About this deal
Jeremy Charles Robert Clarkson (born April 11, 1960) is an English broadcaster and writer who specialises in motoring.
And yet while the farm may be called Diddly Squat for good reason, Jeremy soon begins to understand that it's worth a whole lot more to him than pounds, shillings and pence . . . However, local councillors have different plans and show their concerns about possible lighting from the development. Clarkson doesn’t believe this a valid argument and highlights how RAF Brize Norton is nearby!So, while he is the first to admit that he is still only a ‘trainee farmer’, he clearly still has work to do.”
In the first Diddly Squat book he was critical of local councillors, and here he continues this theme, and he tells how he thinks freemasonry plays a part in many planning decisions. He also reveals that he believes that councillors refuse his applications because of who he is.He writes weekly columns for The Sunday Times and The Sun, but is better known for his role on the BBC television programme Top Gear. It's easier to get planning permission to build a nuclear plant than to turn a barn into a restaurant? In the book, we read that time is moving fast for Clarkson at the age of 61 and how he is thinking of opening a restaurant, and is looking for people who will help him run such an establishment.
Did you know that loading a grain trailer was more demanding than flying an Apache gunship? Or that cows were more dangerous than motor-racing? Or whether would have been easier to get planning permission to build a nuclear power station than to turn an old barn into a farm restaurant?Or that it would have been easier to get planning permission to build a nuclear power station than to turn an old barn into a farm restaurant?