'Top Gear' stops filming due to accident, co-presenter with serious injuries
CTV
The making of the hugely popular BBC car show 'Top Gear' has been halted following a crash during filming in December that left co-presenter Andrew 'Freddie' Flintoff with serious injuries, the broadcaster said late on Thursday.
The making of the hugely popular BBC car show "Top Gear" has been halted following a crash during filming in December that left co-presenter Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff with serious injuries, the broadcaster said late on Thursday.
The BBC said it had concluded its investigation into the crash - which had initially led to filming being suspended - and that it would now halt filming.
It was unclear when or if at all filming would resume and the broadcaster said it would make a decision later this year.
"We have sincerely apologized to Freddie and will continue to support him with his recovery. Under the circumstances, we feel it would be inappropriate to resume making series 34 of Top Gear at this time," BBC Studios said in a statement.
"We understand this will be disappointing for fans, but it is the right thing to do, and we’ll make a judgment about how best to continue later this year."
The BBC also said it would carry out a health and safety review of "Top Gear," one of its most successful programs that has been running since 2002 in its current format, a revival of a 1977-2001 eponymous BBC motoring program.
Flintoff, 45, a former England cricketer who became a "Top Gear" host in 2019, was said to be "lucky to be alive" following the accident at Top Gear's test track in Surrey in southern England.