Trio shift into Top Gear
Monday, June 2, 2008
© The Cairns Post
Winning team: Top Gear co-hosts (from left) Charlie Cox, Warren Brown and Steve Pizzati.
The Australian version of Top Gear is coming soon.
MOTORSPORT commentator Charlie Cox, cartoonist Warren Brown and driving instructor Steve Pizzati have won the highly sought-after jobs of hosting the Australian version of Top Gear.
After months of interviews, the three were revealed as the hosts of the Australian version of the hit BBC TV motoring program.
They beat more than 4000 others for the chance to front the program, which will premiere on SBS after the Olympics this year.
The first version outside the UK, the show features three enthusiasts test driving and brutally appraising the world's most popular cars and performing stunts.
SBS director of content Matt Campbell said it was a difficult task to pick the final three but was confident they had found a winning combination.
"We have chosen three totally different and entertaining personalities who have a natural chemistry that works," Mr Campbell said.
All men are passionate motoring enthusiasts. BBC motorsport commentator Charlie Cox, 47, is known for his classic one-liners. He worked in radio in Sydney in the 1980s before moving to the UK where he won several motor racing titles in the 1990s and was involved in a near life-ending crash in 1995.
Mr Brown, in his mid-40s, is best known as a cartoonist and motoring columnist for The Daily Telegraph, and also has a passion for historic cars.
The youngest of the bunch, Steve Pizzati, is in his mid-30s. He is an advanced driving instructor, freelance motoring journalist and a race driver for Porsche Australia. Sydney Morning Herald motoring editor Josh Dowling will act as the motor industry consultant.
The Australian Top Gear will have a distinctly Australian feel while still being based on the format made popular in the UK where it is led by Jeremy Clarkson.
Top Gear managing director Adam Waddell praised Aussie presenters.
"A show like Top Gear doesn't resonate with a huge global audience just because people love cars," he said. "The show's popularity owes much to the relationship between its three presenters."
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