Jeremy Clarkson has banned a third person from his new pub.
Hundreds have flocked to Jezza’s new pub, The Farmer’s Dog, in Oxfordshire since it opened its doors at the end of August. Punters were queueing outside the 64-year-old’s boozer from 8am to try a crisp pint of Hawkstone lager.
But it seems three people won’t be setting foot inside the pub as they’ve got on the wrong side of the former Top Gear host. A new video posted on the pub’s Instagram account shows Clarkson scribbling the name of Maddy Hornby to the list of people barred from the pub.
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Unfortunately, it’s the daughter of the man behind the camera – Jonathan Hornby – who won’t be let into the watering hole. In the clip, Jonathan asks Jeremy what he’s doing before Jeremy replies: “I’m banning your daughter because she moaned after not being able to have Tabasco in her Bloody Mary. So she’s banned.”
The crowd laughs from behind the camera, with Hornby revealing: “Keir Starmer, James May, Maddy Hornby. You’re all banned.” PM Keir Starmer and Jeremy’s long-term Top Gear and Grand Tour co-host were the first to be barred.
However, it would appear Maddy’s barring is most likely a joke. Especially considering Jonathan, a friend of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, is helping Jezza run The Farmer’s Dog.
Clarkson has slammed Starmer’s decision to ban smoking from pub gardens. Ahead of the Farmer’s Dog opening, Jeremy told Times Radio: “No, he’s (Keir Starmer) banned. Actually he’s the first person to be banned. He’s actually on a board in the hall, he’s banned.”
Clarkson has been trying to make sure only British produce will be sold at his pub, which is why American-produced Tabasco isn’t available. He wrote: “I have tried my absolute hardest to make sure that every single thing you consume in The Farmer’s Dog was grown or reared by British farmers. And I have failed.
“Yes, the pork, the beef, the lamb and the venison are all British. And so is pretty much everything else. The milk, the butter, the eggs, the vegetables and the fruit. We even cook in British oils.”
Clarkson added: “But there have been some problems like, for instance, the simple G&T. You can’t have a pub that doesn’t offer a gin and tonic. But there is quinine in tonic water, and you can’t grow that in Britain.”
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Source: Celebrities - dailystar.co.uk