This car, with many, many optional extras,
was £36,000.
Whereas James May's BMW i3 was...
Well... let's find out, shall we?
JEREMY OVER RADIO: How much was your i3?
Well, it was £40,000,
but I got £5,000 back from the government,
so actually it's £35,000,
which is less than yours, I think.
You were given, by the government,
£5,000 of taxpayers' money
so you could buy that car?
I didn't make the rules. You can't turn it down.
It's not like the Beatles' OBE.
That is obscene!
I mean, James May is a wealthy man,
but that bus driver has bought his car for him.
Where's the justice in that?
You're paying for his car. Do you know that?
You have paid for it.
Just so you know, you've paid for his car.
Has James May thanked you for buying his car for him?
Jeremy will have an opinion on this,
despite having bought a farm on which, for many years,
he was paid to not grow anything.
Congestion charge here.
It's £11.50 to drive into the centre.
- JAMES: Not for me, it isn't. - JEREMY: Of course it isn't.
The taxi driver, is he paying for your congestion charge?
I suppose everybody must pay a little bit.
# James May, James May Stealing from the rich #
# James May, James May Stealing from the poor #
# He steals from the rich He steals from the poor #
# And once more, wants it all #
# That's appalling #
It nearly works.
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