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Quentin’s career began respectably enough by studying English
Literature under Philip Larkin, but after university he ‘went
completely off the rails’ and started up a car dealership
selling ancient Ferraris and Maseratis. Which is how he amassed
his now famous knowledge of everything on four wheels and made him
unique among motoring pundits. Quentin’s expertise is very
real as he’s the only car commentator who has bought and sold
literally thousands of cars.
He first came to the public’s attention in the early nineties
as deputy editor of the only magazine solely devoted to second hand
motors, Buying Cars, and was soon poached by the BBC to
co-host Top Gear with Jeremy Clarkson. His deep knowledge
of the market changed the way British consumers bought used cars
and caused most carmakers to regularly reach for their Valium. For
a decade he appeared every week on Top Gear, routinely
exposing shoddy service and poor product, educating car buyers on
how to beat the system as well as pressurising the industry to lower
new car prices in the UK.
He also presented his own classic car series The Car’s
The Star along with the first property show to talk about money,
All The Right Moves, both for the BBC. He then left Top
Gear to present Channel Five’s rival motoring programme,
Fifth Gear. While at Five he created the Britain’s
Worst Driver format which was nominated for best reality show
in the coveted Montraux Golden Globe Awards. A raft of Worst
derived shows followed, including Britain’s Worst DIYer,
Worst Mother in Law, Worst Husband, Worst Teenager and Worst
Builder to name just a few.
The Worst format is now an international brand and has
been televised in 30 different countries including America, Canada,
Holland, Australia, Denmark, Sweden and Belgium. Quentin has also
presented many other shows including How to Fail Your Driving
Test, The Biggest Car Fraud in The World and Television’s
Most Shameful Moments. A familiar face on most channels he
regularly appears on BBC Breakfast, GMTV, Panorama, Watchdog, Tonight
With Trevor McDonald, This Morning, Richard and Judy and most news
and current affairs programmes.
Quentin’s voice is almost as recognisable as his face and
he’s narrated Driving School, War and Piste, Cops Uncut,
How To Live Longer as well as network TV ads for Barclays Bank,
Car Phone Warehouse, Kellogs, Pacelforce, Shell Optimax, Black and
Decker and Tic Tac. He’s also a Bafta Judge and Fellow of
The Royal Society of Artists.
He admits to being particularly proud of achieving the lowest ever
recorded score on the BBC’s second series of Strictly
Come Dancing – a toe-curling 8 out of 40, which is still
an unbroken record. He claims he is ‘to dancing what Frank
Bruno is to English literature’ and dances ‘with all
the finesse and elegance of a hoard of Mongol storm troopers on
a three day pass’. Quentin pens regular columns for The
Sunday Mirror and Classic Cars Magazine as well writing
for scores of other newspapers and periodicals. He’s also
written 10 motoring books. Quentin is married with three children
and has homes in Warwickshire, London and Saint Emilion, France.
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