Richard Hammond: I don’t understand why gay people feel the need to come out

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Former Top Gear presenter Richard Hammond has come under fire after claiming that gay celebrities shouldn’t bother to come out.

The former Top Gear presenter made the remarks in an interview with the Sunday Times.

Speaking to the newspaper, the TV anchor insisted that sexuality is “not an issue” and questioned why people “feel the need to mention it”.

He said: “It may be because I live in a hideously safe and contained middle-class world, where a person’s sexuality is not an issue, but when I hear of people in the media coming out, I think, why do they even feel the need to mention it?”

Richard Hammond: I don’t understand why gay people feel the need to come out

Hammond added: “It is so old-fashioned to make a big deal of it. That isn’t even an interesting thing to say at a dinner party any more.”

His comments were roundly trashed on social media.

In the same interview, The Grand Tour presenter defended cracking a joke about ice cream being only for gay people.

The popular Top Gear and The Grand Tour presenter made the bizarre remarks in the Amazon show’s Boxing Day episode.

Fellow host Jeremy Clarkson had suggested you couldn’t enjoy a Magnum ice cream while inside a Rolls Royce, pointing to a photo of its pristine interior.

Richard Hammond: I don’t understand why gay people feel the need to come out


Hammond then responded by saying: “It’s alright, I don’t eat ice cream. It’s something to do with being straight.”

A senior officer in the British Army since cited the joke in a warning that that LGBT people in the armed forces still face “ingrained prejudice”.

But in his interview with the Times, Hammond defended the joke – almost a year after it was made.

He told the Sunday Times: “Look, anyone who knows me knows I wasn’t being serious, that I’m not homophobic. Love is love, whatever the sex of the two people in love.

Olly Alexander of Years and Years, slammed Hammond at the time.

Richard Hammond: I don’t understand why gay people feel the need to come out

He wrote: “Really tho no wonder some straight guys are fucked up they can’t even have ice cream.”

And according to Lieutenant General Patrick Sanders, LGBT+ soldiers and staff face “discrimination” and “bullying” whilst serving.

The commander of the Field Army and a three-star general, spoke out in an open letter to the LGBT+ community in the British military.

In it, he hit out at former Top Gear host Richard Hammond for ‘joking’ that eating ice cream is “gay”.

The general writes: “Under fire, no one cares if someone is black or white, gay or straight, because they value the individual for who he or she is, what he or she can do, and because they are so utterly dependent on him or her. But this experience is not universal.

“Away from the cauldron of operations or training, lazy or ingrained prejudice remains, ranging from outright bullying and discrimination, to the sort of casual but hurtful remark that refers to ice cream as ‘gay’.”

It’s not the first time a Top Gear presenter has come under fire over homophobic jokes.

In 2015, Clarkson and Hammond also came under fire for gleefully using homophobic slurs on a visit to a fudge factory.

Jeremy Clarkson also previously apologised for a tweet he sent containing a picture of himself with a sign saying “gay c*nt”.

Clarkson had tweeted the image in 2014, featuring fellow Top Gear host James May, along with the caption “Sadly, I fell asleep on the plane.”

In 2010, Clarkson caused outrage when he said of gay people: “I demand the right not to be bummed.”

Clarkson has more recently lashed out at transgender people.

In a newspaper column he said that parents of a transgender child were “lunatics”.

Richard Hammond: I don’t understand why gay people feel the need to come out

He said of encountering a family with a trans child: “I was horrified. I wanted to seek them out and explain that they were free to live a lunatic life, washing their armpits with charcoal and liking Jeremy Corbyn’s thoughts on how ballistic nuclear submarines must be built by the comrades and then used as flower pots.

“But they must not, and I was going to emphasise this with spittle, be allowed to poison the mind of a child.”

He added: “To try to calm down a bit, I turned to the BBC for guidance, and there I was told there are 650,000 people living in Britain today with some kind of gender ‘issue’.

“Well, I just sat there shaking my head, because the simple fact is: there aren’t.”