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Examples
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'' It is always a tremendous moment - say the name Richard Hammond, long pause, 'any accidents in the last ...?' yes, all right, yes there have been. ''
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2009
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"It is always a tremendous moment - say the name Richard Hammond, long pause, 'any accidents in the last ...?' yes, all right, yes there have been."
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He went on: "It is always a tremendous moment - say the name Richard Hammond, long pause, 'any accidents in the last ...?' yes, all right, yes there have been."
unknown title 2009
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He went on: "It is always a tremendous moment - say the name Richard Hammond, long pause,
unknown title 2009
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The new 20-part series, called Richard Hammond's Tech Head, marks the
The Guardian World News Mark Sweney 2011
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Last month the supermarket it ditched celebrity figures such as Richard Hammond from its adverts and started airing a series of commercials featuring children visiting farms to underline its credentials as a supporter of British agriculture.
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2010
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Clarkson made a second appearance in the Ofcom top 10 – this time with his Top Gear co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May – after they described Mexicans as "lazy, feckless, flatulent and overweight" on an episode of the BBC2 show broadcast in January.
Matthew Wright murder 'joke' show is most complained-about of 2011 2011
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Richard Hammond left his computer team behind in London, fiddling with a confusing virtual Earth, to help film genuinely terrifying footage of a scientist climbing the "safe" outer wall to "put some fresh lava in a science flask", like a year-four project, before realising he was about to immolate and running away like a gurl in a white suit, as the world would.
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Among the grand things I learned from Imagine… Harry Nilsson: The Missing Beatle and Richard Hammond's Journey to the Centre of the Planet, the two best factual programmes of the week, were: there was blood from polyps such a pretty word left on the microphone after Harry Nilsson and John Lennon duetted – spatted – to be louder/croakier on their druggy "Many Rivers to Cross", and both voices dimmed hence.
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Richard Hammond called Mexicans "lazy, feckless, flatulent and overweight", and James May and Jeremy Clarkson followed up with references to the country's food as "refried sick."
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