In his column this week for the Sunday Times (London) Jeremy Clarkson does his best to prove that Johannesburg's "fearsome global reputation" is unfounded. The Top Gear presenter notes that crime is to the capitalist city of South Africa what architecture is to Rome, beef eaters are to London, and shopping is to New York. If you were to tell your mother you were heading off on "a package holiday to Kabul, with a stopover in Haiti and Detroit, and she wouldn't bat an eyelid." But, Clarkson continues, "tell her you're going to Joburg and she'll be absolutely convinced that you'll come home with no wallet, no watch and no head." However, he adds "I've spent quite a bit of time there over the past three years and I can reveal that it's all nonsense."
Clarkson musters up a number of compelling points to back up his thesis that "Johannesburg is Milton Keynes with thunderstorms" and "way better" than Vancouver. The first is that there was a front-page lead story in The Star a few weeks ago (see below) on "the theft of a computer from one of the local schools? I'm not joking. The paper even ran a massive picture of the desk where the computer used to sit. It was the least interesting picture I've ever seen in a newspaper."
The second is that when he travelled from his hotel to the Coca-Cola dome each day, escorted by an armed guard, "all we passed was garden centres and shops selling tropical fish tanks." Clarkson makes the obvious point that if the streets were as violent as they are made out to be "then, yes, I can see you might risk a trip to the shops for some food. But a fish tank? An ornamental pot for your garden? It doesn't ring true."
The honest truth about the city is, he states, "You go out. You have a lovely ostrich. You drink some delicious wine and you walk back to your hotel, all warm and comfy. It's the least frightening place on earth." The real question is, he asks, is why does everyone there "wrap themselves up in razor wire and fit their cars with flame-throwers and speak of how many times they've been killed that day? What are they trying to prove?"
He points out that no foreigner is going to attend the football World Cup matches in the city if they think they're going to be stabbed. "Why ruin the reputation of your city and risk the success of the footballing World Cup to fuel a story that plainly isn't true?" His theory is that Joburgers are desperately trying to save the lions of the Kruger National Park. Every night, many Mozambicans - many with HIV/AIDS - cross the park in an effort to get into South Africa. And "very often these poor unfortunate souls are eaten by the big cats. That, you may imagine, is bad news for the families of those who've been devoured. But actually it's even worse for Johnny Lion." The problem, he suggests, is that these lions are at risk of contracting feline AIDS from the refugees they devour.