Clarkson's Farm future 'confirmed' as Prime Video makes huge decision
The future of Jeremy Clarkson's reality show Clarkson's Farm has finally been secured, as Amazon has signed on the dotted line for season six, which airs on its Prime Video streaming service. This means fans have at least two more series of the docuseries to come, as season five has yet to air. Although he had previously stated filming would wrap after season five, and a break would be taking place, the former Top Gear host changed his mind. Jeremy had intimated in December that he had enough ideas to do up to six seasons, and he claimed Amazon also wanted this.
"I said I'll stop doing them when there are no more ideas. But I've got two quite good ones, so we'll do six, and then we'll see..." While he has yet to deliver season five, he had teased he would begin filming season six if it snowed in January, which it did, allowing him to shoot scenes which should air in 2027.
The Sun reported Jeremy said he doesn't take a break in between filming the seasons, explaining: "We've never had a rest. We wrap a series and immediately start again, because farming doesn't stop.
"So we just said, 'OK, well, let's just actually wrap it ...' then I said, 'If it snows, we'll start filming again'."
Going by previous years' schedules, viewers should expect season five around April or May this year, which would mean season six would land around the same time in 2027.
As usual, the series will follow Jeremy Clarkson, his girlfriend Lisa Hogan, who runs the farm shop, Kaleb Cooper, the farm manager, farming consultant 'Cheerful' Charlie Ireland and construction specialist Gerald Cooper.
This good news about the show's future comes just days afterJeremy issued a devastating update as he confirmed the death of one of his animals on Saturday, January 31.
He shared a photo of a brown and white cow lying on the hay as he wrote: "Sad day on the farm. We lost another cow."
At the moment, they're waiting on updates to determine exactly what caused the loss.
He's unfortunately faced the loss of multiple animals in the past year, with another cow dying back in October while pregnant with twins due to TB, which also resulted in the farm going into lockdown.