Jeremy Clarkson shares annual A-level tweet about his ‘C and 2 Us’ boasting of ‘large house with views of the Cotswolds’
JEREMY Clarkson has today boasted of his “large house with views of the Cotswolds” in his annual A-level tweet about getting a C and two Us.
The former Top Gear host tweets every year on results day to reassure anxious students they don’t need top marks to have a successful career.
This morning, he said: “A level results not great? Don’t worry, I got a C and 2 Us and I’m currently building a large house with far reaching views of the Cotswolds.”
In just 30 minutes, the tweet had racked up more than 20,000 likes with many praising his light-hearted tweet at such a stressful time for thousands.
One replied that it’s “not results day without Jeremy’s tweet”.
Others said they had been “looking out” for his tweet before he wrote: “The tweet everyone has been waiting for!”
A level results not great? Don’t worry, I got a C and 2 Us and I’m currently building a large house with far reaching views of the Cotswolds."
Jeremy Clarkson
One Twitter user wrote: “I await this tweet every year! Never fails to disappoint.”
Clarkson, 60, then went on to joke about controversy over this year's marking, quipping: “And I didn’t even get the chance to insist the government gave me three As instead.”
He first started writing his annual A-level tweet in 2014, saying: "If your A level results aren't joyous, take comfort from the fact I got a C and two US. And I have a Mercedes Benz."
As exams were cancelled during lockdown, a computer algorithm is for the first time being used to adjust grades given by teachers to 250,000 students.
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Four in ten grades have been changed, with many marked down, after teachers tried to dish out record numbers of A*s.
And those students who miss out on a university place will have to wait until next week to find out how the appeal process works.
There was a glimmer of hope today though as figures show the total number of students accepted on to UK degree courses has risen by 2.9 per cent last year to 358,860.