
The crew of the U.S. adaption of the BBC TV series Top Gear, including its three presenters Adam Ferrera, Tanner Faust and Rutledge Wood, are currently in Iceland filming episodes that will be aired on the History Channel in late March or early April.
Managing director of Arctic Trucks Eðvarð Þór Williamson confirmed the news to RÚV yesterday. The crew is using ten of its trucks and especially asked for three old and significantly altered American “gas guzzlers,” ruv.is reports.
Ferrera, Faust and Wood are reportedly planning to drive around Iceland in a large Ford Bronco, Scout and Chevrolet in the coming days.
Their presence in the country has garnered attention among foreign tourists; one person tweeted on Monday that he had seen the trucks parked in front of Hallgrímskirkja church in Reykjavík, posting a picture of it as proof.
Eðvarð said the 30-person crew will stay in Iceland until mid-next week but wouldn’t reveal any further information as their travel plans are confidential.
However, it is considered unlikely that they will spend much time driving around in urban areas and Eðvarð said they are probably the only people thrilled about the current weather conditions.
The U.S. version of Top Gear is not quite as popular as the original British series, yet it is estimated that approximately two million viewers watched the first episode of the last series.
Click here to read about the British Top Gear crew driving on new lava in Iceland.
ESA
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Four Icelandic contestants will participate in this year’s World Skills International, the world cup for industrial- and vocational subjects. The competition is held every other year.
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This year’s free English-language travel guide Around Iceland has been released, the 38th year in a row. The guide is also published in Icelandic and German and is distributed in 100,000 copies to the country’s most frequented tourist destinations.
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The 2013 June-July issue of Iceland Review is out. Themed ‘We Are Young’ the magazine celebrates the arrival of summer by interviewing young energetic Icelanders who excel in art, sports, business and politics—and Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, the youngest PM in the republic’s history and the world’s youngest ruling state leader. Click here to take a look at a selection of the current issue and here to subscribe to the magazine.
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The road to Höfn, a 1,690-person harbor town by the fjord Hornafjörður, is lined with reindeer. Whole herds of the wild horned animals rest peacefully on withered pastures, grace next to sheep and horses and bounce along the road. Soon, Vatnajökull, Europe’s largest glacier and the region’s biggest attraction, comes into view. Looming over Höfn, its outlet glaciers flow down from the mountains on which the bright white icecap rests.
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