According to reports, Amazon’s decision to break ways with Jeremy Clarkson is unrelated to his horrible hate rant towards Meghan Markle.
The Clarkson’s Farm vocalist, 62, was at the subject of significant anger last month after declaring that he ‘hated’ the Duchess of Sussex on a ‘cellular level’ in a scathing column for The Sun.
Despite the outcry, including criticism from his own daughter Emily Clarkson, Variety said that the streaming service has decided to’sever ties’ with the former Top Gear host.
While seasons of The Grand Tour and Clarkson’s Farm that have already been commissioned will continue, the publication stated that the platform will no longer cooperate with the broadcaster once they are completed.
However, it has been reported that Amazon’s decision to ‘separate’ itself from Clarkson was always planned and was motivated by his essay about Meghan, 41.
Instead, it’s believed that The Rig streamer has opted to cancel Clarkson’s projects because they are too expensive to create and aren’t attracting enough viewers.

The Telegraph reports that a ‘senior figure connected to Amazon’ said: ‘Any speculation that this has anything to do with anything like that [Harry and Meghan] is nonsense.’
A media analyst also denied that Clarkson’s tainted reputation had turned Amazon off, telling the outlet: ‘Amazon’s only interest in anything it makes or sells is does it make a profit?
‘This is a company that sells Mein Kampf, the Communist Manifesto, the Big Book of Serial Killers and Prime Video has a documentary on Charles Manson’s final words. I don’t think Jeremy Clarkson is quite in that league.’

According to the story, Clarkson is ‘expensive,’ and his shows don’t ‘rank well outside of the UK,’ making them unprofitable.
According to data from worldwide audience measurement company Parrot Analytic, demand for Clarkson’s Farm is 30% lower than demand for the typical show in the United States.
Meanwhile, The Grand Tour, which is shot all over the world, is said to have had the “most expensive TV opening scene ever.”
The opening sequence, which featured 150 automobiles, 2,000 acrobats, and six jet planes, was estimated to have cost over £2.5 million.
Clarkson, who apologised to Meghan and Harry, said ITV and Amazon were ‘incandescent’ about his remarks.
The Triggerpoint host emphasised that Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? Clarkson’s controversial views are not welcomed.
In a letter to MP John Nicolson, president of ITV Carlyn McCall clarified that Clarkson’s views are ‘in no way endorsed by ITV’, adding that his role as host of the show ‘does not give a platform for his beliefs’.
Meanwhile, Prince Harry and Meghan expressed their displeasure with Clarkson’s apologies, criticising his “habit of propagating hate language.”
‘On December 25, 2022, Mr Clarkson wrote solely to Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex,’ they added in a statement.
They continued: ‘While a new public apology has been issued today by Mr Clarkson, what remains to be addressed is his long standing pattern of writing articles that spread hate rhetoric, dangerous conspiracy theories, and misogyny.
‘Unless each of his other pieces were also written “in a hurry”, as he states, it is clear that this is not an isolated incident shared in haste, but rather a series of articles shared in hate.’