Charlie Stayt admits to being enormously upset in BBC Breakfast rant

Charlie Stayt ‘enormously upset’ over manual Minis

Charlie Stayt admitted he was “enormously upset” as he shared with BBC Breakfast viewers a headline that had stunned him.

“I’m just looking at one of the inside pages,” he explained, “Mini – the manufacturers of the Mini, which is owned now by BMW announced that the Mini Cooper, of course famous for The Italian Job film, will only be sold with an automatic gearbox in the future.

“So you cannot and will not be able to buy a Mini Cooper with a manual gearbox.”

“Oh,” co-host Sarah Campbell responded before asking: “Are you upset about that?”

“Yes! Enormously upset,” Charlie replied. “It feels massively wrong.”

READ MORE Charlie Stayt scolded by BBC co-star after chaotic Ben Miller interview

He went on to ask his colleague: “Do you not like driving a manual car?”

“No,” Sarah admitted, shaking her head at the cameras.

Reading further into the article, Charlie continued: “Apparently, sales of automatic cars go back to 2011, when 76 percent of cars were manual cars.

“Fast forward to 2021, the most recent figures out, and just 37 percent of cars bought were manuals.

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“So it’s changing enormously. Yeah, it’s just a change, isn’t it?

“I can remember when cars used to have gear levers up on the dashboard you would kind of pull in and out.”

“Right…” Sarah replied before asking: “And did they have indicators or did you have to stick your hand out to let them know where you’re going?”

“I used to drive a car that had an arm you controlled with a toggle and it controlled the arm, it came out of your side,” Charlie recalled.

“Good, lovely,” Sarah stated sarcastically as Charlie added: “I didn’t make that up, you know.”

“A glimpse into your motoring history,” she continued before changing the subject swiftly.

Charlie enjoys sharing anecdotes on the show and on Thursday’s programme was scolded for going “off-topic”.

While interviewing former Death in Paradise star Ben Miller, Charlie became distracted by the subject of giants and quizzed Ben, who had written a book involving the mythical creatures, about why they couldn’t swim.

He soon admitted a BBC editor had told him in his earpiece to move on from the subject.

BBC Breakfast airs weekdays from 6am on BBC One.

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