While the BBC was forced to apologise after Top Gear host Richard Hammond described Mexicans as lazy,feckless8230; and flatulent in their show,co-host Jeremy Clarkson has again insulted them in his newspaper column.
Clarkson accused the Mexicans of having no sense of humour in his column in The Sun.
He also quoted jokes about various nations 8211; including Britain 8211; to tailor his argument.
8230;there are calls in Britain at the moment for all offensive humour to be banned. But what people don8221;t realise is that without offence,there can be no jokes, he wrote.
Despite earlier apologising for the show8221;s 8221;feckless8221; comments,the loud mouth host then ended the column with his own joke about Mexicans.
Mexico doesn8221;t have an Olympic team8230; because anyone who can run,jump or swim is already across the border, The Daily Mail quoted him from his column.
He added that at one point on Wednesday we were receiving 200 complaints from Mexico every minute.
His latest comments come after a Mexican instructed lawyers to bring a test case against Top Gear.
Iris de la Torre,a jewellery design student in London,is bringing the claim under a new equality law. Her lawyers claim it could cost the BBC 1million pounds in damages.
They have demanded the hit BBC1 motoring show is taken off the air and an investigation made into the comments.
Meanwhile,Brit MPs have now demanded that the BBC apologises over the 8221;ignorant,derogatory and racist remarks8221;.
In a Commons motion,a cross-party group of six MPs said the comments were 8221;unacceptable and untimely8221;.
This is not the first time Top Gear,with its blend of motoring news,schoolboy humour and audacious stunts,has got into trouble.
In 2008,the show was rapped by the BBC Trust for showing Clarkson and May sipping gin and tonic at the wheel during a stunt.