My sympathy was tempered with the thought that he didn't "have" to drive a Maserati in order to take part in the race, and it was clearly stated at the beginning that he bought it with the Mille Miglia in mind and intended selling the car at a profit once it had completed.
I think to a certain degree I would have felt for him a great deal more if he'd entered a car that he'd developed over a period of time and it had broken down during the first stage.
Even the voiceover for the programme ended up giving the impression that here was a "celebrity" chef entering a trophy car into a trophy race where the car hadn't been road tested and the driver was woefully unprepared for the level of care needed to nurse such a "precious" car through an arduous race. Boo Hoo.
I suppose though the BBC wouldn't have made a programme about someone who wasn't a "celebrity" entering a car that they'd taken the first interest in preparing for competition and completing the race successfully.
To the producers It was proably considered far more fun watching a chequebook waving wannabe throwing shedload of money at an untested car and ending up on his derriere at the side of the road.
It's a malaise of our modern media driven society, so it is
