Kaleb Cooper has answered one of the questions he keeps getting asked more than anything else in relation to Clarkson's Farm - and in doing so provided a pretty witty response.
The third season of Clarkson's Farm has been released on to Amazon Prime Video this month with millions of subscribers tuning in to watch the hilarious, witty and grounded documentary series following Jeremy Clarkson's venture in to full-time farming.
Taking over the running of Diddly Squat Farm in England's idyllic Cotswolds back in 2019, Clarkson teamed up with local farmer Kaleb Cooper, now 25, who has taught him pretty much everything he knows about the arable trade since.
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Three seasons of Clarkson's Farm have now aired - and a fourth looms large - showing the pair as they work towards getting Jezza capable enough to work the fields while also venturing in to other, newer forms of income streams for the business.
The third season saw Jeremy once again take on West Oxfordshire District Council and this, on this occasion, win pretty big.
There was also shock in the last episode over a year-long bet Jeremy and Kaleb had taken on.
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Speaking about the show, Kaleb sat down with broadcaster ABC Australia to speak all things Clarkson's Farm.
When asked about what do fans usually come up to him and question, Kaleb said: "They normally say is it all real and like 100%, I don't know how you think it's not real.
"I'm not an actor. I don't go out there and act.
"I am myself and therefore they go - 'well do you not just go out there and make ideas up and go out and do it?' - I said no.
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"We just film our day-to-day lives and I think that's why it works because of course you're showing real life then.
"It blows my mind, I mean I'm honoured if you think I'm acting or you think that I'm an actor.
"I mean I'll be the next, I don't know, I'll be the next Deadpool or whatever, I don't know."
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Kaleb also hinted at finally going abroad if he can pluck up the courage.
"We hope to see you in Australia sometime soon, I know you've got a lot of fans here," said presenter Warwick Long.
"You could always get to travel our way and do a bit of research as well from the UK, it'll be great to see."
Kaleb said: "Hopefully I want to get brave enough to get a passport and set up a contracting business in Australia. That is a goal I have."
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Viewers of Clarkson's Farm would no doubt love such a move, with it fitting nicely in to some fan theories saying they've already cracked Kaleb's next TV job.
Topics: Kaleb Cooper, Clarkson's Farm, TV and Film, TV, Documentaries, Australia, UK News, Amazon, Amazon Prime, Jeremy Clarkson