Jeremy Clarkson and Lisa Hogan are back on television, with a new series of Clarkson's Farm landing on Prime Video on Wednesday, 3 June. For viewers searching Jeremy Clarkson Children, the return also puts Hogan back in the frame as the woman overseeing operations at the Diddly Squat farm shop.
The timing matters because the show has again reopened the world of Diddly Squat, Clarkson's Oxfordshire farm in Chipping Norton, where the familiar on-screen cast returns to the daily grind of farming. Hogan is not just appearing in the series; she is shown carrying out one of the business's most visible jobs, keeping the farm shop and other vital projects moving.
That visibility has also kept Hogan in the spotlight for reasons beyond the programme. She is 6'2", or 188 cm, compared with Clarkson's 6'5", 196 cm frame, a gap of roughly three inches. Clarkson once joked that he never notices anyone's height unless they are taller than him, which lands differently when both he and Hogan are described as unusually tall.
Hogan has built a public identity around that height as well. On social media, she brands herself the Tall Irish, and it is also the name of her emerging wellness brand, which is set to stretch across cosmetics, fragrance, candles, food and drink, alcoholic beverages, clothing, fashion accessories and footwear.
Clarkson's Farm remains a working show rather than a celebrity cameo reel. It follows Clarkson's efforts to run his Oxfordshire farm with help from Kaleb Cooper, Charlie Ireland, Gerald Cooper and Hogan, and her role at the centre of the farm shop means the new series keeps her tied to the day-to-day mechanics of Diddly Squat. What the return does for her broader business plans is still unclear, but the television comeback has already put Hogan back where audiences are most likely to notice her: in the middle of the farm's operations, not on the sidelines.

