It sounds like everyone's doing the contractual minimum with Clarkson right now. Amazon had already ordered a third series of Clarkson's Farm, and I suspect that'll go ahead. The Grand Tour just isn't what it once was, and now it's reported that a celebrity run of Who Wants to be a Millionaire which was due to be recorded next month has been cancelled. The regular series is still going to be taped. I would not be surprised if ITV rests the format and finds a new host.
For all his weak apologies, the truth is that outside the UK, the public is behind Harry and Meghan, and there's no reason for Amazon to want to be working with someone who's taken the other side. The reason that column got published, unfortunately, is because the popular press here in the UK is still very much Team Monarchy and doesn't like Harry and Meghan.
I've said before, that personally I couldn't give a damn about any of them, but that doesn't mean I *hate* the two of them. Honestly, good luck to them with whatever they do. I have no interest. But I do care about popular newspapers behaving so callously towards anyone. That column got published despite a sub-editor and quite probably a senior editor seeing it first and thinking, "Yup - that's fine." Because the UK popular press is virulent against them. They have published pages and pages on the book and the Netflix show.
In fact, beyond the tabloid press readership, I suspect that many others in the UK are either with the pair, or like me, don't care.
BTW, the paper that really hates them the most is the Daily Mail. Yet, that's only the printed version. What you need to understand is that, despite sharing a title and ownership, the online version of the Mail is almost entirely unrelated to the print version. They target different people, and they don't share the same world view. The site is very profitable in the US, and they know that the younger readership there likes Harry and Meghan. So the site treads carefully. On the other hand, the print paper in the UK is read largely by a much older audience, and they're completely different. It's a media form of cognitive dissonance.
Adam