Jimmy Broadbent

Last updated
Jimmy Broadbent
J2Praga.png
Broadbent driving Praga R1 'Goldie' at Brands Hatch
Nationality Flag of the United Kingdom.svg British
Full nameJames Alan Broadbent
Born (1991-06-13) 13 June 1991 (age 32)
Hastings, United Kingdom [1]
Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie career
Debut season2023
Current teamTeam BILSTEIN by BLACK FALCON
Racing licence FIA Bronze Driver.png FIA Bronze
Previous series
2021
2022
Championship titles
2022 Praga Cup
YouTube information
Personal information
Born
James Alan Broadbent
Origin Hastings, United Kingdom
Nationality Flag of the United Kingdom.svg British
Occupations
Channel
LocationUnited Kingdom
Years active2012–present
Genres
Subscribers911,000 [2] [3]
Total views299.7 million [3]
YouTube Silver Play Button 2.svg100,000 subscribers2018

Last updated: August 30, 2023

James Alan Broadbent (born 13 June 1991) is an English social media personality, commentator, and racing driver. He has over 900,000 subscribers on his YouTube channel, with content related to gaming, sim racing, and real life racing. Broadbent most recently competed in the 2022 Praga Cup, in which he won the teams and drivers championships in with his entry Team87 and teammate Gordie Mutch. [4] He also commentates for the Gran Turismo World Series esports tournament. [5]

Contents

Broadbent's popularity has been partially attributed to his modest background, having lived in a shed in his mother's garden for a long period of time, and his honesty with personal struggles, both traits in stark contrast with the trend of internet celebrities portraying an artificial idyllic life. [6]

YouTube career

Broadbent began uploading content for YouTube in 2012, his first video being published in May of that year. [7] His early videos consisted of raw video game footage with no commentary from sim racing games such as rFactor. This would later develop into sim racing content with commentary throughout the years. [8] He reached 10,000 subscribers in 2017; [1] by 2018, he had around 86,000 subscribers.

In 14 April 2018, Broadbent was temporarily banned by YouTube while viewing Michael Dunlop's then-lap record from 2016 on the Isle of Man TT Mountain Course on his stream. His stream was also terminated for use of copyrighted content, as entertainment distributor Duke Video held the rights to all Isle of Man TT content. Broadbent's ban was lifted the following day after Duke Video had lifted the claim on his livestream. [9]

On 4 June 2018, Broadbent reached 100,000 subscribers on YouTube. [10]

In November 2020, Jimmy raised over £71,000 for Mind in memory of his father, Alan Broadbent. [11] By the end of 2020, he had over 600,000 subscribers. [12]

Commentary role

Broadbent was invited by Polyphony Digital, the creators of the Gran Turismo video game series, to work as a commentator on their FIA-Certified Gran Turismo Championships. [5]

Racing career

In sim racing

In 2019, Broadbent took part in the annual iRacing 24 Hours of Le Mans in the iRacing video game, with teammates Adam David Hodgkinson and Nate Lupson with the 2016 Audi R18 LMP1 prototype sports car, and won their race overall. [13] On May 16th 2020, Broadbent Won the annual iRacing Indy 500.

Broadbent now has 2/3 of the sim racing Triple Crown of Motorsport

During the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020, Broadbent participated in Formula One's F1 Esports Virtual Grand Prix exhibition series in the F1 2019 video game, taking part in the Bahrain round in a Racing Point RP19. [14] He fought McLaren driver Lando Norris for 4th place at the final lap of the race, with Broadbent ultimately taking the position at the final corner after a collision with Norris. [15] He later participated in the 2020 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual esports event in the rFactor 2 video game, piloting an Aston Martin Vantage GTE for Mahle Racing alongside former IndyCar Series driver Robert Wickens, Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters driver Ferdinand Habsburg and sim racer Kevin Rotting. [16] They classified in 46th place overall and 17th place in their class.

Broadbent returned to the event in 2022, racing a Porsche 911 RSR GTE for Team Project 1 x BPM, alongside René Buttler, Bram Beelen and Tim Neuendorf. [17] In the end, the team finished in 33rd place overall and 14th place in their class. The following event in 2023 saw him race a BMW M8 GTE for Mahle Racing, driving alongside FIA World Endurance Championship and W Series driver Beitske Visser and sim racers Muhammed Patel and Michele D’Alessandro. [18] The team qualified in 7th place setting a time of 3:46.894 and then in the race, finished in 9th place and 32nd place overall scoring 4 points.

In real-life motorsport

Broadbent competing in the Club Time Attack Championship in the Pocket Rocket Class. Jimmytimeattack.png
Broadbent competing in the Club Time Attack Championship in the Pocket Rocket Class.

2021: Racing debut

In 2021, it was announced that Broadbent would take part in the 2021 Britcar Endurance Championship with Team J2 Praga, driving the Praga R1 alongside Jem Hepworth in the Praga class. [19] At the season opening round in Silverstone Circuit, Broadbent and Hepworth would finish 6th and 8th in Race 1 and Race 2 respectively. In the following round in Snetterton Circuit, the duo would retire in Race 1, but would come back to finish 10th in Race 2. The third round at Oulton Park saw the team struggle, as the two drivers would gather 23rd place and 12th place finishes in both races. At the second Silverstone round in Round 4, they would score a 6th place finish. Due to a support race fatality, the next round in Brands Hatch was cancelled. For the final race of the season, it was announced that Gordie Mutch would be replacing Hepworth as Broadbent's teammate to compete in Donington Park. Donington would prove to be the team's most successful race of the year, as Broadbent and Mutch would sweep the round and win both races, allowing the team to finish 5th overall in the championship standings. [20]

2022: Praga Cup title

In March 2022, Broadbent founded his racing team, Team87. [2] [21] Team87 signed a multi-year partnership deal with German sim racing peripheral manufacturer Fanatec in August of that year. [22] The next month, Bell Sports became the team's official helmet manufacturer. [23]

Broadbent and Mutch would race again as teammates in 2022 for Team87, this time participating in the inaugural 2022 Praga Cup season. [24] The team experienced a solid start in the first three rounds of the season, scoring two podiums and a 9th place finish. At the fourth round, Broadbent and Mutch would take the chequered flag in the lead, however, they were disqualified post-race during scrutineering after a turbocharger issue was discovered on the team's Praga R1. [25] They would win the next Snetterton race, however, as well as four additional wins in the next six races afterwards in Silverstone and Donington, allowing the team to clinch the drivers' and teams' championships at the end of the season. [4] The championship victory gave Broadbent his first motorsport title as both a driver and team owner.

2023: Nürburgring Endurance Series

In December 2022, it was announced that Broadbent would be taking part in testing of the 2023 BMW M4 GT4 in the Circuito de Almería in Spain with BMW Motorsport. [26]

As of April 2024, Broadbent competes with a FIA Bronze racing licence. [27] On 03 June, Broadbent released a video on YouTube announcing that he would be participating in the Nürburgring Endurance Series for 2023 alongside sim racing YouTubers Misha Charoudin and Steve Alvarez Brown (Super GT). The trio will be part of a Bilstein-organized VT2 class entry, driving a heavily modified BMW 330i by Black Falcon. [28]

2024: New machinery and 24 Hours of Nürburgring

For the 2024 NLS season Broadbent is competing in a BMW M4 GT4 of Team Bilstein. Charoudin and Brown are also part of the team again and they are joined by the 2016 24 Hours of Nürburgring overall winner, Manuel Metzger. It was also announced that the team will compete in the 2024 24 Hours of Nürburgring for the first time. They will complete in the SP8T class in the NLS and N24H. [29]

Personal life

Broadbent's father, Alan, died by suicide when Jimmy was only 13 years old after struggling from alcoholism and depression. [30]

In an interview with DriveTribe in 2020, Broadbent told that around 2014, he "lost everything" due to depression and other mental health issues, especially regarding sociability. He lost his job, his house and his fiancée broke up with him. He stated that he had struggled and still struggles with depression and suicidal thoughts.

With nowhere to live, he moved to a shed in his mother's house's garden. He stayed there and also produced content from there. The shed eventually became an inside joke of Broadbent and his YouTube community. [31] In 2021, Broadbent bought his own house and currently lives there. [32] Broadbent also owns 5 cars, a Nissan Skyline GT-R (R32), [33] Nissan 350Z, Nissan GT-R (R35), [34] first-generation Subaru Impreza WRX RA, [35] and a modified Mazda MX-5 (NA). [36]

Racing record

Racing career summary

SeasonSeriesTeamRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPodiumsPointsPosition
2021 Britcar Endurance Championship - Praga Team J2 Praga 920021715th
2022 Praga Cup Fanatec Praga Team871152372851st
2023 Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie - VT2-R+4WD Black Falcon Team Bilstein400010NC†
2024 Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie - SP8T Team Bilstein by Black Falcon2100171st*

* Season still in progress.

Complete Britcar results

YearTeamCarClass1234567891011DCCPPoints
2021 Team J2 Praga Praga R1 (Mk5) Praga SIL1
1

6
SIL1
2

8
SNE
1

Ret
SNE
2

10
OUL
1

23
OUL
2

12
SIL2
1

6
BRH
1

C
BRH
2

C
DON
1

1
DON
2

1
5th5th171

Complete Praga Cup results

YearTeamCar1234567891011DCPoints
2022 Fanatec Praga Team87 Praga R1 (Mk5) SIL1
1

4
SIL1
2

9
OUL
1

2
SNE
1

DSQ
SNE
2

1
SIL2
1

6
SIL2
1

1
DON1
1

1
DON1
2

4
DON2
1

1
DON2
2

1
1st285

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