Jeremy Vine was caught up in a road rage row during his cycle home after a white van man who thought he was a woman gave way to him, angering another motorist, dramatic video shows.

The Radio 2 host regularly records himself cycling through London's congested streets on a helmet-mounted camera and shares the clips with his social media followers, often exposing drivers' bad behaviour.

In his latest clip, the presenter praises a van driver for giving him time to emerge from a junction, but highlights how another motorist in a white car is less patient.

'I'm a bit slow off the lights here and I do appreciate that the van driver behind me gives me time and space, but the guy behind him is not impressed,' Vine said in a clip of the row.

The driver begins beeping his horn and edging closer to the van, before managing to overtake while blaring his horn at Vine. 

The van driver chases the 'bad driver' down, and the pair begin exchanging expletives in what Vine called an almost 'medieval' showdown.

The Radio 2 host regularly records himself cycling through London 's congested streets on a helmet-mounted camera. In his latest clip he discusses a row between two drivers

The Radio 2 host regularly records himself cycling through London 's congested streets on a helmet-mounted camera. In his latest clip he discusses a row between two drivers

The van driver mistook Vine for a woman
The two drivers pull up side-by-side

A furious row erupts between the drivers as the two vehicles, a white van and white car, pull up side-by-side 

Vine praises the van driver
He calls the motorist in the white car a 'bad driver'

The presenter praises one van driver for giving him time to emerge from a junction, but highlights how another motorist in a white car is less patient

A furious row erupts between the drivers as the two vehicles pull up side-by-side, with the van driver shouting as he explains why he waited for Vine: 'Look, she was there!'

The car driver seemingly yells back 'a warden is coming for you and your bum, son'.

Vine reassures the white van driver: 'You did well mate, thank you,' before carrying on with his journey.

But the explosive exchange doesn't stop there, with the irate van driver continuing to spout vile insults at the other motorist.

'I am now starting to feel sorry for the bad driver,' Vine says in his voiceover of the video clip, and he is seen approaching the man to check if he is alright.

The drivers eventually pull away from each other, with each trying to get the final word in as they continue to blow their horns while going in separate directions.

In his caption for the video, which he shared on X, Vine concluded: 'This incident shows the way cars act like air fryers for anger. 

'Cyclists think a lot of drivers hate them — actually those drivers hate EVERYONE. From my commute home yesterday.'

The intense journey comes after Vine joined MailOnline on a cycle ride through London's busy streets, highlighting the dangers faced by cyclists like himself.

'50% of London's drivers are fine. But the rest aren't,' he explained as he detailed how he gets about the capital.

'I am now starting to feel sorry for the bad driver,' Vine says in his voiceover of the video clip

'I am now starting to feel sorry for the bad driver,' Vine says in his voiceover of the video clip

The drivers eventually pull away from each other, with each trying to get the final word in as they continue to blow their horns while going in separate directions

The drivers eventually pull away from each other, with each trying to get the final word in as they continue to blow their horns while going in separate directions

'The crucial thing that's happened is they've bought a car because they've seen an advert of it doing 100mph on the side of the mountain and now they're doing 7mph.

'So there's a lot of frustration and you don't want to become a target for that frustration.'

The 57-year-old talk show host, who is an avid cyclist, regularly posts clips on social media taken from his helmet mounted video camera of him blasting drivers for carrying out what he says are dangerous manoeuvres. 

In September last year, the broadcaster posted footage of an 'unbelievable' incident which saw him almost reversed into by a van after he claimed it took an illegal right-hand turn.

The video showed Vine cycling down a road before entering a junction where a white van can be seen driving towards him on the other side of the road. 

The vehicle then turns right across the path of Vine, forcing him to stop his bike and repeatedly honk his horn. 

He then gets behind the van, which begins reversing into him and Vine then uses both hands to slam the back of the truck to make it stop. 

X users debated who was in the wrong, but most agreed that Vine was innocent and that he had a lucky escape.

The journey comes after Vine joined MailOnline on a cycle ride through London's busy streets

The journey comes after Vine joined MailOnline on a cycle ride through London's busy streets

Before that, Vine caught a foreign diplomat using a mobile phone and bragging 'I don't have licence' in busy traffic on Kensington High Street, just past the gated entrance of Kensington Palace.

He also had a near-miss with a HGV driver who cut across a cycle lane in central London without indicating.

In the clip Vine can be seen approaching the junction in the cycle lane, which is clear. 

Jeremy Vine divides opinion. He is generally loved by cyclists - and loathed by motorists alike

Jeremy Vine divides opinion. He is generally loved by cyclists - and loathed by motorists alike 

Instead of waiting for Vine to pass, the HGV driver turns left at the junction without indicating - cutting across the cycle lane as Vine approaches.

Other recent films have also seen van drivers tell the Radio 2 call-in presenter to 'f*** off' after he challenged them on their driving and a London bus driver brand him a 'terrible person'.

He has also sparred with an Amazon driver who called him a 'p****' and a 4x4 driver he caught scoffing a bag of chips and using her phone while at the wheel.

Some of Vine's 780,000-plus followers again debated the manoeuvre after he posted the clip – with users split on whether the taxi driver had been unsafe.