A Peppa Pig theme park is exactly the sort of thing you‘d expect to hear someone talking about at 10:30 on a Monday morning - if you were watching Channel 5. But maybe not when you are watching a speech by the prime minister.
For some reason, when giving a speech at the CBI Conference in South Shields, Boris Johnson made a point of waxing lyrical about the children’s animated show after he visited Peppa Pig World on Sunday with his wife Carrie and son Wilfred.
In an odd moment in an already bumbling speech, Johnson asked the crowd how many of them had visited the family theme park in Paultons Park, Hampshire. Johnson’s question got a muted response, much to his dismay.
Regardless, Johnson carried on recounting his visit saying that “he very much enjoyed it” and that it was “his kind of place,” which prompted some laughter from the audience.
Johnson carried on talking about Peppa Pig World and championed its “discipline in schools” and “heavy emphasis on new mass transit systems” but wasn’t too impressed about the stereotypes being forced on Daddy Pig.
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He continued: “The real lesson about Peppa Pig World, for me, was the power of UK creativity. Who would have believed that a pig that looks like a hairdryer, or a Picasso-like hairdryer, a pig that was rejected by the BBC would now be exported to 180 countries, with theme parks in both America and China as well as in the New Forest at a business that is worth at least £6 billion to this country. “
He added that he thought that was “pure genius” and that “no Whitehall civil servant would conceivably come up with Peppa.”
While Johnson might have thought this was a worthwhile tangent to go off on, the reaction on social media is unimpressed, to say the least.
Moses parted the Red Sea, @BorisJohnson just stayed at a friend's villa there! Suspect the CBI would have learnt considerably more from Peppa Pig. https://t.co/s132MoQrE6
— David Lammy (@DavidLammy) November 22, 2021
Ladies & Gentlemen, the Prime Minister: pic.twitter.com/83kfv8NtHo
— William Kedjanyi (@KeejayOV3) November 22, 2021
Boris Johnson should’ve stayed in Peppa Pig World.
— Kevin Maguire (@Kevin_Maguire) November 22, 2021
His bizarre performance and speech at the CBI conference will alarm business leaders, Tory MPs and voters.
Nurse!
Macmillan
— James Felton (@JimMFelton) November 22, 2021
We have not overthrown the divine right of kings for the divine right of experts
Churchill
Failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts
Johnson [fumbling through pages]
Has anyone here been to Peppa Pig World?
Opens Twitter, sees the PM has praised Peppa pig world.
— 🎃 Duffeh | 🏳️🌈 (@Duffeh_Leeds) November 22, 2021
I'm going back to bed. https://t.co/ZtJU1qOJvX pic.twitter.com/cqxAJfvaE6
Boris Johnson arriving at "Peppa Pig World" 😃 pic.twitter.com/puPdQ5WODJ
— russ (@dirk7890) November 22, 2021
"Peppa Pig World" ladies and gentlemen I present our PM 🤣🤣 pic.twitter.com/hL1toBSfBW
— russ (@dirk7890) November 22, 2021
PM's *green growth* speech to CBI was incoherent & rambling
— Caroline Lucas (@CarolineLucas) November 22, 2021
Stories about Peppa Pig, imitating a racing car & *Mother Nature is against wfh* - really?
Meanwhile Govt pursues obsession with endless GDP growth on finite planet & slashing of environmental regulations to get there
Lol, he's crap at speeches, thinks he's Moses and is chatting about Peppa Pig, but actually what he's doing to day is a detailed robbing of the poorer off to protect the richest. Its full of niggly details and difficult maths but the fact remains. He's laughing at us
— Jess Phillips MP (@jessphillips) November 22, 2021
A national embarrassment, as well as a corrupt coward.pic.twitter.com/eSv19QJdKf
— Dr Rosena Allin-Khan 💙 (@DrRosena) November 22, 2021
What is it with Tory PMs and pigs
— Hannah Jane Parkinson (@ladyhaja) November 22, 2021
Other highlights of Johnson’s speech included him championing the “bouncebackability” of British business, imitating a race car and namechecking former leader of the Soviet Union Vladimir Lenin.
Perhaps the most embarrassing moment was when he appeared to lose his place in his speech and spent around 20 seconds shuffling through his papers, trying to find his spot again.