‘She’s a rude, belittling fat-shamer’: How Peppa Pig became every parent’s worst nightmare
Reshmi Bennett, a bakery owner and children’s author, was not prepared to lose her battle with TV’s most divisive pig. Like so many youngsters, Bennett’s six-year-old son had been wooed by the porky charms of Peppa Pig, the anthropomorphic superstar of children’s animation. But once Bennett sat down to watch the programme with her little boy, she was horrified. “Peppa’s so dislikeable,” she tells me. “She’s rude, entitled and belittling. She’s also a sore loser and unsupportive of her friends. She fat-shames her dad and ... [is] mean to her little brother.”
Bennett says her son quickly grew out of watching Peppa after he was put on a (potentially healthier) diet and . But her concerns about the character aren’t hers alone. They echo one of the great debates currently defining modern parenthood: Is she too rude and entitled for the children who worship her? Or does she merely mirror childhood in all its complexity?
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days