logo
Peppa Pig has a new baby sister, as name and first photos revealed

Peppa Pig has a new baby sister, as name and first photos revealed

The name and first pictures of Peppa Pig's baby sister have been revealed as the family welcome a new member.
The animated show, which has told the story of Peppa, Daddy Pig, Mummy Pig, and her little brother George for more than two decades, announced the pregnancy in February.
ITV's Good Morning Britain presenter Richard Arnold on May 20 shared the first photographs of baby Evie.
Arnold said: 'Daddy Pig has just shared these pictures with me of Peppa's brand new baby sister Evie, named after Mummy Pig's Aunt Evie, she was born at 5.34am [0434 GMT] this morning.'
The gender of the baby was revealed in April when the chimneys of Battersea Power Station were lit up in pink to show Mummy Pig was expecting another girl.
The animated show later announced an hour-long 'Peppa Meets The Baby', which is due to come out on May 30 and will feature 10 song-filled episodes as Peppa and George prepare for the arrival of their sister.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This week in PostMag: a queer-friendly football team, Innsbruck and Michelin
This week in PostMag: a queer-friendly football team, Innsbruck and Michelin

South China Morning Post

time4 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

This week in PostMag: a queer-friendly football team, Innsbruck and Michelin

Throughout my life, I've been lucky to feel like I belong – at least as much as anyone can hope to. I grew up on the central coast of California, where ethnic ambiguity didn't raise any eyebrows. I was never made to feel different or like an outsider. 'People saw me as white, so that was how I felt,' wrote my colleague, and fellow half-Asian, Shea Driscoll, in a recent essay exploring his own evolving sense of identity. That hit home. And though I didn't explicitly think of myself as white, I certainly was never forced to think of myself as 'different'. I could just be. It was a privilege I didn't realise I had until I moved to the United States' East Coast. There, where the racial demographics are different from California, I started getting the question, 'But where are you really from?' for the first time. I met friends who looked like me but had spent their lives feeling like they didn't fit in. This issue's cover feature brought these memories flooding back. At its core, it's a story about making a space yourself when the world won't allow you one. Sarah Keenlyside spends a day on the pitch with Baes FC – a women- and queer-friendly football team in London founded by members of the Asian diaspora off the back of discrimination at other clubs. They've made a home and community for people who felt like outsiders elsewhere. There are so many ways a sense of home can be created. Off the pitch and inside three very distinct Hong Kong flats, Peta Tomlinson investigates the trend of wood as a way for interior designers to evoke a sense of warmth. It's a transformative effect on the city's usual cold, characterless residential spaces. As Michelin continues its march towards world domination, Gavin Yeung explores what it means to be the only Michelin-starred restaurant in your region as he stops at two establishments in Thailand in a delicious adventure. The Old World beckons to Peter Neville-Hadley as he finds himself wandering Innsbruck's history-laden streets in Austria. In what is mostly known as a ski destination, he discovers excitement off the powdered slopes in the city's palaces, churches and treasure-filled museums. For our loyal readers of Then & Now, I regret to inform you that this will be the last for a while. After more than two decades of columns, our dear Jason Wordie will be taking a (much-deserved) break. We look forward to his return – but until then, we'll miss it dearly as I expect you all will, too.

Ex-England football captain David Beckham to be awarded knighthood by King Charles: reports
Ex-England football captain David Beckham to be awarded knighthood by King Charles: reports

South China Morning Post

time16 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Ex-England football captain David Beckham to be awarded knighthood by King Charles: reports

David Beckham will be awarded a knighthood by King Charles III next week in recognition of his football career and his charity work, reports said on Friday. The former England football captain is set to be named in the King's Birthday Honours List, according to the BBC and other sources. Other sporting figures who have been awarded the title include Beckham's former manager at Manchester United, Alex Ferguson, and British tennis great Andy Murray. The Sun newspaper said he would take the title of 'Sir' and his wife Victoria, a former member of the Spice Girls pop group, would be known as Lady Beckham. The 50-year-old, who has long been in the running for a knighthood, was appointed an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2003 – a lower award in Britain's honours system. David Beckham was appointed an officer of the Order of the British Empire in 2003. Photo: AP Victoria later received the same award for services to the fashion industry.

Welcome to Wrexham, that'll be US$475 million please. Hollywood pair looking to cash in
Welcome to Wrexham, that'll be US$475 million please. Hollywood pair looking to cash in

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

Welcome to Wrexham, that'll be US$475 million please. Hollywood pair looking to cash in

Wrexham AFC, the Welsh football club co-owned by actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, are reportedly looking to sell a stake in the team that would set the franchise's valuation at US$475 million. Sources said the club was looking for an investor to join the Hollywood stars, who bought Wrexham for US$2.5 million in late 2020. Since then, the team have become the subject of a popular documentary series on FX – Welcome to Wrexham – and have earned promotion through England's system for a record three straight years. Internal talks were focused on how to raise capital to help Wrexham compete in the Championship next season, one step below the Premier League, with the latter arguably the top football league in the world. The projected value would represent a nearly 19,000 per cent jump in the team's worth in less than five years. Rob McElhenney (left) and Ryan Reynolds bought Wrexham in late 2020. Photo: AP For comparison, Championship team Sheffield United fetched US$135.5 million in a takeover late last year, and Everton – a Premier League side – sold for an estimated US$500 million in December.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store