
My daughter shares her name with Peppa Pig's new baby sister Evie - and I'm worried kids will now oink at my little girl
News of the birth of Evie Pig, the latest arrival in the Peppa Pig universe, has captured headlines as fans celebrate Mummy and Daddy Pig's bundle of joy.
But the reveal of Evie Pig's name is cause for concern for one mother whose own daughter is named Evie, as she fears it will become a source of bullying.
Danielle Price, 27, said she worries other children will start oinking at her two-year-old daughter in the playground because of the cartoon character.
She said she chose the name 'Evie' because it was 'pretty and delicate', and was initially excited by the reveal of the new cartoon baby.
But after some thought, Danielle now has concerns that Evie will be associated with the animated pig when meeting other children.
The sales advisor from Dromara, County Down, Ireland, said: 'Initially, I was like "oh my goodness, this is so good". And when I go home, Evie is going to be thrilled when I tell her.
'After I thought about it a bit, I realised children will know this pig as Evie Pig, and what if people started calling my daughter Evie Pig or started oinking at her?
'I know that if a child were called Peppa, people would call them Peppa Pig,' added the concerned mother.
Danielle said she chose the name 'Evie' because she 'thought it was a really lovely name', adding: 'It is pretty and delicate, I just loved the name.'
When she told her daughter Evie that Peppa's baby sister shared her name, Danielle said she was 'over the moon' - but she isn't 100 per cent sure the toddler has 'grasped' what it might mean.
When she first heard the news, Danielle said she was happy because her daughter is a huge Peppa Pig fan - but that quickly changed.
She said: 'At first I was flattered, I've picked a good name, and they think it is a good name too. As I thought that, I was like "no no, this is not good".
'You're telling me that I gave birth to my daughter in January 2023, and I thought "yep, that's it, she's called Evie". That is a pretty name, it is perfect for her.
'You're telling me that Mommy Pig looked at a pig and thought the same thing? I don't think so.'
Danielle is particularly worried that her daughter sharing a name with the cartoon pig will lead to her being bullied and getting oinked at in the playground by other children.
'What if my child is in nursery or school, or she's just making friends at soft play and they're like 'hey, what's your name?'.
'And she's like 'Evie' and they're like 'oh, like Evie Pig?' and then she is compared to a pig for the rest of her life?
'And even worse than that, kids are nasty, what if a kid starts oinking at her for fun?'
Peppa Pig and her family announced the new arrival on Tuesday May 20, three months after Mummy Pig revealed live on Good Morning Britain that she was pregnant with her third piglet.
Fans were delighted by the announcement, but the excitement didn't stop there as Mummy Pig even appeared on the cover of Grazia UK in a maternity 'shoot' to celebrate her pregnancy.
Then last month, the Pig family held a huge gender reveal party at London's Battersea Power Station.
The chimneys of the iconic power station lit up in pink to reveal they were expecting a baby girl.
The VIP party, which was held at the world's first-ever permanent Peppa Pig store at Battersea, also served to fundraise for the National Children's Trust (NCT), the UK's leading charity for pregnancy and parents.
Earlier this month, it was announced that the NCT is the official 'Pregnancy and Parenting Charity Partner' for Peppa Pig in the UK.
When she was still pregnant, Mummy Pig told Grazia that she and Daddy Pig were going through 'so many ideas' for baby names.
She revealed: 'Too many, frankly! Oink! Knowing it's a girl has narrowed our options down a bit – I'm not sure Peter, Percy or Patrick Pig really work as girls' names! But it's too difficult to choose now.
'When she's here and looking up at me and Daddy Pig, we'll just know the perfect name. That's what we did when Peppa and George were born.'
Peppa Pig first aired in 2004 and has since been broadcast in 180 territories and translated into 40 languages. It's spawned books, toys and even two theme parks, with the global Peppa empire now worth over £1billion.
Mummy Pig gave birth to Evie Pig at the Lindo Wing in London, the same maternity ward in St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, that the Princess of Wales welcomed all three of her children.
Prices at the the exclusive maternity ward start at £5,900 for just one night, rising up to £7,500 for deluxe packages.
The birth was announced with a royal-inspired twist on the classic royal birth announcement, complete with a town crier, a scroll-style proclamation, and the unveiling of an official Peppa Pig birth certificate. Big siblings Peppa and George are said to be over the moon and excited to meet their new baby sister, while Mummy and Daddy Pig are ' looking forward to lots of happy snorts and sleepless nights.'
Big siblings Peppa and George are said to be over the moon and excited to meet their new baby sister, while Mummy and Daddy Pig are 'looking forward to lots of happy snorts and sleepless nights.'
GMB revealed that 'understandably, Mummy Pig is resting but Daddy Pig has let me know he will be free to catch up next week for his first ever TV interview and another glimpse of the new baby.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
8 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Bitter family rift at the heart of Ed Sheeran's Emerald Isle roots: How Suffolk- born singer's beloved grandparents were shunned by loved ones, as he cops backlash for 'identifying culturally' as Irish
The devastating family rift at the heart of Ed Sheeran 's roots is revealed after he sparked a backlash for claiming he 'identifies culturally' as Irish on the The Louis Theroux Podcast. While the singer, 34, was born in Halifax, Yorkshire, and famously raised in Suffolk, he has many family members in Ireland and fondly recalls childhood holidays spent there. His father John's family hails from Belfast, and is one of eight siblings born to Nancy Mulligan and William Sheeran. While Nancy was a Catholic from the Republic of Ireland, her husband was a Protestant from Northern Ireland, so when they fell in love during the Second World War it caused huge ructions on both sides of the family. It was this bitter fall out in Ed's paternal lineage that inspired his hit 2017 song Nancy Mulligan, named after his grandmother. The folk track tells the tale of his grandparents being shunned for marrying outside their religions. Reflecting on the romance, Ed said: 'They got engaged and no one turned up at their wedding. He stole all the gold teeth in his dental surgery and melted them down into a wedding ring, and they wore borrowed clothes to get married. 'And just basically have this kind of Romeo And Juliet romance, which is like the most romantic thing'. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Despite the couple, who met in London during WWII before returning to their native Ireland years later, not being supported by their families they went on to start their own and welcomed a whopping eight children over their almost 70-year marriage. As well as Ed's father John they shared Jim, Bill, Peter, Chris, MaryAnne, Bridget and the late Sally as well as 23 grandchildren, with Ed spending many holidays wth his grandparents in County Wexford. William died in 2013, while Nancy passed away in 2023 aged 98, but Ed was forced to miss her funeral due to his ongoing and highly publicised copyright trial in New York - that he eventually won. Speaking at the service, Ed's father said the singer was 'so upset' to miss his beloved grandmother's funeral but he has to 'defend his integrity' across the pond. He then turned to the 'Romeo and Juliet' love story referenced in Ed's song: 'Mum met Dad, a dental student, at a Guy's nurses' home party'. 'Friendship turned into love, but the Northern Ireland Presbyterian side of dad's family did their utmost to end the relationship'. 'Their wedding was attended by only one family member – mum's twin sister Peggy. They lived above that dental surgery in South London with a growing family. Eventually five boys and three girls. Mum joked to us that she had originally wanted 11 children so she could feel the football or cricket team.' When Ed's song inspired by the romance was released in 2017, a sweet video emerged of his grandmother listening to it for the first time. The then 92-year-old told RTE News: 'I'll never think of him as being famous, I have to say. He's exactly the same as he always is when he visits. 'And it's very rare because he's always working and when you think he was working from the age of 14, you'd have to feel sorry for him, you know he's so tired but he loved it.' Following Nancy's death Ed revealed the loss inspired the song Supermarket Flowers on his album Divide. He said on social media: 'When my grandma passed away I wrote a song called Supermarket Flowers about the situation. The verse lyrics are about packing up her room at that hospital. The care she received was incredible; the people who worked there so lovely, compassionate, funny and caring. 'Me and my family became very close to the nurses who worked there and my mum is still in touch with them now. I just wanted to make a tribute to my gran, She was the musical one in my family. Hopefully I will pass that on to my kids'. Opening up on his heritage on the latest episode of The Louis Theroux Podcast, Ed explained: 'I class my culture as Irish. I think that's what I grew up with. 'My dad's family is ... he's got seven brothers and sisters. We'd spend all of our holidays in Ireland. 'My first musical experiences were in Ireland, I grew up with trad music in the house. So I identify culturally as Irish, but I was obviously born and raised in Britain.' The Galway Girl hitmaker went on to say that he was 'really proud' of his Irish cultural roots, and that he didn't feel that he had to 'just be British', as it was down to 'how you feel'. Nancy passed away in 2023 aged 98, but Ed was forced to miss her funeral due to his ongoing and highly publicised copyright trial in New York (pictured) - that he eventually won He said: 'I don't overthink it but I do feel like my culture is something that I'm really proud of and grew up with and want to express. 'And I feel like just because I was born in Britain doesn't necessarily mean that I have to just be [British], there's loads of people I know that are half this or quarter this. 'I don't think there's any rules to it. It should be how you feel and how you were raised and what you lean into.' And when asked whether he gets 'a lot of love' in Ireland, the chart-topping star also praised the country as being 'my second home'. He said: 'I'd say it's basically my second home, musically. I'd say Ireland is the place that I am most successful musically.' 'I come from an Irish family, spent most of my childhood summers and birthdays and Christmases in Ireland listening to trad music bands,' Ed previously said in an interview. However Ed's comments sparked backlash as fans took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to hit back at his claims he is Irish as they claimed he was 'pretending'. They penned: 'Identifies just means to pretend'; 'does Ed Sheeran hold eligibility to start for the Irish national football team?'; 'They can have him'; 'It's not where you're born. It's your bloodline that determines what you are. Cliff Richard was born in India. Is he Indian? You can be born anywhere in the World. That doesn't automatically make you part of that culture.'; The Galway Girl hitmaker went on to say that he was 'really proud' of his Irish cultural roots, and that he didn't feel that he had to 'just be British', as it was down to 'how you feel' However Ed's comments sparked backlash as fans took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to hit back at his claims he is Irish 'Whilst he's of the Irish diaspora, he's English'; 'Why can't he just identify as himself'; 'That Galway Girl must've spun his head around'; 'Ed Sheeran tour posters for the top of the bonfire'; 'Grand so. Tell him he's now eligible to join the Gardai' 'His song Galway girl has to be up there with the worst songs of all rubbish with all the usual Irish cliché only thing he missed in the lyrics was shouting 'up the ra'..seems a nice lad but terrible music'. However others understood his point of view as they argued: 'Well his da is Irish so he's perfectly entitled to.'; 'You can be born and raised for some time anyway in England and still identify culturally as Irish. It's not unprecedented';


NBC News
12 hours ago
- NBC News
Video game actors' strike ends after tentative deal is reached
The video game actors' strike was suspended on Wednesday after a tentative deal with game publishers was announced, bringing an end to the union's nearly year-long strike. The previous Interactive Media Agreement between the actors and video game companies expired in July 2022, and did not have any protections for artificial intelligence, according to the SAG-AFTRA, which counts 2,600 voice actors, stunt performers, motion capture and performance capture actors among its union members. The actors began striking in July. Activision Productions, Blindlight, Disney Character Voices, Electronic Arts Productions, Formosa Interactive, Insomniac Games, Llama Productions, Take 2 Productions and WB Games were among the struck video game companies. The strike also applied to specific games on a case-by-case basis. The future of generative AI — and how it can be used to replace labor — was a crucial sticking point for actors and writers during last year's Hollywood strikes. While the actors and writers unions came to deals with studios in 2023, negotiations between video game actors and major game developers continued. Terms of the new contract have not yet been announced. But in a news release about the tentative deal, SAG-AFTRA National Executive Director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland mentioned progress had been made regarding AI provisions. "Patience and persistence has resulted in a deal that puts in place the necessary A.I. guardrails that defend performers' livelihoods in the A.I. age, alongside other important gains," he stated. Crabtree-Ireland, who also served as the chief negotiator, acknowledged "the sacrifices made by video game performers and the dedication of the Interactive Media Agreement Negotiating Committee throughout these many months of the video game strike." SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher also commended the "incredible courage and persistence" of the video game performers, as well as 'the tireless work of our negotiating committee" in helping secure a deal. A spokesperson for the union did not immediately respond to a request for additional comment on Wednesday. Audrey Cooling, a spokesperson for the video game producers party to the Interactive Media Agreement, also commended the deal. 'This agreement builds on three decades of successful partnership between the interactive entertainment industry and the union," she sand in an email statement. "It delivers historic wage increases of over 24% for performers, enhanced health and safety protections, and industry-leading AI provisions requiring transparency, consent and compensation for the use of digital replicas in games. We look forward to continuing to work with performers to create new and engaging entertainment experiences for billions of players throughout the world.'


The Guardian
16 hours ago
- The Guardian
Mix Tape review – it's easy to fall for this sweet and intense romance
The question 'will they or won't they?' permeates many romantic stories, and it is almost always answered with 'they do eventually'. In the four-part Irish-Australian drama Mix Tape, that evergreen question is still there, more or less, but it has been deepened and expanded in interesting ways. It's not really about whether Alison and Dan will get together because we know they already did – one of the show's two distinctly different timelines follows them as lovestruck teenagers in the 1980s. But the other timeline, set in the present day, reveals Alison and Dan went their separate ways and haven't seen each other for many years. There's the possibility they might get back together, despite each being married with children to other people. But for me, it was more interesting to contemplate whether either of them could finally find healing and closure for their deeply unresolved feelings. The past is a lonely place, as they say, and it has left big sandbags weighing down their minds. Which all sounds rather heavy. But this series – directed by Lucy Gaffy and written by Joe Spain, adapting Jane Sanderson's novel of the same name – is staged with lightness of touch and is a real pleasure to watch. At its core are four beautifully judged performances: from Teresa Palmer and Jim Sturgess as adult Alison and Dan in the present day, and Florence Hunt and Rory Walton-Smith as their younger selves. The latter convey giddy, intoxicating young love while the former are more plaintive and yearning. As adults, Dan is a Sheffield-based music journalist while Alison is a bestselling novelist living in Australia. When a radio interviewer inquires about her upbringing in Sheffield, she gently infers she'd rather talk about something else. The script is full of small but salient moments like these, fleshing out the characters' lives and emotions without dumbing things down or applying highlighter pen. We're introduced to the leads at a house party in Sheffield in 1989, when young Dan spots Alison from across the room. They get to know each other partly by swapping mix tapes, which of course enables plenty of needle drops (think Joy Division, the Cure, New Order). I initially feared a cheesy 'soundtrack of love' element, but Gaffy strikes a good balance: sweet but never cloying. The characters' intense connection is tempered by the knowledge they'll ultimately split, the circumstances gradually revealed. When Dan sends Alison a friend request years later, we can tell by the look on her face that it's welcomed. Visually conveying this kind of emotional information isn't easy, though it helps to have complex and enigmatic eyes like Teresa Palmer, who is very good at saying a lot with a little. She often plays roles that require her to balance relatability with concealed depths, such as the recent miniseries The Last Anniversary, Disney+'s cult-themed drama The Clearing and Cate Shortland's kidnap movie Berlin Syndrome. Sturgess is excellent too as Dan, a man who seems to be constantly running things over in his mind, haunted by gaps in his life that might never be filled. The terms 'flashback' and 'flashforward' feel too sharp and simple for Mix Tape. The jumps back and forward in time are more like joins, feeling fluid and instinctual; props to editors Katrina Barker and Christine Cheung. The trick – also demonstrated recently in Justin Kurzel's psychologically complex series The Narrow Road to the Deep North – is to make each timeline feel both independent and interconnected: satisfying on their own terms, but also inseparable. I was moved by both story strands in Mix Tape, which really do feel like two sides of the same coin. At four episodes of roughly one hour apiece, the runtime felt just right: more than enough to truly get to know these people. I left wishing the best for them. Mix Tape is on Binge in Australia now, with a UK release yet to be announced.