Zip-wire calamity to wild rugby tackles: The comedic face of UK's
Johnson
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[July 22, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - Dangling
helplessly from a zip-wire while waving British Union Jack flags, Boris
Johnson and his attempt to publicize a party in one of London's parks
became one of the most memorable non-sporting moments of the 2012
Olympic Games.
"It's going well ... Get me a ladder," the portly then-London Mayor
jovially shouted as the crowds below laughed along after he became
stuck.
For most politicians, such a turn of events would be an humiliating
embarrassment that could overshadow their careers. For the man famed for
his mop of unruly blond hair and expected to be named as Britain's next
prime minister on Tuesday, it was par for the course.
Johnson, 55, has made a point of turning run-of-the-mill publicity
events into a comedic adventure thanks to a large helping of upper-class
English eccentricity, a trait that has made him popular with many
Britons who see him as the antithesis of drab political rivals.
He came to wider public attention with his star turns on the BBC’s
popular satirical TV quiz show "Have I Got News For You" and his gift
for humor comes naturally.
Whether it is kissing fish in a visit to Essex in eastern England or
knocking a 10-year-old boy flying during an impromptu game of rugby
during a trip to Japan in 2015, Johnson's antics and undiplomatic
behavior have tended merely to enhance his reputation.
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London's Mayor Boris Johnson collides with 10-year-old Toki
Sekiguchi during a game of Street Rugby with a group of Tokyo
children, outside the Tokyo Square Gardens building October 15,
2015. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo
"My friends we export French knickers to France, French knickers
made in this country," he told a delighted audience during the 2016
campaign ahead of the referendum on whether to leave the European
Union.
Other famous photos that might have sunk a more conventional
politician included wearing a string of sausages round his neck to
promote new business in northern England and grimacing furiously
during a game of tennis using an old wooden racquet.
That ability to entertain his fans could now propel him into Downing
Street.
(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Stephen Addison)
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