Pregnant Celebrity Gogglebox star Daisy May Cooper hits back at cruel trolls slamming her appearance on the show

PREGNANT Celebrity Gogglebox star Daisy May Cooper hit back at a cruel troll who slammed her appearance on the show.

The This Country star, 34, made her debut on the Channel 4 show on Friday's episode.

However, Daisy – who is pregnant with her second child with husband Will Weston – shared a post with some of the abuse she received after appearing on the show.

Sharing a Tweet on Instagram, the post said: "Watching Celebrity Gogglebox and Daisy May Cooper looks like a troll."

The star then cut away to a video of her dancing to "Trolls Just Want To Have Fun", from the film Trolls 2.

She captioned the video: "Haters gonna hate, but I'm going to carry on letting my hooters swing."

Daisy announced she was pregnant with her second child in March of this year.

The Kerry Mucklowe star wrote: "Thrilled to say me and @willwestonlandscape are expecting another babber ❤️❤️❤️❤️."

Fans including Jessie Wallace were delighted, with the EastEnders actress writing: "????????????????????❤️."

Daisy and Will, who are already parents to a daughter called Pip, married last September in the Cotswolds.


She shot to fame in 2017 after This Country, a mockumentary about rural life, proved a huge hit on BBC Three.

She plays slovenly Kerry alongside her real-life brother Charlie, as her dopey cousin Kurtan.

They are joined in the show by their real-life dad Paul, who plays Kerry's feckless, criminal father Martin Mucklowe.

Speaking on Lorraine in March, the Bafta-winning actress said she created the comedy while they were so poor they couldn't even afford to buy McDonalds.

Daisy said: "It was such a bleak time because I’d just come out of drama school and I thought I’d get loads of auditions and I got none.

"I got a cleaning job paying about £100 a month and we thought we had to write something because humour was the only thing getting us through.

"Even finding the £9 for auditions on National Express was tough. A lot of it is based on experiences that we’ve had.

"When they were talking about not being able to afford a McDonald's and watching their friends eating it, that was us."

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