A story that has the Lobby in stitches. Bloody hell, you couldn't make it up. A surfer from Mexico City, let’s call him ‘El Niño del Asfalto,’ is paddling out in some nondescript Pacific swell, chasing a world record. But a chorus of British experts has weighed in. Authenticity. That's the new buzzword.
Whitehall didn’t send a memo. But someone in the Foreign Office twitched. The National Trust is probably drafting a position paper. The BBC has already booked a roundtable for the Today programme.
Let’s be clear. No one in the Mexico City surfing scene asked for our opinion. They didn’t send a delegation to the Royal Geographical Society. But here we are. British cultural credentials being waved like a soggy Union Jack.
The surfer, we’ll call him ‘Chico’ for the sake of narrative, grew up in concrete. Not a beach in sight. He learned on a wave machine. A concept that makes Cornish surfers spit out their pasties. He’s chasing a wave height record. The sort of thing that gets you into the Guinness Book. But the authenticity police say his wave doesn’t count. It’s not ‘real.’ It’s not ‘pure.’ It didn’t form over a reef that’s been worshipped by the local tribe for centuries.
Who appointed us the guardians of wave purity? Since when does the British establishment dictate who can and cannot chase a world record on the ocean? This is a classic case of cultural gatekeeping dressed up as expertise.
I’ve been around Westminster long enough to smell a handout leak. This story came from a think tank. One of those ‘cultural policy’ outfits that no one reads. They want to regulate the definition of a wave. Imagine. A government-approved wave. With a certificate of origin.
The surfing fraternity is in uproar. The usual suspects. The hashtag #AuthenticWave is trending in places that have never seen a surfboard. The entire saga is a gift for those who love a good row.
And let’s not forget the politics. The surfer is Mexican. A country we have a complicated history with. A country we once exploited for resources. Now we want to tell them their waves aren’t British enough? The irony is thick enough to paddle through.
The Foreign Secretary is ‘monitoring the situation.’ That’s code for ‘please don’t make a diplomatic incident out of a wave.’ But the damage is done. The British brand is taking a battering in the surfing world.
Meanwhile, the record attempt goes on. The surfer doesn’t care. He’s chasing a number. A spot in the history books. He doesn’t need our approval.
The real story here isn’t the wave. It’s the arrogance. The assumption that we, the British, can define what is culturally authentic. For everyone. Everywhere. It’s the same playbook. The same tone. The same condescension.
So while the experts pontificate, the wave waits. The surfer waits. The world record is still up for grabs. But the cultural war is just beginning.
And I’ll be watching. From a dark corner of a Whitehall pub. Drink in hand. Bloody wave’s not the only thing breaking today.








