David Beckham correcting Victoria after she calls herself ‘working class’ leaves Internet in splits

'Be honest - what car did your dad drive you to school in?' David Beckham asked Victoria

David Beckham correcting Victoria after she calls herself ‘working class’ leaves Internet in splits
David and Victoria Beckham have been married since 1999 (Instagram/ @victoriabeckham)

LONDON, UK: David Beckham did not let his wife Victoria be “dishonest” with their fans as he funnily corrected her when she claimed to come from a “working class” background.

The entertaining interaction between the pair reportedly happened in the newly-released Netflix documentary ‘Beckham’.

In one part of the show, Victoria recalled her initial romance with the former football star.

She said, as reported by The Mirror, “I just fancied him, it was as simple as that. I think because we both come from families that work really hard.”



 

Victoria Beckham claims parents 'worked really hard’

The renowned fashion designer continued, “Our parents worked really hard and we’re very working-class…” but she was immediately interrupted by David, who asked her to “be honest”.

The 49-year-old singer fired back saying, “I am being honest!” But David did not step back and asserted, “Be honest - what car did your dad drive you to school in?”

He again asked her, “Be honest, what car was it?” to which, Victoria said, “It's not a simple answer.”


 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Victoria Beckham (@victoriabeckham)


 

However, eventually, the television personality shared, “It depends but yes in the 80s my dad had a Rolls Royce!”

Satisfied with her answer, David just said, “Thank you,” before letting her complete her interview.


 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Victoria Beckham (@victoriabeckham)


 

'He wouldn't let her 'bend it like Beckham'

Many people took to Twitter to react to the hilarious interaction with one saying, “David Beckham is the last remaining investigative journalist.” Another tweeted, “Not just a great footballer 😃.”



 



 

“That head popping into the room and asking those questions is quality cinematography, 😂” a third user shared. Someone else remarked, “He wanted the truth, wouldn't let her 'bend it like Beckham'.”



 



 

“Many rich people like to act like they had it as hard as working-class people, so they hijack the term trying to change it's meaning. And a lot of people actually go along with it. You see it with many F1 drivers as well,” a person commented on a rather serious note. “That's the kind of persistence we need from BBC journalists,” a tweet added.



 

 



 

 


 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Victoria Beckham (@victoriabeckham)