David Walliams has admitted he finds many of the acts on ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ “boring” because they’re errrm, too talented.
The 45-year-old judge took aim at many of the singers who audition for the show during a Q&A in London, explaining that he prefers the wannabes who are, well, a bit rubbish.

He said: “The talented people bore me. If I hear another person singing Mariah Carey or Whitney Houston.
“It is so boring. I much prefer the untalented people who come on the show as opposed to those who are talented. I like an old man hoola-hooping. That is pure joy.
“It is a celebration of eccentricity and anyone can get up and have a go. Everyone has an uncle who can play the spoons or an aunty who can sing opera.”

David also hinted at his frustration with his boss Simon Cowell’s timekeeping, saying the ‘BGT’ team are forced to endure “lots of waiting around” because he’s always late.
“Simon Cowell does not like to get out of bed until 4pm which means the whole show is thrown into chaos every day as we start late and there are children who need to go to bed and there are people who need to get a plane back somewhere,” he said.
“When we are in somewhere like Manchester, the audience are there at 2pm, he rolls up at 4pm and we start at 6pm.”
This year’s series kicked off with 16-year-old Sarah Ikumu’s show-stopping performance of ‘And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going’, from the film ‘Dreamgirls’, which was enough to earn Simon Cowell’s Gold Buzzer.
‘Britains Got Talent’ is on ITV at 8pm every Saturday.

Simon Cowell brushed off the controversy, though, insisting: “I see it as a testament to how we are as a country. We want everyone to do well, no matter where they are from. It’s a positive not a negative.”

However, by the time she made it through to the live finals, producers were accused of exploiting a vulnerable woman, with reports repeatedly suggesting she was struggling to cope with the media attention surrounding her.
Writing in the Daily Mail, Simon Cowell has later said: “Looking back on it all, it has become clear to me that we didn't handle the situation with Susan as well as we could have. Yet to be honest, when I analyse exactly what happened, I don't know that I could have done it any differently.”
Although Simon Cowell later allowed her to perform again at the end of the show, it was a memorably uncomfortable moment for BGT viewers, who questioned whether children should be allowed to take part in such a high-pressure competition.
However, David was met with a backlash from viewers when he made the unpopular decision to put through Christian Spridon, after his *ahem* unique take on Tom Jones’s Sex Bomb.

Claiming she was“relieved” to have been let go early, she added: “[Simon] was hours late. We would have to start at 9am and he wouldn't get there until 1pm. It was disrespectful to me, Amanda Holden and Piers Morgan. Throughout my career, if I have a call time of 9am, I'll be there at 8.30am ready to go. Simon didn't work like that, it was his party and he did it his way.
“It wasn't what I wanted to do anyway, I wanted to act. So when it didn't work out I wasn't bothered, it meant I could go back to doing what I really wanted to do."

J-Lo later insisted: “I don’t think I’m any racier than any other female pop artist. OK, I’ll wear a sexy outfit, but I think it’s more because my body shape’s a little different to other body shapes, so that’s not very fair.”


Eventually, the company issued a statement, insisting: “There has been speculation on the internet that Britain's Got Talent finalist Ronan Parke was known to and worked with Syco/Sony Music before entering the show. There is no truth in this story whatsoever. Ronan first came to Syco/Sony's attention when he entered this year's competition.”
Simon also addressed the controversy live on air, claiming: “There has been an allegation made in the papers - not in the papers actually, on the Internet - that Ronan Parke had a previous recording contract with me, that I’d bet him beforehand, both of which are complete and utter lies. He entered the show of his own accord, he’s 12 years old, this is a deliberate smear campaign.”