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The UK just unveiled a snazzy new $1.1 million paint job on its VIP Airbus A330 jet that Brits are calling 'Boris Force One'

  • The UK government's flagship VIP transport aircraft just exited the paint shop with a new, distinctly British livery.
  • The Royal Air Force operates the plane, repainted at a cost of over $1.1 million, according to The Sun, that now sports a Union Jack and the country's name written in gold lettering.
  • Some Brits are calling it "Boris Force One," a homage to the US Air Force One, while others are calling it "Hair Force One," in reference to Prime Minister Boris Johnson's hairstyle.

The US has Air Force One, Canada has Can Force One, and the UK now has Boris Force One.

That's what some Brits are now calling their government's VIP plane, fresh from the paint shop with a fresh look. Top government officials will now be flying in style as the Royal Air Force just unveiled the new, distinctly British paint job for the VIP-configured Airbus A330 jet that flies the country's leaders and royals.

The mostly white aircraft with "United Kingdom" emblazoned in gold lettering across the side and a Union Jack on the tail now represents the country on long-distance overseas trips. Ironically, the jet is painted in a style known in aviation as "Eurowhite."

The jet first arrived in the Royal Air Force's VIP fleet in 2016 following a near-$13 million restyling from its standard military configuration, according to CNBC. Despite boasting a luxurious interior, the A330 still wore its battleship gray colors like any other Royal Air Force transport plane and performed military-style missions when not flying the country's top brass.

The government previously relied on chartering airliners for the task, as seen when then-Prime Minister Tony Blair chartered a British Airways Concorde to visit the US, reported by the Associated Press.

Take a look.

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