There's a reason the Zen of Python includes this:
"There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it."
It also came with batteries included, which really lowered the learning curve.
Perl was well known for being a pain to read months after you wrote it. Most Python code in those days was readable by people who did not even know Python.
When I started my job in 2010, I took a class at work on Perl. I had done some Perl years before and had grown sick of it, but I thought I was just doing it "wrong" so I thought the course would tell me how to code in Perl "properly".
Nope - I'd been doing it "right" all along. I just hated the language. At the end of the course, I told the instructor (a graybeard) that he should just use Python, and that one day I'd teach the Python course and he should attend. He scoffed at the notion: "Languages will come and go, but Perl will always prevail!"
I never did teach that course, but I bumped into him about 7 years later. He had completely (and willingly) abandoned Perl for Python, and was a big Python advocate.