UK Adverts over-represent black people while ignoring over-70s - 4/51 is the new 13/50

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https://www.thetimes.com/uk/media/a...e-still-being-shunned-in-tv-adverts-56dnpmncw/https://archive.is/SVIuX

Although showing of ethnic groups is improving, a study reveals a stark disparity in representation of minorities
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Diversity in representation of racial groups has improved in adverts, but other minorities are rarely featured

A study into the representation of minorities in television adverts has found that more than half feature black people, but disabled people remain severely underrepresented.
Jack Thorne, the creator of Adolescence, has called for “self-examination” from advertising bosses after Channel 4’s Mirror on the Industry study found that representation of the disabled, elderly and pregnant lagged well behind that for people of colour.
The research was carried out by the agency Tapestry, which for a sixth year audited the top 500 adverts across all broadcasters over two separate four-week periods.
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Jack Thorne

It found that the proportion of adverts featuring black people jumped after the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, from 37 per cent in 2020 to 51 per cent in 2022, and has remained stable since.

Black people make up about 4 per cent of the population of England and Wales, according to 2021 census data.
Meanwhile people from a south Asian background appeared in 17 per cent of adverts, up from 13 per cent in 2023, and east Asians featured in 11 per cent of ads. The groups account for 8 and 1 per cent of the population respectively.
Other minority groups were less common. Despite accounting for almost 18 per cent of the population, disabled people featured in just 4 per cent of adverts last year — a proportion that has not changed since 2018.

Those categorised by researchers as LGBTQIA+ appeared 2 per cent of the time, down from the previous five-year average, and below the 3 per cent of the population they account for.
The over-70s were included in 2 per cent of adverts, while pregnant women appeared in just 0.1 per cent.
Thorne, who is autistic and previously suffered from a severe skin condition, campaigned for disabled accessibility in UK television, which led to the creation of the TV Access Project. He said that brands should follow the progressive strides being taken by broadcasters.
“It is a huge shame the advertising industry is failing to see what broadcasters do. It limits what they can do,” Thorne said. “I hope these figures have an impact and lead them to some self-examination and change.”
Melissa Johns, a disabled actress who stars in the ITV drama Grantchester and is co-founder of the advocacy group TripleC, said that early in her career she faced discrimination from an advertiser that did not want its brand to be associated with her.
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Melissa Johns says she got fewer roles in adverts because of her disability

“I was told not to expect to get many ads because people associate with what they see. They said that viewers will question if a chocolate bar is only for disabled people if they see a one-armed person eating it,” she said. “Or whether their own arm would drop off if they ate it!”
Johns added that advertisers had a powerful role to play in changing perceptions of disabled people. “Brands should ask to see a greater range of potential actors when they go to casting agencies,” she said.
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Currys’ “sigh of relief” advert was praised for its inclusiveness

Currys’ “sigh of relief” ad, produced in partnership with the Royal National Institute of Blind People and featuring a shop assistant showing how technology can meet blind and partially sighted people’s accessibility needs, was singled out for praise.
Marcus Ryder, chief executive of the Film and TV Charity said the research demonstrated a need for greater diversity among advertising bosses, which would result in a more “authentic” representation of Britain.
“The findings reflect the prejudices and biases of those making the adverts. What do they think is sexy? What do they think is cool?” Ryder said.
“If [black people] are over-indexing, that speaks to the people behind the camera and reflects the fact that popular culture is dominated by African Americans, who are often seen as sexy or fashionable.”
Researchers found that more than 70 per cent of black people polled felt that companies “should do more to represent people like me” in adverts.
Ryder noted that the study highlighted “colourism”, where lighter-skinned black people featured more frequently, while those darker-skinned actors who did appear were more likely to be male and working-class.
“Diversity should always be far more than just about counting heads,” said Ryder. “Is the black person just seen as a regular dad? Sometimes it feels as if, after the age of 30, all black people die off. Bosses look at hitting targets as opposed to hitting accuracy.”
Bobi Carley, director of industry relations for ISBA, the society for advertisers, said its members were committed to being “fully representative of society”.
 
I saw a J Crew ad like a week ago showing a family where the dad was black, mom was white, one kid Hispanic, and the other kid Chinese.

On top of being impossible genetically it was so woke it was jarring.
 
I will never understand the people that are upset that ads aren't specifically targeting them. Why would you want that? Please try to sell my more shit i don't need Mr. Madmen.
Perhaps there are consequences for an endless barrage of positive portrayals, recognition and normalization in media.
 
In the off chance I'm watching cable the most fun game to play is to spot how many whites appear. White women appear quite frequently(as in one token one per ad), but for white men, I have gone entire ad breaks without even seeing one. And even when they do appear, often they're depicted as the ignorant customer rather than anything respectable. The UK also likes to re-run ads from a decade ago, so the best chance at seeing white families to catch an old ad.
I do the same with training decks/ informational stuff at work. The yearly harassment training is a prime source of white men though!
A while back i changed companies and they still had a load of old training slides for some technical stuff that hadn’t been updated. The difference between the old and the new was striking to say the least
 
I've seen whole commercial breaks with nothing but fat niggers. It's actually entertaining now. Every time a commercial break begins, I feel like I'm playing a slot machine.

I do the same with training decks/ informational stuff at work. The yearly harassment training is a prime source of white men though!
A while back i changed companies and they still had a load of old training slides for some technical stuff that hadn’t been updated. The difference between the old and the new was striking to say the least
That's where you can reliably find white men. In any spot that's addressing a problem everyone knows is a nigger problem, they cast a white man. STDs, sexual harassment, crime... I once saw a spot with an Oriental trying to break into a nice home, but the concerned black father looked at his alarm system and felt secure. It's hilarious.
 
I once saw a spot with an Oriental trying to break into a nice home, but the concerned black father looked at his alarm system and felt secure. It's hilarious
Is anyone buying it? Do reddit style faggot NPCs believe it's a reflection of reality? Do niggers feel justifiably embarrassed and pandered to?

It's funny right now, but will it be funny in 50 years when it never stops and people assume it really is true somehow?
 
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