Are Advertisers Finally Realising They Need to Stop Over-Representing Black People?

Black people make up 4% of the UK but appear in over half of adverts, according to a new Channel 4 report

This post, authored by Lee Taylor, is republished with permission from The Daily Sceptic

I can’t be the only one who has noticed how most modern adverts now follow a formula: for every white actor, there is a black actor.

This would be unremarkable if it reflected reality – but with over 80% of the UK population being white and only 4% being black, it feels forced, unnatural, almost performative.

Channel 4’s recent study, ‘Mirror on the Industry‘, confirms what many viewers have long suspected: advertising excessively overrepresents certain groups in the name of diversity, while older people, pregnant women and the true majority – white Britons – are far less visible.



The underrepresented

Despite feminism – in all of its forms – being widely glorified across the advertising world, one of the most overlooked groups comprised pregnant women, who appear in just 0.1% of adverts, despite around 50% of women having at least one child by the age of 30.

In a country already anxious about declining birth rates, this near-absence further marginalises a critical stage of life, sending a subtle message about which experiences matter most to our country’s marketing departments.

Another group to be nominally represented in advertising is pensioners, who appeared in only 2% of the top 500 commercials studied. This is particularly striking given that pensioners are among society’s most affluent groups.

This demographic not only possesses substantial purchasing power but also represents a growing segment of the population. The omission of pensioners from advertisements may reflect a missed opportunity for brands to engage with a financially stable and increasingly influential audience.

Marketing isn’t about morality. It’s about message, audience and resonance. The best advertising speaks directly to the customer. It understands them, reflects their aspirations, makes them feel seen.

So what happens when the majority are made invisible? White Britons make up over four fifths of the UK population, yet they’re often conspicuously absent in advertising. 

Are we out of the woke woods?

Could this survey mark a turning point – a formal admission that progressive marketing has strayed beyond what is reasonable or necessary? Perhaps.

But a recent case study shows we are still lost deep in the woods of wokeness. Just weeks ago, Sanex’s shower gel advert was banned for “suggesting white skin is superior to black skin”. 

The 28-second advert opened with a black woman covered in a clay-like substance to illustrate the discomfort of dry skin, and closed with a white woman showering; her skin clean and comforted.

To most viewers, it was a simple before-and-after demonstration of a product’s effectiveness. Yet two complaints were enough for the Advertising Standards Authority to rule it must never be broadcast again.

Is this preoccupation with avoiding offence to a racial minority that is already overrepresented really necessary? It takes little observation to see the lengths to which the advertising world goes to accommodate black people; indeed, Channel 4’s study reported they were featured in over half of the 500 adverts surveyed. 

Cosmopolitan UK’s recent launch of its exclusively ‘Black Beauty Hub’ highlights just how strongly the advertising and fashion sectors have shifted to prioritise black women’s representation.

What emerges from all of this is a striking imbalance: while some groups – particularly black women in fashion and beauty – are consistently elevated, others such as pregnant women and pensioners remain virtually invisible.

Advertising, or ‘progressive advertising’ if you will, is supposed to reflect the society it sells to, yet current practice too often distorts that reality, overrepresenting some demographics while sidelining others.

The result is not greater diversity, but a skewed picture in which the industry’s obsession with signalling inclusion ends up narrowing the range of stories it tells.

Lee Taylor is CEO and founder of marketing agency Uncommon Sense.

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Comments 9
  1. It’s not propaganda, conspiracy, or social engineering. It’s simply business. Blacks are the demographic the ads will influence. Advertisers know black people will fall for the advertising.
    Anyone of superior intelligence won’t watch TV. People of average intelligence either ignore the ads, or worse, remember what not to buy since buying the heavily advertised products just pays for more advertising.

  2. “Are Advertisers Finally Realizing They Need to Stop Over-Representing Black People?” No. Advertisers will NEVER realize they need to stop over-representing black people.

  3. Well it wouldn’t be much of a selling point to have the woman put on the magic cream or whatever, go into the shower white and emerge black, would it?

  4. That’s the reality they’re trying to paint. That there are more minorities than there actually are, and that the streets are safe when they aren’t

  5. All ads are shite anyway, why would you want to watch them. Look at pauls christian media network banner at the top advertising wonderful accurate prophecy when necromancy is forbidden in the bible. Are they going to do a bogof on prophecy next.

  6. It’s interesting that this comes from Channel 4, when they are the worst, wokist over representers, giving even Netflix a run for its money.

  7. Of course they’re over-representing Black People. That’s the agenda, to foment confusion to augment a growing sense of a loss of white culture, and the people themselves. It’s just as bad, if not worse in Canada.

    1. Canada’s horrible. Particularly to be wary of is the push showing white women engaging with dudes outside their own culture. All cultures are not equal.

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