Rod Liddle's Spectator article Is Reform Racist examines Sarah Pochin's (Reform MP) claims that TV ads in the UK today are unrepresentative - i.e. they include far too many black people:

[https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/is-reform-racist/]

As the Guardian reported this week – and one could wish for no more valuable conduit when it comes to talking about racism – ‘In 2020, 37 per cent of adverts featured black people; that number increased to 45 per cent in 2021 and 51 per cent in 2022 before a decline in 2023 to 49 per cent. The 2021 census showed that 4 per cent of the population of England and Wales is black.’

Although FNN does have a soft spot for that Maltesers Look on the Light Side ad with the inter-racial geriatrics 'getting it on':

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQkLGamKKAg

Rod then moves deftly on to dwarfs:

But, as you know, it is not just the TV ads. Every single quiz show now has its quotas. They employ people to make sure that every episode has a black face on it and a gay and preferably a disabled contestant. I know someone who actually performed this task for a BBC quiz programme and was berated by the producer when one week he ended up with two dwarfs on the same show. ‘One dwarf is sufficient. We can’t have two of them,’ the producer raged.

What a nightmare for all these people who have to keep up with quotas in order not to be accused of being 'racist'.

Shame Rod did not move onto drug culture because then he could have quoted one of 'Sir' Lenny Henry's wild and wacky Jamaican characters saying in a Jah Me accent:

Ecstasy is a drug so powerful, it makes white people think they can dance. 

To which Charlie Williams (RIP) might have responded:

Eeeh me old flower. If you don't shut up, I'll come and live next-door to you.