Quizzes & Puzzles10 mins ago
Will You Be Shopping At Boots This Christmas ?
Hope this link works, and I'm wondering if, 'go woke go broke' might not kick in.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I've not watched the Boots one yet, but I have noticed a trend for 'mixed race' families (not sure if that's the right term) on TV adverts, especially those shown during Coronation St usually a black person with a white partner, although Asian heritage partners don't appear very often. There's even a Holiday Inn (or some similar name) that has 2 men sharing a bed. I always feel they are trying too hard. Maybe it's not important but to me they are too often trying to make the untypical look the norm, and I wonder why.
"Oh my goodness, Dr Who is a timetraveller and is of neither gender!
Mixed race families are the norm and therefore should be shown on tv.
Ask yourself how is it wrong that there are little black children actually seeing a Mrs Claus that looks like them? Or people on TV that look like them?"
Easy tiger, you'll be tying yourself in knots cherry-picking the acceptability of fictional characters you need to support the new world view.
For anyone who can't access the Spectator article, this is a relevant passage;
This reaction to Boots is hardly unexpected. The retailer, which this year received a ‘gold award’ in Stonewall’s UK Workplace Equality Index, has pledged ‘to focus on LGBT+ acceptance through our marketing and brands’. It is conspicuous among brands keen to showcase hyper-progressive values. Boots has provided 3,000 Pride pins to staff, and in 2022, its Christmas advert featured a drag queen. Its adverts, especially in print and on television, are often notable for a hyper-tokenism, even in a medium already infamous for its apparent aversion to white males.
Yet the backlash against Boots’s advert isn’t about shock but frustration at a relentless narrative, especially on gender issues. In these culture wars, it seems that not even Christmas offers a truce from what many see as corporate virtue-signalling. But will the Boots advert work?
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