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Alex B Cann column - Thursday 30th October 2025

A tweet from actor Reece Dinsdale this week asked "where does 'wrong and ugly' end and racist begin"? This was inspired by the dreadful viral clip of Reform UK Ltd MP Sarah Pochin, responding to a caller on one of those seldom watched new  rolling TV news hannels, who was bemoaning the state of telly adverts.

Specifically, she said the Talk TV viewer was "absolutely right" when complaining about the "demographics" of advertising, and "it drives me mad when I see adverts full of black people, full of Asian people". She claimed "your average white person" is "not represented anymore", in a discussion between a white TV host and a white MP that's presumably now been seen by far more people than the original show when it aired.

Reform UK's leader Nigel Farage is being touted by some commentators as our next Prime Minister following a string of soaraway opinion poll leads, even though the next general election is most likely several years away. Whilst I don't think there should even be a debate about whether being cross about seeing someone black or Asian on a supermarket advert is racist, he shied away from calling a spade a spade, instead saying the way Sarah Pochin worded her comments was "wrong and ugly". Wrong and ugly? I obviously write this from a position of white privilege, where I have never had to worry about the colour of my skin being an issue, but what utterly disingenious poppycock.

I'm convinced that a lot of those who voted for Brexit did so because they wanted to see fewer brown and black faces on the tills at Sainsbury's, and remember hearing a caller say as much to LBC's mid-morning host James O'Brien back in 2017 (he claimed to have counted only one white cashier at the tills, and raised it with the store's manager, such was the level of his concern). This is pure racism. As is the recent statement by Robert Jenrick about spending 90 minutes in a place where he didn't see another white face.

What sort of person watches telly ads and keeps a tally of the ethnic makeup of those selling us stuff? It's a deeply weird prism through which to view the world. I just can't fathom it. The recent Yaxley-Lennon rally in London was another depressing occasion, full of those with so-called 'legitimate concerns' and stoked up by an appearance by Elon Musk darkly hinting at violence on its way to our streets. Verbal and physical attacks on NHS nurses are on the rise, flags have become a weapon of division, and I find it all incredibly bleak and depressing.

If we allow sentiments like Pochin's to pass unchallenged, what comes next? What do some of these characters say at dinner parties, when the cameras are not rolling, if this is the bit they are willing to say out loud? I was glad to see Sir Keir Starmer calling out the comments as racist, but wonder how he allowed his famous 'island of strangers' speech to pass through quality checking before he later disowned it.

I can't begin to imagine how it must feel to not belong in a country where you were born, have always lived, and have as much right as anyone else to call home. Is that really the kind of place we want the UK to be? Nobody is saying there isn't a debate to be had about levels of immigration, but those risking their lives arriving on small boats make up a tiny proportion of the total numbers (roughly 5%, according to a recent count), yet take up the majority of the shouty red top front pages. Open up more legal routes, process claims more quickly, and perhaps numbers would drop.

Seeing people with different ethnicities selling baked beans and cars on telly ads is a really strange thing to get foamed up about. Not calling out obvious racism is more dangerous still. I don't say this lightly, but there have been echoes of the 1930s in some of the campaign posters I've seen, and I do worry about the path we are heading down. Ads with black and brown faces are not 'woke', and representing different ethnicities is not something that should upset anyone. Anyone who's spent time on 'X' recently will have seen it's largely become an echo chamber for far-right bots fanning the flames of division, and I worry that real life is heading the same way. I hope not.

More from Alex Cann's Weekly Blog

  • Alex Cann’s weekly blog - Thursday 23rd October 2025

    I remember my first date with Sofia very well. It was back in the mists of time (well, January 2010!), and although the chain restaurant I chose turned out to be pretty underwhelming, as did the film (Did You Hear About The Morgans, 12% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes), the date went pretty well! Reviews of my movie choice point out the lack of chemistry between its leading stars, and one critic sums it up perfectly as "a meandering and thoroughly conventional rom com". We've been married now for over 13 years, so thankfully my choices didn't scupper things.

  • Alex Cann’s weekly blog - Thursday 16th October 2025

    If you've been to the supermarket recently, you won't have failed to notice the soaring price of everyday items. British grocery inflation rose to 5.2% in the month to October 5th, according to industry data released earlier this week, which is only adding to pressure being heaped on consumers by higher energy bills.

  • Alex Cann's weekly blog - 9th January

    It was tempting to write something this week about the digital darts being fired from the keyboard of the world's richest man, and how it might be better if we just switched social media off for a bit, but for the sake of my blood pressure, I thought I'd share the first part of a musical Top 10 with you.

  • Alex's Weekly Blog - 31st October

    Back in March, celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley -Whittingstall clashed with the health secretary at the time, Victoria Atkins, over what he claimed was the government's failure to tackle the obesity crisis. Measures such as limits on special offers and banning junk food adverts before 9pm were kicked into the long grass until at least October 2025. Separately, reports have suggested that the pandemic made obesity rates significantly worse among children, as unhealthy eating habits and a lack of exercise became the norm.

  • Alex's Weekly Blog - 17th October

    A gentle reminder that British Summer Time ends at 2am on Sunday 27th October, and the clocks 'fall back'. There's a survey for everything, and in 2019, a YouGov poll found that 59% of Brits would prefer to remain permanently in BST.

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