As to the advertising point, in August 2019, researchers at the Qatar Computing Research Institute released a study where they investigated gender and racial diversity in approximately 86,000 ads that had been shared by, quote, 73 top international brands on Instagram and Facebook. 100% interracial relationships. One of their questions was about just representation, generally speaking, but another was, quote, which pairs of demographic groups are preferred in advertising images for cross-sex interaction context. As to the representation question, they found that white people appear in ads at a rate proportional to the most recent census data, but that black people are way less likely to appear in ads than you would expect based on demographic numbers. And that the number looks even worse when you look specifically just at black women, the rate which the researchers called, quote, strikingly low. As to the question of cross-sex interaction between members of different races, what do you know? They found that there was a gigantic tendency towards white male, white female pairings in ads. But that raised a new question for them, which was, is this just the result of there being way more white people represented in ads? So they took into account the relative number of models of different races, and they found that, quote, the preference towards pairing of the same race in cross-sex interaction becomes apparent.