“…Other research has shown that there have been more images of Black people in magazine photographs in recent years, but that these may be concentrated in specific areas, such as the sports section of the magazine (DeLouth, Pirson, Hitchcock, & Rienzi, 1995). 1 Traditionally, Black men and women have been stereotyped as unskilled labourers, athletes, entertainers (Pieterse, 1992;Plous & Neptune, 1997;Shuey, King, & Griffith, 1953), exotic foreigners, in traditional roles of "Mammy" or "matriarch" (Kitch, 1997), or as inferior or subservient to White authority figures (Wilkes & Valencia, 1989, as cited in Coltrane & Messineo, 2000). For example, 50 years ago, Shuey et al (1953) found that magazine advertisements that contained photographs and drawings of Black people repeatedly represented them in service occupations, such as maids or waiters, and as always belonging to the lowest occupational category.…”