Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing

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The BBC has been accused of sexism following the release of the showā€™s promotional shots.

The Great British Bake Off ā€“ a show loved by millions, often said to represent all that is good about life here in the UK.

Scones, humour, signature bakes, a stiff upper lip, Sue Perkins, Mary Berry ā€“ and sexism?!

Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icingā€

New promotional shots for GBBOā€™s latest series have incurred the wrath of the baking showā€™s loyal fanbase, many of whom accused the show of sexism.

Their anger comes as the images introducing this yearā€™s contestants featured gendered icing ā€“ pink for girls and blue for the boys.

Fans were quick to spot the colouring, taking to Twitter to share their ā€œdisappointmentā€ in the showā€™s ā€œstupid decisionā€.

Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing
Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing
Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing

Even Lib Dem leader Tim Farron was worried!

ā€œLooking forward to catching #GBBO but I hope the pink icing for girls, blue icing for boys is dropped,ā€ he wrote.

Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing

In the wake of the backlash, it seemed the BBC may have recognised its mistake, as it hastily tweeted out a new picture of the contestants with multicoloured icing.

Fans accuse BBC of ‘gendering’ Great British Bake Off icing

The scandal came as viewers were today introduced to the 12 new contestants for the seventh series of GBBO.

One of last yearā€™s finalists, Tamal Ray, won thousands of fans when he appeared on the hit BBC One show ā€“ including a huge gay following after he opened up about his sexuality.

Tamal was eventually pipped to the post by fellow contestant Nadiya, who wowed the judges with her culinary creations.

The new series is due to be broadcast at 8pm on BBC One, on August 24.