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Ashley Banjo and his brother Jordan looked dapper as they attended the British Academy Television Awards on Sunday.
The Diversity stars walked the star-studded red carpet at Television Centre in White City ahead of the ceremony.
The brothers were nominated for Must-See Moment for Diversity’s Black Lives Matter-inspired dance routine on Britain’s Got Talent in September.
Suave: Ashley Banjo and his brother Jordan looked dapper as they attended the British Academy Television Awards on Sunday
Ashley, 32, cut a suave figure as he donned a black blazer with matching trousers which he paired with a black shirt.
Jordan, 28, opted for a navy blazer for the ceremony which he wore with black trousers and a crisp white shirt.
Posing alongside his brother, the dancer completed his look with a black bow tie.
There was fury when Diversity’s controversial dance routine was shortlisted for a BAFTA after being nominated by ITV despite being the second most complained-about TV moment for a decade.
Looking good: Ashley, 32, cut a suave figure as he donned a black blazer with matching trousers which he paired with a black shirt
Officials were accused of pursuing a ‘woke, political agenda’ by considering the dance for the Virgin Media’s Must-See Moment Award, where it will now go to a public vote alongside five other scenes.
Led by Ashley, Diversity opened their performance by reciting a viral poem The Great Realisation by the singer Tomfoolery, about the BLM movement and police brutality.
During their performance, the group also narrated the murder of George Floyd at the hands of police officer Derek Chauvin put his knee on his neck in Minneapolis on May 25 for nearly nine minutes.
The flood of complaints put the controversial routine just steps behind Celebrity Big Brother’s ‘punchgate’ which received 25,237 objections in 2018, after Roxanne Pallett falsely accused Ryan Thomas of hitting her.
Outfit: Jordan, 28, opted for a navy blazer for the ceremony which he wore with black trousers and a crisp white shirt
Ashley said on The Jonathan Ross Show that he is ‘proud’ of the routine after its BAFTA nomination.
He said: ‘It was controversial, made a lot of people unhappy, but it also made a lot of people stand up and be proud. It made a lot of conversations happen that needed to happen.
‘To potentially win a Bafta for something that was controversial when it shouldn’t have been, it will be something that stays with me for the rest of my life.’
Speaking of the controversy, the doting father added: ‘We thought it would ruffle a few feathers, but not be one of the most complained about moments of the decade.
‘The reaction, even still to this day, the online reaction I get on a daily basis is shocking, actually. But I’d do it 100 times over.’
Reaction: There was fury when Diversity’s controversial dance routine was shortlisted for a BAFTA after being nominated by ITV despite being the second most complained-about TV moment for a decade
The BAFTAs, hosted by Richard Ayoade, has a collection of guest presenters including Lydia, who will co-present a gong with co-star Olly, who played the lead role of AIDS-stricken Ritchie Tozer.
Olly will also open the ceremony with a dazzling performance of his new track Starstruck.
Line Of Duty’s Adrian Dunbar, Strictly winners Bill Bailey and Oti Mabuse, and Daisy May Cooper are all set to present.
Tom Allen and AJ Odudu, meanwhile, are presenting the Virgin Media BAFTAs: Back to the Red Carpet show.
Nomination: Officials were accused of pursuing a ‘woke, political agenda’ by considering the dance for the Virgin Media’s Must-See Moment Award
It was revealed earlier this week the awards show is set to beam celebrities who can’t attend Sunday’s event in person onto the red carpet as holograms.
Presenters Stacey Dooley and Vick Hope will introduce the hologram guests to those actually at the socially distanced ceremony.
Other guest presenters – Catherine O’Hara, Jon Snow, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Jamie Demetriou, Tommy Jessop, Bob Mortimer and Paul Whitehouse – will all appear via video call during the ceremony.
Covid restrictions mean TV fans can’t be in attendance on the red carpet as usual this year and some nominees won’t be able to attend because of filming bubbles.
Performance: The group narrated the murder of George Floyd at the hands of police officer Derek Chauvin put his knee on his neck in Minneapolis on May 25 for nearly nine minutes
In an attempt to ensure everyone can access the awards, Virgin Media will beam them onto the red carpet through the latest hologram technology.
Small Axe leads this year’s nominations with 15 nods.
The BBC One anthology film series, directed by Sir Steve McQueen, picked up six TV nominations and nine in the craft categories, including a nod for the Mini-Series gong alongside Normal People, Adult Material and I May Destroy You.
Small Axe – which features five films that tell stories about lives of West Indian immigrants in London from the 1960s to the 1980s – also picked up two Leading Actor nominations with John Boyega and Shaun Parkes both receiving nods.
Proud: Ashley said on The Jonathan Ross Show that he is ‘proud’ of the routine after its BAFTA nomination
Letitia Wright, who also starred in the series, is up for the Leading Actress prize, and she will face competition from Billie Piper (I Hate Suzie), Daisy Edgar-Jones (Normal People), Hayley Squires (Adult Material), Jodie Comer (Killing Eve) and Michaela Coel (I May Destroy You).
Elsewhere, I May Destroy You star Paapa Essiedu will go up against John and Shaun for the Leading Actor award, as well as Normal People actor Paul Mescal, Baghdad Central’s Waleed Zuaiter, and The Crown’s Josh O’Connor.
The Crown received 10 nominations – four for TV and six for the craft categories – including a nod for the Drama Series accolade alongside I Hate Suzie, Save Me Too and Gangs of London.
Other nods included This Country, Man Like Mobeen, Inside No. 9, and Ghosts for the Scripted Comedy prize, and siblings and This Country creators Daisy May and Charlie Cooper received nominations for the Female and Male Performance in a Comedy Programme gongs, respectively.
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