Farage proclaims in an exclusive interview with Campaign Magazine that the Ad industry has 'no idea what's going on in people's lives'.

"The advertising industry is a great industry. They still go to lunch. They like a drink. There are some very clever people in it. It’s not heavily regulated, which means you can make money. I might fancy it myself one day,"

Dearie me, will we see Nigel as head of strategy somewhere? The US ad industry still fall for that charming UK accent thing, he's basically a shoe-in. And that quip about it not being heavily regulated, ah yes. Just what we need, more ad-people in the industry only for the potential gold-carving. I smell a return of the 80s, where everyone is an influencer making money for nothing and chicks for free. Oh wait, that's already happened.

"The ad industry, like the media in general, has helped to perpetuate the myth that everyone who voted for Brexit were knuckle-dragging, tattooed, working-class scum," he tells Campaign. "These people have no idea about what’s really going on in people’s lives."

The UKIP and Brexit party ads were quite simple, bluntly to the point they didn't care if they offended or were divisive, but there's more to it than that. While some of London's creatives are recoiling in horror at seeing Nigel Farage on the cover of Campaign, and making sure all of Twitter knows how they feel about this travesty, we might actually learn something from the rise of Nigel and the Brexit party, which didn't happen overnight despite how it may seem. It took 27 years before Farage was front-page anything. 27 years of a consistent message.