Lauren Speed-Hamilton and her husband Cameron Hamilton are one of the few success stories from Netflix’s Love Is Blind. Since they found love on the reality dating show that asks folks to get hitched without seeing each other, the two have praised the show and helped amplify it on their growing social media platforms — but that doesn’t mean they’re afraid of criticizing the show.

According to Showbiz Cheat Sheet, Speed-Hamilton recently called out the series for choosing to highlight Black women participants in trailers, but not in the actual show.

The show’s third season, which premiered Oct. 19, highlighted multiple Black women in its teasers and trailers: Branni Max, Charita, Kalekia A., Kim and Raven.

 

Netflix also shared their profiles to get fans excited about the upcoming season. But many fans were surprised to learn that only Raven’s story is followed throughout the season.

Hamilton isn’t here for the neglect. She took to Twitter to share her thoughts on the lack of Black women represented on the show.

“I don’t like how LIB be cutting all the black women. How come they are always in the trailer but not the show…,” she wrote.

The content creator noted in another tweet that, like any dating reality show, the narratives painted in each season are manufactured by producers to a certain extent. As such, including Black women in the show shouldn’t be an impossible task.

“I know it’s slim pickings but about 85% of them couples be forced (just moving forward for entertainment purposes) anyway. Y’all could at least force some more sisters to move forward throughout the show,” she shared in another tweet.

According to Elite Daily, Speed-Hamilton went on to explain that not all couples that get engaged on the show are followed throughout the season. Caitlin McKee and Joey Miller, two of this season’s participants, got engaged in the pods, but producers chose not to include their love story in the show’s arch.

In response to a viewer who asked why the show seems to ignore Black women, Speed-Hamilton said they most likely don’t find them interesting enough, which is a problem.

 

“It’s couples that get engaged that aren’t even shown sometimes. I think they only show what they deem most entertaining,” she tweeted.

This is just the latest conversation about Love Is Blind‘s diversity issue. Earlier this year, the show’s co-host, Vanessa Lachey, catalyzed controversy when addressing the show’s lack of body diversity.

 

She explained that contestants who don’t fit the body types of those usually highlighted in dating reality TV shows are too “insecure” to participate.

“Their whole life they’ve been so insecure about being themselves because of this crazy swipe generation that we are in and this catfishing world that we’re in, that they’re so afraid to be themselves,” she told Insider.

People weren’t happy about Lachey’s claims and considered her explanation very telling of what Love Is Blind is all about.