Nobody hears about the reverse story since it does not serve a narrative made popular only because it was specifically chosen that way.There are exceptions to everything, of course, but historically there's been far, far less black affinity for rock (or country or classical) music than there's been white affinity for genres generally considered "black." The story of the white kid in suburbia hiding the transistor radio under the pillow to hear a distant R&B station at night in the '60s is a familiar one. Nobody talks about the black kid in the inner city doing the same thing to listen to distant pop or MOR or country station, not because there weren't any but because it was highly unusual back then. Black interest in those genres continues to be minimal to this day. White interest in "black music" continues to grow.
I know of many diverse artists and listeners to the format. You won't hear about them since racists and people that stoke division for profit are in charge.
The false narrative of division in the most diverse region on the planet is ridiculous as some of the comments in this thread slamming Country as racist and only Rhythmic or Latin, Middle Eastern or Asian formats are all that should exist here.
White interest in "black music" continues to grow since that is mostly what is marketed to them given the orchestrated exclusion of all else. I suspect if Chinese pop was marketed to them, given enough time it would continue to grow to.