During a press conference on Thursday, Farage was again asked about the accusations and whether he believed his old schoolmates were lying.
He first attacked the BBC’s Today programme for their interview with Tice, saying it was “disgraceful” to frame a question linking himself to dictator Adolf Hitler.
He went on to accuse the BBC of “hypocrisy” saying: “At the time I was alleged to have made these remarks, one of your most popular weekly shows was the Black and White Minstrel Show.
“The BBC was very happy to use blackface – not just in the Black and White Minstrels, they did it in It Ain’t Half Hot Mum.
“I cannot put up with the double standards of the BBC about what I’m alleged to have said 49 years ago and what you were putting out on mainstream content.
“So I want an apology from the BBC for virtually everything you did throughout the 1970s and 80s.”
The Black and White Minstrel Show, a programme where white performers painted their face black, ran from 1958 to 1978, getting peak audiences of 16 million.
Even at the time it was considered offensive with the Campaign Against Racial Discrimination submitting a petition for the show to be axed.
Farage also attacked ITV, describing the broadcaster as “the channel of Bernard Manning”, referring to the comedian often accused of making racist jokes.