'Adolescence' TV drama exposes global issue of teenage violence
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Drama tops global
*
Depicts events around killing of girl by teenage boy
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Themes of misogyny, online radicalisation resonate
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Campaigners welcome important conversation
By
Since its release on
The action in between, with each hour-long episode shot in a dizzying single take, slowly destroys the initial disbelief that a child so young could commit such a violent crime.
It depicts a toxic online culture known loosely as the manosphere in which common teenage male insecurities about attractiveness and romantic failure can warp into resentment and hatred of the opposite sex.
"There are people who will watch it and go 'but that boy
couldn't do that'. The point is that boy can do it," said
"Suddenly the possibility becomes normal, and so we begin to say, what on earth can we do to stop that from happening?"
The show is number one in the
"Although on the surface it feels like it's a very British
production ... actually, the themes that it's dealing with: what
our children are doing online, what they're listening to ... I
think that's as important in America, as it is
Portuguese police produced a guide for parents to explain
the hidden meaning of emojis used by young people - a plot
component in the show.
British police urged parents to look for signs their child may be being radicalised online, using data showing 60% of referrals to its terrorism prevention system came from children aged 17 or under to highlight the scale of the wider problem.
HIT HOME HARD IN DOWNING STREET
"Adolescence" reached the home of British Prime Minister
"It hit home hard," Starmer said in a statement, backing a scheme to make the show available to schools across the country and encouraging a national conversation on the isues it raises.
"This isn't a challenge politicians can simply legislate for. Believe me, if I could pull a lever to solve it, I would."
The show has created a moment that campaigners, police and educators have been waiting for: a general public prepared to accept the uncomfortable truth that they do not know what their children are doing online, and that they all need help.
"This is the start of something. What we need to do as an
education profession is make sure that we take advantage of
that," said
McDonald said Tender was working with
"This (show) is not going to solve the problem, but it's
enabled everybody to actually notice that there is a problem,"
she said.
(Writing by
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