Drama shines light on âgrowing problemâ â PM

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said there was a need to tackle the âemerging and growing problemâ raised by new TV drama Adolescence.
The four-part series co-written and starring actor Stephen Graham, from Kirkby, Merseyside, follows a family whose lives are blown apart when their teenage son is arrested for killing a female classmate.
The drama released last week shines a light on the corrosive impact of social media and misogynist influencers on some teenage boys. It was the most-watched show on Netflix around the world over the weekend.
Starmer said he and his family had been watching the serial after Knowsley MP Anneliese Midgley raised the issue at Prime Ministers Questions earlier.

Sir Keirâs comments came after writer of Adolescence, Jack Thorne, said he and co-writer Graham wanted the programme to be a piece of work that âcauses discussion and makes changeâ.
Thorne said: âI want it to be shown in schools, I want it to be shown in Parliament. Itâs crucial because this is only going to get worse.
âItâs something that people need to be talking about, hopefully thatâs what drama can do,â he added.
âToxic misogynyâ
Midgley told the Commons âeveryoneâ was talking about the series, whose stars Graham and Christine Tremarco, were both born in her constituency.
The Labour MP said it âhighlights online male radicalisation and violence against girlsâ and that âthe creators of the show are calling for screenings in Parliament and in schools to spark changeâ.
She asked the Prime Minister to back the campaign âto counter toxic misogyny earlyâ and âgive young men the role models they deserveâ.
Starmer responded his household had also been glued to the show.
He said: âAt home we are watching Adolescence with our children.
âIâve got a 16-year-old boy and a 14-year-old girl and itâs a really good drama to watch.â
He said the violence carried out by young men influenced by what they see online was âabhorrentâ and âwe have to tackle it.â
He added the government was taking steps such as putting in specialist rape and sexual offences teams in police forces across the country dealing with 999 calls.
However, he said the issues raised in Adolescence were âa matter of cultureâ which he said âitâs important across the whole house that we tackle this emerging and growing problemâ.
It comes as the former England manager Gareth Southgate spoke out about masculinity and the âmanosphereâ.
In a wide-ranging talk for the BBCâs annual Richard Dimbleby Lecture, Southgate said he feared young men were spending too much time gaming, gambling and watching pornography â and that they needed better role models beyond online influencers.
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