Why Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’ Has Parents Talking About Phones

3 weeks ago 19

Television|‘Adolescence’ Has People Talking. Its Writer Wants Lawmakers to Act.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/24/arts/television/adolescence-netflix-smartphones.html

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The Netflix hit has touched off debates about smartphone use by children and, in Britain, fed into calls for a social media ban.

In a police interrogation room, a boy wearing a gray sweatshirt and a man in an orange polo shirt sit on one side of a table; a man in a gray suit sits on the other side.
Mark Stanley as Paul Barlow, Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller and Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller in “Adolescence.”Credit...Netflix

Alex Marshall

Published March 24, 2025Updated March 25, 2025, 9:38 a.m. ET

The British screenwriter and playwright Jack Thorne has written several TV dramas that he hoped would stir political debate. Until last week, they never quite took off.

Then, his new show, “Adolescence,” appeared on Netflix.

In the days since its March 13 release, the four-part drama about a 13-year-old boy who is suspected of killing a girl from his school after potentially being exposed to misogynist ideas online has become Netflix’s latest hit. According to the streamer, it was the most watched show on the platform in dozens of countries after it debuted, including the United States.

In Britain, the show has been more than a topic of workplace chatter. It has reignited discussion about whether the government should restrict children’s access to smartphones to stop them from accessing harmful content.

Newspapers here have published dozens of articles about “Adolescence,” which Thorne wrote with the actor Stephen Graham. A Times of London headline called it “The TV Drama That Every Parent Should Watch,” and campaigners for a phone ban in schools have reported a surge in support.

In Britain’s parliament, too, lawmakers have used the show to make political points. Last week Prime Minister Keir Starmer told the House of Commons that he was watching “Adolescence” with his two children, and said that action was needed to address the “fatal consequences” of young men and boys viewing harmful content online.

Image

In the show, Ashley Walters, center left, plays a police officer whose son has to instruct him on the meaning of emojis online.Credit...Netflix, via Associated Press

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