
The co-writer and producer of the famous teenage Netflix drama Netflix has attended a meeting with Prime Minister in Downing Street to discuss how to prevent the influence of youth under the influence of toxins online.
Sir Kir Starmer has spoken about the drama Jack Turn, which tells the story of a 13-year-old boy accused of killing a girl for “sometimes saddened.
As “A torch that shines intensively on a mixture of issues that many people don’t know how to answer,” he said.
The meeting comes as Netflix has announced that the series will be available to free screenshots in schools, a step that Sir Kiry welcomed as “an important initiative to encourage as many students as possible to watch the show.
The program led to a national discussion on the effects of social media and the effects of Manusphert.
Thorn, who wrote the program with actor Stephen Graham, recently said he recently said he recently said he said The prime minister must consider “urgently banning smartphones in schools and a “digital age, like Australia, which has passed a law that prohibits children under the age of 16 from using social media.
Thorn and producer Joe Johnson gave their views on Monday to Sir Kir, with charitable organizations and youth.
The prime minister said the program had “lilled a tailored paper” but told the audience that there was no simple solution.
“If I am honest, like a father, I haven’t seen it easily,” he said.
“At the same time, he communicates with fears and worries, not only young people – because I was really surprised how much our children had given him – but explicitly the fears and concerns of parents and adults across the country.
“It may not be a single answer to the silver bullets, some Liverpool’s Liverpool that can be drawn.
He said the show focused on “the effects of devastating feminicide on our society”, with “the dangers of online extremism and this feeling of young people on themselves, often in their bedroom or anywhere isolated with the online radical,” and “the challenges faced by our children.
The drama will be available for all central schools in the UK through streaming services.
“You have the opportunity to take this into schools, beyond our expectations. We hope it will cause teachers to talk to students, but what really hopes is that it will cause students to talk among themselves,” Torn said in a statement.
The government referred to measures, including the online safety law, which says social media companies must protect children from harmful substances, including pornography, drugs that encourage themselves, speak badly and dangerous content.
Platforms are expected to receive “ive-secure technology technology” to make children see harmful content.
But the government said the legislature was “not the end of the discussion.
The teenager in the UK made a history when it became the first stream program to rank first, with about 6.5 million people watched in the first week.
Netflix has said it has had 66 million world views in its first two weeks.