
Cultural Reporter

One of the most discussed television programs in recent years, the difficult drama Netflix in adolescence, this week has been a hot topic of discussion, from the discussion the municipality’s house to US Discussion Program For the gates of the screenwriter’s school.
The discussions were raised because of the imaginary story of a 13-year-old boy accused of stabbing a girl, and the reasons that could have been made into the killer.
“I have received a lot of answers from people I haven’t heard for years. I’m talking about the conversations they’re making with their children now,” author Jack Torn said. “That’s really happy.
“My son’s president stood at school gates to say, ‘I’d like to talk to you about this, and I would like to think about what our school can do and what other schools can do,” Torn said.
“The discussions are likely to start in all different places.
Torren is now calling for the government to take “radical measures” to help fight the problems the program.
The main one is social media and the influence of Insul’s ideas (without will without will), which encourages men to blame women for lack of relationships and opportunities.

But the drama with actor Stephen Graham, however, only puts fingers on Insul’ culture, the author tells the BBC.
“I really hope this is a drama that suggests that Jamie is like this because of a large number of complex causes.
Parents, schools and friends are all shown to participate in various ways.
But Jamie, played by Owen Cooper, is attacked on social media to feel ugly, and is exposed to Insul’s message and weak opinion about sexual violence.
“He is a weak child, then hears these things he means about why he is isolated, why he is alone, why he doesn’t belong to that thing, and he eats it.
“Now, with all the different pressures on it and the characteristics of his community around him, he begins to believe that the only way to restructure this balance is through violence.

The author descended from online worms like himself on sites such as 4chan and Reddit so that he could see the world in the eyes of Jamie.
He discovered that these messages did not come from open places.
“It’s far from just Andrew Tye. It’s not the big guns that Manusphert,” he says.
“It’s smaller blogs and vlogs and small parts of the country talk about a video game, but then through the video to explain why women hate you.
“It was the things that I felt as much as I made the most uncomfortable.
These issues are not new, but the show is that others also talk about the dangerous messages that aim to boys and young people.
On Wednesday, former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate delivered a speech Warning against “important, modified and poisonous effects.
“They are so far away that you can get the samples that our youth need in their lives,” he said.
Thorn says Sir Gareth is “surprising” – but he believes the solution is more than a better example.
“We have had that conversation since childhood,” the author says. “This must be a point that we do something a little more violent.
“The models of the role of the role can have a great impact on people. But the truth, we have to change the culture they use and the tool that makes our technology easier for this culture.
“It was really an interesting speech, but I hoped it would propose radical things what he had done.
So what can be more radical treatment?

This week, Prime Minister Sir Kirstar told parliament that he had watched the drama “Very Good” and his teenage children.
The violence committed by young people who are influenced by what they see online “is it is a victim and we have to deal with it,” and “Althose is also a matter of culture,” he told the municipalities.
Torn hopes the prime minister will receive the message that “there is a crisis that is happening in our schools, and we need to think about how to stop boys from harming girls, and each other.
“That takes some different things to facilitate schools and homes, and that requires government help,” he says.
He urged Sir Kire to consider “urgently” to ban smartphones in schools and “digital consent”, like Australia, which has passed a law that prohibits children under the age of 16 from using social media.
The author also suggested an extension of all the use of smartphones and playing.
“I think we have to do what Australia is doing, and distinguishing our children from this harmful disease of thought that causes them,” he said.
But the ban will be a difficult sale to adolescents.

Torn appeared on the BBC 2 this week alongside three men aged 18, 19 and
When asked about the ban on social media under the age of 16, they felt mixed.
“It’s a great idea, within the framework of reason,” another said, “A completely unfair,” while the third was against the idea, as “social media has brought a lot of good to young generations.
To Turn, a question about how smartphone police and social media are getting too close to home.
His eight-year-old son, Torn, says he wants to make sure he will establish a “communication way to communicate with him” as he grows up. Soon, he wants his own phone.
While working on the series, he thought about how to deal with the use of his son’s future technology. “And I’m still processing how I’m doing it.
He says he has opened his teenage research and writing about the challenges facing young people and parents. But how can we deal with them? That’s the most difficult part.