Adolescence broke the British TV rating records.
The four -part series, written by and starring Boiling point Actor Stephen Graham follows the family of the 13-year-old schoolboy, Jamie Miller (played by Owen Cooper), who is accused of the brutal murder of a young girl.
It has become an immediate success and the center of a national conversation about Incel culture, misogy and the online ‘manosphere’. As discussed in Parliament, there is an appeal to it to become compulsory viewing in schools.
In a new record, the show became the first stream program in history to overcome the UK’s weekly TV ratings. According to the Ratings Body Barb, the first episode of the series was viewed by 6.45 million people. This meant that it was British television crabs including Apprentice and Dead in paradise.
It is also the biggest viewer for any streaming TV program in the UK in a single week, a record previously held by Netflix’s Fool me once in January 2024.
The second episode of the program was second with 5.94 million views, Apprentice and Dead in paradise was in third and fourth place with nearly 5.8 million respectively. Adolescence dominated the rest of the map with its third episode in fifth place with 5.14 million and the final delivery drawing in 4.65 million.
Each suspension is shot in a one-up, characters follow in real time as they try to get under the incident. Graham is investigating topical issues, including Incel Culture, Misogyny and the online “Manosphere”, and is inspired by news articles of stabbing wounds of young girls.
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“I read an article about a young boy stabbing a young girl,” the Thousand blows Star tells The independent. ‘And then perhaps a few months later on the news [another] Young boy who stabbed a young girl, and when I’m really honest with you, they hurt my heart. ‘
He explained that the storyline examines a complexity of topics and that parents should be “mindful” of the external influences that work on their children.
“It’s just mind about not just our children, and not just educating the school our children,” he said. ‘But there are also influences that we have no idea that it has a profound effect on our young culture, in -depth consequences, positive and extremely negative. So it looks at it and sees that we are all liable. ‘