Badenoch says boy Adolescence lead character based on was ‘not white’

1 April 2025, 15:14

Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch speaking at their local election campaign launch
Local elections 2025. Picture: PA

Writer Jack Thorne has dismissed an online theory the race of the lead character was changed and stressed it was not based on a real case.

Kemi Badenoch has said Adolescence is based on a true story that has been “fundamentally changed” and that the real-life perpetrator was not white, a theory already rejected by one of the drama’s makers.

Co-creator Jack Thorne recently dismissed an online theory that the series changed the race of the lead character and stressed it was not based on a real case.

The drama about a teenage boy who is accused of killing a girl from his school examines so-called incel (involuntary celibate) culture and has prompted a national conversation about online safety.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer hosted a roundtable at Downing Street with Thorne and children’s charities on Monday to talk about young boys being influenced by misogyny they encounter online.

Tory leader Mrs Badenoch said she had not watched the series.

“I don’t have time to watch anything to be honest, but I have read about it … what I understand is that this is a fictional representation of a story that is actually quite different,” she told LBC.

She said it “certainly touches on some of the things that are happening in the world today” but is not the biggest thing happening when it comes to people being radicalised on social media.

“There are bigger problems, such as Islamic terrorism and that kind of radicalisation, and the story which it is based on has been fundamentally changed, and so creating policy on a work of fiction rather than on reality is the real issue.”

She was later asked on GB News if she thinks white boys are being wrongly singled out.

“Adolescence is a fictional story. It’s based on a real story, but my understanding is that the boy who committed that crime was not white,” she said.

Sir Keir Starmer meets with writer Jack Thorne and producer Jo Johnson (right) of the television show Adolescence
Sir Keir Starmer meets with writer Jack Thorne and producer Jo Johnson (right) of the television show Adolescence (Jack Taylor/PA)

She said Sir Keir having meetings sparked by the reaction to the programme was a “gimmick”, after Labour had said the same about the Tories’ proposed mobile phone ban in schools.

“It’s a gimmick. He thinks that he’s going to touch the people of this country. ‘They’re all watching Netflix, so I’ll just talk about the thing they’re watching on TV’.”

Some have said the call for a ban on pupils using phones is unnecessary as many schools already do not allow children to use mobiles.

A post on social media amplified by Elon Musk has suggested the story, which features a white actor, is based on the Southport attacker.

Co-creator Thorne recently rejected the accusations of “race-swapping” in the series.

It is not based on a true story and is “making a point about masculinity”, and not race, Thorne told the News Agents podcast.

“It’s absurd to say that (knife crime) is only committed by black boys. It’s absurd. It’s not true. And history shows a lot of cases of kids from all races committing these crimes,” he said.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

A woman's hand on a laptop keyboard

UK and allies expose Russian cyber attacks on logistics firms aiding Ukraine

Marks and Spencer signage

Slow recovery ‘appropriate’ to ensure M&S is secure after cyber attack – experts

A shopper walks through a Marks & Spencer store

Marks & Spencer hack: When will the retailer be back to normal?

Alphabet chief executive Sundar Pichai on stage

Google in ‘tough position’ as it balances AI advances and advertising revenue

Alphabet chief executive Sundar Pichai speaking on stage

The key announcements from Google I/O

Close-up of a smartphone showing the Google app page in the App Store.

Google launches fully AI-powered search engine despite concerns over misinformation and climate impact

TV gardener Alan Titchmarsh warned that the Uk's potato crops were in "grave danger" due to the emergence of the insect in the last two years

UK potato crops in 'grave danger' as Alan Titchmarsh warns of 'savage' threat to food security

Woman doing grocery shopping at the supermarket and reading food labels

Food distributor for supermarkets hit by ransomware attack

Treasury Committee

NatWest boss says AI is ‘addition’ to human jobs rather than replacement

People walk past cows that are wearing GPS collars while grazing on Midsummer Common in Cambrige

Cambridge cows get GPS collars to stop them from falling into river

A mysterious object in space has been sending an ‘unexpected’ pulsing signal to Earth that is ‘unlike anything ever seen before’, as scientists say they can’t rule out aliens.

Mystery space object sending ‘inexplicable’ pulsing signal to Earth as Nasa scientists ‘can’t rule out aliens’

Group of people holding plaques and signs

Government defeated for third time in Lords over copyright protection against AI

Lines of code on a computer screen

Solicitors criticise ‘antiquated’ Legal Aid Agency IT system after cyber attack

The Meta AI app page in the App Store on a smartphone screen

More than third of UK consumers now use AI to shop – survey

Scientists took months to develop gene therapy for baby KJ Muldoon to treat his rare genetic disease.

Baby with rare genetic disease receives personalised gene therapy in world first

A UK Driving Licence shake-up is coming this summer

Major driving licence change to launch this summer - affecting up to 50 million Brits