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Netflix’s recent polarising show Adolescence has sparked a lot of recent conversation because it explores teenage masculinity in raw, sometimes unsettling ways - touching on themes like male insecurity, peer pressure and toxic online influences that mirror real-life dynamics within the manosphere.
The “manosphere” refers to a loose collection of online communities that focus on men’s issues, often promoting traditional gender roles and, at times, misogynistic views. It includes groups like men’s rights activists, pickup artists, and Incel communities.
Leveraging off this momentum and to help limit the risk of involvement in violent extremism through diversion, disengagement and awareness raising efforts - Step Together engaged SenateSHJ to undertake a qualitative and quantitative analysis of conversations taking place around the recent Netflix series Adolescence.
The report presents a summary of online conversations around Adolescence from 1 January 2025 to 19 May 2025 and was prepared solely for analytical purposes and should not be relied upon for any other reasons.
It contains publicly accessible opinions and statements from third parties. The opinions and statements within do not represent the opinions of either SenateSHJ or the NSW Government, and neither party endorses any statements or claims made.
The portrayal of how young boys navigate modern masculinity has ignited debate over whether it’s critiquing or inadvertently glamorising these controversial ideologies. From a countering violent extremism lens, it raises the question of definitions and the delicate tipping point between violent misogyny and incel ideology, and the evolution from online grievance spaces into real-life threats.
SenateSHJ examined the news articles with the greatest ‘social echo’, plus the most engaged with posts on Facebook, X, Twitch, BlueSky, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Reddit and commentary threads connected to these news articles.
Social echo refers to the extent to which a story was engaged with and shared on social media.
Over 20,000 comments from across the articles and associated ‘social echo’ were collated into themes.
The key themes identified were:
They felt the framing was more relevant for older generations and called instead for basic social skills, empathy and treating others with respect.
The main contributors to the conversation were concerned mothers and disinterested young people were the least engaged. Given this audience breakdown, these were the most useful themes for communication consideration:
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