Penticton Herald

Show about teen suicide draws criticism

-

NEW YORK (AP) — It’s a scene as painful to watch as it is graphic: A 17-year-old girl climbs into a full bathtub with a razor. We see her slice into her skin, we see the blood pour out, hear her cry and struggle to breathe. Then she is still.

The suicide of the heroine in Netflix’s new series 13 Reasons Why shouldn’t come as a shock, since it’s depicted in the final episode of a series built around the character’s death. But knowing it is coming doesn’t make it any easier.

That stomach-turning scene has triggered criticism that it romanticiz­es suicide and prompted many schools across the country to send warning letters to parents and guardians. The show’s creators are unapologet­ic, saying their frank depiction needs to be “unflinchin­g and raw.”

“Many people are accusing the show of glamorizin­g suicide and I feel strongly — and I think everyone who made the show — feel very strongly that we did the exact opposite,” said writer Brian Yorkey, who won a Tony Award and a Pulitzer Prize for Next to Normal, which grappled with mental illness. “What we did was portray suicide and we portrayed it as very ugly and very damaging.”

The 13-episode drama, co-produced by actress and singer Selena Gomez, is based on Jay Asher’s young-adult 2007 bestseller about a high school student who kills herself and leaves behind 13 audiotapes detailing the events that led to her death — including sexual assault, substance abuse and bullying.

As it usually does, Netflix released all 13 hours of the series at once — on March 31 — leaving suicide prevention specialist­s worried teens might binge the entire series without a chance to fully absorb the issues and ask questions.

“Graphic details about suicide we know historical­ly are not recommende­d,” said Phyllis Alongi, the clinical director of The Society for the Prevention of Teen Suicide . “I understand what the producers are saying, but it could really be unsafe and I think we need to be a little more responsibl­e.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada