The Province

Degrassi tackles tough topics

Controvers­ial new season deals with abortion, the refugee crisis

- VICTORIA AHEARN THE CANADIAN PRESS

The esteemed Canadian teen TV franchise Degrassi is tackling the subject of abortion again, given it’s a “very important time to be telling this story,” says series co-creator Linda Schuyler.

In the third season of Degrassi: Next Class, Amanda Arcuri’s 16-year-old character Lola Pacini decides to have an abortion and viewers get a unique perspectiv­e — from inside the procedure room with her.

“We’re constantly reading the stats and keeping apprised as to what’s happening and also have our finger on the pulse of some of the scary right-wing thinking that’s out there,” says Schuyler, who is also an executive producer for the show.

“We’re very much influenced by what’s going on in the world, there’s no question. When this season comes on air, in the very first episode, we (also) see that Degrassi is welcoming Syrian refugees.”

The entire third season is now available in Canada on the Family Channel app and on Netflix in the U.S. and around the world. The season makes its Canadian broadcast premiere Monday on Family Channel.

This is the fourth time a Degrassi character has had an abortion. The previous characters were Erica Farrell of Degrassi High, Tessa Campanelli of School’s Out! and Manny Santos of Degrassi: The Next Generation.

“We’ve also done an equal number of stories of kids who get pregnant and make different choices,” says Schuyler.

“So it’s not like we are advocating get pregnant, get an abortion. But we really felt that it was very important, particular­ly in this day and age when the abortion debate is coming back on the main stage, that we wanted to demystify it.

“Our message is not use abortion as birth control. Far from it,” she adds. “But we also want to respect the dignity and the rights of a young woman to be able to make her own informed choices.”

In the episode, Lola finds out she’s pregnant and decides to have an abortion after researchin­g her options for a couple of weeks.

When a counsellor at the clinic says she can take more time to think about her options, Lola insists she wants to go through with it. Cameras then show her lying on the examinatio­n table and chatting with the doctor in the procedure room as he preps the equipment.

“I think that it will help a lot of teenagers realize that, ‘Hey, it’s OK if I do this because it is my body and I can be strong after this, I’ll get through this, I have lots of people supporting me,’” says Arcuri.

Lola isn’t haunted by her decision, as is often the case in abortion storylines. Instead, she tells a friend it wasn’t a difficult choice for her and that she doesn’t feel sad or regretful.

“Some girls will have an emotion and cry for days after and some will feel strong and feel liberated and feel like it wasn’t a big deal. And I think it’s a good way to tell a story — that people react differentl­y, Lola’s reaction is justified, it’s normal, it’s OK,” says Arcuri.

Lola also doesn’t tell the father about her abortion beforehand. Arcuri says it speaks to a woman’s right to make a decision about her own body, but she adds it might make some viewers angry.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Amanda Arcuri says her character’s abortion experience in Degrassi: Next Class will ‘help a lot of teenagers.’
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Amanda Arcuri says her character’s abortion experience in Degrassi: Next Class will ‘help a lot of teenagers.’

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