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Can it be Skins the new "Doctor Who" - The Guardian


The Guardian website has an article about skins and there you can read a little about Naomily, Thomas and why is Skins such a big reference for most of the young people.

We know now that each episode has about 1 million viewers when Skins is on Tv, and much more than 1 million online viewers... It´s great, isn´t it?

About season 4 they only say that Naomily will be a great part of the show (probably the main relationship) , they give us the guest names of the show, and now we know that Merv aka Thomas "got four sex scenes with four different girls!" Thomas is going wild now!!!

You can read the full article bellow! :)
"People make up fan fiction. Fan porn fiction!" Effy from Skins, known to her parents as Kaya Scodelario, is sitting on the back of a catering bus in a car park in Bristol, explaining that the show's fanbase proves its devotion in unlikely ways. The internet is awash with hormonal reimaginings of what the characters get up to in an alternate universe, and it usually involves manly hugging or fighting that turns into something altogether more sexual.

"The best are the boys' ones; you can read them and imagine it!" she giggles. "It's funny."

The amount, scope and terrifying imagination of Skins fan fiction is staggering, but E4's teen smash – about to start its fourth series – is the kind of programme that inspires serious dedication. Its viewers officially number around a million per episode when it's on TV, but unofficially the audience is much bigger than that, both locally and internationally, thanks to its online presence. For a show that was written off by many critics as teen nonsense at the start of the first series, it's been hugely successful. Skins fans voted it to victory in the Audience Award category at last year's Baftas, beating The X Factor, Coronation Street and The Apprentice. The fans have also had an impact on the focus of the new series. The emotional centre of the previous run was meant to be the love triangle between Effy (younger sister of series one star Tony) and her sixth-form suitors Freddie and Cook. It's been a narcissistic and painfully adult affair of some messiness, but it was the smaller, and far sweeter, story about two girls falling in love with each other that really grabbed the viewers' attention. As a result, Emily and Naomi – that's Naomily to brevity-lovers – are now a much bigger part of the show.

"Last year it was a side storyline," confirms Lily Loveless, who plays Naomi, "but this year it's quite important, probably because of the comments on the website."

Kat Prescott (Emily) is happy that it's had such a positive impact with the audience. "I've had four fan letters, which was so cool," she grins. "People who can relate to it probably feel quite alienated in some ways, so to see it … I know if I was in that position it would be a relief. There isn't that much about young girls coming out."

And they weren't just coming out. They ended up as romantic leads in a primetime teenage drama and the couple that all the viewers were rooting for. At the end of the last series, they were the only ones with a high-school-movie-style happy ending.

"After Emily admitted she was gay," Kat explains, "the rest of the series wasn't about them being girls. It was about two people being in love and one of them, for whatever reason, was being funny." She shrugs, "So that was quite cool. Because I don't think it should be a massive issue."

For all its posturing, the outwardly cool, don't-give-a-shit kids aren't necessarily where the heart of Skins lies. Series four kicks off with an episode given over to Thomas, who arrived in Bristol from the Democratic Republic of the Congo at the start of series three. He didn't really do much except get a girlfriend and beat Mackenzie Crook in a chilli-eating contest. This time, he's balancing his mother's expectations and religion with teenage life in a different environment with an entirely new moral code to negotiate. It's a thoughtful, heavyweight storyline, and Merv Lukeba, who plays him, is thrilled to be getting more attention.

"It's a wicked episode," he smiles. "I've got four sex scenes with four different girls! You should have seen the grin on my face when I got the scripts. I'm nicely looked after. High five, Mr Executive Producer!"
'At 17, I was going, "Why are my parents so stupid?" Once I got that, I got the show' John Griffin, producer

Thomas's struggle to fit in and the Naomi-Emily love story suggest that – whisper it! – Skins is sometimes, kind of, responsible television. It can handle the "issues" because it's well written, by a mix of experienced and very young writers, who use a team of teenage consultants to come in for a meeting once a week to give their thoughts on the latest developments. And the young cast are bolstered by an incredible roster of guest stars, including Peter Capaldi, Sally Phillips, Paul Kaye, Josie Long, Bill Bailey, Olivia Colman, Harry Enfield, David Baddiel, Ronni Ancona, Chris Addison and Ardal O'Hanlon, who usually pop up as inept parents who are far more irresponsible than their offspring.

"When I first saw it, I thought, 'Why are the adults so two-dimensional and silly?'" explains series producer John Griffin, standing outside an anonymous house in a Bristol suburb that leads a double life as Effy's back garden. Griffin produced the equally raucous Shameless for Channel 4 before taking on Skins for series four. "I didn't get it. Then it dawned on me. At 17, I was going, 'Why are my parents so stupid? They don't understand. They behave in a ridiculous way.' Once I got that, I got the show."

And now, the show is turning into an industry. There's a film in development, possibly with the series three/four cast; their last call before a new guard is ushered in for the next two-year cycle. A novel came out at the start of the month, offering an official take on fan fiction by filling in the gaps of the unseen summer holiday in a style somewhere between Mills & Boon and Bebo. (Sample extract: "Cook sniggered, his face sweating – from the heat, from the MDMA. 'Fair enough, Naomikins.' He took a swig of lager and waved the can at us.") Then there's the American remake, which gets the cast riled up, because they're not sure it will work with the stricter US broadcasting rules; and, of course, there's the prospect of a whole new gang for 2011/12 and beyond. "In that sense," says Griffin, "we've made a show with more longevity than anything else. Normally your cast get too old. It gets tired. The second year means we can tell whatever story we want. As long as we keep reinventing it … I think it can last. By the time our audience are in their late 20s, I think people will talk about which was their Skins generation, like I talk about my Doctor Who." Does he think it's already influential? "I do, I suppose, but I never quite know who's copying who. I think if I'm being really honest, the really cool kids, older teens, sneer at Skins a little bit. But we've become an incredibly aspirational show for kids who are just going out into the adult world, wanting to go to sixth-form college, and wanting their lives to be that fantastic. Or tragic!"

There's no point in denying that the drink, drugs and reckless shagging are a huge draw for its teenage audience. Griffin doesn't even try; you might have to tick a box to say you're 18 or over to watch the show online, but he's well aware that it appeals to a younger crowd. He reasons that the cast are roughly the same age as their characters, and if they don't break the rules about what the actors can do, it shouldn't be too much for its viewers to handle. Then there are the mega-fun trailers for each series, which pack in enough sex, drugs and rock'n'roll to get the more reactionary headline-makers up in arms about – shock! – real-life "Skins parties". Teenagers! In houses! Getting off with each other! Or, if the Daily Mail is to be believed, gatherings "named after the Channel 4 drama about appallingly behaved teenagers", in which houses get trashed and family pets are drugged.

Attracting such a mix of snooty disapproval and parental fear, as it has from the start, just shows that Skins is doing its job properly; Hollyoaks would give its entire Wags wardrobe to be this smart, funny and relevant. Because Skins really is one of the best shows for and about teenagers that British TV has ever come up with. It's just that, like all teenagers, it's misunderstood.

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