Adolescence Part 1: Playing at the Top Of Your Intelligence
In the first installment of this four-part series, Jacob Krueger breaks down the pilot episode of Adolescence, the acclaimed limited series by Stephen Graham and Jack Thorne, and explores how it redefines the rules of the crime genre. Rather than relying on high-octane action or procedural tropes, Adolescence opens with a quiet moment between a father and son—immediately signaling a series more interested in emotional complexity than sensationalism. Jacob examines how the show uses a one-shot visual style, grounded performances, and a deceptively simple interrogation scene to set up its true narrative engine—not a mystery about what happened, but a deeper inquiry into why. Along the way, he introduces the concept of writing characters “at the top of their intelligence” and shows how this choice can lead to more authentic conflict, deeper suspense, and unexpected emotional payoffs.
Listeners will learn:
- How to hook your audience in the first 10 seconds of a pilot
- What it means to write characters “at the top of their intelligence”
- How Adolescence builds suspense without relying on genre clichés
- Why showing competent characters can create more compelling drama
- How the show uses limited perspective to reflect its central themes
- Why the central mystery isn’t “what happened?”—but “why?”
- How structure, theme, and cinematography work together to shape audience expectations
- What to do when your script demands a character make a less-than-smart choice
Whether you’re building a limited series or just learning how to craft a great pilot, this episode offers valuable insight into writing complex characters and reinventing familiar genres from the inside out.

Join Jake for free every Thursday night at Thursday Night Writes, RSVP here
and check all of our classes!



