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  • STAR RATING: ***** Saturday Night **** Friday Night *** Friday Morning ** Sunday Night * Monday Morning

    The true story of Jerome Rogers (Chance Perdomo), a young man barely out of his teens who landed an insecure, zero hour contract job as a courier on his moped, delivering blood packs between hospitals. In the CCTV camera ridden nightmare of London, he managed to rack up a series of parking fines that escalated out of control, and after using the assistance of pay-day loan companies and getting into trouble with bailiffs, was driven to take his own life.

    According to large sections of the left leaning media, and even to numourous TV programmes high-lighting the problem, the scale of debt among younger people in the UK is at a pretty desperate stage, with many in precarious employment where in many cases, they are worse off than those out of work. Wages are not consistent with the cost of living (especially in the capital!) and it's making a decent lifestyle completely unsustainable. In the most extreme circumstances, it's now taking casualties, as this dramatization of one of the most extreme cases all too powerfully proves.

    It's the central performance of Perdomo as the tragic Rogers that really serves as the driving force, an afflicted, hopeless young man, whose life was ripped apart by cameras working for a computerized court, where he can't be found guilty or innocent or have any sort of legal representation, just have big, soulless black machines issue him with fines he has no hope of paying. In his final scenes, he really comes alive, delivering a gut wrenching outburst of emotion that really stirs your gut.

    While it delivers little in the way of humour or anything to feel positive or happy about, it's still a highly impressive and well worth seeing drama that shines a light on an accumulative problem in our society at the moment that really needs looking at. ****
  • akatic-2186912 September 2018
    This should be shown in schools as part ot the curriculum,roll on the corbyn government.
  • almanac-3917831 March 2024
    When I first saw this programme I felt devastated by it. Based on a true story, it shows how Jerome Rogers's initially small debt ballooned, propelled by a soulless system of computer algorithms, into a debt that literally became life-threatening. The youthful, bewildered innocence of Jerome is ably portrayed by the main actor, and the supporting cast and direction are excellent.

    The drama reflects a deep, terrible problem in society we've all become inured to: money, the "root of all evil". Had Jerome been rich he wouldn't have had to deal with all the problems thrown at him. His experience is multiplied over and over across the globe. How many innocent people have lost their lives due a lack of money to buy food, shelter, medical aid or medication? How many will die in the future due to corporations destroying the environment in the headlong rush for profits?

    The real-life footage of Jerome at the end of this drama, when he was being ordered to pay up by a debt collector, is all but unbearable. RIP Jerome.