logo
Survivors of strangulation are being let down when they turn on their TVs

Survivors of strangulation are being let down when they turn on their TVs

Metro17-05-2025

The first time I saw someone being strangled on TV was in EastEnders.
I was 16 in 2005, when gangster Johnny Allen (Billy Murray) held Sharon Watts (Letitia Dean) against the wall by her throat, yelling threats into her face before she revealed she was pregnant.
The scene did not really stick out to me back then, nor did I find it shocking or moving. But therein lies the problem.
To me, it seemed like Sharon walked away with no shock afterwards, confusion, trauma, or flashbacks. It was something that just happened – a small piece in a bigger storyline.
Two decades later, the same thing happened when Keanu Taylor (Danny Walters) strangled Sharon until Linda Carter (Kellie Bright) stopped him before it was too late.
But the thing is, strangulation is rarely broken down and seen for what it actually is.
I'm the Communications Manager of the Institute for Addressing Strangulation (IFAS) and I want you to really picture it. The person you trust most in the world has their hands around your throat, restricting your breathing and is looking directly into your eyes as they do this.
Fear is running through you, and you believe with every fibre of your being that you will die. These are your last moments. Only they are not.
You survive. But this moment is lodged into your memory forever. This is what it means to be a victim-survivor of strangulation.
So why can't popular culture reflect this accurately? The best we can seem to muster is that it's a harmless sexual act, which is not only alarmingly inaccurate but also minimises the health risks.
Films such as Lady Chatterley's Lover, Obsession, and 365 Days all feature strangulation as a normal part of sexual experiences. But watching these scenes, you would never know how easily the act of strangulation can cause harm.
Then there's strangulation as a purely violent act, as seen in the TV series, Mr Bigstuff, where Danny Dyer's character is strangling someone using a hammer handle.
But what sits between these extremes is much more complex, widespread, and dangerous. Strangulation often occurs as part of domestic abuse or sexual violence, often perpetrated by someone you know or maybe even love and trust.
It is the ultimate control you can exert on another human being. By applying pressure to the neck – a vulnerable area – and restricting someone's breath, you are showing you have final say over whether they live or die.
That's why I want to see more scenes in popular culture of strangulation that take it seriously in domestic abuse contexts. Because the stats are truly sobering.
Research has shown that a person can lose consciousness in around seven to 10 seconds of being strangled, damaging blood vessels in the neck, leading to blood clots forming, which may result in a stroke. In fact, evidence suggests it's the second most common cause of stroke in young women.
IFAS analysed data from Domestic Homicide Reviews, which showed that prior controlling behaviours were present in two third of cases where the victim was fatally strangled. Over half of those who were fatally strangled had experienced non-fatal strangulation prior to their death.
On top of that, of the 2,000 women aged 14 years and above who were killed in the UK since 2014, strangulation was used in 550 killings; 372 of those women killed were strangled by an intimate partner.
One in 4 women will experience domestic abuse at some point in their lives
ONS research revealed that, in 2023, the police recorded a domestic abuse offence approximately every 40 seconds
Yet Crime Survey for England & Wales data for the year ending March 2023 found only 18.9% of women who experienced partner abuse in the last 12 months reported the abuse to the police
According to Refuge, 84% of victims in domestic abuse cases are female, with 93% of defendants being male
Safe Lives reports that disabled women are twice as likely to experience domestic abuse as non-disabled women, and typically experience domestic abuse for a longer period of time before accessing support
Refuge has also found that, on average, it takes seven attempts before a woman is able to leave for good.
Shockingly, there were a total of 23,817 offences of strangulation and suffocation recorded in England and Wales in the first year of strangulation and suffocation becoming a stand-alone offence.
Given how widespread strangulation is, media reporting on these cases is seriously lacking.
To tackle this, organisations like End Violence Against Women (EVAW) – a UK-based organisation that campaigns to end all forms of violence against women – offers guidelines on how to report on this subject matter, which emphasise the importance of prioritising the voice of the victim or survivor.
Their voices can help educate the public about the risks around strangulation and provide much needed context to the one-dimensional strangulation scenes we are often exposed to in film and TV.
Overall, British soaps have done well to increase understanding of violence against women and girls. This is especially so around coercive control, like during Mo and Trevor's domestic abuse storyline in 2001.
Through physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, Trevor terrorised Mo. This was in the form of coercive control by not letting her see family and friends, rape, and violent acts of aggression like pulling her hair or making her eat Christmas dinner off the floor.
For British audiences at the time, it helped people to recognise signs of abuse in their own relationship and access support. In fact, one domestic abuse organisation stated that it was 'ground-breaking' and the most significant TV portrayal of violence in the home in 30 years.
Since then, domestic abuse has thankfully been covered much more widely in TV and film, like coercive control in the film Alice, Darling, honour-based violence in ITV's Honour, and stalking in Netflix's Baby Reindeer.
But more needs to be done to ensure strangulation is depicted realistically. Watching scenes play out on the big screen, I wonder how many of these producers, directors, or even actors have actually spoken to anyone who has experienced strangulation. More Trending
The irony is that many of the scenes of late showing strangulation would likely have required intimacy coordinators on sets – and rightly so – to protect the actors' wellbeing through creating a safe, consensual, and respectful environment.
But what about the audience watching strangulation scenes? Don't we need to be protected from misinformation, misrepresentation, and minimisation of what strangulation actually is and the harm it causes?
TV and film have the power to help raise awareness of the risks around strangulation and move conversations forward.
View More »
But this starts with speaking to those who have lived experience. Only through these dialogues can we create complex, nuanced, and moving depictions of strangulation.
Do you have a story you'd like to share? Get in touch by emailing jess.austin@metro.co.uk.
Share your views in the comments below.
MORE: My boyfriend poked my back with his penis – his seduction technique needed work
MORE: We're living in the Handmaid's Tale – Adriana Smith proves it's true
MORE: Man jailed for at least 29 years for stabbing Cher Maximen to death at Notting Hill Carnival

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap
EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE actress behind EastEnders' Mary 'The Punk' Smith has revealed a huge new image transformation. The BBC screen star looks completely unrecognisable from her time on Albert Square in a snap that marks four decades since she stepped foot in Walford. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 6 The actress behind the EastEnders character Mary 'The Punk' Smith looks completely different after a career change Credit: BBC Press Release 6 Played by Linda Davidson, she was one of the soap's original characters Credit: BBC 6 She has a fresh blonde haircut and has ditched the thick black eyeliner Credit: Rex Features Mary, played by 61-year-old Linda Davidson, was one of 26 EastEnders characters when the soap launched in 1985. Her single mum character first appeared in episodes three, with viewers getting to know her controversial ways over the following three years. Yet her time on the long running series came to a close in 1988. Linda then stunned fans as Mary and fellow EastEnders OG character George 'Lofty' Harrison reunited for an image with Dot Cotton, played by the late June Brown. It teased their comeback for a storyline in 2018 that saw another of the soap's original characters, Dr Harold Legg, get killed off The pair were also seen together in 2015 at celebrations for the 30th anniversary of EastEnders. Yet away from the soap set, Canadian born Linda looks completely different. She has traded in her character's dark, wild locks and backcombed style for a neat blonde pixie cut. Gone are the leather jackets and pale-faced make-up with heavy eyeliner combinations, with smart suits and red lippie her current uniform. Linda gave up acting - after stints on Casualty and an appearance on the Lorraine show - to work in web design and now runs a social media agency. EastEnders' Mary the Punk and Lofty to return to Albert Square in 2019 after 30 years away She often gives keynote speeches in media and has previously addressed the issue of social mobility in a speech at the House of Commons. SOAP STAR A soap source previously told The Sun how well-regarded her character was. They told us: "Lofty and Mary The Punk are two of the most memorable characters of the original set of stars. Speaking of her own time on the soap, Linda previously said: "EastEnders was my first proper family. "It gave me stability and a fantastic foundation from which to build an incredible life." Mary was seen as one of EastEnders' most controversial characters at its launch — a former punk rock groupie and drug user whose wild lifestyle put her baby at risk. Barely able to write, she couldn't look after her child without her neighbours' help and earned her living as a prostitute. She returned to Walford for two separate stints, in 2019 and 2022. Off screen, Linda previously dated co-star Nejdet Salih, who played cafe owner and minicab driver Ali Osman. 6 She has returned for two soap stints since her 1988 exit Credit: BBC Pictures' Digital Picture 6 She was last in Walford back in 2022 for Dot Cotton's funeral Credit: PA

EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap
EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

EastEnders Mary ‘The Punk' Smith looks unrecognisable 40 years after joining BBC soap

THE actress behind EastEnders' Mary 'The Punk' Smith has revealed a huge new image transformation. The BBC screen star looks completely unrecognisable from her time on Albert Square in a snap that marks four decades since she stepped foot in Walford. 6 6 Mary, played by 61-year-old Linda Davidson, was one of 26 EastEnders characters when the soap launched in 1985. Her single mum character first appeared in episodes three, with viewers getting to know her controversial ways over the following three years. Yet her time on the long running series came to a close in 1988. Linda then stunned fans as Mary and fellow EastEnders OG character George 'Lofty' Harrison reunited for an image with Dot Cotton, played by the late June Brown. It teased their comeback for a storyline in 2018 that saw another of the soap's original characters, Dr Harold Legg, get killed off The pair were also seen together in 2015 at celebrations for the 30th anniversary of EastEnders. Yet away from the soap set, Canadian born Linda looks completely different. She has traded in her character's dark, wild locks and backcombed style for a neat blonde pixie cut. Gone are the leather jackets and pale-faced make-up with heavy eyeliner combinations, with smart suits and red lippie her current uniform. Linda gave up acting - after stints on Casualty and an appearance on the Lorraine show - to work in web design and now runs a social media agency. EastEnders' Mary the Punk and Lofty to return to Albert Square in 2019 after 30 years away She often gives keynote speeches in media and has previously addressed the issue of social mobility in a speech at the House of Commons. SOAP STAR A soap source previously told The Sun how well-regarded her character was. They told us: "Lofty and Mary The Punk are two of the most memorable characters of the original set of stars. Speaking of her own time on the soap, Linda previously said: "EastEnders was my first proper family. "It gave me stability and a fantastic foundation from which to build an incredible life." Mary was seen as one of EastEnders' most controversial characters at its launch — a former punk rock groupie and drug user whose wild lifestyle put her baby at risk. Barely able to write, she couldn't look after her child without her neighbours' help and earned her living as a prostitute. She returned to Walford for two separate stints, in 2019 and 2022. Off screen, Linda previously dated co-star Nejdet Salih, who played cafe owner and minicab driver Ali Osman. 6 6 6

EXCLUSIVE Samantha Womack reveals quitting EastEnders WASN'T her choice as she admits she was 'REJECTED' by BBC bosses
EXCLUSIVE Samantha Womack reveals quitting EastEnders WASN'T her choice as she admits she was 'REJECTED' by BBC bosses

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Samantha Womack reveals quitting EastEnders WASN'T her choice as she admits she was 'REJECTED' by BBC bosses

Samantha Womack has opened about leaving EastEnders, revealing she was forced out of the show after being 'rejected' by its directors. The actress, 52, became a fan favourite as the fiery Ronnie Mitchell on the BBC soap opera, having bagged the part in 2007. But after a decade in Walford, Samantha's time on the show came to an abrupt and brutal end in 2017 as Ronnie and her sister Roxy (Rita Simons) were killed off together on Christmas Day. The move was a widely unpopular one, with some EastEnders die-hard fans even choosing to boycott the prime-time soap over the death of the much-loved Mitchell sisters. Now, Samantha has opened up on her EastEnders exit in an interview with MailOnline, revealing she still 'doesn't understand' why her and Rita's characters were killed off. The much-loved siblings were brutally killed off on Christmas Day in 2017 after an accident in a swimming pool (pictured) - Samantha still 'doesn't understand' why fan-favourites Ronnie and Roxy were killed off by BBC producers The mother-of-two said: 'It was really hard for us because it wasn't in our hands. 'We didn't make the decision to go. I don't really understand what happened, one producer was leaving and another was coming in, I don't know what went on. 'At the time it felt like bereavement, it felt like losing a family member. It was like losing family and losing stability. 'But the thing that was the most painful - and it really was painful - was that me and Rita loved feeling like we belonged there, and then to be rejected, and I know that's emotional but that's what it was, it hit us both so hard. 'I do look back now and think, "God, I could still be there", I would never have moved to Valencia, I would never have done half the things I've done. I was like getting a barnacle off a rock, I probably needed to be forced off at that time.' Since leaving EastEnders, Samantha - who shot to fame on EuroVision aged 18 - has made her way into the world of theatre, appearing in a West End production of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe in 2022. But it was during her time playing the White Witch that she was diagnosed with an 'aggressive' form of breast cancer. 'I didn't have any lumps or feel ill,' she said, 'I've never been a doctor person so in the middle of two shows I went for a check-up not expecting to find anything. 'So I went for the ultrasound and there was a little screen on the wall in the doctors' room, looking at it afterwards we saw this little black shadow that wasn't a circle. My step-dad is doctor and I knew that most things natural are circular. Everyone just went quiet. 'In my brain, I did think, "there you are". I do feel like somewhere in our brains, our intuition is important. I've learnt to listen to that voice in my head as it basically saved my life.' Samantha was back in the theatre just hours after her scan, and recalls giving a hectic performance on-stage as the reality of the situation sunk in. 'I hadn't thought the whole thing through, I think we all knew that it was cancer but it hadn't been confirmed yet,' she said. 'I didn't have any time to think about going back to the theatre to do a second show. I was playing the White Witch, and the play's all about life and death and how close those two things are. 'For my entrance, I was lifted into the sky on this machine and all of this snow is coming down, there's cello music playing. I just remember having this moment of floating in all this snow, looking out into all this black space - I couldn't process what was happening. 'It was sinking in on-stage in front of everybody. I was mad that evening, I was doing all kinds of crazy things. In a way I was letting go of everything.' Samantha was later diagnosed with a high grade three form of breast cancer and required chemotherapy in order to recover. The EastEnders star - who was diagnosed in her late 40s - called the treatment 'terrifying' and remembers the 'awful' smell of chemotherapy on her skin, but went on to announce she was cancer-free five months later. Three years on from her recovery and the actress is now working with GenesisCare on their Keep Abreast of your Breast Density campaign to educate women about breast cancer diagnosis. In particular, they're encouraging women to ask vital questions during mammograms about issues such as their breast density. Women with extremely dense breasts are shockingly six times more likely than those with fatty breasts to get breast cancer. 'Cancer-free's a weird term,' Samantha said, 'we all have cancer in our cells all the time, so there's always a chance it can come back. 'To get a proper diagnosis you need proper information. There are four types of breast density, A, B C and D, but if you're extremely dense it's really difficult to spot a tumour. 'There are options though, if there's anything bothering you at any time, you can instigate these investigations on your own. GenesisCare are empowering women to ask the right questions, and they will tell you what your breast density is. 'Early diagnosis is the difference between cancer sounding like a death sentence and like something you can work through.' Samantha says that she's now feeling 'better, calmer and happier' than ever as she enjoys life at her home in Valencia, Spain. She's more picky and 'willing to say no' to opportunities now, but didn't close the door on a possible return to soap television in the UK. 'The fanbase for Ronnie and Roxy is extraordinary,' the actress said. 'They still to this day go loopy when they hear there's any sort of chance we could come back. 'I don't know (how we could come back), the only way is that they could possibly say that we didn't actually die. I don't know. 'It's a big commitment, I know only too well what those working days are like. But I have a strong affection for the show, I love everyone there and I miss everyone there. 'I loved working with Rita, it felt silly, it felt fun, we were controversial, we were naughty.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store