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== Characterisation ==
== Characterisation ==


JJ is shown to be quite self-concious and nervous in his own skin, especially around girls, so much so that he finds it hard to communicate with them on a confident level and in-turn resorts to his love of magic tricks in order to impress people. The friends he does have however are [[Freddie Mclair]] and [[James Cook]], whom he considers his best friends though he later becomes torn between the two after Freedie and Cook have a falling out. He suffers from a form of [[Autism]] and because of this, in the past he has referred to himself as 'not normal' during a conversation with [[Emily Fitch]], who he discovers goes to the same psychiatric clinic as him.
JJ is quite self-concious and nervous in his own skin, especially around girls, so much so that he finds it hard to communicate with them on a confident level and in-turn resorts to his love of magic tricks in order to impress people. The friends he does have however are [[Freddie Mclair]] and [[James Cook]], whom he considers his best friends though he later becomes torn between the two after Freedie and Cook have a falling out. He suffers from a form of [[Autism]] and because of this, in the past he has referred to himself as 'not normal' during a conversation with [[Emily Fitch]], who he discovers goes to the same psychiatric clinic as him.

Revision as of 22:31, 8 March 2009

Jonah Jeremiah "JJ" Jones is a fictional character from the British TV series Skins. He is played by the actor Ollie Barbieri.

Characterisation

JJ is quite self-concious and nervous in his own skin, especially around girls, so much so that he finds it hard to communicate with them on a confident level and in-turn resorts to his love of magic tricks in order to impress people. The friends he does have however are Freddie Mclair and James Cook, whom he considers his best friends though he later becomes torn between the two after Freedie and Cook have a falling out. He suffers from a form of Autism and because of this, in the past he has referred to himself as 'not normal' during a conversation with Emily Fitch, who he discovers goes to the same psychiatric clinic as him.