With its move to NBC following its abrupt cancellation on Fox, Brooklyn Nine-Nine is seemingly looking to revamp its format with a storyline tackling a serious topic.

Showrunner Dan Goor has revealed that the cop comedy might address issues reflective of the Me Too movement such as sexual harassment and assault.

This revelation comes in the wake of Terry Crews’ courage to admit his experience with sexual assault in 2017.

With its recent move to NBC, which has seen huge ratings in large part due to the success with the family drama This Is Us, a show that has dealt with serious topics such as racism and mental health, it would be wise for Brooklyn Nine-Nine to take a more serious approach to its storytelling.

Because of one of its male cast members, it would be a smart approach to have Brooklyn Nine-Nine‘s writers craft a storyline in which one of the series characters experience sexual harassment. Stories of men encountering sexual harassment in the workplace are still considered taboo.

In the age of the Me Too movement, men coming forward with tales of harassment are still, unfortunately, looked down upon, as the men coming forward are wrongly perceived as weak for showcasing vulnerability.

If you need an example of this, look no further than rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson’s gross treatment of Crews following his Me Too revelation.

A Me Too storyline with a man at the center could help spur a bigger conversation revolving around toxic masculinity and its insidious nature that has conditioned men to believe they can’t emote or must show a tough exterior at all times.