Follows the 2023-24 Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders squad: their auditions, training camp, and finally the ending of the Cowboys season, which predictably ended in the NFC Wild Card Round.Follows the 2023-24 Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders squad: their auditions, training camp, and finally the ending of the Cowboys season, which predictably ended in the NFC Wild Card Round.Follows the 2023-24 Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders squad: their auditions, training camp, and finally the ending of the Cowboys season, which predictably ended in the NFC Wild Card Round.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 4 nominations total
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It seems like a lot of viewers missed the point of this. It's as if some of you thought you were rating DCC directly. If you found the music tense instead of bright, it's because it's supposed to be. If you found the way the cheerleaders are spoken to in a toxic manner, you were supposed to. If you were disappointed this wasn't about hard working dancers loving their low pay part time job because it's "tradition" and was instead about toxic workplaces, impossible beauty standards, and the exploitation of women's bodies, you're a part of the problem. The DC as an organization has the money to pay these women a reasonable salary a hundred times over. At the VERY least bodyguards. Lastly the constant Jesus talk was meant to highlight how and why it's so easy to take advantage of a group of young women.
This 7 part doco is a well funded story that looks good and does well. It has all the structure, flesh and hallmarks of what that old pamphlet "How to make a documentary for Netflix", required.
Thing is though - if this is what America is all about, then geez! We're doomed.
It would have been good if the producers could have shown some of the love and community that apparently they are famous for, but No. It was absent.
Not without content though - In the last reunion episode we had a lady that was an original 70 model, currently battling and surviving from ovarian cancer.
Would have been good to see how the DCC came together and supported this sister.
But no, there is no footage or record of that,...because it didn't and doesn't happen.
America and it's values take centre stage here. We're screwed.
Thing is though - if this is what America is all about, then geez! We're doomed.
It would have been good if the producers could have shown some of the love and community that apparently they are famous for, but No. It was absent.
Not without content though - In the last reunion episode we had a lady that was an original 70 model, currently battling and surviving from ovarian cancer.
Would have been good to see how the DCC came together and supported this sister.
But no, there is no footage or record of that,...because it didn't and doesn't happen.
America and it's values take centre stage here. We're screwed.
I thought this documentary drama series was interesting to see the inside of this iconic organization. A lot of people are going to scream sexism blah blah blah but there is certainly a tradition here that is highly respected. The ladies work so hard to make the team. My biggest appalling moment was finding out this is more of a hobby instead of a full time paying job. Also the physical toll that cheerleading is on the body. There's definitely a "type" to this space, and I'm definitely not one of them, but I gained so much respect for these ladies after seeing their dedication and commitment and heart into becoming a Dallas Cowboy Cheerleader.
Meant by those involved to paint the organization in a positive light, I felt this series highlighted the misogyny, the exploitation, and the objectification of these women. Paid a repugnantly small salary, these women devote their time and destroy their bodies to be part of something that is frankly beneath them. Many of them are highly educated, most of them have had years and years of formal dance training. Surely they can do better than this. But as one of the veterans said, they had "drank the Gatorade". Eye-opening for those of us unfamiliar with the franchise and worth watching as it exemplifies one of the ways in which the patriarchy is still alive and well, and how some women are perpetuating it.
$25k a year to sell your soul and body to a billionaire. Maybe that's what Hollywood has always been too. Being cut for being too short, or smiling the wrong way, or not having the '"it factor". Hollywood. Hip replacement at 25 years old? All for the honour and joy of being part of a sisterhood. But for $25k a year? Netflix owns the global franchise for sports and entertainment exposes and this one is as good as Drive to Survive in its own way. Utterly compelling. The steely inhumanity of The Owner is probably normal for corporate America, But is it acceptable? Slave labour in todays world isn't right.....
Did you know
- TriviaBasically of reboot of 2006 series DCC: Making the Team.
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- 美國甜心:達拉斯牛仔啦啦隊
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- 1h(60 min)
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