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Spinning Out Parents' Guide

Heads Up, Parents: Spinning Out Is Definitely Not a Warm and Fuzzy Sports Drama For Kids

Watch out! This post contains spoilers.

Although the Netflix skating drama Spinning Out might seem like a perfect show for all audiences, the reality of the show is a little different. If you're used to heartwarming figure-skating movies and assuming this is more of the same to watch with your kids, you might want to take a look through our parents' guide ahead. While Spinning Out's first season does feature many of the same elements that would appeal to younger audiences just like other skating fare, it also has some decidedly more adult and more intense elements that may give parents pause. Ahead, check out five things you should know before deciding whether to stream Spinning Out with your family.

Image Source: Everett Collection

1. Spinning Out Starts Out With a Graphic Accident

The entire premise of Spinning Out relies on the fact that its leading lady, Kat, is a former singles skater who is forced to quit because of a physically and mentally traumatic injury. In the opening minutes of the first episode, we see a flashback to the day of her accident, and it's intense and a little bit graphic, with blood from her injury seen on screen without cutting away. Even though it's framed as a flashback, so we know Kat is OK, it's still a scary moment right off the bat.

Kat's isn't the only nasty accident seen almost immediately: a pairs skater sustains a terrifying injury to her foot when her partner's blade comes too close. If your child (or you) is sensitive to depictions of injury, be forewarned.

Image Source: Everett Collection

2. Spinning Out Is a Sports Romance For Grown-Ups

There are countless love triangles (and other shapes) throughout the first season of Spinning Out, and with many of the involved characters being adults, the show doesn't avoid it when the relationships turn sexual. Several of the characters have more than one sexual relationship over the course of the season, and while it's not necessarily HBO-level graphic sex or full nudity, the romance subplots do include a fair amount of obvious and matter-of-fact sexual content. It's definitely not suitable for younger children.

Image Source: Everett Collection

3. Spinning Out Deals With Issues of Abuse in Sports

Any real-life sports fans will know that there have been a series of abuse scandals rocking several sports, most famously in USA women's gymnastics. Spinning Out tackles those real-life events head-on, with a storyline in which Kat suspects her teenage sister, Serena, is being taken advantage of by an adult man. Be prepared for discussions about these issues.

Spoilers: There is a psychologically horrifying, emotionally intense fallout from these suspicions that includes a brief depiction of nonsexual violence.

Image Source: Everett Collection

4. Spinning Out Depicts the Gruesome Physical Toll of Skating

Figure skating is physically gruelling, and Spinning Out shows that side of the sport without flinching. Throughout the series, there are several scenes that depict the often-gruesome injuries the athletes sustain. Jenn deals with a recurrent hip injury, while the badly damaged feet of several skaters are occasionally shown in close-up.

Image Source: Everett Collection

5. Spinning Out Isn't a Glamorous Depiction of Figure Skating

It's very likely that younger viewers might be drawn to Spinning Out because figure skating is a glamorous sport that's fun to watch. This show, however, deals much more with the interpersonal drama and the day-to-day grind of training rather than the sparkly finished product in competition. The trailers may look like Ice Princess or The Cutting Edge, but it's a decidedly more adult show than those familiar titles. It should be suitable for teens who are ready to consume content that's more intense, but for younger audiences, this probably isn't the show for them.

Image Source: Everett Collection

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