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Netflix Cancellations Are 8 Times Higher Than Average following Cuties Backlash

Netflix Cancellations Are 8 Times Higher Than Average following Cuties Backlash


Netflix lost an above-average number of subscribers over the weekend following a backlash against the company for streaming the controversial film Cuties, according to a new report from a data research company.

YipitData says Netflix’s cancellation rate on Saturday was eight times higher compared to the average cancellation rate in August. It was a multi-year high in daily cancellations, YipitData told Variety.

Cuties, rated TV-MA, follows a group of 11-year-old girls who join a dance group named “Cuties” and “become aware of their own femininity through dance,” according to the show’s description. A Twitter clip that has amassed 22 million views shows the girls on stage dressed in risqué outfits while they twerk, touch each other and grind their hips.

The loss in subscribers followed a “Cancel Netflix” trend on Twitter and Google. “#CancelNetflix” was the fourth-highest trending topic on Twitter Sept. 10. Google also showed a major spike in “Cancel Netflix” searches over the weekend.

Roughly 700,000 individuals have signed a petition urging Netflix to pull the movie.

Netflix has defended the film, saying it is a “social commentary against the sexualization of young children.”

The Parents Television Council, though, says the film “sexualizes children.”

“Although the film tackles an important topic – one that under different circumstances we might even applaud – it’s the way the film goes about it that’s problematic. This film could have been a powerful rebuke of popular culture that sexualizes children and robs them of their innocence,” said Melissa Henson, program director for the Parents Television Council. “… These young actresses were sexualized in the making of this movie. In addition to being coached and trained in highly sexualized dance routines, these girls use foul, vulgar language like ‘f–k,’ ‘b–ch,’ and ‘t-ts.’ They are made to wear revealing clothing.”

Further, Amy, the main character “is shown pulling her pants and underpants down so she can photograph her genitals to post online,” Henson said. “In another scene Amy attempts to seduce a grown man – a family member, no less – to get out of trouble for stealing his cell phone. This child actress, in a scene with a grown man, removes her jacket and begins to remove her pants before being pushed away. These girls are shown thrusting their pelvises to simulate sex, and ‘humping’ the floor. And none of this was necessary to show to critique the sexualization of children.

“Although there is a danger that little girls will be attracted to this film – the far greater risk is the way this film normalizes the sexualization of little girls,” Henson said.

Related:

#CancelNetflix Trends on Twitter after Controversial Film Cuties Airs

375000 Sign Petition to Pull Cuties as Netflix Defends Film as ‘Social Commentary’

Photo courtesy: ©Netflx/IMDb


Michael Foust has covered the intersection of faith and news for 20 years. His stories have appeared in Baptist Press, Christianity Today, The Christian Post, the Leaf-Chroniclethe Toronto Star and the Knoxville News-Sentinel.

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