A Netflix show with gruesome scenes has made some viewers “sickened.”
People who love the streaming service are threatening to quit their subscriptions because of the TV show that is now showing.
Based on the life of an @dult celebrity, some moments have caused a lot of argument among viewers.

Netflix’s official Instagram account published a snippet of the controversial show, but it was shortly taken down. People online didn’t like it very much.
Someone wrote, “Now we have p*** on Netflix too?” My kids can’t view this since I’m canceling the account right now.
Another person concurred, saying, “Isn’t this wrong for a site where kids follow you?”
Are we just making p*** popular now? A third viewer said, “Why isn’t there a warning for this kind of explicit content?” But women who upload pictures of themselves breastfeeding are flagged. If you want to put crap like this out, it should be in its own category on Netflix.

Another worried user said, “I’m not sure I like the way Netflix is going.”
Someone else wrote, “It’s really sad that this is okay in today’s society.” It’s sad and insulting to the value of both men and women that our society and generation are so hypersexualized.
The platform says that the drama, which is based on real events, is “the story of how Rocco Siffredi escaped a humble life and became the world’s greatest p*** star.”

The official synopsis for the show on IMDb says: Siffredi’s family, where he came from, his relationship, and the circumstances that led him to start his career in p****graphy and understand that the monster in his body is compatible with love.
Alessandro Borghi plays Siffredi in the seven-part series Supers**, which is about a man who has starred in more than 1,500 X-rated movies.
Francesca Manieri, the director of the series, told The Independent, “My goal was to put men in front of themselves.”
We call this the phallocentric system because the d*** is the center of thought before anything else.

What can you do in 2024 to learn more about how men and women get along? And how can guys position themselves in front of the image of their symbolic d*** and try to figure all of this out?
The movie has gotten some good reviews from critics, even though there has been some controversy.
The Indian Times has an article by Rohan Naahar. Even when the show looks like it might go off the rails, Borghi is always fun to watch. He makes Siffredi, who could have easily came across as a horrible person, seem weak.
It’s also helpful that the character, at least the one made for the program, is always the first to call out his weaknesses. Being self-aware can help you get the audience’s sympathy a lot. There’s nothing worse than seeing a loose cannon shoot away without knowing how much harm they’re doing.
In Variety, Aramide Tinubu says: Supers** isn’t only about one man’s life and career; it’s also about the lives people make when they dare to be their most authentic selves in the world.
Here is the trailer for the new show that has caused a lot of talk…