Keyboard shortcuts

Press or to navigate between chapters

Press S or / to search in the book

Press ? to show this help

Press Esc to hide this help

Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making The Team Season 12 -

Premiering on August 3, 2017, followed the high-stakes journey of aspiring dancers vying for a spot on the most iconic squad in professional sports. This season was defined by significant transitions, including the move to a new multi-billion dollar training facility and historic performances that pushed both veterans and rookies to their physical and emotional limits. Season 12 Overview and Notable Stats

In Season 12 of "Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team," we meet a diverse group of talented young women from all over the country, each with their own unique story and motivation for wanting to join the DCC. Throughout the season, we see the candidates face numerous challenges, including intense dance rehearsals, physically demanding workouts, and grueling interviews with the selection committee. dallas cowboys cheerleaders: making the team season 12

On the surface, Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team (now in its 12th season) looks like a glittery time capsule from 2005: spray tans, heavily layered blonde highlights, and a soundtrack of generic pop-rock anthems about “believing in yourself.” But strip away the pom-poms, and Season 12 reveals itself as something unexpectedly compelling: a high-stakes corporate apprenticeship in emotional labor, coded in the language of kick-lines. Premiering on August 3, 2017, followed the high-stakes

You can stream "Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team Season 12" on CMT, Hulu, or Amazon Prime Video. Don't miss out on the excitement and drama - tune in and cheer on your favorite candidates as they compete for a spot on the DCC! Throughout the season, we see the candidates face

Not every story is a knife fight. The emotional core belongs to Milan, a plus-size (by DCC standards, meaning a size 4) former NBA dancer with a radiant smile. Her struggle isn’t weight—it’s memory retention. Watching her cry in her car after flubbing a routine, then return the next day with index cards taped to her steering wheel, is more inspiring than any “final performance” montage. And then there’s Brennan, a mother of two who made the team a decade prior but left to raise kids. Her comeback attempt is fraught with ageism (unspoken) and stamina issues (very spoken). When she finally nails the notoriously hard “Thunderstruck” routine, Judy’s rare smile is worth the entire season.

★★★★☆ (Four out of five hair ties—minus one for the unnecessary tanning bed segments.)