TV Shows
Health

Netflix is delving into fitness with Nike Training Club programs

Because binge-shaming you with those little pop-ups wasn't enough, apparently.
By Shannon Connellan  on 
Closeup shot of a sporty woman using a cellphone while exercising in a studio.
Credit: Delmaine Donson / Getty Images

Netflix is delving into fitness, and I, dear reader, couldn't be more...happy about it, yes, that's it.

The streaming giant has teamed up with Nike to launch its longstanding free workout app Nike Training Club on the platform on Dec. 30 (yep, New Year's, it's not lost on me). Basically, alongside your gloriously slothy binge-watching stretches, you'll be able to run up that hill physically and metaphorically and access exercise content too.

"It's not always easy to motivate yourself to exercise, but the option to feel the burn and then directly transition into one of your favourite shows does have a certain appeal," Netflix wrote in a blog post Thursday. "And now, that’s exactly what you can do."

Nike Training Club's Netflix offering will initially have five exercise programs made up of multiple episodes, released in 10 languages and made for varying fitness levels. There's the 13-episode program "Kickstart Fitness with the Basics," as well as programs for core, vinyasa yoga, HIT and strength, and "Feel Good Fitness."

Netflix users will be able to search "Nike" in the app to find the workouts. If you don't have Netflix, the Nike Training Club app is free to download for both Android and iOS.

A Netflix menu showing programs including Nike Training Club
What your Netflix home lobby will look like. Credit: Nike

Along with its highly popular Nike Run Club app, Nike Training Club been a signature of the athletic retail company for years, offering home workouts you can bust out on your phone or tablet anytime. Nike made in-app workouts within Nike Training Club free during the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns, and hasn't rolled it back since. Of course, as Reuters notes, this means the company has been able to gather a serious amount of personal data including individual exercise and buying habits. Just something to keep in mind.

This latest addition, meanwhile, is another feather in the cap of Netflix's ventures into more interactive, holistic content, from its partnership with Headspace to its gaming vertical.

The first batch of Nike fitness classes will launch worldwide on Netflix Dec. 30 with more to come in 2023. As Mashable's Australia Editor Caitlin Welsh correctly observed (credit where it's due), they really missed a trick by not calling this Netflixercise.

Shannon Connellan is Mashable's UK Editor based in London, formerly Mashable's Australia Editor, but emotionally, she lives in the Creel House.


Recommended For You

All those 'Glass Onion' cameos, ranked


Netflix's '1899' mysteriously cancelled after just one season

16 of the best Squarespace templates for artists, painters, and creative types
By Veronika Bondarenko and Jennifer Allen

'That '90s Show' teaser is a nostalgic blast from the past

More in Entertainment

CES 2023: Samsung's new AI oven will let you livestream your bakes

CES 2023: How to watch keynotes from Sony, Samsung, and more

Could Amazon become the big dog in the world of streaming sports?
By Jonathan Tully

Your Apple Watch can predict when you're not stressed out


Trending on Mashable

How to watch Netflix's 'Kaleidoscope' in chronological order, if you must

Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for January 3

AirTag odyssey: One woman's lost luggage journey goes viral


Netflix's '1899' mysteriously cancelled after just one season
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
By signing up to the Mashable newsletter you agree to receive electronic communications from Mashable that may sometimes include advertisements or sponsored content.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!