The sci-fi survival drama La Brea just arrived on Netflix starting May 1, 2026, bringing all three seasons and 30 episodes to a brand new audience. The show originally aired on NBC from September 2021 to February 2024 before getting canceled after its third season. Now that the series is streaming on a major platform, many families are curious whether this sinkhole adventure is appropriate for younger viewers.
The show starts with a terrifying premise. A massive sinkhole rips open at the famous La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, swallowing cars, buildings, and hundreds of people. The survivors fall into a strange underground world that looks like 10,000 BC, filled with prehistoric animals and unknown dangers. The story follows the Harris family, who gets split between the surface world and this dangerous primeval land.
La Brea Carries a TV-14 Rating in the United States
The TV-14 rating means the show is not suitable for children under 14 years old. This rating sits between PG-13 and R when comparing to movie ratings. Parents should know that TV-14 shows can include stronger violence, more mature language, drug references, or intense situations than shows rated PG or TV-PG.
Common Sense Media gave the show a rating suggesting it is appropriate for viewers age 18+ based on parent reviews. This is stricter than the official TV-14 rating. The difference comes from the show’s heavy themes and some disturbing moments that might bother even older teenagers.
The show premiered to mixed reviews, holding only a 29% score on Rotten Tomatoes from critic reviews. Audience scores tell a slightly different story, with many viewers enjoying the suspenseful plot twists and family drama at the center of the story.
Violence and Scary Moments Are the Biggest Concern
La Brea does not hold back on danger and death. The first episode alone shows a massive disaster that destroys a major Los Angeles landmark. For young children, this can be especially frightening because the La Brea Tar Pits are a real place that families actually visit on field trips. Kids may have trouble separating the fictional catastrophe from reality.
Throughout the series, survivors face constant threats including:
- Wolf attacks where animals chase and injure people
- Sabre-toothed tiger encounters resulting in bloody fights and deaths
- Dead bodies shown on screen, including a decomposing corpse
- A man with his arm torn off (shown without excessive gore but still disturbing)
- Gunshots and violent confrontations between characters
One of the most intense moments happens when a character nearly dies by sucde, putting a gun to their own head. This scene deals with serious mental health struggles and can be very upsetting for sensitive viewers.

Language, Drugs, and Adult Content in La Brea
The show contains coarse language throughout all three seasons. One review counted roughly 25 obsenities and 15 religious profanities across just the first four episodes. Words like “hell,” “a*,” and “sht” appear regularly. Characters also use “Jesus” and “Oh my God” as exclamations multiple times per episode.
Drug references appear frequently. One character constantly uses a vape pen containing medical marij**na for anxiety, shown in almost every episode like product placement. Another episode shows **a duffel bag full of herin in someone’s car trunk. Characters also drink alcohol, with one scene explicitly showing a character drinking from a flask.
For families concerned about romantic content, La Brea includes:
- A same-s*x couple (Tony Greene and Billy Fisher) shown as a normal relationship
- Several kissing scenes between different characters
- References to past adultery in character backstories
- No nudity, only bare chests during medical scenes
What Parents Should Know Before Pressing Play
The show’s dark and intense tone runs through every episode. Survivors deal with constant loss, separation from family members, and the psychological toll of being trapped in a deadly place with no clear escape. This is not a light action show.
On the positive side, La Brea promotes teamwork, courage, and perseverance. The characters must work together, communicate clearly, and face their fears to survive. Family bonds, especially between parents and children trying to reunite, drive the emotional core of the story.
The cast includes good diversity and representation. A disabled actress (Zyra Gorecki) plays disabled character Izzy Harris, bringing authentic lived experience to the role. The show features actors of color in leadership positions without relying on stereotypes.
Where La Brea Is Streaming Right Now
La Brea became available on Netflix starting May 1, 2026 for subscribers in the United States. The complete series includes:
- Season 1: 10 episodes
- Season 2: 10 episodes
- Season 3: 10 episodes
For viewers in the UK, Canada, Australia, and India, Netflix availability may vary. The show also remains available for purchase on Prime Video and other digital storefronts in select regions. The series originally aired on NBC and is a Universal Television production, meaning it may also appear on Peacock depending on licensing agreements.
The TV-14 rating fits the content. Teenagers 14 and older who enjoy sci-fi survival stories like Lost or The 100 will likely handle the intensity. But parents of sensitive children or younger teens should watch the first episode alone before deciding. The opening sinkhole sequence alone might be too much for viewers under 12.
Also Read: NBC Cancels ‘Brilliant Minds’ and ‘Stumble’: Low Ratings End Two Shows
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