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Ballet TV is a Japanese online ballet learning platform with a tagline centered on bringing “safety and peace of mind to the world of arts and athletes.” Based on the available content, it is not simply a follow-along lesson site. Instead, it offers a video-based course system covering ballet study, health, safety guidance, medical anatomy, and teacher training, along with a ballet movement dictionary, interviews, history, and entertainment channels.
The course categories are fairly specialized. There is a free ballet movement dictionary covering terms such as plié, glissade, jeté, and pirouette, as well as more advanced content including “Ballet Safety Instructor Qualification®︎,” “Rhythmic Gymnastics Safety Coach Qualification,” “Ballet Anatomy,” “Posture Assessment,” “Dr. Rumiko’s Ballet Medicine Lectures,” and music lectures. The teaching format is mainly pre-recorded lessons, archived videos, and unlimited-viewing content. The site also mentions “ビデオ/ライブレッスン” and Zoom assignments, suggesting that live classes or live-session replays may be available. No 1-on-1 coaching information was found. The teaching language is Japanese.
Pricing is varied. Free members can watch some free videos. Paid membership costs 2,980 yen per month, and there are also instructor monthly fees such as 1,980 yen/month. Course bundles range from 3,000 yen for topic-based lessons to 140,000 yen for qualification courses; the study courses also include a 420,000 yen option, placing them in the high-ticket professional development category. For payment, the FAQ states that paid membership supports credit cards only, while individual content may support carrier billing.
Its strengths are its high level of specialization and its integration of ballet with sports safety, body anatomy, physical therapy, and teacher development, making it suitable for those seeking long-term, systematic professional training. The free content can also help beginners understand basic movements. The downsides are that the content is mainly in Japanese, which creates a barrier for Chinese users; advanced courses are not cheap; and the available text does not indicate Chinese subtitles, an app, assignment review, or 1-on-1 feedback.
It is best suited to ballet teachers, advanced learners, parents, and people concerned about children’s training safety who have Japanese-language ability. Access from mainland China is not specified in the available text, so it remains unknown. Payment will likely require an international credit card. If you simply want beginner-friendly follow-along lessons in Chinese, domestic dance platforms, offline ballet studios, or Chinese-language video courses may be better alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on ballet-tv.com official site.
ballet-tv.com is an Japan Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $198.00, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ballet-tv.com directly.