Tag Archives: empty-handed

DWTS’ Carrie Ann Inaba Confronts Heckler During Live Finale

Citing multiple sources, Variety reported in 2019 that Dancing With the Stars contestants make $125,000 for the rehearsal period and first two weeks of the show. If they progress beyond that point, the outlet continued, they earn more money each week. At the time, sources told the publication stars could earn a maximum of $295,000. However, Bobby Bones said he made more than this when he won season 27 with Sharna Burgess in 2018. “That show pays OK,” the radio personality said on a Sept. 2025 episode of Jason Tartick’s podcast Trading Secrets. “Like, first episode, no money. Second episode, $10,000. I think it’s like, $10,000, $10,000, $20,000, $20,000. It ends up being $50,000 an episode if you last.” Also receiving a base salary of around $110,000, Bones continued, “I ended up making close to $400,000 from that show.” ABC has not publicly confirmed any of these figures. Similarly, little has been shared publicly about how much the pros get paid. But as with the contestants, it seems like the longer they’re on the show, the more money they can make. But even if a pro is eliminated in the first round, they’re not leaving the ballroom empty-handed. “You’re guaranteed until a certain amount of weeks,” Jenna Johnson said on a June 2025 episode of Kelly Stafford and Hank Winchester’s podcast The Morning After. “I think there’s different contracts though. I can’t speak for everybody.” Apparently not. While Johnson-who won season 26 with Olympic figure skater Adam Rippon, as well as season 33 with The Bachelor’s Joey Graziadei-says the pros don’t get a larger paycheck if they take home what is now called the Len Goodman Mirrorball Trophy, she noted there’s still an incentive to make it to the finale (besides bragging rights, of course). “If you make it all the way to the end, you’re getting paid the whole season, which is amazing, and you get a bonus on top of that for making it to the finale,” she explained on The Morning After. “If you win, it’s not like you win a $1 million and split it with your partner. You’re just getting a cute trophy together.” The pros get little input when it comes to being matched with a celebrity. “You get no say,” Lindsay said on a May 2025 episode of Maggie Sellers’ Hot Smart Rich podcast. “It’s very much just, ‘Here’s your partner. Make it work.'” In fact, Jenna said the pairing is often a secret until the last minute. “They really want to keep it a secret until you meet them live,” Jenna said on The Morning After. “They want that genuine reaction. So I think people always think we know who we have and we’re keeping it a secret. Absolutely not. They do not tell us. They really don’t even want us to know the cast. It gets leaked a lot, but they want it very hush-hush until you walk in and meet your partner.” As for what the Dancing With the Stars team looks for when making these matches? “It’s based on height, build and personality and compatibility,” former showrunner Rob Wade told E! News in 2015. “We don’t pair people who aren’t going to get on. It’s too intense. It’s not like The Bachelor or something, we couldn’t do that. That would just be miserable experience for the celebrity, for us and the viewer. You don’t want to see two people who don’t like each other and, quite frankly, we have made that mistake pairing people up who didn’t get on so well.” Put simply, a lot. “Every day we have four-hour rehearsals,” Rylee Arnold, who was partnered with Olympic gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik on season 33, shared on a September 2024 episode of the Lightweights Podcast With Joe Vulpis. “It’s either 9: 00 a. m. to 1: 00 p. m., 1: 00 p. m. to 5: 00 p. m. or 5: 00 p. m to 9: 00 p. m.” But the work doesn’t stop once the rehearsal wraps. Rylee noted she might then meet with producers or the creative team, work on choreography or study dance videos. “Literally my whole life is devoted to it,” she continued, “but it’s my passion and it’s what I love. So, it makes me so happy.” Indeed, it’s a no-days-off kind of gig. “We have our show day on Tuesday and then it’s Wednesday to Sunday, straight rehearsals,” Rylee added. “And then Monday we have camera blocking and then Tuesday’s show day again.” If you thought the quickstep was fast, just wait until you hear about the pace of the costume department. “We meet with the set and lighting designers, dancers and talent and create a story [for each pair],” costume designer Daniela Gschwendtner told TV Insider back in 2017. “Then we sketch out ideas. We have five days, max, to make all the outfits. That’s half a day per costume, not including all the rhinestones. The fitting and trimming we do later. We have about 20 people in our department and then we have a separate tailor shop. It’s a big enterprise.” In fact, costume designer Steven Norman Lee said pairs usually try on their costumes for the first time just hours before showtime. And while the department “might use a pair of pants again for the boys,” he continued, everything is generally made custom each week. As Gschwendtner added, “We do reuse things for group numbers or promo shoots, but not for the competition. We don’t reuse things unless there’s a specific reason to do so. We try to keep everybody fresh and new in something different every week, so it stays interesting.”.
https://www.eonline.com/news/1407486/dancing-with-the-stars-finale-carrie-ann-inaba-shouts-at-heckler?cmpid=rss-syndicate-genericrss-us-top_stories

Trump warned Zelensky that Putin could ‘destroy’ Ukraine if he wants in closed-door ‘shouting match’: report

President Trump chastised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during an explosive, closed-door meeting at the White House on Friday, warning the leader that President Vladimir Putin would “destroy” Ukraine if he wanted to, according to a report.

The three-hour sit-down, which took place a day after Trump held a call with Putin, reportedly devolved into a “shouting match,” with Trump “cursing all the time,” people familiar with the matter told The Financial Times. Sources told the outlet that Trump also dismissed maps of the frontline in Ukraine, insisting Zelensky surrender the Donbas region to Russia.

The president’s rhetoric appeared to mirror many of Putin’s talking points, a European official with knowledge of the meeting said. Trump reportedly told Zelensky that Putin had described the bloody war that has ravaged Ukraine as a “special operation, not even a war.”

“If [Putin] wants it, he will destroy you,” Trump warned Zelensky, at one point throwing the maps of the battlefield to one side, the official said. Trump then expressed frustration, saying he was “sick” of seeing the map of the frontlines.

“This red line, I don’t even know where this is. I’ve never been there,” Trump lambasted, according to the official.

Following the tense meeting, Zelensky was described as “very negative,” one official told the publication. Meanwhile, European leaders remained “not optimistic but pragmatic” as they planned next steps.

The White House did not respond to The Post’s request for comment by the time of publication.

Zelensky’s primary goal for the meeting was reportedly to procure powerful Tomahawk missiles that could target Russia within range of remotely launched attacks from Ukrainian territory. However, Trump later urged Russia and Ukraine to end their nearly four-year war at the current battle lines.

“Enough blood has been shed, with property lines being defined by War and Guts. They should stop where they are,” Trump posted to Truth Social shortly after the volatile sitdown. “Let both claim Victory, let History decide! No more shooting, no more Death, no more vast and unsustainable sums of money spent.”

Zelensky told reporters that Ukraine was ready for an end to the war. “I agree with the president, yes, both sides must stop,” he said. “But between us, it’s about Putin, because we didn’t begin this war.”

Though Zelensky left the White House meeting empty-handed, he maintained that it was significant Trump did not outright say “no” to the possibility of acquiring the long-range missiles.

“For today, it’s good again that he didn’t say no,” Zelensky told NBC’s “Meet the Press,” referring to Trump. “The Tomahawks, it’s very sensitive for Russians,” he added. “I think that Putin [is] afraid that [the] United States will deliver us Tomahawks. And I think that he’s really afraid that we will use [them].”

The Ukrainian leader also mentioned that Ukraine has proposed exchanging its drone technology for American weapons. Trump acknowledged that Washington and Kyiv have been discussing such an exchange.

“They make a very good drone,” Trump said of Ukraine.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/20/world-news/trump-warned-zelensky-that-putin-could-destroy-ukraine-if-he-wants-in-closed-door-shouting-match-report/