Gulf News

‘DANCING WITH THE STARS’ TROTS EVER ON

The franchise’s 29th season will feature reality TV’s most famous faces

- By Ashley Lee

Dancing With the Stars has built a reputation as a ballroom competitio­n for actors, athletes and musicians, plus the sporadic politician and media personalit­y.

“I always say it’s the most bizarre dinner party you’ll ever put together,” said co-executive producer Deena Katz. “You start with a group of people that you don’t necessaril­y expect to be in the same room, and then somehow, once you meet them all, it makes sense.”

And over the last 15 years, the occasional reality star or two has joined the fun: Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s siblings Kim and Rob Kardashian, The Osbournes kin Kelly and Jack Osbourne, Little Women: L.A. star Terra Jole and Duck Dynasty daughter Sadie Robertson. But this season — the franchise’s 29th, which kicked off Monday on ABC — will not only be known as the one filmed with a new host, a familiar judge and under Covid-19-compliant guidelines. It will also be the one that unabashedl­y opened its dinner-party doors to the very famous faces of reality television.

The group competing on the ballroom floor this fall includes Catfish creator Nev Schulman, Tiger King personalit­y Carole Baskin, Cheer coach Monica Aldama, Selling Sunset Realtor Chrishell Stause and Kaitlyn Bristowe, the ninth DWTS contestant from the Bachelor and

Bacheloret­te franchise. (Host Tyra Banks, whose America’s Next Top Model ran for 24 seasons, is no slouch when it comes to reality TV cred, either.)

Although Dancing With the Stars has always pulled its reality-TV talent from various networks in the space — E!, Bravo, TLC, MTV, Lifetime and its parent network, ABC — this year’s crop is most notable for featuring three from Netflix, reflecting the streamer’s aggressive push into unscripted genres.

It’s a tangible example of how much culture at large is shaped by reality TV, which, thanks to Netflix, now includes star-making docuseries like Cheer and

Tiger King alongside more traditiona­l fare like KUWTK and Housewives. “It’s really important that this cast has people that everyone’s talking about right now, as if the season is just a slice of what’s going on right now,” Katz told The Times.

Producers of the competitio­n consider the significan­t proportion of reality TV stars in this season’s cast another example of the dance competitio­n’s ability to adapt over the years, as it’s periodical­ly brought in notable names from platforms like YouTube and Vine. And while the long-running series isn’t necessaril­y the authority on what’s considered cool, perusing through its past line-ups feels like thumbing through time capsules of past pop culture phenomena. “Way back in Season 1, influencer­s, YouTube, Netflix — they really weren’t around, so you didn’t have this bigger pool of people to reach out to that we have now,” said Katz. “We had to evolve as culture evolved if we wanted to stay relevant.”

The reality stars were to compete alongside talk show host Jeannie Mai; musicians AJ McLean and Nelly; former athletes Charles Oakley, Vernon Davis and Johnny Weir; and actors Anne Heche, Justina Machado, Jesse Metcalfe and Skai Jackson. And as with any season, no particular person’s following alone can guarantee a championsh­ip.

“It can’t just be people that you know about or may have heard about, it has to be people who you’re going to be with every Monday night, because you want to get to know them more, watch their journey and root for them every week,” Katz said. “You want to laugh and cry along with them, whether or not you know where they’re from.”

That’s more important than ever for Dancing With the Stars, one of the few network titles returning to the fall TV schedule amid the pandemic. “On top of everything, they’re all wonderful, warm and fun people to be around,” said executive producer Andrew Llinares.

 ?? Photos courtesy of ABC ?? ‘Catfish’ creator Nev Schulman (right) on ‘Dancing With the Stars’.
Photos courtesy of ABC ‘Catfish’ creator Nev Schulman (right) on ‘Dancing With the Stars’.

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