The Real DWTS Secret: Skill vs. Shock & Spicier

14/11/2025 5 min

Listen "The Real DWTS Secret: Skill vs. Shock & Spicier"

Episode Synopsis

Enjoying the show? Support our mission and help keep the content coming by buying us a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/deepdivepodcastDancing with the Stars has been on the air for over 30 seasons, a staggering feat that begs the question: what is the secret sauce to its unstoppable longevity? On the surface, the answer seems simple—it’s a beautiful spectacle of pure, unadulterated ballroom artistry. Week after week, celebrities deliver technically stunning and emotionally charged transformations, earning electric perfect scores for performances like Chandler Kinney's Argentine Tango or Danny Amendola's contemporary dance. But that is only half the story. The real engine driving the show’s enduring popularity lies in a core, manufactured conflict: Is the best dancer actually the one who wins?The central tension of the entire show is the voting system itself. A celebrity’s fate is decided by a combination platter: the judges’ scores, which focus purely on technical skill, musicality, and performance quality, and the audience vote, which is driven by fan loyalty, celebrity appeal, and emotional connection. This constant, head-to-head battle between skill and popularity creates shocking, often infuriating results that are essential to the show’s appeal.We look at some of the most jaw-dropping and infamous eliminations in DWTS history—including Heather Morris (Beyoncé’s former backup dancer), Olympic champion Simone Biles, and Juan Pablo Di Pace (who earned perfect scores but was still sent home)—all incredibly talented dancers sent packing because they simply didn't earn enough fan votes. The most notorious example of this conflict was Season 27, when radio host Bobby Bones won the entire competition despite consistently receiving low scores from the judges, leading to massive fan outcry.The producers are well aware that this controversy is a huge part of the show's appeal, and they actively lean into the chaos, particularly through controversial casting. They bring on polarizing figures who are guaranteed to make headlines and keep the show in the spotlight. Think of former White House press secretary Sean Spicer, whose contentious casting reportedly led to the firing of beloved original host Tom Bergeron, or celebrity chef Paula Deen, who joined the show right after a huge public scandal. Perhaps the most unbelievable casting coup was convicted con artist Anna Delvey, who competed with an ankle monitor after receiving special permission to travel from house arrest. You truly cannot make this stuff up.But the drama is often happening backstage, spilling out from the voting floor into fiery interpersonal feuds. We recount the notorious rivalry of Season 13, where soccer star Hope Solo publicly accused her professional partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy of aggressive behavior during rehearsals (which he vehemently denied), creating one of the bitterest public feuds the show has ever seen. This drama fuels passionate online fan debates over everything from prior dance experience to off-screen behavior, keeping the show continuously in the conversation.The winning formula, the secret to its 30+ season run, is a perfect, almost chaotic blend: it takes the high art and glamour of ballroom dance and smashes it right up against the messy, unpredictable drama of reality TV. The formula is simple: genuine artistry + skill-vs.-popularity conflict + controversial casting + backstage feuds = an unstoppable television powerhouse. Maybe you tune in for the beautiful dancing, but you stay for the shock eliminations, the outrageous contestants, and all that juicy interpersonal drama. It leaves us with one final thought: Is the beautiful dancing just the opening act for the main event—the drama?