âDancing With the Starsâ recap: Nyle DiMarco takes the Mirrorball in the Season 22 finale
Please join me in a hearty huzzah to the winner of Season 22 of ABCâs tireless hit, âDancing With the Stars,â and in the same breath, a collective, âCurse you, âDWTS!ââ with a concurrent fist-shaking motion aimed in the general direction of the closest TV screen.
The former? Thatâs a given. The latter? Thatâs for making me care about yet another cast of B-, C- and D-list characters, heretofore mostly unknown, in ways I never thought possible.
How do you keep doing it, âDWTS?â How?! And why am I still sobbing about freestyle performances from the night before? Sure, go ahead and rerun the clips during Finale Part Deux. The sloppy tears begin with the first bars of music. That is not a pretty cry. Are you happy now?
But on to the results, which simultaneously are and are not the most important part of this whole venture. Quick: who ruled Planet Mirrorballus in 2012? See? You donât know. This time should be more memorable, though.
Thatâs because in the spring of 2016, itâs Nyle DiMarco, the first and only deaf winner of âAmericaâs Next Top Model,â who can add another reality competition prize to his mantle. He was my early prediction, but late in the season it really turned into a three-way race to the finish between Nyle, the runner-up, gorgeous UFC grappler Paige VanZant, and third-place finisher, âGood Morning Americaâsâ cheery meteorologist, Ginger Zee.
Only a few points separated them going into the finale, and it certainly wasnât their scores on Tuesday night that proved to be the tipping point. It was the fan votes, and viewers simply loved Nyleâs story.
And he did what no one has ever done in the ballroom before. Former contestant Marlee Matlin, who is hearing impaired, made it about halfway through Season 6. But sheâs said that she could feel the musicâs vibrations and hear some of the beats. Nyle, on the other hand, could not, instead relying on his partner Peta Murgatroyd for cues and counting. What he did was nothing short of remarkable.
And when he and Peta repeated their favorite dance, that smokinâ hot cha-cha from the very first week of the contest, it was easy to understand why they won. Nyle planted the flag early, and despite Valgate and that really unfortunate re-creation of âThe Mask,â he never let up. Side note to Nyle: Some dances, like the quickstep, are better left alone.
Major props to Nyle, his determination and skill, and his dedication to advocating for the deaf. No doubt his message will carry far wider than the âDWTSâ audience, which is already significant.
Because this is âDWTS,â there was a ton of filler on Tuesday nightâs two-hour extravaganza, some of it awesome. Host Tom Bergeron doing the robot! Greatest hits from the finalists! Von Miller, the pride of the NFL, returning just to fart some more on camera! Geraldo Rivera used only as a prop, not allowed to dance in that big summer-themed group number! National treasure Sasha Farber in a crab costume! A negligible amount of Mischa Barton (on video)!
And some of what took place is best described as, âAwwwww.â Nyleâs mom pogo-ing at his victory. Gracious goodbyes. Carrie Ann Inaba learning to use American Sign Language (see the heart-melting video above). Nyle breaking down at Carrie Annâs tribute and hugging Americaâs dad Bergeron before hoisting the Mirrorball into the air.
And sure, there was plenty of pure promotion: pop stars Pitbull, Fifth Harmony, Aloe Blacc, blah blah blah. And there were some goofball, cheesy bits, but havenât we all come to expect and/or tolerate that? In fact, wouldnât we miss those if they were gone? Donât fret. Thatâll never happen.
Itâs always fun to see the bloopers and the former contestants, in this case Doug Flutie, the affable football legend; Antonio Brown, the Pittsburgh Steeler with the million-dollar frequently-flossed smile; the lovable Wanya Morris and the lovely Jodie Sweetin. (One last time: Poor Keo! Honestly, whose idea was it to replay his lowest moments from the season? Why does the show hate him so much? Check back in the fall for âDancing With the Stars Season 23: Keoâs Revenge.â)
Oh yeah, and there was also a â24 Hour Fusion Challenge,â as if that mattered. It did not, but it gave us another chance to see the finalists in action. Hereâs the lowdown:
Ginger Zee and Val Chmerkovskiy
They did a mashup of foxtrot/Argentine tango, with Val the cagey competitor cramming in a bunch of things that Ginger did well. She looked like she was having a great time, lumbar distress and big mistake be damned. Len Goodman called her a âfantastic dancerâ who had improved over the course of the series. Carrie Ann said she was sad it was the last dance from the chipper celeb, who gave a nod on her way out to geeky science girls like her everywhere, saying, âYou can be more than one thing.â
Score: 27, all 9s
Nyle DiMarco and Peta Murgatroyd
Itâs cha-cha and tango together, after an emotional final practice session during which the protective Peta talked tearfully about how inspired sheâd been all season working with Nyle. Bruno Tonioli said it was âbrilliant,â and that Nyle âexceeded expectations every time.â And Carrie Ann said heâd spoken so eloquently through dance that she wanted to speak his language for the critique. After signing, Bergeron asked her to translate. âI said, âThank you for showing us your beautiful heart when you dance.ââ
Score: perfect 30
Paige VanZant and Mark Ballas
It really couldâve gone either way, Nyle or Paige, and they likely knew that as they trained for their salsa-and-jive combo. Hey, I saw hip action. Did you catch that, Grumpy Goodman? Carrie Ann said Paige set the standard from Day 1, and Len called her âthe one to beat.â
Score: 30, a perfect score for Markâs 30th birthday
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