New Photo - Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis following hospitalization

Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis following hospitalization Melina Khan, USA TODAYWed, March 4, 2026 at 1:17 PM UTC 6 Val Chmerkovskiy is back on his feet. The "Dancing with the Stars" pro gave fans an update on his health after sharing that he had been hospitalized for vertigo between performances on the show's live tour. "So I got BPPV, which isn't too bad, thank God. There's no tumor in my brain, God forbid," the 39yearold said in a video posted to social media on March 3. He continued, "And thankfully, it's not related to my neck injury.

Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis following hospitalization

Melina Khan, USA TODAYWed, March 4, 2026 at 1:17 PM UTC

6

Val Chmerkovskiy is back on his feet.

The "Dancing with the Stars" pro gave fans an update on his health after sharing that he had been hospitalized for vertigo between performances on the show's live tour.

"So I got BPPV, which isn't too bad, thank God. There's no tumor in my brain, God forbid," the 39-year-old said in a video posted to social media on March 3.

He continued, "And thankfully, it's not related to my neck injury. And so having ruled those things out, I feel a lot better."

Two days earlier, the dancer shared a video from his hospital bed in Peoria, Illinois, revealing that he had been experiencing vertigo, a false sense of motion.

"I'm just spinning everywhere," he said.

BPPV, short for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, is the most common cause of vertigo and includes symptoms like dizziness and loss of balance, according to the Mayo Clinic.

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Val Chmerkovskiy returns to 'DWTS' tour after hospitalization

Valentin Chmerkovskiy attends the world premiere of 20th Century Studios "Avatar: Fire and Ash" at The Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on Dec. 1, 2025.

Chmerkovskiy returned to the tour stage for the March 3 show in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, after missing the live performance in Peoria, Illinois, on March 1.

"I'm still a little fuzzy here and there, but good enough to perform. And I'll see you all tonight," he said.

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After initially opening up about his hospitalization, Chmerkovskiy's "Dancing with the Stars" family shared well wishes in the comments of his March 1 video.

"Get better soon! But take time to heal we need our ballroom diva back when he's ready to serve," Xochitl Gomez, Chmerkovskiy's partner and winner of Season 32, wrote.

"We got you Val," fellow pro Emma Slater wrote.

The 2026 "Dancing with the Stars" live tour kicked off in January and is planned for nearly 100 total shows before wrapping up in May.

In addition to starring a slew of fan-favorite pros, including Chmerkovskiy's wife Jenna Johnson, the tour features several stars from Season 34.

What is BPPV? Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis

BPPV causes brief periods of dizziness and is often set off by changes in the head's position, like lying down, turning over or sitting up in bed, according to the Mayo Clinic.

The condition occurs when tiny calcium crystals come loose from their normal location within the inner ear, per Johns Hopkins Medicine.

A common treatment for BPPV is known as the Epley maneuver, an exercise to reposition the head in a way that helps move the crystals.

"Thankfully, our PT is certified in getting those crystals back and doing the Epley maneuver," Chmerkovskiy said.

Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached at melina.khan@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Val Chmerkovskiy updates fans after hospitalization during 'DWTS' tour

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Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis following hospitalization

Val Chmerkovskiy reveals diagnosis following hospitalization Melina Khan, USA TODAYWed, March 4, 2026 at 1:17 PM UTC 6 Va...
New Photo - Who is the best supporting actor Oscar winner? We rank them.

Who is the best supporting actor Oscar winner? We rank them. Brian Truitt, USA TODAY Wed, March 4, 2026 at 4:32 PM UTC 1 There are some truly wonderful good guys among the Oscars' best supporting actor performances this century. There's also a Nazi villain, a band director from hell and even a Joker. At the Academy Awards, the category has had its share of antagonists, like Robert Downey Jr.'s vengeful politico in Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer" or Javier Bardem's psycho killer in "No Country for Old Men.

Who is the best supporting actor Oscar winner? We rank them.

Brian Truitt, USA TODAY Wed, March 4, 2026 at 4:32 PM UTC

1

There are some truly wonderful good guys among the Oscars' best supporting actor performances this century. There's also a Nazi villain, a band director from hell and even a Joker.

At the Academy Awards, the category has had its share of antagonists, like Robert Downey Jr.'s vengeful politico in Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer" or Javier Bardem's psycho killer in "No Country for Old Men." Two-time best actor winner – and recent Actor Awards honoree – Sean Penn could be a good fit for this dastardly crew as the antagonist of "One Battle After Another." He's one of the guys up this year for the supporting actor Oscar alongside his costar Benicio Del Toro, Stellan Skarsgård ("Sentimental Value"), Delroy Lindo ("Sinners") and Jacob Elordi ("Frankenstein").

In anticipation of someone else joining the canon in 2026 – or Del Toro getting his second win in the category – we're ranking all the best supporting actor winners of the past 25 years.

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25. Christoph Waltz, 'Django Unchained' (2013)

Christoph Waltz plays a bounty hunter who helps a former enslaved man (Jamie Foxx) on a quest for revenge in "Django Unchained."

In Quentin Tarantino's Western revenge flick, Waltz conjures a nifty bit of chemistry with Jamie Foxx for a different sort of buddy dynamic: King Schultz (Waltz) is a German dentist and bounty hunter who frees the enslaved man Django (Foxx) and then they partner up on a rescue mission to Mississippi to find Django's wife.

24. Chris Cooper, 'Adaptation' (2003)

Chris Cooper plays an over-the-top horticulturalist in the meta dramedy "Adaptation."

Cooper goes all in with an over-the-top personality in this very strange meta dramedy. Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) has an existential crisis trying to adapt "The Orchid Thief" by Susan Orlean (Meryl Streep), and Cooper's John Laroche is a flower-stealing Florida man (and Susan's secret lover) embroiled in an absurd murder plot.

23. Jim Broadbent, 'Iris' (2002)

Jim Broadbent plays a husband who struggles with his wife's worsening Alzheimer's disease in "Iris."

Featuring Kate Winslet and Judi Dench as famed novelist Iris Murdoch in her younger and older years, the biopic is also a moving drama about the effects of dementia on patients and loved ones. Broadbent is quite good as the elder Iris' husband John, struggling through worries and frustrations as her Alzheimer's disease worsens.

22. Morgan Freeman, 'Million Dollar Baby' (2005)

Maggie (Hilary Swank) rises up the boxing ranks with help from the wise Scrap (Morgan Freeman) in "Million Dollar Baby."

The best picture-winning boxing drama paired up-and-coming boxer Maggie (Hilary Swank) with grumpy reluctant coach Frankie (Clint Eastwood). The usual sports movie template gets a welcome tweak with Freeman, whose gym assistant Scrap is a wise, grounding presence for both Maggie and Frankie as they navigate personal issues.

21. Benicio Del Toro, 'Traffic' (2001)

Benicio Del Toro (left) plays a Mexican cop in the ensemble crime drama "Traffic."

Steven Soderbergh's crime drama looks at the drug trade from various perspectives, and Del Toro's rock-steady performance is one of the highlights – a nice job amid a litany of not-always-nice characters. He plays a Mexican cop hired by a general to take out a cartel hitman, the situation goes south but he still finds a way to do right.

20. Christian Bale, 'The Fighter' (2011)

Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg, left) gets an earful from his half-brother Dicky (Christian Bale) in "The Fighter."

Unnervingly thin and hot tempered, Christian Bale plays Dicky, a former boxer and crack addict who trains his younger half-brother Micky (Mark Wahlberg) for a championship fight, though is not the best influence. They bicker and fight in the true-life sports drama, and Bale exudes a gonzo frenetic energy with an underlying melancholy.

19. George Clooney, 'Syriana' (2006)

George Clooney (center) stars as CIA officer trying to stop a Middle East assassination plot in the geopolitical thriller "Syriana."

Even with some extra weight and bushy facial hair, Clooney can't hide his talent for imbuing watchable humanity into a role. In a political thriller with intertwining story lines, the A-lister stars as a veteran CIA agent who uncovers an assassination plot in the Middle East. His efforts to stop it brings a bunch of trouble (and a little torture).

18. Mark Rylance, 'Bridge of Spies' (2016)

Mark Rylance plays Rudolf Abel, a Soviet spy arrested in the U.S. in the thriller "Bridge of Spies."

The English actor was a relatively unknown commodity on this side of the pond but became a brilliant revelation for his role in the Cold War thriller as a quiet, older Brooklyn man arrested for being a Soviet spy. Opposite Tom Hanks, Rylance emits an icy intensity but also a kindness as his character waits for whatever fate chooses for him.

17. Ke Huy Quan, 'Everything Everywhere All at Once' (2023)

"Alpha" Waymond (Ke Huy Quan) comes from the future with multiverse-hopping tech in "Everything Everywhere All at Once."

Quan's comeback, from 1980s child star to selfie-taking Oscar winner, is one of Hollywood's more crowd-pleasing narratives in recent years. He's also just fun to watch in the trippy genre mashup thanks to a multifaceted role filled with alternate personalties, from a kind laundromat owner to an alpha martial-arts master from the future.

16. Sam Rockwell, 'Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri' (2018)

Officer Dixon (Sam Rockwell) finds a formidable foe in fiery mom Mildred (Frances McDormand) in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri."

The darkly comic crime drama pits Frances McDormand's righteously furious mom against a police force that hasn't caught her daughter's killer. Rockwell's Officer Dixon, a mama's boy with a screw loose and a history of torturing Black prisoners, is a target of her ire − that is, until the actor carefully adds layers to what could be a one-note jerk.

15. Mahershala Ali, 'Green Book' (2019)

Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen, left) gets advice in writing love letters from Don Shirley (Mahershala Ali) in "Green Book."

The period dramedy ended up being a somewhat controversial best picture winner. Ali, on the other hand, is spot-on as a renowned classical pianist who goes on a tour of the Jim Crow South with a New York tough guy (Viggo Mortensen) and puts on aristocratic airs that belie his insecurities.

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14. Tim Robbins, 'Mystic River' (2004)

Tim Robbins (with Marcia Gay Harden) plays a man still haunted by childhood sexual abuse in the neo-noir mystery "Mystic River."

Robbins gave one of his most nuanced performances as a Boston man forever haunted by a childhood trauma in Clint Eastwood's somber neo-noir mystery. Decades after being sexually abused, his erratic actions cause tension among friends and family, and he becomes the prime suspect in the murder of a pal's daughter.

13. Troy Kotsur, 'CODA' (2022)

Troy Kotsur and Marlee Matlin play the deaf parents of a hearing girl in the coming-of-age drama "CODA."

In the endearing best-picture winner, he's the salty deaf father of a hearing teen girl (Emilia Jones) whose interest in exploring singing takes her away from the family fishing business. Kotsur brings such warmth and joy to the screen, especially in a tear-jerking scene where his character has his world opened up by experiencing, in his own way, the kid's musical gift.

12. Jared Leto, 'Dallas Buyers Club' (2014)

Jared Leto plays a trans woman with AIDS in the drama "Dallas Buyers Club."

Jared Leto is a sucker for a transformational part, and he pulled off something special in the heartbreaking true-life drug drama. While Matthew McConaughey plays the real figure of Ron Woodroof, Leto turns in a touching portrayal of a trans woman faced with AIDs yet never losing her verve as the fictional Rayon.

11. Kieran Culkin, 'A Real Pain' (2025)

Kieran Culkin won an Oscar for playing the more mercurial of two traveling cousins in "A Real Pain."

In writer/director Jesse Eisenberg's comedy, Culkin and Eisenberg play estranged cousins who embark on a trip to Poland to explore their Jewish roots. As the more mercurial of the two, Culkin masterfully navigates an excellent character arc, taking an outspoken nuisance and giving him thoughtful nuance on a Holocaust tour.

10. Christopher Plummer, 'Beginners' (2012)

Christopher Plummer plays a father who comes out as gay late in life in the romantic dramedy "Beginners."

Mike Mills' tale of fathers, sons and generational romance features the legendary Plummer in one of his later roles. It's also one of his essential ones, as a father who comes out as a gay man during his twilight years and faces a cancer diagnosis with honesty and dignity, all while being an inspiration for his son (Ewan McGregor).

9. Robert Downey Jr., 'Oppenheimer' (2024)

Robert Downey Jr. is Lewis Strauss, a political foe of J. Robert Oppenheimer, in the historical epic "Oppenheimer."

Hollywood's erstwhile Iron Man can do dastardly when the opportunity arises. Downey deliciously goes for petty, vindictive and nasty as Lewis Strauss, a political foe wanting to tear down Cillian Murphy's J. Robert Oppenheimer not for America's benefit or national security but because of a perceived personal slight.

8. Daniel Kaluuya, 'Judas and the Black Messiah' (2021)

Daniel Kaluuya (center) stars as Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton in the period thriller "Judas and the Black Messiah."

Kaluuya superbly inhabits the role of a stirring, profound orator, playing Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton in the 1960s-set period thriller. As the FBI works to silence popular political dissent, Kaluuya projects appealing charisma in his speech scenes as well as a deep well of emotion as the gravity of Hampton's work weighs heavily.

7. Alan Arkin, 'Little Miss Sunshine' (2007)

Olive (Abigail Breslin) gets advice from her caring grandpa (Alan Arkin) in the road-trip comedy "Little Miss Sunshine."

May everyone have a loved one as eccentric and caring as Arkin's patriarch. A dysfunctional family goes on a road trip of misadventure to take a little girl (Abigail Breslin) to a child beauty pageant, and Arkin plays the rascally grandpa who instills in her and others the power of trying and being one's true self.

6. Javier Bardem, 'No Country for Old Men' (2008)

Javier Bardem plays the chilling hitman Anton Chigurh in the Coen brothers' "No Country for Old Men."

May everyone avoid anybody this downright creepy. And don't let the Dorothy Hamill haircut fool you. Like the Terminator but flesh and bone, Bardem is oh-so-chilling as psychopathic hitman Anton Chigurh, who's doggedly efficient when it comes to finishing a task and leaves the fate of victims to the whims of a coin flip.

5. Christoph Waltz, 'Inglourious Basterds' (2010)

Christoph Waltz stars as a Nazi colonel captured by Allied forces in Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds."

No one does gleefully evil better. Quentin Tarantino's ultraviolent World War II fantasy gave the Austrian-German actor his villainous breakout role as Hans Landa, a Nazi baddie with an upper-crust cultural side. Waltz lends a slimy charisma to the merciless SS colonel, who gets a satisfying comeuppance via carving knife.

4. Brad Pitt, 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' (2020)

Brad Pitt plays stunt double/confidante/driver/handyman Cliff Booth in Quentin Tarantino's "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood."

In Quentin Tarantino's alt-history fable, Pitt plays a steely stunt double equally adept at fixing TV antennas or dealing with the Manson Family, all with a grin on his weathered face. Yet the star hints at a darkness underneath the suntanned exterior that adds so many more layers to a seemingly superficial personality.

3. Mahershala Ali, 'Moonlight' (2017)

Drug dealer Juan (Mahershala Ali, left) takes young Chiron (Alex Hibbert) under his wing in "Moonlight."

Barry Jenkins' stunning movie explores the maturation of a gay black man from lost child to bullied teenager to intimidating drug dealer. Ali beautifully cements the film's strong sense of empathy early on as a crack pusher who tries to give the main character a loving foundation even as he's indirectly responsible for the kid's adversity.

2. J.K. Simmons, 'Whiplash' (2015)

J.K. Simmons plays an imperious jazz band director in "Whiplash."

How much of a master thespian do you have to be to turn a jazz band director into a menacing supervillain? Wielding a baton and supreme intensity, Simmons makes a drumming Miles Teller's life a living hell in Damien Chazelle's amazingly stressful, psychologically taxing (in a good way!) musical drama.

1. Heath Ledger, 'The Dark Knight' (2009)

Heath Ledger won a posthumous Oscar for his riveting portrayal of the Joker in "The Dark Knight."

The greatest screen villain of this century, period, cut the blockbuster check. Ledger ingeniously plays the Joker as a chaotic force of nature, a scarred and unknowable ghoul clad in clown paint and a garish suit from Demon's Wearhouse. While Christian Bale's Batman is the hero we need, Ledger is the magnetic figure we can't stop watching – an uber-anarchist so incomparably charming that it's impossible not to root for him on some deep, dark level.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Best supporting actor winners ranked in Oscar history – Our list

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Who is the best supporting actor Oscar winner? We rank them.

Who is the best supporting actor Oscar winner? We rank them. Brian Truitt, USA TODAY Wed, March 4, 2026 at 4:32 PM UTC 1 ...
New Photo - Vote in our poll: Which era of Survivor is better?

Old school or new kids on the block? Vote in our poll: Which era of Survivor is better? Old school or new kids on the block? By Dalton Ross :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/DaltonRossauthorphoto2e15b12006e2438a99fb06db6d682421.jpg) Dalton Ross is a writer and editor with over 25 years experience covering TV and the entertainment industry. Survivor is kind of his thing. EW's editorial guidelines March 4, 2026 10:00 a.m. ET :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/gettyimages278252320008caebc60c83b44f38eebc1b14c3af635.jpg) 'Survivor' season 1 Cast.

Old school or new kids on the block?

Vote in our poll: Which era of Survivor is better?

Old school or new kids on the block?

By Dalton Ross

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Dalton Ross is a writer and editor with over 25 years experience covering TV and the entertainment industry. *Survivor* is kind of his thing.

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Portrait Of 'Survivor' season 1 Cast

'Survivor' season 1 Cast. Credit: CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images

Last week's *Survivor 50* premiere was the first time players from both the "old" and "new" eras of the franchise met in the island arena to do battle. (Although all those pre-season 40 contestants told Jeff Probst at the marooning that they prefer the label "classic era" in an extended exchange that did not make it to air.)

And each era took a big hit in the premiere. Season 1 OG Jenna Lewis-Dougherty was the very first person voted out of the game, although it was for playing too fast, not too slow. Then, the new school lost one of its newest players when Kyle Fraser was medically evacuated after tearing his Achilles during the day 3 immunity challenge.

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Because Probst put in a big franchise reset after season 40, labeling *Survivor 41* the beginning of a new era, we wondered if that meant the season after *Survivor 50* would be an ever *newer* era, but the host and showrunner told EW that he did not see any huge changes in store.

'Survivor 50' premiere recap: Everything you didn't see on TV

The cast of 'Survivor 50'

The ultimate 50-question 'Survivor' quiz: Test your reality TV knowledge

Ultimate 50-question 'Survivor' quiz

So with the old-era and new-era players now mixing it up, and the new era not ending anytime soon, we thought we would pose a very simple question: Which era is better? Do you prefer old or new? Classic or modern? Original recipe or extra crispy? Weigh in now on the ultimate era, and then see how your fellow *Survivor fans* have chosen as we tally the votes!

***Want to be kept up with all things Survivor? Dig deep and sign up for 's free Survivor Weekly newsletter to have all the latest news, interviews, and commentary sent right to your inbox. ***

- Survivor Fandom

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Vote in our poll: Which era of Survivor is better?

Old school or new kids on the block? Vote in our poll: Which era of Survivor is better? Old school or new kids on the block...

 

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