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Dancing with the Stars live results: Updated scores for Jordan Chiles, Baron Davis and more from 2025 DWTS Episode 1

Daniel Mader

Dancing with the Stars live results: Updated scores for Jordan Chiles, Baron Davis and more from 2025 DWTS Episode 1 image

© Robert Hanashiro

The 34th season of "Dancing with the Stars" is here.

At 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday night, two notable sports figures will be among the star-studded cast for Episode 1 of the dancing competition, which will air on Disney+ and ABC.

After Ilona Maher and her partner, Alan Bersten, finished in second place in Season 33, two more well-known athletes will be competing on "DWTS" this year: Baron Davis and Jordan Chiles. Davis is a retired 13-year NBA star who spent time with the Hornets, Warriors, Clippers, Cavaliers and Knicks. The two-time All-Star is from Los Angeles and played at UCLA before he was selected third overall by Charlotte in the 1999 NBA Draft.

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Chiles, meanwhile, is a two-time Olympian who represented the United States gymnastics team in Tokyo and Paris; she helped Team USA win gold in the 2024 women's artistic team all-around competition. She also competed collegiately at UCLA and also won NCAA championships in 2023 and 2025.

Once again, star athletes will take the spotlight in "Dancing with the Stars" as Episode 1 officially arrives Tuesday night. 

Follow along below for the results from Episode 1 of "DWTS" Season 34, including any potential early eliminations.

MORE: Everything to know about Jordan Chiles, Baron Davis and the "DWTS" cast

Dancing with the Stars results tonight

Scores will be updated in the order the competitors performed. 

Contestant NameJudge ScoreAudience Score
Jen AffleckTBDTBD
Hilaria BaldwinTBDTBD
Jordan ChilesTBDTBD
Baron DavisTBDTBD
Alix EarleTBDTBD
Dylan EfronTBDTBD
Corey FeldmanTBDTBD
Danielle FishelTBDTBD
Elaine HendrixTBDTBD
Scott HoyingTBDTBD
Robert IrwinTBDTBD
Lauren JauregiTBDTBD
Whitney LeavittTBDTBD
Andy RichterTBDTBD

Who was eliminated on DWTS?

This section will be updated once contestants begin getting eliminated from the show. 

HOW TO WATCH DANCING WITH THE STARS: FUBO

How does Dancing with the Stars scoring work?

Scoring on "Dancing with the Stars" is divided into two categories: judges and audience. During the episode, the panel of judges give the dancers a score from 1 to 10. For Season 34, Derek Hough, Carrie Ann Inaba and Bruno Tonioli will all return as judges. Before the audience votes, the judges give the dancers a maximum of 30 points.

This is where the scoring can get confusing. What matters isn't exactly the number of points a dance gets, but how that number relates to the total number of votes the judges gave out. In the scenario that the judges give out 100 points throughout a round, with dancer A getting 10 and dancer B getting 20, then dancer A will have 10% of the judge's vote and dancer B will have 20% before audience votes are tallied.

Then, let's say dancer A gets 35% of the public vote, while dancer B only gets 5%. Dancer A's final score would be 45% of the vote, and dancer B would have gotten 40%. In this example, dancer A would move on, and dancer B would be eliminated. 

Scoring is the percentage of the judges' votes added to the percentage of the audience's votes, for a total score. 

How to vote for Dancing with the Stars

You can cast your vote for your favorite dancers either through ABC's website or text messages. A number will pop up on the screen during the broadcast, and you can text the dancer's first name to that number to register a vote. 

You are limited to casting up to 10 votes per couple, per voting method. You can vote for multiple couples and allocate your votes as you see fit; further details can be found on ABC's DWTS site.

Voting is only live during the original DTWS broadcast in the ET/CT slot. 

Daniel Mader

Daniel Mader is a Content Producer for The Sporting News. He joined SN in 2024 as an editorial intern following graduation from Penn State University. He has previously written for Sports Illustrated, NBC Sports, the Centre Daily Times, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, The Daily Collegian and LancasterOnline. Daniel grew up in Lancaster, Penn., with a love for baseball that’ll never fade, but could also talk basketball or football for days.