Julianne Hough’s marriage to Brooks Laich ended just as soon as it began, at least according to the dance pro. Hough says the combination of common marital woes mixed with his career woes caused things to start “unraveling” almost immediately after they said “I Do.” She spoke of their split while appearing on the Armchair Expert podcast ย and admits that there were signs things wouldn’t work before they tied the knot, with her saying she ignored a lot of “orange flags” before their 2017 nuptials.ย
She says she and the former NHL star dated long-distance for over three years and didn’t live together before they wed. Laich also “had a really tough last few years of his career” before he retired in 2018, which added to their growing strife. “He was injured and then he got traded before his team that he had been there for almost 12 years won the Stanley Cup,” she said while becoming emotional. “It makes me want to cry because I feel for him so badโฆThat was in 2017,” she added. “That was the year we got married and the year that everything started unraveling.”
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A week after she asked her now-ex for a separation in September 2019, she says her two dogs died, leaving her separated. “It was very tragic,” she said. “That was all kind of happening at the same time and it was an unraveling. Everything that I had ever known, that I had put in place for my control and my protection โฆ I had this marriage to this guy who represented more of a father figure to me, and while he was changing, I was changing.”
Hough added that she felt “uprooted.” In hindsight, she says she feels like things could have worked out at a different time. “I feel like our relationship and our marriage was exactly right, and the end of it is right, too,” she explained. “We both have regrets that it didn’t work out, because I don’t think we had the maturity to come together,” she continued. “He was contracting while I was expanding. We just couldn’t find each other in that.”
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โReverse the Curseโ โ Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May 20 (8:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jeff Probst serves as host and executive producer. Pictured: Aubry Bracco Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ยฉ2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved. -

Netflix logo is displayed during the 'Paris Games Week' on November 02, 2017 in Paris, France. Netflix is an American company offering streaming movies and TV series on the Internet. 'Paris Games Week' is an international trade fair for video games and runs from November 01 to November 5, 2017. (Credit: Chesnot / Getty Images)






