If you’ve been browsing Facebook lately, you might have come across a post that begins with a line intended to stop your thumb mid-swipe and a tiny explosion of emojis. A blurry picture of Ellen Pompeo and her husband, Chris Ivery, is shown beneath the words “UPDATE — 30 Minutes Ago.” A few sentences suggest that something horrible has happened to Chris. Some of them claim ALS. A declining quality of life, a failing body. Pompeo is fighting back tears as the room falls silent.
It’s all untrue. The odd thing is that. Nothing is the foundation of the whole thing.

I searched for any document that a real journalist would have filed, such as the original report, interview, or statement. It doesn’t exist. The credible coverage of Chris Ivery in 2025 is almost dull and unremarkable: he appeared at his wife’s Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony in late April, looking at ease in gray suit pants and a vest, and he laughed with Pompeo in front of her engraved star. A few months later, the couple took all three of their children to Dodger Stadium for Game 5 of the World Series, where they all wore matching blue hats and supported the home team. Typically, a dying man does not spend October with his kids at a baseball game.
Where does the illness narrative originate, then? From the comment sections themselves, as far as I can tell. A Facebook post that was cited in the rumor’s propagation makes a vague reference to “a man who is an actor, who unfortunately has ALS,” and somewhere along the line, Ivery’s name was added to that fragment. Someone else may be completely involved in the confusion. Seldom do these things come from clean sources. Post by post, they simply pile up until the lie gains sufficient weight to resemble a memory.
The format is what makes it effective. The promise of a “heartbreaking moment,” the emojis, and the fictitious timestamp are all designed to generate clicks before anyone considers checking. Ivery’s extreme privacy makes him an almost ideal target. Since he and Pompeo are known to maintain a low profile and cherish their privacy, there isn’t much actual information to refute the fabrications. The internet despises vacuums. That has a somewhat depressing quality to it.
Pompeo has openly discussed the racist mail that came in when viewers couldn’t accept a Black man married to their favorite blonde TV doctor. This is the same man who tabloids once attacked because of his race and past. He never requested to be well-known. He wed a woman who just so happened to become one. And now, years later, for engagement metrics, strangers have chosen to infect him with a deadly illness.
It’s difficult to avoid thinking that we’ve gotten worse at this. The hoax lacks cunning. It is not required to be. All it has to do is move more quickly than reality, which it always does.
According to all credible accounts, Chris Ivery is doing well. quietly raising three children, working in the fashion industry, and occasionally getting pictured wearing a Dodgers cap. The least noteworthy thing you can think of, but it practically qualifies as news these days.

