Christina Applegate: 'I miss who I was before I got sick'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
a day ago
- Buzz Feed
Can You Guess The Number Of Chocolates In The Jar?
So, here's how this is going to work. I filled a jar with Almond M&Ms, and you are going to comment on how many you think are in the jar. The first person to guess the correct answer will be mailed a real-life treat: A BuzzFeed Prize pack! I'm sure you have some questions, and I'm here to answer them! If you're wondering... OK, some specifics. Here is the jar! The jar is approximately eight inches high and four inches wide. It curves in around the middle. OK, are you ready to make your guess? Answer in the comments below. The first one to get it correct will be sent a real-life prize pack! You have until August 3rd at 5:00 P.M. EST to guess, and this post will be updated the following day with a winner (and the right answer)!


Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
Christina Applegate's daughter said she misses who she was before MS diagnosis
Christina Applegate isn't the only one who misses who she was before her diagnosis. The 53-year-old 'Dead to Me' actress announced in August 2021 that she had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) several months prior. At the time, she described it as a 'tough road' on X. Now four years later, Applegate credits her daughter for being 'the reason I'm still here and trying.' During a recent appearance on 'Let's Talk Off Camera with Kelly Ripa,' Applegate opened up about her journey with MS and detailed one of the difficult conversations she had with her daughter. 'We got into a big thing the other day, and sorry Sadie, but it has to be said,' the actress explained. Applegate shares her 14-year-old daughter Sadie with her husband Martyn LeNoble, whom she has been married to since 2013, per People. 'She said, 'I missed who you were before you got sick,'' Applegate continued. 'That is just like a knife to the heart because I miss who I was before I got sick too. Very much.' According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, MS is a chronic disease of the central nervous system in which the body's immune system attacks itself by mistake. Though symptoms are unpredictable and most people have a different experience with it, common symptoms include numbness, weakness, trouble walking, vision changes and more, per Johns Hopkins. 'Every day of my life, it's such a loss,' Applegate said of her diagnosis. 'See, now I'm gonna cry.' Jamie-Lynn Sigler, a fellow actress and one of Applegate's close friends who also has MS, joined Applegate on Ripa's podcast and shared a similar sentiment. 'My little one hates it. He's mad that I can't run like all the other moms, he points out all the time that I walk like an old lady,' Sigler said of her experience with MS as a mom of two, per the New York Post. As for her older son, Sigler said he takes a different approach to her diagnosis. 'He looks at me like, 'You're gonna beat this thing one day, mom,'' she explained. 'He congratulates me all the time for how hard I work, he tells me I'm doing amazing, he's my cheerleader.' The 'Sopranos' actress shares sons Beau, 11, and Jack, 7, with her husband Cutter Dykstra, according to Us Weekly. Applegate's conversation with Ripa and Sigler comes four months after she opened up about how MS has affected her as a parent in an interview with People. The 'Anchorman' actress was candid about how her daughter has seen 'the loss of her mom.' 'Dancing with her every day. Picking her up from school every day. Working at her school, working in the library. Being present out of the house, out of my bed,' Applegate explained. 'She doesn't see those things anymore. This is a loss for her as well. And we're both learning as we're going along,' she added. Applegate went on to explain how much she misses being there for her child. 'She'll come in the room, and if she sees that I'm laying on my side, she knows that she can't ask me to do anything,' she told People. 'And that breaks me, breaks me. Because I love doing stuff for my kid. I love making her food. I love bringing it to her. I love all of it, and I just can't sometimes. But I try,' she continued. Applegate and LeNoble got engaged in 2010, welcomed their daughter in 2011 and tied the knot in 2013, according to People. They celebrated their 12-year wedding anniversary earlier this year.


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
‘King of the Hill' still has something to say in its return
'King of the Hill' lasted 13 seasons, during which we got to know Hank and the retinue of weirdos — his neighbors — who gather in the alley behind Hank's house (in the fictional Texas everytown of Arlen) to drink endless cans of Alamo beer and talk about their problems. That may not sound interesting to folks who didn't watch 'King of the Hill,' but fans of the show know what's up, and they were upset when Fox yanked 'King of the Hill' to accommodate the 'Family Guy' spinoff 'The Cleveland Show.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Those frowns are about to turn upside down with the 'King of the Hill' reboot, whose 10 episodes drop Aug. 4 on Hulu. Bringing back a beloved show is dicey, obviously; for myriad reasons, many Advertisement The new season reunites most, though not all of the old gang. Importantly, Hill is still voiced by Judge; Kathy Najimy is back as Hank's prideful wife Peggy; and Bobby's adorable rasp is handled once more by Pamela Adlon. However, conspiracist Dale Gribble is voiced now by Toby Huss (because Johnny Hardwick Advertisement Peggy, Bobby, and Hank. Hulu But this reboot isn't a nostalgia trip. Hank and Peggy have just returned to Texas after living for several years in Saudi Arabia — Hank was in the propane business there, too — and they soon discover things have changed in Arlen in the intervening 16 years. On the way home from the airport, for instance, they stop at a convenience store and Hank encounters a unisex bathroom. 'Are we all-gender ?' he asks Peggy, bewildered. There are also bike lanes, Uber drivers, an app for seemingly everything, and 'Did you know that the cashier at Frumpy's asks for tips now?' Peggy says to Hank. 'I came here for some sensible shorts, not to get fleeced.' Hank, who has been described, correctly, as an 'aggressively average' American male, has a hard time with change, so all the newness is disorienting. He's also retired now, which makes reentry even rockier. Thankfully, he's got his idiosyncratic buddies: Dale, Bill, and Boomhauer, who seem like slightly exaggerated versions of their former selves. What's interesting is that even Dale's nuttiest conspiracy theories — in episode 3, he claims President George W. Bush's favorite pastime of clearing brush on his Texas ranch was a 'false flag to distract the dummies from the real invasion by MS-13 in secret tunnels from Acapulco' — sound like something you might really hear in 2025. (In Hank's absence, Dale was elected mayor of Arlen, but he only served for 36 hours because, he says, 'I denied the results of my own election.') Advertisement For me, though, it's all about Bobby, who as a pudgy 11-year-old kid never seemed to meet the expectations of his unimaginative dad. Now, Bobby is in his 20s and the executive chef of a Japanese-German barbeque joint. (Predictably — and amusingly — concerns about cultural appropriation are raised.) In one episode, Bobby and Hank square off in a beer-making competition, with Bobby dissing his dad's brew as 'the accountant of beers' and telling him that suds are 'fruitier, bolder, more assertive' nowadays. But, as always, Hank thinks he knows best. 'I've been drinking beer for 40 years and I never once wished it tasted more like fruit,' he says. If I have a complaint about the revival, it's the animation. The show used to look hand-drawn, though I know it wasn't for the duration of the show's original run. But the enhanced digital animation of the new series has a slickness that renders it undistinguishable from other animated shows. That's too bad, but not a reason not to tune in. Advertisement KING OF THE HILL Starring: Mike Judge, Kathy Najimy, Pamela Adlon, Toby Huss, Jonathan Joss. On Hulu Mark Shanahan can be reached at