Bruce Willis' family share poignant messages about dads ‘living with disability or disease'
Bruce Willis' family celebrated him on Father's Day, while acknowledging holidays can feel 'hard' as he lives with dementia.via CNN Newsource
Bruce Willis' family celebrated him on Father's Day, while acknowledging holidays can feel 'hard' as he lives with dementia.
'Happy Father's Day to all the dads living with disability or disease, showing up in the ways they can and to the children who show up for them,' Wills' wife, Emma Hemming, wrote in a post on Instagram. 'What Bruce teaches our girls goes far beyond words. Resilience, unconditional love, and the quiet strength in simply being present.'
'Love deepens. It adapts. It stays, even when everything else changes. But to be fair to myself, these symbolic days stir up a lot,' she continued. 'I'm profoundly sad today. I wish, with every cell in my body, that things could be different for him and lighter for our family.'
Hemming shares two daughters Willis. He is also the father of three adult daughters from his previous marriage to Demi Moore.
In 2022, it was announced that Willis would be stepping away from his decades-long Hollywood career due to cognitive issues after being diagnosed with aphasia, a brain disorder affecting communication. The following year, his family updated his diagnosis to frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a progressive brain condition.
Wills' eldest daughter, Rumer Willis, shared several photos of her dad from over the years in a separate post on Sunday.
'Today is hard, I feel a deep ache in my chest to talk to you and tell you everything I'm doing and what's going on in my life. To hug you and ask you about life and your stories and struggles and successes. I wish I asked you more questions while you could still tell me about it all. But I know you wouldn't want me to be sad today so I'll try to just be grateful reminding myself how lucky I am that you're my dad and that you're still with me and I can still hold you and hug you and kiss your cheek and rub your head I can tell you stories,' she wrote. 'Sending love to all those who are in the boat with me.'
Hemming, too, ended her message with positivity.
'As they say in our FTD community, 'It is what it is.' And while that might sound dismissive, to me, it's not. It grounds me. It helps me return to the acceptance of what is and not fight this every step of the way like I used to,' Hemming wrote. 'Today, let's celebrate the badass dads, those who are here, and those we carry with us. Onward.'
By Alli Rosenbloom, CNN
Hashtags

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


CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
Vancouver author and former MGM assistant's debut novel is based on her own Hollywood blunder
In the early 2000s, Christine Stringer worked as an assistant on film sets in Vancouver. She brushed shoulders with stars and knew the inner workings of Hollywood North. While working on a film starring Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson, the director hired her to move to Los Angeles and be his assistant while they finished up the movie — Walking Tall. "It was just my dream come true," she said. But her dream became something of a nightmare when she was accused of stealing a copy of the film and investigated by the FBI for piracy after she lost a DVD. That story is the inspiration for her debut novel, Charity Trickett Is Not So Glamorous, a light-hearted, comedic take on what Stringer actually endured — which includes a scene where Charity takes a date to a movie premiere only to learn he wasn't quite what she thought. "Jack is definitely a real guy that I went on a first date with in L.A. and he used me to sneak into the premiere of Mean Girls," Stringer told CBC's North by Northwest host Margaret Gallagher. 'She's a better version of me' Stringer set the book in the '90s, a little earlier than when she found herself in Tinseltown. "I am such a lover of Hollywood and, in my mind, if I wanted to write this book and have it represent the Hollywood that I grew up with and I loved, I had to move the timeline backwards a little bit," she said. She said she has already planned two more books for Charity Trickett, which will move into the early 2000s. Charity Trickett, who gives off true main character energy, is "everything that I wish I was in my early 20s when I lived in L.A.," Stringer said. "She's feisty, she's smart," she said. "I think that hindsight and age has given Charity … she's a better version of me because of it. When I was in L.A. and I was under FBI investigation, all I could think about was how it impacted me. I didn't realize, then in my 20s, how it was going to impact my boss who was on the verge of getting married, or how it would impact the executives at the studio who had decades of experience in their industry and have kids that they have to send off to university." In the novel, things go awry for the protagonist when she loses a copy of the big film she's been working on. If this happened today, Stringer said, the fallout would have happened more quickly. "With HD, that film could be distributed globally within seconds." In Stringer's case, things did eventually settle down. She continued to work in film for a few years before leaving the industry in 2011. As for the missing DVD, she said investigators told her that she had been pickpocketed. "He was trying to extort MGM for, like, millions of dollars — this is the story I was told, mind you, and then they caught him. Nobody would tell me any details, but that's the story they gave me."


CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
Adam Duritz of Counting Crows wrote a song about wanting to be famous — and it came true
In 1993, Michael Jordan retired from basketball for the first time, Jurassic Park was making a killing at the box office, and Counting Crows released their debut single, Mr. Jones. That song became an inescapable radio hit that catapulted Counting Crows into the cultural zeitgeist. For lead singer Adam Duritz, the success of Mr. Jones came as a total surprise, but there was also something prophetic about the song, seeing as he wrote it about his desire to be famous. "We all wanna be big stars," he sings on the track. "But we don't know why and we don't know how." In a new interview with Q 's Tom Power, Duritz looks back on his breakout hit and shares why overnight fame maybe wasn't a dream come true for him after all. WATCH | Adam Duritz's full interview with Tom Power: It all started when Duritz spent a fun night out in San Francisco with his friend Marty Jones, whom he'd played with in his old band, The Himalayans. Jones's dad, a flamenco guitarist, was in town, so they went to check out his gig before eventually heading to a bar called New Amsterdam. "We went to a lot of bars that night, trailing around after this flamenco troupe and getting hammered," Duritz recalls. "Just feeling like this is really cool: basking in someone else's spotlight and kind of wishing it was me in the spotlight." Duritz says a lot of the lyrical details in Mr. Jones are based on things that actually happened that night, like when his friend started flirting with an older woman named Maria — a beautiful "black-haired flamenco dancer" who "dances while his father plays guitar," as the song goes. WATCH | Official video for Mr. Jones: The Counting Crows frontman penned Mr. Jones when he got home later that night, but he didn't expect it to be a hit. By the time the band released the song in December of 1993, they had already been hustling as musicians for years. "I was 27 before anyone from any record company came to see any band I was in, and it wasn't Counting Crows," Duritz tells Power. "I was 28 when we got signed and I was 29 when that record came out. And we had been on the road for about three or four months as an opening band, opening for Midnight Oil, opening for Suede, opening for Cracker. And after two or three months, some TV shows started calling us — Letterman first and then SNL." When Counting Crows performed on Saturday Night Live, the band wasn't even in the top 200. After appearing on the show, Duritz says their debut album, August and Everything After, "jumped 40 spots a week for five or six weeks." Then, in April of 1994, there was a major turning point when Counting Crows returned back to the U.S. from a European tour. "We flew into New Orleans, and we'd been out of the country for a while, so whatever had happened back here, we weren't here to experience it," Duritz says. "The first morning after we got there, I went out to the [Tipitina's Jazz Festival], as I always did, and got mobbed. And that's when I realized, 'Oh, what the hell happened?'" With hundreds of thousands of people mobbing him at festivals, fans hounding him everywhere he went and his privacy being invaded by tabloids, Duritz learned the hard way that fame isn't all it's cracked up to be. These days, he rarely plays Mr. Jones.


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
Jurors see clips of ‘freak-off' sex marathons central to Sean ‘Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking charges
Sean Combs arrives at the Pre-Grammy Gala And Salute To Industry Icons at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Jan. 25, 2020, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision/AP, File) NEW YORK — The jury at Sean 'Diddy' Combs ' sex trafficking trial got a glimpse Monday at some of the 'freak-off' sex marathons at the heart of the case, with prosecutors showing excerpts of explicit videos that the hip-hop mogul recorded during the drug-fueled sessions. Prosecutors played portions of three sex videos recovered from a Combs-linked account on a cellphone that his former longtime girlfriend Cassie provided to authorities, giving jurors a close-up view of the encounters they've heard about repeatedly since testimony began May 12. One video was from Oct. 14, 2012, the same day prosecutors say Combs had a 'freak-off' in New York City with Cassie and sex worker Sharay Hayes, known as 'The Punisher.' Before playing the clip, prosecutors showed jurors an invoice for an Oct. 14, 2012, stay at the Trump International Hotel & Tower in Manhattan that was booked under Combs' alias, Frank Black. A note on the invoice said the guest requested to have the room at 3 a.m. Prosecutors also showed jurors text messages in which Cassie, the R&B singer whose real name is Casandra Ventura, arranged the Oct. 14 meetup with Hayes. In one message, she wrote: 'Can we actually do 3 a.m. at the Trump hotel, Columbus Circle?' Hayes replied: 'Great. I'll text when I'm on my way,' and told her his fee for the encounter was $200 cash. Jurors were also shown excerpts of videos taken on Oct. 20, 2012, and Dec. 4, 2014. Collectively, the clips shown to jurors were several minutes long and although at least one juror winced at a video, their reactions mostly were muted. Defence lawyers have said the videos prove Combs was engaging in consensual sex rather than crimes. Because of their graphic nature, the excerpts were available for viewing only for jurors, the prosecution and defense teams and Combs, all of whom wore headphones to hear the audio portion. Reporters and members of the public were not allowed to see or hear the videos. The videos were the most notable part of an otherwise dry day in court as prosecutors wind down their case with so-called summary witnesses -- government agents who are reading aloud heaps of text messages, travel records and other document-based evidence. After six weeks of witnesses and evidence, prosecutors said they plan to rest on Wednesday. After that, Combs' lawyers said they'll start calling witnesses. Earlier in the trial, a forensic video expert retained by the prosecution to enhance the videos identified them by date. During that testimony, a prosecutor described the videos as 'sex videos.' Until Monday, jurors had only seen still images taken from the 'freak-off' videos. Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges after his September arrest at a New York hotel. He was denied bail multiple times and has remained incarcerated at a federal lockup in Brooklyn ever since. Other text messages jurors heard Monday included Combs' ex-girlfriend, identified by the pseudonym 'Jane,' complaining to him about sex marathons and to his chief of staff, Kristina Khorram, about his threats to release explicit videos of her. Jane laid into Combs after Cassie sued him in 2023 for alleged sexual and physical abuse. He promptly settled. Jane, who dated Combs from 2021 until his arrest last year, told Combs she felt he exploited her with their 'dark and humiliating lifestyle.' A month later, Jane texted Khorram that Combs 'just threatened me about my sex tapes' and said he'd send them to her child's father. Jane told Khorram she needed her help because Combs was having one of his 'evil-ass psychotic bipolar' episodes. Before the jury entered the courtroom Monday, Judge Arun Subramanian dismissed a juror after concluding there were 'clear inconsistencies' in his answers last week and during jury selection about whether he resided in New York or with a girlfriend in New Jersey. 'Taking these all together, the record raised serious concerns as to the juror's candor and whether he shaded answers to get on and stay on the jury,' he said. Subramanian had first announced late Friday that he was dismissing the juror, but he left open the possibility that he would question the juror a final time after defense lawyers protested, saying that dismissing the Black juror and replacing him with a white man might spoil an otherwise diverse jury. The judge said he had decided not to question him further because it could lead to 'another set of shifting answers. In other words, there's nothing that the juror can say at this point that would put the genie back in the bottle and restore his credibility.' By Michael R. Sisak And Larry Neumeister