logo
Longtime ESPN anchor Jay Harris reveals cancer diagnosis

Longtime ESPN anchor Jay Harris reveals cancer diagnosis

Yahooa day ago

Longtime 'SportsCenter' anchor Jay Harris will step away from ESPN for the time being after he announced he was diagnosed with prostate cancer on 'Good Morning America.'
Harris will undergo surgery on Tuesday and expects to be off the air for about a month.
'Then I'm coming back better than ever,' Harris told GMA's Michael Strahan.
Harris, who has worked for ESPN since 2003, said his doctor is optimistic about a full recovery, and added his last scan showed the cancer hadn't spread.
'So once we take out the prostate hopefully that will be it,' Harris noted.
The 60-year-old posted an essay on ESPN Front Row and wrote that by sharing his diagnosis, he hopes 'normalize this conversation and hopefully provide a bit of guidance and preparation, just as it has been offered to me.'
Harris revealed he's received a lot of support from those around him including fellow 'SportsCenter' anchor Hannah Storm, who recently battled breast cancer.
According to the American Cancer Society, roughly one in eight men will receive a prostate cancer diagnosis. While a serious disease, most men don't die from it.
Read the original article on MassLive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ESPN's Jay Harris diagnosed with prostate cancer
ESPN's Jay Harris diagnosed with prostate cancer

UPI

time9 hours ago

  • UPI

ESPN's Jay Harris diagnosed with prostate cancer

ESPN host Jay Harris explained that his father had prostate cancer, and as a Black man, he knows the disease carries a higher risk. Photo courtesy of ESPN June 6 (UPI) -- Longtime ESPN Sports Center anchor Jay Harris has been diagnosed with prostate cancer and is scheduled to have surgery Tuesday. Harris, 60, wrote about his experience in an essay posted Thursday on ESPN's Front Row website. He said he got the news "over a month ago," NBC News reported. "It's jarring news for sure, yet unfortunately, it's not unexpected, given my family history and demographic," he wrote. Harris explained that his father had prostate cancer, and as a Black man, he knows the disease carries a higher risk. "I'm 60. It's something I've always been cognizant of, and my doctor and I talk about it every annual visit," he continued. "And I'm sharing it all with my 26-year-old son. Maybe I'm oversharing at times -- lol -- but he needs to know." The good news, Harris added, is that his PET scan showed no signs that the cancer has spread. Depending on what doctors find during the procedure, he hopes to return to work "in a month or so." "My goal in sharing this is to join the many others who also want to normalize this conversation and hopefully provide a bit of guidance and preparation, just as it has been offered to me," he wrote. About 1 in 8 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime, according to the American Cancer Society. It's the second-leading cause of cancer death among men in the United States. Most cases are diagnosed in men age 65 and older, and Black men are more likely to get it and die from it, the ACS notes. If caught early, many forms of prostate cancer have a five-year survival rate above 99%, according to the ACS. Harris said one of the most meaningful parts of the experience so far has been the support and stories that others have shared, NBC News reported. "Whenever I've mentioned my diagnosis, invariably I've gotten, 'Oh, my cousin did the radiation,' or 'My father had the surgery,' or 'My uncle went through that years ago. Do you want me to ask him to call you?' " Harris wrote. More information The American Cancer Society explains which men need to be screened for prostate cancer. Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

There is a medical reason why Tyrese Haliburton sounds like he has two different voices
There is a medical reason why Tyrese Haliburton sounds like he has two different voices

USA Today

time11 hours ago

  • USA Today

There is a medical reason why Tyrese Haliburton sounds like he has two different voices

There is a medical reason why Tyrese Haliburton sounds like he has two different voices Indiana Pacers star guard Tyrese Haliburton has continued his heroic postseason run, but if you listen to him talk about it, you may notice something. Haliburton, who represented Team USA during the Paris Olympics, occasionally sounds like he has two entirely different voices. Just press play on this clip of Haliburton talking about the improbable comeback that Indiana had against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game of the NBA Finals. In the beginning of the interview on national TV, Haliburton is speaking with a slightly deeper voice. Then (ironically) right as he said the words "why would that change" later in the conversation, his voice suddenly had a much higher pitch. More: Tyrese Haliburton and the Pacers keep pulling off the impossible It happened during his postgame press conference as well: This is something that some fans noticed when Haliburton appeared on The Young Man and the Three with JJ Redick. Then it happened against before the 2024 NBA All-Star Game hosted in Indiana as well: Haliburton has acknowledged that this is indeed something that happens to him. It is something he has talked about with ESPN's Pat McAfee. Here is what what he says: "I do. People say that all the time ... I never catch it. I watch podcasts after and I'm like, 'Dang, my voice changed.' I didn't do that on purpose. It just happened. It just happens that way naturally sometimes." Haliburton added that he feels he has no control over it, and it's something that just happens to him. So why exactly does that happen? Brianna Williams reached out to Dr. Michael M. Johns from USC's Voice Center, and he provided a possible explanation (via ESPN): "Vocalization is a lot like athletics; people don't think of it that way because it happens naturally," Dr. Johns told ESPN. "It's like putting aluminum foil on a guitar string; the sound changes when the vibration is irregular." Regarding Haliburton's voice, Dr. Johns observed: "When you listen to Tyrese's voice, there's a rough quality to it, and that would likely be a change of what's happening at the vocal cords, like that 'tinfoil on the guitar string' analogy." He speculated that Haliburton might be compensating for vocal fatigue by changing his resonance, shifting the shape of his vocal tract or resonator. "Athletes are using their voice a lot, and they're using their voice loudly," Dr. Johns explained. "They're hollering across the court. There's a huge amount of noise around them. They've got to be heard over that noise. And so they, like other vocal athletes, can develop some injury to their vocal folds, vocal nodules, or vocal swelling that can cause some rough quality to the voice." This is fascinating and something that makes Haliburton very unique.

ESPN anchor Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis
ESPN anchor Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

ESPN anchor Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis

NEW YORK — ESPN 'SportsCenter' anchor Jay Harris revealed Thursday he's been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The sportscaster, 60, shared the news on ABC's 'Good Morning America' and in a post he penned for ESPN Front Row. Harris is scheduled for surgery on June 10. 'I'll be away from 'SportsCenter' for about a month to recover and then I'm coming back, better than ever,' said Harris, who's anchored the show since 2015. Harris said he's received an 'optimistic' prognosis from his doctors and, per his most recent scan, 'nothing has spread.' 'Once we take out the prostate, hopefully that'll be it. That's the goal,' he noted. Harris said he went public with the news in part because men often 'don't talk' openly about their health and he hopes to encourage others to have conversations that could potentially be life-saving. 'We all need to talk about these things because we all have them in our families,' said Harris, whose father and cousins also had prostate cancer. 'I hate to be morbid but we sentence ourselves to death for not talking.' In his piece for ESPN Front Row, Harris wrote he was diagnosed with the cancer last month, and while 'jarring,' it wasn't entirely unexpected given his family history and demographic. 'Prostate cancer disproportionately affects Black men,' he said. 'It's something I've always been cognizant of, and my doctor and I talk about it every annual visit. And I'm sharing it all with my 26-year-old son. Maybe I'm oversharing at times — lol — but he needs to know.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store