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Share on Pinterest After living with multiple sclerosis for years, The Sopranos actor Jamie-Lynn Sigler shares what she wishes shed done differently after diagnosis and how she learned to thrive while living with the disease. NovartisActor Jamie-Lynn Sigler was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) during the 3rd season of the The Sopranos.It took Sigler years to accept her diagnosis and share it with others.To help others living with MS, Sigler created a short guide that focuses on self-reflection.

Jamie-Lynn Sigler was 20-years old and on the iconic HBO show The Sopranos when she was diagnosed with relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS), which is a type of multiple sclerosis (MS), a condition of the central nervous system that affects processes between the brain and body.

I was showing some symptoms at the time that were confusing and there was no rhyme or reason to why I was feeling them, Sigler told Healthline.

Common symptoms of MS include fatigue, walking difficulties, muscle stiffness, vision issues, constipation, numbness and tingling in the arms/legs, and more.

Because Sigler was otherwise healthy and young, the diagnosis surprised her.

[I] think my initial reaction was fear and how do I protect myself with this, so I protected myself by not telling anyone and while that felt like the right thing to do at the time, in hindsight I was depriving myself of a support system and the care I think I needed, she said.

She believes the disease progressed more than it would have if she had taken a more proactive approach in understanding MS and how to take care of herself.

Its been a journey for me and many iterations of how to deal with the disease, said Sigler. Living with multiple sclerosis: Its OK to say, Im not OK

Sigler initially kept her diagnosis a secret from her fellow Sopranos cast members, which in hindsight, she said, affected her and her work.

I did have youth on my side, in that I could hide certain things or convince myself of certain things, but slowly I would open up to certain people and having a small albeit mighty group that knew, I still wasnt reaching out for help, she said. I was slowly trying to figure out what it would be like having people know about this.

She also shied away from an honest relationship with her MS specialist. She did not always abide by her treatment plan and didnt speak up when asked, How are you?

I had no voice. I think I thought that my power was taken away once I was given a diagnosis so I was never expressing what I was feeling physically or emotionally, said Sigler. Support systems are crucial for people living with multiple sclerosis

Because MS is a complex and unpredictable condition that can affect the body and also the mind and emotions,Dr. Kalina Sanders,board-certified neurologist at Baptist Neurology, said its crucial for patients to speak up about symptoms that affect both.

Our bodies are integrated and each aspect affects the other. Unmanaged mood disorders can make physical symptoms worse, she told Healthline.

Sigler limited the amount of time she saw or spoke to her MS specialist because she felt that the least amount of communication she had, the more in denial she could be.

However, during the 22 years of living with RMS, she gained knowledge about the disease and the confidence to be more open.

[When] you harbor any secret, you start to have these feelings of guilt and shame, she said.

Through many conversations with friends, family, and therapists, she learned to let go of those feelings. Progression of her disease also made it difficult to hide.

About 7 years ago, she decided to go public with her condition.

[Initially] my coming out about living with RMS was how is the world going to accept me? How is this industry going to accept me? How are they going to look at me? now that they know this news, said Sigler.

While it was a hard journey of self-reflection and allowing herself to feel sadness, fear, and grief that come along with a RMS diagnosis, she said today those concerns are gone and she accepts herself with the disease.

[I found] my voice, and when I came to this place of acceptance, its like, okay this is my reality but I still have a lot of hopes, and a lot of have dreams, and I have children, and I have a husband and I have a full life, how do I pivot? What can I do? What do I need? said Sigler. Creating a guide for others living with multiple sclerosis

Sigler helped develop a 3-step guide in partnership with Novartis for people living with MS that focuses on self-reflection. The steps include:reflectreframereach out

[This] guide is really about feeling safe with your feelings and feeling okay with your feelings because thats the way to move forward, said Sigler. I want [people living with MS] to feel represented [in this guide] and I want them to see thattaking the time to go through each step can allow them to set the foundation, to set the life that they still want and need and love.

The first step, self-reflection, encourages people to reflect on where they are in their MS journey as Sigler learned to do over the years.

The second step focuses on reframing your situation.

For Sigler, she said this might be going to a concert with friends and getting dropped off at the venue while they find parking or going to her sons baseball game and using a wagon to lean on as she walks to the field.

The third step, reaching out, recommends creating a support system and asking them for help.

[This] is really hard for anyone to doand in that reaching out stage, so many of my connections and relationships became deeper and more meaningful, said Sigler. People love to be help. I know my cup gets very full whenever Im helping any of my girlfriends or friends.

A trusting network can offer a listening ear and empathy during challenging times.

Additionally, they can offer companionship during medical appointments or treatments and help to ensure the patient is receiving appropriate and satisfactory care, said Sanders.

Connecting with your doctor is also part of this step.

Sigler knew her MS specialist was a fit when he told her at an initial visit that her voice needs to be the loudest in the room.

[That was the first time I felt like I had any power or say in my life after having a diagnosis such as MSIt allowed us to have a conversation and a back and forth and it allowed me to have a safe space to express what I was feeling and going through, she said.

Dr. Sharon Stoll, DO, assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine, said when patients visit her for the first after a MS diagnosis, they are scared and often dont speak up, which can cause disservice to them.

We in the medical community should be more open and create more of this transparency that if you dont share with us what youre going through, the limiting factors are in the disease and how it affects your life then we cant come up with a shared decision makinga treatment plan that works for you, Stoll told Healthline.

She starts visits with the question: How are you doing?

However, because most patients respond by saying theyre fine or great, she follows up with: and how are you really doing?

I find that unless you ask again, unless you rephrase it, reframe it, people often feel like they cant be honest even with a doctor, Stoll said. Im the one that can actually prescribe the medication and prescribe the physical therapy or the occupational therapy, so I just recommend anyone who suffers from this disease to really share that with their provider. Moving forward is possible while living with multiple sclerosis

The fear and trepidation that comes with a MS diagnosis is something Sigler knows well.

Despite being a celebrity, she still faces the same challenges that other people living with MS do.

But what I can say is anything is possible, especially in the world we live in now where theres so much discussion of inclusion and accessibility. I have been able to see firsthand the pivot and adjustments that can be made to still participate, to still move forward, she said. I might look perfect or normal or be how it used to be, but its still possible.

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Tom Hollander on AI actor Tilly Norwood : ‘Perhaps I’m not scared enough’

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Tom Hollander on AI actor Tilly Norwood : 'Perhaps I'm not scared enough'

Tom Hollander says he’s not worried about AI actors replacing real ones and thinks the creation of synthetic performers will only boost the value of authentic, live performance.

The 58-year-old plays entrepreneur Cameron Beck in The Iris Affair, a drama about the world’s most powerful quantum computer.

Dubbed “Charlie Big Potatoes” – it could eat ChatGPT for breakfast.

It’s a timely theme in a world where Artificial Intelligence is advancing at pace, and just last week, the world’s first AI starlet – Tilly Norwood – made her Hollywood debut.

Hollander is not impressed. He suggests rumours that Norwood is in talks with talent agencies are “a lot of old nonsense”, and questions the logistics of working with an AI actor, asking “Would it be, like a blue screen?”

Norwood – a pretty, 20-something brunette – is the creation of Dutch actor and comedian Eline Van der Velden and her AI production studio Particle6. It’s planning to launch its own AI talent studio, Xicoia, soon.

Hollander tells Sky News: “I’m perhaps not scared enough about it. I think the reaction against it is quite strong. And I think there’ll be some legal stuff. Also, it needs to be proven to be good. I mean, the little film that they did around her, I didn’t think was terribly interesting.”

More on Artificial Intelligence

The sketch – shared on social media and titled AI Commissioner – poked fun at the future of TV development in a post-AI world.

Stars including Emily Blunt, Natasha Lyonne and Whoopi Goldberg have objected to Norwood’s creation too, as has US actors’ union SAG-AFTRA.

Hollander compares watching an AI performer to watching a magic trick: “You know with your brain that you’re watching something that’s bullshit… If they don’t have to tell you, that would be difficult. But if they’ve told you it’s AI, then you’ll watch it with a different part of your brain.”

Pic: Sky Atlantic
Image:
Pic: Sky Atlantic

Always screen-ready, with no ego and low salary requirements, Norwood is being billed as a studio’s dream hire. In line with Hollywood’s exacting standards for female beauty, she’ll also never age.

Hollander’s Iris Affair co-star Niamh Algar, who plays genius codebreaker Iris Nixon in the show, doesn’t feel threatened by this new kid on the block, poking fun at Norwood’s girl-next-door persona: “She’s a nightmare to work with. She’s always late. Takes ages in her trailer.”

But Algar adds: “I don’t want to work with an AI. No.”

She goes on, “I don’t think you can replicate. She’s a character, she’s not an actor.”

Pic: Sky Atlantic
Image:
Pic: Sky Atlantic

Algar says the flaw in AI’s performance – scraped from the plethora of real performances that have come before it – is that we, as humans, are “excited by unpredictability”.

She says AI is “too perfect, we like flaws”.

Hollander agrees: “There’ll be a fight for authenticity. People will be going, ‘I refuse makeup. Give me less makeup, I want less makeup because AI can’t possibly mimic the blemishes on my face'”.

He even manages to pull a positive from the AI revolution: “It means that live performance will be more exciting than ever before…

“I think live performance is one antidote, and it’s certainly true in music, isn’t it? I mean, partly because they have to go on tour [to make money], but also because there’s just nothing like it and you can’t replace it.”

Algar enthusiastically adds: “Theatre’s going to kick off. It’s going to be so hot.”

Pic: Sky Atlantic
Image:
Pic: Sky Atlantic

As for using AI themselves, while Hollander admits he’s used it recently for “a bit of problem solving”, Algar says she tries to avoid it, worrying “part of my brain is going to go dormant”.

Indeed, the impact of technology on our brains is a source of constant inspiration – and torture – for The Iris Affair screenwriter Neil Cross.

Cross, who also created psychological crime thriller Luther, tells Sky News: “We are at a hinge point in history.”

He says: “I’m interested in what technological revolution does to people. I have 3am thoughts about the poor man who invented the like button.

“He came up with a simple invention whose only intention was to increase levels of human happiness. How could something as simple as a like button go wrong? And it went so disastrously wrong.

“It’s caused so much misery and anxiety and unhappiness in the human race entire. If something as simple as a small like button can have such dire, cascading, unexpected consequences, what is this moment of revolution going to lead to?”

Indeed, Cross says he lives in “a perpetual state of terror”.

Supercomputer 'Charlie Big Potatoes'. Pic: Sky Atlantic
Image:
Supercomputer ‘Charlie Big Potatoes’. Pic: Sky Atlantic

He goes on: “I’m always going to be terrified of something. The world’s going to look very different. I think in 50 or 60 years’ time.

He takes a brief pause, then self-edits: “Probably 15 years’ time”.

With The Iris Affair’s central themes accelerating out of science fiction, and into reality, Cross’s examination of our instinctual fear of the unknown, coupled with our desire for knowledge that might destroy us is a powerful mix.

Cross concludes: “We’re in danger of creating God. And I think that’s the ultimate danger of AI. God doesn’t exist – yet.”

The Iris Affair is available from Thursday 16 October on Sky Atlantic and streaming service NOW

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Source: Pujols, Angels discuss managerial opening

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Source: Pujols, Angels discuss managerial opening

Future Hall of Fame first baseman Albert Pujols met with Los Angeles Angels general manager Perry Minasian in St. Louis about the team’s managerial vacancy Thursday night, a source familiar with the process told ESPN on Friday, confirming an initial report by The Athletic.

A formal offer has not been made, sources cautioned, though Pujols has been considered a top candidate since the Angels declined the 2026 option on manager Ron Washington’s contract last week.

Pujols, 45, has expressed strong interest in managing at the big league level for years and led a Dominican winter ball team, the Leones del Escogido, to a championship in January. Pujols was previously named manager for his native Dominican Republic in next year’s World Baseball Classic, though he would likely rescind that role if he lands a big league job this offseason.

The Angels are one of six teams looking for new managers. Other clubs have inquired about Pujols, though the Angels are the only team he has formally met about managing thus far, according to a source.

Pujols signed a 10-year, $240 million contract with the Angels in December 2011 that included a 10-year, $10 million personal-services contract that kicked in after he retired. What becomes of that deal would likely be part of any financial negotiations that would inevitably take place with the Angels.

Pujols has been a special guest instructor at Angels spring training each of the past three years and is considered a prime candidate by both Minasian, who held him in high regard even after releasing him in May 2021, and Angels owner Arte Moreno.

One of the greatest players of the 2000s, Pujols won three MVPs and two World Series championships in a 22-year career that included 703 home runs, 2,218 RBIs and 3,384 hits. His best years came in St. Louis, but the Angels could give him his first shot to manage.

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