Blind Item #6
This former A+ list mostly television actor has cancer but is still continuing his partying ways.
This former A+ list mostly television actor has cancer but is still continuing his partying ways.
Posted by ent lawyer at 1:00 AM
Labels: blind item
Sheen
ReplyDeletesheen
ReplyDeletecharlie sheen
ReplyDeleteCharlie sheen
ReplyDeleteGeez
ReplyDeleteQuestion: What does partying have to do with cancer?
ReplyDeleteAnswer: NOTHING, JudgEnty!
A very brief google search would help at least 90% of your posts.
Doctors be like - have a few cocktails, smoke some weed, won't hurt you any more than chemo, amirite?!
Source: I work in cancer research x 30 + years. Get off your high horse, you don't know shit..
I can vouch that there ain't nothin' wrong with that.
ReplyDeleteThis is my number. +15184801619. Message me! Call me! Im desperate for a boyfriend and attention! Im 36, single, I live paycheck to paycheck. Im unhappy. Text/Sext me!
ReplyDelete+1
ReplyDeleteIf they are dying anyways, partying isn't going to prolong or shorten the time they have left.
So: Party On, Dude!
Download tinder girl
ReplyDeleteyou must know people who do the same..most everyone knows someone or has a relative who will still drink or smoke to relax.
ReplyDeleteWrong site Rebecca
ReplyDeleteand certainly no sex right Enty??? wtf?
ReplyDeleteDamn lol.
ReplyDelete@Dave, dude don't put 'em in their grave just b/c they have Cancer. Usually,they're recieving Chemo, Radiation & partying to Live!
ReplyDeleteI can't think of a better time to go wild than after a cancer diagnosis.
ReplyDeleteAgree
ReplyDeleteIf anything, I am impressed with his energy level and stamina. Chemo is incredibly tiring and energy-draining. If he can do both more power to him. However, if he is partying instead of getting treatment, then he is a fool
IF CHARLIE SHEEN HAS CANCER THEN THERE IS A GOD
ReplyDeletehonestly cut his mortal coil already. his death will up the value of the human race
ReplyDeleteDepends. If the end result doesn't change, I'll squander my time on what makes me smile, not what makes me miserable. If treatment will give me 5 extra days, but I'll be in hideous pain, I'll skip it.
ReplyDeleteEach to his/her own.
Rebecca's mean friend/ex.. tsk tsk
ReplyDeleteWay harsh Tai
ReplyDeleteDepends on the type of cancer. Tx have made huge advances.
ReplyDeletebut doesn't it totally put cancer into remission at times? or is that blind luck and we just attribute it to chemo? i've always wondered
ReplyDeleteEnty: have you watched someone die from cancer? I have, and if my sister wanted drugs I'd have been on the phone to my dealer so fast my head would've spun. I don't know which uneducated Enty wrote this, but fuck you.
ReplyDeleteThere are many, many, many different types of cancer. Some cancer is considered curable by current standards, many types are treatable, a few types remain flat out deadly and nothing currently known to mankind can extend the life of a person with those specific cancer types.
ReplyDeleteMr. Uno,
ReplyDeleteCigarette smoking is associated with dramatically increased risk of lung, head and neck, and certain other cancers. Drinking alcohol is associated with increased oral, and other cancer risks.
Sexual activity is associated with HPV infection, in turn causing increased risk for head and neck, and genital cancers (in both genders).
I don't know where, or how you do your "research", nor do I know the truth of this blind item, but down here on earth, persons who like to "party" like Charlie Sheen (ie smoke, drink, and have lots of sexual partners) have exceptionally high risks for oral and throat cancers. Other notables include Michael Douglas, Sean Connery, George Harrison, Eddie Van Halen, Sammy Davis Jr, all of whom smoked, drank, and "played around" a bunch.
I think you're jumping to conclusions here. Enty said this person got cancer, but hasn't stopped "partying". He didn't say this was good or bad, who it was, or what type of cancer.
ReplyDeleteAs it happens Charlie Sheen has publically admitted to a throat cancer "scare" last year. . .maybe he does have throat cancer, maybe not. I don't know. What I do know is if he doesn't have cancer now, stopping drinking and smoking will decrease his future risk of developing one. Even if he does have one, he can still beat it, and he won't be immune to another one. . .IE, there is still potential benefit to quitting.
I've worked in human clinical trials for cancer and malignant hematology for over 30 years. My work has included new drug discovery/development, molecularly targeted therapies, nano-delivery systems and first-in-human trials. I participated in the research leading up to the HPV--> cancer findings (viral oncogenesis).
ReplyDeleteI've been at my present place of employment (an academic medical institution in the northeast US) for 12 years and immediately prior to that, I audited the conduct of human clinical trials all over the US for the National Cancer Institute within the Cancer Trials Support Unit of the NCI.
That's my cancer-specific "research" background.
What's yours?