I told you last week that this former A list mostly television actor from a now defunct hit cable show was back on the bottle. He was even more messy at an event late this week.
The thing is, you can be super handsome and attractive and respectable but as soon as you start slurring and stumbling and fumbling and being stupid, everyone just loses SO MUCH respect for you, it's not really something you can win back.
Hammaconda can't get it up when he's drinking according to our Entern so there's that too. He drinks to find a lay but bitch can't do it because he drank the night away. Karma for how he treated Jennifer Westfeldt all those years
He is a mess. Michigan Mama is so right...drink to cope, regret actions, drink to forget, drink to mask regrets, drink, drink, drink. He's got a lot of seemingly good friends out there (swarmed by the former SNL crowd post Oscars, grew up with Paul Rudd), hopefully they can try to get thru to him. He is even wearing it physically at this point.
@Viking Song The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) defines addiction as “a chronic, relapsing brain *disease*, that is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences."
I just posted this same thing about alcoholism on another BI: I discovered firsthand that alcoholism is a disease. I thought the idea was stupid because, after all, I had CHOSEN to drink, but what I realized was that although my first steps into drinking were a choice, it activated the disease. Drinking, for me, felt like walking down the street and then falling into a pit. You’re making benign choices and then BOOM. Within about 2 months of drinking, I went from a shot of vodka or 2 getting me buzzed to needing 6 shots to achieve the same effect. It was bizarre and terrifying. Alcoholism is in my DNA, as is evident my the incredible amount of alcoholics on both sides of my family. To fight the disease, I don’t drink. But the disease is still there and always will be. So a choice can activate the disease. Hopes this makes a little sense.
Jon Hamm
ReplyDeleteJon Hamm - get it together before you die from alcohol poisoning
ReplyDeleteHammaconda all over bebe rexha at vanity fair
ReplyDeleteTerrible disease.
ReplyDeleteLost the two most imp.people in my Life to severe alcoholism. One died; one is homeless and not communicating.
It is sad. It is a cycle of drinking, regretting, drinking.
ReplyDeleteHe's a piece of shit...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.kxan.com/news/local/austin/actor-jon-hamm-was-accused-in-violent-ut-fraternity-hazing/1049388762
The thing is, you can be super handsome and attractive and respectable but as soon as you start slurring and stumbling and fumbling and being stupid, everyone just loses SO MUCH respect for you, it's not really something you can win back.
ReplyDeleteHammaconda can't get it up when he's drinking according to our Entern so there's that too. He drinks to find a lay but bitch can't do it because he drank the night away. Karma for how he treated Jennifer Westfeldt all those years
ReplyDeleteHe is a mess. Michigan Mama is so right...drink to cope, regret actions, drink to forget, drink to mask regrets, drink, drink, drink. He's got a lot of seemingly good friends out there (swarmed by the former SNL crowd post Oscars, grew up with Paul Rudd), hopefully they can try to get thru to him. He is even wearing it physically at this point.
ReplyDeleteAlcoholism is not a "disease." It is an addiction.
ReplyDeleteFucked up childhoods are hard to shake off for some
ReplyDelete@Viking Song
ReplyDeleteThe National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) defines addiction as “a chronic, relapsing brain *disease*, that is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences."
Hamm isn't going to do anything until he hits rock bottom. It's coming.
ReplyDeleteI just posted this same thing about alcoholism on another BI:
ReplyDeleteI discovered firsthand that alcoholism is a disease. I thought the idea was stupid because, after all, I had CHOSEN to drink, but what I realized was that although my first steps into drinking were a choice, it activated the disease. Drinking, for me, felt like walking down the street and then falling into a pit. You’re making benign choices and then BOOM. Within about 2 months of drinking, I went from a shot of vodka or 2 getting me buzzed to needing 6 shots to achieve the same effect. It was bizarre and terrifying. Alcoholism is in my DNA, as is evident my the incredible amount of alcoholics on both sides of my family. To fight the disease, I don’t drink. But the disease is still there and always will be. So a choice can activate the disease. Hopes this makes a little sense.