Tag Archives: Michael

DR MICHAEL MOSLEY: Why too much sleep can drain your brain power…

Did you enjoy an extra hour in bed last Sunday when the clocks went back? We’ve been repeatedly warned about the dangers of not getting enough sleep so, understandably, most of us would have seized the opportunity to get more shut-eye.

But new research suggests that trying to pack in more sleep can actually undermine our health.

There is no question that a good night’s sleep benefits our brains. We feel groggy and irritable if we have slept badly, and long-term sleep deprivation can lead to serious damage.

It is when we are in deep sleep that our memories are preserved — and when channels open in our brains, allowing fluid to gush through and clear away any waste products that have built up during the day.

So, you might imagine that people getting the most sleep must have the healthiest brains. But a recent study, from Washington University Sleep Medicine Center in the U.S. concluded that for older adults, too much sleep may be as bad for their brains as too little.

New research suggests that trying to pack in more sleep can actually undermine our health, writes Dr Michael Mosley 

The researchers looked at 100 adults, average age 75, who had been taking part in a long-term study of their brains, which included doing things like repeated memory tests.

They were also given portable EEGs (electroencephalographs) which measured their brain waves to provide an accurate picture of how much they were sleeping.

They couldn’t rely on the participants telling them this, as previous EEG studies have shown we actually sleep around an hour less each night than we think we do. So if you think you’re getting seven hours a night, you are probably only really having about six. That’s because we often wake up during the night but don’t remember doing so.

The researchers then compared how long the volunteers were sleeping with their mental performance over the five years of the study.

The best results were seen in those getting 4.5 to 6.5 hours of EEG-measured sleep each night, the equivalent of between 5.5 and 7.5 hours of self-reported sleep. People getting more, or less, than those amounts showed the biggest declines in brain power.

The best results were seen in those getting 4.5 to 6.5 hours of EEG-measured sleep each night, the equivalent of between 5.5 and 7.5 hours of self-reported sleep. People getting more, or less, than those amounts showed the biggest declines in brain power (stock image)

Fertility benefit of cleaner air

The tiny particles we inhale from polluted air cause chronic inflammation throughout our bodies, which not only damages our heart and lungs, but egg and sperm production as well

The talk at Cop 26 has been all about the impact on our climate and planet of burning fossil fuels.

 I hate to add to the gloom, but it also has a more subtle and insidious effect — it can reduce fertility. 

The tiny particles we inhale from polluted air cause chronic inflammation throughout our bodies, which not only damages our heart and lungs, but egg and sperm production as well. 

A study published earlier this year in China found that 26 per cent of couples exposed to higher levels of air pollution were unable to conceive after a year of trying, compared to 15 per cent of couples breathing healthier air.

 If you want to have kids, that is a big difference, and something to add to the long list of reasons why we should be switching to cleaner, greener fuels as soon as possible. 

This fits in with other major studies, such as one published in the Journal of the American Heart Association in 2017, which compared people’s levels of self‑reported sleep with their risk of developing heart disease and dying. The people who said they slept significantly less, or more, than seven hours had a higher risk of having a heart attack or stroke than those around the seven hour mark (which is roughly the amount most Brits say they normally get, although the advice is to have eight hours).

As to why sleeping more than average is linked to poor health, this may be partly because people who are already in ill health spend more time in bed, so it’s not the long sleep that is causing the poor health, but the other way round. But the researchers from Washington University Sleep Medicine Center also suggest that spending more time in bed can be counterproductive because it leads to more fragmented, poor-quality sleep, which is bad for you.

In other words, if you really want to enjoy the full benefits of a good night’s sleep, you need quality rather than just quantity.

Ensuring you have more quality sleep might sound difficult, particularly if you are an insomniac (someone, for example, who wakes up a lot in the middle of the night and then struggles to get back to sleep, as I do). But one of the most simple, but effective, ways to achieve it is to restrict the hours you spend in bed. The trick with Sleep Restriction Therapy (SRT) is to teach your brain to associate ‘bed’ with ‘sleep’ and nothing else.

The idea is that for a short period of time you restrict your sleep by getting up at the same time every morning but going to bed later than normal.

So if you normally go to bed at 11pm and get up at 7am, then you might try going to bed at midnight, or even 1am, instead. This will increase your sleep drive, so the next night you will fall asleep faster and hopefully wake up less frequently. You do this for a week or two, until you have got back into the habit of falling asleep easily, then gradually increase the amount of time you spend in bed until you get enough quality sleep.

This will vary from person to person, but one of the best ways of telling if you are getting ‘enough’ is whether you feel sleepy and irritable during the day.

If you want to try SRT there are four things to bear in mind.

1. Do not cut your time in bed to less than five hours.

2. Stick to it rigorously.

3. Do not lie down, nap or snooze during the day.

4. Do not drive or use machinery if you experience serious daytime sleepiness.

There are more details about how to do SRT in my recent book, Fast Asleep.

Note: if you have serious insomnia then you might want to talk to your GP or get professional support from someone who is trained to deliver CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for insomnia).

 

 Could next year’s Covid jab be given as a painless patch?

Some good news for people with trypanophobia — a fear of needles — who want to be protected against coronavirus.

A team at The University of Queensland are testing a skin patch that they’re hoping to use to deliver Covid-19 vaccines. It consists of a strip of plastic, just 1 cm square, covered with 5,000 tiny plastic spikes.

When coated with the Covid vaccine they can be pressed onto your arm with a single click from a spring-loaded applicator.

 This is not only painless but the vaccine doesn’t have to be stored at cold temperatures either. Also, when a vaccine is given this way the tiny needles puncture just the outer layer of the skin — this is called an intradermal injection and this can produce a much more powerful immune response than a vaccine delivered via a needle into muscle. That’s because your skin is packed full of immune cells, primed to respond powerfully to any foreign intruders.

Studies using flu vaccines have shown you only need to give a fifth of the normal dose to get the same effect as injecting into muscle. Despite these advantages, few vaccines are routinely administered with intradermal injections because you have to get the needle into just the right layer of skin (the dermis) and this normally requires trained medical staff.

But if a Covid vaccine could be given as a patch, it would be painless, which might encourage more vaccine refuseniks to come forward. It could be done without needing any expertise as the needles are designed to only reach the dermis. The patch could even be self-administered. This approach has only been tested on animals but trials on humans begin next year.

A team at The University of Queensland are testing a skin patch that they’re hoping to use to deliver Covid-19 vaccines. It consists of a strip of plastic, just 1 cm square, covered with 5,000 tiny plastic spikes. When coated with the Covid vaccine they can be pressed onto your arm with a single click from a spring-loaded applicator (stock image)

Read original article here

Aaron Carter Days Away from Son’s Birth, Name is a Nod to Michael Jackson

Read original article here

Scottie Pippen Takes Aim at Michael Jordan in New Book

Scottie Pippen’s new memoir, “Unguarded,” is a master class in settling scores, or creating new ones.

Beginning in the prologue, Pippen expresses anger at Michael Jordan over “The Last Dance,” the 2020 ESPN documentary on the 1990s Chicago Bulls, which Pippen writes “glorified Michael Jordan while not giving nearly enough praise to me and my proud teammates.” Pippen gets more caustic from there.

“How dare Michael treat us that way after everything we did for him and his precious brand,” Pippen writes, adding, “To make things worse, Michael received $10 million for his role in the doc while my teammates and I didn’t earn a dime.” (Pippen and several Bulls players appeared on camera for the documentary. It has not been publicly disclosed how much Jordan, whose company Jump 23 was part of the project, made for the series.)

In response to Jordan calling Pippen “selfish” in the documentary for delaying a foot surgery and asking to be traded, Pippen writes, “You want to know what selfish is? Selfish is retiring right before the start of training camp when it is too late for the organization to sign free agents,” a reference to Jordan’s unexpected first retirement after his father’s death. He calls Jordan hypocritical and insensitive. And he criticizes Jordan for his behavior toward co-workers: “Seeing again how poorly Michael treated his teammates, I cringed, as I did back then.”

“Michael and I aren’t close and never have been,” Pippen writes.

That’s just in the opening pages. In the rest of the book, Pippen takes shots at everyone from Charles Barkley (“wasn’t dedicated enough to win a championship”) to Isiah Thomas (“dirty” player, “with a knack for making the most inappropriate comments”).

Pippen also tees off on the former Bulls Coach Phil Jackson about the famed moment in 1994 when Pippen refused to re-enter a playoff game for the last 1.8 seconds after Jackson drew up a play for Toni Kukoc instead of for him. After telling Dan Patrick in a radio interview earlier this year that it was racist for Jackson to have done so, Pippen backs off that assertion in the book. Even so, Pippen writes that Jackson humiliated him and that “the moment of truth had come, and he had abandoned me.”

As open as Pippen is in the book, he seemed far less willing to engage with the material in an interview. The conversation over a video conference became terse, and Pippen canceled a photo shoot afterward.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

You come from very humble roots. You weren’t recruited by a huge school. You were underpaid compared with market value for a significant period of your career. Is there any point in your life when you didn’t feel overlooked? Because this book seems to stem from a lot of you wanting to write your own story and wanting to set the record straight.

I think I can say there was no part in my life that I felt overlooked. That may be your take of what you took from reading the book, but I didn’t feel like I was overlooked. I just felt like it was a different journey than most people have traveled — who’s played on a professional level, who’s had to go to college.

From the opening pages of the book, you take a cudgel to Michael Jordan. Have you always felt this way and just kept that inside or did those feelings really come into focus after watching “The Last Dance”?

I think he’s always separated himself a little bit from what I consider the traditional team concept, in some sense. And I think “The Last Dance” just put the icing on the cake. So it was all about him at the end of the day.

One of the most interesting lines is when you write, “We didn’t win six championships because he got on guys, we won in spite of his getting on guys.” And I thought that was really interesting, because Jordan’s treatment of teammates has long been heralded as a virtue. Did you find it to be unproductive?

Well, I can’t say I found it to be unproductive, because it was productive.

But you also said that you guys won in spite of it.

Well, we won when he retired. We didn’t win a title, but obviously we didn’t have a full roster, so.

Do you worry that your book will create a permanent split between you two?

To answer your question, no.

Have you given him any sort of heads up about what you’re saying about him?

No.

You write that Isiah Thomas reached out after the documentary aired and wanted to declare a truce with you. You said that you were unwilling to speak to him. Why is that?

Well, I played in the league for 18 years and there was never a relationship there. I’ve been out of the league for 15 years, so why now? It’s not like we’re crossing each other’s paths anymore.

You write that the book pushed you where you needed to be pushed, even to some places you didn’t want to go. What’s an example of a place that you really needed to push to talk about? What places didn’t you want to go?

I don’t want to specifically point that out. I think you should read the book and figure it out. I’m not going to make your job easy by getting some controversy on that.

Your interview with Dan Patrick in the spring made a lot of headlines. You said it was racist for Phil Jackson not to draw up the play for you in the famous 1.8 second game. You walked that back in the book. After you made those comments, did you hear from former teammates about it? What were you hearing from people and what made you walk that back in the book?

What made me walk it back?

Yeah.

I didn’t walk it back. I just didn’t have it in the book. I said it was probably not right for me to say that about Phil being racist at this stage. It’s water under the bridge now. But at that point in time, based on where I was as a player, the year that I was having, I thought it was a bad move on his part.

When was the last time you spoke to Phil Jackson?

I can’t recall.

Just to clarify, because I just want to make sure I don’t put words in your mouth. You don’t think that Phil was racist in designating Toni Kukoc to take that last shot?

Did I say it? What are you asking?

OK, in your book, and I’m quoting you here — —

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Have you heard me say that I said that?

Well, yeah, I watched the interview.

OK, so I said it. Now what are you asking me?

In your book you write: “I was so hurt when he picked Toni over me that I needed to come up with an explanation for why I was rejected. For why, after everything I had given to the Chicago Bulls, I wasn’t allowed to have my moment. So I told myself at the time that Phil’s decision must have been racially motivated, and I allowed myself to believe that lie for nearly 30 years. Only when I saw my words in print did it dawn on me how wrong I was.” So you call it a lie. So I just want to clarify exactly what it is. Do you or do you not believe that Phil was being racist when he drew up that play?

I feel like it was a moment where he did me wrong. How about that? How about I answer your question that way.

OK, fair enough. What do you think is a big misconception about you? Is there something that people don’t know about you that you would like them to get to know about you?

I’m private, so there’s not much you can learn about me.

Read original article here

Michael Jackson’s son Prince reveals his father would have backed the Free Britney movement

Michael Jackson’s son Prince has said the late singer would ‘wholeheartedly support’ Britney Spears’s campaign to end her conservatorship.

The 24-year-old appeared on Thursday’s episode of Good Morning Britain when he revealed the Billie Jean hitmaker would have wanted the pop star, 39, to ‘remain in control’ of her life.

Britney and Michael were close friends during his lifetime and in 2001 he asked her to duet to him, where they sang The Way You Make Me Feel together in Madison Square Garden in New York City. 

Reveal: Michael Jackson’s son Prince has said the late singer would ‘wholeheartedly support’ Britney Spears’s campaign to end her conservatorship

When asked about the Free Britney movement, he replied, ‘That is a very tough question just because I don’t like to put words in my father’s mouth. 

‘And I can’t say that I ever heard him mention anything about that, and obviously this is something that has really come to light in recent years.

‘But knowing my father and the compassion that he had for individuals who wanted to remain in control of their own life – as it was his goal to be in control of his own life – I would think that he would be very supportive of her cause.

‘He would understand the place that she is coming from. I think that he would wholeheartedly support her,’ the eldest of the three Jackson children concluded.

Speaking in an interview after their performance, Britney said: ‘I didn’t realize what had happened until I got off the stage. It was just really an amazing experience. It was awesome. I was very honored that he wanted to do this song with me.’ 

Friends: ‘It was his goal to be in control of his own life – I would think that he would be very supportive of her cause,’ Prince said (Michael and Britney pictured in 2002)

She also introduced Michael onstage at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards, and said: ‘So, he’s my idol, the best guy in the whole world. I’m really kind of excited. I’m really nervous.’

When asked about the allegations Michael had groomed young children, Britney insisted she wanted to believe that they were ‘untrue’.  

Michael shocked the world when he passed away in 2009 aged 50 following an overdose of the anaesthetic propofol.

Tragic: Michael shocked the world when he passed away in 2009 aged 50 following an overdose of the anaesthetic propofol (pictured in 2005)

Britney recently launched a furious tirade at her family where she claimed they have ‘hurt her deeply’ in an impassioned Instagram post.

The MTV EMA winner called out her relatives – which includes her father Jamie Spears, mother Lynne, sister Jamie Lynn and brother Bryan – first accusing them of rudely ignoring her before later demanding ‘justice’ for her conservatorship.

Britney’s father was suspended as conservator of her estate in September and a hearing determining if the entire conservatorship will be terminated is forthcoming.

Her legal team had previously accused him of conservatorship abuse and mismanagement of her money.

Surpise: The 24-year-old appeared on Thursday’s episode of Good Morning Britain when he revealed the Billie Jean hitmaker would have wanted Britney to regain her life

Speculating: ‘He would understand the place that she is coming from. I think that he would wholeheartedly support her,’ the eldest of the three Jackson children concluded (pictured in 2019)

The Toxic songstress posted an image of a ‘mini typewriter’ and roses, as she fired off a message about people rudely breaking plans or blowing her off.

‘Don’t you find it weird when you jump through hoops to organize trips or set up lunch dates with people you love only to know they’ll bail on you or leave after 10 minutes ???’ she wrote.

‘It’s humiliating and it’s like every person I’ve ever opened to immediately says they’ll be gone on a trip for two weeks after, she went on.

Pals: Britney and Michael struck up a well-documented friendship during the pop star’s early career (pictured in 2001)

Troubled: Her father, Jamie, has held the power over all of her personal and financial decisions following her multiple involuntary holds in psychiatric hospitals (pictured in 2018)

‘OK I get it … they’re only available to me when it’s convenient for them,’ Spears continued, before adding: ‘Well I’m no longer available to any of them now !!!’

Taking a stand, she wrote: ‘I don’t mind being alone … and actually I’m tired of being this understanding Mother Teresa … if you’re rude to me then I’m done … peace out !!!

Adressing her family directly, Britney wrote: ‘This message is to my family … for hurting me deeper than you’ll ever know !!!’

‘They’re only available to me when it’s convinient to them’

‘I know the conservatorship is about to be over but I still want justice !!!’ she went on, not specifying what justice would entail.

Hurt: Britney sent an angry message to her family on Monday, accusing them of ‘hurting [her] deeper than [they’ll] ever know’

‘I’m only 5’4′ and I’ve played the bigger person my entire life … do you know how hard that is ???’ she went on, later posting the text in inspirational image form on her Instagram feed.

Spears finished the post with a mention to singer Camila Cabello, writing: ‘Ps … @camilacabello I found my tiny desk too !!!!!

Later in the day Spears would post one of her routine dance videos, writing: ‘I danced my little heart out yesterday … yes … old school … but the best voice of all time … Whitney …. rhymes with B !!!!!! Psss ok so I was feeling myself… it’s fun to be sassy sometimes !!!!’

Sending a message: She posted a photo of a rose and tiny typewriter along with a message where she accused her family of rudely ignoring her and later demanded ‘justice’ for her conservatorship

Words of wisdom: ‘I’m only 5’4′ and I’ve played the bigger person my entire life … do you know how hard that is ???’ she went on, later posting the text in inspirational image form on her Instagram feed

Spears’ Instagram only alluded to the legal drama playing out in courts for Spears right now.

In June, Spears gave an emotional, 23-minute testimony during a hearing in a Los Angeles court where she pleaded with Judge Brenda Penny for freedom by ending the 13-year conservatorship she’s been under.

Her father, Jamie, has held the power over all of her personal and financial decisions following her multiple involuntary holds in psychiatric hospitals.

In the shocking testimony, Britney admitted: ‘I’ve lied and told the whole world I’m OK and I’m happy. It’s a lie. I’ve been in denial. I’ve been in shock. I am traumatized.

‘Fake it ’til you make it, but now I’m telling you the truth, OK? I’m not happy. I can’t sleep. I’m depressed. I cry every day.’

Estranged: Spears’ father was suspended as conservator of her estate in September and a hearing determining if the entire conservatorship will be terminated is forthcoming. Spears’ legal team had previously accused him of conservatorship abuse and mismanagement of her money

Spears said she did not feel she ‘was heard on any level’ the last time she was able to speak to the court in 2019.

‘I want changes and I want changes going forward,’ she said. ‘I deserve changes. I was told I have to sit down and be evaluated, again, if I want to end the conservatorship. Ma’am, I didn’t know I could petition the conservatorship to end it.

‘This conservatorship is doing me way more harm than good. I deserve to have a life, I’ve worked my whole life. I deserve to have a two to three-year break.’

And one of Britney’s wishes was granted September 29 when Jamie was suspended from the conservatorship by Judge Penny, which was considered a huge legal win for the pop star in her quest for freedom. 

Controlling: In snippets of the memoir, obtained by TMZ , Jamie Lynn says she was bombarded with people telling her she was ‘just too young’ and didn’t know what she was doing; her parents pictured in 2004

Read original article here

UFC 267 PREVIEW! | UFC Round-Up w/ Paul Felder & Michael Chiesa – UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship

  1. UFC 267 PREVIEW! | UFC Round-Up w/ Paul Felder & Michael Chiesa UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  2. ‘How much do I want this?’: Glover Teixeira explains changes that led to unlikely UFC 267 title shot MMA Junkie
  3. Aljamain Sterling eyes early 2022 return after ‘life-changing’ neck surgery, confident he defends his belt: ‘I’ve made some serious gains’ BJPENN.COM
  4. UFC 267 Embedded: Vlog Series – Episode 3 UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  5. Aljamain Sterling has no regrets about ‘life-changing’ neck surgery, expects early 2022 return to unify titles MMA Fighting
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

James Michael Tyler, actor who played Gunther on “Friends,” dies at age 59 from prostate cancer

Actor James Michael Tyler, who played Gunther on the sitcom “Friends,” died Sunday morning from prostate cancer at his home in Los Angeles, Tyler’s manager confirmed to CBS News. He was 59.

Tyler spoke publicly about his cancer diagnosis over the summer. “I’ve been dealing with that diagnosis for almost the past three years,” he said on the “Today” show. “It’s stage 4. Late-stage cancer. So eventually, you know, it’s gonna probably get me.”

Tyler is survived by his wife, Jennifer Carno.

In June, Tyler said he was at an annual checkup when the cancer as first caught. “I was 56 years old at the time, and they screen for PSA, which is prostate-specific antigen,” he said.

“Nearly immediately, my doctor called me and said ‘Hey, I need you to come in tomorrow because I suspect that you may have quite a serious problem with your prostate,'” Tyler said.

He said the reason he appeared virtually at a recent “Friends” reunion instead of in person was because of his illness. 

“I wanted to be a part of that, and initially I was going to be on the stage, at least, with them, and be able to take part in all the festivities,” said Tyler, who appeared via Zoom. “It was bittersweet, honestly. I was very happy to be included.”

He said it was his decision not to be there in person or explain why. “I didn’t want to be like, ‘Oh, and by the way, Gunther has cancer,'” he said, adding that many of the former castmates did know about his illness.

Prostate cancer, one of the most common types of cancer, often grows slowly and stays confined to the prostate gland, according to the Mayo Clinic. However other types of prostate cancer are aggressive and can spread quickly.

While low-grade prostate cancer may not need treatment right away or ever, prostate cancer can be treated by removing the prostate or with radiation therapy, chemotherapy and other treatments, according to Mayo Clinic.

Prostate cancer in particular is almost 99% treatable if detected early and those with a history of prostate, ovarian, breast, colon or pancreatic cancers among male and female relatives should begin to discuss screening starting at about 40 years old, according to the Prostate Cancer Foundation.

Read original article here

James Michael Tyler: Gunther actor from Friends dies aged 59

James Michael Tyler, who played the beloved character Gunther on Friends, has died aged 59.

The actor had been battling prostate cancer since 2018 and died at his home in LA on Sunday, his manager confirmed to TMZ.

In a statement, his family said: “The world knew him as Gunther (the seventh “Friend”), from the hit series Friends, but Michael’s loved ones knew him as an actor, musician, cancer-awareness advocate, and loving husband.

“Michael loved live music, cheering on his Clemson Tigers, and would often find himself in fun and unplanned adventures.

“If you met him once you made a friend for life. [Tyler] is survived by his wife, Jennifer Carno, the love of his life.”

Tyler spent 10 years in the recurring role of Gunther on Friends, also appearing in Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Scrubs, Episodes, and Modern Music, among others.

Tyler kept his diagnosis a secret from the public for around three years, before revealing that he had prostate cancer that had spread.

“I was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, which had spread to my bones,” Tyler said in a June interview with Today. “I’ve been dealing with that diagnosis for almost the past three years … It’s stage four (now). Late stage cancer. So eventually, you know, it’s gonna probably get me.”

After his initial diagnosis, which was discovered during an annual check-up, Tyler said he had been given hormone therapy, which “worked amazingly for about a year”, but that the cancer had spread around the time the coronavirus pandemic took hold.

He also appealed to men to get regular prostate checks, saying: “There are other options available to men if they catch it before me. Next time you go in for just a basic exam or your yearly check-up, please ask your doctor for a PSA test. It’s easily detectable.”

Access unlimited streaming of movies and TV shows with Amazon Prime Video Sign up now for a 30-day free trial

Sign up

Despite being a key member of the Friends cast, Tyler did not appear in person in the reunion, telling Today that he did not want his illness to be a “downer” during the special.

“I wanted to be a part of that, and initially I was going to be on the stage, at least, with them, and be able to take part in all the festivities,” he said.

“It was bittersweet, honestly. I was very happy to be included. It was my decision not to be a part of that physically and make an appearance on Zoom, basically, because I didn’t wanna bring a downer on it, you know? … I didn’t want to be like, ‘Oh, and by the way, Gunther has cancer.’”

Read original article here

James Michael Tyler, Who Played Gunther on ‘Friends,’ Dies at 59

James Michael Tyler, who played the deadpan, smitten barista Gunther on the TV show “Friends,” died Sunday of prostate cancer at his home in Los Angeles, his longtime manager said. He was 59.

Mr. Tyler was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer in September 2018, according to a statement from his manager, Toni Benson. After his diagnosis, Mr. Tyler shared his story to encourage others to get screened for prostate cancer as early as 40.

“Friends” helped launch the careers of its star-studded cast, which included Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer. It debuted on NBC in the fall of 1994, ran for a decade, and typically had around 25 million to 30 million viewers each week.

Though Mr. Tyler was not a main character, he was widely considered to be “the seventh friend” and appeared in 150 episodes, according to IMDb. He played the part of Gunther, a barista at Central Perk, the friends’ hangout, who had a deep crush on Ms. Aniston’s character, Rachel, who also worked at the coffee shop.

Mr. Tyler’s path to the show was fortuitous. While working as an actual barista at a real-life coffee shop, he was asked if he would be interested in being an extra on “Friends.” For the first season, his character was known as “Coffee Guy.”

“At the time I was also working as a barista for a place called the Bourgeois Pig, one of the last independent coffee houses in Los Angeles,” Mr. Tyler told The New York Times in 2012. In his second season, he got a line of dialogue: “Yeah,” he said, when Mr. Schwimmer’s character, Ross, asked him if his apartment had stairs.

Marta Kauffman and David Crane, the show’s co-creators, recalled the beginnings of Mr. Tyler’s run on the series.

“When he started as an extra on Friends, his unique spirit caught our eye and we knew we had to make him a character,” they said in a statement Sunday night. “He made Gunther’s unrequited love incredibly relatable.”

In the series finale, Gunther, known for his bleached locks, finally summoned the courage to confess his love to Rachel, who let him down warmly.

“I love you, too,” Rachel told Gunther. “Probably not in the same way. But I do. And when I’m in a cafe having coffee, or I see a man with hair brighter than the sun, I’ll think of you.”

Born May 28, 1962, in Winona, Miss., Mr. Tyler was the youngest of five children, raised by a retired Air Force captain and a homemaker, according to a biography on IMDb. He moved to Anderson, S.C., to live with his sister at age 11 and enrolled at Clemson University as a geology major. He earned a master’s of fine arts from the University of Georgia and moved to Los Angeles after a brief stint of selling cars in Olympia, Wash., according to the bio.

“Michael loved live music, cheering on his Clemson Tigers, and would often find himself in fun and unplanned adventures,” Ms. Benson said in a statement. “If you met him once you made a friend for life.”

Mr. Tyler revealed publicly in June that he had prostate cancer. He told “Today” that he was surrounded by an “extraordinary” support group and that many people were praying for his health.

“It’s made me, personally, just realize how important every moment is, every day,” Mr. Tyler said. “And fighting. Don’t give up. Keep fighting. Keep yourself as light as possible. And have goals. Set goals. My goal this past year was to see my 59th birthday. I did that, May 28th. My goal now is to help save at least one life by coming out with this news.”

While undergoing treatment, Mr. Tyler continued to perform and starred in two short films, “The Gesture and the Word” and “Processing,” earning accolades at film festivals, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Mr. Tyler’s survivors include his wife, Jennifer Carno. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.

Read original article here

James Michael Tyler, Gunther from ‘Friends,’ Dead at 59 from Cancer

Read original article here

Michael Jackson Passport Application Up for Sale for $75,000

Read original article here