Jason Bateman Details

Originally appeared onE! Online

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Jason Bateman's decision to get sober was a smart one.

TheSmartLesshost recently reflected on his decade-long binge of partying with alcohol and drugs, which began in the '90s as his career stalled following his years as a child star onLittle House on the PrairieandThe Hogan Family.

"Fortunately, I was living at a time without social media and camera phones," Jason toldThe Hollywood Reporterin an interview published Feb. 18, "so I got away with a lot, but it was definitely close a few times."

However, after he found more steady work onArrested Developmentin 2003, Jason and his wifeAmanda Anka—who tied the knot in 2001—discussed how his rocky lifestyle had to end.

"Amanda and I definitely had a few negotiations about the point at which the [partying] spigot was going to completely turn off," he continued. "She'd be like, 'This drip, drip, drip is annoyingly unpredictable, Jason.'"

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The 57-year-old added, "She didn't demand that I completely absolve, but that was sort of the back-and-forth, and I was like, well, I feel like my [sobriety] ETA is six months away, but if I could land this plane now, it would alleviate a lot of the tension, so let's just f--king do it."

Plus, even amid his partying, Jason—dad toFrancesca, 19, andMaple, 14, with Amanda—always knew his partying days would need to come to an end if he wanted to continue working.

Jason Bateman, Amanda Anka

"I was conscious the whole time of wanting to get a lot of these boxes checked before I became a father," he shared, "and a guy with a career that I not only wanted but had a feeling I might be able to get it if I just got the right job."

TheZootopia 2star also used the experience of those around him to inform his choices.

"I've got friends who had bottoms that were pretty chilling," he said, "but I was lucky enough to recognize, 'This is probably as far as I should go if I still want to accomplish the things that I want to get to.'"

Now, given his experiences with work and sobriety, Jason is grateful for the perspective he has earned.

"Were it not for some of that cliff-hanging earlier in my career, I don't know if I'd be as good as I am at the caretaking of these opportunities," he explained. "But I have seen and felt what it is like to really not have a lot of prospects, and it keeps you hungry."

Read on for more stars who have detailed their experiences with sobriety.

Jason Biggs

<p>Jason Biggs</p>

In October 2018, theAmerican Piestar announced he was one year sober in a celebratory and encouragingInstagrampost.

"I first tried to get sober over 5 years ago, when the weight of my obsession with booze and drugs became too heavy for me to handle," he wroteat the time. "Turns out this s--t is hard."

He continued, "After some fits and starts, I've managed to put together one year of sobriety. I'm as proud of it as anything in my life. If you're struggling, know there's help. Don't be ashamed. We can do this."

Years later, hereflected on his journey with addiction and the lengths he went to hide the hisstruggle.

"I'm going to therapy and 'working on things' but meanwhile I'm leaving therapy, having just had a good session, and I'm going to the liquor store and buying a fifth of vodka, drinking it and then driving home," he said on a March 2024 episode of his wifeJenny Mollen'sAll the Failspodcast. "I knew how to get wasted enough to where I took myself out of the life equation, took myself out of the present, didn't have to connect in a way that made me feel things."

He added, "I had it figured out to a T. To not get too drunk where I couldn't have a conversation with you. I was replacing those bottles in the bar all the time."

Ashlyn Harris

<p>Ashlyn Harris</p>

The two-time FIFA Women's World Cup champ has been open about hermisuse of Adderallwhile battling injuries during her college soccer career.

"I was getting really heavily addicted to Adderall and misusing it," she said on a 2025 episode of theQuestion Everything with Danielle Robaypodcast. "I was taking it all the time. I would go days without sleeping. It was wild. I felt like I was gonna give myself a heart attack. I was crushing it. I was snorting it. It was so problematic."

However, in the midst of her struggle, her college coachAnson Dorrancewas there to support her.

"It got really, really dark and I had to make some serious adjustments," she explained, "and Anson would have me read books. I started reading this book called [Man's Search]for Meaningand it's about suffering and reframing it and it changed my life."

<p><strong>Offset</strong></p>

In October 2025, theMigosmember shared he wasfour years sober from codeine—an opioid used to make the soda-based drink sizzurp—after a "wake-up call" from his teenage sonJordan.

"My oldest son kept asking for like pineapple Fanta, but he don't even really drink soda," Offset recounted onBaby, This Is Keke Palmer. "And then one day he came in studio like, 'Why yours is different color than mine?' It killed me."

Explaining how the innocuous remark "touched" a nerve, Offset continued, "When I went in my room, I damn near cried."

"I felt bad as a father," the rapper added. "He don't even notice it's drugs in here though. He don't know, but in my head it's like, him even just saying he want the same soda I want. It's just like, 'Oh no, I'm influencing him.'"

Anthony Hopkins

<p style="font-weight: 400;">Anthony Hopkins</p>

Over the years, the two-time Oscar winner has spoken candidly about December 29, 1975: the day he got sober.

"I was drunk and driving my car here in California in a blackout," he revealed in October 2025 on theNew York TimespodcastThe Interviewpodcast, "no clue where I was going, when I realized that I could have killed somebody—or myself, which I didn't care about—and I realized that I was an alcoholic."

After reaching out to a friend for help, he was able to begin a new path. And in December 2025, he reached 50 years of sobriety, doing so with a message to those in a similar position he found himself in a half century ago.

"Choose life instead of the opposite," he said in an Instagram message. "Life life life and more life."

<p>Jax Taylor</p>

The Valleystarshared his decades-long battle with drugsin March 2025 after going to rehab.

"I am coming out that I'm an addict," Jax shared during the March 4 episode of Bravo'sHot Micpodcast. "I have substance issues, primarily with cocaine. It's hard to say out loud."

"I've been dealing with this on and off since I was 23 and now I'm 45," he continued. "There was times where I would stop doing it but then there were times where I'd go heavy on it."

Jax also gave up drinking, explaining, "I don't necessarily think I have an alcohol problem, but the two go hand in hand. I can't do cocaine without drinking. So, I just gave up both. I'm proud to say I'm 82, 83 days sober right now, which is the longest I've ever gone in my life without either."

Tom Holland

Tom Holland

TheSpider-Man: No Way Homestarstopped drinking alcohol in 2022after feeling "enslaved" to the drink. "I was definitely addicted to alcohol, not shying away from that at all," Holland recalled on theOn Purpose with Jay Shettypodcast. "I think that anyone that has a beer everyday has probably got a little bit of a problem."

"And then you would just reach that moment where you're like 'Wow, I shouldn't have had that last beer,'" the actor continued. "And you wake up the next day and you have a terrible headache."

Since making the lifestyle change, Holland noticed he "could sleep better" and "handle problems better."

"Things that would go wrong on set that would normally set me off, I could take in my stride," he shared. "I had so much such better mental clarity. I felt healthier. I felt fitter."

Alec Baldwin

<p>Alec Baldwin</p>

The star ofHunt for Red Octoberdoes not often speak to his sobriety journey, which began almost forty years ago.

"I don't discuss this a lot," he said duringa May 2024 podcast appearance. "I discuss it every now and then when it makes sense. I'm 39 years sober. I got sober Feb. 23, 1985."

Speaking about his life after moving from New York City to Los Angeles in 1983, Alec explained, "I had a white-hot problem every day for two years. I think I snorted a line of cocaine from here to Saturn. We took it back home. I mean, cocaine was like coffee back then. Everybody was doing it all day long."

And after quitting the drug, he soon turned to alcohol—only to also quit that dependency.

Today, he relies on the city around him.

"New York relaxes me," he shared of his home. "I walk around and I see aspects of it that I've never seen before. I'll look at a building and I'll go, 'My God, I never noticed that about that building, those doors.' I have lunches and coffee and my friends."

Anne Hathaway

<p>Anne Hathaway</p>

ThePrincess Diariesalum shared in April 2024 that she ismore than five years sober. As she told theNew York Times, "That feels like a milestone to me."

Her reasoning was clear. "I knew deep down it wasn't for me," she shared. "And it just felt so extreme to have to say, 'But none?' But none. If you're allergic to something or have an anaphylactic reaction to something, you don't argue with it. So I stopped arguing with it."

And she's happy she made that decision. "My personal experience with it is that everything is better," she continued. "For me, it was wallowing fuel. And I don't like to wallow."

Demi Moore

Demi Moore

While accepting the 2018 Woman of the Year Award by the Peggy Albrecht Friendly House, a residential program for women recovering from substance and alcohol abuse, Moorespokeabout the "self-destructive path" that nearly derailed her career.

"I feel like there's a defining moments in our lives that shape who we are and the direction we go and early in my career, I was spiraling down a path of real self-destruction and no matter what successes I had, I just never felt good enough," the star recalled. "I had absolutely no value for myself and this self-destructive path, it very quickly brought me to a real crisis point and it wasn't clear at the time the reason. Maybe it was divine intervention."

Moore, who sought treatment in 2012, thanked two unnamed people she "barely knew" for delivering something of an ultimatum to her to turn her life around. "Unless I was dead, I better show up," she quipped, adding that she was given "a chance to redirect the course of my life before I destroyed everything."

"Clearly they saw more of me than I saw of myself," Moore noted. "And I'm so grateful because without that opportunity, without their believing me, I wouldn't be standing here today."

Noah Cyrus

Noah Cyrus

Cyrus shared in 2022 that she's been in recovery for her Xanax addiction since 2020. "It gave me so much structure in the time that I really needed structure, because I didn't want to just be sitting around and stirring in my brain," she toldRolling Stone. "It gave me hope."

The singer added, "Once I felt that it was possible to silence things out for a second and numb your pain, it was over."

She said her friends at the time "kind of cosigned" her drug use and "it just kind of becomes this dark pit, bottomless pit." But, during the pandemic, Cyrus said she was noticing challenges and felt she wasn't emotionally present. "I was completely nodding off and falling asleep," she recalled. "And unable to keep my head up or keep my eyes open, because I was so far gone."

She eventually sought help and noted that "it took some time to get on my own two feet."

<p>Eminem</p>

The "Lose Yourself" rapper reflected on his prior prescription pill abuse in his 2025 documentaryStans, noting an overdose and missing his daughterHailie Jade's birthday party prompted a change.

"I cried because it was like, 'Oh my god, I missed that,'" he said in the doc. "I kept saying to myself, 'Do you want to f--king miss this again? Do you want to miss everything? If you can't do it for yourself, you f--king pussy, at least do it for them.'"

Eventually, channeling his energy back into his music helped the Oscar winner on his sobriety journey.

"It did something. It turned the light on," he explained. "I realized I'm not embarrassed anymore about [sobriety]. I started treating sobriety like a super power and I took pride in the fact that I was able to quit."

Dax Shepard

Dax Shepard

TheParenthoodalumwas sober for 16 yearsbefore relapsing in 2020 by taking Vicodin after a motorcycle accident.

"For the last eight weeks maybe, I don't really know…I'm on them all day," he said on hisArmchair Expertpodcast. "And I'm allowed to be on them at some dosage because I have a prescription and then I'm also augmenting that."

"And I hate it," he continued. "And I'm lying to other people. And I know I have to quit. But my tolerance is going up so quickly that I'm now in a situation where I'm taking, you know, eight 30s a day, and I know that's an amount that's going to result in a pretty bad withdrawal. And I start getting really scared, and I'm starting to feel really lonely. And I just have this enormous secret."

Jamie Lee Curtis

<p>Jamie Lee Curtis</p>

In 2018, theHalloweenstar got very candid about her 10-year addiction to opiates, which began in the late '80s after a minor plastic surgery "for my hereditary puffy eyes." The reslt was a prescription that changed her life. "I had a 10-year run, stealing, conniving," she toldPeople. "No one knew. No one."

When her sister visited her in the summer of 1998 and brought along prescribed painkillers for a rib injury, Curtis said she hit her rock bottom. "I knew she had them in her suitcase in our guest room closet," shetold the publication, crying at the memory. "I basically took all her opiates. When she was leaving I knew she would pack her suitcase and find her pills missing. I knew I had to acknowledge to her what I had done, and so I wrote her a note and left it on her suitcase. I came home that day, and she put her arms around me and told me she loved me and she was concerned about me and she was unwilling to watch me kill myself."

She attended her first meeting on Feb. 3, 1999, the same day she revealed her struggle to her filmmaker husbandChristopher Guest. "He was incredulous that he'd never noticed," Curtis said, adding that she's been sober ever since.

Drew Barrymore

Drew Barrymore

Barrymore, who previously went to rehab for alcohol and drug addiction, shared in 2021 that she was marking a big milestone in her journey. "I'm just going to say something for the first time in a long time: I have not had a drink of alcohol in two and a half years," she said onCBS Mornings. "And it was something that I realized just did not serve me in my life."

She added, "It's so funny. When we reveal ourselves and our truths and the things we've worked so hard for, it's so liberating and vulnerable all at the same time."

Barrymore later explained to theLos Angeles Timesthat she doesn't use the "sober" label because she doesn't want people to think she's "some perfect Puritan."

"I kept thinking, 'I'll master this. I'll figure it out,'" she said in 2023. "And finally, I just realized: 'You've never mastered this, and you never will.'"

Bradley Cooper

Bradley Cooper

TheA Star Is Bornactorstruggled with a cocaine addictionduring the early aughts before friendWill Arnettstepped in and confronted him out about his behavior.

"That was the first time I ever realized I had a problem with drugs and alcohol⁠," Cooper recalled during a 2022 appearance on theSmartlesspodcast. "I'll just never forget it."

Crediting Arnett as "the reason" he went sober, Cooper added, "He took that risk of having a hard conversation with me that put me on a path of deciding to change my life."

Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt

TheFight Clubstar spent years struggling with alcohol before Cooper helped him get sober. "I got sober because of this guy," he told the audience at the 2020 National Board of Review Annual Awards after Cooper presented him with a trophy. "And every day's been happier ever since."

Ryan Phillippe

Ryan Phillippe

In September 2023, theCruel Intentionsalum shared on Instagram that this was "the longest I've gone since I was a teen without some kind of nicotine or marijuanain my system (among other things)."

"Feeling thankful for the freedom that comes with breaking addictions and dependency on substance," he added. "Sobriety, clarity, and spiritual connectedness feels real good."

Demi Lovato

Demi Lovato

After publicly celebrating six years of sobriety on tour in 2018, the singer stunned fans later that same year with the release ofthe confessional single "Sober,"which revealed that she had relapsed.

"Mama, I'm so sorry I'm not sober anymore / And Daddy please forgive me for the drinks spilled on the floor / To the ones who never left me / We've been down this road before I'm so sorry, I'm not sober anymore," she sang.

A month later, Lovato washospitalized for a near-fatal overdose.

"I have always been transparent about my journey with addiction," shewroteon Instagram two weeks later. "What I've learned is that this illness is not something that disappears or fades with time. It is something I must continue to overcome and have not done yet...I now need time to heal and focus on my sobriety and road to recovery. The love you have all shown me will never be forgotten and I look forward to the day where I can say I came out on the other side. I will keep fighting."

Jada Pinkett Smith

Jada Pinkett Smith

In 2018, sherecalled battling her addictionsto sex and alcohol. "My sort of addictions jump. They jump around. When I was younger, I definitely think I had a sex addiction of some kind, yes, that everything could be fixed by sex," she said, before sharing about the time she realized she'd developed a troubling drinking problem.

"I remember reaching a rock bottom that time I was in the house by myself and I had those two bottles of wine and was going for the third bottle," she said. "And I was like, 'Now hold up. You're in the this house by yourself going onto your third bottle of wine? You might have a problem.'"

"So I went cold turkey. That's the thing about me: I can go cold turkey. I am a binger, and I always have to watch myself and I can just get obsessed with things," she continued. "It's not what you're doing but how you're with it. Why you're doing it. It's the behavior that's attached to it because if you want to have a lot of sex, that's great, but why are you having all that sex? That's what you've got to look at."

AJ Mclean

AJ Mclean

TheBackstreet Boysmember tried drugs for the first time before filming the music video for 2000's "The Call," tellingGood Morning Americayears later that he "was off the walls" during the shoot. He got sober in 2021 following a relapse andsaw numerous positive benefits just one year later, including losing 32 pounds in seven months by cutting out alcohol and fast food.

"I'm sticking this one out all the way," he toldPeoplein July 2025. "It's a daily thing. But I have finally done what has been suggested amongst the sober community, and my life has flipped in a positive way."

While AJ acknowledged he is "still learning, still growing," he's now confident in who he is.

"I've discovered new verbiage, such as boundaries, never really had those," he continued. "Now I have those, which is a blessing. AJ is a member of a group. He is a persona, but he doesn't define me as an individual.Alexander Jamesis who I am."

Bow Wow

Bow Wow

After the sudden death ofMac Miller, the rapper—bornShad Moss—took to Twitter to let his fans know that he'd once struggled witha cough syrup addiction."To the youth- Stop with these dumb ass drugs," he began his series of tweets. "Im going to let something out. When me andOmarionworked on FACE OFF album. I was high off lean everyday! When yall saw me on BET going off onToraei was high off lean. My attitude everything changed. My fans started to...Turn on me my family too. I never promoted lean in my songs. The whole time i was on the UCP tour withChris[Brown] I WAS SIPPING 4's atleast 7 times a day. I was addicted until our show in Cincinnati.. i came off stg and passed out woke up in the hospital i was having withdraws.""I never felt a pain like that ever," Bow Wow continued. "It was summer but i was walking round with 3 hoodies on because i was so cold. I missed the chicago show of that tour baltimore show BECAUSE I WAS F--KING HIGH AND SICK!!!! that s--t is not cool and i was doing it to be cool! Kick that s--t! Be a good son or daughter. Be the best you. Ima start being more vocal. We gotta save the youth from going out early. Parents watch your kids. Explain to them. We want yall to live man. I almost died f--king with syrup.""To this day im affected my stomach will...Never be the same and it hasnt been. DRUG FREE IS THE WAY TO BE! smarten up tighten up out here," he told his fans. "We cant lose no more of you. Not one! I love all yall. The young artist all the kids around the world.. dont follow a trend. Break the cycle. PEACE."

Lily Allen

Lily Allen

With the dual releases of her fourth studio albumNo Shameand memoirMy Thoughts Exactly, the singer spent much of 2018 getting brutally honest about the height of her addition problems. According to Allen, she was abusing cocaine and drinking to the point of being "parisitically drunk. Ultimately,Gwyneth PaltrowandChris Martinstaged an interventionaftershe accidentally headbuttedOrlando BloomatKate Hudson's Halloween party and knocked herself out.

She toldThe Guardian,"Nothing seemed to reach or satisfy me. I remember waking up one morning in those dark days thinking, 'Maybe it's time for heroin, because nothing else is working.'"

Dennis Quaid

Dennis Quaid

TheParent Trapactor battled a cocaine addiction throughout the '80s that sent him to rehab in 1990. As he later explained onToday, he grew up in the '60s and '70s when "there was a completely different attitude" towards the drug.

"It was even in some movie budgets. I was basically doing cocaine pretty much on a daily basis during the '80s," he admitted in 2018. "I spent many, many a night screaming at God to 'Please take this away from me and I'll never do it again, cause I've only got an hour before I have to be at work.' Then at 4 o'clock in the afternoon I'd go, 'Oh it's not so bad.'"

"I had what I call a white light experience where I saw myself either dead or losing everything that meant anything to me," he continued. He had to sit down then-fiancéeMeg Ryanand explain what was going on. Then, he sought help. "That was the end of the love affair with me and cocaine."

Ryan Lochte

Ryan Lochte

After an incident in Newport Beach where the Olympic swimmer tried to kick in his own hotel room door, Lochte made thedecision to seek treatmentin 2018. "Ryan has been battling from alcohol addiction for many years and unfortunately it has become a destructive pattern for him," his rep told E! News in a statement. "He has acknowledged that he needs professional assistance to overcome his problem and will be getting help immediately."

"Ryan knows that conquering this disease now is a must for him to avoid making future poor decisions, to be the best husband and father he can be, and if he wants to achieve his goal to return to dominance in the pool in his 5th Olympics in Tokyo in 2020," the statement concluded.

For free and confidential help for those facing mental and/or substance use disorders, call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) national helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).

Jason Bateman Details “Negotiations” With Wife Amanda Over Sobriety

Originally appeared onE! Online Jason Bateman's decision to get sober was a smart one. TheSmartLesshos...
Kid Rock Is Selling $5K First-Class Tickets to His Upcoming Freedom 250 Tour

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty

People Kid Rock in January 2026 Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Kid Rock listed "First Class Seats" on his upcoming headlining tour for up to $5,000

  • Aside from proximity to the stage, there is no added incentive to the seats

  • Jon Pardi, Parker McCollum, Brantley Gilbert and Big & Rich will join him on the road

Kid Rockis selling "First Class Seats" for his upcomingFreedom 250 Tour.

According to theTicketmaster website, Kid Rock has priced the premium seats as high as $5,000 to sit in the first row. After the first row, the "First Class Seats" are reduced by $1,000 until the fifth row. Proximity to the stage aside, there is no added incentive listed on the website.

On the Freedom 250 Tour, Kid Rock will kick off on May 1 in Dallas and make 10 stops across the country before wrapping in Burgettstown, Penn. on June 20. The tour will includeJon Pardi,Parker McCollum,Brantley Gilbertand Big & Rich as special guests.

In between his solo tour, the "All Summer Long" singer, born Robert James Ritchie, will also perform at his Rock the Country festival, which celebrates the 250th birthday of the United States of America. The festival will be held in seven small towns across the country from May to September.

The artists slated to perform at the festival include Kid Rock,Jason Aldean,Blake Shelton,Jelly Roll,Riley Green,Miranda Lambert,Brooks & DunnandElla Langley.

Up until earlier this month, the festival was meant to make stops in eight cities but the South Carolina tour dateswere canceledafter several artists slated to perform dropped out. According toPost & Courier, Anderson County, S.C. officials confirmed that the two-day concert planned for July 25 and July 26 had been canceled.

In a statement shared with PEOPLE, Rock the Country said that the festival was "created to unite people together through music. Our lineups and our crowds reflect that sentiment — a wide range of voices, backgrounds, and stories that make up this country."

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"We're truly disappointed we won't be bringing the show to Anderson. Our fans work hard for their money, and we refuse to put on a show that doesn't meet the standard they deserve," the festival added.

"Our focus remains where it's always been: Supporting our artists, honoring our fans, and delivering unforgettable nights throughout the country," the statement continued. "The shows ahead represent the heart of what Rock the Country stands for: music, community, and pride in where we come from."

"Loving America isn't political; it's who we are," the festival concluded.

Kid Rock in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in July 2024  Andrew Harnik/Getty

Andrew Harnik/Getty

In recent weeks, rock band Shinedown,Ludacris,Morgan WadeandCarter Faithdropped out of the festival.

Earlier this month, Kid Rock also performed atTurning Point USA's All-American Halftime Show, which served as an alternative to the2026 Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Showheadlined byBad Bunny.

After the show, he wasaccused of lip-syncingandfaced backlashfrom country singers likeZach Bryanfor the performance.

In an interview on Fox News'The Ingraham Angle, however, he insisted it was a"syncing issue."

Read the original article onPeople

Kid Rock Is Selling $5K First-Class Tickets to His Upcoming Freedom 250 Tour

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty NEED TO KNOW Kid Rock listed "First Class Seats" on his ...
Fran Drescher Says Trauma 'Manifested in Me' as Illness: 'It Created a Cancer'

Team Coco/YouTube

People Fran Drescher appeared on Conan O'Brien's Team Coco podcast. Team Coco/YouTube

NEED TO KNOW

  • Fran Drescher opened up about the lasting impact of her brutal 1985 attack and rape, sharing that she didn't "completely unpack" the trauma

  • The Nanny alum, 68, told Ted Danson on the SiriusXM podcast, Where Everybody Knows Your Name, that the trauma "created a cancer within me"

  • She shared that she now processes pain, finding strength in "allowing yourself to feel"

Fran Drescheris reflecting on her mind-body connection, specifically the theory that unresolved trauma she has carried may have played a part in heruterine cancer.

"I think that the mind [and] body is connected. There's nothing that's autonomous from the other,"The Nanny, alum, 68, told hostTed Dansonon the Feb. 17 episode of SiriusXM'sWhere Everybody Knows Your Namepodcast.

She went on to share that her illness may have stemmed from unresolved trauma from a brutal 1985 assault. "I was in my condo with my girlfriend andPeter [Marc Jacobson], my husband at the time, when two men broke in with guns and raped me and my girlfriend and stole everything and left. Thank God [they] left us alive, even though at the time you really don't know whether you're gonna get through this or not," Drescher said of the incident, which she first wrote about in her 1996 autobiographyEnter Whining."By the grace of God, they were apprehended and put in jail."

Fran Drescher at the 2026 Golden Globes in Beverly Hills. Christopher Polk/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty

Christopher Polk/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty

While having some justice gave her "closure," Drescher said rape is something that "shatters you in a very profound way." The crime left her unable to feel "fearless," saying, "I'm always a little anxious or nervous or fearful," explaining she carries a protective alarm at all times.

"I have a big dog that's very protective of me, and that helps me to function in a very good way. It manifests differently in everybody, but that was kind of how it manifested in me," she said.

But while Drescher found ways to adjust to the ever-present state of fear, she explains, "I didn't really completely unpack what I was feeling. I just sort of went back to my life and let these residual neuroses kind of begin to rule me."

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Drescher referred to her 2000 diagnosis of uterine cancer, adding, "I always felt like because I really didn't deal with the rape in a very healthy way, it created a cancer within me and poetically in my reproductive [organs]."

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Researchers have explored the link. According to a study in theNational Library of Medicine, "Stress plays a positive role in cancer initiation, progression and cancer metastasis, a negative role for anti-tumor immune function and therapy response." Stress can also trigger "unhealthy behaviours such as eating and drinking alcohol to excess, smoking, abusing drugs or being physically inactive" — things which have been linked to cancer.

Drescher went on to explain that understanding the connection between mental and physical health changed how she processed trauma, telling Danson, "It got me on a path of feeling my pain much more so than I used to. I used to kind of put it away and just get on with things and thought that that was a sign of strength."

"But in fact, really strength is to lean into your pain," she said, "to allow yourself to feel your pain."

If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go torainn.org.

Read the original article onPeople

Fran Drescher Says Trauma ‘Manifested in Me’ as Illness: ‘It Created a Cancer'

Team Coco/YouTube NEED TO KNOW Fran Drescher opened up about the lasting impact of her brutal 1985 attack a...
Trump launches his 'Board of Peace' with billions pledged for Gaza, but many allies are wary

When President Donald Trump convenes the inauguralmeeting of his Board of Peaceon Thursday, he is expected to run it like one of his Cabinet meetings, a US official told CNN.

CNN US President Donald Trump speaks as he presents the “Board of Peace” onstage at the World Economic Forum (WEF) on January 22, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. - Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Instead of his Cabinet officials, however, he will be joined by representatives from countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Hungary and even Belarus, which is a member of the board despite being under US and European sanctions for supporting Russia's war against Ukraine. However, several key allies are still staying away from membership.

In addition to Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio; Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner; US Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz; US special envoy Steve Witkoff, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who sits on the executive committee for the Board; and High RepresentativeNickolay Mladenov, who serves as the key link between the board and the Palestinian technocratic committee, are all expected to speak, along with other attendees, according to a senior US official.

Two sources familiar with the matter said the countries attending the meeting as members were told they will have two minutes each to speak, but another source said Wednesday that allotment was now expected to be 90 seconds. According to the US official, Trump may ask specific countries for updates or opinions. There are expected to be updates on issues of security, humanitarian efforts and the Palestinian technocratic committee meant to run Gaza, the senior US official said.

Trump has previewed big announcements for the meeting, including billions of dollars to support the reconstruction of Gaza and personnel for the stabilization force there.

But there are lingering questions about the broad mission of the Board of Peace, its effectiveness and the broader future of Gaza.

There is some concern in the international community that Trump has established the body as a counterweight to the United Nations, of which he has been a sharp critic.

In remarks on Monday, Trump confirmed that he thinks the Board is "going to go far beyond Gaza," but said "we're working in conjunction with the United Nations."

Trump, who could serve indefinitely as chair of the board, has been eager to tout his credentials as a peacemaker and has argued he was snubbed for the Nobel Peace Prize last year. The meeting is happening at the US Institute of Peace, which Trump has recently renamed for himself.

The meeting – and the board itself – are a clear example of Trump pursuing a foreign policy goal without collective buy-in from America's closest allies: Most of the US' traditional European allies have rejected membership. As such, they will not attend or will only send representatives as observers for Thursday's meeting.

Many Middle Eastern countries will be present after having decided to join the Board, but it is unclear which, if any, of those countries will make the steep fiscal commitment of $1 billion to become permanent members. And many are sending their foreign ministers, rather than their heads of state, in part because the conference coincides with the start of Ramadan.

According to a senior Trump administration official, the following countries are expected to send representatives to the meeting either as observers or to represent a member state: Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Egypt, El Salvador, the European Union, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kuwait, Mexico, Mongolia, Morocco, Netherlands, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Paraguay, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, South Korea, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.

Iran looms over meeting

The inaugural meeting comes as the US military buildup in the Middle East is growing, and the specter ofpotential US military action against Iranis expected to loom large over the meeting. Trump has threatened that the US could strike Iran if a nuclear deal is not agreed to in the coming weeks.

"You can't disassociate Iran from the Middle East or the Middle East from Iran," one diplomat said.

The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and other vessels sail in formation in the Arabian Sea, on February 6, 2026. - Petty Officer 1st Class Jesse Mo/US Navy

Countries in attendance are expecting to discuss the Iran situation on the sidelines, with plans to reiterate that miliary action against Iran should be avoided.

"It's not anybody's preference to see a military action taking place in a region where we have at least 30% of the world's oil concentrated, and around a place that is a basic passage of traffic for international trade," the diplomat noted.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday that more than 20 countries are expected to attend. The senior US official said the number includes countries participating as observers.

However, according to sources and public statements, many of the nations are not sending leaders to the meeting. Instead, they will be represented by foreign ministers or lower-level officials.

Israel, Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Hungary and Belarus have all signed on as members of the board and are among the nations expected to have representation at the meeting.

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At least five countries that have not joined the Board of Peace as members, including Italy and Romania, are expected to send representatives as observers. The European Union will be represented by Dubravka Šuica, the commissioner for the Mediterranean, to the meeting, a spokesperson said.

Many European countries have said they will not become members of the board, amid concerns about its broader mission, and its members. Russia and China were both invited to join but have not done so.

Chance for progress on Gaza's future

On the whole, Thursday's conversation is viewed by participants as "exploratory," said one diplomat from a member nation. And while most countries attending the meeting know very little about what to expect from the meeting, some say that it represents the best chance to drive progress in Gaza.

There is an acknowledgement among some diplomats that Trump is best positioned to pressure the parties, particularly the Israeli government.

"Trump now has a big role and wants this to happen and he can control Bibi if he wants," another source said, referencing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

People walk past the rubble of destroyed buildings in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in the northern Gaza Strip on February 8, 2026. Since October 10, a fragile US-sponsored truce in Gaza has largely halted the fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, but both sides have alleged frequent violations. - Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images

Indonesia is expected to highlight its announcement in recent days that it is readying about 1,000 troops – and possibly thousands more – to possibly be part of the International Stabilization Force (ISF) in Gaza, according to two sources familiar with the matter. However, a final decision, to be made by the Indonesian president, has not yet been made.

A pledge of troops to the ISF would be a victory for the Trump administration, which has been working to secure troop commitments for months, even before the Board of Peace was officially launched.

However, as of now, there have been no public final commitments from governments to send troops to serve as part of the ISF. And the timeline for the deployment of the troops and whether or how they will be involved in demilitarization of Hamas – one of the biggest hurdles – remains unclear.

In a post on Truth Social on Sunday, Trump said the Board "will announce that Member States have pledged more than $5 BILLION DOLLARS toward the Gaza Humanitarian and Reconstruction efforts and have committed thousands of personnel to the International Stabilization Force and Local Police to maintain Security and Peace for Gazans."

Trump did not provide further details about the planned announcements. No country has publicly announced funding for the reconstruction effort.

On the issue of reconstruction, one source noted there are concerns about funding reconstruction only for Israel to bomb Gaza again, which has continually happened. US officials have offered private assurances that this won't happen, the source said, and there is a belief among some that Trump will keep the Netanyahu government from doing so.

The source noted that many countries who will not commit troops to the ISF will be willing to give large amounts of money to support reconstruction.

The ISF, backed by the UN mandate, is a key component of the Trump administration's peace plan. It is meant to deploy to Gaza in order to support a Palestinian police force and allow Israel to begin withdrawing from the territory it still occupies.

An Israeli official says the US is planning for 20,000 soldiers to be part of the ISF.

One of the thorniest parts of the Trump administration's peace plan – the demilitarization of Hamas – has not yet been resolved.

One of the sources noted that there may be parallel tracks of deploying troops and beginning reconstruction while working on the issue of demilitarizing Hamas. Regional allies do not want Israel to use the lack of progress on phase two as an excuse, the source said, and there is an understanding by US officials and regional allies that demilitarization will be a long-term process.

The senior US official said they are under no illusions on the challenges regarding demilitarization but have been encouraged by what the mediators have reported back.

CNN's Oren Liebermann contributed to this report.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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Trump launches his ‘Board of Peace’ with billions pledged for Gaza, but many allies are wary

When President Donald Trump convenes the inauguralmeeting of his Board of Peaceon Thursday, he is expected to run it lik...

 

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