Sunday, December 25, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Happy Xmas and Chanukah


Ben Stiller:
"Happy Xmas and Chanukah to everyone... especially those deployed overseas in serving the country".





Monday, December 12, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Are you seriously a warden taking secret pictures?


Ben Stiller:
"Are you seriously a warden taking secret pictures?"




Thursday, December 1, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Big thank you


Ben Stiller:
"Big thank you to everyone who sent me Happy Birthday messages. Happy to be here and very grateful for my friends and family".





Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Thank you for a painfully beautiful and inspiring performance


Ben Stiller:
"Thank you for a painfully beautiful and inspiring performance".









Monday, November 28, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Incredibly embarrassing tonight


Ben Stiller:
"Incredibly embarrassing tonight".







Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Dirk Novitzki


Ben Stiller:
Dirk Nowitzki NBA sign a pair of shoes for Ben' son at the Knicks game.




Sunday, November 13, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Outside LeonardCohen's house right now...


Ben Stiller:
"Outside LeonardCohen's house right now..."






Friday, November 11, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: In Leonard Cohen's hometown today


Ben Stiller:
"In Leonard Cohen's hometown today".




Ben Stiller on Twitter: Veterans Day


Ben Stiller:
"Thanks to all who have served so we can live our lives and be free and do all the things that we couldn't if they didn't".





Ben Stiller on Twitter: Great time tonight at Canadiens MTL


Ben Stiller:
"Great time tonight at @CanadiensMTL game... thanks for hospitality and awesome experience".





Monday, October 10, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Bulletin board in the high school we are filming in


Ben Stiller:
"Bulletin board in the high school we are filming in. A lot to deal with".




Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: So, I had cancer


Ben Stiller: "I had cancer a couple of years ago and I wanted to talk about it. And the test that saved my life".



 ***

The Prostate Cancer Test That Saved My Life
Written by Ben Stiller



“So, yeah, it’s cancer.”

My urologist segued from talking about how inconvenient it was picking his daughter up at school that morning to dropping a cancer diagnosis on me without missing a beat. Two weeks earlier, I didn’t even have an urologist.

“Yeah,” he said, in a slightly nonplussed way, gazing at the results, “I was surprised myself.”

As my new, world-altering doctor spoke about cell cores and Gleason scores, probabilities of survival, incontinence and impotence, why surgery would be good and what kind would make the most sense, his voice literally faded out like every movie or TV show about a guy being told he had cancer… a classic Walter White moment, except I was me, and no one was filming anything at all.

I got diagnosed with prostate cancer Friday, June 13th, 2014. On September 17th of that year I got a test back telling me I was cancer free. The three months in between were a crazy roller coaster ride with which about 180,000 men a year in America can identify.

Right after I got the news, still trying to process the key words echoing dimly in my head (probability of survival–vival-vival-val…” “incontinence-nence-nence-ence…), I promptly got on my computer and Googled “Men who had prostate cancer.” I had no idea what to do and needed to see some proof this was not the end of the world.

John Kerry… Joe Torre… excellent, both still going strong. Mandy Patinkin… Robert DeNiro. They’re vital. OK great. Feeling relatively optimistic, I then of course had to do one more search, going dark and quickly tapping in “died of” in place of “had” in the search window.

As I learned more about my disease (one of the key learnings is not to Google “people who died of prostate cancer” immediately after being diagnosed with prostate cancer), I was able to wrap my head around the fact that I was incredibly fortunate. Fortunate because my cancer was detected early enough to treat. And also because my internist gave me a test he didn’t have to.

Taking the PSA test saved my life. Literally. That’s why I am writing this now. There has been a lot of controversy over the test in the last few years. Articles and op-eds on whether it is safe, studies that seem to be interpreted in many different ways, and debates about whether men should take it all. I am not offering a scientific point of view here, just a personal one, based on my experience. The bottom line for me: I was lucky enough to have a doctor who gave me what they call a “baseline” PSA test when I was about 46. I have no history of prostate cancer in my family and I am not in the high-risk group, being neither — to the best of my knowledge — of African or Scandinavian ancestry. I had no symptoms.

What I had — and I’m healthy today because of it — was a thoughtful internist who felt like I was around the age to start checking my PSA level, and discussed it with me.

If he had waited, as the American Cancer Society recommends, until I was 50, I would not have known I had a growing tumor until two years after I got treated. If he had followed the US Preventive Services Task Force guidelines, I would have never gotten tested at all, and not have known I had cancer until it was way too late to treat successfully.

Now, in my case, my doctor, Bernard Kruger, watched my PSA tests rise for over a year and a half, testing me every six months. As the numbers continued to rise, he sent me to the urologist, who gave me a slightly invasive physical check in his office using a gloved finger. This took all of 10 seconds. While I don’t recommend it for fun, amazingly some don’t recommend it at all. After this exam, and looking at my rising PSA numbers, he suggested an MRI to get a roadmap of my prostate.

It’s a non-invasive procedure like the one athletes get to check for torn ACLs. Loud, but painless. Only after studying the MRI results did my doctor recommend a not-fun-at-all biopsy. Unlike the MRI, the biopsy was as invasive as it gets: long needles in sensitive places and more small talk about kids and school pick ups while it was all going down.

Then the biopsy came back positive. Of course “positive” for medical tests is usually not so positive. I had a Gleason score of 7 (3+4), which is categorized “mid-range aggressive cancer.” Surgery was recommended. At this point I decided to go out and get a few different opinions. All the doctors I talked to concurred that the tumor needed to be taken out.

Ultimately, I found a wonderful surgeon named Edward Schaeffer who I felt comfortable with. He performed a robotic assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. Due to a lot of skill and a little beneficence from some higher power, he got all the cancer. As of this writing I am two years cancer free and extremely grateful.

So. What is the deal with this PSA test and why the controversy?

It is a simple, painless blood test. It is not dangerous in itself in any way. If the PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen) value is elevated in the blood, or levels rise sharply over time, it could indicate the presence of prostate cancer. It is definitely not foolproof.

The criticism of the test is that depending on how they interpret the data, doctors can send patients for further tests like the MRI and the more invasive biopsy, when not needed. Physicians can find low-risk cancers that are not life threatening, especially to older patients. In some cases, men with this type of cancer get “over-treatment” like radiation or surgery, resulting in side effects such as impotence or incontinence. Obviously this is not good; however it’s all in the purview of the doctor treating the patient.

But without this PSA test itself, or any screening procedure at all, how are doctors going to detect asymptomatic cases like mine, before the cancer has spread and metastasized throughout one’s body rendering it incurable? Or what about the men who are most at risk, those of African ancestry, and men who have a history of prostate cancer in their family? Should we, as the USPSTF suggests, not screen them at all? There is growing evidence that these guidelines have led to increased cases of prostate cancers that get detected too late for the patient to survive the disease.

Five years after their initial recommendation to stop PSA testing, the USPSTF is presently, per their website, “updating their recommendations.” I think men over the age of 40 should have the opportunity to discuss the test with their doctor and learn about it, so they can have the chance to be screened. After that an informed patient can make responsible choices as to how to proceed.

I count my blessings that I had a doctor who presented me with these options. After I chose to take the test, he directed me to doctors who worked at centers of excellence in this field to determine the next steps. This is a complicated issue, and an evolving one. But in this imperfect world, I believe the best way to determine a course of action for the most treatable, yet deadly cancer, is to detect it early.
Published in Medium





How Ben Stiller Fought Prostate Cancer and Won


Ben Stiller:
"Really wonderful to go on with Howard and Ted and talk about this. Two guys who I really appreciate in life". 




***


How Ben Stiller Fought Prostate Cancer and Won


Ben Stiller is talking for the first time about being diagnosed with prostate cancer at 48. Stiller, now 50, visited the Stern Show on Tuesday morning and told Howard how he and his doctor were able to detect and treat the disease early.







"It came out of the blue for me," Ben told Howard. "I had no idea." Had he not gotten tested by his doctor, Ben's cancer could have gone undetected. Luckily, he was given a PSA, or prostate-specific antigen test, in his 40s, despite most medical professionals suggesting that prostate cancer screening not begin until age 50.

"It's a very controversial subject, the PSA test," Ben said. "The PSA test is the only early screener for prostate cancer and, right now, the United States Preventative Services Task Force does not recommend to take the test. I think American Cancer Society says you should discuss it at 50. If I hadn't taken the test - my doctor started giving it to me at 46 - I would not have known. Right now, I still wouldn't have known."

When his PSA test came back with higher than normal levels, Ben was then given an MRI followed by a biopsy. After being diagnosed with prostate cancer, Ben explained one of the first things he did was search the internet to learn about others who have had prostate cancer, including his former co-star Robert De Niro.

"I called him right away," Ben told Howard. "He hooked me up with his doctor." After talking to several specialists, Ben was introduced to Dr. Ted Schaeffer, the chair of Northwestern University's Department of Urology, who has performed some 2,000 surgeries in his career.

"I felt comfortable with Ted," Ben said. "You want to go to a surgeon that you feel is going to get rid of the cancer first and preserve everything." On the morning of his operation, however, Ben admitted to being scared, calling it a "frightening" experience. Howard wondered if Ben was at all scared about losing his sexual function and if he had sex, possibly for the last time, the night before his surgery.

"My wife was kind enough," Ben said with a laugh. Post-surgery, sex has changed for Stiller. He and his doctor explained what men can expect after undergoing a procedure that removes the prostate.
"It takes time to come back," Ben said. "It changes the experience of what an orgasm feels like. It's great, it just feels different."

"The prostate makes the semen," Dr. Ted said. "You can totally have an erection and everything you're thinking and feeling during sex is the same because that's up in your brain."

After a successful surgery, Ben was given another PSA test which came back clean. Three months after the operation, a second test showed that the cancer was officially gone. Ben told Howard that he saved the Tweety Bird band-aid from his final blood test to remind him of how grateful he was to get that good news. 

"It just gives you an appreciation for everything in life and all the other bullshit doesn't matter," Ben said. Now, his goal is to get the word out about PSA tests and how important it is for men to get one, even if they're not yet 50. 

"It's part of who I am now," Ben said. "This thing saved my life, I gotta say something."
Published in HowardStern























Sunday, September 18, 2016

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Which edition of Tropic Thunder does Ben prefer?


Ben Stiller:
Which edition of Tropic Thunder does Ben prefer: Theatrical or Director's Cut?




Ben Stiller on Twitter: I am still planning on getting to it


Ben Stiller:
"I am still planning on getting to it".




Friday, September 16, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Great event today at UN


Ben Stiller:
"Great event today at UN handing over #WithRefugees petition signed by over 1 million people".




Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Zoolander 2: New York Premiere Fashion Runway with Ben Stiller, Penelope Cruz, Owen Wilson, Will Ferrell


Zoolander 2: New York Premiere Fashion Runway with Ben Stiller, Penelope Cruz, Owen Wilson, Will Ferrell. 





Zoolander 2: New York Premiere arrivals with Ben Stiller, Penelope Cruz, Owen Wilson, Kristen Wiig, Will Ferrell, Milla Jovovich.


Zoolander 2: New York Premiere arrivals with Ben Stiller, Penelope Cruz, Owen Wilson, Kristen Wiig, Will Ferrell, Milla Jovovich.





Ben Stiller on Twitter: This was a great morning


Ben Stiller:
"This was a great morning. Hope people can see the human side of this complicated issue..."




Saturday, February 6, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Ridiculously Hot


Ben Stiller: "Ridiculously Hot".




Ben Stiller on Twitter: Homeless


A special message from Ben Stiller: Help us count homeless in NYC!





Friday, February 5, 2016

Christine Taylor about Dodgeball and Zoolander


Star of Zoolander 2 and Dodgeball, Christine Taylor, chatted to us about her husband using his Zoolander moves on her.




Thursday, February 4, 2016

Ben Siller on Twitter: This was much more dangerous than it looks


Ben Stiller:
"This was much more dangerous than it looks".





Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Had a UNHCR meeting refugees being welcomed in Germany


Ben Stiller:
"Had a UNHCR meeting refugees being welcomed in Germany".





Saturday, January 30, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Zoolander Party


Ben Stiller:
"Watch Zoolander and like live Tweet with me... It's going to be incredible".







Monday, January 25, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Happy to be in Australia


Ben Stiller:
"Happy to be in Australia. Just in time for Australia Day"







Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Ben Stiller on Twitter: Glenn Frey


Ben Stiller:
"Sending good thoughts out to those close to Glenn Frey. Hard to imagine growing up without his music".















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