Biden's cancer diagnosis prompts new questions about his health while in officeNew Foto - Biden's cancer diagnosis prompts new questions about his health while in office

By Andy Sullivan WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Former President Joe Biden's cancer announcement revived questions on Monday about the extent of his health issues during his tenure, with Vice President JD Vance saying Biden should have been more transparent with the public. "Why didn't the American people have a better sense of his health picture? Why didn't the American people have more accurate information about what he was actually dealing with? This is serious stuff," Vance told reporters as he wrapped up a trip to Rome. He wished Biden "the right recovery." The remarks by Vance, a Republican, captured the renewed focus on the health of the 82-year-old Democratic former president with the publication of a book that details widespread concerns about Biden's mental acuity among aides and Democratic insiders as he pursued reelection in 2024. Excerpts from the book have prompted new questions about whether critical information was withheld from the American public about Biden's ability to serve in the White House. Biden's closest aides have dismissed those concerns, saying Biden was fully capable of making important decisions. A spokesperson for Biden did not immediately return a Reuters request for comment. Biden has appeared on television to rebut accusations that his mental capacity had diminished during his 2021-2025 term. "There's nothing to sustain that," he said on ABC's 'The View' on May 8. Biden, the oldest person ever to serve as president, was forced to drop his reelection bid last July after a stumbling debate performance against Republican rival Donald Trump eroded his support among fellow Democrats. Biden's vice president, Kamala Harris, launched a bid of her own but lost to Trump in the November 2024 election. DOCTORS SURPRISED Biden's office said he had been diagnosed on Friday with prostate cancer that has spread to his bones. Several doctors told Reuters that cancers like this are typically diagnosed before they reach such an advanced stage. "I would assume the former president gets a very thorough physical every year," said Dr. Chris George, medical director of the cancer program at Northwestern Health Network. "It's sort of hard for me to believe that he's had a (blood test) within the past year that was normal." Dr. Herbert Lepor, a urologist at NYU Langone Health, said that given the available screening options, "it is a bit unusual in the modern era to detect cancers at this late stage." Some 70% of prostate cancer cases were diagnosed before they spread to other organs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. U.S. guidelines do not recommend annual blood screening for men over 70 and it is unclear whether the annual presidential exam would have included those tests. The new book, "Original Sin," by journalists Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson put a spotlight on Biden's mental acuity in his final months in office. "It was a mistake for Democrats to not listen to the voters earlier," U.S. Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut, a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, said on NBC on Sunday. Biden faced no serious challenge for the 2024 Democratic nomination, and party leaders repeatedly vouched for his ability to serve a second four-year term even though 74% of Americans in January 2024 thought he was too old for the job, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling. Biden's cancer diagnosis drew an outpouring of sympathy from supporters and rivals alike, including Trump. Biden thanked the public on behalf of his wife and himself for their support in a social media post released early on Monday. "Cancer touches us all. Like so many of you, Jill and I have learned that we are strongest in the broken places. Thank you for lifting us up with love and support," he said. (Reporting by Andy Sullivan, additional reporting by Kristina Cooke, Nancy Lapid and Steve Holland; Editing by Ross Colvin and Howard Goller)

Biden's cancer diagnosis prompts new questions about his health while in office

Biden's cancer diagnosis prompts new questions about his health while in office By Andy Sullivan WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Former President ...
Cannes standout 'My Father's Shadow' marks a historic first for NigeriaNew Foto - Cannes standout 'My Father's Shadow' marks a historic first for Nigeria

CANNES, France (AP) — Akinola Davies Jr. and his brother Wale were both toddlers when their father died. Many years later, they began thinking about an idea for movie: What if they had gotten to spend a day with him? In "My Father's Shadow," which is playing in theCannes Film Festival'sUn Certain Regard section, the Davies brothers pay tribute to the father they hardly knew in a shattering father-son tale and one of the clear standouts of the festival. The film, which premiered Sunday, was the culmination of more than a decade's worth of wondering. Wale first sent Akinola a script — the first Wale had written and the first Akinola had read — in 2012. "With zero context, he sent it to me and I just had this real emotional reaction," Akinola Davies said in an interview. "I actually cried when I read it because I had never conceived of the idea of spending a day with my father and what we would say to him and what he would be like." "My Father's Shadow," set over a single day in Lagos in 1993, is making history in Cannes. It's the first Nigerian film in Cannes' official selection, a milestone that Nigeria is celebrating. The country hasits own large film industry, nicknamed Nollywood.But thanks to "My Father's Shadow," Nigeria set up its own national pavilion in Cannes' international village this year. "It means a lot to people back in Nigeria. It means we can exist on these platforms and our stories can exist in these spaces," said Davies. "It's a testament to talent that's around in Nigeria. It's a testament to the stories that are there. It's a testament to the industry that's flourishing." "My Father's Shadow," which Mubi acquired for North American distribution ahead of the festival, has connections to the United Kingdom, too, which is where Davies is based after growing up in Nigeria. "The Nigerian press asks me a lot if the film is Nollywood or not Nollywood. I would say it is because all the technicians work in Nollywood," said Davies. "You can't borrow people from that whole industry and say it's not part of it." "My Father's Shadow," shot in Lagos, also gets a tremendous amount of its texture and atmosphere from Nigeria. "Point a camera at anything in Lagos, and it's so cinematic," Davies says. "I have this real sense of romance for Nigeria," he adds. "Everyone's like, 'It's super chaotic,' but for me it's actually very still. Just driving around in the car feels really cinematic to me. I just take pictures of people all the time." "Gangs of London" actorṢọpẹ́ Dìrísùplays the father, Folarin. At the family's home outside Lagos, the boys (Chibuike Marvellous Egbo and Godwin Egbo) return home to unexpectedly find him there. They hardly ever see him — he works in Lagos — but Folarin takes them along on a trip in the city that will be revelatory for the boys. To make the fictional version of their father, the Davies brothers had to try to remember what they could (Akinola was 20 months when his father died; Wale was 4 years old), listen to stories and weed out their imagined memories. Their father rapidly developed epilepsy and died during a seizure, lying in bed next to their mother. Akinola is named after him. "It's kind of the confluence of memory, dream and hearsay," Davies says. "How do you work through all of that to create a portrait?" "My Father's Shadow" is set on a pivotal day for Nigeria, when Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, who took power in a coup, refuses to accept the results of a democratic election. On this day, not just the conjured memory of the Davies' father but the dreams of a nation are put on hold. "My Father's Shadow," though, representsthe realization of Davies' filmmaking aspirations.His first feature, following the brothers' BAFTA-nominated short "Lizard," confirms Davies as a major up-and-coming director. More than that, though, "My Father's Shadow" is deeply cathartic for him. "Being the age I am, I've done my grieving," Davies says. "But just before we shot, I realized I was still grieving. Our prep started about a week after the anniversary of my dad's passing. Every year, my mum calls me or texts me. I took my brother to his grave, put flowers down and made kind of a ceremony out of it." ___ Jake Coyle has covered the Cannes Film Festival since 2012. He's seeing approximately 40 films at this year's festival andreporting on what stands out. ___ For more on the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival.

Cannes standout 'My Father's Shadow' marks a historic first for Nigeria

Cannes standout 'My Father's Shadow' marks a historic first for Nigeria CANNES, France (AP) — Akinola Davies Jr. and his brother...
Book Review: Ocean Vuong takes existentialism to deeply intimate level in 'The Emperor of Gladness'New Foto - Book Review: Ocean Vuong takes existentialism to deeply intimate level in 'The Emperor of Gladness'

Hai is 19 and suicidal. Grazina is 81 and living alone with dementia. So when she strikes a deal to house him so they can keep each other company in exchange for his help as a kind of unofficial live-in nurse, this could spell their mutual salvation or destruction. Ocean Vuong's new novel follows Hai as he takes care of Grazina and works in a fast-casual restaurant to help support them. Told in moments, "The Emperor of Gladness" takes existentialism to a deeply intimate level, leaving the reader to contemplate what it is to live in a messy, complicated world of wars, addiction, class struggles and good people looking for second chances. The novel was immediately namedOprah Winfrey's latest book club pick. The author draws heavily on his own life — from Hai's family fleeingthe Vietnam Warto their jobs in the service industry that allow them to scrape by — so "The Emperor of Gladness" is only a few degrees away from a memoir. And while it's told in prose,Vuong's penchant for poetryshows in patches of colorful, visceral language strewn with metaphors that run through the whole book, all the way back to its title. The novel opens with a movie-like sweep through East Gladness, a tiny town outside of Hartford, Connecticut. The omniscient narrator zooms in on various scenes of decay and neglect until we land on Hai, at possibly his lowest point. There's not so much a plot as a gathering of people and experiences. We piece together the characters' stories the way you would with real people in real life; through snippets that build atop each other until you can patch together a narrative of the relationships that left the biggest scars and the events that had profound impacts. Vuong achieves more by writing beside his characters than one would by writing a straightforward story about them. True and gritty, "The Emperor of Gladness" is almost voyeuristic in how it looks into the most intimate and human moments of people's lives, reflecting back on the reader and leaving plenty to ponder. ___ AP book reviews:https://apnews.com/hub/book-reviews

Book Review: Ocean Vuong takes existentialism to deeply intimate level in 'The Emperor of Gladness'

Book Review: Ocean Vuong takes existentialism to deeply intimate level in 'The Emperor of Gladness' Hai is 19 and suicidal. Grazina ...
It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fineNew Foto - It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine

CANNES, France (AP) — "Is this what the end of the world feels like?" So asks a character in one of the most-talked about films of the78th Cannes Film Festival:Oliver Laxe's "Sirât," a Moroccan desert road trip through, we come to learn, a World War III purgatory. It's well into "Sirât," a kind of combination of "Mad Max" and "The Wages of Fear," that that reality begins to sink in. Our main characters — Luis (Sergi López) and his son Esteban (Brúno Nuñez) — have come to a desert rave in search of Luis' missing daughter. When the authorities break it up, they join up with a bohemian troupe of ravers who offroad toward a new, faraway destination. Thumping, propulsive beats abound in "Sirât," not unlike they do at Cannes' nightly parties. In this movie that jarringly confronts the notion of escape from harsh reality, there are wild tragedies and violent plot turns. Its characters steer into a nightmare that looks an awful lot like today's front pages. "We wanted to be deeply connected to this day and age," Laxe said in Cannes. As much as Cannes basks in the Côte d'Azur sunshine, storm clouds have been all over its movie screens at the festival, which on Monday passed the halfway point. Portents of geopolitical doom are everywhere in a lineup that's felt unusually in sync with the moment.Tom Cruise, in "Mission: Impossible – Final Awakening," has battled the AI apocalypse. Raoul Peck, in "Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5," has summoned the author's totalitarianism warnings for today. Eventhe new Wes Anderson("The Phoenician Scheme") is about an oligarch. If the French Riviera has often served as a spectacular retreat from the real world, this year's Cannes abounds with movies urgently reckoning with it. It's probably appropriate, then, that many of those films have been particularly divisive. "Sirât" is laudable for its it's-time-to-break-stuff attitude to its characters, even if that makes for a sometimes punishing experience for the audience. This is a love-or-hate-it movie, sometimes at the same time. Ari Aster's "Eddington,"perhaps the largest American production in recent years to sincerely grapple with contemporary American politics, was dismissed more than it was praised. But for a good while, "Eddington" is breathtakingly accurate in its depiction of the United States circa 2020. In "Eddington," the conservative, untidy sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) runs for mayor against the liberal incumbent, Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal), partly over disagreements on mask mandates. But in Aster's small-town satire, both left and right are mostly under the sway of a greater force: social media and a digital reality that can wreak havoc on daily lives. "I wrote this film in a state of fear and anxiety about the world," Aster said in Cannes. "I wanted to try and pull back and just describe and show what it feels like to live in a world where nobody can agree on what is real anymore." Reflecting a world running on a 'new logic' It's been striking how much this year's Cannes has been defined by anxious, if not downright bleak visions of the future. There have been exceptions — most notably Richard Linklater's charming ode to the French New Wave"Nouvelle Vague"and Anderson's delightful "The Phoenician Scheme." But seldom has this year's festival not felt like an ominous big-screen reflection of today. That's been true in the overall chatter around the festival, which got underway with the new threat of U.S. tariffs on foreign-produced films on the minds of many filmmakers and producers. Rising geopolitical frictions led even the typically very optimistic Bono, in Cannes topremiere his Apple TV+ documentary "Bono: Stories of Surrender,"to confess he had never lived at a time where World War III felt closer at hand. Other films in Cannes weren't as overtly about here and now as "Eddington," but many of them have been consumed with the recurring traumas of the past. Two of the most lauded films from the beginning of the festival — Mascha Schilinski's "Sound of Falling" and "Two Prosecutors," by the Ukrainian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa — contemplated intimate cases of history repeating itself. "Two Prosecutors," set in Stalin's Russia, captures the slow-moving crawl of bureaucratic malevolence by adapting a story by the dissident author and physicist Georgy Demidov, who spent 14 years in the gulag. Loznitsa said his film is "not a reflection of the past. It's a reflection of the present." In the period political thriller "The Secret Agent," Brazilian filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho turns to not a real historical tale but a fictional one, set in 1977 during Brazil's military dictatorship. Wagner Moura brings a natural movie-star cool to the role of Marcelo, a technology expert returning to his hometown of Recife where government corruption is rife and hitmen are on his tail. Vividly textured, with absurdist touches (the hairy leg of a corpse plays as a colorful metaphor for the dictatorship), "The Secret Agent" seeks, and sometimes finds, its own logic of political resistance. "I really believe that some of the most heartfelt texts come not necessarily from fact but from the logic of what is happening," Filho said in an interview. "Right, now the world seems to be running on some kind of new logic. Ten or 15 years ago, some of these ideas would be completely dismissed, even by the most conservative politicians. I think 'The Secret Agent' is a film full of mystery and intrigue but it does seem to have a certain logic which I associate with my country, Brazil." Finding the rays of hope In nonfiction filmmaking, no one may be better today than Peck ("I Am Not Your Nego," last year's"Ernest Cole: Lost and Found") in connecting historical dots. "Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5" marries George Orwell's words (narrated by Damian Lewis) on totalitarian states that demand "the disbelief of objective truth" with the actions of contemporary governments around the world, including Russia, Myanmar and the United States. Images of abombed-out Mariupol in 2022runs with its official description: "Peacekeeping operations." It's not just geopolitical tremors quaking on movie screens in Cannes. Climate change and natural disasters are on the minds of filmmakers, too, sometimes in the most unlikely of movies. The French animated film "Arco," by illustrator Ugo Bienvenu, is about a boy from the distant future who lives on a "Jetsons"-like platform in the clouds. He travels back in time to another future-time, 2075, where homes are bubbled to protect them from fire and storm, and robots do all of the parenting for working parents who appear to their children only as digital projections. It's a grim future, particularly so because it feels quite plausible. But the strange charm of "Arco," a brightly colored movie with a whole lot of rainbows, is that is offers a younger generation a dream of a future they might make. A relationship between the boy from the future and a girl who finds him in 2075 sparks not just a friendship but a nourishing vision of what's possible. "Arco," in that way, is a reminder that the most moving movies about our current doom offer a ray of hope, too. "People are feeling disenchanted with the world, so we have to re-enchant them," said Laxe, the "Sirât" director. "Times are tough but they're very stimulating at the same time. We'll have to look deeply into ourselves. That's what we're forced to do because it's a tough world now." ___ Jake Coyle has covered the Cannes Film Festival since 2012. He's seeing approximately 40 films at this year's festival andreporting on what stands out. ___ For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visit:https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival

It’s the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine

It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine CANNES, France (AP) — "Is this what the end of the world ...
Olivia Munn Says 'Crashing Moment' of Breast Cancer Diagnosis Led to a New Appreciation for Life (Exclusive)New Foto - Olivia Munn Says 'Crashing Moment' of Breast Cancer Diagnosis Led to a New Appreciation for Life (Exclusive)

Frazer Harrison/Getty Last year, Olivia Munn revealed she was diagnosed with breast cancer The actress has since had five surgeries, including a lymph node dissection, a double mastectomy and a hysterectomy She tells PEOPLE that today, she has more appreciation for the little things in life and being with friends and family Olivia Munnhas a greater appreciation for life since going through herbreast cancer journey. On May 15, while promoting her new Apple TV+ showYour Friends & Neighborsat an FYC event in Los Angeles, the actress opened up to PEOPLE about the new perspective she has gained. "I don't think I realized how much I was focusing on things that didn't matter until I had a crashing moment in my life, which was being diagnosed with breast cancer," she explained. "It's unfortunate, I think, when something that big has to kind of turn your head around to look back at how you've been living and realizing like, 'Oh, wait, these things don't matter.' But, at the same time, that's, I guess, the blessing in those moments." Munn, 44, wasdiagnosed with bilateral breast cancerin April 2023. She has since had five surgeries, including a lymph node dissection, a double mastectomy and a hysterectomy. Since overcoming that difficult journey, theX-Men Apocalypsestar admitted that she's so much more appreciative of her friends and family, especially her husbandJohn Mulaneyand their two children, sonMalcolm, 3, and 7-month-old daughterMéi. "So when I have energy to get up in the morning and I have energy to be with my family and my friends, and I get to work with amazing people, it's truly, as saccharine as it might sound, when I get up and I'm here and I get to see the sky and I see my children playing and I get to talk to my friends — I just need that," she said. "Everything else is just extra." Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Earlier this year, Munn told PEOPLE that she's been feeling positive about her breast cancer journey. During the 2025TIMEWomen of the Year Gala in February, she said she's "doing really good" as she discussed her treatment and health. "I'm doing really good today," Munn, who was anhonoree at the event, shared. "I am working through different medications and I think anyone who's gone through any kind of cancer, but specifically breast cancer, understands there's a real science to figuring out the best kind of medication for you." While Munn admitted "there are good days and bad days," she said that she has "hit a good stride" when it comes to her health. "I think before all of this, I wanted to seize the day and get stuff done and have my list of to-do things," she said at the time. "And now my to-do lists are a lot shorter. I love organizing and my house is a mess — I don't know if it's because of cancer treatment or because I have two children." "I give myself a lot of grace now with things like that," she told PEOPLE. "I don't worry about the house being a mess … I just wake up and really kind of give myself, I call them attainable goals instead of making really big goals that you end up feeling like I fell short … so I feel successful every day no matter how small it is." Read the original article onPeople

Olivia Munn Says ‘Crashing Moment’ of Breast Cancer Diagnosis Led to a New Appreciation for Life (Exclusive)

Olivia Munn Says 'Crashing Moment' of Breast Cancer Diagnosis Led to a New Appreciation for Life (Exclusive) Frazer Harrison/Getty L...

 

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