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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar opens up about prostate cancer diagnosis

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Kevork S. Djansezian/Getty ImagesBy ANGELINE JANE BERNABE and MYA GREEN, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — For the first time, basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is opening up about his private battle with prostate cancer since being diagnosed 11 years ago.

In an essay Abdul-Jabbar wrote for WebMD, the NBA’s all-time leading scorer revealed how he’s had prostate cancer, leukemia and heart bypass surgery to shed light on the health challenges facing Black people.

Abdul-Jabbar wrote that while he’s received some of the best medical attention over the years as an NBA star, he’s aware of how others in the Black community do not.

“While I’m grateful for my advantages, I’m acutely aware that many others in the Black community do not have the same options and that is my responsibility to join with those fighting to change that,” he wrote. “Because Black lives are at risk. Serious risk.”

“We’re at a crossroads here,” Abdul-Jabbar told ABC News’ Good Morning America in an interview about his op-ed. “People are either going to take health care seriously and promote it and support it, or people will be struggling, and we want to end the struggling. We want people to be well.”

In his essay, Abdul-Jabbar pointed out that some of the health issues Black people are prone to as a group include diabetes, heart problems, obesity and cancer.

African Americans have the highest mortality rate of any racial group for all cancers combined, and have higher rates of diabetes, hypertension and heart disease than other groups, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health. The trend continues with COVID-19, which Abdul-Jabbar highlighted in his essay.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted just how malignant the system is,” Abdul-Jabbar wrote. “The virus has hit the African American community at a much higher and more devastating rate than it has the white community. At the same time, they receive a lower standard of care.”

In addition, Abdul-Jabbar pointed out how more Black people are dying from COVID-19 at higher rates because they are essential workers.

According to several states’ analysis of data, the coronavirus pandemic has hit Black and Latino communities across the U.S. hard, killing people of color at a disproportionate rate compared to white Americans.

And based on an analysis released by the Economic Policy Institute, people of color (Black, Latino, Asian American and other non-whites) account for 43% of all essential workers in the nation amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Because of this, “the risk of infection may be greater for workers in essential industries who continue to work outside the home despite outbreaks in their communities, including some people who may need to continue working in these jobs because of their economic circumstances,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in a post, “COVID-19 in Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups.”

“The fact that people of color have more face-to-face jobs with people, they are more likely to be involved in healthcare,” said Abdul-Jabbar. “And they have to use public transportation, just those factors by themselves will make the people of color more susceptible, more vulnerable to a pandemic.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 12/13/20

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Sunday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PRESEASON
Atlanta 116, Orlando 107
Brooklyn 119, Washington 114
Detroit 99, New York 91
Houston 0, Chicago 0
LA Lakers 131, LA Clippers , 106
Sacramento 121, Portland 106

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Arizona 26, NY Giants 7
Chicago 36, Houston 7
Dallas 30, Cincinnati 7
Denver 32, Carolina 27
Kansas City 33, Miami 27
Tampa Bay 26, Minnesota 14
Tennessee 31, Jacksonville 10
Indianapolis 44, Las Vegas 27
Seattle 40, NY Jets 3
Green Bay 31, Detroit 24
LA Chargers, 20 Atlanta 17
Philadelphia 24, New Orleans 21
Washington 23, San Francisco 15
Buffalo 26, Pittsburgh 15

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Iowa 106 N. Illinois 53
Michigan St. 109, Oakland 91
West Virginia 87, Richmond 71
Ohio St. 67, Cleveland St. 61
Arizona St. 71, Grand Canyon 70
Texas at Baylor (Postponed)
Tarleton State at Kansas (Canceled)
William & Mary at (Postponed)

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Brett Young teases the Christmas album he'd like to make, as he looks forward to celebrating with Presley

No Comments Country Music News

Riker BrothersIt’s sure to be a special Christmas at Brett Young‘s house this year, as his daughter Presley experiences lots of holiday traditions for the first time. 

Even though she was here last year, the proud father says she was really too little to enjoy it.

“We tried to make it a bigger thing than it was possible to be,” Brett reflects. “She was… two months exactly…”

“I’ve already gotten to the age now where I still love Christmas, but it’s not even about presents anymore,” he continues. “I think most people reach that age in their late teens, early twenties. So I’ve been in that stage for a long time. But to have her there, it’s like we’re buying her presents that she doesn’t know she’s getting.”

“So it’s interesting,” Brett laughs. “We tried to force it on her and she was like, ‘Yeah, whatever, just feed me.'”

One yuletide treat Presley will likely enjoy in the years to come is an eventual holiday album by her dad. 

“This would have been the perfect year to record a Christmas record because we were all home,” Brett admits. “But I just realized that too late, and I missed my window…”

“I love Christmas music. I’ve been talking a lot about doing it — more than just one song, whether it’s an EP or a full-length. And what we could do to make it a little bit different,” he explains, “because I don’t want to write Christmas songs. I would love to do the classics, but in a different vibe or style.”

“It’ll happen at some point, maybe next year,” he adds. “As soon as it works, it’s happening.”

Brett did find time to record his version of “Silver Bells” for 2020, which joins his rendition of “O Holy Night” from 2017.

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

'SNL' cold open tackles the COVID-19 vaccine rollout

No Comments Entertainment News

Will Heath/NBC(NEW YORK) — A day after the FDA approved the emergency use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, Saturday Night Live offered its take on the rollout in this weekend’s cold open.

The bit featured Heidi Gardner as President Donald Trump’s COVID-19 coordinator Deborah Birx and Kate McKinnon playing Dr. Anthony Fauci this time.  Brad Pitt famously portrayed Fauci on an SNL episode back in April.

Beck Bennett played Wolf Blitzer, host of CNN’s The Situation Room, who sought Fauci’s comments on the distribution of the vaccine, which Bennett’s Blitzer characterized by saying, “It’s just like the PS5: Everybody wants it, nobody can get it and if you’re rich you already had it a month ago.”

Describing the president’s performance, McKinnon’s Fauci went on to declare Trump “has done about as good a job with the rollout as I did with that first pitch at The Nationals game.”  A video of the awful pitch followed.

The sketch went on to praise Fauci for his contributions in guiding the country through the pandemic, as well as his popularity with Americans, with bras even being tossed at him.

“Any other year I’m a two, this year I’m a 10,” McKinnon’s Fauci declared.

Meanwhile, Gardner’s Birx touted her part in in the rollout, taking credit for almost refuting Trump’s advice to drink bleach to kill the virus.

“Remember when Trump said to inject bleach and I did a stanky little face?” she said. “I almost whispered, ‘No.’”

Saturday’s episode was hosted by Timothée Chalamet, with musical guests Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.

 

By George Costantino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Search called off for 20-year-old Navy sailor who fell overboard

No Comments National News

U.S. Navy via Getty ImagesBY: BILL HUTCHINSON, ABC NEWS

(NEW YORK) — The search for a missing 20-year-old Navy sailor who authorities believe fell overboard while on the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier off the coast of Southern California has been called off, officials said.

The search for Ethan Goolsby, an aviation ordnanceman airman apprentice from San Antonio, Texas, ended Saturday evening after Navy officials said search and rescue crews spent more than 55 hours scouring 607 square nautical miles of the Pacific Ocean without finding a sign of the sailor.

The Navy declared Goolsby deceased.

“The loss of our sailor is felt deeply by all on board,” Capt. Eric Anduze, commanding officer of USS Theodore Roosevelt, said in a statement. “The entire Theodore Roosevelt team sends our deepest condolences to the family of our missing shipmate.”

The announcement came just hours after Goolsby’s family posted a message on Facebook, reading, “We are holding out hope for a miracle.”

The search for Goolsby began Thursday morning when a lookout on the USS Theodore Roosevelt reported spotting what appeared to be a sailor in the water about 7:30 a.m., according to a statement from the Navy’s 3rd Fleet in San Diego. Three rescue helicopters and a boat were immediately launched, according to the statement.

“As far as they’re telling us, nobody saw him go over, so they don’t know where he fell from,” Goolsby’s mother, Michelle Goolsby, told Navy Times of the disappearance of her only child. “They wouldn’t tell us if he was floating, if he was struggling, if he was moving. They didn’t know.”

She said Navy officials told her and her husband, Kelly Goolsby, that a second lookout confirmed seeing their son in the water and that a smoke signal and flotation device were thrown to him.

In their Facebook post, the family said Navy officials told them their son was last seen aboard the 1,092-foot-long aircraft carrier between 7 and 7:15 a.m. Thursday at the completion of his night shift.

The USS Theodore Roosevelt left San Diego on Tuesday ahead of its second deployment of the year, according to Navy Times.

Earlier this year, the Navy reported a COVID-19 outbreak aboard the Roosevelt that infected a quarter of the ship’s crew of nearly 5,000. One sailor who contracted the virus died.

Michelle Goolsby said her son surprised them with a visit home in October. When he reported back to duty on Nov. 2 he had to quarantine for five weeks, she said.

“They told us (the Naval Criminal Investigative Service) is investigating and they really can’t share any more information at this point,” Michelle Goolsby told Navy Times. “We know there’s been a lot of things that’s happened on that ship, with the COVID, and I have questions.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.