Entertainment
Lily Allen talks evolution as she reflects on touring in 20’s
Lily Allen is preparing to return to the road and this tour seemingly marks a major personal milestone for her.
In a new interview on CBS Mornings, the 40-year-old pop star reflected on gearing up to tour her latest album West End Girl as this would be her first time traveling and performing since she got sober in 2019.
The project itself was reportedly inspired by the end of her marriage to actor David Harbour, but the tour represents something more meaningful than that.
Speaking with Anthony Mason, Allen admitted that performing in her twenties felt like “a big party,” often blurring the line between the stage and the lifestyle.
“I don’t know if that if it sounded much fun to the people that were listening to it,” the Tennis artist laughed.
“It was sure as hell was fun, you know, going out there, but I’m not at that stage in my life.”
Allen explained that when she got sober in 2019, she imagined it would eventually allow her to bring West End Girl “to life,” but she never expected the touring gap to stretch this long.
Now, as she gears up to perform live again, she admitted that the nerves are real.
“I’m nervous,” the singer confessed.
“I don’t think there’s any risk of anything happening, but it’s a real adrenaline rush that you get when you’re on a stage and people responding to your words and when you come off stage that adrenaline is rushing around your body and looking for a place to get out.”
Entertainment
5/2: Saturday Morning – CBS News
Entertainment
AI detects pancreatic cancer 3 years before diagnosis: Study reveals breakthrough results
An artificial intelligence (AI) software that could possibly revolutionise pancreatic cancer treatment by early diagnosis, even before the tumor becomes visible on a scan, is currently being evaluated in a clinical trial.
A Mayo Clinic AI tool detected abnormalities on scans up to three years before the patients were diagnosed.
According to a research paper published in the journal Gut, an AI model developed by a Minnesota-based clinic was trained with CT scans of patients who were earlier being examined for other diseases but were later diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
The research team then asked radiologists and AI software to review the scans and found the AI system to be three times more effective at detecting early signs of the disease compared to radiologists.
A radiologist at Mayo Clinic and an author of the study said they knew pancreatic cancer does not come all of a sudden in three months, adding, “We knew that signal was there. We just needed to find a way to be able to detect it.”
Pancreatic cancer has a five-year survival rate of around 13% and is on its way to become the second leading cause of cancer deaths by 2030; however, if successful, the deployment of Mayo Clinic’s AI software could improve early detection and treatment outcomes.
Early detection for the disease has been rare so far, but the Stage I patients had a survival rate of up to 40%.
Entertainment
Andy Serkis on making the animated version of "Animal Farm"
Andy Serkis, the iconic voice of Gollum in “Lord of the Rings,” speaks with “CBS Saturday Morning” about his latest project, an animated version of George Orwell’s “Animal Farm.”
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