Kamis, 05 Maret 2020

Devs introduces an intriguing mystery with its premiere - The A.V. Club

Karl Glusman and Nick Offerman
Karl Glusman and Nick Offerman
Photo: Raymond Liu (FX)

When you first start watching the premiere episode of Devs, you’re certain of one thing: This show is supposed to be “high concept.” From the random images at the beginning of the premiere to the eerie music that permeates the first episode, this show is sending a message of what it wants to be: smart and edgy. And that makes sense, as it’s the brainchild of Alex Garland who wrote and directed Ex Machina and Annihilation, the latter of which was based on the novel by Jeff VanderMeer. This is a guy familiar with the ins and outs of artificial intelligence and the sheer weirdness that sci-fi can be, and he appears to be putting that experience to great use in Devs.

The entire first episode is meant to unsettle you. Every choice is meant to show that there is something not quite right here. Even on a sunny, beautiful day when people are enjoying the outdoors, I felt cold watching it. This atmosphere is perfectly encapsulated in the strange and creepy plastic-looking statue, modeled after a young girl, that towers over the campus of Amaya, the Google or Facebook-like tech company at the center of Devs. Yes, it might be the “coolest” place to work, but I don’t know that I would ever be able to get used to a giant doll statue hovering over my place of work. How are you even supposed to concentrate knowing that thing is out there just….looking at you? No, thank you. It’s just weird and I do not like it—which is, of course, the point.

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The central question of the show, and one that will likely unspool over the course of its eight-episode limited run, is what in the world is going on at Devs? We see glimpses and hints over the course of this episode. Sergei (played by Karl Gusman) works on artificial intelligence at Amaya and demonstrates he’s able to successfully predict what a single-celled organism will do for about 30 seconds. After the presentation, Forest (Nick Offerman) and Katie (Alison Pill) invite Sergei to join the mysterious world of Devs.

And indeed, it’s a world, not just a team. Devs is indicative of everything that’s messed up about Silicon Valley and startup culture—the invitation to work nights, the lack of interest in “observing weekends,” as if over-working is a treat. The open workspace that is a nightmare in terms of productivity (though, if people have no phones to talk on, it might be less of an ordeal). The complete and utter lack of privacy that is coupled with the expectation that Amaya is watching and recording every single thing that you are doing at any given time.

What is Devs though? Forest says that even the people on the team may be unclear about the end goal, signaling that each of these people may work on a piece of a much larger puzzle. It’s an application of the current quantum computing system they use, but Forest rules out some of Sergei’s guesses: national security, cold fusion, artificial intelligence, encryption, biotech, search engines. At this point, my relatively uneducated theory is time travel, given Forest’s speech about determinism coupled with Katie’s insistence that the code actually changes nothing, even if it is revolutionary. If you think choices are predetermined, then being able to travel through time wouldn’t really affect anything.

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Alison Pill
Alison Pill
Photo: Miya Mizuno (FX)

The Devs office consists of a machine built within a Faraday cage, which blocks electromagnetic fields. The gold mesh surrounding the building could be to conduct heat and electricity (plus it looks pretty freaking cool), while the vacuum seal may ensure that everything within the building stays in the building (including air). Knowing this doesn’t provide answers necessarily, but it is intriguing information, and shows how many resources Amaya has put into protecting whatever knowledge is hidden in Devs.

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This is why Sergei’s next move is such a surprise. He somehow copies the code that he finds on his computer at Devs onto his wristwatch. That provokes all kinds of secondary questions: Is Sergei some sort of plant? A seemingly normal wristwatch with the capability to receive data isn’t exactly something you’d wear every day—though he is wearing it in his initial meeting with Forest and Katie. This means that the data-watch is either an exact duplicate of his personal wrist watch, switched out after he returns home for the day before starting at Devs, or he’s been wearing it for awhile. Either way, there are unanswered questions about who he’s working for and what his motivations might be.

The result, of course, is Sergei’s brutal murder at the hands of Amaya’s head of security, Kenton (Zach Grenier), while Forest cooly watches. And, to make things even more complicated, they fake footage of him leaving the campus and then returning the next day to light himself on fire, supposedly committing suicide in front of the creepy statue.

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Illustration for article titled iDevs/i introduces an intriguing mystery with its premiere
Photo: Miya Mizuno (FX)

Despite the footage, Sergei’s girlfriend Lily (Sonoya Mizuno) is convinced there’s something strange going on. After all, she’s also an Amaya employee, working in their encryption department. She ends up going to an ex-boyfriend, Jamie (Jin Ha), to decrypt information she finds after restoring the contents of Sergei’s phone from a cloud backup. Presumably, this is the code that Sergei downloaded onto his watch. Jamie refuses to help her, but once he finds out about Sergei’s death, I have a feeling he’ll change his mind.

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It will be interesting to see, in future episodes, how Lily comes to grow and develop as a character. She’s at the center of this mystery, thrust into it thanks to Sergei. But she’s still a little bit of a blank—we know a decent amount about her after this first episode, but she doesn’t quite feel fully realized yet. That will likely happen over the course of future episodes, when she’s the focus of the episodes and, presumably, the person driving the narrative forward, rather than just playing her part as she does in this premiere.

Overall, this was a very promising first episode, and it bodes well for the rest of the series. The mysteries presented are intriguing ones, and because it’s a limited series we can be relatively sure we’ll get some answers by its end. (The fact that it’s from the mind of Alex Garland also indicates there probably is a resolution in mind, versus writing a mystery he doesn’t know how to solve, leading to a disappointing conclusion—looking at you, Lost.) All in all, I’m looking forward to seeing where we go from here.

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Stray observations

  • Lily is incredible at portraying the anxiety of someone who is quietly worried.
  • The fact that Lily knows all of Sergei’s passwords is a quiet (and tech-oriented) way to show the nature, and closeness, of their relationship.
  • Before he starts speaking, Nick Offerman is delightfully unrecognizable as Forest, Amaya’s CEO. He’s also utterly terrifying, from his utter lack of regard for any sort of utensils to eat a salad to the stone cold way he watches someone murdered on his orders (even if he shows some emotion about it later on). The acting in this show is generally fantastic, and Offerman is incredible playing against type.
  • Alison Pill is wonderful in everything she does, and apparently after her role in Star Trek: Picard as a synthetic life expert, she’s getting very good at talking about artificial intelligence.
  • The role of music in this show is crucial and incredible for setting the scene.
  • Given what Jamie says about Lily and Amaya, does the company feel a little bit like a cult?
  • Can I just say, again, that the giant doll statue is creepy?
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2020-03-05 14:00:00Z
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Devs, Alex Garland's FX on Hulu series, reviewed. - Slate

A woman stands next to a wall that provides a reflection of her.

Sonoya Mizuno in Devs.

FX

Any taxonomy of television would need an entire kingdom just for bad TV. There’s bad TV that’s carelessly made, like a sheep with three hooves and a slapped-on beak. There’s bad TV that’s intentionally bad, schlocky and garish, like a sheep with magenta-dyed fleece. And then there’s bad television that’s striving to be great, that’s got ideas and style but sinks under the weight of its own oversize ambition—a sheep with a 50-pound weight tied to its forelegs and dropped in a river. Alex Garland’s Devs, a philosophically minded, prestige sci-fi cock-up airing on FX on Hulu (so, airing on Hulu with FX branding) belongs to this last species—except in Devs, multiple versions of the same sheep inhabit multiple realities. It sinks like a stone in every single one.

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Garland, who wrote and directed every episode of Devs, previously wrote and directed Annihilation, a sonic connection to which you can hear in Devs’ opening moments. Each episode begins with an eerie drone, gonging over otherwise silent images of the cast meaningfully staring at things. People portentously staring—or, in one instance, silently tossing a plate at a wall—is on my “oh, please, no” bingo card, so I won’t pretend that Devs and I got off on the right foot. And since humorlessness and seriosity—like, intoning Yeats levels of seriosity—are also on my bingo card, we never worked it out, though over the course of its eight episodes I did come to believe that, while absolutely none of it worked for me, much of what Devs was doing it was doing on purpose.

The show is made with so much care, sci-fi exposition, and cash—the supercomputer at the center looks like an art deco chandelier!—that its willfully hermetic, claustrophobic vibe; its fussy but swanning beauty; its dramatically deflating structure; and its contained-to-the-point-of-flatness performances must all be intentional, tuned as they are to the show’s central idea about the finite nature of the infinite. But all this control squeezes the life out of everything. The show is what it wants to be, but what it wants to be put me in mind of the big whiffs of the immediate post-Sopranos era, a hefty, pretentious, high-profile exercise in trying to make you Google de Broglie–Bohm theory.

Devs concerns itself with a young woman named Lily Chan (Sonoya Mizuno) who works for Amaya, a quantum computing giant that has surpassed Facebook and Twitter and Google in Silicon Valley supremacy. Lily, low-key and androgynous, is the type of character whom other characters are constantly saying is singular and exceptional, a woman who does things differently, though that’s mostly expressed by her tendency to use windows instead of front doors. Lily lives with her boyfriend, Sergei (Karl Glusman), a Russian engineer who also works at Amaya. Every morning they step over the homeless man who lives on their San Francisco doorstep to take the company bus out to the valley.

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This setup might suggest that Devs is interested in modern-day tech companies and the anthropology of their social milieu. It’s not. Its climactic insight on this subject is that tech CEOs have too much power—“You know the problem with people who own tech companies? They have too much power. They become messiahs”—which it shares twice, treating it like a revelation each time instead of a San Francisco fortune cookie. The would-be messiah of Amaya is its shaggy-headed beardo of a CEO, Forest (Nick Offerman), a man driven by a personal tragedy announced by the lifelike megastatue of his daughter that towers over the campus named for her. (The statue is further evidence of the show’s general disinterest in actual tech companies: In this age of polished industrial design, none of them would ever plant a 10-story garden gnome with wax museum energy in their front yard.)

Outwardly, Amaya is your standard world-conquering tech outfit, but its hundreds of employees obscure its real purpose, which is known only to the small handful of people involved with the company’s top-secret Devs team. Early on, Sergei is invited to join Devs after giving a presentation to Forest and his right-hand woman Katie (Alison Pill), in which he is able to accurately predict the future behavior of a simple organism. (Forest chomps on raw spinach during the presentation, a techlord with the swagger to eat like a cow, which is about as funny as Devs gets) After 30 seconds, though, the model falls apart: There’s too much data, too much complexity, and the numbers “go insane.” Or maybe, Sergei theorizes, “it’s a quantum-type problem.” Somewhere in the multiverse is an organism that’s behaving exactly as they predicted—it’s just not this universe. “Not a fan of the multiverse theory,” Forrest replies. Is your Reddit sense tingling yet?

It should be. Devs’ best quality is that it will inspire a thriving community of people geeking out about it on the internet—people who will likely work as a ventilator for the show itself, making it seem more alive than it is. (In this, and so many other things, it has a lot of overlap with HBO’s Westworld, another sci-fi show about humans’ limited capacity to change, but one that’s at least real enough to admit technocrats seeking absolute power might be motivated by self-interest, and not “trauma.”) The series concerns itself with all sorts of ideas, scientific and philosophical, that are fun to think and theorize about, while being, itself, no fun at all. Unlike Garland’s other previous directorial effort, the zingily plotted and spacily stylish exploration of artificial intelligence and sex robots, Ex Machina, Devs has no spark. It has no moment anywhere close to being as creepy, strange, funny, or threatening as an Oscar Isaac dance sequence, even if Garland did recast Isaac’s dance partner as Devs’ lead. (In the one scene where she gets to let loose, she’s great.) What it has instead is a good brainteaser, a sci-fi philosophy mashup: What if the multiverse were real, but also deterministic? What if the world that was constantly branching out into different realities showed us that we tend to do the same thing in every one, turning back on ourselves like so many ingrown toes?

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Shortly after being promoted to the Devs team, Sergei disappears, and Lily is left to figure out what happened to him, turning for help to her lovelorn ex-boyfriend Jamie (Jin Ha, definitely the best thing about the show). Lily doesn’t know what happened to Sergei, but we do. Garland has made a choice to have the audience inhabit a kind of all-seeing position—which, like so much about Devs, is structurally elegant but dramatically inert. It puts us in the same position as, say, a tech team that has designed a supercomputer so powerful that it can see the past and all possible futures, a clever bit of mirroring. But it also leads to multiple sequences in which Lily is just catching up to what we already know, recapitulations that are passed off like moments of tension but have all the suspense of a “previously on … ” intro.

Over and over again, Devs’ characters are informed that, no matter how hard they fight it, they are going to end up doing the same thing they were going to do, or already have. Instead of fighting anyway, they accept it. It’s as if Oedipus responded to the prophecy that he would kill his father and marry his mother by saying: “Oof. You sure? I guess I’ll just go do that.” Obviously, that’s the stuff of tragedies that have lasted for thousands of years. By the time someone really tries to break out of what has been preordained, they accomplish it with so much ease that the moment, meant to be remarkable, falls flat: This whole free will thing doesn’t seem that hard—maybe someone should have tried it sooner.

But Devs is the kind of show that’s immune, in some ways, to criticism. On the one hand, it’s a big mood; on the other, it’s a logic puzzle. You feel it and then, if you keep watching, you’ll find yourself trying to solve it, even if that means picking at it. Why would a company hire a corporate spy if it could see the past and the future? Why would two people privately argue about firing someone they already knew they had fired? You could take these questions to r/devs, or you could answer them for yourself.

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2020-03-05 12:30:00Z
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Lady Gaga Announces Six-City ‘The Chromatica Ball’ Summer Tour - Rolling Stone

Lady Gaga has announced a special six-date summer tour dubbed “The Chromatica Ball.” The trek, presented by Live Nation, will kick off July 24th in Paris and continue through London, Toronto, Boston and Chicago before wrapping on August 19th in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

General tickets for The Chromatica Ball go on sale Friday March 13th in Paris, London and Toronto, and Monday March 16th in Boston, Chicago and East Rutherford via Live Nation. Fans can also access VIP packages, which may include premium tickets, a backstage tour, VIP parking and exclusive access to a pre-show lounge, special entry and more. Information on VIP packages is available here.

In addition, Citi cardmembers can take advantage of a special Citi Presale powered by Verified Fan opportunity for tour dates in the United States. Citi cardmembers can register now through Saturday March 9th at 11:59 p.m. EST to access the presale, which runs from Tuesday March 10th at 10 a.m. through Thursday March 12th at 5 p.m.

Every North American ticket includes a CD copy of Lady Gaga’s upcoming release Chromatica, which drops April 10th via Interscope Records. For all shows in the U.S., $1 from each ticket sold will be donated to the singer’s Born This Way Foundation, which she founded in 2012 with her mother Cynthia Germanotta.

Lady Gaga announced the release of Chromatica after dropping a new single, “Stupid Love.”

The Chromatica Ball tour dates:

July 24 Paris, France – Stade de France
July 30 London, UK – Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
Aug. 05 Boston, MA – Fenway Park
Aug. 09 Toronto, ON – Rogers Centre
Aug. 14 Chicago, IL – Wrigley Field
Aug. 19 East Rutherford, NJ – MetLife Stadium

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2020-03-05 11:10:00Z
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Rabu, 04 Maret 2020

Matt Reeves Shows Off Robert Pattinson as 'The Batman' (and His Batmobile) in Three New Images! - Bloody Disgusting

In the wake of set photos leaking and circulating around the net, director Matt Reeves has now taken to social media to share three official shots from his upcoming The Batman!

The three photos show off Robert Pattinson as The Batman as well as this particular film’s muscle car take on the iconic Batmobile, and you can check them all out down below.

If these first few shots are any indication at all, Reeves’ The Batman is set to be the most downright Gothic trip to Gotham since Tim Burton took us there. And that excites us. A lot.

What say you?!

Jeffrey Wright is co-starring as Commissioner Gordon with Zoe Kravitz as Selina Kyle/Catwoman. Paul Dano is set to play the Riddler, with Andy Serkis as Alfred Pennyworth, Colin Farrell as the Penguin, and John Turturro as Carmine Falcone.

Jayme Lawson and Peter Sarsgaard will also star.

The Batman hits theaters on June 25, 2021.

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2020-03-04 17:58:18Z
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James Bond movie No Time to Die delayed until November due to coronavirus - The Verge

No Time to Die, the 25th installment of the James Bond franchise, is pushing back its planned theatrical release date in response to the novel coronavirus outbreak. Originally scheduled to premiere in April, the film will now skip the spring and summer entirely and come to theaters on November 12th in the UK and on the 25th in the United States.

As noted by The Hollywood Reporter, MGM had already canceled publicity tours and other events for No Time to Die as the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, began to take hold. MGM, alongside Bond producers Michael Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, said the decision to postpone the release altogether came “after careful consideration and thorough evaluation of the global theatrical marketplace.”

No Time to Die becomes the first major Hollywood flick to be pushed back as countries and scientists work to slow the transmission of the novel coronavirus. A Bond fan blog, MI-6 HQ, recently published an open letter — “No Time for Indecision” — requesting that the film’s release be delayed. “The health and well-being of fans around the world, and their families, is more important,” the site wrote, also noting that moving forward with an April release could be disastrous for box office performance. Movie theaters in countries heavily stricken by outbreaks have been temporarily closed.

Other high-profile upcoming theatrical releases include Disney’s Mulan later this month, with Black Widow and F9 both following in May, so MGM might not be alone in switching up plans in the interest of keeping audiences safe. Over 90,000 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed globally, with over 3,000 deaths resulting from the disease.

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2020-03-04 17:42:04Z
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‘No Time To Die’ Release Date Moving To Fall In Hopes Global Theater Biz Back At Full Strength - Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: With the coronavirus socking it to the Asian box office, Deadline has learned that MGM, Eon and Universal are postponing the next James Bond movie, No Time to Die from its UK and international release date of April 2 and its U.S. Easter weekend global day-and-date of April 10, and moving the 25th 007 movie to Nov. 25, the Wednesday before Thanksgiving.

“MGM, Universal and Bond producers, Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, announced today that after careful consideration and thorough evaluation of the global theatrical marketplace, the release of No Time to Die will be postponed until November 2020. The film will be released in the U.K. on November 12, 2020 with worldwide release dates to follow, including the U.S. launch on November 25, 2020,” said a statement given exclusively to Deadline by the three studios.

That date brings Bond back to November, which is a season he’s launched from largely going back to 1995’s Goldeneye (except for Tomorrow Never Dies which opened in the U.S/Canada on Dec. 19, 1997). No Time to Die will now face off on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving with Warner Bros. Will Smith King Richard, Disney’s Raya and the Last Dragon, and Sony’s comedy The Happiest Season. 

This is purely an economic decision we understand, and not one based on growing fears over the coronavirus. Bond is a day-and-date worldwide release, and with the franchise back in the hands of MGM fully post Sony’s distribution of the last four Daniel Craig movies, along with Universal, all parties involved need to have all foreign territories working at their maximum in order for the latest Bond to be a continued box office success. For a tentpole of this size and scope, that kind of decrease in business would have a significant and detrimental impact on the film’s ultimate global take.

I’ve heard that the move for No Time to Die should not be perceived as a concern about the safety of theaters outside of areas where public health officials have restricted or recommended against attending public events.

All together, the last four Craig 007 movies – Spectre, Skyfall, Quantum of Solace and Casino Royale — have grossed $3.2B in the overall near $7B franchise, with Skyfall being the highest grossing pic of all-time in the 58-year-old series at a whopping $1.1B. Failing at the box office is not an option for Mr. Bond, and for the studios to stick to their original release plan would be a disservice to their partners in exhibition.

Get ready for a big domino effect when it comes to rival studios following MGM/Eon/Universal’s example in re-scheduling their day-and-date event pics. It’s best to wait out the resurgence of key Asian offshore territories, if you have a major event pic on your schedule. No Time to Die, directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga, leaves behind a very lucrative Easter weekend period that’s up for grabs. How much does Easter weekend stand to make? The 2015 and 2016 holidays delivered back-to-back record openings with Uni’s Furious 7 ($161.2M) and Warner Bros.’ Batman v Superman ($181M) driving respective weekend grosses for all titles to $247.1M and an all-time Easter high of $278.5M Stateside.

However, ever since China shuttered its exhibition structure due to the coronavirus outbreak, MGM, Eon and Uni have been in a wait and see mode. With theaters closing across Korea, Japan, Italy and France, there was a clear need to push the release of No Time to Die. The studios have been closely monitoring the coronavirus outbreak like many other companies, and have seen a significant impact on the global market with all industries facing difficult decisions during these uncertain times.

China alone is poised to lose more than $2 billion since shutting 70K theaters this year. The release dates for Universal’s Dolittle and 1917, Searchlight Pictures’ Jojo Rabbit, Paramount’s Sonic the Hedgehog, and Pixar’s Onward have all been postponed indefinitely. For the period of Jan. 1-March 3, Comscore reports that South Korea’s box office is -60%, Italy’s is off 70-75% with roughly half of its cinemas closed (through we’ve heard that’s bound to improve by this weekend), Taiwan is down 30% year on year, along with Singapore (-35%), Philippines (-35%) and Hong Kong (-55%). In total, the global box office is expected to see at least a $5B hit in 2020.

Recent Bond movies have typically had their openings staggered around the globe over two weekends, with initial debut in the UK and select territories, followed by the U.S. and other offshore markets.

For example, when 2015’s Spectre opened in the U.S. to $70.4M, it added 71 markets in its second foreign weekend for a take of $117.38M, bringing its overseas cume to $219.22M and WW haul to $289.6M.

When Skyfall opened to a franchise domestic record of $88.3M in Nov. 2012, the pic’s running overseas tally was at $428.6M, bringing its global take to $516.9M (all numbers unadjusted for inflation).

Uni has No Time to Die all over the world sans some legacy MGM markets, i.e Nordic territories and the Middle East which are being sub-distributed. A UK world premiere was scheduled for Monday, March 30. Originally No Time to Die was to go April 2 and 3 in UK & Ireland, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, Croatia, Cyprus, Greece, Serbia, Slovenia, India, South Africa, and Turkey. Then in sync with U.S, the following overseas markets were to open on April 8-10: Australia & NZ, Belgium, France, Italy, Russia, Ukraine, Baltics, Indonesia, Korea, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, Vietnam, and All of Latin America

The decision to movie No Time to Die, we hear, was fully supported by everyone involved with the movie.

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2020-03-04 17:00:00Z
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"Jeopardy" Host Alex Trebek Was Brutally Honest One Year After His Pancreatic Cancer Diagnosis - BuzzFeed News

One year after he revealed he had been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer, Jeopardy host Alex Trebek has updated fans on his condition while revealing new details about his mental and physical struggles.

"The one-year survival rate for stage 4 pancreatic cancer is 18%," Trebek said in a video posted on social media on Wednesday. "I'm very happy to report I have just reached that marker."

The longtime game show host told the public in March 2019 that he was undergoing treatment for cancer, with a stage 4 diagnosis indicating it had spread beyond his pancreas. But he vowed at the time to "beat the low survival rate statistics for this disease."

In May, he said his cancer was in near remission, but then announced in September he had to resume chemotherapy.

In his video on Wednesday, Trebek was candid about his experiences undergoing treatment.

"Now I'd be lying if I said the journey had been an easy one," he said on Wednesday. "There were some good days but a lot of not-so-good days. I joked with friends that the cancer won't kill me; the chemo treatments will."

"There were moments of great pain, days when certain bodily functions no longer functioned, and sudden, massive attacks of great depression that made me wonder if it really was worth fighting on," he said.

But Trebek said he "brushed that aside quickly" because he didn't want to betray his wife, "who has given her all to help me survive."

"It would have been a betrayal of other cancer patients who have looked to me as an inspiration and a cheerleader of sorts of the value of living and hope," he added. "And it would certainly have been a betrayal of my faith in God and the millions of prayers that have been said on my behalf."

A spokesperson for the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network said in a statement that Trebek's openness about his disease had "transformed the conversation around pancreatic cancer and provided hope to people impacted by the disease."

This isn't the first time Trebek has been brutally honest about his treatment. Last year, he revealed to Good Morning America that he was often experiencing deep bouts of depression.

In his latest video, Trebek said he is doing his best to stay positive.

Referring to a discussion with his oncologist, he said they were working to ensure he is still alive in another year.

"If we take it one day at a time with a positive attitude," he said, "anything is possible."

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJ1enpmZWVkbmV3cy5jb20vYXJ0aWNsZS9kYXZpZG1hY2svamVvcGFyZHktYWxleC10cmViZWstcGFuY3JlYXRpYy1jYW5jZXItdmlkZW8teWVhcj9vcmlnaW49d2ViLWhm0gFgaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYnV6emZlZWRuZXdzLmNvbS9hbXBodG1sL2RhdmlkbWFjay9qZW9wYXJkeS1hbGV4LXRyZWJlay1wYW5jcmVhdGljLWNhbmNlci12aWRlby15ZWFy?oc=5

2020-03-04 16:55:00Z
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