Norah O’Donnell is opening up about recently being diagnosed with skin cancer.
When the 43-year-old CBS morning anchor went in for a routine checkup with her dermatologist the week before Thanksgiving, she wasn’t expecting to find out that she had melanoma in situ.
“I had these yearly skin checks and I had gone two years ago to Dr. Elizabeth Hale. At the time, I checked some things and everything was fine,” she tells People exclusively.
Two years later, O’Donnell realized she was long overdue for checkup.
During her appointment, O’Donnell’s doctor identified two spots on...
When the 43-year-old CBS morning anchor went in for a routine checkup with her dermatologist the week before Thanksgiving, she wasn’t expecting to find out that she had melanoma in situ.
“I had these yearly skin checks and I had gone two years ago to Dr. Elizabeth Hale. At the time, I checked some things and everything was fine,” she tells People exclusively.
Two years later, O’Donnell realized she was long overdue for checkup.
During her appointment, O’Donnell’s doctor identified two spots on...
- 3/29/2017
- by Brittany King
- PEOPLE.com
![Kevin Spacey in House of Cards (2013)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNmM4ODU1MzItODYyYi00Y2U0LWFjZjItYTRhZWIwOGMyZTRhXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNjc2NTQ4Nzk@._V1_QL75_UY207_CR5,0,140,207_.jpg)
![Kevin Spacey in House of Cards (2013)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNmM4ODU1MzItODYyYi00Y2U0LWFjZjItYTRhZWIwOGMyZTRhXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNjc2NTQ4Nzk@._V1_QL75_UY207_CR5,0,140,207_.jpg)
Elizabeth Hale (Ellen Burstyn) has no patience for the politics of marriage. She despises the stagecraft of clasped hands and sweet kisses, the delicate calculus by which wives and widows navigate the corridors of power, preferring the clean lines of swift action, blunt talk. In the fourth season of Netflix’s “House of Cards,” as her son-in-law, President Francis J. Underwood (Kevin Spacey), campaigns for the Democratic nomination, Elizabeth advises her daughter, Claire (Robin Wright), to use her maiden name to run for higher office, and urges her affluent friends in Highland Park, Texas, to donate to Underwood’s challenger. “When he loses,” she says, “Claire can begin her own career.”
Read More: Where to Watch the Best TV of 2016
With this candid assessment, the series’ brooding fable of a Clinton-esque couple’s brutal ambition recaptures the lean, efficient complexion of the first — remembering, perhaps, that Frank’s closest allies...
Read More: Where to Watch the Best TV of 2016
With this candid assessment, the series’ brooding fable of a Clinton-esque couple’s brutal ambition recaptures the lean, efficient complexion of the first — remembering, perhaps, that Frank’s closest allies...
- 7/6/2016
- by Matt Brennan
- Indiewire
Man oh man. I mean, it still doesn’t live up to the “I killed a recurring character in the first episode” act that House of Cards pulled in season two, but it introduces the ever wonderful Ellen Burstyn as Claire’s dying mother Elizabeth Hale and Neve Campbell acting as Claire’s “Doug” counterpart Leann Harvey.
There’s new power in this season, just as we are introduced to old. We meet up with Remy and Lucas again, finding out that the former has been ever more retired with Jackie and the latter is waiting it out in jail. And we’re introduced to Underwood’s fourth wall late in the second episode, where we realize that Frank really only cares about himself—but it’s not that shocking now is it?
Season four also marks writer’s Beau Willimon’s last stint on the show. But it does...
There’s new power in this season, just as we are introduced to old. We meet up with Remy and Lucas again, finding out that the former has been ever more retired with Jackie and the latter is waiting it out in jail. And we’re introduced to Underwood’s fourth wall late in the second episode, where we realize that Frank really only cares about himself—but it’s not that shocking now is it?
Season four also marks writer’s Beau Willimon’s last stint on the show. But it does...
- 3/13/2016
- by Catherina Gioino
- Nerdly
At the tail end of last week, Netflix gave audiences another reason to binge with the release of the fourth season of their hit series House of Cards. As the show (or at least one of the shows) that put the streaming service on the map as a place for original programming, this has always been a flagship property, with anticipation for new seasons always at a fever pitch and a pedigree including David Fincher and Beau Willimon. Suffice to say, House of Cards is special. This year is no exception for the show, as season three ended on a real cliffhanger and plenty of us were dying to see what happens next. I’ll steer clear of new spoilers, of course, but just so you know, everything previously involving Kevin Spacey’s now President Frank Underwood and Robin Wright’s Claire Underwood is fair game. Let’s dive in!
- 3/9/2016
- by Joey Magidson
- Hollywoodnews.com
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