Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

READ: Marc Summers Talks About OCD and Brushes With Death

READ: Marc Summers Talks About OCD and Brushes With Death

If you a kid in the late '80s or early-to-mid '90s, and were lucky enough to have cable (or a friend who did), then Marc Summers was probably a huge part of your childhood.


The former Nickelodeon star and Double Dare host, now 66, recently sat down for an interview with People magazine to reflect on his career, and opened up about his struggles with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder as well as his two brushes with death.

Being known for getting doused in "slime" on a daily basis wasn't easy for Summers, who claims that he would hurry to change his clothes as soon at filming ended. What he didn't know until he was diagnosed live on his Lifetime talk show in 1995 was that he had a crippling case of OCD.

The very public revelation took its toll, halting his career in its tracks, as Summers explains: "Most people weren’t aware what OCD was back in the late ‘90s." He even lost a job hosting Hollywood Squares due to the lack of understanding. "People were not given the tools to learn what it was," he laments.

But in some ways, his OCD gave him an incredible drive and focus. By 2001, he was given a chance to host Unwrapped on the Food Network, which has gone on to be the network's longest-running program thus far.

He credits himself as a bit of a "pioneer" for OCD, pointing to Howie Mandel's ability to open admit his own struggles with OCD and germaphobia as evidence.

Summers' life took a drastic turn in 2009, when he required surgery to remove 17.5 inches of his small intestine after experiencing stomach pain. After the surgery, he woke up and, "being a stand-up comic, I sort of joked with the doctor, ‘Do I have cancer?’ And he says, ‘As a matter of fact, you do.'"

He was originally misdiagnosed with mantle cell lymphoma and given six months to live before another oncologist determined that is was actually chronic lymphocytic leukemia. But during the four-month period between diagnoses, his family thought he was dying.

"The whole story about your life flashes in front of you," he says. He recalls phoning his wife from his taxi and saying, "'I’m not going to see the kids get married. I’m not going to see our grandchildren. I’m going to be dead.'"

"I was a mess. I was confused. I didn’t know what the hell was going on," he explains.

After a tough 2-year battle with the illness, he came out on the other side only to have a taxi he was in hydroplane and crash into a highway median in 2012, breaking every bone in his face in the process.

The accident led to memory loss, which Summers feared would affect his career should he host another show.

"It was really frightening," he says of the nine-month recovery, which ultimately forced him to embrace the fact that "there’s no time like the present."

The revelation has led him to create an autobiographical one-man play, which is chronicled in the new documentary On Your Marc. And now, after three years of cognitive therapy, Summers says his OCD is "80 percent cured."

"It’s like retraining your mind not to have the intrusive thoughts and not to do the repetitive actions," he explains.

And luckily, there's no slime to deal with anymore.

Kudos to Summers for sharing his incredible journey:

Please SHARE this with your friends and family.

H/T: People, Twitter

More from News

'Doomsday' fish in Cabo San Lucas
@accuweather/X

Two 'Doomsday Fish' Just Washed Up On A Beach In Mexico—And Everyone's Saying The Same Thing

Okay, this is probably fine! Nobody panic! IT'S PROBABLY FINE. *sobs*

Two so-called "doomsday" fish, the mysterious deep-sea oarfish, beached themselves at the same time in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, last month in what has come to be regarded as a warning and bad omen for millennia.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of Trump voter Richard Stanley
MSNow

Broke Trump Voter Dragged After Admitting He Misses 'Uncle Joe' Biden As Gas Prices Surge

After MAGA Republican President Donald Trump decided to join Israel in attacking the sovereign nation of Iran, gas prices in the United States have jumped, with some parts of the country seeing prices over $4 or even $5 at the pumps.

MS NOW spoke to a man filling up his diesel pickup truck at a gas station in Lantana, Florida. Construction worker Richard Stanley identified himself as a Trump voter, then expressed regret over his choice.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Shawn McCreesh

Reporter Goes Viral For Bluntly Calling Trump Out To His Face For Suggesting Iran Bombed Girls School

New York Times reporter Shawn McCreesh has gone viral after bluntly calling out President Donald Trump for suggesting that Iran somehow got a hold of Tomahawk missiles to bomb a girls' school in its own country on the first day of the war.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was criticized last week after she rejected reports that the U.S. struck a girls' elementary school in Iran, killing 175 people, insisting in remarks to the press pool that it's just Iranian "propaganda" that they've "fallen" for.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alysa Liu
Marc Piasecki/WireImage/Getty Images

Alysa Liu Reveals That We've All Been Pronouncing Her Name Wrong—And Fans Are Stunned

It's always jarring when you see someone in the spotlight for years, only to realize that the way you've pronounced their name has been wrong. Take Taylor Lautner, for example!

Now the same is true for Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu, whose name has been interpreted with a variety of pronunciations since she started skating professionally, with the most common being "ah-leash-ah" followed by "lou."

Keep ReadingShow less
Melania Trump
Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images

Melania Dragged After Bragging About Her 'Record-Breaking' Documentary Being Available On Streaming

Melania Trump's self-titled documentary is now available on the streaming platform that spent $75 million to make it, Amazon Prime.

Excited to get the word out, the FLOTUS posted an announcement on Elon Musk's social media platform X.

Keep ReadingShow less