I got curious about that Paula Yates figure, and wikipedia told me she died in 2000 (age 41). A heroine overdose - after she was clean for 2 years, she took as much as an addict would (I just learned that there is a tolerance build up also to the toxicity). She was found in the presence of her 3 year old. Pretty sad eventhough she is a horrible guest here.
Did the same. Also, her boyfried - Hutchence from INXS - died from suicide while beeing under influence of cocaine, alcohol and prozac(yes, one of the side-effects of SSRI antidepressants is suicide) and after a phone conversation with Geldof who took their daughter. Also her daughter from Geldof also overdosed and her last post was photo "Me and mom". Fatalistic family, if you ask me
@@yanikkunitsin1466 In regards to Serotonin reuptake inhibitors, Suicide is not a side-effect, not like you take the pills and then die. The side-effect is that for the first weeks you can experience increased effects of your mental disease. This is because in order to make the body stop sending so much serotonin between neurotransmitters it "opens" up the synapses resulting in the opposite of what is the goal, because of this the body will start sending less, but it takes time to adjust and stabilize. This can take months. So starting taking prozac because of anxiety or depression can be a good thing long term, but short term with alcohol and drugs that increase both depression and anxiety it's like going into a warzone while removing your protective gear. Which is why you so often hear about that combination when it comes to celebrity suicides.
@@vesoha that's gibberish, especially about (still poorly understood) mechanism of SSRI's (nothing "opens up", there is just progressive increase in receptor sites) Suicides are explained that after beginning of therapy people finally find power to realize their suicidal ideation. And as this happens in certain percent of cases it's classed as "side-effect" in pharmacology.
@@yanikkunitsin1466 SSRI is an umbrella definition for alot of different psychopharma, so results differ and so does side-effects. And there are so many subjective factors aswell. So take this as an example of one inlay. "If you have suicidal thoughts. These can increase, when you start taking antidepressive medication, this is because the medication takes a while to work, approximately 14 days, but sometimes longer" Now this is directly in relation to the drug not therapy. Secondly the ideation comes long before the therapy, and comes in the period between diagnose and start of medication. Especially for patients where anxiety is the stronger factor. Granted that a person can get so frustrated with the normal side-effects in the start phase that they in their already fractured state of thought they take a turn for the worse because clearly the medication is not working for them. For others the belief in the medication can give a placebo effect that actually sets them on the right mental path. Anyway the only reason i commented was that you claimed suicide was a side-effect of the medication and that is just false, or atleast wrongly formulated. And sadly it is that kind of misinformation that make patients give up on the medication in the first phase or even before start because of anxiety making them more scared of the cure than the disease. Factors like access to medication without supervision, dosage, lack of information on usage, psychological condition all plays a part in how you react. But what the actual chemical process in the brain is, is very much a fact in modern SSRI pharmacology.
There's some great rounds from the past.
Disappointed that Craig Charles' missing words round and caption competition wasn't included here, he excelled here
Thanks so much for posting.
Love that "unbroadcastable" up in the corner. No it isn't!
It was VHS-only release and it was somewhat unbradcastable (can be found on YT)
I got curious about that Paula Yates figure, and wikipedia told me she died in 2000 (age 41). A heroine overdose - after she was clean for 2 years, she took as much as an addict would (I just learned that there is a tolerance build up also to the toxicity). She was found in the presence of her 3 year old. Pretty sad eventhough she is a horrible guest here.
Her Daughter Peaches also died of an overdose in 2014, tragic really
Did the same. Also, her boyfried - Hutchence from INXS - died from suicide while beeing under influence of cocaine, alcohol and prozac(yes, one of the side-effects of SSRI antidepressants is suicide) and after a phone conversation with Geldof who took their daughter. Also her daughter from Geldof also overdosed and her last post was photo "Me and mom". Fatalistic family, if you ask me
@@yanikkunitsin1466 In regards to Serotonin reuptake inhibitors, Suicide is not a side-effect, not like you take the pills and then die. The side-effect is that for the first weeks you can experience increased effects of your mental disease. This is because in order to make the body stop sending so much serotonin between neurotransmitters it "opens" up the synapses resulting in the opposite of what is the goal, because of this the body will start sending less, but it takes time to adjust and stabilize. This can take months. So starting taking prozac because of anxiety or depression can be a good thing long term, but short term with alcohol and drugs that increase both depression and anxiety it's like going into a warzone while removing your protective gear. Which is why you so often hear about that combination when it comes to celebrity suicides.
@@vesoha that's gibberish, especially about (still poorly understood) mechanism of SSRI's (nothing "opens up", there is just progressive increase in receptor sites)
Suicides are explained that after beginning of therapy people finally find power to realize their suicidal ideation. And as this happens in certain percent of cases it's classed as "side-effect" in pharmacology.
@@yanikkunitsin1466 SSRI is an umbrella definition for alot of different psychopharma, so results differ and so does side-effects. And there are so many subjective factors aswell. So take this as an example of one inlay. "If you have suicidal thoughts. These can increase, when you start taking antidepressive medication, this is because the medication takes a while to work, approximately 14 days, but sometimes longer" Now this is directly in relation to the drug not therapy. Secondly the ideation comes long before the therapy, and comes in the period between diagnose and start of medication. Especially for patients where anxiety is the stronger factor. Granted that a person can get so frustrated with the normal side-effects in the start phase that they in their already fractured state of thought they take a turn for the worse because clearly the medication is not working for them. For others the belief in the medication can give a placebo effect that actually sets them on the right mental path. Anyway the only reason i commented was that you claimed suicide was a side-effect of the medication and that is just false, or atleast wrongly formulated. And sadly it is that kind of misinformation that make patients give up on the medication in the first phase or even before start because of anxiety making them more scared of the cure than the disease. Factors like access to medication without supervision, dosage, lack of information on usage, psychological condition all plays a part in how you react. But what the actual chemical process in the brain is, is very much a fact in modern SSRI pharmacology.
it is better without angus
Nope
what did the cockatoo say?
"I always get exhausted after the 2nd time"
@@powerdavid6235 Ah, well ... not that much of a cockatoo then is he...
Paula Yates was poorly treated
Done
I'd love to see more of Eddie Izzard on the show
Wouldn t we all.
But so sad the needling of Paula Y, and now she s dead, prematurely RIP Paula.
These are the days long gone when Hislop used to be a snidey little shit.
Yes he seems to have mellowed.
Beat of CoVid 19 dabce
Jesus, what is Ian’s problem with Paula? He can’t think boob job reports are in the public interest.