CELEBRITY PROFILES DECEMBER 2020/JANUARY 2021 BY RICHARD LALIBERTE Journalists Bill and Willie Geist Spread the Word About Parkinson’s Azer he went public with his diagnosis of Parkinson's disease, TV journalist Bill Geist enlisted his son, Willie, to help increase awareness about the progressive movement disorder. Bill Geist and Willie Geist have a strong bond: They are both journalists and writers. Photograph by Deborah Feingold In most households, a diagnosis of a progressive neurologic condition would be considered big family news. But when Bill Geist, a former CBS Sunday Morning correspondent and best-selling author, was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1992, he and his wife, Jody Lewis Geist, kept it a secret from their children, Willie and Libby, for more than 10 years. "My parents shielded us from worrying about Dad," says Willie, the anchor of NBC's Sunday Today with Willie Geist and a co-host of MSNBC's Morning Joe. "He was of the mind that you shouldn't concern people with your problems." Bill's stance hasn't changed much in the nearly three decades since his Parkinson's diagnosis. "I don't like talking about it that much," he says. "I like people to know I've had it for years and carried on and still haven't given in to it. But at some point, you have to conclude that denial doesn't work anymore." The two journalists half-jokingly admit that the hallmark of their relationship is not talking about important stuff. They explain that signature trait in Good Talk, Dad: The Birds, the Bees...and Other Conversations We Forgot to Have, a book they co-authored in 2014. "My dad grew up in the middle of the stoic Midwest in a time and place where you didn't sit down and talk about your feelings a whole lot," Willie writes in the introduction. "I'm guessing 1950s Champaign, Illinois, wasn't a lucrative place to be a shrink." When Bill first noticed that something seemed wrong, he was five years into his career at CBS News. He'd previously been a reporter and columnist at the Chicago Tribune and The New York Times, where he wrote a popular column called "About New York" from 1980 to 1987. At CBS, Bill became known for wry reports that portrayed colorful characters, quirky places, and offbeat situations in unsung corners of America. One segment profiled a 93-year-old California "paperboy" who tossed newspapers to remote customers from an aging single-engine prop plane. Another covered an Iowa town that celebrates the summer solstice when the sun sets "smack dab" in the center of a pair of railroad tracks running past grain bins. Numerous stories depicted wacky competitions such as cow-chip hurling. "Oddly enough, throwing poop has put me on TV," says a woman in the segment. "That's weird." Bill won three Emmy Awards at CBS and remained with the network until his retirement in 2018. He wrote more than half a dozen books during his time at CBS, and it was at a book-signing event that he experienced one of his first symptoms. "My handwriting got smaller and tighter," he says. "I had to apologize because I was ruining the autographs. I couldn't admit anything, so I said I broke my wrist skiing. I added 'in Switzerland' to make it sound better." Over the next year other problems developed, most noticeably a tremor in his hands. He finally saw a neurologist in Ridgewood, NJ, where he and Jody were raising their children at the time. At one point in the exam, Bill locked eyes with the neurologist as he held up his hands. "I could see them shaking," Bill says. "We nodded at each other because we both recognized this was bad, and a tear came to my eyes." Forward Functioning Movement symptoms of Parkinson's disease such as tremor and small handwriting occur when neurons responsible for producing the chemical messenger dopamine have been damaged or lost in an area of the brain called the substantia nigra. The brain needs dopamine for smooth and purposeful movement, among other functions. A loss of dopamine can cause a range of symptoms, including slowed movement, muscle stiffness, and difficulty with walking and balance. Most people develop the disease around age 60, so a diagnosis before age 50 is considered early onset. "It's degenerative, so I assumed it gets worse and worse, but I didn't know when or how much," says Bill, who was diagnosed at age 47. "I still don't know what will happen day to day." "People often think of Parkinson's as an old person's disease, but younger people can have it," says Alfonso Fasano, MD, PhD, professor of neurology at the University of Toronto. While one person's experience of the disease can differ greatly from another's, all share one reality: "We don't have a cure," Dr. Fasano says. "We do, however, have good symptomatic therapies, and the majority of people with Parkinson's live a normal life for many years." Bill is part of that majority, and he credits his attitude with helping him manage his diagnosis. "I didn't want to think about Parkinson's, didn't want to let it into my life, into my house, didn't want it to be the first thing people thought of when they saw me," he writes in Good Talk, Dad. He was also aware that the disease can flatten emotions and cause depression, and he worked hard to fight that. "My whole life I was a person who would come into a room and liven things up and be fun to have around," Bill says. "I couldn't deal with losing that." Bill didn't just keep his disease from his kids. He hid it at work, too, partly out of concern that CBS might bench him. Although much progress has been made in lifting the stigma around the disease, especially since actor Michael J. Fox announced his diagnosis in 1998, the atmosphere was different 30 years ago. "There was not as much protection for people," says Janis Miyasaki, MD, FAAN, director of the Parkinson and Movement Disorders Program at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. "Bill may have been justifiably concerned about an employer's ability and willingness to support him." Bill Geist has always been close to his son, Willie, but for years he kept his diagnosis a secret. Photo courtesy CBS Though he struggled with symptoms, Bill forged ahead. "The fact that he was able to function at work and keep a busy schedule traveling around the country speaks to his strength and resilience and the fact that people can live well with Parkinson's," says Dr. Miyasaki. "It's helpful to focus on what you can do, not on what you can't do or have difficulty doing. Some people have a harder time with Parkinson's than others through no fault of their own." Bill's relatively stable disease course, in which his symptoms progressed slowly, is a pattern more often seen in early-onset cases. "For some people, disguising Parkinson's is impossible," says Alberto Espay, MD, FAAN, director of the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders at the University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center. "Being able to avoid declaring his disease to others for more than a decade suggests he has a type of Parkinson's that is sometimes referred to as 'benign Parkinson's,' though there's nothing benign about it from a practical perspective." At home, Bill seemed well enough that Willie—in high school when his father was diagnosed—didn't take much notice. But he and his sister weren't oblivious. "Senior year I remember things that made me think Dad was getting old," Willie says. One was Bill reaching up to open the car's sunroof. "I can't say why that image is seared into my memory," Willie says. "He was just slow and not moving the energetic way I remembered." Bill's slowness, naps, and occasional self-isolation gradually raised questions. "My mom would say, 'He's got a neurologic thing and takes medication for it, and the doctors say they can manage it,'" Willie says. "In hindsight, that shouldn't have been good enough for us, but they said it was under control—and it did seem to be. Dad never complained and never wanted to talk about it. We followed his lead." Eventually, Bill felt a need to come clean about what was happening during those times when the family got together. "I was really tired and taking naps when they were going places," Bill recalls. "Then my wife said something offhand. She said, 'You wouldn't want to give them the idea that you don't like them,' which couldn't be further from the truth." Bill gave the go-ahead for Jody to tell the children he had Parkinson's disease. The news was so unsurprising that Willie can't remember the moment he found out. "It was like, 'Oh...Oh!'" Willie says. "We had figured it out, but being told made it seem more serious." CBS viewers eventually started wondering what was up as well. "People noticed I was moving my head and jerking a bit," Bill says. "We were getting letters at work asking, 'What's wrong with Bill?'" Finally, in 2012, two decades after his diagnosis, he announced on CBS Sunday Morning that he had Parkinson's disease. The whole family (Christina and Willie Geist, Jody and Bill Geist, Libby Geist and Kevin Wildes) celebrated Bill's Emmy win in 2016.
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