CARSON DALE snarkily snapped at Savannah Guthrie when she joked about how he had won People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive.
Today’s cohost, said: “How dare you!”Savannah interrupted Savannah’s segment on Tuesday’s broadcast about the prize.
Carson, 49, opened the segment by saying, “It’s that season of year again.”
“The publication has officially crowned 2022’s Sexiest Man Alive and the winner is-“
Savannah, 50. “Congratulations Carson!”
Carson looked at the camera with a serious expression and continued to work: “Chris Evans.”
He made an aside for Savannah. “How dare you.”
Carson was funny during the broadcast but the presenter didn’t shy away from talking about more serious subjects.
This week, the TV personality discussed his mental health problems in the past.
Carson shared a photo from earlier this year while discussing Mind Matters.
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He explained: “What you don’t see is that in this moment, I was having an insane panic attack. I was really struggling and nothing is what it seems right?”
He stated, “People reach me all the time to say, I’ve been having panic attacks for fifteen years’ or thank you for discussing it’.
“And that’s the whole point of it, I wear it as a badge o honor.
“I’ve always had anxiety, I’ve dealt with the panic attacks, I’ve gone to tons of therapy and this is how God made me, I’m wired this way.”
Earlier this year, Carson admitted to having secret “panics” on-air while hosting The Voice.
CARSON’S CONFESSION
He said USA TODAY: “On The Voice, when I’m live on Monday nights, most of the time, my right hand is in my right pocket.
“I’m literally gripping onto the flesh of my thigh because I’m waiting for a high-panic moment to pass.”
Californian native, he revealed that he has generalized anxious disorder in 2018. This is a condition that causes excessive anxiety and fear.
“You may think my life’s perfect. I’ve got kids. I always look happy on TV or when you watch me on The Voice. But that’s just not how it works,”He went on.
The TV personality said that he was “in a much better place”After his diagnosis, he went public.
“Once you realize that other people have GAD, that it’s an actual diagnosable thing, and there is a whole psychology and physiology behind it, you have context,” he explained.
“I think learning about all that, talking about it, exploring it has just ripped the veil.”
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