Kelly Noonan Gores Focuses on the Mind-Body Connection in “Heal” Documentary
Kelly Noonan Gores takes viewers inside the connection between our bodies and minds with her new critically-acclaimed documentary “Heal.” She sits down with Alyssa Julya Smith at Cheddar’s WeWork studio in Los Angeles to discuss the spiritual journey people take to become healthy, and to rid the body of stressors that can cause illness.
Through interviews with such luminaries as Deepak Chopra, Bruce Lipton, and Anita Moorjani, the film highlights the relationship between spirituality and science, and how we have more control over our health than we have been taught to believe. Noonan Gores explains that more than 133 million people are living with chronic illnesses due to stress.
She says she learned from making this documentary that everything that happens in our bodies is connected to - and often begins with - our minds. “Heal” is currently trending as the # 1 top-selling documentary on iTunes.
Kendall Tichner, founder and CEO of Wild Captives Archery Range in Brooklyn, NY, joined Cheddar News to discuss how she got started after going viral with her skills during the pandemic and how it led her to open her archery range where she wants to cater to more women and LGBTQ+ communities.
Emmy-winning actor Andre Braugher, best known in TV shows like 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' and 'Homicide: Life on the Street,' died on Monday at the age of 61.
The Emmy-winning actor died at age 61 after a brief illness. Braugher was best known for starring as Det. Frank Pembleton in the critically acclaimed 1990s series "Homicide: Life on the Street" and as the deceptively stone-faced Capt. Ray Holt on the comedy "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" in 2013-2021.
A study out of South Korea looked at over 23,000 people and found those who spend more than an hour commuting to work are 16% more likely to experience depression.