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Here's an article. Of course people who are performers do radio shows because it is their job. They don't call in to radio shows they aren't required to for work and say they feel like committing suicide. My meaning was misconstrued.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-robin-williams-last-days-20140813-story.html
If you were to run into me in a social situation you would have thought either 'this guy is hilarious' or 'this guy is an obnoxious douche' but you would not have thought 'huh, what a depressed little wallflower.' But this past year was my first time dealing with depression in a decade. And like always I only realize as I'm coming out of it that I was depressed. I'm addressing it with diet and exercise. This isn't a plea for help or attention.
But that is why I don't think sweeping statements about what a depressed person would or would not do is ever going to be accurate. Just because Doyel is depressed doesn't mean he doesn't feel like he should or even has to do things like call into talk shows as part of his job. I didn't miss any work other than for regular sickness and my job involved (I've moved on) dealing with high-anxiety clients in multiple phone calls every day.
My guess is that people like Doyel feel a considerable amount of pressure to stay in the limelight, to make radio and TV appearances whenever they can because keeping their face and name in the public eye is key to their ongoing employment.












