Jay and Gary Pancreatic CancerCast

Pearce Brothers Podcasting

Jay Pearce was diagnosed with Stage Four Pancreatic Cancer in June 2024. In this series, Jay and his brother Gary, both retired broadcast and media professionals, follow Jay’s week-to-week progression through therapy as he and his family combat this extremely serious condition.

Episodes

  1. 09/25/2024

    Over and Out

    Gary, here. Episode 6, Final Hours, recorded on August 20, was correct. Jay died at 4:20 am the next day, Wednesday, August 21, 2024. I was honored to be by his side, along with his wife Melisse, his son Dale and daughters Sara and Mannon, Sara’s partner Coty Phousongphouang, and honorary family member John Henke. Little changed from my description in Episode 6. Jay’s pulse rate slowed a little overnight. Consulting with his doctor, we asked to have the oxygen feed removed. That dropped his blood-oxygen level from the 90s to the 80s, where it remained through the night. Dale, Sara and Coty remained overnight to keep vigil. The rest of us tried to get some sleep at home or our hotels. Sara called and woke me around 2 am. Jay’s blood-oxygen was dropping quickly, even though his pulse was racing, trying to keep oxygen in his bloodstream. The nursing staff said it was it was time to call us in. As we stood by his bedside, everyone touching him someplace (I had my hand on his forehead), his breathing slowed, the blood-oxygen level dropped below 50, and then his pulse dropped from near 100 to, finally, zero, as he took his last breath. There was nothing dramatic. No gasp, no shudder. He just stopped. Likely brain activity had ceased well before this, but we weren’t monitoring it. The staff cautioned us about hanging onto the pulse and O2 levels too closely. We told them that many of us were techies, and we understand measurement. Those numbers did help us understand what was happening, and accurately predicted the end. It’s September 25 as I type this. More than a month has passed. Melisse organized a Celebration of Life at the WILL TV Studios in Urbana, and about 70 of Jay’s friends and collegues attended. Another will be held in October in Carbondale IL, where Jay’s career began, and a final tribute is in the works for the Rock Island area where Jay was CEO of WVIK before retiring. I think this brings the Jay and Gary Pancreatic CancerCast to a close. However, the Jay and Gary Show may well continue. I’m not quite sure how, or under what name, but I have new connections to family and friends, and some of us aren’t through podcasting yet. Stay tuned. And goodbye, my brother. I love you.

    27 min
  2. 08/10/2024

    With Friends Like These

    Unable to eat or hold anything down, losing weight fast, Jay ended up back in the hospital last week. Brother Gary returned to Champaign to be with Jay and family. When he got there, Jay perked up for a moment and grabbed his hand, but he wasn't able to speak - it hurt his throat, which had a tube running down from his nose. They were trying to feed him by pumping food directly to his stomach, but that wasn't working, either. It wasn't all bad news. Scans showed the chemo was working - the tumor on his pancreas and liver had shrunk. But now he was too weak for more chemo. The doctors wanted to install a somewhat more 'permanent' port (a 'G Tube") into his stomach, but his white-cell count was way too low for surgery, because of the risk of infection. The white-cell drop was an after-effect of the strong chemo. White cell boosters and a temporary feeding setup through his chemo port began helping. So did some music. Then three old, very close friends arrived, and Jay even laughed a bit. Jay introduces this episode. It's about all the energy he could muster for podcasting, and you'll probably be a little shocked at his condition. But he wanted to say hello. Then Gary rounded up the friends for a little trip down memory lane, something Jay (and you) can enjoy watching. Gary learned a lot about his brother, as their adult lives were pretty separate. The Friends Like These are Jay and Jock Hedblade (Jock is the one on Zoom on the phone screen), and Wade Ferrel. Wade's wife Mary was hanging out off camera, and she was also one of Jay's friends from way back. That's the story so far. The doc's expect his white cell count will shoot up, the G Port can go in next week, he''ll start getting some real food, and he can get strong enough for chemo to start again. And Gary's hoping that his podcast partner will be able to get back on the mic 🎙

    1 hr
  3. 06/30/2024

    Some Retirement

    Welcome to Episode 1 of the Jay and Gary Pancreatic CancerCast: “Some Retirement” Let’s get up to speed. Jay and Gary Pearce are brothers, retired media pro’s who began a fun podcast in early 2024 (because they could). Then Jay was diagnosed with Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer (also found in his liver and some lymph nodes). They put the ‘fun’ show on hold, and decided to document Jay’s journey though serious cancer therapy in this new show. (See the About section of the website for a few more details.) The afternoon of Jay’s first chemo infusion (Monday, June 17), Gary arrived in Champaign to visit for a few days, and hopefully record our first CancerCast episode. Jay had a rough night before the infusion appointment, but he felt good enough to go, and wasn’t feeling too bad that afternoon. That night was bad, too, but by Tuesday afternoon, Jay was up for recording. Gary set up the mics and cameras, and we shot our Stand Back and Stand By episode for the Jay and Gary Show, putting that podcast on hold. Then we recorded the beginning of this premiere episode of the CancerCast. But the effort was taking a toll on Jay, so we wrapped early. On Wednesday, we picked back up, with Gary recording on his phone to keep it simple. Then he drove Jay to the clinic, where they were scheduled to remove a portable pump that had been slowly continuing to infuse chemo since Monday. And since Jay hadn’t been able to eat or drink much, they gave him a liter of saline to rehydrate him. We were able to record a little more at the clinic, and that wraps this episode. Gary headed out, stopped to visit Jay’s son Dale, his wife Caty and their brand new daughter Charlotte about three hours south, then heded home where he spent the past week editing the episode, preparing graphics, creating a YouTube channel and getting the audio pod on Apple Podcasts. And updating this website. There’s a lot to launching a new pod😏 During that time, Jay was slowly improving, and as of this writing, he reports that he had ‘three fairly decent days in a row’. We’re looking forward to the next episode, recording soon.

    21 min

About

Jay Pearce was diagnosed with Stage Four Pancreatic Cancer in June 2024. In this series, Jay and his brother Gary, both retired broadcast and media professionals, follow Jay’s week-to-week progression through therapy as he and his family combat this extremely serious condition.