Y&R’s Lily Brooks O’Briant Undergoes Second Major Surgery for Endometriosis
The Young and the Restless alum Lily Brooks O’Briant is opening up about her second surgery for endometriosis.
Key Takeaways
- Lily Brooks O’Briant was diagnosed with endometriosis in 2023 at age 16.
- O’Briant’s first surgery was in 2023.
- The actress has since become an advocate for endometriosis awareness.
- O’Briant opened up about undergoing her second endometriosis surgery this year.
O’Briant Tells All
O’Briant, who hasn’t appeared on Y&R as Lucy since 2024, has always been open about her battle with endometriosis. The actress revealed her diagnosis in 2023, produced a documentary about the illness called
After already undergoing a surgery in 2023, O’Briant recently went through a second major surgery, and revealed all in a vulnerable
“Endometriosis is a disease that affects 1 in 10 women. I am 1 in 10. This past week I had my second endometriosis surgery. My first was two years ago at age 17 where @seckinmd removed 21 lesions. I am incredibly grateful to have been treated by 3 of the very best Endometriois excision surgeons in the world (seriously ask Google) @camrannezhatmd @seckinmd and @drchu_endodoc. The trip to nyc was pretty tough on me last surgery so I had my surgery in CA with Dr. Nezhat who removed 24 lesions from my ovaries, fallopian tubes, intestines, nerves in my back, bladder & more. I was doing everything I could to manage my endo symptom – anti-inflammatory diet, supplements, acupuncture, lymphatic drainage massages, managing stress & more but needed this second surgery. I am so grateful to be healing now #endowarrior #endometriosis @endofound
Andrew Lincoln says The Walking Dead marked the end of a TV era (and he's not wrong)
Andrew Lincoln returned to TV in Coldwater, a new series that premiered on ITV on Sept. 14, for the first time since The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live
In the interview with The Times, Lincoln also shared some thoughts on
Here's what Lincoln told The Times:
“It was quite interesting being in a [network] TV show like The Walking Dead, which felt like it might have been the last show that was able to generate the numbers that it did. It rode out 12, 13 years of the streamers. I think it’s much, much harder to be noticed now. It’s an oversaturated market. I was a bit reluctant to do this job: I thought, are we going to be able to make the show that I want to make or that I think David deserves to make? And the answer was yes. I couldn’t have wished for a better return to the UK.”
Why Andrew Lincoln is right about The Walking Dead being the last of its kind
The Walking Dead premiered on AMC in 2010. Netflix was around at that point, but streaming had yet to catch on. I remember watching the first few seasons online and not on Netflix, if that makes sense in a less than legal way, because I didn't have access to AMC. I'm also old enough to remember a time when, if you missed an episode of a show or caught on later in the run, you had to wait for DVDs, re-runs, or do your best to find a less than savory stream. I know I'm not alone in watching those early season of
But, to Lincoln's point, there were a lot of fans tuning in on AMC every Sunday night for new episodes of wild zombie show. During the height of it's run through the 2013-2015, as streaming really began to catch on,
Those are insane numbers for a cable drama. Unfortunately, we don't have good enough metrics with the rise of the streamers to know just how many people are tuning in for TV shows like we used to be able to do, but those numbers are massive.
Ratings fell every season after season 5, but that followed a larger trend of fans cutting the cord, watching delayed, and via streamers like Netflix months or even years after seasons premiered. There were obviously story changes that caused some fans to stop watching, too, of course, but there should be nothing but praise for AMC and
The series ran for 11 seasons on AMC through the fall of 2022. I don't think we're ever going to see a scripted cable drama of this quality and technical precision ever again, not in the streaming era at least.
While we see broadcast shows like Grey's Anatomy carrying the torch for an earlier age of TV, the current cable shows and streaming shows are often much shorter. Game of Thrones,
In terms of scope, TV shows like The Walking Dead just simply don't exist right now. They were making 16-episode seasons every year. The latter seasons had 20-plus episodes in each season. Now, the big streaming shows take at least 18 months between seasons. Some take two or three years between seasons. Not
Even in the interview, Lincoln shared the reason he decided to ultimately leave the original series before returning in The Ones Who Live.
"“As I see it I just had a protracted time away. It started at only four and a half months [per year] and then, as the show grew, it turned into eight months. And then I’d have to do press on top of that, so I only spent two and a half months back in the UK."
Why we'll never see a show like The Walking Dead again
I believe Lincoln was also making a point about TV, in general, in his comments. He talked about how difficult it is to create a fanbase now. He even called the TV market "oversaturated." And, he's right! Covering TV shows for a decade, I've seen a huge shift in viewing patterns. Some shows achieve huge heights like
Unless viewing patterns and viewers move back to watching more shows when they air and a shift away from streaming happens, I don't see a show like
That's how we get a show like Stranger Things taking a decade, basically, to produce five seasons. A pandemic and work stoppage contributed to that, as well, but the norm for these shows is to take 18 months between seasons. It's hard to have a show run for 11 seasons when you take that long between seasons. It would take nearly two decades for that show to air on the streamers.
Most streaming shows are capping out at four to five seasons. Stranger Things is about end later this year after five seasons. The Witcher will end after season 5. The Boys
So, I do believe that Lincoln was correct in his assessment of The Walking Dead's place in the greater TV landscape. While there have been many Walking Dead spinoffs, even those shows just don't have the reach that The Walking Dead did. And, they haven't lasted nearly as long. Fear the Walking Dead did run for eight sesaons, but it was never on that same level as The Walking Dead. The Ones Who Live is a one-season series. Dead City is still going strong, as is Daryl Dixon, which is the middle of its third season currently. But, even that show is going to end after season 4.