In a harrowing new interview, Drew Carey reveals he suffered a massive heart attack during the peak of his sitcom fame, showing up to work and eating chili spaghetti while ignoring life-threatening symptoms—a near-death experience that only ended when chest pain struck a second time, right in the writer’s room of The Drew Carey Show.
Drew Carey’s career-defining ABC sitcom, The Drew Carey Show, was riding high. As star and co-creator, the comedian was in the middle of a cultural moment, filming a new season. But in the late 1990s, a silent killer was on set—and Carey himself was its unknowing host. The story, now told in full for the first time on Ted Danson’s podcast, reveals a terrifying lapse between body and mind that nearly ended everything.
Carey’s health crisis began not with a collapse, but with a jog. Overweight and preparing for production, he decided to get fit. Using a heart monitor, he stepped out—only to see his heart rate spike into a dangerous zone, accompanied by shoulder numbness, a classic heart attack symptom. Yet his mental model of a heart attack, fed by cartoon logic, expected a dramatic collapse. When that didn’t happen, he dismissed the warning signs and kept running.
The first omen, as Carey now reflects, was a deer crossing his path. In hindsight, he calls it a sign. But the comedian’s dedication to his work—and perhaps a stubborn denial—overrode survival instinct. Instead of rushing to a hospital, he went to dinner with his then-girlfriend and ordered chili spaghetti, a notoriously heavy meal that would be the last normal meal he’d eat for a while.
The Second Warning: A Crisis in the Writer’s Room
The following day, Carey returned to set. Production on the new season was starting. The show, after all, waited for no one—least of all its leading man who thought he’d just overexerted himself. Rehearsals proceeded. Then, in the writer’s room, it happened again: a tightness in his chest. This time, the signal was undeniable. Excusing himself, he trudged up the stairs to his trailer, each step a struggle, and made a call that saved his life.
“I went to step up the stairs to my trailer, and I really went like, ‘Oh boy, that was rough,’” Carey recounted to Danson. “And I got on the phone to the producer, and I said, ‘Hey, you have to call the ambulance, I think I’m having a heart attack.’”
Credit: ABC / Courtesy Everett
The Hospital, The Stent, and A Presidential Punchline
Once at the hospital, doctors confirmed the heart attack and inserted a stent to keep an artery open—a procedure former Vice President Dick Cheney is famously known for. Carey, ever the comic, turned the medical reality into a legendary joke. “My joke used to be: [I had the] same thing Dick Cheney had, except they left my heart in,” he said. The punchline landed so well with Cheney himself that “He was pounding the table he was laughing so hard—thank God!”
The story takes an emotional turn in those final moments before the ambulance. Fearing the worst, Carey asked for his friend, the late Sam Simon, a director and producer on The Drew Carey Show who also shared a deep history with Ted Danson from their Cheers days. “I just wanted to make sure I touched him before I went off,” Carey said, “because I didn’t know what was going to happen.” It was a raw, human moment amidst the comedy—a testament to the bonds forged in television trenches.
Why This Story Matters Beyond the Laugh Track
This isn’t just a celebrity health scare; it’s a cultural case study in the myth of invincibility. Carey’s experience dismantles the Hollywood trope of the tireless workhorse. His initial dismissal of symptoms because they didn’t match a cinematic collapse is a dangerously common cognitive bias. The fact that he ate a heavy meal and worked a full day highlights how the body’s alarm systems can be overridden by duty, habit, and misinformed expectation.
Furthermore, the story is a time capsule of 1990s television. The Drew Carey Show was a giant, and its production schedule was relentless. Carey, as its engine, felt pressure to perform. His near-death in the show’s very writer’s room is a stark metaphor for the creative burnout that often lurks behind the scenes of our favorite sitcoms. The tangential connection to Cheers through Sam Simon and Ted Danson threads together two eras of network television comedy, underscoring the tight-knit, familial nature of that industry.
Finally, Carey’s self-deprecating humor in recounting the trauma provides a masterclass in resilience. He transformed a private medical horror into a public story with a joke about a political figure, reclaiming agency through laughter. It’s a coping mechanism that resonates deeply with fans who’ve seen their favorite stars face health battles.
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