Jamie-Lynn Sigler and Christina Applegate.Photo:Astrid Stawiarz/Getty; Phillip Faraone/GettySoon afterChristina Applegatereceived the “devastating"diagnosisthat she had multiple sclerosis in June 2021, her friendLance Bassreached out.“You need to talk to Jamie,” he told her.Jamie-Lynn Siglerhad been living with the disease for two decades, so when Applegate got in touch,The Sopranosactress, who lives in Austin, was ready to help. “I wanted to give her tools and things that I’ve learned that have helped me,” says Sigler, 42.And, says Applegate, “we haven’t stopped talking since.“Their relationship has since grown into a powerful friendship that’s been a lifeline for both actresses as they face their futures with the disease. “MS brought us together,” Sigler tells PEOPLE magazine in an exclusive sit-down interview with the two actresses for next week’s issue.“We have each other and that’s helped us so much,” says Applegate, 52, who learned she had the disease when she was in the midst of filming the last season of her Netflix seriesDead to Me.Now, their friendship has inspired a new podcast,MeSsy, debuting March 19. “We would talk on the phone for two hours, and we’d be laughing and crying and we were like, “This is helping us. Let’s record this. Let’s do it,” Applegate says.Christina Applegate and Jamie-Lynn Sigler’s MeSsy podcast debuts March 19.Wishbone ProductionAdds Sigler, who kept her own diagnosis hidden for 15 years beforerevealing it in a PEOPLE storyin 2016, “the way that Christina disarms me and allows me to talk about the hard stuff, I needed desperately.“Although the podcast (which will also feature conversations with famous friends, and former co-stars likeMartin ShortandEdie Falco) provides an unflinching —and darkly humorous — look at the challenges of MS (case in point: an upcoming episode riffs on adult diapers), it is not a podcastaboutMS, they say.“It’s not about the specific experience we’re having,” Sigler says. “It’s us facing something hard and it’s about figuring out how to still push through. I’ve never been more … nervous isn’t the word, but like a good anxious about any project I’ve ever put out more than this, because I care so deeply about it. We are sharing the deepest parts of ourselves.”
Jamie-Lynn Sigler and Christina Applegate.Photo:Astrid Stawiarz/Getty; Phillip Faraone/Getty

Astrid Stawiarz/Getty; Phillip Faraone/Getty
Soon afterChristina Applegatereceived the “devastating"diagnosisthat she had multiple sclerosis in June 2021, her friendLance Bassreached out.“You need to talk to Jamie,” he told her.Jamie-Lynn Siglerhad been living with the disease for two decades, so when Applegate got in touch,The Sopranosactress, who lives in Austin, was ready to help. “I wanted to give her tools and things that I’ve learned that have helped me,” says Sigler, 42.And, says Applegate, “we haven’t stopped talking since.“Their relationship has since grown into a powerful friendship that’s been a lifeline for both actresses as they face their futures with the disease. “MS brought us together,” Sigler tells PEOPLE magazine in an exclusive sit-down interview with the two actresses for next week’s issue.“We have each other and that’s helped us so much,” says Applegate, 52, who learned she had the disease when she was in the midst of filming the last season of her Netflix seriesDead to Me.Now, their friendship has inspired a new podcast,MeSsy, debuting March 19. “We would talk on the phone for two hours, and we’d be laughing and crying and we were like, “This is helping us. Let’s record this. Let’s do it,” Applegate says.Christina Applegate and Jamie-Lynn Sigler’s MeSsy podcast debuts March 19.Wishbone ProductionAdds Sigler, who kept her own diagnosis hidden for 15 years beforerevealing it in a PEOPLE storyin 2016, “the way that Christina disarms me and allows me to talk about the hard stuff, I needed desperately.“Although the podcast (which will also feature conversations with famous friends, and former co-stars likeMartin ShortandEdie Falco) provides an unflinching —and darkly humorous — look at the challenges of MS (case in point: an upcoming episode riffs on adult diapers), it is not a podcastaboutMS, they say.“It’s not about the specific experience we’re having,” Sigler says. “It’s us facing something hard and it’s about figuring out how to still push through. I’ve never been more … nervous isn’t the word, but like a good anxious about any project I’ve ever put out more than this, because I care so deeply about it. We are sharing the deepest parts of ourselves.”
Soon afterChristina Applegatereceived the “devastating"diagnosisthat she had multiple sclerosis in June 2021, her friendLance Bassreached out.“You need to talk to Jamie,” he told her.
Jamie-Lynn Siglerhad been living with the disease for two decades, so when Applegate got in touch,The Sopranosactress, who lives in Austin, was ready to help. “I wanted to give her tools and things that I’ve learned that have helped me,” says Sigler, 42.
And, says Applegate, “we haven’t stopped talking since.”
Their relationship has since grown into a powerful friendship that’s been a lifeline for both actresses as they face their futures with the disease. “MS brought us together,” Sigler tells PEOPLE magazine in an exclusive sit-down interview with the two actresses for next week’s issue.
“We have each other and that’s helped us so much,” says Applegate, 52, who learned she had the disease when she was in the midst of filming the last season of her Netflix seriesDead to Me.
Now, their friendship has inspired a new podcast,MeSsy, debuting March 19. “We would talk on the phone for two hours, and we’d be laughing and crying and we were like, “This is helping us. Let’s record this. Let’s do it,” Applegate says.
Christina Applegate and Jamie-Lynn Sigler’s MeSsy podcast debuts March 19.Wishbone Production

Wishbone Production
Adds Sigler, who kept her own diagnosis hidden for 15 years beforerevealing it in a PEOPLE storyin 2016, “the way that Christina disarms me and allows me to talk about the hard stuff, I needed desperately.”
Although the podcast (which will also feature conversations with famous friends, and former co-stars likeMartin ShortandEdie Falco) provides an unflinching —and darkly humorous — look at the challenges of MS (case in point: an upcoming episode riffs on adult diapers), it is not a podcastaboutMS, they say.
“It’s not about the specific experience we’re having,” Sigler says. “It’s us facing something hard and it’s about figuring out how to still push through. I’ve never been more … nervous isn’t the word, but like a good anxious about any project I’ve ever put out more than this, because I care so deeply about it. We are sharing the deepest parts of ourselves.”
source: people.com