
Pregnant news anchor goes into labour live on air but refuses to leave set for hours
A pregnant news anchor went into labour whilst on air but decided to carry on with her broadcast.
US host Olivia Jaquith, who works for local CBS affiliate WRGB in New York, was just about to go on air for her Wednesday morning newscast when her waters broke.
Despite her coworkers encouraging her to go to hospital, Olivia decided to carry on with work.
Her co-anchor Julia Dunn broke the news to viewers, explaining: 'We do have some breaking news this morning, literally.
'Olivia's water has broke and she is anchoring the news now in active labor.'
'Early labor,' Olivia, who is expecting a baby boy with her husband, Tyn, was keen to clarify adding that she had experienced one contraction so far.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the
A pregnant news anchor went into labour whilst on air but decided to carry on with her broadcast
US host Olivia Jaquith, who works for local CBS affiliate WRGB in New York, was just about to go on air for her Wednesday morning newscast when her waters broke (pictured earlier in her pregnancy)
'It's been a few minutes since then, so we're still in good shape,' she insisted.
'Her decision to stay on the desk by the way,' Julia added. 'Well, I'm happy to be here and I'll stay on the desk for as long as I can,' Olivia said.
The team then uploaded a graphic onscreen where a red box read: 'Days past due date: 2.'
Julia was also giving updates off camera, sharing a video of Olivia on Facebook as she exclaimed: 'Guys, this isn't April Fools. Olivia's water broke in the newsroom.'
'I don't know what's going on, this is my first time. I'm new here,' Olivia laughed.
'Yesterday I was getting cramps when I was on the desk and I didn't really think anything of it...this morning I got up to go pee, but then stuff just kept coming out.'
'I think I could get through a three-hour show,' she added.
Olivia's mother told her news program: 'It's just exactly what I expected, honestly. That's her. That's how she operates.'
Her co-anchor Julia Dunn broke the news to viewers, explaining: ' We do have some breaking news this morning, literally. 'Olivia's water has broke and she is anchoring the news now'
News Director Stone Grissom added that the station 'couldn't be more thrilled' for their anchor.
'From her on-air pregnancy announcement earlier this year to running a half-marathon while expecting, Olivia has met every stage of this journey with grace and grit. Today was no exception,' Grissom told WRGB.
'Olivia's passion for storytelling, love for her hometown, and commitment to our viewers have always been evident. We're overjoyed to soon welcome our newest (and tiniest!) member.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
3 hours ago
- Sky News
Blood test for Alzheimer's disease is highly accurate, researchers say
Researchers say a new blood test for Alzheimer's disease has been shown to be highly accurate in detecting people with early symptoms. Scientists looked for two proteins - amyloid beta 42/40 and p-tau217 - and found the test was 95% accurate in identifying patients with existing cognitive impairment linked to the condition. The US study involved 509 patients in an outpatient memory clinic in Florida and was published in the medical journal Alzheimer's and Dementia. The test, which has already been approved by the US regulator, was also 82% accurate for specificity, which means it could rule out people without dementia. Dr Gregg Day, who led the study, said the test was as good as existing, but more invasive, tests. He said the next step was to extend the test to a wider range of patients, including those with early Alzheimer's who do not have any cognitive symptoms. Scientists say the two proteins, which they have identified in blood plasma, are associated with the buildup of amyloid plaques. Amyloid protein can be found in our brains, but in Alzheimer's disease, amyloid sticks together and forms abnormal deposits, which are thought to be toxic to brain cells. Dr Richard Oakley, associate director for research and innovation at the Alzheimer's Society in the UK, said the results "suggest this test is very accurate". "Blood tests will be critical to accelerate diagnosis and give more people access to the care, support and treatments they desperately need faster than ever before," he added. In the UK, the Blood Biomarker Challenge is a multi-million-pound research programme supported by the Alzheimer's Society, Alzheimer's Research UK and the National Institute for Health and Care Research. 1:09 Its goal is to bring blood tests for dementia diagnosis to the NHS by 2029. Dr Julia Dudley, head of research at Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "We urgently need to improve how we diagnose dementia and it's great to see international research working towards this goal." She said the studies like the Blood Biomarker Challenge are a "crucial part of making diagnosis easier and faster, which will bring us closer to a cure". "The study is testing blood tests, including p-tau217, in thousands of people from sites across the UK," she added.


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
Switch on those glutes! Suddenly it's all about the bass, and for good reason
I'm staring at the screen, trying to write a joke. It involves a muscle called the gluteus maximus, Roman centurions and possibly a reference to Biggus somebody from Monty Python's Life of Brian. I've been sitting here for over an hour, so long that when I finally stand up I have to hobble and wobble a few steps before I can get my stride back. It's because my glutei maximi are a bit of a joke. I have spent so much of my life literally sitting on this Roman-sounding muscle, staring at screens, trying to think up killer first lines to stories that by middle-age this undernourished workhorse is vocalising its disappointment at my life choices. Everyone seems to be talking about glutes right now and it's not just some fad brought on by Kim Kardashian's internet-breaking bum. Fitness instructors tell us to 'switch on those glutes', or admonish us for having 'lazy' glutes or 'dead butt syndrome'; suddenly, it's all about the bass. And it's for good reason. The gluteal muscles are vital for getting us up and about, yet humanity's increasingly sedentary lifestyle and work are leading to neglect of our glute health, with potentially serious consequences for our overall health. Let's meet the triumvirate of the tush muscles: gluteus maximus, gluteus medius and gluteus minimus. Maximus is, as the name suggests, the big one that makes up what might colloquially be known as the butt cheek and which attaches at the back of the pelvis and at the side of the thigh bone. 'Glute max is largely responsible for extending your hips, so pushing your leg behind you,' says associate professor Angie Fearon, a physiotherapist at the University of Canberra. 'If you're standing up and you pushed your leg backwards, that would be that muscle … it pushes you forwards when you're walking, or running or hopping or skipping.' Gluteus medius and minimus take the leg out to the side and manage the rotational movement. These three muscles are vital in keeping the pelvis stable during walking, lifting the leg up and powering us forward. They are also a link from the core muscles in the stomach and the lower back down to the muscles of the legs. Weak gluteal muscles can lead to what Dr Charlotte Ganderton describes as a teapot-style gait, where people tilt their upper body from side to side over their hip as they walk. 'They're actually throwing their whole torso over their hip to be able to clear their foot through, and that obviously has significant consequences on the rest of your body and the joints that are further up from the hip, so the spine,' says Ganderton, a physiotherapist at RMIT and Alphington Sports Medicine in Melbourne. The real problem with neglected gluteal muscles is what they can lead to. 'If you don't have good functioning gluteal muscles, the actual hip joint is the one who takes on those forces,' Ganderton says. 'People that have hip pathology – so hip arthritis, lateral hip pain, which people call gluteal tendinopathy – we know that these individuals have poor hip strength, and they often have very poor hip control when we assess them in the clinic.' The two most common hip conditions that affect particularly older people are hip osteoarthritis and gluteal tendinopathy, which is sometimes also called greater trochanteric pain syndrome or bursitis. 'What we see in people with those conditions is they're often weaker in that area than an asymptomatic control group,' Fearon says. With gluteal tendinopathy, pain develops because weaker gluteal muscles leads people to overuse other muscles, which then cause irritation and inflammation of the tendons and muscles in the outer hip region. And for many, our sedentary lifestyle is to blame – it is very much a case of 'use it or lose it'. Even two weeks of sitting on our backsides with little to no activity can be enough to start deconditioning and diminishing of our muscles. Further on from that, 'the muscle no longer stays as muscle tissue, for the most part – it actually fills with fat and what we call fatty infiltrate', Ganderton says. And once that happens, it can be very challenging to reverse and rebuild the muscle. However the exercises to strengthen the gluteal muscles are actually pretty basic. The simplest one is called a 'gluteal bridge' and just involves lying on your back, planting the soles of your feet on the floor or bed and lifting your pelvis up off that surface. Or while you're lying down, roll on to your side and lift the upper leg upwards to about the width of your shoulders. Ganderton's own research in postmenopausal women with gluteal tendinopathy found that a simple standing exercise could also help. 'Standing on one leg where you've got both knees straight and you just lift up the opposite leg about a centimetre off the floor, so just weight shifting across uses a lot of muscle activity in the leg that's standing on the ground,' she says. For the more active and stable among us, Fearon also recommends squats and walking lunges, carrying weights if you're up to it. Even these simple exercises can make a big difference, Fearon says. 'Say you had 100 people with gluteal tendinopathy, in a large percentage of them, if you got them to do some specific strengthening work for the hip abductors, and you gave them some suitable education, they'd probably all improve or a large percentage of them would.' But at the most basic level, we just need to move more. 'There's really good evidence that shows that if you get up and move every 20 to 30 minutes – get up, do a few squats, go and get a glass of water, go to the photocopier, just get up and move – it actually sets off a whole lot of enzymes in your muscles, which is good,' she says. 'Your brain gets a break and overall you do better.'


The Guardian
7 hours ago
- The Guardian
DC rally protests cuts to US veterans programs: ‘Promises made to us have come under attack'
A flurry of red, white and blue American flags fluttered across the National Mall on Friday as more than 5,000 military veterans and their allies descended on Washington to protest against the planned elimination of 80,000 jobs at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the cancellation of hundreds of contracts for veterans services with community organizations. 'I hope that in the future veterans will be able to get their benefits,' said David Magnus, a navy veteran who decided to travel from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, after his doctor told him she was quitting during a recent mental health appointment. Before Donald Trump returned to office in January, 'the VA was good', he said, but since then medical staff have faced harassment that puts the entire system at risk. 'It used to be, you'd call and get an answer,' he said. 'Now, so much is going on that they don't know where to put you.' Organizers said that in addition to the march in Washington, there were more than 200 corresponding actions across the country, from watch parties to vigils held at VA clinics. Many veterans told the Guardian they came to the nation's capital on their own after hearing about the rally online. The VA secretary, Doug Collins, has said the efforts are designed to trim bureaucratic bloat and will have no impact on veterans' healthcare or benefits. Reporting by the Guardian last month found the agency, which provides healthcare to more than 9 million veterans, has already been plunged into crisis. Across the nation, appointments have been cancelled, hospital units closed, the physical safety of patients put at risk. Demonstrators said the Trump administration is seeking to destroy the VA, the largest integrated healthcare system in the United States, with 170 government-run hospitals and more than 1,000 clinics, and replace it with a private voucher program that will provide substandard care. 'We're a generation of service. We volunteered and stepped up to lead. Now we are seeing the promises made to us come under attack,' said Kyleanne Hunter, the chief executive of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America and a Marine Corps veteran who flew multiple combat missions as an AH1-W Super Cobra attack pilot. The administration's proposed budget for the VA, released on Friday, slashes spending for 'medical services' by $12bn – or nearly 20% – an amount offset by a corresponding 50% boost in funding for veterans seeking healthcare in the private sector. 'We're already being starved,' said Sharda Fornnarino, a Navy veteran and one of about three dozen nurses brought to the rally by the National Nurses United union. Fornnarino, who works at the VA in Denver, Colorado, said that while politicians in Washington debate permanent staff reductions, essential healthcare positions are being left vacant. With fewer staff on the floor, veterans on hospice 'are being left to die in their own piss and shit', said Teshara Felder, a Navy veteran and nurse at the agency's hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, said. A blue-ribbon commission established by the agency last year found veterans received significantly better care at lower cost from the public system. Private providers operated with little oversight, they wrote, and 'are not required to demonstrate competency in diagnosing and treating the complex care needs of veterans nor in understanding military culture, which is often critical to providing quality care for veterans'. The VA says the budget submission 'prioritizes care for our most vulnerable veterans, including those experiencing homelessness or at risk of suicide' and 'eliminates nonessential programming and bureaucratic overhead that does not directly serve the veteran'. The march was held on the 81st anniversary of D-day, when Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy, a decisive turn in the war against Nazi Germany during the second world war. Organizers said their inspiration goes back even further – to the 'Bonus Army' march on Washington in 1932 during the depths of the Great Depression, when thousands of first world war veterans gathered on the National Mall to demand promised benefits, only to have the US military deployed against them. Christopher Purdy, an Afghanistan war veteran and organizer of today's march, said the Bonus Army rally helped set the stage for the New Deal social programs and eventually the GI Bill, which provided higher education, healthcare and home ownership to veterans returning from the second world war. Other speakers criticized Trump's decision to impose a travel ban on visitors from 12 countries, including Afghanistan, where many of the demonstrators served alongside translators who risked their lives for the US. Shortly after taking office in January, Trump ordered a pause on the US refugee admissions program, putting translators' safety in doubt. 'We all left behind people who are now marked,' said Nadim Yousify, who immigrated to the United States in 2015 after working as a US government translator in Afghanistan and later joined the Marine Corps.