
Alex Jones shares heartbreaking family update as celeb pal steps in to help in emergency
Welsh BBC star Alex Jones has shared a heartbreaking update on her family's pet, after she called on a celebrity pal to help her in her emergency. The One Show host, 48, shared her harrowing experience on social media, telling her followers Supervet Noel Fitzpatrick saved the day.
She described her friend as the "light at the end of a pretty scary 24 hours" after she found her new pet in pain after being hit by a car. Alex told her fans: "We think our gorgeous little kitten, Sabrina was hit by a car yesterday evening but despite breaking her pelvis, she managed to crawl back to the house to tell us that she was hurt.
"After overnight emergency care, she is now with @profnoelfitzpatrick at his hospital where I'm certain she will receive the best care possible." Posing for a selfie with Noel, Alex added: "My brilliant friend @profnoelfitzpatrick has been the light at the end of a pretty scary 24 hours."
Mum-of-three Alex announced to her fans that her family had adopted their kitten Sabrina in March this year. She, her husband Charlie Thomson and their children Kit, Teddy and Annie, said they were "obsessed" with their "most perfect little kitty kat."
Their new addition joined their growing family, after she revealed last year that t hey had also welcomed a new puppy into the fold. Charlie had shocked his family with the heartwarming surprise, with Alex expressing her feelings to her followers.
In a fit of excitement, Alex shared: "Big news!!! There is a new addition to the family and it was a COMPLETE SURPRISE (thanks Charlie).
"It was a huge shock but I've fallen head over heels with little Scout, we all have. The children's faces were a picture!!! I've never had a dog before so any puppy advice would be most welcome."
In the video, taken in her sprawling garden, Alex introduced her pup to fans saying: "So I have a bit of news. On Monday night, and it's taking me a few days to process it, I came home here and Charlie was standing in the middle of the drive with what I thought was a jumper in his hands. And then this black jumper moved.'
She continued: "I got out of the car and I said, 'Whose dog is that?' And he said, 'Ours'. We have a new arrival. Look, we have a new little baby.
"This is Scout. Say hi. 'Hi everybody, hello'. He's 10 and a half weeks old. I absolutely love him. He's gorgeous."
But Alex recently opened up about one of her husband's habits that gets under her skin, claiming his love of The Simpsons sends her "into a spin." In a candid chat on their Binge! podcast, she told McFly star Harry Judd that Charlie loves to watch the animated show, and has also introduced to their eight year old son Teddy.
However, she believes it's "not suitable" for kids, with the show usually being given a PG or 12 rating in the UK. She told Harry: "I hate The Simpsons. That, what's his name [Homer], I hate him.
"It's because Charlie keeps putting it on. He's the antithesis of me, he absolutely loves it, and he has now started showing it to Ted and it's just not suitable. It sends me into a spin every time I walk into the room and the bloody Simpsons is on. No."

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


The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
TV tonight: Japan's kamikaze pilots and why they were impelled to sacrifice themselves
9pm, BBC FourIt is still absolutely shocking to see footage of the kamikaze attacks that Japan operated for 10 months at the end of the second world war. Nearly 4,000 Japanese pilots died this way and 7,000 allied military personnel were killed. Why did they push this strategy? And why were people so willing to do it? Takayuki Oshima's monumental film uses 15 years of research and interviews with witnesses, family members and former pilots to explore this massive system of suicide attack. Hollie Richardson 7pm, BBC TwoIrvine Welsh, the author of cult 90s hit Trainspotting, is back with a new novel and a new philosophy. He shares them here with Katie Razzall, over the course of a wide-ranging interview: 'We're living in a world so full of hate and poison now, it's time we focused more on love as an antidote.' Ellen E Jones 8pm, Channel 4How can you keep your senses sharpened as you grow older? A 75-year-old perfumer, an 86-year-old jazz musician and a 68-year-old biathlete reckon they have smell, hearing and eyesight covered respectively. The late Michael Mosley met them to put their tricks to the test. HR 9pm, BBC Two 'I personally love Neanderthals.' More from this excellent origin story, as Ella Al-Shamahi makes the case that our much-maligned forebears were far from the knuckle-draggers of popular myth. And they're closer than we think in temporal terms, too, as a fossil shows a modern human had a Neanderthal ancestor only a few generations before their time. Phil Harrison Sign up to What's On Get the best TV reviews, news and features in your inbox every Monday after newsletter promotion 9pm, ITV1It has been a tame affair so far – what with no shark seriously injuring a C-lister – but the fear factor is notched up a bit as the famous faces embark on a cut-off raft in shark-ridden waters. Is this the moment Lenny Henry sends a strongly worded message to his agent? HR 11.10pm, BBC OneNew season, new entity. Witch Rowan (Alexandra Daddario) has birthed a monster – literally: the malevolent demon Lasher reincarnated in baby form, as evinced by his terrifying growth spurts and dark appetites. Meanwhile, Moira Mayfair arrives seeking answers about her sister Tessa's death. Ali Catterall


Telegraph
3 minutes ago
- Telegraph
ITV beat the BBC, but all TV coverage of women's football needs to grow up
It was, you have to say, excellent TV, skilful and provocative, and it hit Carney right in the feels. Karen told us she was welling up and 'I am not going to lie, I found it quite triggering. There is now a little girl and little boy that now knows it is OK to want to be a footballer.' Pace yourself, Karen, there's still half an hour until kick-off. Wright and Hayes also did appropriate amounts of Her Game Too-ing and fair enough. Over on the BBC, a pop singer called Self-Esteem did a song called Focus is Power and it doesn't get more earnest than that. Maybe because the game itself is younger at this level of mainstream interest, or because some of these Lionesses were able to play very long careers, but it feels like the pundits are generally a lot closer both in age and personally to the women they are commenting on. For instance on the BBC: White, only 36 and a team-mate of many of these, whereas a men's game will have Alan Shearer or whoever, guys who belong to a different generation who can, sometimes, put the boot in where needed. This is partly why the coverage of England women players and manager is largely uncritical. For example, it was put to ITV's Anita Asante before the match that maybe Lauren James wasn't fit. Firmly, Asante said: 'If Lauren James is in the starting line-up she is 100 per cent.' That did not really seem to be the case, though, and it symptomatic of a general reluctance to criticise that the men's game has largely moved beyond. Hard to see Gabby Logan saying that the England women's team had played s---, isn't it, as Gary Lineker did about Harry Kane and co? Not that yesterday called for anything beyond cheerleading. Women's football is, as yet, still part elite sport and part feelgood story and social project and the coverage reflects that but it will be really interesting to see if there's room for a Roy Keane or Alan Hansen type in a few years as the TV coverage matures.


BBC News
3 minutes ago
- BBC News
Here We Go creator says Bedford representative of the whole UK
A comedy writer has said he set his sitcom in the town of Bedford as it is representative of the whole Basden created and writes the BBC One show Here We Go, which he also appears in alongside Alison Steadman, Katherine Parkinson and Jim former vice president of Cambridge Footlights said: "I thought Bedford was a really good location for a show that speaks to the whole country."I wanted to set the show somewhere that just felt very traditionally English but not really known for being any one particular thing." Describing the show's premise, Basden said: "It's about a family called the Jessop family who live in Bedford and are a very, very normal family who find themselves in a lot of weird and wonderful situations."The full third series of the show is now available on BBC iPlayer, following the premiere of its first episode on BBC One. Basden added: "I didn't want it to feel too regional."I didn't want it to feel like it's a show about London or a show about Manchester or something."While one episode of the new series is set in Malta, the show remains largely based in Bedford, although it is filmed in other parts of the country. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.