
Mom Can't Find Dog During Baby's First Night in Crib—Then She Checks Camera
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A mother, unable to locate the family dog, was left in tears once she spotted him on the baby monitor.
Jenn Doyle and her husband recently put their 3-month-old baby to bed in her crib, hoping she would sleep there through the night for her very first time. They kept the baby monitor nearby. And while it was going smoothly, panic set in when they couldn't find their first baby, their golden retriever.
Doyle told Newsweek via TikTok that she ran around the house looking for him to let him outside before going to bed, but he was nowhere to be found.
"I kept calling his name and he couldn't come, which is so unlike him," she said. "Then I heard him shake his head and his collar jingled on the baby monitor..."
That sound made it dawn on her: the dog snuck into the baby's room. To confirm her suspicions, she turned to the baby monitor and used the buttons to move the camera around, checking where the dog could be hiding.
Doyle shared in a June 8 TikTok video, under her account @jenndoyle13, what she discovered in the baby's room, which didn't take long. The dog sat underneath the baby's crib as she peacefully slept. Keeping his head up and looking forward, he went on watch duty to protect his tiny human.
She admitted that she shouldn't have surprised her in the first place. The couple's dog has always been by their baby's side since day one.
"I cried, I thought it was sooo cute!" she said. "He has been so protective of her and never leaves her side. It's adorable."
Screenshots from a June 8 TikTok video of a mother finding the dog sitting next to the baby's crib while she was sleeping.
Screenshots from a June 8 TikTok video of a mother finding the dog sitting next to the baby's crib while she was sleeping.
@jenndoyle13/TikTok
With over 178,200 views and 25,200 likes on TikTok as of Monday, people fell head over heels for this dog's protectiveness during the baby's first night in her crib. Many thought this was a perfect example of how humans "don't deserve dogs."
"He's working the night shift," said a viewer, while a second added: "Oh my gosh, he's standing watch. That's too cute."
Another commented: "That dog can't believe you would let that baby sleep alone lol! So adorable!"
Even the official TikTok account for Chewy chimed in: "Yeah, so I'm sobbing now..."
Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.

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


Newsweek
28 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Smash Hit Series 'The Pitt' Gets Major Season 2 Update
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors HBO Max, formerly known as Max, experienced droves of fans flocking to the streamer to watch the smash hit medical drama, "The Pitt." The series is led by Noah Wyle, who plays Dr. Michael Robinavich, the lead doctor in an emergency room center in a Pittsburgh hospital. More news: New 'King of the Hill' Revival Poster Gives First Look at Two Returning Characters The 15-episode season follows Dr. Robinavich and a cast of doctors, nurses, interns, and patients experiencing harrowing situations through one-hour blocks in a single working shift. The series' first season has a 95 percent critic approval rating, along with an 86 percent fan approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with plenty of the praise pointing to the performances, writing, and accuracy of an emergency room. According to Variety, the series' first 14 episodes garnered an average of 10 million viewers. This huge popularity led to the second season of the show being greenlit in February. 'The Pitt' Season 2 Receives Major Update Noah Wyle in Max's "The Pitt", Season 1, Episode 15. Noah Wyle in Max's "The Pitt", Season 1, Episode 15. Warrick Page/Max More news: Exclusive: TMNT Co-Creator Kevin Eastman Reflects on 40 Years of Turtle Power Now, "The Pitt" has received a major update regarding the second season. Also, according to Variety, the second season has begun filming in Los Angeles and is eyeing a release date for January 2026. Should the series remain on pace, the second season will come out a short year after the first. This is a huge turnaround for a hit show, as sometimes it can take multiple years for a follow-up season to release. It is also no surprise that HBO Max is putting a rush job on "The Pitt," considering the first season was such a smash success. The entire series is already predicted to be up for multiple Emmy nominations, with Wyle being pegged as a shoo-in to be nominated for Best Actor. What Could 'The Pitt' Season 2 be About? This section contains spoilers about "The Pitt" Season 1. There are many unanswered questions about the ending of the first season of "The Pitt." For starters, Dr. Robinavich experienced some massive panic attacks following the end of having to treat so many patients from Pitt Fest. With his psuedo son, Jake, seeing the death of his girlfriend and blaming the doctor, can the pair move forward? Also, beloved lead charge nurse Dana is still dealing with having been assaulted by a disgruntled patient. The biggest question for her is whether she actually plans to quit her position. Though Dana does what she must when loads of patients pour in from the active shooter situation, the feeling is that she will not come back to work. Fans might have to wait to find out if Dana truly quit, but the character might be too popular to not be involved in some grand way — even if she did stop being a nurse. Dr. Frank Langdon is also dealing with being labeled a drug addict, and his fallout with Dr. Robinavich is sure to be a big talking point in the next season. Either way, fans will not have to wait long to see the second season. For more streaming, head to Newsweek.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Plane passenger spent 45 minutes eating putrid snack on flight: ‘Should be illegal'
There's something fishy going on at 30,000 feet. As if air travel isn't stressful enough nowadays — owing to the recent increase in mid-flight meltdowns, delayed departures and chaotic crashes — frequent flyers are now forced to contend with the funky foodstuffs of their fellow passengers. 'The lady next to me decided to make tuna salad [while in] mid-air,' Katie Georges, a content creator, cried in the closed captions of TikTok footage featuring the woman's smelly spread. Viral visuals of the fragrant, flagrant foul show the unidentified foodie blending the fish with Greek yogurt and relish. The clip has scared up over 1.2 million views from outraged onlookers online, who've deemed the mile-high madness 'Instant no-fly list behavior,' and likened the stinky stunt to a 'federal offense.' And, unfortunately for Katie and the other trippers trapped on the sky-train, the tuna lover's snack wasn't just a quick bite. 'Took her 45 minutes to eat it all,' a crestfallen Katie captioned the post. Everybody nose that eating tuna on an airplane is totally funked up. Still, it's a in-the-clouds crime that seems to happen all the time. Ally, a lifestyle influencer, sent shockwaves through social media after sharing a snippet of an unnamed man chowing the canned treat during a recent flight. Irked by the pungent protein, Ally labeled the traveler's mealtime misdeed a 'crime against humanity.' Zavier Torrence echoed similar sentiments while on a separate trip, during which an inconsiderate jet-setter downed a fusty tuna melt sandwich. 'People who eat on flights need to be incarcerated for 10 days,' Torrence groaned in his vid. And it seems commenters beneath Katie's recording concur. 'Tuna should be on the list of things TSA confiscates,' an irate spectator spat. 'I would have started coughing and gagging,' added another. 'The officers would've been waiting for me at the gate,' wrote an equally peeved person, suggesting that being assaulted by the rank aroma of tuna would have triggered a violent eruption. 'I love me some tuna salad,' another admitted. 'But on a plane? Should be illegal.'


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Theory on Who's in Sabrina Carpenter's Controversial Album Cover Blows Minds
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A woman has gone viral for sharing her theory on Sabrina Carpenter's newly-released upcoming album artwork, and believes she knows who appears on the cover alongside the popstar. Singer Carpenter, whose 2024 smash hit Espresso clinched the title of the most-streamed song on Spotify last year, got fans in a frenzy in June when she released the lead single, Manchild, from her upcoming album. At the same time, she revealed the name of her next record—Man's Best Friend—and the artwork set to illustrate the cover. But while her new song has racked up more than 54 million Spotify streams, and the accompanying video watched 25 million times on YouTube since its release nine days ago, it has come with some backlash, as some fans accused Manchild of containing lyrics which could be construed as ableist. The album art, too, is not without controversy. Revealed via Carpenter's Instagram account, seen here, it depicts the 26-year-old singer in a black dress and heels, before kneeling before what appears to be a man in a black suit, her hair tangled in their outstretched hand. It sparked a huge discussion online, with some worrying it promoted regressive gender stereotypes, with one TikTok user, @ddiva444, previously telling Newsweek she believes it "paints women as an object used to serve men" and "normalizes violence towards women." As the debate rages on, one woman has turned the album cover on its head, with her theory that what has been shared so far is not the full artwork at all. TikTok user @thespoiledstylistt shared a video to her account on June 12, and said she was "calling it right now." She predicted Carpenter's album cover is "rage bait," and she would eventually release the "zoomed out version, and it will be her holding her own hair." The woman pointed out the proportions of the person in the suit, saying the assumed man in the image "looks tiny and his hands look small." Going further, she pointed out that Carpenter dressed in a suit for the after-party of the Met Gala, and that this is a hint towards the album cover. Newsweek has contacted Carpenter's representatives via email for comment on this story outside of normal working hours and will update this article if they respond. The theory video got a lot of online attention, being like more than 855,000 times and racking up close to 10 million views since being posted just days ago, as commenters continued to share their own opinions, one calling the cover "tone deaf, I am genuinely baffled how anyone is defending it." Sabrina Carpenter wears a sui at the Met Gala After Party on May 5, 2025. Sabrina Carpenter wears a sui at the Met Gala After Party on May 5, 2025. Ilya"I think maybe people are missing the point... she's alluding to that fact that men have treated her like a dog as a joke," another said, while one defended the musician: "I'm so confused on why we care about Sabrina's album cover, are we forgetting what feminism actually is?" Another wasn't keen on the theory, saying "that hand is clearly a man's hand," but another suggested: "I swear this is just a social experiment [on] how people switch up so fast against her." And another said: "I don't think her album is rage bait cause there's nothing to get upset about in the first place. It's her art and she isn't even being offensive to anyone!" The comments continued to pile up on Carpenter's Instagram post, which itself has just under 5 million likes. There comments were polarized there too, with one writing: "This isn't satire, this is not empowering to women. You've missed the mark by so much hun." While someone else said: "People complaining when it's actually genius. It's an imagine full of layers to be seen: There's irony, there's conflict, there's a joke, there's critic, there's self-critic, there's a play with the words in the title. There's a lot." Newsweek has contacted @thespoiledstylistt on TikTok for comment on this story. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures you want to share? Send them to life@ with some extra details, and they could appear on our website.