
Former "Bachelorette" JoJo Fletcher and her husband, Jordan Rodgers, welcomed their first baby via emergency cesarean section days before Christmas, the couple announced.
Fletcher wrote on Instagram that she went for a sonogram appointment on Tuesday and "found out we needed to deliver via emergency c section that day."
Their baby girl, Romy Blair Rodgers, was born at 5:37 p.m. on Tuesday.
Prince William, Kate Middleton and kids spread cheer on Christmas
"What a whirlwind these last couple of days have been but in the most magical way," she wrote.
"Merry Christmas to us," she said.
How celebrities are celebrating Christmas 2025
Fletcher's best friend from "The Bachelor," Becca Tilley, commented, "Our little Romy girl!!!!! Love y’all so much! So proud of you!!!!!"
Rodgers, a college football analyst, won Fletcher's final rose on season 12 of the "Bachelorette," which aired in 2016. They tied the knot in 2022. Fletcher announced her pregnancy in August, saying they were welcoming a "rainbow baby."
LATEST POSTS
- 1
The Best Business visionaries Under 30 - 2
Manual for Picking the Ideal Wine Matching - 3
Vote in favor of the juice that you love for its medical advantages! - 4
A Manual for Pick High Evaluated Food Conveyance Administrations In Significant Urban communities For 2024 - 5
A new mom skipped a routine appointment. An infected cut led to a devastating diagnosis
Steven Spielberg's 'Disclosure Day' trailer drops: What we know about the alien movie
Paraplegic engineer becomes the first wheelchair user to blast into space
The Developing Nearby Food Development and Its Advantages
Which Film Has the Incomparable Melodic Score?
Most loved Specially prepared Espresso Mix: Which Meal Do You Adore the Most?
Crypto Investor’s Family Tied Up and Beaten by Armed Gangs in Their Home
IDF kills four terrorists equipped with weapons, surveillance gear near Gaza's Yellow Line
Iran warns its ready to open new front in Yemen, close Bab al-Mandab Strait with Houthis
Recalled "super greens" supplement linked to dozens of salmonella cases, CDC says













