![]() ![]() Brittney (Anna Grace Barlow) found out she was pregnant after she threw up right before her big performance on The Big Leap. Jessica (Carra Patterson) is months away from delivering when Turner & Hooch begins. Jennifer 1 (Tiya Sircar) and Jennifer 2 (Ayden Mayeri) are very smug and self-satisfied with their pregnancies in The Afterparty. Trying to get pregnant was pretty much the only storyline for Karen Pittman’s Dr. ![]() Police officer Nyla Harper (Mekia Cox) found out she was pregnant on The Rookie after she had to go to the ER while being injured on the job. There’s so much natural, innate drama in pregnancy and the desire to become pregnant that too often TV writers hit the same themes and notes on an endless closed circuit loop.Īnd pregnancy is everywhere on TV these days. But television loves a good cliché, and pregnancy is the good one that never stops giving. We know extreme circumstances happen in real life (just ask Seth Meyers’ wife, who gave birth in the lobby of their apartment building). Maybe some of you out there have experienced this. Or during a blizzard? A blackout? A flood? A fire? An unforeseen natural disaster?ĭid you not know you were pregnant until you violently threw up and thought it was just the flu but you were wrong?ĭid you go to the doctor for something else and to your great surprise the doctor told you that you were pregnant?ĭid you have bizarre cravings during pregnancy? Demand sardines and ice cream at 2 a.m.?ĭid you scream expletives at your significant other while you were in labor? Or was he or she not being there because their flight didn’t take off on time, or they were in a traffic jam or stuck in the blizzard, blackout, flood, fire, or natural disaster mentioned above? Have you ever given birth in an elevator?
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