Canadian TV: Anchor Gets Commotio Cordis Live on Air

Global warming is insidiously increasing the occurrence of commotio cordis.

If we want these very random coincidences to stop, we need to totally deindustrialize the Western world.

New York Post:

A Canadian TV reporter suffered a frightening medical emergency during a live broadcast on Sunday, telling the station’s news anchor, “I’m not feeling very well right now.”

Jessica Robb, a reporter with CTV, was reporting to anchor Nahreman Issa from the field in Edmonton when she began stumbling over her words and having difficulty completing a sentence.

“Sorry, Nahreman,” Robb said in footage aired by TMZ on Monday. “I’m not feeling very well right now and I’m about to…..”

Robb’s words fade off and she can be seen starting to lose her balance on the air.

“We will make sure that Jessica is OK, and we’ll give you guys an update a little bit later,” Issa says back in the studio.

The station has not revealed the nature of Robb’s medical episode, but posted a statement from the reporter on Twitter on Monday.

“On Sunday night, a very personal and vulnerable moment unfolded as I reported live on air,” Robb says in the statement. “Since then, it has been shared thousands of times, along with baseless theories about the cause.

We need to end these baseless theories.

The Science says that this was commotio cordis, which is becoming more and more normal every day as the sea level rises.