laura whitmore says her second child arrived last month, unexpectedly early and with “dramatic flair.” The TV presenter shared the news alongside Iain Stirling, who posted a note calling the baby their “newest living legend.”
She framed the birth as a family update, not a celebrity reveal: “A new player has entered the game!” Whitmore also said the couple’s daughter, born in March 2021, now has a younger sibling.
Whitmore’s 5 hour playlist
Whitmore said she had made a “5 hour birthing playlist” for the delivery, but it only played “about 3 songs” during labour. She added that she ended up using it after birth, which gives the story a sharper edge than the usual polished birth announcement.
Her own wording kept the tone light even as she described the early arrival: “We welcomed the most precious baby last month, unexpectedly early and with dramatic flair (wouldn’t expect anything else).” That sentence does most of the work here — it gives the timing, the surprise, and the couple’s preferred register in one line.
Iain Stirling’s jumper
Stirling backed up the announcement with a photo of a white hand-knitted jumper, hat and booties, with “Littlest Living Legend” sewn onto the jumper. His post also said, “Say hello to our newest living legend.” It is a small but useful detail: the clothing and wording make clear the couple wanted the announcement to read as a family moment, not a publicity campaign.
Their second child makes the daughter born in March 2021 a big sister, and that is the practical change readers should take from the announcement. The couple had said they were expecting in February 2026, so this is a quicker-than-expected arrival after that earlier update.
Whitmore’s post lands best as a concise family milestone with a built-in complication: the baby arrived earlier than planned, but the couple already had the language, the humor and even the playlist ready. That is the real story here — not the reveal itself, but how directly they handled the timing when it changed.




