Broadcaster Gabby Logan has admitted she doesn’t care if discussing her sex life embarrasses her children.
Gabby Logan has candidly confessed she is aware her children get embarrassed when she discusses relations with husband Kenny but defiantly refuses to stop.
The 51-year-old broadcaster has been very vocal about the couple’s sex life since Kenny, 52, had his prostate removed due to cancer.
The couple, who married in 2001, share 19-year-old twins Rueben and Lois.
In her latest book The Midpoint Plan she admitted that her children hate her saying that their father is “fully functioning” following his operation.
She also reflects on the fact they are leaving for university writing: “So you can have daytime sex again! My kids will kill me for oversharing, but it’s a plus point of being empty nesters.”
She says Kenny is fine with her openness. “When he got his diagnosis he said that once he had been treated he would like to talk about it, so we started recording little bits we could put in a podcast,” she said.
“His prostate episode is the most downloaded of all. Doctors recommend it to their patients,” she told the latest issue of Saga Magazine which she covers.
Gabby was speaking to the publication ahead of a busy few weeks where she will be one of the lead anchors for the BBC’s Paris Olympics coverage.
She will join Clare Balding, Hazel Irvine, Isa Guha, Jeanette Kwakye, JJ Chalmers and Mark Chapman in keeping viewers up to speed with all the events.
However strict laws in France will stop presenters from leading coverage of both morning and evening sessions.
They will be restricted by the French working time directive, which stipulates that workers in the country must have a minimum of 11 hours between shifts. Athletics events are due to start at 9am local time and run late into the evening.
This means Gabby and Clare will head up prime-time evening sessions during the Games, leaving Jeanette Kwakye, JJ Chalmers and Hazel Irvine to take care of the morning and afternoon shows.
Broadcasters found to be bending the rules could be stopped from working by French authorities.
“Because of the French working directive, we are not allowed to do the morning session and the evening session,” Gabby explained when the rule was revealed.
“They are really strict about it apparently. It’s not just a kind of box-ticking exercise. It’s quite a change for all of us because we are used to these really early sessions in the morning.
“We are all having to work to those rules within the BBC. We know the French work to live. It just means we split the day up slightly differently.
“Jeannette is doing that portion of the day in the studio, which means that she will be able to cover off the morning athletics stories, and we will be doing all the evening at the stadium,” she said.
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Source: Tampa Bay Times