Love Island's Amy Hart hits back at fans who think she's pregnant

Love Island's Amy Hart hits back at fans who think she's pregnant
Source: Daily Mail Online

Amy Hart has revealed her plans for a second baby but hit back at fans who have speculated she is already pregnant.

The former Love Island star, 31, shares son Stanley with Sam Rason, whom she wed in Spain back in September.

"Yes, we would like one, as soon as possible really, but it isn't fully in our control. Hopefully I'll have some great news to share with everyone soon. But, for right now, I'm not. It's so funny because people comment all the time on my post saying, 'she's definitely pregnant already,'" Amy said about plans for baby number two.
"I'm like look, I know I make questionable decisions sometimes, but drinking as much wine as I do, yeah I promise you I'm not," she added.

Amy exchanged vows with partner Sam in Spain two months ago after announcing their engagement a year prior. She walked down the aisle to the sounds of 'You're Already There' by Alison Jiear and was able to exchange vows without tripping.

She said 'I do' in front of her 137 closest friends and family and had seven bridesmaids while Sam had six groomsmen for the four-day celebration.

"So we did this marriage course. It's through Alpha and it was so useful. I would really recommend it to anyone," Amy explained about married life.
"One of the things was about setting aside time every week to just be together. We've sectioned off Friday evenings and we've said that if something came up on a Friday that we really wanted to go to, then we would just do Friday lunchtime instead."

Amy rose to fame on Love Island in 2019 where she was famously dumped by Curtis Pritchard on the show. She welcomed Stanley with Sam in March 2023 and got engaged six months later during a cruise ship shoot for her podcast.

Phone Scamming Incident

Elsewhere during the interview with MailOnline, Amy shared how she fell victim to a phone scamming hoax which wiped £5,000 from her bank account within minutes.

"They must time it because it was literally within the time I went onto the search engine and typed it in; they phoned me back," Amy explained about receiving a scam call appearing as her bank's fraud line due to number spoofing.
"They knew lots of details about me... They said there had been fraudulent activity on my account."

Her husband Sam called up their bank only to find out they were not speaking with them officially. Although they recovered their money eventually, Amy warns others about scammers' tactics using pressure techniques prompting victims into action based on false claims of fraudulent activities.