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Ann Reynolds Biography
Ann Reynolds is an American journalist who is a Dayton native and Summa Cum Laude graduate of Ohio University’s Scripps Howard School of Journalism, majoring in Television Broadcast News. Her high marks and work as an anchor, reporter, and producer earned her top honors in her broadcast news class. She also lettered as a four-year OU Varsity Cheerleader and received the Scholar/Athlete Award for graduating with the highest GPA.
Ann Reynolds Age
Reynolds’ age information will be updated soon.
Ann Reynolds Early Career
After college, a career in broadcast was temporarily put on hold. She continued to work with an agency as a commercial actress and model, as well as work as a Head Instructor, Judge, and Choreographer for an international cheer and dance company, which kept her traveling.
These wonderful opportunities seemed like they would be short-term, but lasted much longer than expected.
In addition, she was fortunate to spend many years as an NFL Cheerleader for the Cincinnati Bengals, serving as a Corner Captain, Cheer Coach, Rookie Coach, and a member of the select traveling Ben-Gal Show Team performing on USO tours state-side and overseas.
Ann Reynolds photo
Ann Reynolds ABC 22
With her feet firmly planted back in the Miami Valley, she was thrilled to join FOX 45 and ABC 22 as a freelance feature host and reporter and assist with producing entertainment segments.
You can catch her on most mornings talking about entertainment, businesses in our community, fun lifestyle ideas and hosting cooking segments. She is so happy to finally be back working in news and having the opportunity to meet so many people in the Miami Valley.
Ann Reynolds Facts
She continues to do some commercial and spokesperson work and is thoroughly enjoying being the mom of two little boys. Ann is very passionate about volunteer work with the Humane Society of Greater Dayton and as a Humane Society spokesperson, you will often see her on-air with an adorable pet looking for a forever home.
She is also committed to working with the Miami Valley Hospital Foundation, and she hosts an annual event benefiting cancer research and assisting cancer patients, a cause that is very important to her after her mom’s long battle with ovarian cancer.
Ann Reynolds Michelle Obama Opens Up About Miscarriage, IVF And Marriage Counseling
Article by Ann Reynolds;
Former first lady Michelle Obama said she felt “lost and alone” after suffering a miscarriage about 20 years ago, during an exclusive interview with “Good Morning America” anchor Robin Roberts.
“I felt like I failed because I didn’t know how common miscarriages were because we don’t talk about them,” Obama said. “We sit in our own pain, thinking that somehow we’re broken.”
She added, “That’s one of the reasons why I think it’s important to talk to young mothers about the fact that miscarriages happen.”
Obama, who worked as a lawyer and hospital administrator before becoming the first lady, told Roberts that it hit her at ages 34 and 35 that “the biological clock is real” and “egg production is limited.”
She revealed to Roberts that she underwent in-vitro fertilization (IVF) in order to conceive her two daughters.
“I realized that as I was 34 and 35,” said Obama, now the mother of 17-year-old Sasha and 20-year-old Malia. “We had to do IVF.”
The former first lady, known for her advocacy for women and girls around the world, decided to get candid about her miscarriage and her journey to motherhood in “Becoming” to help other women.
“I think it’s the worst thing that we do to each other as women, not share the truth about our bodies and how they work,” Obama told Roberts.
Ann Reynolds How Cryostorage Is Supposed To Protect Embryos
Article by Ann Reynolds;
When two different fertility centers (in Ohio and San Francisco) have problems keeping embryos and eggs frozen at the appropriate temperature, the first thing that comes to mind is a power outage, the sort of thing that would affect a home freezer.
But freezing and storing are much different when done in a lab, and when what’s being stored are the building blocks of a family’s fertility.
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Here’s how cryostorage works.
It’s helpful to know how cryostorage works, and why it’s extremely rare to have such an issue.
Cryo-freezing doesn’t depend on electricity at all; it depends on liquid nitrogen.
Nitrogen, at room temperature, is a gas (indeed, it’s most of the air we breathe). But when you cool it down below minus-320 degrees F, it becomes a liquid; an extremely cold liquid.
As Dr. Rick Paulson, a past president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, told us, “cryotanks are best thought of as giant thermos bottles. They are made of stainless steel, cylindrical, with thick insulation in the walls and the bottom, and a thick insulated lid. They are filled with liquid nitrogen.”
The tanks stand about waist height and the cells they store are sealed inside the tank. “All of the eggs, sperm, and embryos are kept submerged in the liquid nitrogen,” Paulson said. “If the temperature at the surface of the liquid were to increase, the liquid nitrogen would start to boil [into a gas], while the temperature of the remaining liquid would stay at the very low temperature of the boiling point until it was gone. There is no such thing as lukewarm liquid nitrogen.”
A little of the liquid nitrogen does evaporate on the surface of the liquid, at a rate of about an inch a day, even with the lid closed. For that reason, it is constantly replenished.
Paulson, who is now chief of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Keck Medicine of USC in Los Angeles, explained the process: “Our tanks have an automatic refill function. They are continuously monitored. To double check the equipment, levels of liquid nitrogen are checked daily.