The studio was silent. Millions were watching. And one phrase — meant with kindness — has now sparked a nationwide conversation about disability, language and who gets a voice on daytime television.
Disability campaigner Sophie Morgan has publicly criticised Cat Deeley after the This Morning presenter said that Jesy Nelson’s twin daughters “could live normal lives” if newborn screening for Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA1) were introduced.
To many viewers it sounded hopeful.
To the disabled community, it cut deeper.
“They will have lives — not ‘normal’ ones”
Sophie, 40, who was paralysed in a car accident 22 years ago, shared a powerful post from disabled journalist Frances Ryan on Instagram — pointing out that the word “normal” implies disabled lives are somehow less valuable.
“Disabled children can have careers, marriages, friendships,” Frances wrote.
“But they face structural barriers, pain and discrimination — not a lack of humanity.”
Sophie added:
“We need disabled people in front of and behind the camera. These conversations need lived experience — not just good intentions.”
The moment that changed the tone
The comment was made during an emotional segment about Jesy Nelson’s eight-month-old twins, Ocean Jade and Story Monroe, who were diagnosed with the most severe form of SMA last week.
Jesy had bravely revealed that early treatment — available in more than 40 countries — could have prevented the devastating progression of the disease. The test costs just 36p per baby.
That is when Cat said:
“With screening, these children could live normal lives.”
It was meant to comfort — but to many, it reinforced an outdated narrative that disabled lives are somehow broken versions of everyone else’s.
“Four non-disabled people discussing disability”
Frances Ryan also highlighted another uncomfortable truth: the panel discussing the twins’ future featured four non-disabled presenters.
“This is why disabled journalists matter,” she wrote.
Not to argue — but to bring reality into the room.
Why this matters
SMA1 causes progressive muscle weakness, affecting breathing, swallowing and movement. Jesy has said doctors told her daughters may never walk or regain neck strength — something she believes could have been avoided with early screening.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting has since backed her campaign, admitting she was “right to challenge how long diagnosis takes.”
Scotland will begin newborn SMA screening this spring. England has not yet followed.
A moment bigger than television
This is no longer just about a phrase said on live TV.
It’s about:
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Who defines what a “good life” looks like
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Who is allowed to speak for disabled children
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And whether compassion also means choosing better words
As Sophie Morgan put it — it takes a team to get this right.
And now, the country is listening.



