
Daytime  TV has seen its fair share of jaw-dropping moments â but few have stopped a studio cold quite like this.
On Monday morning, Janet Street Porter delivered a revelation no one saw coming.
At 79, the outspoken broadcaster, columnist and Loose Women icon casually announced that she has married â for the fifth time.
No press release.
No red-carpet photos.
Just a quiet, joyful video â and one unforgettable line.
Appearing alongside panellists Kaye Adams, Brenda Edwards, Sue Cleaver and Nadia Sawalha, Janet teased that she had been âkeeping a big secret.â
Moments later, a pre-recorded clip rolled.
Standing beside her long-term partner Peter Spanton, 70 â with their dog Badger between them â Janet smiled into the camera.
âIâve been keeping a big secret,â she said.
âPeter and me â and Badger â got married on Saturday.â
Then came the sentence that sent the studio into stunned silence before erupting in applause:
âI finally did it. I waited till last for the best.â
This wasnât a whirlwind romance.
It was a quarter-century partnership.
Janet and Peter have been together since 1999 â choosing commitment without ceremony, loyalty without noise, and privacy over spectacle.
Until now.
The wedding itself was deliberately low-key. No glossy magazine spread. No orchestrated reveal. Just a deeply personal milestone shared on Janetâs own terms â with the audience that has followed her for decades.
Back in the studio, the reaction was instant.
Smiles. Laughter. Applause.
Brenda Edwards beamed as the news landed.
At home, viewers flooded social media with emotion:
 âProof that love doesnât have an expiry date.â
 âIâm crying â this is beautiful.â
 âJanet has lived life her way. This feels perfect.â
For many, it wasnât just a wedding announcement.
It was a statement.
 Five Marriages. One Unapologetic Woman.
Janet Street Porter has never claimed to be conventional â and her love life reflects a woman who refused to settle.
She previously married photographer Tim Street Porter, publisher Tony Elliott, filmmaker Frank Cvitanovich, and David Sorkin â each chapter marking a different era, none defining her.
Instead, she has spoken openly about independence, resilience, failure, and the courage to try again.
And now â at 79 â she has done exactly that.
In a culture obsessed with youth and first chances, Janetâs announcement landed with quiet power.
This wasnât a fairytale ending.
It was something braver.
A woman who lived fully.
Loved honestly.
Failed publicly.
Learned loudly.
And still believed enough in love to say âyesâ one more time.
When Janet said she âsaved the best for last,â it didnât sound like a joke.
It sounded like certainty.
Because if Janet Street Porter proved anything on Monday morning, itâs this:
There is no final chapter on happiness â only the one you choose to write next.






