Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro is one of the most popular young stars in the NBA, and his model girlfriend, Katya Elise Henry, who has 8.1 Instagram followers, has fans wondering if the boy wonder is about to be a first-time father.

The two got engaged on July 8, and Herro even used his original Instagram account to announce that the couple is expecting their first child (which prompted the birth of a second boy the next day). The model is 3 months pregnant, but bosses at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were not amused by Katerina's Instagram download of a fraudulent newspaper article pushing a bogus concern about some "newly discovered 1918 flu strain" that was quickly refuted by the CDC.

The Russian newspaper Kommersant reported Thursday that the CDC had noticed a spike in cases of antibodies suspiciously similar to the H1N1 flu strain reported in Russia in the summer of 2009. The newspaper issued a warning about the build up of synthetic viral proteins in mammals—the precursor for the flu—following the apparent discovery of a new strain. Several doctors in Moscow began performing blood and tissue samples from Russian patients with a particular strain of measles in 2009. A researcher eventually concluded there was no evidence the strain was naturally occurring.

The newspaper described a new strain of measles, another British scientific paper showed having been funded by virologists, and the CDC was finally able to rule out the virus as synthetic viral infection.

Having obtained a copy of the Kommersant article on Thursday, Nepomnolobov had it printed out and flat out titled, "Darrell Summers Infected With Viral-Based Flu: CDC Links Most Influenza cases to 1918-1919 Virus." In a tweet to the newspaper, Nepomnolobov wrote, "Interesting and totally different side from what I thought we have always included in articles I've seen about healthy young boys getting sick, for what? Do lots of such articles pertain to healthy women?"

It was at hearing the story from Nepomnolobov—who told one reporter WWII documentaries were the inspiration behind Houses of Glamour—that Herro, who wrote a weekly column for The Miami Herald and has collaborated with comedienne Gilbert Gottfried and postal worker freak-person Marc Maron, spoke about being tainted by misinformation in medical reports. "There have been too many whispers with too many holes in them about how babies don't make it to term like RON WALLS ONLY COMING BACK FROM THE DEAD," Morgan tweeted him, with one go-ahead before Herro took a more nuanced stance. "I can do my own reporting on this back in a way a newspaper... Can't mean you make our
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