TikTok stars Campbell “Pookie” Puckett and Jett Puckett have a reason to celebrate.
The couple shared an update on Campbell’s health via TikTok on Friday, January 25, following her recent health scare earlier this month.
“As a lot of you know, Pookie had some surgery about two weeks ago to remove some pre-cancer that we had known about for months,” Jett, 34, said in the video. “We got the results back from the doctor and the lab. They were able to confirm they got all of the pre-cancer out.”
He added, “I’m just so so thankful that my wife is now okay, the mother of my child is now okay. She’s been the most incredible mother.” Campbell, 32, gave birth to the couple’s first child, daughter Paloma, in October 2024. In the Friday video, the TikTok star gushed, “I love being a mom.”
Jett added, “She loves it I think even more than we could have possibly ever imagined. Every time Paloma’s placed in Campbell’s arms, Campbell lights up like a Christmas tree. It’s just the most magical thing, I can’t really believe it.”
@campbellhuntpuckett Live in faith not fear❤️ love you guys!! #grateful #love #couple #pookie
The couple initially rose to fame when Jett dubbed his wife “Pookie” in one of her day-in-the-life videos in January 2024. Since then, Campbell has amassed over 1 million followers on both TikTok and Instagram. Jett revealed earlier this month that Campbell had undergone a procedure and that the doctor was “cautiously optimistic” about her condition.
“I’m just so grateful to have this community, you guys mean so much to us,” Campbell continued. “I don’t know what I did to deserve so many people that are so sweet to us. There’s one thing that I want to share, this kind of like the motto that I’ve lived by the last year: ‘Live in faith, not fear.’”
Jett said that had “been praying about this every day for months,” noting that “the doctors didn’t want to do the surgery” while Campbell was pregnant.
“We had to wait for nine months,” Jett explained. “During that time it was possible it could turn into real cancer. Thankfully it didn’t, we got through the birth [and] we were able to confirm at that time that it did not turn into actual cancer.”
He continued, “Once they removed it, then the fear was, ‘Did they get it all? Will they have to go back in?’ We finally got the results back. They did get it all — they had what’s called clean margins. It’s such an unbelievable blessing.”