Jelly Roll and Wife Bunnie X.O Make Shocking Decision: Adopt Boy Whose Parents Were Lost in Texas Floods—America Moved by Their Act of Compassion
In a moment that has stunned and deeply moved a nation, country-rap star Jelly Roll and his wife, podcast host and influencer Bunnie X.O, have announced they are adopting a young boy who lost both his parents in the devastating floods that ravaged parts of Texas last week.
The tragedy unfolded when torrential rains led to flash floods that swallowed entire neighborhoods. Among the countless heartbreaking stories, one struck a particular chord: a 6-year-old boy was found clinging to debris, alone, cold, and crying. His parents had been swept away as they tried to escape rising waters. Rescue workers called it a “miracle” that he survived at all.
That miracle soon turned into a story of radical love and healing.
According to sources close to the couple, Jelly Roll and Bunnie saw a televised segment about the child while preparing for a charity event in Nashville. “He looked so lost,” Bunnie shared in an emotional Instagram post. “And something in my soul just said—we can’t let him be alone in the world.”
Within 48 hours, the couple had flown to Texas, quietly visited the shelter where the boy was staying, and began the legal process to bring him into their home. No press fanfare, no red carpets—just quiet, determined love.
At a press conference outside their Tennessee home on Friday, Jelly Roll, holding back tears, said, “I’ve written a lot of songs about pain, about redemption, about finding light in dark places. But nothing prepared me for this. We didn’t choose this moment. It chose us. And we’re honored to love this boy with everything we have.”
The boy’s name has not been released publicly to protect his privacy, but social workers confirm he is adjusting well and already calling Bunnie “Momma B.”
Public reaction has been overwhelming. Messages of love have flooded social media. One fan wrote, “Jelly and Bunnie didn’t just open their home—they opened the hearts of millions.” Others praised them for not just talking about faith and family in their music and platforms, but living it out loud in the hardest and most beautiful way.
It’s no secret that both Jelly and Bunnie have walked hard roads—struggles with addiction, poverty, broken family ties. But perhaps that’s what made them uniquely able to understand what this little boy needed: not just safety, but someone who truly knows what it means to be lost—and found.
In a country often divided and exhausted by headlines, this story has reminded many what compassion looks like when it’s not performative but personal. It’s about stepping into someone else’s grief and saying, “You’re not alone anymore.”