Bob Saget's widow has revealed the last text message he sent her before his unexpected death.
Kelly Rizzo opened up about her husband's passing on the Today show, in her first sit-down TV interview since the Full House star passed away.
When asked about their "last conversation, last connection", the 42-year-old told host Hoda Kotb that there was nothing left unsaid between herself and her husband in their final messages.
"I was just very grateful that it was all 'I love you so much.' I think I said, 'I love you dearly,' and he said, 'I love you endlessly.' And then I said, 'I can’t wait to see you tomorrow.'
"It was just all love," she added with tears in her eyes.
Saget died suddenly and unexpectedly on January 9. The 65-year-old's body was found in his hotel room at the Ritz-Carlton Orlando. He had performed on stage in Jacksonville the previous evening.
Kotb, 57, asked whether Saget had been feeling unwell in the days leading up to his death. Though Rizzo didn't reveal any physical ailments the star was suffering with, she did say that he was struggling with "everything going on in the world."
"All I’ll say was he was very happy and thrilled to be back out on the road. He was also very sensitive, and just all the weight of everything going on in the world, it was just weighing very heavily on him, and that’s why he felt more compelled than ever to make people laugh," the widow said.
Rizzo - who founded blog and TV show Eat Travel Rock - married Saget in October 2018. Through tears, she told Kotb that, though she is grieving for her husband, she had no regrets about their time spent together.

"He valued every single second that we had together. That’s why this is so heartbreaking, but at the same time I know that every second that we had together was just maximized to the fullest.
"There was nothing left unsaid, and there was nothing left on the table."
Saget's death was met with an outpouring of grief from friends and fans. On January 14, more than 100 of his closest friends gathered for a private funeral service to say their last goodbyes. Rizzo described how many came up to her to say they had spoken to her husband in the days before his death.
"He was everyone’s dear friend," she reflected. "No one will ever be like Bob."