Being a news reporter can sometimes mean weathering tough conditions. But one reporter has proven that she can handle whatever the weather throws at her - quite literally.
Tori Yorgey was giving a roadside traffic update in West Virginia when she was hit by a car on live television.
But the plucky journalist didn't let that stop her - as she quickly bounced back into the frame and carried on with her report.
Yorgey was covering an incident in which a water main had broken amidst wet and icy conditions.
The plan was to give viewers of NBC affiliate WSAZ the latest on the issue from a roadside location in the city of Dunbar.
Accompanied only by a photographer, she headed out to the locations to give her report. But no sooner had they set up the shot than things were knocked off track when a car skidded off the road into Yorgey.
The reporter was sent flying out of frame - only to pick herself up and rush back on screen.
"Oh, my God! I just got hit by a car, but I’m OK," Yorgey told anchor Tim Irr seconds after being hit.
"You know, that’s live TV for you," she joked while struggling to get back in the shot.
Yorgey laughed the incident off, telling viewers that this wasn't her first time being taken out by a moving vehicle.
"I actually got hit by a car in college just like that," she said, adding: "I am so glad I’m OK."
Meanwhile, the driver of the car could be heard apologizing off camera.
"She didn’t mean to. It was an accident. I know it was," said Yorgey, who even managed to pick up the knocked-over camera and carry on with her report after the incident.
Her upbeat attitude to the situation was only matched by anchor Irr, who hardly seemed to react at all to what happened and remained eerily calm.
The clip has since gone viral on social media, prompting Irr to explain his serene reaction.
"On the contrary, I couldn't see what happened. Only audio. Then, I wasn't truly convinced she was OK," he tweeted.
Yorgey did go to the hospital after her report to get checked out, Craig Melvin revealed on TODAY. He added that she's doing absolutely fine.
Meanwhile, her resilient attitude caught the eye of some big wiggs in the news anchor world.
Savannah Guthrie said after watching the video "she is my hero". "I hope she got a big job. She’s an intrepid reporter!" the NBC news anchor added.