‘DWTS’ Alum Sharna Burgess Reacts After Meeting Peta Murgatroyd’s Baby

Dancing With the Stars alum Sharna Burgess is “so ready” for another baby after meeting Peta Murgatroyd’s youngest son, Milan.
Burgess shared a photo of herself snuggling Milan via her Instagram Story on Friday, April 25, and captioned it, “The best snuggles in the world with this squish. @petamurgatroyd you’re such an amazing mama. Ovaries exploded. I’m so ready for this again.”
Burgess, 39, shares one son, Zane, with her fiancé Brian Austin Green, 51. Green is also dad to three sons — Noah, 14, Bodhi, 13, and Journey, 10, — with his ex-wife Megan Fox, and his son Kassius, 23, with ex Vanessa Marcil.
Burgess and Green have been especially supportive of the newest baby in the duo’s extended family. Fox and her ex-boyfriend Machine Gun Kelly welcomed their daughter on March 27, 2025. Last November, Burgess reposted Fox’s baby announcement to her Instagram Stories and wrote, “Welcome little one, we are all so excited to meet you.”
Sharna Burgess Seemingly Compares MGK to ‘Dog Pissing on Its Territory’
Fox and Green were married from 2010 to 2021. Green and Burgess have been dating since 2020 and got engaged in 2023.

Those good tidings haven’t necessarily extended to MGK (real name Colson Baker). On the same day the pair’s baby was born, Burgess took a shot at Baker on Instagram after he and Green sparred across the social media platform.
“Lol,” she shared via Instagram Stories on March 27, in response to a DM Green received from Baker that read, “Stop asking when our child is gonna be born. You the FEDS. Quit calling TMZ and focus on that apology you owe me for speaking on my name in public. You chose the wrong one to f— with mr child actor. Go back to cereal commercials.”
“That was about the equivalent of a dog pissing on its territory making it known its back in the area. So eloquently put too. Bravo,” Burgess wrote.
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly Are ‘In a Good Place’ After Welcoming Baby
“When kids are in a split household the greatest thing you can do is make them love and feel safe in both homes, like both homes are also friends and share love and communication,” Burgess shared in a second post the same day. “We work to always keep our language and experiences positive, and when talking about their other home we always talk about it with. love and support. A successful coparenting relationship starts with communication and respect.”
She continued, “Our kids are so excited about the arrival of their baby sibling, and we are excited FOR them. They have been asking nearly every day of their arrival for about a month now. Naturally when they ask us to find out how mama is doing, we say no problem and do just that.”