sunday night that had people concerned for her health. as soon as i opened my mouth, i knew something was wrong. i knew what i wanted to say, but i didn t have the words to say it. reporter: branson was reporting live after the grammys when something went terribly wrong. well, a very, very heavy heavy vertation tonight when he a very darsen let s [ mumbling ] reporter: branson says nearby paramedics came to her aid checking vital signs her temperature and even taking blood. to be honest with you, i started crying right away, because i was scared. i was embarrassed. i was terrified and confused. confused. what had just happened? reporter: along with garbled speech, branson remembers losing feeling in her hands and face, but the word stroke never entered her mind. medical emergency was in my mind. the word, something medically is going wrong. reporter: branses eventually saw a neurologist as ucla
oh, yeah. v8 juice gives you 3 of your 5 daily servings of vegetables. v8. what s your number? scared and terrified, that s how a local cbs reporter serene branson is now describing her incoherent report covering the grammy awards. doctors are saying the episode was a complex migraine, not the minor stroke that many feared. here s nbc s amy robach. heavy vertation tonight. reporter: the video has become a video sensation for viewers across the country. on thursday night, kcbs reporter serene branson watched it for the first time. well, a very, very heavy heavy vertation tonight we had a very darsen let s go ahead [ mumbling ] on kcbs s late news branson talked about the incident from