For those very few who haven't seen the video yet, Professor Robert Kelly, a political science professor in South Korea, was being interviewed by the BBC about the ongoing impeachment scandal in the country.
The interview starts off like any other — the professor fields a question from the host in the comfort of what appears to be his home office. But suddenly the door to the office opens and one of his children walks into the room all happy.
Kelly does his best to continue the interview while simultaneously attempting to tell his child that now is not the time to play — or at the very least play elsewhere. ut this is where things get worse for the professor as what appears to be his second child bursts into the room in a wheeled bouncy chair.
What happens next is probably the most comical part of it all and guarantees its status as a viral video for the days to come. A woman comes running into the room and quickly removes the two children but she leaves the door wide open. Once the children are out of the room she hilariously reaches in to close the door while doing her best not to disrupt the interview.
A little too late for that.
Here Are Some Of The Best Twitter Finds
Enter every room like the kid who interrupts the BBC Skype interview.
— Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) March 10, 2017
The perils of #workingfromhome ! Funniest clip in ages! BBC News - Children interrupt BBC News interview https://t.co/ri2mgS1Kv4
— Slate Legal (@Slate_Legal) March 10, 2017
Anyone who's ever done a Skype interview knows exactly why BBC Dad didn't get up to help with the rugrats:
— Jon Schneidman (@RealSchneidman) March 10, 2017
My dude isn't wearing pants.
Related Link:If you watch anything today, watch this @BBCNews interview on S.Korea. It'll make you smile all weekend! —>https://t.co/BtLcjmGDxx
— Mikey Kay (@MikeyKayNYC) March 10, 2017
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