Kids Gone Viral: The Hilarious BBC Interview You Have to See

Professor Robert Kelly, a South Korea expert, was interviewed by the BBC last week. You won't believe what happened just 30 seconds into the interview...

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The most talked-about video last week captured moments from a prestigious BBC news program discussing the situation in South Korea. Not exactly thrilling? Just wait until you see this video. The interviewee, Professor Robert Kelly, was sitting in his home office, answering questions from the studio in the UK when suddenly the door opened and...

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The video went viral at lightning speed, with BBC itself uploading it to YouTube. The consensus was that this is possibly the most genuinely comedic moment in television history. No script could have penned this better: the child bursting in like she's the boss, the baby rolling in his walker, and the shocked mom dashing in, dragging the kids out and nearly collapsing to close the door.

Yesterday, Kelly returned to BBC. This time not to talk about South Korea, but the unexpected fame he and his family achieved. "It was incredibly funny," he admitted. "In the original interview, you can see me barely holding back laughter myself."

Why didn’t he get up to remove the kids himself? Because he was wearing jeans and felt awkward about it. The mother, who rushed in to fetch the kids, realized the invasion through the TV: she was watching her husband’s interview when suddenly familiar little faces popped up on the screen.

No, the parents say they didn’t punish the kids for the unauthorized intrusion. The blame, they admitted, lies with the professor himself for forgetting to lock his office door.

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