To be interviewed by the BBC, enter your children and the video ends up being to laugh

I am not a professor of international relations as Robert E Kelly, but I have given more than one online talk from home and I assure you: be live and see how your children appear at the scene it's tragic. You try to save the situation, you think if it is better to continue doing as you do not see them and hide or assume the disaster. You value if it is better to continue, although you no longer know what you are saying, or if the most logical thing is to stop talking and solve the situation.

And that I turn upside down that this good man, facing the door, so that if they enter they will not be seen. But equally, you are no longer alone, and you feel that it is not serious to dedicate a moment to your children, that they should not be there, when you are addressing several people.

Something like this happened to Mr. Kelly, interviewed urgently by the BBC on the occasion of the political crisis that is happening in South Korea. Being a professor at the National University of Pusan, in that country, the only way to answer the prestigious English network was through videoconferencing, and the fastest, by doing it from home. But everything goes wrong when the children appear and the video ends up being to laugh.

The children enter and a woman comes running

As we see on Magnet, first the oldest daughter enters, walking with a fun dance. Mr. Kelly smiles and tries to tell him with his arm, throwing her back, let him go, while inside a phrase rumbles: "Look I told them not to bother me, that this was important ...".

Then the thing gets even better, because a baby walks in with a big walker. The climax comes when it appears skidding a female figure that could be the mother or the kangaroo, who in an attempt to get the children as soon as possible, only manages to roll the scene even more. A book falls, makes too much noise, begins to drag the older woman and roll the walker, stops to open the door and finally pulls them out as she can.

And then comes the final scene, when nobody is listening to the teacher: reappears cats to close the door, probably imagining that thanks to being crouched, it has not been seen on television, before millions of spectators, while the cries of children who want to return to where Dad is are heard are heard.

Dad, that man who must now be thinking that just happened one of the worst moments of his life, and they will probably never call you back for something like that.

You used to have a job

The video has also reached us through Twitter, from the account You Had a Job, which collects photos and scenes for which someone should probably run out of work. We understand that in this case they refer to the woman who runs in to save the furniture, in case it is the kangaroo:

Meanwhile on the BBC News. pic.twitter.com/2SmutEuHgC

- You Had One Job (@ _youhadonejob1) March 10, 2017

And being a father is like that. Children appear when you least expect it; They make you a crush when you are in a hurry and get up early just the day they could sleep for a while longer. Being a father is that, and as we have said a moment ago, it is much more.

Video: Children interrupt BBC News interview - BBC News (May 2024).