Professor's Very Serious 'BBC News' Interview Crashed by His Hilarious Kids

Adults should take notes: This is how to crash a live TV interview.

OK, fine. I will now concede that, on rare occasions such as this, kids are actually hilarious. Professor Robert E. Kelly was simply trying to make his way through a recent BBC Newsinterview on South Korean politics when he was interrupted, in quick succession, by his two children.

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"Scandals happen all the time," a pre-interruption Kelly told BBC News. "The question is how do democracies respond to those scandals." At this moment, one of Kelly's children enters the room and approaches the camera:

"I think one of your children's just walked in," the reporter astutely observed. Within seconds, a second child enters the room and cranks the hilarity to 11:

Amid a series of apologies, the children were then removed from the interview after stealing the whole damn show:

A classic moment in Kids Interrupting Adults Adulting history, no doubt. But what does Twitter think?

Speaking of children doing admirable shit, let us revel in the memory of Drew Carey's 11-year-old son reportedly saying "screw our president" on live TV last month:

Connor Carey, according to the New York Daily News, also took credit for helping start a tiny bonfire during the D.C. area protest. "Because I felt like it and because I'm just saying, screw our president!" he said when asked by a seemingly annoying Fox News reporter about his involvement.

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