Photo: Robert E. Kelly/Twitter

A brother-sister duo who went viral after crashing their dad’s live interview six years ago look all grown up!
In 2017, Robert E. Kelly — a professor of political science at Pusan National University — was participating in a live BBC News interview about the impeachment of South Korean president Park Geun-hye whenhis then 4-year-old daughter Marion and then 9-month-old son Jamesunexpectedly came into his home office.
As the interview continued, Marion could be seen dancing in the room as she played with a toy. As her dad attempted to keep her at bay, James rolled in on a walker causing his wife to burst into the room — while the interview was still being conducted — to grab her children.
The viral moment, which now has54 million views on YouTube, ended with Kelly apologizing as his kids could still be heard from outside the room.
Making light of the interview’s sixth anniversary, Kellytook to Twitter Tuesday to provide an updateon his family while jokingly referring to himself as the “BBC dad.”
“Some BBC Dad content since the 6th anniversary of the original video was last Friday,” he wrote alongside photos showing him and his wife standing next to their two children.
The snaps show James looking dapper as he matches his dad’s formal attire, wearing a long-sleeve white dress shirt underneath a black vest. His sister was also dressed for the occasion in a sparkling pink dress as she held a bouquet of yellow roses.
“People often ask me and my wife what it has been like to suddenly become virally famous. It has mostly been fun, and sometimes weird,” shared Kelly in aself-written essaypublished a year after the 2017 interview.
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“As work becomes more flexible due to smartphones, super-light laptops, the cloud, and so on, it increasingly follows us home,” added Kelly while speaking to the reaction from parents.
source: people.com