Professor’s talk on South Korea a hit in home-office comedy
SEOUL, Korea, Republic Of — You can see the exact moment professor Robert Kelly knows his live interview has imploded.
As Kelly speaks from his home office via Skype with BBC about the just-ousted South Korean president, his eyes dart left as he watches on his computer screen as his young daughter parades into the room behind him. Her jaunty entrance resembles the exuberant march of the Munchkins celebrating the Wicked Witch’s death in the “The Wizard of Oz.”
And that was just the opening act in a series of mounting mini-calamities — the BBC presenter later called it “a perfect piece of physical comedy” — that has made the Friday interview a viral hit: The BBC estimates 100 million views. Kelly on Wednesday called the interview “a very public family blooper, nothing more,” but it has created a new, bewildering level of celebrity for the well-known though low-key analyst and frequent commentator on the Koreas for foreign media.
The following is a post-mortem of a live interview disaster or, depending on your point of view, a nugget of internet comedy gold: