Oman Daily Observer

BBC INTERVIEW DAD LAMENTS ONLINE FAME

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BUSAN: An academic who became a global Internet sensation when his children interrupte­d a live television interview lamented the perils of online fame on Wednesday, telling reporters: “I’m so through with this.”

Robert Kelly, a professor at South Korea’s Pusan National University, was sharing his insights with the BBC last Friday on the downfall of impeached president Park Guen-Hye when his daughter Marion waltzed into his home office, followed by his toddler son James, who wheeled in on his baby walker.

Kelly’s wife Kim Jung-A, who was watching the interview on television from their living room, flew in seconds later, flinging her arms in a desperate attempt to retrieve the young intruders, before returning on all fours to reach out and close the door.

The interview — described as a “perfect piece of physical comedy” by the BBC — spread like wildfire, watched more than 160 million times on the broadcaste­r’s Youtube page as of Wednesday.

Then the humour turned into extensive online commentary on how Kelly handled the situation, their home life, and a wider debate on newspaper opinion pages over perceived racism after some posters questioned whether the woman in the video was his wife or a nanny.

Major internatio­nal news outlets including CNN, the Guardian and the Wall Street Journal have covered the gatecrashi­ng, which was also parodied by the Jimmy Fallon Show.

Kelly, who specialise­s in East Asian affairs, said he and his family had been “buried under phone calls, messages and Twitter”.

“I’m so through with this that I’m not even reading the websites anymore. There are also think pieces on this too that I have given up trying to read,” he told a press conference in Busan organised by his university — which his wife and children also attended.

US-born Kelly, who studied at Ohio State University, teaches US foreign policy at the institutio­n where he is an associate professor, and has research interests in internatio­nal politics and political theory.

He has written a number of academic papers, and regularly contribute­s to publicatio­ns such as Newsweek or appears as a political commentato­r on internatio­nal broadcaste­rs.

“I hope that at some point, people know me for my work,” he said. “I mean, this wouldn’t be the first line in my obituary.”

Asked if, with hindsight, he would have refused the BBC permission to upload the footage to its Facebook page, he said: “If I could have prevented the recording altogether from going on the Internet, yes.”

The video triggered accusation­s of discrimina­tion in South Korea and elsewhere after some online posters overseas immediatel­y assumed that Kelly’s wife was a nanny.

 ?? — AFP ?? Robert Kelly, an expert on East Asian affairs and a professor at South Korea’s Pusan National University, his wife Kim Jung-A, daughter Marion (2nd R) and toddler son James pose at the university in Busan.
— AFP Robert Kelly, an expert on East Asian affairs and a professor at South Korea’s Pusan National University, his wife Kim Jung-A, daughter Marion (2nd R) and toddler son James pose at the university in Busan.

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