BBC professor breaks silence on kids’ adorable interview gatecrash

Robert E. Kelly and his child during the interview.
Updated 15 March 2017
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BBC professor breaks silence on kids’ adorable interview gatecrash

The professor at the center of the viral clip that has made waves around the world has spoken out about why his children gatecrashed his BBC interview.
Robert E. Kelly and his wife, Kim Jung-A, told the Wall Street Journal that their family had been inundated with calls and interview requests after the hilarious incident.
The interview went on to answer several much-wondered about questions about the video clip, including whether Kelly had been wearing pants – he says he was wearing jeans – and why his yellow sweater-wearing daughter bounced into the room so jubilantly.
“She was in a hippity-hoppity mood that day because of the school party,” Kelly told the Journal, in another video interview.
The professor also returned to the BCC Tuesday to shed light on the viral clip.
“We watched it multiple times, too, and our families have watched it as well. Everybody we know seems to think it's pretty hysterical,” Kelly said. “It was sort of catching a regular family off-guard and stuff. It's funny.”

He did add, however, that assumptions that his Korean wife was a nanny made them “pretty uncomfortable.”
According to Kim Jung-A, she didn’t realize the children had wandered into their father’s office until she saw them on the TV screen.
It was, Kelly told the Journal, “a comedy of errors.”
“I made this minor mistake that turned my family into YouTube stars,” Kelly said of forgetting to lock his office door. “It’s pretty ridiculous.”


Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

Updated 06 March 2026
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Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

  • Partnership aims to increase accessibility for all audiences
  • Milano Cortina Games run from Friday to March 15

LONDON: Eurovision Sport, the European Broadcasting Union’s free-to-air streaming platform, will provide live and on-demand subtitling for coverage of the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games in partnership with AI language company Camb.ai

The service will run across all competition days, allowing viewers to stream all six Paralympic Winter Games sports on Eurovision Sport with real-time subtitles. The Games open on Friday and run through March 15.

Camb.ai will supply contextual speech-to-text transcription for both live and catch-up coverage, which the organizers said would support accessibility without altering the editorial integrity of broadcasts.

Eurovision Sport Managing Director Alan Fagan said the aim was to make the Games available to “the widest possible audience,” by scaling up digital accessibility across every event on the platform.

The initiative forms part of the EBU’s most extensive digital coverage of a Paralympic Winter Games to date and complements member broadcasters’ linear output.

It also reflects a wider industry push to make live sport easier to follow for viewers watching without sound, people with hearing impairments and audiences consuming content on demand.

Camb.ai’s Chief Technology Officer Akshat Prakash said the company was proud to deepen its partnership with Eurovision Sport, describing the platform as a leader in applying new technology to sports coverage.

The two organizations began working together in 2024, when they delivered what they described as Europe’s first AI-powered real-time translated sports commentary during European Athletics events.