Professor Robert Kelly may have incredible knowledge on all things in the Korean political sphere – North and South – and a PhD in international relations, but since his adorable kids and mortified wife burst in on him during a live interview, he’ll be forever known as BBC Dad.
Here’s a reminder, because there’s never a bad time to watch this again.
In a stroke of marketing genius, Twitter drafted him in to explain their recently added conversation control settings, and it couldn’t have been better.
As someone who knows something about interruptions, we asked #BBCdad @Robert_E_Kelly to help us talk about Twitter’s conversation settings, which give brands more control over the conversations they start. https://t.co/i5eC2qEyRf pic.twitter.com/RSvqqpIyjT
— Twitter Marketing UK (@TwitterMktgUK) November 17, 2020
Twitter Marketing even set the tweet so that only they could reply. We see what they did there.
Here are a few things people had to say about the ad.
They have grown up so much https://t.co/cRbXVjaAo6
— Scott Bryan (@scottygb) November 17, 2020
Well played. It might also be the first promoted tweet I've ever actually shared. https://t.co/v7nsaMcEko
— Omar El-Gammal (@Oelgammal) November 17, 2020
I'm crying. He's an influencer now. https://t.co/FzTElk5fa2
— Tianna, the Producer (@dontsmileattee) November 17, 2020
The ultimate relatable icon of our era https://t.co/w9uX0e9slV
— Hollie (@ThriftyMumCom) November 17, 2020
Finally, a word from the man himself.
As someone who knows something about interruptions, I approve of this. Enjoy seeing the BBC Kids again! https://t.co/ja0K5lZLp6
— Robert E Kelly (@Robert_E_Kelly) November 17, 2020
Oh, we did enjoy it, Prof. We really did.
READ MORE
BBC Dad and the kids who videobombed him were back on TV – and they’re still full of mischief
Source Twitter Marketing Image Screengrab
The post Twitter’s use of BBC Dad to explain the new conversation settings is genius-level marketing appeared first on The Poke.
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