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Zoom call fails
Zoom call fails










zoom call fails zoom call fails

"I'm really, really sorry your Lordships." "It may be easier just to let him do that, rather than for me to keep trying to bat him away. "OK, I should first explain, I'm really sorry, my cat has managed to open my kitchen door and is trying to get on my lap," she says in a cool, calm and collected way, teaching us all a thing or two about how to handle such potentially embarrassing intrusions. Here's what happens when your pet wants to join your meeting - even if it is with members of the House of Lords /uTnY0k88wa- BBC Politics June 4, 2020 "I'm really, really sorry your Lordships" 🐈

zoom call fails

It happened in 2017, when the associate professor of political science at Pusan National University in South Korea was speaking live from his home office about the ouster of the country's then-president Park Geun-hye. Long before the pandemic and when Zoom became everyone's go-to work platform, BBC correspondent Robert Kelly experienced a rather embarrassing mishap of his own. Please stay planted at home and safe!" 2. You should see me in a crown, right I yam glad this is making folks laugh at this time.

zoom call fails

Her boss, Lizet Ocampo, has a pretty serious job, as she's the political director at non-profit People for the American Way, but thankfully, she saw the humour despite the fact that the tweet now has almost one million likes. My boss turned herself into a potato on our Microsoft teams meeting and can’t figure out how to turn the setting off, so she was just stuck like this the entire meeting /uHLgJUOsXk- Rachele Clegg March 30, 2020 "My boss turned herself into a potato on our Microsoft teams meeting and can't figure out how to turn the setting off, so she was just stuck like this the entire meeting," Clegg wrote alongside a screen grab of the meeting. Very early on in the pandemic, in March 2020, social media user Rachele Clegg tweeted about one of the first video meetings to go truly viral. So, in honour of this hilarious mishap, we reminisce on some of the other best Zoom and video-conferencing fails we've seen over the past few months. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the footage has since gone viral. “I can see that,” replied the presiding judge. One might think we'd be more adept at using the popular video-conferencing platform by now, but only this week Presidio County Attorney Rod Ponton in Texas managed to attend a court hearing as a fluffy white doe-eyed kitten. We've all been guilty of mass circulating videos of people messing up on Zoom over the past 10 months or so, since the world began working from home.












Zoom call fails