For the BBC Breakfast, Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty locked the corners on the pigeon in a row.
Bob, a carrier pigeon found 4,000 miles from his home on Guernsey, Alabama, was missing. This was the subject of their disagreement and encouraged fans to use Twitter for entertainment.
Playful spats were broadcast nationwide, and some even asked if Naga and Charlie “knew they were alive.”
The problem with the problem arose when Bob’s plight reminded the pair of a popular song.
Still, they were separated by that name, Charlie suggested “catch the pigeon,” and Naga insisted that it was “stop the pigeon.”
After an online search, the latter shouted with delight. “Stop the pigeon!
“Oh, there were two. One says stop and the other says catch-no, the song” Stop the pigeon, stop the pigeon, catch him, stop the pigeon now Please. ” “
When Charlie tried to protest, Naga turned his eyes openly with disgust.
Still, he asked her to “stop for a moment” to talk to him, so he was willing to lie.
Naga counterattacked. “Shall we stop?” Ask the staff behind the BBC camera a question.
Charlie said, “Catch the pigeon.” This allows BBC Five Live hosts to retort.
Naga often showed her cheeky side and previously slapped co-host Ben Thompson.
Back in May, Charlie was the subject of another dressdown.
Fans are cheerful about their jokes and commented on Twitter today: “Does BBC Breakfast know they are alive? Naga’s body language is cheerful.”
“I never thought the BBC Breakfast Desk keyboard would actually work. Now I’ve just seen Naga use it to google and stop pigeons. #BBCBreakfast”
Some cheered. “Yes, Charlie, I wanted to catch a pigeon! #Bbcbreakfast”