GINGER Zee brought her kids into work and it has fans all saying the same thing.
The Good Morning America star had to work during Halloween but didn’t let her job get in the way of the spooky festivities and even involved her boys in the fun.
Ginger’s sons, Adrian and Miles, were dressed up as Queen singer Freddie Mercury and Elton John respectively.
“Freddie Mercury and Elton John are in the building!” read a tweet from the GMA Twitter account, along with a video of Ginger’s Halloween segment.
Ginger, 41, asked the boys to share their favorite Elton John song – Miles answered Yellow Brick Road while Adrian said Tiny Dancer.
“Love having my boys with me,” Ginger tweeted with a red heart emoji.
There was only one word on the minds of fans after seeing the boys’ costumes: adorable.
“They were adorable today…thx for sharing them with all of us!” wrote one person.
Another wrote: “I saw them today. They are adorable. Congratulations. Good job mommy.”
“They are absolutely adorable!!!” said a third person.
Ginger shares her boys with her husband, Ben Aaron, who she married in 2014.
On her Instagram, Ginger posted another photo of the boys’ costumes along with her husband dressed as David Bowie and Ginger herself as Blondie member, Debbie Harry.
‘CREEPY’ SEGMENT
The star sparked controversy the same day after some fans found her segment on natural burials “creepy.”
Ginger could be seen in an ABC clip walking around a natural burial ground where bodies are left to decompose in biodegradable containers.
The chief meteorologist noted it “feels different to a typical cemetery” adding, “here death is breathing new life beneath our feet.”
But not everyone was supportive of the idea.
One person commented: “To hell with that. Decomposing in a graveyard horrible idea.
“Cremation is a quicker way to return to ashes to ashes dust to dust, that’s how God made us and that’s how we return.”
The process of human composting sees a dead body placed with alfalfa and woodchips in the vessel so it can decompose into the soil.
Meanwhile, natural burials see bodies left un-embalmed and have only a biodegradable burial container around them.
President of the Green Burial Council, Ed Bixby, explained: “Natural burial means no embalming, no outer burial container like a concrete vault, biodegradable burial container itself and no upright monument set in concrete.
“But the biggest part of what we do is the family participation so the family can be part of the process from start to finish.”