THIS is the moment Kelly Osbourne’s adorable son appeared to pay tribute to the late Prince of Darkness.
Ozzy Osbourne died at the age of 76 in July earlier this year, with his more memorable antics now resurfacing.
The Black Sabbath rocker famously detailed biting off a bat’s head, something Kelly’s two-year-old appears to know all about.
Uploading a sweet clip of her son Sidney on TikTok, the little one is seen with a cuddly toy bat in the family’s home.
Shared with Slipknot’s Sid Wilson, the pair’s toddler makes reference to Ozzy’s story, pretending to bite off the head.
“Learned from the greatest, Papa,” Kelly wrote in the post’s caption.
read more on ozzy osbourne
Fans couldn’t get enough of it either, with one writing: “Before I even saw who posted this I thought..’He even looks like Ozzy’.”
A second said: “Imagine your dad is Sid Wilson from slipknot and your grandfather is ozzy. He’s so cute.”
“The next Ozzy Osbourne in the making,” a third penned.
While a fourth commented: “You didn’t, I love this! He is such a happy baby bat.”
“What an honor to have Oz as a pap, bless you & your family,” wrote a fifth.
A sixth concluded, “Learned from his papa and will continue to grow learning from his daddy! Future Rockstar!”
Late star Ozzy is thought to have carried out the wild act in 1982.
In his 2010 autobiography I Am Ozzy, the singer details the moment, saying he picked it up, stuffed it in his mouth, and chomped down.
“Immediately, though, something felt wrong. Very wrong.
“For a start my mouth was instantly full of this warm, gloopy liquid,” he recalled.
“Then the head in my mouth twitched.”
“Somebody threw a bat. I just thought it was a rubber bat.
“And I picked it up and put it in my mouth. I bit into it,” he said.
Then he realised: “Oh no, it’s real. It was a real live bat.”
His story was slightly different in 2006, telling the BBC: “This bat comes on. I thought it was one of them Hallowe’en joke bats ‘cos it had some string around its neck.
“I bite into it, and I look to my left and Sharon [Osbourne] was going [no].
“And I’m like, what you talking about? She [says], ‘it’s a dead real bat’.
“And I’m… I know now!”











