Mariah Carey Jokes Through Dress ‘Pop’ on ‘Good Morning America’

Mariah Carey is the latest victim of a wardrobe malfunction, albeit a minor one, on national television. It happened during her appearance on "Good Morning America" as part of their Summer Concert Series on Friday,, where she was scheduled to perform "#Beautiful" with Miguel.

While chatting with anchor Lara Spencer, the singer, clad in a glittering Donatella Versace gown, suddenly had the "moment".

"Oh shoot, now the back of my dress just popped. I love you, Donatella, but it popped, darling," she said, rolling her eyes.

Carey then obligingly turned around on the spot to show off to the crowd what had gone wrong. As a crew member came to help her on stage, she avoided any further embarrassment by holding the top of the dress to her chest. "Is it going to fall? Yeah, both of them are out now," she said candidly.

Carey joked further with Spencer as the fixing of her dress continued.

"What should we call this? The Central Park saga?" she asked. Spencer, assisting her in preserving her modesty, said with a grin, "I think it's a TV moment. It's several moments - it seems like a Youtube moment, possibly Spotify even," said Carey with a chuckle.

The producers of the show finally took the hint and went in for a commercial break.

When the show returned, the 43-year-old crooner had changed her outfit and was ready to perform, though she did swear again for some reason, and quickly said, "You didn't hear that."

This is the third big "Oops" clothes moment of the week. Former "Desperate Housewives" star Eva Longoria had one at Cannes where she lifted her dress a little too high, revealing more than anyone bargained for (she also showed her sense of humor when she tweeted a picture of herself the following night and said there would be no wardrobe malfunctions in the new dress). Back on home turf in Miami, former Victoria's Secret model Miranda Kerr may ironically have wished for any kind of bra at all, when her jumper slipped off during a photoshoot for a make-up range and threw photographers into a clicking frenzy.