Travis Barker visited Robert Kardashian’s grave to ask to marry Kourtney

Travis Barker visited Robert Kardashian’s grave to ask to marry Kourtney

Travis Barker went above and beyond in order to propose to Kourtney Kardashian.

In episode three of Hulu’s “The Kardashians,” Kris Jenner reveals to her daughter Kim that the Blink-182 rocker visited the late Robert Kardashian’s grave to ask permission.

“He came over and asked for her hand in marriage,” the momager recalls as makeup artist Mario Dedivanovic applies her face, “and I was like … it was so sweet and so tender, and then he said he went to your dad’s grave and asked your dad, and I just lost it.”

The famed attorney died Sept. 30, 2003, after a battle with esophageal cancer.

“It’s all happy,” Jenner, 66, continued as she held back tears. “I wish that your dad was here to see it. I can hardly believe that it’s the first time that she’s getting married. Isn’t that cute?”

The duo went on to make fun of Kim’s marriage history, with the Skims founder quipping, “While I’ve had enough for all of us.”

Robert Kardashian's gravestoneBarker visited the famed attorney’s grave out of respect.E!

Barker, 46, proposed to the Poosh founder, 43, in October at the Rosewood Miramar Beach hotel in Monecito, Calif., after a year of dating. He got down on one knee surrounded by an elaborate display of red roses and white candles.

While their wedding plans aren’t known, the two did give fans a surprise of a lifetime when they got married in Las Vegas without a license. Barker and Kourtney later confirmed the ceremony by sharing photos from their tequila-infused night out after the Grammys.

Kourtney Kardashian and Travis BarkerThe pair got engaged in October 2021.kourtneykardash/Instagram

“Found these in my camera roll,” she captioned a series of photos from the impromptu ceremony.

“Once upon a time in a land far, far away (Las Vegas) at 2am, after an epic night and a little tequila, a queen and her handsome king ventured out to the only open chapel with an Elvis and got married (with no license),” she wrote, adding, “Practice makes perfect.”