Este sitio web fue traducido automáticamente. Para obtener más información, por favor haz clic aquí.
Updated

Amanda Knox announced Friday that she was engaged to boyfriend Christopher Robinson after a space-themed proposal that was out of this world.

Knox, 31, uploaded a snippet of the proposal on her Instagram page Friday. She also uploaded the whole video of the proposal on YouTube.

WARNING: GRAPHIC LANGUAGE

“It was just your average Sunday night, when suddenly...,” she captioned the post on her Instagram.

AMANDA KNOX SAYS ‘FOXY KNOXY’ NICKNAME STILL HAUNTS HER: ‘THE REAL YOU IS GONE’

The video showed Robinson, a Seattle-based poet, talking to Knox before a crashing sound was heard. The couple walks to the backyard where a flashy meteorite was sitting accompanied by the theme music from “ET: The Extra-Terrestrial.” Inside the meteorite was a tablet detailing her relationship with Robinson.

WARNING: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC LANGUAGE

“Will you stay with me until the last star in the last galaxy burns out and even after that? Amanda Knox, will you marry me?” Robinson asks.

“Yes, I will,” Knox replies before kissing him.

“How did you do this?” she asked.

“I love you,’ he said.

At the end of the video, a description stated, “This insanity was over a year in the making."

“And for the record, Amanda doesn’t wear rings,” it concluded.

Robinson and Knox have been dating since 2015, according to People.

AMANDA KNOX PENS TRIBUTE TO MEREDITH KERCHER ON 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF HER GRUESOME DEATH

Knox made headlines in 2007 after she was accused of killing her roommate Meredith Kercher in the apartment they shared with two other students in Perugia, Italy. Knox was found guilty in 2009 but acquitted and freed in 2011 after spending nearly four years in prison.

Amanda Knox was accused of killing her roommate in 2007.

Amanda Knox was accused of killing her roommate in 2007. (Reuters)

She returned to the United States after the 2011 ruling that freed her, but she was sentenced in absentia to prison again in 2014 – until Italy’s highest court overturned that decision in 2015, ending the possibility of future trials.

Fox News’ Katherine Lam contributed to this report.