Digital Media Center
Bryant-Denny Stadium, Gate 61
920 Paul Bryant Drive
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0370
(800) 654-4262

© 2024 Alabama Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Hey! You! The Unstoppable Rise Of Heckling

An unidentified heckler lets loose as President Obama begins a speech at the Martin Luther King memorial dedication in Washington, D.C., in October 2011.
Mannie Garcia
/
UPI/Landov
An unidentified heckler lets loose as President Obama begins a speech at the Martin Luther King memorial dedication in Washington, D.C., in October 2011.

As summer nears, Great American Hecklers are being spotted all over the place.

You can see them — and hear their calls — at commencements, sporting events, political gatherings. Hecklers on the right and hecklers on the left.

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair was rudely interrupted by hecklers — reportedly shouting "warmonger" and "war criminal" — during commencement at Colby College in Maine. An anti-abortion heckler appeared at Georgetown University's graduation ceremony, to razz Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius.

Hecklers loudly assault musicians in bars, preachers on street corners and athletes everywhere — even during oh-so-quiet-please Professional Golf Association tournaments. At the recent Players Championship in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., for instance, unruly spectators ridiculed golfer Kevin Na for his quirky style of play.

Hecklers in Hackensack, N.J., hectored city officials — verbally — during a council meeting. Mitt Romney was halted by a heckler in New York City a few weeks ago, and President Obama has been heckled here and there, from Ohio to California.

At one point or another, all of us have spied a Great American Heckler.

Hey, Weeks! Who says YOU can write a story about heckling? You don't know jack sprat about hecklers! You've never heckled anybody in your life!

Anatomy Of A Heckler

Heckling, as California psychologist Pamela Rutledge points out, is not something you can do alone. A heckler needs someone to heckle.

Rutledge, who blogs about human behavior for Psychology Today, says that "heckling can be seen as a disruption or a challenge to power."

The heckler, she says, may want all the attention and the power. Or the heckler may believe he has a legitimate right to express a dissenting opinion. "In any public arena," Rutledge says, unexpected and targeted shouting "shifts the communications from a unidirectional flow to an exchange. By breaking what we might think of as the fourth wall, it disrupts the barriers and often encourages others to join in."

When that happens, the interaction between heckler and writer, er, performer becomes participatory and a collective experience, Rutledge says. "The disruption breaks the fusion between the performer and the audience, and the ability to reconnect rests with how the performer is able to handle the heckler."

In other words, all heck might break loose.

Rutledge attributes the abundance of contemporary heckling to the shifting communications landscape, from a traditional, top-down, mass-media, one-directional model to an Internet-driven, troll-baiting, many-to-many, anybody-can-say-anything-to-anybody model that "has increased individual beliefs in the ability to speak up, be heard, and to expect not just a response but a two-way exchange."

Hey, Weeks! Take an ear of corn and shuck it! Amirite?

How To Handle Heckling

Comedians get heckled so often they develop strategies for dealing with the disrupters. Erin Jackson, a semifinalist on NBC's Last Comic Standing in 2008, has been booed off the stage — and Jumbotrons — at the National Mall in Washington.

And she's seen hecklers aplenty. On one occasion, during a political bit (with some offensive language) she even had a heckler apologize.

"When I'm heckled," Jackson says, "the first thing I usually do is to repeat what the person said so that everyone in the showroom knows what happened, and understands what I'm responding to."

No comedian wants to unleash a zinger back at a heckler unless the whole audience knows what the heckler has said to deserve the putdown. "You want to get the crowd on your side against the heckler," Jackson says. "If you can't shut them up immediately, getting a couple hundred people to turn on them can help a lot.'

And if that doesn't work? Allyson Jaffe, who runs DC Improv, where Jackson has performed, says that if a heckler can't be persuaded to hush up by the club's staff, "we will ask them to leave and escort them out of the building."

A few times, Jaffe has had to call the cops. "These are rare occasions," Jaffe says, "and last-resort options."

Hey, Weeks! There's a taxi outside waiting to take you to Scramsville! Get off the page!

Let's Hear It For Hecklers

Is a heckler protected by the First Amendment? This is up for debate — depending on where and how and why the heckling occurs. Heckling at a hockey game is not considered the same as heckling at a campus lecture. Organized disruption is often treated differently from individual outbursts.

According to the National Lawyers Guild, "Although the law is not settled, heckling should be protected, unless hecklers are attempting to physically disrupt an event, or unless they are drowning out the other speakers."

On the other hand, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education maintains that if free speech is protected, it should also be protected from disturbance and interruption.

Comedian Jackson has another take on heckling altogether. "I actually think we need to work together as a society to create more opportunities where we can heckle each other," Jackson says. "Why should comics get to have all the fun? A Segway tour where people just roll around and disturb other folks while they work. Or one of those double-decker tour buses where you could ride down the street drinking beer and shouting at strangers."

That, she says, would be an improvement.

Yo, Weeks, are you FINALLY done? That's five minutes I'll NEVER get back!

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: May 28, 2012 at 11:00 PM CDT
An earlier version of this story misidentified the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education as the Foundation for Independent Rights in Education.
Linton Weeks joined NPR in the summer of 2008, as its national correspondent for Digital News. He immediately hit the campaign trail, covering the Democratic and Republican National Conventions; fact-checking the debates; and exploring the candidates, the issues and the electorate.
News from Alabama Public Radio is a public service in association with the University of Alabama. We depend on your help to keep our programming on the air and online. Please consider supporting the news you rely on with a donation today. Every contribution, no matter the size, propels our vital coverage. Thank you.