If you’re watching local news right now,
it’s hard to avoid stories like this one:
"A clown started chasing us up here."
"On Facebook they said there was killer clowns around here that were killing people."
We saw a man with all black on,  clown mask on, and like a red wig.
This wave of clown panic started in late August,
when police in South Carolina received reports
about a suspicious character dressed as a
clown who was trying to get children to follow
them into the woods.
Residents reportedly took matters into their
own hands and began firing shots into the woods.
“We do know that it’s striking fear among
members of our public.
And so we have patrols out in each of these areas and wherever we think we might anticipate that person.
We've added patrols to see if we can intercept the person and the activity.
Since then, police around the country have
been inundated with complaints about clown
sightings, and prank calls falsely reporting
sightings.
Residents in some communities are asking if
they’re allowed to shoot clowns on site.
“You’re under arrest for disorderly conduct."
"I was not scaring nobody, I promise you."
"Alright, how did we get a 911 call?"
"I just came out the door, I swear."
As you can hear the police officer saying,
the arrests are usually made for disorderly
conduct, though some states also have anti-mask
laws that prevent people from concealing their
identities in public.
The consequences of these copy-cat pranks
are playing out in a very real way.
Schools in several states have been put on
lockdown after threats from people posing
as clowns on social media and word-of-mouth
reports of clown sightings.
On top of that, one student in Georgia was
arrested for bringing a knife to school to
defend herself against clowns, and another
in Virginia was arrested for posting a request
on social media for a clown to kill her teacher.
At Penn State, hundreds of students flooded
the streets in search of clowns that had allegedly
been seen around campus — though police
reported that there were no credible sightings
or threats.
Turns out the clown backlash may be more dangerous than the pranksters themselves.
At the end of September, a 16-year-old who
was allegedly scaring neighborhood kids while
wearing a clown mask was stabbed to death
after a confrontation.
Now, this isn’t the first time things like
this have happened.
As recently as 2014 there was a similar clown
craze in the U.S. that became a small social
media trend and spread to France.
But the roots of people dressing up as clowns
as a prank are a lot older than social media.
In 1981 in neighborhoods around Boston, police
received over 20 calls about children having
seen mysterious clowns.
Local schools panicked.
Police questioned a clown they believed to
be the one children had seen, only to find
that he had just been making rounds to department
stores as part of his job.
A few days later, police in Kansas City were
flooded with an estimated 60 to 100 calls
about a “demon clown” scaring children,
armed with a knife.
Parents were on edge after a local parochial
school sent home a note warning them about
a “killer clown” — but police weren’t
able to find any real threat, and blamed the
hype on prank calls and children’s imaginations.
Now, all of this happened just a year after
John Wayne Gacy was charged with the murders
of 33 people, mostly adolescents, committed
over the course of the previous decade.
Gacy worked as a clown for charity — so
there was a lot of preexisting fear around
this image of a dangerous clown.
And for the next 25 years, appearances kept happening.
East Chicago in 1991, Washington,
DC in 1994, South Brunswick in 1997.
When you think about what first made people
afraid of clowns, it’s tempting to pin it
to Gacy or movies like “It,” “Poltergeist,”
and “Killer Klowns from Outer Space”.
But to understand how clowns gained the dark
associations that they have today, you have
to go back to the British Regency era, back
when a clown named Joseph Grimaldi was the
most popular entertainer in England.
If you look at the costumes that he wore,
you can see how he invented a lot of the classic
“clown” look as we know it today: the
colorful hair, the extravagant clothes, the
white face makeup.
But Grimaldi rose to stardom at a time when
what it meant to be famous in pop culture
was changing.
"An interest in celebrity culture began to
emerge, you know, people were interested in
the personal lives of people that they saw
in public. So being a public person was no longer
enough, people wanted to know about
the private individual and the secret and
potentially scandalous aspects of their private
life."
And that private life had a dark side: Grimaldi
suffered from depression and alcoholism.
When he was first starting out as a writer,
Charles Dickens edited Grimaldi’s memoirs,
and later immortalized a version of that disturbed
clown character in his first novel, the Pickwick
Papers.
The image stuck, even though entertainment
went through major changes.
Slapstick clown humor had always worked well
in situations where you couldn’t always
fully see or hear what a performer was doing,
like in large auditoriums or in movies without
sound.
As mainstream culture changed, clowns became
darker characters.
“Think of a wildly popular clown who's very
highly visible in popular culture — there
isn't one, or rather there are two: There’s
the Joker, who’s a sinister psychopath,
and there’s Krusty the Clown, who’s morally,
financially, and physically bankrupt…
"Oh I don't know what you're saying, it all sounds so crazy to me."
"So the days of Howdy Doody and others figures
are unfortunately gone.”
“I do have some sympathy for the clowning
community I mean their numbers have dwindled
and then they really have been reduced to
a children's party performers and ... that's
quite a considerable demotion from the place
that they've occupied in our culture really
for two thousand years if not longer, into
ancient classical history.”
"We wanna encourage people who may be inclined to dress in clown outfits not to do it.
And to avoid doing it at all."
A lot of police statements have made sure
to clarify that these aren’t “real clowns,”
they’re people dressed as clowns.
And while that might sound like a silly distinction,
it’s actually really important for the professional
clowning community.
“It does frustrate us because we work very
hard at our art form, and we take it very
seriously.
It brings bad light on clowning as a profession.”
Traditional professional clowning is in a
rough spot.
Membership in the World Clown Association,
which is the nation’s biggest trade group
for clowns, reportedly dropped from about
3,500 in 2004 to 2,500 in 2014.
And since the latest wave of sightings, many
professional clowns are afraid to make public
appearances.
Some have even canceled previous events out
of fear for their own safety.
“I’m more afraid for the clown than for
the citizens, because everybody down here
got guns.
I don’t want to be the one to ride up on
you and have an encounter with you, because
I don't think it's gonna end well.”
If you want a better idea of the scale of the clown prank epidemic
that's going on right now, you should go over to Atlas Obscura.
This guy named Erik Shilling has put together this interactive map
that looks at all of the sightings, all of the reports, and all of the false reports that have come out in recent weeks.
I haven't tried to count everything on this map, but there is a lot.
