“I dare you to throw something at me and I’ll f—ing kill you”
Adele calls out the recent surge of unruly behaviour at concerts.
Do you like to throw stuff onstage at concerts? Adele has some choice words for you.At a show in Las Vegas this week, the British singer-songwriter held no punches, saying (jokingly, of course) that she would “f**king kill” anyone who dared throw something at her onstage.The Grammy winner continued: “Have you noticed how people are like forgetting f**king show etiquette at the moment? People just throwing s–t onstage, have you seen them?”Adele’s onstage rant may have been tongue-in-cheek (she herself noted the irony as she was launching t-shirts into the crowd with a cannon), but cases of concertgoers launching projectiles at artists have become increasingly visible lately.Crowd management experts have noticed an increase in aggressive behaviour at live events including concerts and sports matches since the coronavirus pandemic lockdowns were lifted, said Eric Stuart, chair of the Global Crowd Management Alliance.”When we speak with our colleagues around the world, in Australia, New Zealand, America, Canada, Ireland, everybody’s saying the same thing,” Stuart told Euronews Culture. “There is a definite change in people’s behaviour, there’s a lot less tolerance, a lot less patience, a lot more aggression. The phrase that is used most frequently is a sense of entitlement.”Recent incidents have seen artists dodge everything from sex toys to a bag of someone’s literal ashes while performing.A surge in unruly audience behaviourOne of the most egregious recent cases of a projectile actually hitting an artist took place last month, when US pop star Bebe Rexha was hit in the face with a cell phone while she was performing in New York City.The Grammy-nominated artist had to get stitches, and was left with a massive bruise on her left eye, which she shared with fans in a photo posted to Twitter.The 27-year-old man who threw the phone was charged with assault and aggravated harassment. A witness who was quoted in a criminal complaint said they heard the man say: “I was trying to see if I could hit her with the phone at the end of the show because it would be funny.”He later changed his story; his lawyer maintains that he threw the phone because he wanted Rexha to take a selfie, referring to a TikTok trend where performers will record a video on fans’ phones during shows, which subsequently go viral online.A few days later, American singer Ava Max was slapped by a man who climbed onstage during her show in Los Angeles. In videos posted to social media, the man is seen being dragged off by security, as Max continues her performance.A shift in the dialogue between artists and fansThis kind of behaviour isn’t new – people have been throwing things onstage during concerts pretty much as long as concerts have existed. Think back to the thousands of panties that ended up at Tom Jones’ feet, or that one time David Bowie was almost blinded by a lollipop.”We’ve always had incidents of people throwing things on stage,” Stuart said. “It’s never been a major problem. But now people are throwing hard things like mobile phones. I’ve not heard of it to this level before.”Stuart says that artists need to take some of the responsibility for the audience’s actions, by establishing clear boundaries from the outset.”It’s a really difficult thing because artists want to be seen and loved by their fans,” he said. “But if an artist does pick up a phone off the floor, take a selfie and then pass it back out to the person that’s thrown it, then they’re encouraging that behaviour, which would then be copied by others and may actually increase the danger.”Even Adele’s stage rant wasn’t particularly effective, according to Stuart, who said that shooting t-shirts into the crowd could actually cause injuries in the audience if people rushed to catch them.”We need to make sure that the artists fully understand that there are consequences to their actions, not just parts of their art and part of their performance, but how they respond to people,” he said.Another concern is the disproportionate number of female artists who have been targeted by the violence, which several fans have pointed out on social media.“Idk what is in the air lately but the disrespect for female artists by unruly concert goers who will do anything for attention is deeply concerning and abhorrent,” wrote Twitter user sweetlikeh0ney.Stuart says that in the coming weeks, crowd management experts are planning on meeting to discuss what he says “feels like a pattern” of female artists being targeted by violence while onstage.”The sense is that it seems to be mostly towards female artists, but I don’t think any of us really know why, and none of us can actually envisage the reason. I don’t think we’ve got a strong enough evidence base to confirm that that is the case.”
Source: euronews.com