The creator of the paint-faced villain Pennywise, in his novel It, responds to panic over spate of clown-related activity across the country
After instilling a fear of clowns into millions of readers with his malevolent character Pennywise, novelist Stephen King has urged an America alarmed by a flurry of threatening clown sightings that its time to cool the clown hysteria.
The first sighting was in Greenville, South Carolina, where a small boy told his mother that a pair of clowns had tried to lure him away. A number of clowns have since been spotted in states including Florida, New York, Wisconsin and Kentucky. Time magazine totted up sightings in more than 24 states, with a handful of arrests. Its report said: In Alabama, at least seven people face felony charges of making a terrorist threat connected to clown-related activity.
David Kiser, a talent recruiter for Ringling Bros circus company, told the Guardian that since caveman days, people would smear ashes on their faces to make each other laugh. Other times they would smear ashes on their faces to scare each other. Scott Bonn, a criminologist and professor of sociology at Drew University in New Jersey, told Time that the fascination with clowns is really the fact that theyre not real. We dont know whats beneath that makeup. It could be anyone or anything. Theyre actually very frightening.
Kings clown creation, Pennywise, has terrified readers since he appeared in his novel It in 1986. There was a clown in the stormdrain. The light in there was far from good, but it was good enough so that George Denbrough was sure of what he was seeing, writes King. The face of the clown in the stormdrain was white, there were funny tufts of red hair on either side of his bald head, and there was a big clown-smile painted over his mouth They float, it growled, they float, Georgie, and when youre down here with me, youll float, too.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/oct/06/clown-sightings-stephen-king-it-pennywise