Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto TV Reporter Shauna Hunt Fights Back Against Obscene On-The-Job Hecklers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2015 01:15 PM
    TORONTO — A Toronto reporter is setting social media abuzz by fighting back against a controversial trend that sees men hurling obscenities at female journalists on the job.
     
    Shauna Hunt of CityNews was the latest woman to be heckled by a group of men shouting sexually explicit comments into her microphone as she tried to cover a local soccer game.
     
    But Hunt decided to confront the aggressors, and the video depicting the confrontation has gone viral.
     
     
    Hunt asks the men what could possibly motivate them to taunt women in this way and demanded to know what their mothers would think of their conduct.
     
    The men can be heard dismissing her questions and saying their mothers would have found the so-called prank funny.
     
    The trend, which has been playing out in cities across Canada and the United States for more than a year, has been publicly condemned by two Canadian police forces and Ontario's premier. 
     
    Police in Calgary and Toronto have said future hecklers could face criminal charges, while Kathleen Wynne sent out a tweet speaking out against workplace sexual harassment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary
    Doug Dunlop says his boy Tadhg (TYGH) went to the store Sunday to spend his own money, as he has done dozens of times before.

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary

    Police Search For Evidence, Suspects After 29-Year-Old Victoria Man Shot

    Officers say the 29-year-old arrived at Royal Jubilee Hospital with a non-life threatening gunshot wound at about 12:30 a.m. Thursday.

    Police Search For Evidence, Suspects After 29-Year-Old Victoria Man Shot

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's highest court is set to release its ruling on a long-standing dispute between the province and teachers, who waged a lengthy strike last summer.

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province

    Vancouver Police Make Arrests At Marijuana Store Amid City Debate On Regulation

    Vancouver police raided and arrested staff at a marijuana store Wednesday, just one day after city council voted to hold public consultations on regulating pot shops.

    Vancouver Police Make Arrests At Marijuana Store Amid City Debate On Regulation

    US Makes About-Turn With Praise For Modi, But Brickbats For BJP

    US Makes About-Turn With Praise For Modi, But Brickbats For BJP
    Ten years after denying a visa to Narendra Modi, the US has made an about-turn praising the Indian prime minister for his statement in support of religious freedom, but slammed ruling BJP politicians for religious intolerance.

    US Makes About-Turn With Praise For Modi, But Brickbats For BJP

    Camphor Mothballs Mixed With Candy In More Than 1,100 B.C. Food Bank Hampers

    Camphor Mothballs Mixed With Candy In More Than 1,100 B.C. Food Bank Hampers
    PORT MOODY, B.C. — A British Columbia health authority is warning that camphor mothballs were accidentally mixed with candy and distributed in more than 1,100 food bank hampers.

    Camphor Mothballs Mixed With Candy In More Than 1,100 B.C. Food Bank Hampers