BBC Homepage
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
  • Your account
  • Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • More menu
More menu
Search BBC
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
Close menu
BBC News
Menu
  • Home
  • InDepth
  • Israel-Gaza war
  • War in Ukraine
  • Climate
  • UK
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Culture
More
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Family & Education
  • In Pictures
  • Newsbeat
  • BBC Verify
  • Disability
  • Trending

The sport reporter and the obscene ranter who lost his job

  • Published
    13 May 2015
Share page
About sharing
fhrtipImage source, CityNews
Image caption,

According to reports this man lost his job after an obscene on-camera rant outside a football stadium

ByBBC Trending
What's popular and why

When a football fan in Toronto shouted obscenities at a TV reporter, she stopped to confront him - and another man appearing in the video has lost his job.

Ah, the perils of broadcasting. If you're not in the middle of a riot or a war zone, there's always the prospect of someone jumping in front of the camera and shouting an obscene, sexually charged phrase.

That's what happened to Shauna Hunt, a reporter for CityNews in Toronto while she was reporting outside a football match. But instead of ignoring the outburst and continuing her interview, Hunt went after a group of men after one of them jumped in front of her camera and shouted an obscene phrase. The subsequent argument was posted to YouTube with the profanities bleeped out by the TV station, external, and has been watched 1m times.

"It's a disgusting thing to say, it's degrading to women," Hunt says to one of the men. "I get this every single day, ten times a day, by rude guys like you."

The man was later identified and appears to have lost his job at a Canadian energy company, external. Several other men are pictured in the video, including the man who first jumped in front of the camera, but it's unclear what, if anything, has happened to them.

On Twitter, more than 10,000 messages were posted using a hashtag that's an acronym of the original dirty phrase: #FHRITP.

"To all you idiot men who yell obscenities & #FHRITP at female TV reporters: You're guilty of sexual harassment & I hope you get fired too," tweeted another Canadian reporter, external.

The act of interrupting a TV report and shouting this phrase (which we are not going to repeat for reasons of decency) is, in fact, part of a social media trend. A YouTube prankster named John Cain claims to have been the first person to make the phrase popular - he made a series of viral faked videos which seemed to show live newscasts being interrupted by the profane phrase. Those sparked a trend of real-world obscenity shouters which seems to plague TV journalists in Toronto and elsewhere. CityNews says several of its reporters have been targeted, external.

In a video responding to the incident, Cain claims the outburst is a funny prank and denies it's sexist - although many Twitter users and YouTube commentators disagree. Some highlighted the fact that the man who got sacked wasn't the original shouter. "My concern is that he got fired for thinking something his friend did was funny. Which is absurd. Go after the GUY who said the thing not his friends," said one commenter on Reddit. Others said he got exactly what he deserved: "Where does making the distasteful joke come from? An ignorant mindset, immaturity, lack of professionalism. It seems he wasn't qualified for the job he had in the first place."

Blog by Mike Wendling, external

Next story: The 'disappearing' game that's frightening parents around the world - even though it's a fake

You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, external, and find us on Facebook, external. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.

Top stories

  • Queen leads tributes to 'wonderfully witty friend' Dame Jilly Cooper

    • Published
      6 hours ago
  • Footage shows Jihad Al-Shamie before attack

    • Published
      2 hours ago
  • Israel and Hamas begin indirect talks in Egypt on Trump's Gaza peace plan

    • Published
      2 hours ago

More to explore

  • What makes this US shutdown different (and more difficult)

    A woman wearing a dress with a black sleeveless top and a knee-length stripped black, white and bright pink skirt looks at a sign in front of the National Gallery of Art saying it is "closed due to federal government shutdown"
  • 'I was lucky to get out': Everest hikers battle hypothermia as blizzard rescue continues

    Person wearing winter trekking gear ploughing through a huge snow drift on Mount Everest
  • The true cost of cyber attacks - and the business weak spots that allow them to happen

    M&S and JLR logos
  • Sex, class, horses: The unique mix that made Jilly Cooper's books special

    Jill Cooper sitting at a piano, pictured in 1996
  • Does your relationship have a swag gap, and is that always a bad thing?

    Jessica Raialo wearing a green and blue flower patterned jacket, orange neck scarf, grey and red t-shirt and a belt, next to her boyfriend wearing a dark cap and long-sleeved top.
  • EastEnders' Kellie Bright on the challenges of being parent of an autistic child

    Kellie Bright is wearing a bright red shirt with white lace details, leaning forward with hands on a colourful floral-patterned surface, against a plain light background. Her hair is tied up with a pink accessory.
  • What is MND and are athletes more likely to be diagnosed?

    • Attribution
      Sport
    Rob Burrow (left) and Kevin Sinfield (right)
  • Gisèle Pelicot to face one of her rapists in court as French women fear nothing has changed

    Gisèle Pelicot is surrounding by members of the press carrying cameras. She is walking with her head held high with a faint smile. She has a red bob and is wearing a black coat. She is flanked by her legal team.
  • News Daily: Our flagship daily newsletter delivered to your inbox first thing, with all the latest headlines

    A promo promoting the News Daily newsletter - a graphic of an orange sphere with two concentric crescent shapes around it in a red-orange gradient, like a sound wave.
loading elsewhere stories

Most read

  1. 1

    British parts found in Russian drones, Zelensky says

  2. 2

    Taylor Swift's new album breaks her own sales records

  3. 3

    Bleak reality of opposition sets in for Conservatives

  4. 4

    Queen leads tributes to 'wonderfully witty friend' Dame Jilly Cooper

  5. 5

    Woman stalked Madeleine McCann's family, jury told

  6. 6

    First-year resident doctors back strike action over jobs shortage

  7. 7

    US Supreme Court rejects Ghislaine Maxwell appeal in Epstein case

  8. 8

    Footage shows Jihad Al-Shamie before attack

  9. 9

    Yet another French PM resigns, spelling yet more trouble for Macron

  10. 10

    What makes this US shutdown different (and more difficult)

BBC News Services

  • On your mobile
  • On smart speakers
  • Get news alerts
  • Contact BBC News

Best of the BBC

  • The Bafta-winning Belfast police drama returns

    • Attribution
      iPlayer

    Added to Watchlist
    Blue Lights has been added to your iPlayer Watchlist.
    Blue Lights
  • Andy Zaltzman dissects the week's news

    • Attribution
      Sounds

    Added to My Sounds
    The News Quiz has been added to your My Sounds.
  • Exposing a disturbing scam targeting teenage boys

    • Attribution
      iPlayer

    Added to Watchlist
    Blackmailed: The Sextortion Killers has been added to your iPlayer Watchlist.
    Blackmailed: The Sextortion Killers
  • The foods that could help you live to 100

    • Attribution
      Sounds

    Added to My Sounds
    The Food Chain has been added to your My Sounds.
    The Food Chain
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Make an editorial complaint
  • BBC emails for you

Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.