Professional clowns in Queensland say the “creepy” clown trend sweeping the country is threatening their safety and livelihood.
A spate of incidents of people dressed as clowns terrorising unsuspecting people across the US and now Australia has seen police make arrests as the craze spreads across social media.
Sunshine Coast man George Farmer, whose clown name is Rocco, said the prank is also scary for well-meaning entertainers like him.
“We don’t go out alone to visit places, we have to travel together, we might have to look at taking our makeup up down when we go home,” he said.
“For a clown who has done what I do for 16 years, it’s very scary.”
Mr Farmer is the president of the Coastal Caring Clowns, an organisation which trains volunteers to perform visits to hospitals, schools and community organisations.
He said the recent string of incidents shown in videos of clowns scaring neighbourhoods at night posed concerns for his own safety.
“We have to think how we react because in the public, we would see the clown and somebody might think ‘Oh that’s a scary clown, get him’,” he said.
Mr Farmer does three outings dressed as Rocco a week and visits four different hospitals a month.
He said getting into costume for his day job was “liberating”.
“When you start to learn clowning, you really become another character.”
“If I would not have a costume to go to somebody in a nursing home and they don’t know me, they would not look at me.
“They would feel ‘who is that stranger?'”
According to Mr Farmer, the trend is also altering perceptions of clowns as deranged predators instead of happy entertainers.
“We have to think what can we do to protect us from them, and also what can we do to promote that other clowns are around.
“There are only a small part of clowns that do these silly things, but damaging the whole trade.”