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FIREdresses down Tennessee Tech for punishing student groups over drag show
The shade, the shade, the shade of it all.
At Tennessee Tech University, two student groups, the Lambda Gay-Straight Alliance and the Tech Players, are under investigation after co-hosting a drag show at the school鈥檚 theater. Tech鈥檚 president, 鈥溾 by the show, froze the groups鈥 planned events indefinitely 鈥 a clear violation of the students鈥 First Amendment rights.
On Aug. 20, the two student groups and Upper Cumberland Pride, a local LGBTQ+ advocacy organization, co-hosted 鈥淒RAG at the Backdoor,鈥 a drag show at Tech鈥檚 Backdoor Playhouse. About two weeks later, a video with clips of one drag queen鈥檚 routine at the show was posted on Twitter, and the negative comments caught administrators鈥 attention.
Tech cannot use the personal opinions of administrators and Twitter critics to determine whether it can restrict students鈥 First Amendment right to free expression.
The short video clips show a performer lip-sync, dance, and transform her costume in an elaborate routine, with fans handing her tips, clapping, and cheering. According to the comments on Twitter, some viewers found the performer鈥檚 routine offensive, some thought it was a mockery of religion, and some were angry that one of the fans tipping the performer appeared to be a minor. Instead of defending and standing by its students鈥 constitutionally guaranteed right to freedom of expression, Tech sided with the internet critics and posted a 鈥渃omment鈥 of its own.
In , President Phil Oldham (who may or may not have been clutching a string of pearls at the time) claimed to be 鈥渄isturbed and dismayed鈥 by the show, which he characterized as 鈥渆xplicit activity.鈥
鈥淚 also am offended by disparaging mockery toward any religious group,鈥 he wrote, reassuring apparent critics it was not a university-sponsored event, but one organized and promoted by the two registered student groups. Oldham said groups can reserve space on campus for events, but the programming 鈥渟hould not include obscene, lewd or explicit activities.鈥 Tech claims to be investigating what happened at the show 鈥 focusing on the alleged involvement of minors and reviewing its policies and procedures 鈥 but has already meted out punishment to the groups by canceling all of their scheduled events indefinitely until the school pre-screens and approves them.
Apparently drag shows aren鈥檛 everyone鈥檚 cup of tea at Tech, so we鈥檙e here to spill it.
Late last week, FIREsent a letter to Tech reminding the administration that it can鈥檛 investigate or cancel a student group鈥檚 events just because administrators are not fans. Tech cannot use the personal opinions of administrators and Twitter critics to determine whether it can restrict students鈥 First Amendment right to free expression.
FIRE calls on Tech to immediately end its investigation.
No matter how upset anyone may feel about the clips posted online or about a student group hosting a drag show, the First Amendment protects students鈥 and student organizations鈥 right to host expressive events like 鈥淒RAG at the Backdoor.鈥
Expressive conduct, including performing in a drag show or sponsoring a drag show, is meant to convey a specific message to an audience that is likely to understand it and is protected by the First Amendment. While Tech can enforce content-neutral regulations that might incidentally impact expressive conduct, it cannot restrict expression on the basis of its content. Conduct is also protected as expressive when it falls under a traditionally protected genre, like art, theater, or dancing 鈥 exactly the conduct depicted in the video.
Nor does the conduct described here meet the legal definition of obscenity: typically, hard-core pornography with no artistic, literary or social value. Tech鈥檚 president incorrectly claims theater programming 鈥渟hould not include obscene, lewd, or explicit activities.鈥 His personal opinion does not change the legal analysis 鈥 that the drag show was expression clearly protected by the First Amendment.
Tech overstepped further by canceling the two student groups鈥 public events pending administrative review 鈥 essentially preventing their future expression before it happens. This move is a prime example of a prior restraint, which courts consider the 鈥渕ost serious and least tolerable infringement鈥 on free speech. This punishment will have a chilling effect beyond these two groups, discouraging potentially controversial speech from other student groups.
FIRE calls on Tech to immediately end its investigation, reinstate the groups鈥 events, and reaffirm the school鈥檚 commitment to upholding students鈥 First Amendment right to host expressive events of their choice.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, submit your case to FIREtoday. If you鈥檙e faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533). If you鈥檙e a college journalist facing censorship or a media law question, call the Student Press Freedom Initiative 24-hour hotline at 717-734-SPFI (7734).
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