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Hannibal Buress has his mic cut off at Loyola University Chicago

Comedian Hannibal Buress had his mic cut off at Loyola University Chicago last Saturday after a joke about the university鈥檚 restrictions on his act.
Buress was booked to perform at an annual event open to students for Loyola鈥檚 Department of Programming at the Gentile Arena on campus. , Loyola鈥檚 campus newspaper, Buress had his mic cut off just five minutes after his act started when he projected an email containing the school鈥檚 restrictions on his performance onto a screen on stage (pictured above) 鈥 including a ban on content involving rape, sexual assault, race and sexual orientation 鈥 started making fun of them, and then made at least one joke about sexual assault within the Catholic Church after his mic was cut off.
Videos from that night show Hannibal of the restrictions:
鈥淭here were content restrictions that were put with this gig, which I agreed to but then today, I was like 鈥榓w fuck that.鈥 I don鈥檛 know who it is that is really into content restrictions but I鈥檓 almost certain that they aren鈥檛 under the age of 45. Imagine that. A grown, out-of-touch person trying to police what goes into your ears and brain.鈥

, after Buress鈥 mic was cut he said 鈥淏itch ass old people, I can project. Y鈥檃ll fuck kids, right?鈥 FIREsaid the scene was tense after Buress鈥 mic was cut, :
鈥淚 literally thought like I was about to witness a riot and I was ready to participate,鈥 [student] Ally Boly said. 鈥淎lso it鈥檚 wild that Loyola preaches about speaking up and speaking out but they鈥檙e gonna censor someone doing just that, like that鈥檚 wild. Also I鈥檓 really impressed with all the Loyola kids that stood their ground and refused to leave without an explanation.鈥
In a statement to , Loyola confirmed that it had cut Buress鈥 mic because of his show鈥檚 content, stating that he had 鈥渧iolated the mutually agreed upon content restriction clause in his contract.鈥 The statement continued, 鈥淸i]t is standard for the University to include a content restriction clause in entertainment contracts; Buress is the only entertainer to disregard the clause to the degree that his mic was cut,鈥 suggesting that while other speakers have violated the university鈥檚 conditions before, it considered Buress鈥 remarks a bridge too far.
, Buress continued his set on stage without a mic before being drowned out by music, and then after a brief recess, came back on stage and made jokes about his mic being cut off.
Buress鈥 situation differs in some respects from appearances by speakers invited by students or faculty. Buress was invited by the administration itself (he might be a bit of student groups nowadays), which is free to place restrictions on speakers it invites. That differs from, for example, administrators imposing restrictions or conditions on speakers invited by students or faculty. If administrators cut the mic of a comedian invited by students or faculty because of the content of her speech, that would be a clear intrusion into freedoms promised or guaranteed to the students or faculty who extended the invitation to hear a chosen speaker on chosen topics.
Just as a university has the right to demand preconditions of a performer it hires, however, students have the right to question the propriety of those conditions. After all, according to Loyola鈥檚 own :
鈥淎t Loyola University Chicago, we are a community that welcomes debate and differing views to advance education and understanding. We believe in conversation as a way to problem solve and work toward social justice.鈥
So one has to wonder, how well does Loyola handle the full thrust of public debate if this is how it responds to jokes about a sore subject for the Catholic Church?
When universities impose restrictions on a performer鈥檚 speech like this, whatever their legal right, it is important to consider the implications of those restrictions and the question of what is accomplished by enforcing them. Comedy, in particular, is an art that often drives social change, allowing a speaker to set aside 鈥 or indeed poke at 鈥 discomfort around sensitive or charged subjects in order to challenge ideas and powerful people or institutions. For example, Buress to allegations of sexual assault by Bill Cosby. Do academic institutions serve themselves well when they invite comedians to perform and entertain, so long as they don鈥檛 challenge those institutions?
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