Loving live T.V.
I probably shouldn't say this, but one of my favorite things to watch on TV is a news reporter getting harassed during a live report. Hecklers attempt this in a number of ways: 1) some stand there innocently, glancing back and forth from the camera to the monitor and back again, checking themselves out; 2) some jump up and down, screaming and yelling; and 3) some expose themselves.
I've done both #1 and #2 in a past life, but never #3. A true heckler knows the rules of etiquette. That means no harassment when the story is serious or sober in nature. If it's a story about a violent crime, you're to be simply a bystander. If the reporter is covering a county fair, you're free to hop on his back for a piggy back ride.
Sports reporters are usually most susceptible to this type of torment. That's because most of them still insist on doing their live shots "in the crowd," a concept that was first devised 230 years ago. Now, we have studio shows being shot on location, too. Yet, surprisingly, they've been pretty sheltered from abuse.
Thankfully, our neighbors to the North have given us a few ideas on how to change that.