"I need some muscle over here!" 
 
COLUMBIA, Mo 11/10/15 (Beat Byte) -- Mizzou communications professor Melissa Click, Ph.D. and Director of Greek Life Janna Basler are under nationwide fire for blocking ESPN photojournalist Tim Tai from the Concerned Student 1950 tent city on the Mizzou campus.

Dozens of news outlets picked up the story last night, the New York Times calling it "a divide over respect and rights."  

Tai's encounter with the faculty members and student protestors was peppered with subtle and overt suggestions that should he not back away from the encampment, things could get rough.  

"You need to back up if you're with the media," Click is heard yelling repeatedly at the start of a 6.5 minute video Mark Schierbecker posted on Youtube that quickly went viral.  "You need to back up!  Back! Up!"

Basler literally got in his face.   "Sir!  Sir!  I'm sorry, but these are people, too.  You need to back off," Basler said, about three inches from Tai.   "Back off from their personal space!  Back off and leave these students alone!"  

"No," Tai said.  "There's no law against me being here.  I have a job to do.  I'm trying to do my job." 

"We don't care about your job," several people yelled back. 

Mostly white protestors led the confrontation, chanting, "Hey, hey, hey!  Ho, ho!  Reporters will have to go!" 

The photojournalist kept his cool, trying to dodge Basler, raise his camera, and snap a photo.   But raised hands, and the crowd's increasing aggression, kept him back. 

"You lost this one bro!  You lost this one, bro!"  another man off-camera says loudly, about a dozen times.  "You need to back up!"

Tai expressed the irony that the US Constitution's First Amendment not only protected Concerned Student 1950's right to protest, but also his right to photograph people gathered in a public place over  the biggest news event in recent Mizzou memory.  
 
Journalists across the country, meanwhile, have condemned the confrontation for
several reasons. 
 
"Melissa Click may just be the biggest hypocrite in the entire Missouri student protest," wrote sportswriter Larry Brown, citing a Tweet Click posted Saturday. 

"Hey folks.  Students fighting racism on the MU campus want to get their stories into the national media," Click Tweeted.   "Who among my friends knows someone who would want a scoop on this incredible topic?"

 
The most headline-grabbing exchange did not occur with Tai, however.  

Schierbecker -- a staff photographer for the Mizzou Maneater student newspaper -- approached Click.

"I'm media.  Can I talk to you?" he asked. 

"No.  You need to get out," Click responded, raising her finger in a classic "Marvin K. Mooney" stance.  

"No, I don't," Schierbecker responded.  "I actually don't."  

Click grabbed his camera, then turned away to others in the vicinity.  "Hey!  Who wants to help me get this reporter outta here?"  she said.   "I need some muscle over here!"


Photos credit Mark Schierbecker, from his Youtube video