黑料不打烊

Rena Zito pens piece for The Conversation about the stigma of Tourette syndrome

After activist John Davidson, who lives with Tourette syndrome, involuntarily shouted a racial slur at Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo during the BAFTA film awards, Rena Zito, associate professor of sociology, explains the stigma behind the condition in a piece for The Conversation.

Rena Zito, associate professor of sociology

A recent article in The Conversation by Rena Zito, associate professor of sociology at 黑料不打烊 who lives with Tourette syndrome, is challenging widespread misconceptions about Tourette syndrome, particularly the belief that it commonly involves shouting curses or slurs.

At the BAFTA film awards in London on Feb. 22, 2026, John Davidson, whose life inspired the聽award-winning biopic 鈥淚 Swear,鈥 involuntarily shouted a racial slur during Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo鈥檚 speech. The incident has inspired intense conversation around Tourette syndrome and its symptoms.聽

Zito writes that 鈥渇ewer than 1 in 5 people with Tourette鈥檚 experience taboo tics, such as coprolalia 鈥 involuntary obscene or offensive speech.鈥 Despite this, pop culture has cemented the idea that swearing defines the condition. In reality, she explains, most tics are far more ordinary, including 鈥渆ye blinking, shoulder shrugging, throat clearing or brief sounds.鈥

Coprolalia, the clinical term for involuntary swearing, affects only about 10鈥20% of people with Tourette syndrome. Even fewer individuals experience socially taboo words such as racial slurs. Yet these rare symptoms often dominate public perception and media portrayals.

A key misconception, Zito notes, is the belief that 鈥渢ics reveal what people 鈥榬eally鈥 think and feel.鈥 In fact, she emphasizes, 鈥渢ics often compel people to say or do precisely what they most wish to avoid.鈥 The neurological urges behind tics are involuntary and do not reflect a person鈥檚 beliefs, character or intentions.

Zito writes that 鈥渢hese socially inappropriate tics can draw unwanted attention and lead to exclusion, bullying, hostile encounters and barriers to employment.鈥 The stigma can be as distressing 鈥 or more distressing 鈥 than the tics themselves.

Her article calls for greater public understanding of Tourette syndrome鈥檚 complexity. By recognizing that taboo tics are uncommon and involuntary, communities can move beyond stereotypes and toward empathy, ensuring people with Tourette鈥檚 鈥渘eed understanding and support to participate fully and safely in public life.鈥

Read Zito’s full piece in .