John Wayne Gacy’s Double Life
On the surface, Gacy epitomized the American suburban dream. He ran a thriving construction business, was active in local politics and gained attention as a volunteer who often entertained children dressed as "Pogo." Behind his carefully crafted facade was a man harboring violent compulsions. Gacy preyed upon young men—often vulnerable or marginalized—whom he lured into his home with promises of work, trust, or companionship.
Soon after his arrest in December 1978, detectives uncovered the true scale of his crimes. The remains of dozens of young men were buried in the crawl space of Gacy’s home. Other victims were discovered in nearby rivers. The dichotomy of a smiling clown mask concealing a prolific serial killer made Gacy infamous.
While Gacy’s clown persona was not designed to directly terrorize his victims, it functioned as a practical disguise that provided him cover and gave him access, forensic psychologist Dr. Leslie Dobson tells A&E Crime + Investigation.
“The mask drew people in quickly and efficiently, and it gave him invitations to enter places he wouldn’t normally go,” Dobson says. “For Gacy, it wasn’t so much to murder in costume—it was his disguise, his charade. But it helped the whole picture come together for him.”
From Laughter to Terror
The horror of Gacy’s crimes created ripples in how clowns were perceived in popular culture. Before Gacy, clowns were synonymous with circus acts, birthday parties and children’s joy. Afterward, they became an unsettling cultural archetype, their painted smiles reinterpreted as masks concealing hidden menace, says clinical psychologist Dr. Holly Schiff.
“Before his crimes, clowns were almost synonymous with happiness and children’s entertainment,” Schiff tells A&E Crime + Investigation. “The fact that he sometimes worked as a clown, while simultaneously committing horrific crimes in his private life, created a jarring contrast.”
Gacy contributed to the archetype of a sinister clown seen in horror films and other media. For those already uneasy with clowns’ exaggerated makeup and unpredictable antics, Gacy’s crimes provided shocking confirmation that their discomfort had a terrifying real-world anchor, Schiff explains.
“The costumes and painted smiles are now reimagined as a mask for something dark, evil and dangerous,” Schiff says. “I think Gacy's crimes served to cement this idea that something meant to be innocent, fun and harmless could actually conceal menace.”
Coulrophobia: The Fear of Clowns
The roots of clown phobia, known as coulrophobia, stretch back long before Gacy. Historically, clowns and jesters have often carried an undercurrent of menace, their exaggerated emotions creating unease in audiences. But psychologists argue that Gacy’s crimes catapulted this fear into mainstream consciousness.
Dr. Debra Kissen, a clinical psychologist specializing in phobias, emphasizes that the unnatural appearance of clowns already triggers discomfort in the human brain. The face paint, the big nose, the oversized painted mouth—it sends a signal to the brain that this is unusual and potentially dangerous, Kissen tells A&E Crime + Investigation.
“Clowns look strange, foreign and extreme,” Kissen says. “They look human, but not human. Gacy’s crimes just amplified that existing unease, creating a formula that took the fear of clowns to the next level.”
Humans’ most primal instincts can view face paint and stereotypical masks as signs of possible threat. “Our reptilian brain interprets someone in heavy face paint—whom you can’t really see—as unsafe,” Kissen says. “Are they from a warring tribe? Are they hiding something? That part of the brain doesn’t trust what it can’t immediately read.”
For those who seek therapy for clown phobia, Dobson adds that the fear often comes from “not knowing how to read a clown face.”
“I've had clients who are utterly terrified of clowns, even happy looking clowns,” Dobson says. “When we dig into it in therapy, it's that they don’t know what to expect, and it’s associated with a lot of negativity in movies and media.”
Clowns Become a Horror Trope
The media frenzy surrounding Gacy’s crimes also inspired waves of fear-based entertainment centered on clowns. In the decades since Gacy’s murderous rampage was exposed, characters like Stephen King’s Pennywise and Twisty from American Horror Story have embedded themselves in the cultural psyche as twisted reflections of the archetype Gacy made infamous.
According to Dobson, Gacy also unwittingly contributed to a cycle that inspires future criminals.
“If this is your type of stimulation—serial killing, rape, necrophilia—then when you find an idol or a model, you build on it,” she explains. “Copycats see how it’s been done, see the reactions, see the media coverage, and then build on that. They’re not inventing it entirely themselves—they’re feeding off what came before.”
Gacy’s case became more than a tragedy—it became a platform upon which both criminals and creators of horror media could project. His crimes were replayed in news coverage, dissected in documentaries and reimagined on the big screen, solidifying the dark transformation of clowns from circus fun to cinematic nightmare, Dobson says.
Today, mention of Gacy’s name instantly summons the chilling moniker of the “Killer Clown.” The modern-day fear of clowns—hardwired in the nightmares of children, exploited by horror filmmakers and even recognized as a medical phobia—can be traced in large part to Gacy, Schiff says.
“Gacy gave this discomfort a concrete example,” she continues. “For people who were already fearful of clowns, his crimes intensified that anxiety by linking an ambiguous figure to real-life violence.”