In American slang, the term 'spaz' has evolved from a derogatory description of people with disabilities, and is generally understood as a casual word for clumsiness, otherness, sometimes associated with
overexcitability, excessive
startle response ("jumpiness"), excessive
energy, involuntary or random movement, or hyperactivity. Some of these associations use the symptoms of cerebral palsy and other related disabilities as insults. Its usage has been documented as far back as the mid-1950s. In 1965, film critic
Pauline Kael, hypothesised that, "The term that American
teenagers now use as the opposite of 'tough' is 'spaz'."
Benjamin Zimmer, editor for American dictionaries at
Oxford University Press, and researcher at the
University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Research in Cognitive Sciences, writes that by the mid-1960s the American usage of the term 'spaz' shifted from "its original sense of 'spastic or physically uncoordinated person' to something more like 'nerdy, weird, or uncool person, all with a negative sense. In a June 2005 newsletter for American Dialect Society, Zimmer reports that the "earliest [written] occurrence of uncoordinated 'spaz' he could find" is in
The Elastik Band 1967 "undeniably tasteless, garage-rock single" – "Spazz". Later in 1978,
Steve Martin introduced a character Charles Knerlman, a.k.a. "Chaz the Spaz" on
Saturday Night Live, in a skit with
Bill Murray called "Nerds". Bill Murray later starred in the movie
Meatballs, which had a character named "Spaz". Both shows portrayed a "spaz" as a nerd or with potential cognitive or learning disabilities in a comic setting, reinforcing the more casual negative use of the term in the United States by using it in popular comedy. Similarly, Rugrats:
Tales from the Crib: Snow White got a PG rating based on Angelica calling Kimi "Spazzy". The difference in qualitative assessment of the term between British and American audiences is demonstrated by reactions to comments by golfer
Tiger Woods after losing the
US Masters Tournament in 2006. He said, "I was so in control from tee to green, the best I've played for years ... But as soon as I got on the green I was a spaz." His remarks were broadcast and drew no known public attention in the United States. But they were widely reported in the
United Kingdom, where they caused offence and were condemned by a representative of
Scope and
Tanni Grey-Thompson, a prominent
paralympian. On learning of the furor over his comments, Woods' representative promptly apologized. Shortly after
Weird Al Yankovic's song "
Word Crimes" (2014) was released, Yankovic said that he had been unaware that the word "spastic" as used in the song is "considered a highly offensive slur by some people", particularly in the
United Kingdom. He apologized for having it in his lyrics.
Lizzo's 2022 song "
Grrrls" included the word "spaz". The song was criticized and the singer was asked to remove this content (classified as expressing an ableist slur) from the lyrics. After the backlash, Lizzo posted her stance against derogatory language; she has since announced a new version of "Grrrls" with new lyrics. Similarly,
Beyoncé's 2022 song "
Heated" from her seventh studio album
Renaissance included the word. It was strongly criticized and the word was eventually removed from the song. ==Australia==