What exactly do you do if Richard Spencer, famed racist and wrangler of Nazi-wannabes, is planning to come to your town and demanding to be taken seriously and treated with respect? If your town is Gainesville, apparently you just mock him relentlessly. Spencer brought his "I'm all for a white ethno-state but don't you call me a white supremacist" shtick to the University of Florida on Thursday, prompting concerns from school and state officials concerned about public safety after the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, where Spencer was a prominent figure.

The talk he gave seems to have ended without anything close to the violence in Virginia this summer, thankfully. Instead, Florida just brought shade and creative ways to protest. Alligator Brewing, for example, offered free beer in exchange for people's tickets to the event in an effort to empty seats:

But inside, a big chunk of the audience seemed to think that Spencer could have the space, but they didn't have to listen to him. He was regularly booed as he tried to talk about how wonderful the 1950s were, but the winning moments came during the Q&A. One person asked why these white supremacists think white people are superior, "given how ugly you guys are." Which is harsh. But nothing compared to this stone-cold gem.

Hi, my question is just that video of you getting punched on loop, thanks. Spencer may represent a movement of trolls online, but this is a one-step master-class on how to troll in real life. And being such a well-adjusted guy, Spencer took all the ribbing in stride.

Nah, you know that's a lie.

There's an argument some people are likely to make that goes along the lines of, "Well, isn't it important to hear both sides?" And the response is,"Not when one side is white supremacists, no." A key figure at the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Spencer's whole motivation is to make white supremacy more palatable, to make it acceptable in polite company to talk about turning the U.S. into an all-white nation. He claims he made up the term "alt right" for specifically that reason. He demands to be treated like a respectable figure while privately addressing Nazi-saluting crowds.

In light of all that, this seems like a good time to be proud of Florida.