Justin Bieber turns irate after fan throws hat on stage; ‘You ruined the moment’

By diana / Jul 18, 2016 05:39 AM EDT
(Photo : Instagram/Justin Bieber) Canadian singer Justin Bieber performs during his "Purpose World Tour" concert.

Goodies don't seem to thrill Justin Bieber as the 22-year-old singer got mad after a fan threw a hat on stage during his "Purpose World Tour" at Boardwalk Hall Arena in Atlantic City, New Jersey on Friday.

The "Love Yourself" singer had to pause his concert to sermon his fans about the act, which came off a bit over the top. "Take this moment to listen and try not to give me a hat or whatever you're trying to throw onto the stage right now, because I probably don't want that s--t," Bieber said, as quoted by E News.

Bieber later apologized and acknowledged his remark was mean. He went on explaining that the meaning of his "Purpose World Tour" is to say that all people has a purpose in life and that struggles are just part of this journey; however, the singer does not seem to do well with apologies as he concluded his sermon saying, "Sorry for throwing your hat, but you ruined the moment."

This was not the first time the Canadian singer showed displease for goodies given to him by the Beliebers. In May, Bieber reportedly threw a gift out of his window car in front of his fans. Aside from that, the singer also announced on his Instagram account that he wants his fans to stop taking photos of him while he is roaming around.

The singer said he feels like a "zoo animal" when fans always want to get a photo with him when they see him around.

Meanwhile, behavior expert Judi James said Beliebers put their idol into a lot of pressure. James added that Bieber was calling for normalcy when the singer asked to be recognized as a human.

"[One of] Bieber's problems is his fans. As much as viewers might want to, they cannot use empathy to understand what he is going through right now. His comment about no more pics was less about refusing to pose than about his follow-up comment about "say hi or recognize me as human," which is a loud plea for normality," James told IB Times UK.