The act of dismissing or undermining
valid criticism of a piece of
media by accusing the critic of being dishonest, biased, or acting in bad
faith, often paired with an exaggerated or uncritical defense of the media. Frequently accompanied by exaggerated claims that critics are “censoring” or that their critique poses a threat to discourse, this behavior is often used to justify retaliatory actions against critics.
Person A: “I think the pacing of this show is really off, and the dialogue feels unnatural. It’s not as good as
people are making it out to be.”
Person B: “Wow, so you just hate fun, huh? You’re probably one of those
people who’s just here to tear things down for clout. Maybe stop trying to ruin it for the rest of us.”
Person A: “I’m not trying to ruin anything; I’
m just giving my opinion.”
Person B: “No, you’re just being a bad-
faith hater. People like you are the reason creators can’t take risks anymore. Honestly, criticism like this is
toxic and borders on censorship.”
Person A: “Okay, now you’re just glazelighting. I’m giving a valid critique, and you’re accusing me of bad faith to shut me up.”
In this scenario, Person B uses glazelighting to deflect the critique, accusing Person A of dishonesty and framing the criticism as harmful or
toxic to the discourse. Person A calls out the behavior as glazelighting to highlight the manipulative tactic being used.