gloatrage
n. Triumphant satisfaction that a person's behaviour is as bad as expected, combined with outrage at that behaviour.
Etymology
Examples
2017
An unfortunate consequence of the mainstream media’s outrage (or ‘gloatrage’) is that political bias has begun to leak from the opinion pages into the news coverage, giving detractors further reason to eschew what have been traditionally high-quality news outlets such as the Washington Post and the New York Times.
—Neil Winward, “Why the Fourth Estate Is Crumbling,” The Market Mogul, July 03, 2017
2017
It’s time to stop being outraged. It isn’t even really outrage—it’s gloatrage, when you’re secretly thrilled that he’s proving himself to be just as bad as you thought.
—Gideon Lichfield, “It’s time to start ignoring the president of the United States,” Quartz, July 01, 2017
2015
This has been an ugly news week, and the right wing gloatrage over the carnage in San Bernardino will likely dominate the news for days to come.
—Crissie Brown, “Morning Feature—Resisting Despair,” Blogistan Polytechnic Institute, December 04, 2015
2011 (earliest)
Today Apple fanboys struggle to balance "Blackberry sucks" comments with "This…iOS5 update is taking forever" #gloatrage
—Scott Hewitt, “Today Apple fanboys…,” Twitter, October 12, 2011
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