You’re canceled!
“Your Love is Canceled,” Nigel Roger’s dressing down of an entitled date, whose terrible behavior and subsequent dismissal he compares to a television show being canceled.
The verb gained ground in relationship to the #MeToo movement, which effectively and blessedly called for the cancelation of celebrities accused of sexual assault.
In our current climate, canceling has widened its scope, amounting to the social and economic banishment of public figures, brands, movies, and even hostile emojis based on offensive language, polarizing views, racist sentiment, xenophobia, transphobia, criminal activity, homophobia, poor taste, mistreatment of waitstaff, abuse of power, support of white supremacy, etc.
In response to the ongoing discourse, verb cancel to include, “to withdraw one’s support for (someone, such as a celebrity, or something, such as a company) publicly and especially on social media.”
Merriam-Webster also added the term cancel culture to the dictionary, defining it as “the practice or tendency of engaging in mass canceling as a way of expressing disapproval and exerting social pressure.”