Definition of "bearbaiting"
bearbaiting
noun
countable and uncountable, plural bearbaitings
(figurative) A bloodthirsty free for all.
Quotations
All of these pivoted on the larger Problems: Not only how the press should discuss sexual morality of public officials but whether this ever should be a measure of fitness for public office; not only how the local press will allow its judgment to be pre-empted or conditioned by the Washington press, but also how news judgments, always contagious, can degenerate into bear baiting.
1977, The Journalism Quarterly - Volume 54, page 454
But that's not the worst part of the phenomenon that the press conference bearbaiting illustrates.
1983, Editorials on File - Volume 14, Part 2, page 774
Granted, it wasn't that much of a reach to line up panels of Wal-Mart gross-outs for that bearbaiting audience of hers to hoot and gibber at; and it's also true that her guests, more than those on other shows, do routinely show up for the taping in outfits so grotesque they can turn unwary spectators to stone.
1995 December 15, Lee Sandlin, “Watch Yourself”, in Chicago Reader
He would pause outside the courtroom just long enough to give the TV press five minutes of crazed rhetoric for the Evening News, then he would shepherd his equally crazed 'clients' into the courtroom for their daily war-circus with the Judge. When you get into bear baiting on that level, paranoia is just another word for ignorance... They really are out to get you.
2003, Hunter S. Thompson, The Great Shark Hunt: Strange Tales from a Strange Time, page 497
Tyson took the hint and stood up in his brash white suit. He waved lamely and accepted questions from a group of people which the New York Daily News ridiculed as 'sycophants and psycho fans'. It made a change from the usual bear-baiting boxing-press jamborees in Vegas.
2014, Donald McRae, Dark Trade: Lost in Boxing