Scottish Daily Mail

Oh, the perils of online dating when you’re in the public eye!

Think finding a match is hard? Try doing it when you’re a famous face, says Mail columnist AMANDA PLATELL in this hilarious account of her disasters with frauds, fibbers and desperados...

- by Amanda Platell

THE first thought that hit me when I learned that Basic Instinct star Sharon Stone had been ‘outed’ as a user of the dating app Bumble was one of despair.

I mean, what hope in 2020 singleton hell is there for the rest of us women of a certain age when a wealthy, searingly sexy, 62-year-old Hollywood star has to resort to an app to find love?

How ghastly for a woman, who in her day made men giddy with lust — and who still looks scandalous­ly unravaged by time — to resort to parading herself on the fiendishly cruel platform of online dating, laying bare her hopes and dreams in a few perfunctor­y words.

The second thought, when I read how unsuccessf­ul Stone’s foray into modern dating had been, (she was actually blocked by the site, albeit temporaril­y, as no one believed it was her) was: What on earth was Sharon thinking? This was never going to end in wedding bells. I’d be surprised if she ever made it to a second date. Famous people — even mildly well-known people like me — and dating apps just don’t work.

I am speaking from experience here. A year ago, I, too, joined Bumble, the ‘female friendly’ dating site which was launched in December 2014 and is said to have 22 million users worldwide.

Now, let me stress that I’ve never done the

knickerles­s crossed-and-uncrossed-legs for any man, let alone on screen. i’ve never been nominated for a Golden Globe. My personal fortune most definitely does not run into the squillions. i am not famous, nor a celebrity, but am aware that after years on TV and writing for the Daily Mail, many people know who i am.

i have one of those faces that you’d probably look at twice in the street, and wonder whether you should say hello or not. i’ve got a Wikipedia entry and a Google of my name will yield quite a few screens to scroll through.

so, i am not in sharon stone’s league. What we do have in common is our age (we’re both 62) and the fact that we’re single and divorced (sharon twice, me once).

Like her, i’d got to that stage in life where i’d trawled the dating seas of friends, friends of friends, exes, colleagues and the fishing net had come back empty. so i thought, why not join a dating app? it’s how everyone meets these days, isn’t it?

Online dating has grown massively in popularity ever since Match.com blazed a trail in the mid-90s. Now apps such as Tinder and Bumble, with their speedy account set-ups and ‘swipe to like’ approach, have taken dating to another level.

Tinder launched in 2012 on the back of the explosion in smartphone use and within just two years was registerin­g more than a billion ‘swipes’ a day. statistics vary, but it’s said that as many as 70 per cent of new relationsh­ips now start online.

But where does that leave people like sharon stone and me? as i’ve found to my cost — and i suspect sharon must have done by now, since her account was quickly reactivate­d under a blaze of publicity — online dating is a world littered with losers and loonies, fantasists and fraudsters. These men are thinking not of the deep pools of your eyes, but your even deeper pockets, and the thought of basking in some celebrity.

When you’re in the public eye, potential dates have huge preconcept­ions, leading you to become a bizarre caricature of yourself. No one knows who or what you really are, they just see the public persona. and i’m told mine can be scary, which has always bewildered me.

i’d also seen a poll, in the midst of Brexit, revealing that voting ‘Leave’ reduced any woman’s chances of being ‘liked’ by any man by around 80 per cent.

As a staunch Brexiteer, i feared my dating pool would be smaller than a puddle in a heatwave. and if i’m scary, sharon stone must be terrifying.

Neverthele­ss, undaunted, i was drawn to Bumble as it markets itself as female friendly. For the uninitiate­d that’s all you smug marrieds out there — it places women in the driving seat.

it starts with you posting a profile of yourself, describing what you’re looking for: friendship, love, whatever, alongside some pictures.

Unlike the meat market of apps like Tinder where anyone can bombard you with messages and most men on it are searching for fastfood love consumed in one night, Bumble allows only the woman to make the first move: swiping right to like, and so forth. it’s supposed to be empowering.

initially, i was hopeful. i thought i might meet someone outside my own social and profession­al bubble. i’d even take a Guardian reader — i’m not fussy!

so in an attempt to distance myself from the public amanda Platell, i set up my Bumble account simply describing myself as ‘aussie amanda’. i figured that if we got to the dating stage, that would be an appropriat­e moment to reveal myself.

i attached a picture of me taken from a distance, an old favourite of me leaning up against an aged, mudspatter­ed Land rover Discovery in italy, with no make-up (well, hardly any), wind-ravaged hair, striped top and old jeans and a big smile. i thought the rustic look might appeal.

NOT for me the usual endless selfies you see online of women pouting in bikinis. i was up against some stiff competitio­n but thought an ordinary bloke might be looking for an ordinary gal.

another picture had me hugging my friend’s Welsh terrier. someone had told me men love women who love dogs. My profile just said aussie woman seeking happiness in the UK. i was not the Brexiteer, the Conservati­ve spin doctor who worked for William hague, not the Daily Mail columnist.

i was, as Julia roberts said to hugh Grant in the film Notting hill, just a girl looking for a boy and asking him to love her.

i thought my chances would be better if i presented myself as a freelance writer working on her third novel, not yet published, so potential dates would not be able to pick me up on Google.

My cover was that i was single and solvent, two key ingredient­s for mid-life women in the financiall­y strapped dating world of divorced men still supporting their families; no man wants a gold digger.

i didn’t lie, or mislead: i had no kids just an adorable grown up stepson (both true), a good sense of humour (again true, i am told). The only spinning i did with the truth was over my age — 57 — and my choice of pet, as i’d read somewhere that men were suspicious of single women with cats. apologies to Ted, my moggy, who was turned into a canine for the sake of my love life.

i even thought about disguising myself and went wig shopping. i was channellin­g Lady Gaga but alas the blonde tresses i bought made me look like a drag queen.

With my parallel universe created, my Platell alter ego decided, i launched myself on Bumble, crossed my fingers and waited to see if anyone would respond.

Within minutes there were 50 of them — an array of men, literally aged between 18 and 80, despite me specifying i

 ??  ?? Looking for love: A hopeful Amanda before enduring a series of dating disasters
Looking for love: A hopeful Amanda before enduring a series of dating disasters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom