The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Alexandra Shulman’s Notebook

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view to fashion designer Recho Omondi’s The Cutting Room Floor, a podcast with a relatively small but engaged audience.

Medine Cohen had to shut down her Man Repeller site last year amid swirling allegation­s of abuse of staff, but in this interview it was the interrogat­or who found herself the subject of a social media storm for making allegedly antisemiti­c remarks, referring to nose jobs and name changes, such as Ralph Lauren switching from Ralph Lifshitz.

These examples occurred in the fashion sphere but they are mirrored all over social media.

People hoping to grow large audiences have discovered that aggression drives visitor numbers far more effectivel­y than playing nice with audiences eager to join an angry mob itching to be untethered.

Social media can be a wonderful and powerful tool but the increasing­ly common practice of so many people attacking and underminin­g each other is pointless, ugly, ill-informed and hugely destructiv­e.

It takes time to build authority and trust and create a real, lasting business like traditiona­l newspapers and magazines have done over many decades. New media characters should beware how they use their power. Otherwise, before they know it, they will be seen as the old guard and taken down by the newer kids on the block, who will be feeling just as angry and aggrieved about something or other.

Amber quarantine makes me see red

SUDDENLY we’re living in an amber world. How baffling, since of the three traffic light colours, amber is the one that you never know what to do with. Stop? Go? Who knows? Amber quarantine restrictio­ns, amber weather warnings and last week, the most peculiar of all, the first amber extreme heat alerts. Amber isn’t extreme. That’s the point of it.

The smile that makes Queen my role model

I NEVER expected that I’d consider the Queen my role model, but since it’s now the predictabl­e question in every quick-fire interview, I’ve had to come up with one. And who better?

Because while most 95-year-old recent widows would be forgiven for choosing to limit their activities and cosset themselves in a small world of nearest and dearest, our Queen has never been more out and about with a big smile and a handshake. There she was at the Eden Project for the G7 summit, entertaini­ng the Bidens at Buckingham Palace, having a laugh at the Windsor Horse Show, on the set of Coronation Street, behind the wheel of her Range Rover in Sandringha­m – dressed in cheerful colours, never less than smart.

Yes, she has the privilege of money and position. But that doesn’t insulate anyone from age and grief. If only one could hope to compete.

Deluded Dom is so weirdly attractive

DOMINIC Cummings – megalomani­ac, deluded disrupter, vengeful colleague, jilted comrade. Yet also, in his etiolated, white-shirted, nothing-left-to-lose way, weirdly attractive.

After his crazed interview, I mentioned to someone that I found him strangely compelling. They remarked, quite rightly, that only recently I would have thought he was the devil incarnate for helping lead us to Brexit. I still do.

But then aren’t devils often the most alluring ones?

It’s off icial... brown bread really is dead

LAST week I went in search of some brown bread to serve with butter and shrimps. A plain, freshly baked wholemeal tin. Could I find one anywhere? Nope. Sourdough? Oh yes. Endless sourdough – seeded, rye, gluten-free, organic. Focaccia, of course. Chewy, malty French Poilane, for sure. But a plain, easy-to-slice brown, one step up from a supermarke­t Hovis, is as endangered a species as the Chequered Skipper butterfly.

Education Minister needs an art lesson

THIS last 18 months has proved that often you don’t know what you miss until you have it back.

Going to Tate Modern to see the brilliant exhibition by Sophie Taeuber-Arp, one of the foremost abstract artists of the 1920s and 1930s, reminded me how important it is to be able to spend time immersed in another person’s work, forget about the dreary matters of the day and come away enriched by their talent and ideas.

I recommend Education Secretary Gavin Williamson takes a look – it might make him change his mind about pushing through his projected 50 per cent funding cuts to the arts across our education sector. We need future generation­s of artists as much as scientists.

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 ??  ?? QUEEN OF CORRIE: On the soap set
QUEEN OF CORRIE: On the soap set

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