Become a Member
Opinion

I have 112,000 followers but my love for Twitter is over

Freeing myself from social media poison is a step I had to take

July 3, 2024 09:21
Edvard_Munch,_1893,_The_Scream,_oil,_tempera_and_pastel_on_cardboard,_91_x_73_cm,_National_Gallery_of_Norway
Edvard Munch's The Scream
3 min read

If you read my columns, then you probably know how big a part social media plays in my life. I was first introduced to Twitter by David Baddiel and the comedian Omid Djalili in 2009 when I was on a film set with them both. “You’ll enjoy this new site,” they said. “It will while away the hours when you’re on downtime during filming. It’s fun.”

And it was. I don’t think I have gone a day since then without logging on. I have made wonderful friends and incredibly potent connections. I have a great following and a large support group, which helped catapult my recent Shakespeare play into a Top 5 nomination at the audience-led WhatsOnStage awards. When an actress I’ve known for decades recently came for me on Twitter, asking aggressively for my “response to Israel’s actions” after the strike that killed a convoy of World Central Kitchen aid workers (“7 people dead! Trying to feed the starving?”), she felt the wrath of thousands of my Twitter allies who pointed out that demanding a Jewish actress who lives in the UK for an opinion might be considered antisemitic. She was forced to apologise.

I have seen Twitter (or rather X, as we now have to call it) through its many iterations. From being a witty safe space – a small village full of charming people led by Stephen Fry – it morphed into a female networking platform. Great women really ruled the Twittersphere from 2011 to 2014, when every female broadcaster, columnist, artist and writer who had an edge and something to say was there daily. There were some legendary get-togethers where we celebrated each other in an arena that the “boys” couldn’t dominate. In those days, there wasn’t one woman I admired in the Twittersphere whom I didn’t get to meet.

These days, on the other hand, you can’t be a woman on X without being viciously harassed and abused. Try being a high-profile Jewish woman these days who won’t publicly denounce Israel’s right to exist. Oy. Many women got off the site years ago.