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By Vanessa Barford BBC News
Former Aussie cricket star Shane Warne and model Elizabeth Hurley confirmed
splits from their respective partners on Twitter
Cricket star Shane Warne and model Elizabeth Hurley not only exchanged
flirtatious messages on Twitter, but announced the end of their respective
relationships on the microblogging site. So has tweeting become part of 21st
Century courtship?
Celebrities may claim to cherish their privacy when it comes to romantic
relationships - often going to great lengths to disguise dating or paper over
cracks - but some undoubtedly love lapping up the limelight.
Who can forget Tom Cruise declaring his love for actress Katie Holmes while
jumping up and down on Oprah's famed furniture, or Matt Damon announcing on the
same show in 1998 that he and Minnie Driver were no longer together?
Now micro-blogging site Twitter - which boasts nearly 95 million tweets a day -
seems to be providing an even bigger stage, with Liz Hurley and Shane Warne its
latest players.
But instead of simply using it to give their fans a news flash about their
romantic status, Hurley and Warne exchanged flirtatious tweets that could be
read by anyone. What's more, Hurley had yet to announce the end of her
marriage.
"Sammy [her spaniel] sends you a special lick and says he'd like to put his
silky head on your shoulder," was a tweet in November from Hurley to Warne.
This kind of online flirting is risk-taking that can be almost as seductive as
the relationship itself, says Judi James, a social behaviour expert.
Continue reading the main story
TWITTER UPDATES
@warne888
Hey guys been a long day... I have posted a short factually correct paragraph
to clarify situation on my website.(13 Dec)
Shane Warne website:
Sadly and unfortunately, Simone and I split up a while ago, our close friends
and family were informed at that time. It is a private matter so we did not
make it public. We remain friends and will continue to be good parents.
@ElizabethHurley
Painful, sad days. Arun & I separated for private reasons but FTR he has been a
great father to our son Damian & will always be in his life. (14 Dec)
Not a great day. For the record, my husband Arun & I separated a few months
ago. Our close family & friends were aware of this. (12 Dec)
She compares the shared jokes and secretive codes to passing notes in school,
where it does not really matter what is said because it is the act that bonds
them together. This kind of behaviour leads to "cognitive confusion".
"People's behaviour can have the opposite effect to their goal - it's like
office romances, people say their partners must never know, but then they leave
huge clues like e-mails everyone can access.
"It's almost like sticking a banner on the wall. A psychologist would say
subliminally they wanted to be found out."
In April, film star Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy both used the site to inform
fans of their split, with Frasier star Kelsey Grammer tweeting about his
divorce from former Playboy model Camille Donatacci three months later.
Last month, Desperate Housewives star Eva Longoria also joined the tweeting
troupe, catapulting her decision to divorce into cyberspace.
Part of the reason a lot of stars tweet these private events is due to PR, says
Ms James, because they feel deeply misunderstood and they want to get their
"ideal projected persona" out there.
"It can be quite an emotional performance - almost like stepping on stage to
perform - and it goes against what is deemed to be a natural desire for privacy
on these matters, particularly if it involves a messy relationship."
For others, she says, tweeting can vary from just being a natural way of
communicating news, to the ultimate public display of affection.
Jonathan Smith and his fiancee Nathalie Jonathan Smith announced his engagement
to Natalie Goburdhun via Twitter a few weeks ago
"It's evolved from a form of communication that is deemed to be very romantic -
the old-fashioned love letters of Victorians. Instead of being published after
death, they can be shared in two seconds - with the whole world seeing their
affection and love," she says.
One person who decided to announce his engagement via Twitter is 31-year-old
Jonathan Smith, founding partner of Catch digital. But far from being a grand
romantic gesture, he says it was the "quickest and easiest" way to tell all his
friends.
"My proposal was private, as it should be, but when it came to telling
everyone, I thought it would be fun to use Twitter.
"The Monday morning after we got engaged I wrote something rhetoric like 'Is it
uncouth to announce I am engaged on Twitter?"
The only person who knew the news before his tweet was his future wife's
mother, but within minutes he was receiving texts and tweets of congratulations
from all over the world.
Continue reading the main story
Start Quote
He'd put something along the lines of: 'My wife has left me, I wasn't good
enough, isn't that a shame' on his Facebook wall
End Quote Former wife
But not everyone has such happy experiences of things being shared over social
networking sites.
One woman, who wishes to remain anonymous, says she was "utterly shocked" and
"hugely hurt" when her former husband revealed they were getting divorced on
Facebook.
"He'd put something along the lines of: 'My wife has left me, I wasn't good
enough, isn't that a shame' on his Facebook wall. I hadn't even thought about
how I was going to tell my friends - but Facebook was definitely too public a
forum for such an intimate and personal heartbreak."
The woman, who was in her 20s at the time, says a mutual friend eventually
persuaded her former husband to remove the post, and she puts it down to him
feeling "utterly distraught, hurt and defensive".
"I think he didn't want to be seen as anything other than wronged party, but it
was a massively inappropriate way of displaying feelings - these things can't
be explained in 140 words," she says.
For Janet Murray, 38, a journalist at the Guardian, Twitter is a practical
means to communicate with her husband, because she is too busy to take his
phone calls or respond to his e-mails.
"He thinks I'm ignoring him, so he's set up a Twitter account to get in touch
with me - normally about something like who will wait for the plumber, who is
cooking dinner or who is babysitting," she laughs.
"If he tweets, my followers see and I'm embarrassed into replying, so it works!
"
15th december 2010 - 11:07
It is so tragic that people increasingly don't feel like they are living unless
they live life in public. If people feel they don't have time to tell their own
genuine friendship group and family their news, they should maybe spend less
time tweeting the minutiae of their lives to the masses, and pay some real
attention to their significant few. But I guess I'm just old fashioned like
that.
15th december 2010 - 10:45
The one thing that strikes me - they're pretty much all failures at holding a
relationship together - wonder if that says something about the shallowness of
a virtual relationship when apparently you really can't find the time (come on,
not even one minute, you're kidding) to truely engage with the person you love
(d). For me, at least, love trumps all - I want to be living it, not tweeting
it
15th december 2010 - 10:11
I think the impersonal nature of typing something on a computer causes people
to let their guard down. I'm constantly amazed by what some people write on
their Facebook pages. The irony is that some people I know will broadcast their
deepest feelings over Facebook and yet won't say boo to a goose in real life.
15th december 2010 - 9:37
When my boyfriend proposed, twitter was a part of it. He took me to a beautiful
but mobile-phone-signal-less area in Wales, and set up an automatic tweet
linking to a picture of the ring to fire at his planned proposal time. His
twitter feed is non-public, but it meant that afterwards, when we got a mobile
signal back I was inundated with a flood of congratulations from friends - it
was lovely.