"I just thought of a really good way to break the rules," Ros says in the group chat. "What if... someone else wrote my editorial." In that moment – twenty-past-eleven on print day, posing a question with a full stop – I knew that we were all in for a wild ride in this bit of the magazine. And before any of you say 'oh if I were in that situation I wOuLd jUsT uSe Chat Gee-Pee-Tee', please take your loser behaviour off to [redacted], [redacted], and bring your [redacted] with you.
OK, so we've revealed some behind-the-scenes admin, wildly shifted between tenses and disparaged the audience – what other rules can we break? It must be the spirit of all these amazing artistic rule-breakers coursing through my veins that's encouraging this lawlessness. Linder Sterling has been punking the system for five decades; we spoke to the legendary artist ahead of an artistic tour this spring/summer that takes in Edinburgh and Bute. Glasgow-based art project Bank Street Media Labs are messing with the set-dressing in their