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Posted on July 16th, 2009 by Tim Danton

The UK’s Top 40 tech celebs – and why Stephen Fry isn’t number 1

The UK\'s top ten celebrities - PC ProWhen I volunteered to write a feature about the most techie celebrities from these fair British Isles, I hadn’t anticipated the amount of work involved. I figured there would be around 15 celebs, maybe 20, who had been enticed into the wonderful world of Twitter, Facebook and blogging, but the list just kept on growing. I eventually settled on 40 as my cut-off point. Now to work out how to score it.

Fortunately my years working in the PC Pro Labs came to the rescue, and before I knew it I’d worked out a scoring system based on Twitter followers, interactivity, quality and quantity of blogs, techie knowledge and sheer amount of fame. Add it all up and out would pop a lovely number, somewhere between 1 and 100.

Naturally, the phrase “out would pop” is entirely untrue. I had to spend a good two weeks following each celebrity, checking for hints of their geekiness, before I could rate them with any authority. Then there was the small matter of trawling through blogs, Facebook accounts and even long-abandoned MySpace pages.

By the end, four men were vying for top position: TV and radio presenter Richard Bacon, comedian Dave Gorman, novelist Neil Gaiman and the inimitable Stephen Fry.

Each of them had something a bit special to offer. Richard Bacon is perhaps responsible for promoting the phenomenon of social networking to a whole section of the British public that might otherwise have remained oblivious to Facebook and Twitter.

Not only does he share pretty much all of his private life via Twitter updates, he also encourages his hundreds of thousands of listeners to tweet him ideas and responses to include in his nightly Radio 5 Live show. When I started my research in early June he had 430,000 followers; that number now stands at an almight 661,345.

Then there’s Dave Gorman. He’s best known for his offbeat BBC2 series The Dave Gorman Collection, where he went on a quest to find other Dave Gormans around the world, but what pushed him into the upper echelons of our tech celeb list was his thorough embracing of Twitter – he uses it to directly communicate with fans, not just for self-promotion – and the quality of his blogs. He’s also a rather mean snapper of digital photos.

Before I reveal our surprise winner – at least to some – let’s talk about Stephen. There’s absolutely no doubt of his strengths. He has excellent technical knowledge, he tweets roughly 7,000 times a day and his Twitter following comes second only to Richard Bacon in our poll, at 655,000 as of today.

He’s also a true celebrity. Everyone knows who Stephen Fry is, at least in the UK, which can’t be said for anyone else in our top five (Charlie Brooker creeps in at this position).

No, what pulls him down is his blogging. Or lack of. Now, technically he still has a blog on the official Stephen Fry website. However, since 2 March he’s made only two posts, and those have been cut-and-paste jobs from a lecture and an already written Guardian piece. It’s a real shame, because he was a witty blogger with an excellent turn of phrase, and the 140-character limit in Twitter isn’t really designed for eloquence.

Bearing in mind that I gave him 0 points for blogging out of a possible 20, it shows how highly he scored in all the areas to even be in our top three – you can see the full top 40 list, and how they got their scores, at the bottom of this blog.

So, to our number one: Neil Gaiman. At this point a hefty percentage of readers will probably be muttering obscenities about this non-entity, but he’s a bona fide celebrity – especially in the States, where he currently lives – and has a rock-star girlfriend to prove it.

But what wins him our top accolade is his voluminous tweets, his interaction with followers (like Dave Gorman, he actually responds!), his excellent blog and the fact that – while he’s no uber geek – he knows what he’s talking about when it comes to technology.

PC Pro CoverAnd as you might expect from a man who’s collaborated with Terry Pratchett, he’s also very funny.

To find out more about our Top 10, pick up the latest issue of PC Pro (which also includes a darn fine article about improving your children’s IT skills during the school holidays). And to discover exactly who makes up our top 40, and where they score their points, see below.

Note: click on the table to see the full-size image.

(Lead illustration by Howard McWilliam)

Top 40 tech celebrities

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23 Responses to “ The UK’s Top 40 tech celebs – and why Stephen Fry isn’t number 1 ”

  1. lauren Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:44 pm

    wondering if you checked whether all these accounts were real, pretty sure clarkson has been outed as a fake, and i doubt james may would be all a-twitter…

     
  2. coleen digman Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:49 pm

    I agree. Neil is awesome. I’m a huge fan :D I’m following him in Twitter.

     
  3. Tim Danton Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:49 pm

    @lauren We did our best to check – and weeded out the vast majority of fake Twitter accounts – but it’s surprisingly difficult to be certain. Obviously, I focused most of my efforts on the top 10 so it looks like a couple have crept in to the lower echelons – in particular, Jeremy Clarkson.

     
  4. Amy Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:51 pm

    I am quite interested to read the PC Pro article now. By the way, while I guess that you are probably right in calling him so, I am still slightly upset about the reference to Gaiman as a non-entity. Blasphemy!

     
  5. Tim Danton Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:53 pm

    @Amy Don’t worry, I don’t consider him to be a non-entity, and it looks like Coleen agrees with you too!

     
  6. Asa Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:56 pm

    Derren Brown conspicuously absent? Good quality blogging too.

     
  7. Amy Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:56 pm

    Holy Moley! I just checked your list. Is that Mr Pratchett himself or might that be a fake account? Thanks for that list, nice to find list of techie British celebrities.

     
  8. Tim Danton Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 4:59 pm

    @Asa – thanks for the tip. Duly noted for our next round-up!

     
  9. Ian Smith Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 5:08 pm

    *Cough*

    Eddie Izzard at http://twitter.com/eddieizzard
    648,811 followers and spends most of the time twittering about running past various landmarks it seems.

    Noel Clark at http://twitter.com/NoelClarke
    Only 10,754 followers its true, but spends most time twittering about warfare with his neighbours.

    Dara O Briain at http://twitter.com/daraobriain
    15,791 followers and lots of twits on irish matters.

     
  10. Billy Bones Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 5:18 pm

    Mr. Gaiman tweets with imaginary characters, too. I know firsthand.

     
  11. R. Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 5:23 pm

    Why are they all dudes?

     
  12. Tim Danton Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 5:30 pm

    @R Something we cover in the written article, but in the final shake-up there weren’t any women challenging the top 10.

    @Ian Smith, fair cop re Eddie Izzard, though I think he would fall down on the blogging side and I’m not sure he’s very techie – but I’ll follow him from now on.

     
  13. diana Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 6:39 pm

    Gaiman is awesome. I however can see how someone may say he is a non entity. The majority of people I know have never heard of him. (they have heard of Coraline) Unless your a reader of that genre I can see how he is not known. I love his tweets, and I his books. Everyone else on that list the top 4 I guess are people I have not heard of except him :) Gaiman FTW!

     
  14. Isabell Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 7:15 pm

    Rob Brydon is @robbrydon now.

     
  15. Simon Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 7:33 pm

    I think you have Suzi Perry’s account name wrong – should be Suziperry, the one you’ve got appears to have a lot of spam-followers.

     
  16. harry Says:
    July 16th, 2009 at 10:44 pm

    without richard bacon i wouldn’t have found twitter

     
  17. D Says:
    July 17th, 2009 at 12:04 am

    I’m a bit surprised that Russell Brand’s blog got 0. It’s is updated pretty frequently, and while the man himself only writes a blog entry every few months or so, he constantly features in the Vlogs that they post. I would have thought this would gain him more than a zero.

     
  18. D Says:
    July 17th, 2009 at 12:05 am

    Really interesting article though. And good scoring system. Glad to see Neil at number one. His blogs are brilliant.

     
  19. Rob Says:
    July 17th, 2009 at 5:00 am

    I think your fame rating needs a little more work – on what planet are Andy Murray, Jamie Oliver and Russell Brand more famous than John Cleese?

     
  20. Steve Cassidy Says:
    July 20th, 2009 at 11:24 am

    Gorman’s blog on what hapened when students got his phone number deserves a much wider audence.

     
  21. Steve Cassidy Says:
    July 20th, 2009 at 9:00 pm

    Oh and Rob; that would be planet under-30’s.

     
  22. Justin Says:
    July 21st, 2009 at 4:04 am

    Fry posts to Twitter 7,000 times a day? That’s one every 12 seconds assuming he’s not sleeping.

     
  23. SPD Says:
    August 6th, 2009 at 8:33 pm

    http://twitter.com/JasonBradbury

    Come on, you’ve included Suzi, but left Jason out????

    Oz Clarke makes it but Jason doesn’t…?

    Si.

     

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