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Posted On 04.15.09

Steve Rubel’s recent post Twitter Is Peaking; Get Ready to Follow The Geeks Onward on AdAge sparked a very interesting discussion between the great @TWalk and me.

Is the entrance of celebrities into Twitter ruining it for the “rest of us?”

In Rubel’s article, he states, “Just six months ago, the list of the top 100 users on Twitter read like a who’s who of geeks.” I agree. And to us, those in the top 100 were seen as celebrities.

Eventually, new Twitter adopters realized the possibility to exist equally among those celebrity geeks. Yes! We could become celebrities ourselves! We could be important! Known by thousands! Big shots in our little Twitter world.

So what originally determined Twitter Celebrity Status?

Twitter Age (Interesting Content x Rate of Updates)

Twitter Age is–obviously–the length of time someone has been using Twitter.

With this idea, I don’t blame those who’ve worked hard to earn “Twitter Elite Status” (potentially Rubel himself?) for getting peeved off that *REAL* celebrities are changing Twitter, or raising the bar. Where the advantage previously was “Twitter Age,” a totally new variable has entered the picture. Prior fame.

So what does this mean? Twitter Celebrities are not the celebrities of Twitter anymore. There is a whole new standard that we normal people are going to have a tough time reaching.

So what now? Should we pout? Does it really matter? Your network is still your network, regardless of a celebrity’s ability to have thousands more followers than you. Maybe this will separate us into two camps.

Or maybe we’ll just find a new castle where we can be king.

Share and Enjoy:

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Rob
April 15, 2009 2:15 am

I'm pretty sure meeting an 'online celebrity' will not make me too excited. I might enjoy it if it's someone with interesting views or knowledge, but it doesn't really hit me in the same way as meeting Obama, Tom Cruise or even a minor sitcom cast would.

Jared O'Toole
April 15, 2009 9:55 am

I dont think it really matters. Again your network is your network. If you dont want to hear the celebrities you don't have to. The downside is all the noise because they have made so many people join twitter who don't get twitter or use it for any real good. However again you don't have to follow them.

April 15, 2009 12:17 pm

No, the celebrities aren't the ones ruining Twitter. It's those like ciscofatty, who have no discipline or control over their inner dialoguse, those that twitter about the totally inane aspects of their life that have no real purpose to be publicized, and those who are pandering for attention by posting the "next shocking thing" on Twitter, that are ruining it.

All I've got to say on the ruination of Twitter is this: It's long overdue, and good riddence.

April 15, 2009 12:44 pm

I immediately think of a fiance professor's quote of "The competition is never so intense when the stakes are so low". It's kind of like that website that rated how influential your Facebook status is. Congratuluation, you win cyber bragging rights?

I can get how a social media consultant would spin the ROI of being a Twitter stud but that's really pushing it. My favorite recent social media quote was, "Social networking is great! You can be social without actually having to spend the effort to do anything talking to people or actually really being social."

April 15, 2009 5:24 pm

I personally don't follow many of the celebrities, cause I don't find their pseudo-caring about Twitter very enjoyable. That being said I am near obsessed with @stevenbward 's Twitter feed, cause he actually responds to all his @ messages.

Mostly, though, the only time I hear about Twitter is when I am flicking thru channels and happen to catch what Lindsay Lohan or Ryan Seacrest tweet is causing hysteria in the "media" world.

August 15, 2009 11:22 am

I'm not a Twitterer, so I don't see what the fuss is about.

I personally don't see its relevance to social media and the web at large...A site where people can see what people's statuses are? Livejournal has that. MySpace has that. Facebook has that. And those sites also offer a lot more ways to connect and network with people.

Maybe I'm wrong, but I just see it as a fad before the hip new thing in social media comes along.

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