In an idle moment I began wondering about historical figures and how they would use the Internet if alive today. It seemed a suitable subject for my 100th blog post.
Exhibit A: Samuel Pepys
- Pepys would definitely have a Facebook page; he wanted to be a member of the establishment and this would be his way of publicising his activities and making Friends
- LinkedIn - Pepys' LinkedIn page says "Naval Administrator has contacts and contracts for negotiation"
- Tinder - a must for Pepys' social activity
- WhatsApp contacts include Oliver Cromwell, Charles I, Charles II and James II.
Exhibit B: Jane Austen
- Jane would obviously have been a blogger: bloggerjane.blogspot.com
- Selling her novels through Amazon Kindle. Book 1 free, book 2 £2.99, book 3 £7.99, now you're hooked it's £14.99 from now on
- Jane's LinkedIn page says "superior librettist seeking comic opera composer for collaboration"
- She set up a WhatsApp group with her sister, brothers and assorted Hampshire country folk
Exhibit C: Leonardo Da Vinci
- Leo started with Instagram, obviously. A new picture every day
- YouTube channel of Leo building massive Lego structures
- LinkedIn: "painter (not houses), sculptor, engineer, inventor, theoretical physicist, mathematician, writer, locksmith, pilot, balloonist, driver, draftsman, interior designer. Available for...well, anything really; I can do a great job for you"
Exhibit D: Caligula
- Definitely a Twitter candidate. "Senators are fat, lazy dangerous lefties. VOTE THEM OUT!!!!" "German Governor conspiracy! Mainstream media won't report it, of course. Neues Deutschland spokesman for the socialists". "I'm gonna build a wall. A big one. The biggest ever built. To keep the peasants out".
Exhibit E: Henry VIII
- Facebook page: 1.5 million Protestant followers; 2 Catholics (Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and his mum)
- Twitter: "Be afraid, be very afraid, Charley boy"
- Tinder: "looking for a wife. Short term temporary post"
Exhibit F: Mao Zedong
- TikTok: pictures of a Long March
- WeChat group with Qin Shi Huang, Kublai Khan and Sun Yat-sen
- Facebook page sponsored by HuaWei
- Twitter: "We're gonna build a wall around Taiwan. A big wall. The biggest ever. To keep the Taiwanese virus out."
So, 100 blog posts! When Geoffrey Boycott reached a century, he took a fresh guard ready for the next 100. So that's what I'll do.
Wonderful. Really cheered up my Friday. I’d have fun following Caligula.
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