Just how many individuals would you suppose set out to become famous? It isn't really something you are able to predetermine. It was Andy Warhol who said everybody could be famous for fifteen minutes. Given the global population, that isn't a realistic expectation and also the irony is that Warhol is now as famous for that quotation as he is for painting a can of soup.

It seems like to be the quest of modern youth to wish about how to become a famous person; however they do not want to work with it. They feel that getting on their own television will automatically guarantee them fame. Nothing might be further from the truth. There's a surfeit of reality shows on TV today which range from TOWIE in the south to Geordie Shore in the north. All populated by young beautiful people chasing a fame they'll never achieve. They might become perfectly known to a couple of million people, along with a small percentage of those may want their autograph, but famous they will certainly never be.

10 years ago the BBC commissioned a poll from the top 100 Greatest Britons, one might easily substitute "famous" for Greatest, as well as the results would have been very much the same. Probably the most interesting finding was that doesn't one living person featured in the top 10, and Margaret Thatcher was the highest living person at sixteenth. The list included famous Britons from all walks of life and the highest placed celebrity was Michael Crawford in a surprising seventeenth.

If they repeated the process today, how distinct would the outcomes be? Times have changed; the internet has continued to develop beyond anybody's wildest imagination. We certainly have hundreds of television channels, twenty four hour news coverage, and also a media and public with an insatiable appetite for celebrity chat. Magazines pay millions of pounds to orchestrate a celebrity wedding, and newspapers have celebrity hotlines to gather more gossip.

How many people could let you know who Tim Berners Lee, Francis Crick or Patrick Steptoe is today? Not as many who could identify Robbie Williams, Katie Price, or Wayne Rooney. The main difference here is the first three didn't set out as to how to become famous. Fame came from what they achieved, and due to the contribution they have made to the whole world we live in. They will still be famous in another hundred years and if the BBC carries out another survey in 3002 Berners Lee, Crick and Steptoe will definitely be on the list.

 
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