Nobel prize-winning immunologist accidentally asks Twitter when he'll be able to get a drink

Australian Prof Peter Doherty, whose eponymous institute has led the country’s coronavirus research, lit up the internet with an Ed Balls moment on Monday

If you’ve found yourself needing a stiff drink more often than usual to get you through life in the time of coronavirus, it turns out you are in esteemed company.

Prof Peter Doherty, a Nobel Laureate for his work on immunology and patron of the Doherty Institute, which has been at the forefront of Australia’s response to the pandemic, gave people on the internet a much needed distraction on Monday after he confused the social media site Twitter for Google and inadvertently asked his more than 26,000 followers for the opening hours of the alcohol retailer Dan Murphy’s.

Dan Murphy opening hours

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

The University of Melbourne laureate professor and former Australian of the year, 79, did not shy away from the errant tweet.

After firing off the misguided missive at 1.40pm on a Monday afternoon, Doherty confirmed to one of a flood of replies that it was a classic case of too many open tabs, before taking the time to riff on everything from the US president Donald Trump and his less-than-scientific musings on a coronavirus cure to the dating app Tinder.

Jokingly asked by one Twitter user whether he was recruiting for a new clinical trial, Doherty mused that alcohol was a “whole lot safer than bleach”. When another follower suggested it was fortunate he hadn’t mistaken Twitter for Tinder, Doherty suggested that would be “profoundly sad”.

Yes, wires got crossed. Too much time in front of a screen.

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

Whole lot safer than bleach.

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

Doherty also proved that even, or perhaps especially, the experts find it all a bit too much at times and made those of us making a few more furtive trips to the bottle shop than we would like to admit feel better about it in the process.

The days just run into each other.....day on day....tweet on tweet....this way lies madness

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

Doherty’s unexpected foray into comedy received a delighted response on Twitter. The ABC’s already much-memed political editor Andrew Probyn offered to do a pickup for the professor.

The vice-chancellor of the Australian National University, Brian Schmidt, who moonlights as a winemaker, offered a “deep discount”. Doherty replied that even Schmidt’s discounted product would be “way above my usual quality”.

I'll do pick up for you.

— Andrew Probyn (@andrewprobyn) April 27, 2020

Even with a discount, way above my usual quality...

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

He also, finally, got an answer to his original question.

Many thanks, just what I was trying to find out. Why bother with Google, where I was meaning to be, when there's so much help available via Twitter?

— Prof. Peter Doherty (@ProfPCDoherty) April 27, 2020

Doherty won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1996 with his Swiss colleague Rolf Zinkernagel for “their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell-mediated immune defence and the biological role of the major histocompatibility complex”.

But he now joins another illustrious group: prominent people who have accidentally tweeted things. Wednesday will mark the ninth anniversary of what is indisputably the most famous example of the genre. In 2011, the UK’s former shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, tweeted the words “Ed Balls”. For a time, the tweet prompted a semi-official “Ed Balls day” in the UK, complete with London tube advertisements.

Morning all and Happy Ed Balls Day. Just spotted this at Balham. #EdBallsDay pic.twitter.com/rN6Rm5fiQN

— Andy Lang (@HRH_Duke_of_Url) April 28, 2015

Australia’s most famous example to date also came from a politician. In 2010, the then New South Wales opposition leader, Barry O’Farrell, fired off a “deeply off the record” tweet to the journalist Latika Bourke in which he appeared to call the then prime minister Julia Gillard a “ranga”.

O’Farrell appeared to publicly answer a private question from Bourke, writing: “deeply off the record – I think the timetable & struggle to get candidates reflects internal poll – pre & post the ranga”.

He quickly deleted the tweet, but not before it was captured for posterity.

Contributor

Michael McGowan

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Dangerous cures and viral hoaxes: common coronavirus myths busted
With so much misinformation about Covid-19 circulating online, we’ve factchecked some of the more common fallacies

Josh Taylor

06, Apr, 2020 @4:23 AM

Article image
Morrison government asks Facebook, Twitter and Google to block Russian state media ‘disinformation’
Communications minister writes to tech giants about ‘content promoting violence, extremism and disinformation in relation to the Russian invasion of Ukraine’

Daniel Hurst and Josh Butler

03, Mar, 2022 @8:34 AM

Article image
‘Firm but friendly’: how the AEC Twitter account is winning friends and influencing people
The electoral commission says ‘professionalism’ is boring and disengaging – so it’s breaking the rules to combat growing mistrust in the political process

Cait Kelly

10, Feb, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
More than 150 Australian newsrooms shut since January 2019 as Covid-19 deepens media crisis
As BuzzFeed News shutters its Australian operation, data shows 157 newsrooms have closed temporarily or for good since early 2019

Amanda Meade

18, May, 2020 @2:45 AM

Article image
Twitter bots have limited success spreading anti-vaccination messages
A study of millions of tweets finds Twitter users rarely see or retweet vaccine misinformation generated by bots

Melissa Davey

01, Oct, 2020 @8:00 PM

Article image
Twitter deletes 170,000 accounts linked to China influence campaign
Content focused on Covid-19 and the protests in Hong Kong and over George Floyd in the US

Josh Taylor

12, Jun, 2020 @3:00 AM

Article image
TikTok takes down hundreds of Australian videos in misinformation crackdown
False Covid claims, including that Scott Morrison faked getting his vaccine, among the content removed from the popular platform

Josh Taylor

22, May, 2021 @5:36 AM

Article image
Twitter hands over PRGuy17 account and IP details following court order
Avi Yemini now wants Telstra to provide information on 26 IP addresses as part of defamation proceedings against anonymous pro-Labor account

Josh Taylor

22, Jun, 2022 @7:26 AM

Article image
Twitter accused of responding ‘to tyrants quickly’ but ignoring Australian government
Julie Inman Grant tells Senate estimates Twitter’s slowness to tackle online child abuse material is in contrast to its blocking of anti-Erdoğan tweets in the lead-up to the Turkish election

Josh Taylor

25, May, 2023 @4:23 AM

Article image
Morrison pushes for esafety transparency from tech companies at G7
OECD agrees to provide funding to develop new protocols for dealing with terrorism online

Josh Taylor

26, Aug, 2019 @5:33 AM