About Andrew Keen
The San Francisco
Chronicle recently wrote that “every
good movement needs a contrarian.
Web 2.0 has Andrew Keen.”
Andrew
is indeed the leading contemporary
critic of the Internet.
Andrew hasn’t always been
a contrarian. In the mid Nineties,
he was a member of the pioneering
generation of Silicon Valley visionaries
who first “got” the
Internet. He founded Audiocafe.com
in 1995, and, securing significant
investment from Intel and SAP, established
it as one of the most highly trafficked
websites of the late Nineties. As
the Chief Executive of Audiocafe.com,
Andrew became a Silicon Valley celebrity.
He spoke regularly on the digital
media circuit and was featured and
quoted in many newspapers and magazines
including Esquire, The Industry
Standard, Business Week, Wired,
the Wall Street Journal and The
London Guardian.
In 2000, Andrew produced “MB5: The Festival for New Media Visionaries,” a futurist show featuring some of Silicon Valley’s leading pundits. Since then, he has held senior management positions at a number of venture capital backed start-ups including Pulse, Santa Cruz Networks and Pure Depth. Andrew is currently the Founder and Chief Executive of afterTV LLC, a firm that helps marketers optimize their brand desirability in the post-TV consumer landscape.
Born and bred in the Golders Green neighborhood of North London, Andrew was educated at London University, where he graduated with a First Class Honors degree in Modern History. He was a British Council Fellow at the University of Sarajevo and a Berkeley-Stanford MacArthur scholar at UC Berkeley. He has taught at a number of universities, including Tufts, UMass, Northeastern and UC Berkeley. His academic interests include contemporary cultural history, political philosophy and media studies.
Andrew’s erudition, his entrepreneurial experience, and his writing and public speaking skills have established his voice today as both the most controversial and incisive in Silicon Valley. He is the host of the popular Internet chat show afterTV and regularly appears on television and radio. His commentaries can be read on ZDNet, Britannica , iHollywoodForum as well as in traditional publications like the Weekly Standard, Fast Company and the San Francisco Chronicle.
