Sixty thousand is all good and well, but as we all know, hours by themselves mean nothing. Squat. Zippo.
More importantly, who has the most hours, in flight, while wearing plaid? This narrows the field considerably, and more properly balances the playing field. Not everyone is employed chasing powerlines or in a 747, but everyone can wear plaid.
Or how about most bannanas consumed in flight? Most pencils broken while copying clearances? Most fillings lost while chewing gum during the enroute phase of flight?
How about the most fillings lost while chewing gum and eating a banana, by someone copying clearances enroute, who is wearing plaid?
Now add up the hours, where they really count. I believe you'll find that Edward Hargrove of Maramoke, KS, wins handily, and he has a disadvantage going in. He's blind (not legally blind...completely blind), and one of the only individuals issued an unrestricted pilot certificate and medical who is allowed to act as pilot in command while blind.
Mr. Hargrove no longer has teeth (pulled after the fillings went), and may no longer be competitive. It's assumed that the blindness accounts for the wearing of plaid on a continuing basis (Closet Scot?). The total number of hours (32, 451) aloft is high not because Mr. Hargrove follows powerlines or flies the oceanic routes, but because being blind, he's been unable to find the runway exactly 10,241 times in the past fifty years. The broken pencils are beside the point, he can't see to write. No one to date can explain the banana.
Let's hear it for Mr. Hargrove.