Showing posts with label Cat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cat. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

VIRAL: Cat hitches on glider


A video of a cat hitching on a French light aircraft has been making rounds online.

The couple riding a glider at Club ULM in Kourou, France was about to take flight when they saw the cat clinging onto the bars of the left wing.

The cat clung steadfastly throughout the flight.

Romain Jantot said in the video he uploaded that the cat, once a stowaway, is now part of Club ULM as their mascot.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Cats rule this Japanese island


AOSHIMA, JAPAN - An army of feral cats rules a remote island in southern Japan, curling up in abandoned houses or strutting about in a fishing village that is overrun with felines outnumbering humans six to one.

Originally introduced to the mile-long island of Aoshima to deal with mice that plagued fishermen's boats, the cats stayed on - and multiplied.

More than 120 cats swarm the island with only a handful of humans for company, mostly pensioners who didn't join the waves of migrants seeking work in the cities after World War Two.

Aoshima, a 30-minute ferry ride off the coast of Ehime prefecture, had been home to 900 people in 1945. The only sign of human activity now is the boatload of day-trippers from the mainland, visiting what is locally known as Cat Island.

With no restaurants, cars, shops or kiosks selling snacks, Aoshima is no tourist haven. But cat lovers are not complaining.

"There is a ton of cats here, then there was this sort of cat witch who came out to feed the cats which was quite fun," said 27-year-old Makiko Yamasaki. "So I'd want to come again."

The allure of cats is not surprising in a country that gave the world Hello Kitty, a cartoon character considered the epitome of cuteness. Cat cafes have long been popular in Tokyo, catering to fans who can't keep the animals at home because of strict housing regulations that often forbid pets.

The cats of Aoshima are not too picky, surviving on the rice balls, energy bars or potatoes they cadge off tourists. In the absence of natural predators, they roam the island without fear.

Not all the residents are admirers, though. One elderly woman shooed the animals away with a stick when they dug up her back garden. Locals are trying to keep the feline population in check - at least 10 cats have been neutered.

Residents haven't taken too kindly to the tourists either. They don't mind them coming, but want to be left in peace.

"If people coming to the island find the cats healing, then I think it's a good thing," said 65-year-old Hidenori Kamimoto, who ekes out a living as a fisherman.

"I just hope that it's done in a way that doesn't become a burden on the people who live here."

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Hello Kitty turns 40, gives adults 'license to play'


TOKYO -- As a Japanese schoolgirl in the 1970s, Kazumi Kaminaga had never seen something as cute as Hello Kitty when she first laid eyes on the moon-faced, mouthless character in a shop.

"There were hardly any 'kawaii' products when I was in elementary school," said the now 51-year-old mother, using the Japanese word for cute. "It was such a shock... She was really 'kawaii.'"

With Kitty set to celebrate her 40th birthday on Saturday, Kaminaga has become a life-long collector of a brand phenomenon that appears on more than 50,000 products -- including a dress made for pop diva Lady Gaga -- and spawned an estimated multi-billion dollar industry.

The character is licensed to appear on everything from sundries and clothing to electronics and aircraft -- sex toys are a myth -- in 130 countries and territories.

First released in 1974 and appearing on a coin purse the following year, Kitty is far from just kids stuff these days. Its creator Sanrio says Kittymania is actually driven by adults like Kaminaga, who spoke to AFP as she shopped for a birthday card for her boss -- a man.

"There was a trend born in Japan and other Asian countries in the 1990s that it wasn't childish for adults to have products with these characters' images," said Sanrio spokesman Kazuo Tohmatsu. "It was a major change in values and it also happened in America and Europe in the 2000s."

Kitty's enduring legacy is her appeal to all ages, but particularly grown ups, despite her child-like pink bow and a registered height of five apples.

"Hello Kitty gives adults some license to play, to express a part of themselves that other parts of their lives may not allow," Christine Yano, a US-based anthropologist specializing in the character told AFP in an e-mail.

Western attitudes towards cute culture also changed partly because Japanese manga and anime's popularity made things from Japan "more acceptable and even desirable," said Yano, author of "Pink Globalization: Hello Kitty's Trek Across the Pacific."

Over the years, Kitty has shaken up her look with tinges of punk, while linking with fashionable brands has helped keep up the appeal with some "edginess," Yano added.

Kitty was also a product of her time, appearing three decades after Japan's bitter defeat in World War II when the previously devastated country was firmly back on its feet and children had pocket money to spend.

Kitty got a boyfriend, Dear Daniel, when Japanese teen celebrities started openly dating, and a Persian cat named Charmmy Kitty when pets became all the rage among Japanese women.

'Not a cat'


Despite her years, the timeless character, who insists "you can never have too many friends," is still exploring new frontiers.

Kitty went on a space mission this year aboard a satellite and Sanrio is launching a line of Kitty products for men next year, possibly before Valentine's Day.

"That's a good idea -- I must buy them" for my husband and son, said Niroko Hoshino, a 56-year-old office worker whose fingernails are adorned with tiny Kitty faces, although she only became a collector as an adult. "I have all sorts of Kitty goods -- products for the kitchen and washroom, underwear, handbags... I can't even say how many I have."

But just like some real adults, Kitty has suffered something of an identity crisis recently following word that she is actually not a cat, but a girl.

The shock revelation in August went viral on the Internet and shocked many Kitty fans who thought she must surely must be feline.

The surprise came to light when Yano asked Sanrio to fact-check captions for an October Los Angeles exhibition that she is curating to mark the character's 40th anniversary.

But Sanrio insists it has been saying all along that she was a cheerful little girl born in a London suburb -- despite her whiskers and pointy ears.

"Kitty was making telephone calls and had a goldfish friend from the very beginning," Sanrio's Tohmatsu said.

"It is a 100-percent personified character...Barring her cat face, she does exactly what humans do," he added.

Either way, the girl-cat confusion appears unlikely to dent a seemingly bullet-proof brand.

To mark her 40th year, toymaker Bandai is releasing yet another licensed Kitty product: so-called "smartpants" that slip on the bottom of a smartphone for those who think that their device needs underwear.

And what is the mobile phone garment called? Hello Pantty, of course.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Is your cat making you crazy? Feline feces linked to suicide among women


WASHINGTON - Women infected with a parasite spread by cat feces run a higher risk of attempting suicide, suggests a study of more than 45,000 women in Denmark published in a scientific journal this week.

"We can't say with certainty that T. gondii caused the women to try to kill themselves," said Teodor Postolache of the University of Maryland medical school, senior author of the study in the Archives of General Psychiatry.

"But we did find a predictive association between the infection and suicide attempts later in life that warrants additional studies. We plan to continue our research into this possible connection."

About one in three people in the world are believed to be infected with T. gondii, which has been linked to schizophrenia and behavior changes, but often produces no symptoms as it lurks in brain and muscle cells.

Human run the risk of infection when they clean out their cats' litter boxes, as well as by consuming unwashed vegetables, undercooked or raw meat, or water from a contaminated source.

"The study found that women infected with T. gondii were one-and-a-half times more likely to attempt suicide compared to those who were not infected, and the risk seemed to rise with increasing levels of the T. gondii antibodies," a summary of the findings said.

"Previous mental illness did not appear to significantly alter these findings. The relative risk was even higher for violent suicide attempts."

The suspected perils of T. gondii featured in The Atlantic magazine in March this year when it ran a widely-read profile of Czech biologist Jaroslav Flegr, who suspects the parasite of literally changing people's minds.

It headlined the article: "How Your Cat is Making You Crazy."

source: interaksyon.com