report as pdf-file
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report as pdf-file
trans: IMG: ART: PHOTO: ad: prod: trans: Research: prod: Design: ad: ME: PHOTO: Also to: ART: Photo: IMG: 37 AME: 8.7.09 Entertainment Weekly SE: Mitchell By benjamin Svetkey Illustrations by Jessica Hische SHE’S BIGGER THAN Megan Fox. Hotter than Hayden Panettiere. More downloaded than Jessica Alba. She’s one of the most clicked-on females in Internet history. Her name is Nora. And she’s a 5-year-old tabby who can play the piano. In the universe of online cat videos—and that’s a much, much larger universe than many dog lovers might suspect—Nora is a superstar. Her piano performances have been viewed nearly 20 million times since they first started popping up on YouTube two years ago. She has her own calendar, a DVD of her recitals, and two books for sale on Amazon (Nora the Piano Cat’s Guide to Becoming a Good Musician and My Story: A Picture Book). Earlier this summer, a composer in Lithuania incorporated one of Nora’s compositions into a “CATcerto” with an 18-piece orchestra in front of an audience of 600 people. (A video was posted on YouTube last month.) “It’s nuts,” says Nora’s owner, Betsy Alexander, a piano teacher in Pennsylvania for 30 years. “Nora’s got an agent.” AE: Toni Whether they’re playing pianos or getting stuck in paper bags, cats are the undisputed stars of the online video world. What is it about our feline friends that keeps us glued to our YouTube? We take a serious—really!—look at a seemingly endlessWeb phenomenon. Slug: Cats Hello Kitty! closed Issue Date: 1059 Web Obsession Will Maru tame that box? Should the Keyboard Cat be played off for good? We review some famous feline clips. —BS CATcerto Lithuanian composer Mindaugas Piečaitis conducts one of Nora’s compositions. “Nora plays with music the way other cats play with toy mice,” Piečaitis says. The song blows the roof off the Klaipėda Concert Hall, but we still prefer Nora as a soloist. B+ Gizmo Flushes A black-and-white puss flushes a toilet, watches the water swirl down the drain, then flushes again, then watches again—over and over for nearly three minutes. Now, that’s entertainment. A timeless classic in the cat-video oeuvre. A+ KITTENS INSPIRED BY KITTENS The true star of this video isn’t one of the adorable kittens shown in a book of feline photographs (cute as they are); it’s the adorable little girl who provides the kitties with silly dialogue (like “I’m at work!” for this cat typist). B+ Simon’s Cat “Cat-Man-do” Technically, it’s not really a cat video. It’s one in a series of simple line-drawn cat cartoons. But it’s so funny and true— and so brilliantly encapsulates the joys and frustrations of cat ownership— we had to include it here. A EW.COM For even more crazy cats you simply can’t take your eyes off of, go to ew.com/webcats IMG: ART: PHOTO: ad: prod: trans: 39 Research: trans: Design: prod: ME: This kitty from Japan delivers in video after video and has better timing than a lot of human comedy stars. We love the clip with the paper bag, but this one—in which Maru hops in and out of a box—is our favorite. A+ Also to: ad: Photo: Maru and the big box 8.7.09 Entertainment Weekly PHOTO: SE: Mitchell ART: AME: A cat in a blue shirt playing an annoying organ riff is inserted into blooper footage—like a man falling off a treadmill—with the running joke “Play him off, Keyboard Cat” inserted as the title. Call us purr-ists, but the cat’s paws are obviously fake. C AE: Toni Keyboard Cat Entertainment Weekly 8.7.09 IMG: closed Notable Kitty Videos Slug: Cats 38 ICanHascheezburger.com (3) CATNIP The hilarious I Can Has Cheezburger site, where visitors caption and upload their own kitty pics, is one of the most popular cat destinations on the Web till, the potential is mind-boggling, when you think about it. Even discounting for repeat clicking, Nora’s piano playing has pulled almost as large an audience as this year’s finale of Dancing With the Stars. What makes the cat-video phenomenon—and let’s call it what it is, Internet kitty porn—all the more curious is the fact that it’s e xclusively cats. There are undoubtedly sidesplitting canine videos to be found online, and possibly one or two knee-slapping hamster movies, but it’s mostly felines that are driving traffic. No other animal has so devoted and active a fan base. How come? What is it about cats that makes them so fascinating? Aside from the fact that some of them can play the piano? “That’s interesting—a cat playing a piano,” ponders Alan M. Beck, director of the Center for the Human–Animal Bond at Purdue University’s School of Veterinary Medicine and coauthor of Between Pets and People: The Importance of Animal Companionship. “Humans have very complicated reactions to watching animals doing smart things. It amuses us but also makes us uncomfortable. We like to deny animal intelligence because it makes it easier for us to eat them. But why are cat videos in particular so popular? Maybe it has something to do with the fact that cats are very infantlike. Their faces are very babyish. Their meow is a very childlike sound. That’s why people tend to get obsessed with them. Perhaps it’s that same childlike quality that makes cats so popular on the Internet?” In other words, they’re cute. But after an exhaustive study of hundreds of online cat videos, photographs, cartoons, and tweets, we’ve come up with a theory of our own for why it’s pussy galore online these days. For some reason, people expect cats to be smarter than other animals. We interpret their snooty aloofness as intelligence. So when we see one playing a piano, or doing something else humanlike, we’re tickled to have our suspicions confirmed. The only thing that pleases us more is catching a cat doing something dumb, like falling into a fish tank or attacking a computer printer; that’s a soothing reminder of our human superiority. Either way, it makes cat videos like Nora’s “Practice Makes Purr-fect” irresistible even to people who don’t much care for cats…or their atonal Gustavo Santaolalla-esque compositions. “One day we heard this pinging noise downstairs and it was Nora playing the piano,” says Betsy Alexander. “Then she started coming downstairs when my music students were here. She’d get up on the other piano and start playing along with them. Especially when they played Bach— Nora loves Bach. My students helped me make a video of Nora and put it on YouTube so my niece could see it. That first day, the video had 71 viewings. The next, it was several hundred, then thousands, then hundreds of thousands, and millions. No, we haven’t made a fortune, but that’s not my dream. My dream as a piano teacher is that Nora inspires people to play the piano. If she can do it, anyone can.” Just be grateful she didn’t have a drum set in her living room. n Issue Date: 1059 A s it happens, Nora isn’t the only feline becoming famous online. There’s also Gizmo, the cat who repeatedly—and hilariously—flushes a toilet (4.8 million hits). And Maru, an adorable bundle of fur from Japan who appears in a series of videos diving into cardboard cartons and getting his head stuck in paper bags (as many as 4.2 million hits). There’s the kitten who eats broccoli, the cat who jumps onto a baby, the one who stalks like a ninja, and another who chases away a bear—all of them being clicked on (and e-mailed to friends) thousands of times every day. In fact, so many eyeballs are glued to so many cat videos, it’s fair to say they’ve become a full-blown pop culture S craze. There aren’t any awards shows for them yet, and they don’t get reviewed by national magazines (until now; see sidebar), but cat videos are becoming as much a part of some people’s daily enter tainment diet as the TV programs they record on their DVRs or the books they download to their Kindles. And it’s not just videos. There are websites devoted to cat photography, like the L olcats of icanhascheezburger.com (where pet owners post pictures of their kitties with punchlines like “Help the blanket gotz me”), and catsthatlooklikehitler.com, which features photos of cats that amusingly resemble the Führer (for cats that look like Wilford Brimley, you have to go to gatoisland.com). Yes, there’s even a cat on Twitter, Sockington, who recently passed the half-million-followers milestone with tweets like “pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad what oh NOTHING pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad pad.” Snoop Dogg has only 370,000 followers on Twitter. Animal acts are nothing new in entertainment. David Letterman has been showcasing Stupid Pet Tricks for d ecades. And movies about animals have always been crowd-pleasers (last year Marley & Me grossed $143 million, without a single cat in it). There’s even a whole cable network devoted to our four-legged friends, Animal Planet, which sometimes gets ratings as good as the cable news channels. Pets in general are a mega-industry in the U.S., with Americans spending an estimated $43 billion a year. And yet, as with everything on the Internet, nobody has figured out how to make money from cat videos. “The videos that are taking off and becoming viral aren’t really professional—they’re a guy with a camera and a cat,” notes Tracey Paull, digital-media director at Spark Communications, a media agency in Chicago. “That’s a really hard thing to monetize.”