Drugs moved from the mean streets of the big city to the sleepy bedroom communities of suburbia. Now even cats are on drugs! Watch what happens when this scourge reaches the most vulnerable furry population (with an awesome Claude Debussy Clawed Depussy soundtrack at the beginning!).
You will have a total catnip contact high from watching Quincy the French cat make sweet love to his bag of catnip. While he whispers zee sweet nothings to it—something comes between them. What is it?
Crackers the cat still won't admit she has a problem. I guess her human companions have filmed her as a kind of intervention. (I think you're supposed to get all serious with these interventions, though.
OK, maybe not so happy! Someone get this guy some catnip — pronto.
Most cats act utterly indifferent to the comings and goings of mere humans — even when those humans are feeding them catnip, Pounce, and other such goodies. This kitten, however, didn't get the memo on how you're supposed to play it cool. Watch as she literally throws herself at their feet the door.
"Oh, the torments of being a cat! These humans keep putting me in ridiculous outfits (does it look like I like these freaking booties?!) and now the dog won't leave me alone. I need some catnip.
Cats get totally demonic around paper towels and toilet paper. I think Bounty and Charmin need to factor this into their upcoming ad campaigns with maybe catnip-scented 3-ply tissues imprinted with little images of mice. Just a thought...
Lady, the kitten is "insanely" cute. We get it. But we can't confuse a figure of speech with a way of life: Promptly put the kitten down, step away from the catnip, and save the meowing for playtime only.
You might think when you leave the house that your cat is just lying around or looking for scraps of Pounce or catnip. Well, she could be like this cat, upset about the stock market or subprime mortgage crisis and not afraid to let the television know it.