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Confused Cats Against Feminism Goes Viral: Giant list of media mentions, and a possible explanation

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Confused Cats Against Feminism has gone viral, as the Internet kids say.

In less than a week, my humble Tumblr blog has picked up more than 12,000 followers on Tumblr and has generated nearly 20,000 “notes.” It’s been featured in two dozen well-known publications so far, ranging from Jezebel to Cosmopolitan to Le Monde (yes, the Le Monde), and on who knows how many lesser-known sites. It was discussed on The Reid Report on MSNBC. And my assorted inboxes are swelling with literally hundreds of submissions.

So why — other than KITTIES — has the blog struck such a chord?

I wrote out some thoughts on the blog’s origin and its appeal for a Huffington Post writer; unfortunately she got them too late to use in her piece, so I thought I’d share a slightly reworked version of them here:

Obviously, the main inspiration for the blog was frustration with the Women Against Feminism page, and the media coverage of it that seemed to suggest that a couple dozen women holding up antifeminist signs meant that feminism was dead, or at least in crisis. This seemed to me a silly conclusion to draw, especially considering that most of the siigns weren’t so much a reaction to feminism itself as to a caricature of it.

But this is rather typical. I deal with antifeminists — most of them men — every day on We Hunted the Mammoth, and it’s kind of amazing how few of them know even the slightest bit about what feminism really is. They’re battling the feminist bogeywoman in their own heads.

In a way, they’re like anti-Semites whose supposed knowledge about Jewish people comes from reading “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” a phony document concocted not by any actual Elders of Zion (there are no such people) but by other anti-Semites.

Anyway, what really crystallized it for me was reading this post by Jenny Lawson on the Blogess, a hilarious little rant about the ridiculousness of the Women Against Feminism signs, in which she imagined putting up her own blog with people holding baffling signs like “I don’t need air because LOTS OF IT IS FARTS.  I’M NOT BREATHING FARTS.  YOU BREATHE FARTS.”

And then something clicked. There was probably a cat sitting on me at the time, so naturally I thought of doing a blog involving cats. To be honest, though, I’ll use any excuse to post pictures of cats.

So why are so many people connecting with this blog in such a big way? Obviously, people on the internet love cats, and posting pictures of them.

But more seriously, I think the blog has tapped into the frustration that feminists feel, not only because of the straw-feminist-bashing women of the Women Against Feminism blog, but from years of arguing with Men’s Rights Activists and other antifeminists who seem to be everywhere online (they’re not actually an enormous group, just a loud one), and who stubbornly refuse to learn even the most basic facts about feminism as it really exists in the world.

There’s no point in actually arguing with these guys (and gals), because they’re living in their own world, which overlaps only slightly with the real world. Mocking them with cat pics seems more appropriate than trying to convince them, say, that women in America really do deserve the right to vote even though they’re not required to fill out a meaningless form with Selective Service registering them for a military draft that is about as likely to return as Ham and Bananas Hollandaise or Tuna and Jell-o Pie.

Men’s Rights Activists — and all the other assholes of their ilk — want to be taken seriously. But they don’t deserve to be taken seriously. What they deserve is laughter.

As I told Rebecca Cohen of Mother Jones:

Men’s rights activists have a quote that’s supposedly from Gandhi that they like to recite constantly: ‘First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. As they see it, they’ve gotten to the point where people are fighting them. I’d like to knock them back to the point where people are laughing at them.

And with the help of hundreds of feminists and their kitties, not to mention you all here, I think that’s just what we’re doing.

So here are some links to the media coverage of Confused Cats Against Feminism so far. I’ve marked the longer articles with asterisks; those with two asterisks include quotes from me.

Newsweek**

Mother Jones**

Salon*

Jezebel

Buzzfeed*

Bustle*

The Guardian*

Mic.com*

CBC.ca*

Huffington Post* (UK)

Huffington Post *(US)

The Daily Edge*

Cosmopolitan (US)

Cosmopolitan (UK)

Cosmopolitan (AUS)

Elle

Marie Claire (AUS)

Self

The Frisky

Bust

Feministing

Autostraddle

The Debrief

New Media Rockstars

Birdeemag*

TrendHunter

Elite Daily

Feminist Philosophers

Shards of Silence*

Liberals Unite

The Experiment

B for Bel

The Hollywood Gossip

SFWeekly

Foreign language coverage:

Le Monde (France)

Corriere della Sera (Italy)

MeltyBuzz (Italy)

Terrafemina (France)

With the exception of the piece on The Hollywood Gossip, which is a bit confused about the Confused Cats, all this coverage has been glowingly positive. The only negative media mention I’ve found comes in a National Review piece about Women Against Feminism. Frankly, I’d be a bit alarmed if the National Review were to have anything but a negative reaction to the blog.

 

 

 

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FelicBC
FelicBC
10 years ago

Awesome, David! Couldn’t happen to a nicer, cat-loving feminist.

Luzbelitx
10 years ago

Great job, David!!!

You’re also building your case towards “The Myth of Human Power”. Everyone will see now WHO has the real power!

emilygoddess - MOD
emilygoddess - MOD
10 years ago

But Fidelbogen said you were fading into obscurity! Now I don’t know who to believe!

cerberusxt
10 years ago

This idea is absolutely great and you are right (in my case anyway), its really cathartic to laugh at the volontary incomprehension of what feminism really is.

So, thank you for this (and this blog which serve the same purpose).

AcidTrial
AcidTrial
10 years ago

I particularly enjoy the cat pictures (other than because they’re cat pictures) because they illustrate the absurdity of the straw-man arguments used by a lot of anti-feminists. It’s a good bit of ridiculous humour to offset the more systematic takedowns over here.
David Futrelle, you’re doing excellent work, and the better parts of the internet should thank you for it.

Bina
Bina
10 years ago

So much for the “viral success” of the Fiverr Models Against Feminism. Cats rule, antifems drool!

cloudiah
10 years ago

It seems perfectly fitting that cats should defeat bigotry. It’s hard to be a hater when you’re cuddling one of the furrinati.

naltia
naltia
10 years ago

I’ve noticed multiple articles on this appearing on my Facebook feed. I do so love it when two of my favorite things (cats and feminism) come together! 😀

weirwoodtreehugger
10 years ago

I should have submitted earlier so I wouldn’t have to wait so long to see my kitty on there.

Patrick O.
Patrick O.
10 years ago

Bwahahahahahahahahaha! This is awesome. What better way to respond to hateful MRAs. It probably confuses the crap out of them.

freemage
freemage
10 years ago

The National Review’s disapproval: it’s like a stamp of quality assurance.

tinyorc
10 years ago

THE FEMINIST HIVEMIND IS PLEASED, DAVID.

Binjabreel
10 years ago

For some reason, this makes me keep thinking of the “Confuse-a-cat” sketch.

Falconer
Falconer
10 years ago

INB4 the paranoid ravings about how viral internet things are totally controlled by old maids (at 20!) and their hordes of hoarded cats.

Way to go, David!

deniseeliza
deniseeliza
10 years ago

And as always, avoid the comments. *SIGH*

My kitties appeared yesterday and today. Turns out they’ve been using my Tumblr account to oppose feminism!!! Clearly they’re bored and I need to buy more feather sticks for them to fight.

Leigh21
Leigh21
10 years ago

Long-time lurker finally de-lurking: I just wanted to say congrats on your success, David! I’m so happy that your blog took off the way it did, and in such a short amount of time. Perhaps it’s needless to say, but you can expect my kitty-cat to contribute to the blog in the near future.

And here’s a hello to all the rest of the lovely people here too!

cloudiah
10 years ago

Leigh21, please enjoy your Welcome Package.

apeculiarpersonage
apeculiarpersonage
10 years ago

Just wondering, has anyone else seen this: http://theredpillroom.blogspot.no/2014/07/dear-feminists-this-is-why-you-are-in.html
It seems relevant.

cloudiah
10 years ago

Also,

You’re also building your case towards “The Myth of Human Power”. Everyone will see now WHO has the real power!

And we all know what the cover of that e-book would look like.

grumpycatisagirl
10 years ago

Lovely sentence from that Red Pill article:

But like the 35 year old woman who is still trying to rock a miniskirt, you still think feminism is about equality.

cloudiah
10 years ago

Well, apeculiarpersonage, it’s quite a wall o’ text. This stood out to me:

There’s an understandable amount of schadenfreude in the Manosphere over this, but believe it or not, I’m not gloating. I’m just vindicated. Many of us predicted this sort of thing would happen, and gosh darn if it didn’t.

You know what, feminists predicted this too. In fact, feminists (or rather, a feminist wrote a book about this phenomenon back in 1991: Backlash by Susan Faludi. There, she was specifically talking about the backlash against feminist advances in the 1970s and 1980s, but there has always been organized resistance to feminism among both men and women, mostly tradcons, but also less organized populations who resented the erosion of their privilege and hated to see women invading “male spaces” (like traditionally male jobs).

It’s a good book, and doesn’t even seem that dated even though it’s more than 20 years old.

Because the backlash is still with us, and will probably always still be with us, which is why we still need feminism.

Leigh21
Leigh21
10 years ago

Ah, thanks for the welcome package. So ya’ll chose mammotheers as the official demonym, then? I know there was a discussion about it a while back when “Manboobz” changed to “We Hunted the Mammoth”.

And if anyone’s curious, here’s a brief bit of background: I found this blog while writing an essay for my women’s studies class. I was trying to track down the origin of that despicable “Don’t Be That Girl” poster, and was lead here.

katz
10 years ago

But like the 35 year old woman who is still trying to rock a miniskirt, you still think feminism is about equality.

Those old, ugly, decrepit 35-year-olds.

katz
10 years ago

Some have likened it to the feminist Berlin Wall crumbling, or an anti-feminist Arab Spring.

I need this gif again.

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