Ding! Ding! Waiter! Bring me food!
35 million views!
Ding! Ding! Waiter! Bring me food!
35 million views!
Cat bangs food bowl on the floor DEMANDING to be fed!
Watch a blind cat play fetch! The cat can retrieve the toy and return it to the person who tossed it with total accuracy! Isn’t this inspiring?
A floofy white cat shows us how easy it is to glide on a skateboard – remember this when you are feeling overwhelmed, that you can glide through anything. Imagine yourself as calm and effortless as this beautiful cat!
A cat in turkey has the owner of a meat market trained to provide something to eat, every day!
2.5 million views!
A feline parody of the movie Home Alone!
Over 10 million views!
This cat shows how splooting is done.
Here are a bunch of smart cats answering pesky telephones!
Today we have two videos which come from Shawn of North Carolina and it features a rescued blind tuxedo named Pinocchio. Shawn tells us: “He’s my baby!! We lived on Kauai, HI for 7 years, until 2018. We are highly involved in animal rescue, especially special needs. Pinocchio was one of sooo many strays/ferals on Kauai. A good Samaritan saw him wandering around the airport grounds and took him to the local shelter (which was HIGH kill). His eyes were destroyed from an upper respiratory infection.
Thankfully, the vet at the shelter decided to only take his eyes and not his life. I met him when he was recovering in a foster home. He is adventurous and loving and brave and so, so friendly! We are in full awe of him and how he has so much blind trust. Literally. He had a tight bond with a younger kitten, so we adopted him, too. He acts as his seeing – eye. That’s Jiminy!”
Today we have two videos which come from Shawn of North Carolina and it features a rescued blind tuxedo named Pinocchio. Shawn tells us: “He’s my baby!! We lived on Kauai, HI for 7 years, until 2018. We are highly involved in animal rescue, especially special needs. Pinocchio was one of sooo many strays/ferals on Kauai. A good Samaritan saw him wandering around the airport grounds and took him to the local shelter (which was HIGH kill). His eyes were destroyed from an upper respiratory infection.
Thankfully, the vet at the shelter decided to only take his eyes and not his life. I met him when he was recovering in a foster home. He is adventurous and loving and brave and so, so friendly! We are in full awe of him and how he has so much blind trust. Literally. He had a tight bond with a younger kitten, so we adopted him, too. He acts as his seeing – eye. That’s Jiminy!”