Twitter’s latest star is tabby
Microblogging Cat: Feline’s commentary followed online by ‘Socks Army’
By JAKE COYLE
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Published: May 28, 2009
NEW YORK — He’s one of the most popular users on Twitter. More than 500,000 follow his growing celebrity, his every adventure and, well, his catnaps.
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"He’s kind of functioning like a ‘Garfield’ comic. He’s like the 21st century Garfield."
Jason Scott
ON THE NET
Follow Sockington at
www.sockington.org
Meet Sockington. Twitter’s latest star is a microblogging cat who regales more than half a million with his musings on mealtime, personal hygiene and the view from the top of the stairs.
Sockington, or "Socks” for short, is the cat of
Jason Scott, a 38-year-old computer historian and computer administrator from
Waltham, Mass. Since late 2007, Scott has been tweeting from Sockington’s perspective — and finding a "Socks Army” of followers. (Many of his followers are pets, too.)
Dogs and cats in social media isn’t anything new. Many people have made
Facebook pages (there are applications for both "Dogbook” and "Catbook”) and Web sites for their pets.
The difference on Twitter is that the running thread of Sockington’s feline commentary takes on the dimension of a comic strip. Scott has created a character with a particular voice by tweeting messages from Sockington’s point of view such as: "I must say no comment to the whole dining room incident. No questions please.”
"He’s kind of functioning like a ‘Garfield’ comic,” Scott says. "He’s like the 21st century Garfield.”
There’s the risk that a tweeting cat only will further the impression that Twitter is a flash-in-the-pan success in a sea of online time-wasters. But in a way, Sockington is a parody of Twitter, where even a kitty cat’s life — his daily trips to the litter box, his insignificant household travails — is beamed out to the world.
"Everybody wants this social media bubble. They want something where we’re all chattering so much that we all get rich,” Scott says. "And this cat makes everybody look like fools because he’s got hundreds of thousands of followers. And he doesn’t tend to follow anyone but other animals.”
Scott’s Sockington feed has benefited from being one of the accounts recommended to new Twitter users when they sign up. But the growth of the
Socks Army has been gradual over the past year and a half.
Now, it’s starting to potentially generate revenue. T-shirts are for sale with Sockington wisdom printed on them, and Scott acknowledges he may one day accept larger, impossible-to-refuse offers.
"I’m happy that at the heart of it all is a funny little cat, and that’s why all the attention is happening,” Scott says. "There are much worse reasons to get this kind of national attention.”
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