In 2013, 30 million Google searches just used the word ‘cats’. Grumpy Cat’s income rivals Gwyneth Paltrow’s (and here’s betting her website out-performs GOOP). Such is the power of cats over cyberspace that (inadvertent) restrictions on cat videos have been linked to a revolution in Tunisia.
Why are cats so damn popular? Their cuteness is key: academics have concluded that their resemblance to human babies (big eyes, small noses, dome-shaped heads) trigger our evolutionary nurturing instincts. And of course, cat-love is its own language, spanning cultures and uniting strangers over a love of furry faces. Unlike dogs – and much like fellow cuddly clickbait Ryan Gosling – they’re inscrutable, making them perfect for us to project ideas and feelings onto.
Join host Mel Campbell, along with Simon Crerar, Radha O’Meara and others, as our feline-loving panel investigates the appeal of cats – and the lure of cuteness in general – in popular culture, as epitomised by the democratic playground of the internet. Is cuteness as currency (and cultural diplomacy) tied to gender? And if we as a society are more obsessed with it than ever, does that mean we’re dumbing down … or is there another explanation?
Featuring
Featuring
Simon Crerar is BuzzFeed‘s Australia Editor and leads an editorial team dedicated to growing the social news and entertainment company’s Australian audience with viral content by and for Australians. Prior to BuzzFeed, he worked at the Times and Sunday Times in London and at N... Read more
Mel Campbell is a freelance journalist and critic who co-hosts the fortnightly literature and culture podcast The Rereaders. She is a columnist on writing at Overland magazine, and a university lecturer and writer-for-hire on film, TV and media. Her first book was the nonfiction investigation Out of... Read more
Dr Radha O’Meara is a lecturer in screenwriting in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne. She has studied in Australia, the USA and Germany and taught at universities in Australia and New Zealand. Radha has created fiction and non-fiction for film, video... Read more
Jason Potts is a Professor of Economics at RMIT University. He specialises in the economics of new social network technologies and the institutions that facilitate them. He has a cat, called Dog.
Watch, Listen, Read
Watch
Ma Thida: Myanmar’s Struggle for Democracy
Listen
Global Game Changers: The Evolution of the Olympic Games
Watch
Surveillance, Technology and AI: Meredith Whittaker in Conversation
Watch
No Place Like Home: Australia’s Housing Affordability Crisis
Listen
Surveillance Technology and AI: Meredith Whittaker in Conversation
Read