
Resilient cat's kittens were all adopted. But she's waited 200 days for a home
'She's gentle and quietly loyal,' a North Carolina animal shelter wrote June 30 on Facebook. 'She doesn't ask for much — just a little time, a bit of patience, and someone who sees her not as the cat who's been overlooked… but the one who's been waiting for you.'
The Parent Trap is up for adoption after spending more than 200 days at the Watauga Humane Society. She had a ringworm infection when she arrived as a stray in December.
'She had clearly been through a lot,' Danielle Deschamps, communications coordinator for the shelter, told McClatchy News via email. 'But even from the beginning, she carried herself with a quiet resilience.'
The mama cat bears the same name as 'The Parent Trap,' a movie about twins who reunite after years apart. One of the versions stars Lindsay Lohan, whose films inspired the names of the cat's six kittens: Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, Freaky Friday, Get a Clue, Herbie Fully Loaded, Just My Luck and Mean Girls.
'As a mom, she was wonderfully attentive — patient, gentle, and protective, despite being in a stressful shelter environment,' Deschamps wrote. 'She always made sure her kittens were comfortable before worrying about herself, and it's that same soft-hearted loyalty we still see in her now.'
All six of The Parent Trap's babies were adopted, and now it's her turn to get a fresh start. She's described as a cat who is cautious but shows off her curious side when she grows comfortable around people.
'She's a comedy fan (especially if she gets head scritches during the show), adores her pickle toy, and never turns down a feather wand showdown,' the shelter wrote. 'She won't sit on your lap — but she'll curl up next to you like it's where she's always belonged.'
As of July 3, the 2-year-old cat mom was still waiting for a new owner. Details about the shelter's adoption process can be found at wataugahumane.org.
'Our staff would love nothing more than to see her get her long-overdue happy ending,' Deschamps wrote. 'She's been overlooked for far too long — but all she really needs is someone patient enough to let her show her true, sweet self.'
The shelter is in the mountain town of Boone, a roughly 85-mile drive west from Winston-Salem.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Savage but fair: Surviving a swank writing master class in Morocco
Silk Road Slippers, a five-day writers workshop at a delicous Moroccan resort, was more scrivener's boot camp than a luxurious path to self-discovery. MARRAKECH, Morocco – It's morning under the Atlas Mountains and publishing legend Alexandra Pringle is taking a savage blue pencil to a very nice paragraph. At least I thought it was a very nice paragraph. But no. It's actually a mess – jumbled, ineffective – and Pringle, former editor-in-chief at Bloomsbury Publishing in London, strikes down my wan offering with a single sentence before moving on to the next willing victim. It's obvious, just one day into this weeklong writing workshop, that we're in the hands of professionals – three glamorous, erudite killers who've had a hand in some of the biggest and most interesting books of the last 40 years. Pringle runs the master classes with historian and broadcaster Alex von Tunzelmann ("Fallen Idols", "Indian Summer") and Faiza Khan, a former editor-at-large at Random House, packing the plummiest accent this side of Downton Abbey. They're a formidable team – humane, perceptive, politely unsparing. The outfit, called Silk Road Slippers, holds four master classes a year at a delicious resort hotel outside Marrakech, each featuring a different heavyweight lecturer, including winners of the Nobel, Booker, Pulitzer and other literary prizes. My session was graced by novelist Alan Hollinghurst ("The Line of Beauty"). Esther Freud, Nobel laureate Abdulrazak Gurnah , Monica Ali and Andrew O'Hagan have all given attendees a bracing taste of how it's really done. The classes are very much open to new writers. Many at the session I attended earlier this year were already in the writing game, some with published books. But Silk Road Slippers wasn't created with literary pros in mind, von Tunzelmann says. Among those gathered under the palms at the workshop's long outdoor table placed near an outdoor fireplace to ward off the morning chill were an architect, a publicist and a counselor. Silk Road Slippers has hosted newbies who'd spent their professional lives in business, medicine, and law. Scrivener's boot camp The Jnane Tamsna boutique hotel, created by French attorney Meryanne Loum-Martin (whose life would fill a page-turner) and her American ethnobotanist husband Gary Martin, was the swanky backdrop to a week of grinding mental labor. The Morocco location makes Silk Road Slippers accessible to writers from Asia, Africa and Latin America who may not care for the process of getting a visa to Europe and the United States. (U.S. passport-holders travel to Morocco visa-free.) Despite the sumptuous trappings – the palms, the book-lined bar, the (five!) swimming pools – Silk Road Slippers is more scrivener's boot camp than a luxurious path to self-discovery. The days are filled with short writing exercises, with each hastily written passage read aloud by the author and then critiqued by Pringle, Khan and von Tunzelmann. Writers are drilled in dialogue, setting, action, perspective – a crash course in substance and style. In a revealing assignment, attendees were asked to write a fictional third-person scene with themselves as the protagonist. As with the other drills, the results ranged from middling (that was mine) to quite good. There wasn't a bad pen among the nine women and two men who were my classmates. But none topped Booker Prize-winner Hollinghurst, who turned out, in the same 15 minutes as the rest of us, a richly cinematic scene placing the fictional character of Alan Hollinghurst in a tricky social encounter fraught with manners, ego, and ambition. Just like something out of a novel. Anyone can play Years ago, U.S. literary wags spilled barrels of ink over the question of MFA vs. NYC, shorthand for two paths to creating a life as a novelist: the formal structure of a master's in fine arts degree, with its ready-made community and the tutelage of established teacher-mentors, or the (relatively) hard-knock life of apprenticing oneself to the New York publishing industry and living, loving, losing in the real world, with all the bruises to show for it. Nobody was talking about this kind of thing in Marrakech. I had no idea where anyone went to school, or what credentials they may have held. Every person there was taking a leap of some kind to learn alongside – and expose themselves to – a group of discerning strangers. There was no shortage of work. There were tears, and support among new friends. Some writing samples were raw and personal, but that was no protection from our instructors and the feedback born from their editorial instincts: 'There's too much specificity. You're putting the kitchen sink in there.' 'It's just awful. It's explanatory. It's telling us what to think.' 'There's nothing more boring than other people's dreams.' By the end of the week, each participant had completed a passage of at least 1,000 words to be assessed in an hourlong consultation with one of our three guides. I drew Pringle, and I've never had a more rewarding or discombobulating conversation about writing. Despite having two nonfiction books and decades of journalism to my name, Pringle pointed me to the far riskier path of literary fiction. That gets to the heart of why even a published author might want to spend time and money on a workshop like Silk Road Slippers and why it holds so much potential benefit for newcomers. This is solitary work, and trying out your craft with trusted peers and masters of different ages and walks of life can be – as I found – a rejuvenating literary shot in the arm.


Buzz Feed
an hour ago
- Buzz Feed
Anthony Anderson Addresses Lindsay Lohan Controversy
After a resurfaced video of Anthony Anderson interviewing Lindsay Lohan went viral for all the wrong reasons, he is speaking out. Earlier this week, a clip from a December 2003 episode of The Sharon Osbourne Show went viral. Anthony was acting as the guest host, while Lindsay stopped by to celebrate the DVD and VHS release of her hit film Freaky Friday. It's safe to assume the decades-old interview is making its rounds today because Lindsay is currently promoting her latest feature film — the sequel to Freaky Friday — Freakier Friday. But it's catching everyone's attention due to the nature of the interview and the seemingly inappropriate comments a then-33-year-old Anthony was asking Lindsay, who was 17 at the time. Several remarks with sexual undertones were made, starting as soon as she walked on stage, when he greeted her with a kiss on the cheek and then made a joke about her kissing him "on the lips with tongue." Moments that stick out throughout the interview also included Anthony telling Lindsay his family loved The Parent Trap, while immediately following up with, "You've grown up a whole lot since then," as he put his hand on her knee. He also gifted her a pillow with his face on it after she revealed she and fellow child star, Raven-Symoné, got a place together. Although speaking of the pillow, he worded his next question with a sexual innuendo: "Now aside from entertaining me in your room and in your house, what gentleman will be at the new pad with you and Raven-Symoné?" The conversation topics continued to grow more disturbing after Lindsay said she didn't plan on having any men at her new place, because she didn't have a boyfriend. Anthony announced to the audience, " single and looking!" But Lindsay quickly reacted by pointing out, "But I'm illegal for people that are old." He followed up her comments with, "Well, some men like 'em young, we ain't gonna mention no names, but, you know. I'm one of 'em." Statements like these continued throughout the interview until it was over, literally. In fact, his final words to the audience were, "We're about to get our freak on," referring to him and Lindsay as he embraced her in a hug. While he was seemingly making a reference to Freaky Friday, the fact that he was saying these comments to a teenager made many viewers cringe. Lindsay also appeared uncomfortable during certain moments. Many fans took to social media to voice their strong opinions on the interview, and the sentiments were the same: Well, today, Anthony is responding to the backlash: "This interview was clearly intended as comedy. He regrets if the humor was in poor taste and maintains the utmost respect for Lindsay," a spokesperson tells Entertainment Weekly via email on behalf of Anderson. "Any implication to the contrary is both inaccurate and potentially defamatory." Beyond reactions to it being "creepy," some people also pointed out Anthony's controversial past, which includes several sexual assault allegations. The first one emerged in 2004 when Anthony and Hustle & Flow assistant director Wayne Witherspoon were accused of raping a 25-year-old extra on the set of the film. A woman claimed to have heard screaming, followed by a naked woman running from a trailer. She was later treated at St. Francis Hospital. The Daily Beast reported that Anthony was charged with aggravated rape but was released on a $20K bond. He denies the allegations. You can watch the full 2003 interview from The Sharon Osbourne Show below:

Elle
2 hours ago
- Elle
Taylor Swift Gives Travis Kelce a Subtle Shout-Out After Going Instagram Official
THE RUNDOWN Taylor Swift doesn't post on Instagram often, but she returned to the platform less than 24 hours after Travis Kelce made their two-year relationship Instagram official on his account. The singer didn't repost his carousel of personal photos from their downtime together during his offseason. Instead, she gave shout-out to his project, Happy Gilmore 2, in which he has a small role as a waiter. With one little honey pot emoji, she gave a wink the plot surrounding his character. She wrote, 'Happy Gilmore 2 had me cackling and cheering the whole movie! An absolute must-watch, 13/10, go watch it on @netflix as soon as possible 🍯' Happy Gilmore star Adam Sandler raved about Kelce's performance earlier this week at the film's New York City premiere. 'Travis and [Bad] Bunny are ridiculous in it,' he told People. 'Every athlete kicks ass.' Neither Kelce nor Swift attended the event. The Kansas City Chiefs player literally wasn't able to; training camp had just started in Missouri. Swift and Kelce have an exciting fall ahead of them as his football season begins. 'Her schedule is much more open now that the Eras Tour is wrapped, and she's genuinely excited to have the time and flexibility to show up for Travis more consistently,' a source told People on June 12. 'The past two seasons were a whirlwind between performing across multiple countries, long flights, and trying to squeeze in alone time together wherever possible. It wasn't easy but they made it work,' the source added. Now, 'Taylor plans to be at as many of his games as possible,' the insider said. 'They've both had such demanding schedules for so long, so having this stretch of time where things aren't quite as chaotic feels like a welcome change.' Watch Happy Gilmore 2 on Netflix