Cats Are Mean: Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
m (update links) |
(→Literature: being the minion of a protagonist is still "mean" in a sense) |
||
Line 173: | Line 173: | ||
* In [[Saki (author)|Saki]]'s short story 'Tobermory' the titular cat magically becomes able to talk, and horrifies a group of party guests by tattling on all the sins that he's been spying on over the years. But what Tobermory has forgotten is that {{spoiler|cats are mean, but [[Humans Are Bastards]]}} |
* In [[Saki (author)|Saki]]'s short story 'Tobermory' the titular cat magically becomes able to talk, and horrifies a group of party guests by tattling on all the sins that he's been spying on over the years. But what Tobermory has forgotten is that {{spoiler|cats are mean, but [[Humans Are Bastards]]}} |
||
* Prim's cat Buttercup from ''[[The Hunger Games]]'', a [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold]] in feline form. |
* Prim's cat Buttercup from ''[[The Hunger Games]]'', a [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold]] in feline form. |
||
* In ''[[Who Cut the Cheese?]]'' by Stilton Jarlsberg, a cat tears up all the rats in CheesyUniverse. |
|||
== Live Action TV == |
== Live Action TV == |