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Posts Tagged ‘guinea pig’


As anticipated, media notices guinea pig sales increase

Monday, August 24th, 2009

guinea-pig-image With the recent release of G-Force in theaters, a movie putting guinea pigs front-and-center as spies and mercenaries fighting against a ruthless mastermind, families are becoming more aware of our little fuzzy friends. The popularity certainly comes with its merits, but the bad will come with the good as we’ve posted about before.

The impulse buying of animals featured in blockbusters movies is known as "’101 Dalmatians’ syndrome." When the feature film about the spotted pups opened in theaters, thousands flocked to pet stores to get one of the dogs.

Then "Legally Blonde" and "Beverly Hills Chihuahua" escalated the popularity of Chihuahuas, while guinea pigs garnered attention last year with "Bedtime Stories."

"It picked up after Christmas with the release of ‘Bedtime Stories,’" Bumgardner said. "Everyone wanted a guinea pig and he just had a small part. I can’t see how it wouldn’t pick up again."

Six years after the release of "Finding Nemo," children still clamor for their own "Nemo" or "Dory," Knoetgen said.

"That is still the most popular thing," she said. "Kids will come in and see a clown fish. They know the difference because for the one that looks like Nemo they’ll say, ‘That’s a Nemo.’ We had a blue tang for a long time, and kids would go ‘Dory, Dory!’ It’s amazing how movies affect them."

The increasing popularity of the film may have children tapping at the glass and begging mom and dad for their own two-pound rodent.

Link, via chron.com

HSUS Video: It’s All About the Guinea Pigs

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

We just couldn’t pass this one up. With the upcoming movie, G-Force, and the fact that we have several friends who happen to keep guinea pigs, it’s hard not to notice them in our lives. Small animals, pocket pets as they might be called by some, represent a surprising proportion of pets out there. A multitude of veterinarians do care of them, even if they don’t get top billing like cats and dogs, and like any family pet, guinea pigs do need the attention of health professionals—and tender loving care.

The video highlights a problem with American culture that views everything as disposable, including living beings, where movies like G-Force featuring the cute-and-fuzzy create a sudden surge in demand for these critters; but the families that take them on sometimes find the burden of taking care of them too much to bear, and seek to offload them into the shelter community.

Pass this little PSA around, they’re cute, but they do need attention and require a level of responsibility in spite of looking like fuzzy orbs sitting in a cage of sawdust most of the time. They’re cute, but it may be necessary to spread and advocate a culture of responsibility when it comes to the trade and sale of these animals especially because the movie nostalgia factor is going to be nigh-exploitable by every guinea pig breeder and pet store out there.