Saskatchewan
‘It’s the ultimate revenge’: Sask. animal shelter launches ‘Neuter Your Ex’ fundraiserA Saskatchewan animal shelter raising money for spaying and neutering cats is offering some furry vengeance to irate exes.
In exchange for $50 donation, Humboldt SPCA will name a cat who needs to be fixed after an ex-partner
Liam O’Connor · CBC News
· Posted: Feb 08, 2024 5:00 AM EST | Last Updated: February 8
The Humboldt & District SPCA has been promoting its ‘Neuter your Ex’ campaign on its Facebook page. (Humboldt SPCA/Facebook)A Saskatchewan animal shelter that’s raising money for spaying and neutering cats is offering some furry vengeance to irate exes.
The Humboldt & District SPCA is attempting to raise money with a Valentine’s Day campaign called “Neuter Your Ex.”
Oh my gosh … there’s an awful lot of stray cats that roam around town.- Janice WeberShared on the organization’s Facebook page, the post says for every $50 donation the non-profit will name a cat after the ex-partner of the person’s choosing.
The ad says “it’s the ultimate revenge” and will help “heal your broken heart.”
The Humboldt & District SPCA has launched a ‘Neuter Your Ex’ campaign for Valentine’s Day to raise money for spaying and neutering cats. (Humboldt SPCA)”The Humboldt & District SPCA will name a cat after your ex and that’s right … neuter or spay them! Because some things just shouldn’t breed,” says the post on the Humboldt SPCA’s Facebook page.
The post garnered more than 600 likes within its first 24 hours.
WATCH| You can name a cat after your ex and have it neutered:
You can name a cat after your ex and have it neuteredA Saskatchewan animal shelter raising money to spay and neuter cats is taking a different approach to fundraising, ahead of Valentine’s Day. The Humboldt SPCA is having a “neuter your ex” fundraiser. For every $50, they’ll name a cat after the donor’s ex-partner.
Cats have been running rampant in Humboldt according to the non-profit’s president Janice Weber.
“Oh my gosh, there is a lot of cats, strays, ones that come [from] in truck engines that fall out, there’s an awful lot of stray cats that roam around town,” said Weber.
“I’m actually feeding some at my house right now.”
Weber said the idea came from social media posts about shelters in the United States that were running similar campaigns. Less than 24 hours after Humboldt SPCA posted about it, Moose Jaw Humane Society jumped on the bandwagon.
The idea seems to have started south of the border. A New Jersey animal shelter launched its campaign in late January and the Humane Society for Southwest Washington followed suit last week. If you donate to the San Antonio Zoo, it will name a cockroach after your ex and feed it to an animal.
The Humboldt location is overrun with cats right now, according to Weber.
She says it can help expedite the adoption process when the animals are already fixed.
There are about 36 cats at the centre right now, with 19 needing to be spayed or neutered.
Weber said the funds from the campaign will help pay for those procedures — which on the high end can run upwards of $200 for a female cat.
Expert says campaign could be a winnerKatie Lafreniere, an assistant professor at the University of Alberta business school, researches swear words and taboo subjects in advertisements and marketing.
“This type of advertising, shock advertising, they’re deliberately trying to break the rules, and so the point of it is to cross that line, of course you don’t want to go fully fledged well over,” said Lafreniere.
“It’s causing that surprise that is enabling people to want to spend more time actually paying attention to the ad and the message that they’re trying to get across.”
While the slogan dances on the line, it doesn’t go too far according to Lafreniere.
“I think they would have been successful, whether they said spay your ex or neuter your ex. I think that neutering is a more common term,” she said.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Liam O’Connor is a reporter for CBC Saskatchewan based in Saskatoon. O’Connor graduated from the University of Regina journalism school. He covers general news for CBC. You can reach him at liam.oconnor@cbc.ca.