Tara "The Hero Cat", or Zatara, is a female tabby cat living in California, who came to worldwide attention after rescuing her owners' child from being attacked by a neighbor's dog. The moment was caught on household surveillance videos and became a media sensation, appearing on websites and televised news across the globe. The footage uploaded on YouTube attracted over 16.8 million views in the first 48 hours.
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Early life
Tara joined the Triantafilo family in 2008 after she followed the parents to their home. The name Tara was the pet form of 'Zatara', the name smugglers gave to Edmond Dantès in The Count of Monte Cristo. The smugglers said it meant driftwood.
Dog Cat Video Video
Rise to fame
On May 13, 2014, four-year-old Jeremy Triantafilo was riding his bicycle in his family's driveway in Bakersfield, California, when a neighborhood dog, described as an 8-month-old Labrador and Chow mix, came from behind and viciously attacked him on his leg. The dog was violently pulling Jeremy down his driveway when Tara bolted to the rescue, throwing herself at the much larger dog and chasing it away, then returning to Jeremy's side to check on him. Jeremy needed 10 stitches in his left leg (calf) following the attack, but mounted a swift recovery, and was thankful for Tara's heroics.
A few days later, local league baseball team the Bakersfield Blaze invited the cat, assisted by Jeremy's family, to throw the first pitch at a Bakersfield minor league baseball game in Sam Lynn Ballpark as a recognition for her deed. In the same spirit, Cat Fanciers' Association announced Tara the recipient of its first-ever Cat Hero Award.
On June 3, 2014, the Bakersfield Board of Supervisors proclaimed June 3 Tara the Hero Cat Day.
On August 15, 2014, Tara was awarded the Special Award For Cat Achievement by the Cat Vid Festival.
On September 26, 2014, Tara was awarded the Blue Tiger Award; an award only awarded to Military service dogs.
Tara became the first non-human to be named the grand marshal for Bakersfield's Christmas parade in 2014.
On June 19, 2015, Tara was awarded with the Los Angeles SPCA's "Hero Dog" award, for which she also won a year's supply of cat food.
Records
First video in YouTube history to reach 20 million views in 5 days.
Ranked 22nd most influential cat on the internet by Friskies.
Fate of the dog
Scrappy, an approximately 8-month-old Labrador-Chow mix was surrendered by its owners to the City of Bakersfield Animal Care Center later on May 13, when it began a mandatory 10-day quarantine period to determine whether the animal had rabies.
After the video of heroic Tara the cat went viral, websites and online petitions popped up urging the dog not be put down, and calls flooded the phones at the Bakersfield Animal Care Center, according to director Julie Johnson. Despite this, based on the observations in the kennel during the quarantine period, the dog remained classified as a "vicious" and "dangerous" animal. Therefore, adoption requests were strictly denied.
At the end of the mandatory 10-day quarantine period, Scrappy was euthanized despite opposition from animal groups and online petitioners. The infamous dog "was humanely euthanized over the weekend," (May 24, 2014) according to Animal Care Center Director Julie Johnson - who noted the incident has ended far from quietly.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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