British portrait
photographer Harry Pointer created a
carte de visite series featuring cats posed in various situations in the early 1870s. To these he usually added amusing text intended to further enhance their appeal. These souvenir cards were known as Brighton Cats. Other early figures include
Harry Whittier Frees and (using
taxidermied animals)
Walter Potter. The first recorded use of the term "lolcat" was used on
4chan, an anonymous
imageboard. The word "Lolcat" was in use as early as June 2006; the
domain name lolcats.com was registered on June 14, 2006. Their popularity was spread through usage on forums such as
Something Awful.
The News Journal states that "some trace the lolcats back to the site 4chan, which features bizarre cat pictures on Saturdays, or 'Caturdays'." Ikenburg adds that the images have been "slinking around the Internet for years under various labels, but they did not become a sensation until early 2007 with the advent of
I Can Has Cheezburger? " The first image on "I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER?" was posted on January 11, 2007, and was allegedly from the Something Awful website." Lev Grossman of
Time wrote that the oldest known example "probably dates to 2006", but later corrected himself in a blog post where he recanted his statement based on the anecdotal evidence readers had sent him, placing the origin of "Caturday" and many of the images now known by a few as "lolcats" in early 2005. The domain name "caturday.com" was registered on April 30, 2005. The term
lolcat gained national media attention in the United States when it was covered by
Time, which wrote that non-commercialized
phenomena of the sort are increasingly rare, stating that lolcats have "a distinctly old-school, early 1990s,
Usenet feel to [them]".
Entertainment Weekly put them on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "Da cutest distractshun of da decaid? Y, lolcats of corse! We can neber haz enuf of deez capshioned pics of cuddlie kittehs." "Lolcat" was also a runner-up under the "Most Creative" category under the
American Dialect Society Word of the Year Awards, losing out to "Googlegänger". == Format ==