Justin Bieber ‘gives away’ his lonely pet monkey instead of rescuing it from German animal clinic

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Justin Bieber, pictured with Mally the capuchin monkey, has been given an extension to complete paperwork to get his pet back

Justin Bieber has allegedly decided to give away his pet monkey Mally instead of rescuing it from a Munich animal clinic.

German authorities say the teen star doesn’t want the Capuchin back after it was seized by customs officers from a private jet on March 28 and placed in quarantine.

They say his management team in New York contacted them this week asking if they could find a ‘safe and sheltered place, or a zoo’ for the lonely creature.

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Justin Bieber, pictured with Mally the capuchin monkey, has been given an extension to complete paperwork to get his pet back

Mally the monkey is now in quarantine at a German animal shelter

Mally the monkey is now in quarantine at a German animal shelter

The capuchin monkey, taken from its mother at nine weeks, is treating a cuddly toy as its surrogate parent

The capuchin monkey, taken from its mother at nine weeks, is treating a cuddly toy as its surrogate parent

The star and his entourage had no paperwork or health certificates to bring Mally – just a few weeks old – into the country.

After a night spent at an airport quarantine centre, Mally was moved into the care of vets at a clinic in the city.

‘We have to discuss now the way forward with customs officials and other responsible departments,’ said a clinic spokesman. The statement from 19-year-old Bieber’s people in New York thanked the Munich authorities for the ‘caring support’ offered to Mally.

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Some dogs need their space

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Is your dog a DINOS? The acronym hasn’t quite caught on yet, but it stands for Dog in Need of Space. Coined by Maine dogwalker Jessica Dolce, the term is used to describe dogs who don’t like being approached by other dogs or strange people — they need space to be comfortable.

If you haven’t heard of DINOS, perhaps you’ve heard of The Yellow Dog Project, which is making its way around Facebook in the form of a screenshot of a poster asking people with less-than-social dogs to tie yellow ribbons to their collars and leashes, as a sign that they shouldn’t be approached. To date, the movement has almost 16,000 “likes” on the site.

There are lots of reasons dog owners don’t want strangers coming up to their pets. Mocha, the sweet chocolate lab I had for 10 amazing years, loved people to no end, but really did not like other dogs. This forced me to yell, “She’s not friendly!” when other dog owners would let their pets approach, and stifle saying “moron” when they ignored me and brought their dogs over anyway (which happened more often than I care to remember). The Labragator loves dogs, but she’s more enthusiastic than many other dogs, she’s big and powerful, and she does not understand the concept of tangled leashes. So while I’m happy to let her romp with her furry friends in a fenced-in yard or dog park, doing it on a walk is less than fun for everyone involved.

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Nutrigenomics Offers New Insights Into The Why And How Of Companion Animal Obesity

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According to the World Health Organization, more than two-thirds of Americans are overweight or obese. And it’s not just humans who are packing on the pounds. Our furry companions are plagued by an obesity epidemic of their own. More than 50 percent of the dogs and cats in the United States are overweight or obese.

In a new paper on pet obesity in the Journal of Animal Science, University of Illinois professor of animal and nutritional sciences Kelly Swanson and his colleagues describe how nutrients and biological compounds in foods can affect gene expression in animals. Their field, called nutrigenomics, offers new insights into the why and how of companion animal obesity.

There are many reasons for the uptick in pet obesity, but they stem from the domestication of cats and dogs, Swanson said. Because most pets no longer hunt or compete for their food and do not mate – as a result of having been spayed or neutered, the typical dog or cat of today has a much smaller need for energy than the typical wild dog or cat of yesterday, he said.

When a person or an animal consumes more food than the body needs, the excess energy is converted into fat that is stored in adipose tissue. These fats can then be converted back to an energy source during fasting or times of food scarcity.

Adipose tissue secretes more than 50 substances known as adipokines, cell-signaling molecules that are involved in metabolism, immunity and inflammation, the authors write. Two of these adipokines, leptin and adiponectin, increase or decrease, respectively, within obese or insulin-resistant subjects.

The excess adipose tissue that develops in pets often leads to chronic disease and a shorter lifespan, Swanson said. While a new diet or exercise regime may help relieve some of these symptoms, a better understanding of the molecular underpinnings of pet obesity could further increase the quality of life for household animals.

“There are a lot of issues that contribute to pet obesity, but we’re focusing on the animal biology side of it and trying to use some of these tools to learn things we couldn’t learn in the past,” he said.

New tools that allow the researchers to determine how pet obesity affects gene expression within these animals offer promising new insights. These new approaches mark a huge change from the traditional approach to studying obesity, said Maria de Godoy, a postdoctoral researcher in the Swanson lab.

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Books are canine; the Web is feline

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NEW YORK — Reader, if you and I can agree on anything, it’s that the Internet is made of cats. But we may differ on the follow-up: What else could it be made of? When cats took over on our screens and in our minds, whose regime, exactly, did they replace?

For too long we’ve talked as if the online feline emerged from nowhere, to fill a niche that hadn’t yet existed. We’ve made out cats to be the brand-new products of a brand-new age and ignored the fact that before we had the Internet, and before the Internet had its furry totem, media consumers held a different set of animal predilections.

We’ve forgotten that the readers from that ancient age of dusty books preferred dogs, and so they do today. Before the Web page there was the written word. Before kittens ruled the Internet, puppies reigned in print.

The real mystery, then, is not how cats took precedence online, but rather how they managed to dethrone the dog. Our media have been split in two, and each opposing camp — the old against the new — has a spirit animal suited to its ethos. We’re reading dogs and clicking cats. Knopf is a borzoi. BuzzFeed is a Scottish Fold.

When did our entertainments break along these species lines? And what will happen to the dog, once so proud in literature, as the industry that championed it limps into the future?

Surely you’ll be inclined to grant the premise: Think of “Maru the Cat”; think of “Marley & Me.” But let me try to make the case using more objective means. Precisely how do dogs and cats compare online, and then again in print?

The other day I went to visit Yahoo and plugged in the words “cat” and “cats.” (I tried them 10 times each.) My searches pulled an average of 1.8 billion hits, nearly two giga-cats of data on the Internet. Then I did the same with “dog” and “dogs,” and received one-third as many results. For every Web-enabled pooch, three kittens danced on YouTube.

Bing produced a similar comparison: 1.7 billion cats against 775 million dogs, for a ratio north of 2-to-1. Google was more even-pawed, but still the Web evinced a preference for felines: Its worm crawled 2.5 billion sites on cats and just 1.7 billion sites on dogs.

These searches tell us what we knew already: That stats on cats are unsurpassed online. But what’s the mix for books?

On Amazon, canines held the lion’s share of search results, by a healthy 2-to-1. A look at Google Books returned the same disparity: The corpus holds 87 million cats and almost twice as many pups. What’s more, this trend in published work appears to date back centuries.

What about the future? To get a more specific sense, I consulted an online database of book deals and sifted through the last few years for references to animals. Since 2008, editors have signed up at least 44 dog-related works of fiction, compared with 20 books on cats. Among nonfiction deals — including memoirs, how-to guides, photography, and pet-related humor — the spread was even more severe: Over the last two years, the database lists 57 such arrangements for canine printed matter against 18 for kitty-lit.

So there we have it: Dogs really are the champs in print, while kittens win online. Which brings us back to where we started.

There’s an old joke, often (and erroneously) attributed to the founder of Random House, Bennet Cerf, that since people love to read books about Abraham Lincoln, and people love to read books about doctors, and people love to read books about dogs, then the best-selling book of all time ought to be a book called “Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog.”

That wisdom first appeared in print in 1938, in an essay for the Saturday Review by editor George Stevens. His piece, called “Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog and Other Famous Best-Sellers,” looked at how book publishers try — and often fail — to manufacture hits. The principles of viral marketing that he laid out 75 years ago (“advertising sells a book that is already selling,” for one, and “it is up to the publisher to know when the iron is hot”) have since become gospel in media both old and new. Whether it’s “The Art of Racing in the Rain,” or just the “Keyboard Cat,” the lesson is the same: Success must be nurtured, not designed.

That’s the point of the joke, of course: You can’t squish together trends and expect to sell a million copies. But it’s just as telling that the line itself still circulates in old-school publishing, and in old-school publishing alone. (I first heard of “Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog” from a literary scout, who got it from an editor at Houghton Mifflin.)

This long-running fad for dogs in books suggests a deep and strange connection. Consider that in ’38 the dog itself was somewhat scarce: Around that time, the country had just one of them for every nine of us. The doggy boom did not occur until the 1960s, when the ratio of dog-to-man would rise to 1-to-5. (These days it’s 1-to-4.) In other words, dogs were selling books before they sold themselves.

Needless to say, no one in the business ever wondered if Lincoln’s doctor had a cat. The parade of canine hits started with the corny classics — “Old Yeller” and “White Fang” — and now includes some very modern books of science, the kind that tell us what it’s like to be a dog.

Along the way, it swept up a few of the most famous writers ever to have written: Steinbeck did a doggy book, and so did Virginia Woolf. This highfalutin pedigree lingers even to this day. In the last few years, several of our leading journalists — old-media types, of course — have joined the long procession: The New Yorker’s Susan Orlean and the Times’ Jill Abramson have lately gone into the doghouse, and so has New York Magazine’s executive editor John Homans.

Brainy writers have been so inclined to scrutinize the pooch, in fact, they’ve often tried to get inside its head. Jack London did an early version of the dog-narrator, but so have many others: Paul Auster and Dave Eggers, William Maxwell and Peter Mayle.

Kitties, for their part, have mostly failed to earn the same regard. I’ve seen omniscient cats, but only on the Web. And here’s another, final way to show that canines get respect in print: Dogs in stories die; cats almost never do. (That’s just as true in movies, and really any form of narrative. According to one database, the ratio of lifeless dogs to lifeless cats on-screen is 4-to-1.)

Cats have their place in art, of course. They’ve had it since the dawn of culture. In the Chauvet cave in France, where early humans sketched out animals in 30,000 B.C., the evidence suggests a preference for kitties: Among the horses and the bison, cavemen drew a pride of lions and a panther.

I’m guessing that since ancient times, the cat has been more an image than a text. One scholar of feline memology notes that in the 1870s, photographs of cats were put on cutesy cartes de visite. Nice to look at; nothing much to say. In later years the cat became a star of comic strips, starting with the black-and-white called Felix, and then on and up through Garfield, Hobbes and Heathcliff.

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A shaggy dog story: Boy and his pet pose for pictures every day for his father while he is away serving with the navy

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Found you! Max (left) and Julian are best friends and pose for a picture with different props every day

These adorable pictures show Julian Becker and his 165 pound pet Max, the shaggy Newfoundland that never leaves his best friend’s side.

Five-year-old Julian’s mother Stasha started taking pictures of the odd couple every day before they got in the family car in Whidbey Island, Washington, although both Julian and Max were born in England.

With her husband away regularly in his role as a U.S. naval officer, the pictures began as a way of keeping in touch.

Found you! Max (left) and Julian are best friends and pose for a picture with different props every day

Shelter: Julian and Max snuggle under an umbrella. The pair were both born in the UK, and Julian still drinks tea in the morning
Shelter: Julian and Max snuggle under an umbrella. The pair were both born in the UK, and Julian still drinks tea in the morning

They have evolved into a charming document of a boy’s love for a four-legged friend he began walking with his mother from the age of three.

Mother Stasha says: ‘My husband is a naval officer and I am a self employed lifestyle photographer. My son Julian and Max, our Newfoundland, were both born in England, where we were stationed before moving back to the States.

‘My boy still drinks tea every morning but has mostly lost the accent. Max still barks with a Yorkshire twang. Max will turn six in May and Julian is five. They have been together all day, every day since Julian was born.

Quirky: Some of the pictures, such as this one where a pineappple adorns Max's head, are just plain bizarre

Superdog: The caped canine watches over his human friend
Superdog: The caped canine watches over his human friend

Comedy: The pair share their funny side

Contact: With his dad away regularly in his role as a naval officer, the pictures are a way of staying in touch
Contact: The pictures are a way of staying in touch with his father, a naval officer

Den: Max peeps out from a shelter on a sunny day
Den: Max peeps out from a shelter on a sunny day

‘I started taking photos of them in front of the garage everyday before we got into the minivan when I joined Instagram. It was mostly to send them to family and my husband when he travels.

‘Although my son usually refused to have his pictures taken with my camera he warmed up to the iPhone shots quickly and started directing them soon after.’

Pose: Max is incredibly protective of Julian and the two go for a walk every day

Pose: Max is incredibly protective of Julian and the two go for a walk every day

Items that appear in shots are usually things Julian takes for show and tell at his preschool or gadgets he wants to take with him to the beach.

She added: ‘Max usually sits there and takes orders from Julian. I just snap a few and post the photo that made me giggle the most.

‘When I take photos on our hikes and adventures I tend to click as moments evolve too.

Very rarely will I ask if they can stand still for me and when I do photos never have the same “soul”.

She says Max never takes his eyes off Julian when they are out and he likes to swim.

She said: ‘He is always slightly-to-very damp. He endures brushing and likes to be scratched just above his tail.

‘The only time he barks is at whales, one particular UPS guy and if you stop scratching him before he had enough. He snores loudly and loves sleeping outside in cold weather.

Julian, true to his NY Italian roots, talks non-stop. He loves hiking, documentaries and golf. He is pretty much great at everything he does, including bossing his 165 pound dog around.’

Max’s pet peeve is random strangers suggesting he should put a saddle on and ride his dog.

Medical Marijuana For Dogs, California Vet Says

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As more Americans give their pets prescription medication initially intended for humans, at least one U.S. veterinarian is advocating for medical marijuana for pets.

A woman on the upper west side of Manhattan buys lunch at Starbucks for her dog, a shepherd mix who hasn’t been feeling well lately. Another patron, in full yoga regalia, says she buys her own dog bottled water and hypoallergenic puppy chow, taking him to a “holistic veterinarian” as well as doggy daycare for socialization.

(Photo : Creative Commons) Though no studies exist to prove efficacy, at least one American veterinarian says medical marijuana might be considered for pets when other prescription medications fail in treating pain and distress-based disorders.

The scene is not a typical in a country that spends $50 billion per year on pets, including an average of $655 on health care for dogs, with some even buying insurance premiums for doggie health care. Since receiving regulatory approval in 2007, pharmaceutical company Eli Whitney and Company has marketed Reconcile, an antidepressant in the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor class that is intended specifically for dogs.

Now, at least one veterinarian in California is advocating for a more “holistic” approach: Medical marijuana for dogs.

Veterinarian Doug Kramer said he got the idea from a customer whose dog “Nikita” failed to respond to steroids and other pain medications for cancer – and has now set up a website to advocate for the cause.

“A glycerin tincture is, to me, by far the optimal way to do it because it offers the greatest accuracy in dosing,” Kramer told media. “It’s also sweet tasting. Obviously you can make it into butter or oil, so anything that you can cook or make with butter or oil would work, like homemade dog biscuits.”

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Rescued pup with cleft palate becomes Internet sensation

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Lentil

No one can resist little Lentil’s cuteness!

Lentil, a 9-week-old French bulldog puppy with rare facial deformities, is melting hearts and gaining thousands of online supporters with his inspirational story. His foster mother, Lindsay Condefer, was quite surprised her puppy became a viral hit when multiple news outlets from all over the world covered the story.

“All of a sudden this baby turned my life upside down,” Condefer, 34, told TODAY.com.

When Lentil was born Feb. 2 with a cleft palate and deformed nose and lip, The French Bulldog Rescue Network knew he would need special love and attention. As founder of the nonprofit Street Tails Animal Rescue and a pet foster parent with 12 years of experience, Condefer was a perfect choice to take in Lentil, who was the only surviving member of his litter. She took him home a couple days later and now feeds him through a tube every three hours.

The French Bulldog Rescue Network is also amazed by the attention Lentil is getting. FBRN President Joan Cleveland said Lentil “is a very special little puppy whose beauty is in his imperfection and indomitable will to survive.”

Lindsay Condefer
The French Bulldog Rescue Network is amazed by the attention Lentil is getting. FBRN President Joan Cleveland said Lentil “is a very special little puppy whose beauty is in his imperfection and indomitable will to survive.”

Amazed by Lentil’s fight to survive, Condefer created a blog and Facebook page to record his progress. His page has already garnered over 48,000 likes on Facebook.

“I have received more support than I can ever in my mind imagine possible. I don’t know how it happened,” Condefer said.

While she isn’t sure why Lentil’s story has touched the most hearts out of all the dogs she’s fostered, Condefer hopes something good will come out of all the attention, such as raising awareness for rescue pets and those born with cleft palates.

According to Dr. Lewis, a “cleft palate is a congenital deformity that occurs during gestation in utero.” Lentil's condition is rarer than the usual types.

Lindsay Condefer
According to Dr. Lewis, a “cleft palate is a congenital deformity that occurs during gestation in utero.” Lentil’s condition is rarer than the usual types.

Cleft palates usually cause problems in puppies shortly after birth, before the clefts are even noticed, said Dr. John Lewis, assistant professor of dentistry and oral surgery at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine. Lentil’s rare combination of deformities makes him more at risk for inflammation of his lungs and nasal passages, which can make it difficult to breathe. While he’s survived longer than his siblings, he’s not out of the woods yet.

Condefer is taking Lentil to see Dr. Lewis at the end of April, when surgical options for the puppy will be discussed. Multiple surgeries may be necessary, but there is hope that Lentil won’t have to eat from a tube forever.

Let's play! Lentil doesn't let his health problems get in the way of being a lively puppy.

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Let’s play! Lentil doesn’t let his health problems get in the way of being a lively puppy.

“Long-term, once the palatal surgery heals, Lentil should be able to live a normal life. He will always look a little different, but dogs don’t tend to dwell on these things,” Dr. Lewis told TODAY.com.

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Sexy Bar Refaeli sizzles in the sun with her furry friend in pictures to make you very jealous

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They are going to be some weird tan lines

It is a tough being one of the most beautiful women in world,when you’re literally rushed off your feet and are laying horizontal, tweeting beside a pool in the searing hot sun.

The lingerie model and ex beau of Leo DiCaprio posted these snaps of her banging body and adorable dawg with the caption: “A dogs life.”

But then Bar Refaeli has never held back when it comes to smugging off about her amazing life. Not that we’re bitter or anything.

It’s been a good year for Bar with a lingerie shoot, which like the sun, was too hot to stare directly at and later her lol-tastic appearance playing tonsil tennis with a nerd at the Superbowl, which you can see in all its absurd glory below.

So yeah, it’s official, this picture has cemented her as the most desirable woman in the world right now by combining two extremely good things.

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Hyperbaric Chambers Breathe New Life Into Pampered Pets

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Even in a land of pampered pooches, Mayumi Niizuka’s miniature schnauzers are considered spoiled.

Berun, 5, and Kilche, 6, get aroma massages and mud packs twice a month. They bathe in hot springs and dress in designer clothes. Combined with monthly veterinarian fees, Niizuka shells out more than $1,000 on the two pups, far more than she spends on her and her daughter.

“We may not be celebrities but we treat our dogs like one,” she says, laughing.

She’s now adding bimonthly oxygen treatments to the list.

The latest addition to Japan’s $16 billion pet industry, dog spas are increasingly offering hyperbaric-chamber sessions, better known as medical therapy for athletes like Michael Phelps.

Veterinarians have long used oxygen treatment to aid recover for ailing animals, but Japanese spas are turning need into luxury, offering 10- to 30-minute sessions for weight loss and anti-aging. The most pampered animals sit in the capsules for basic R and R.

“Dogs are increasingly becoming a valuable part of the family,” said Masahito Kitoh, the owner of Aspet, one of two companies selling the canine chambers. “Owners are doing everything they can to extend their lives, more than ever.”

First launched by Japanese company Air Press in 2007, the capsules pump 100-percent oxygen at elevated pressures so the blood absorbs more oxygen, and speeds up the body’s recovery time, Kitoh says. The treatments are now offered in more than 100 locations throughout the country for roughly $15 for a 10-minute session. Kitoh says they offer the same aerobic benefit as two hours of exercise.

At the swanky Wag Style dog spa in Tokyo, owners who are too busy to walk their pooches schedule sessions to breathe new life into lethargic dogs. The barometric pressure inside the capsules is equivalent to diving 7 feet under water.

“Lack of exercise, stress and obesity are all reasons [for the oxygen boost],” therapist Sanae Hagiwara said.

In real estate-challenged Tokyo, where dogs live in cramped quarters, Hagiwara says the capsules offer canines the perfect place to unwind.

Much like Americans, the Japanese have been known to coddle their pets, treating them to posh treatments, gourmet meals and couture fashion, with labels like Chanel and Dior offering luxury canine products. There are hot springs resorts for dogs, “strollers” to carry tiny lapdogs, anti-aging supplements and even doggy beer.

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Why Dogs Are Better Than Women

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Why Dogs Are Better Than Women

Dogs don’t cry.

Dogs love it when your friends come over.

Dogs don’t care if you use their shampoo.

Dogs think you sing great.

A dog’s time in the bathroom is confined to
a quick drink.

Dogs don’t expect you to call when you are
running late.

The later you are, the more excited dogs are
to see you.

Dogs will forgive you for playing with other
dogs.

Dogs don’t notice if you call them by another
dog’s name.

Dogs are excited by rough play.

Dogs don’t mind if you give their offspring away.

Dogs understand that flatulence is funny.

Dogs love red meat.

Dogs can appreciate excessive body hair.

Anyone can get a good looking dog.

If a dog is gorgeous, other dogs don’t hate it.

Dogs don’t shop.

Dogs like it when you leave a lot of things
on the floor.

A dog’s disposition stays the same all month
long.

Dogs never need to examine the relationship.

A dog’s parents never visit.

Dogs love long car trips.

Dogs understand that instincts are better than
asking for directions.

Dogs understand that all animals smaller than
dogs were made to be hunted.

When a dog gets old and starts to snap at you
incessantly, you can shoot it.

Dogs like beer.

Dogs don’t hate their bodies.

No dog ever bought a Kenny G or Hootie & the
Blowfish album.

No dog ever put on 100 pounds after reaching
adulthood.

Dogs never criticize.

Dogs agree that you have to raise your voice
to get your point across.

Dogs never expect gifts.

It’s legal to keep a dog chained up at your house.

Dogs don’t worry about germs.

Dogs don’t want to know about every other dog
you ever had.

Dogs like to do their snooping outside as
opposed to in your wallet, desk and the
back of your sock drawer.

Dogs don’t let magazine articles guide their lives.

Dogs would rather have you buy them a hamburger
dinner than a lobster one.

You never have to wait for a dog. They’re ready
to go 24 hours a day.

Dogs have no use for flowers, cards, or jewelry.

Dogs don’t borrow your shirts.

Dogs never want foot rubs.

Dogs enjoy heavy petting in public.

Dogs find you amusing when you’re drunk.

Dogs can’t talk.

Dogs aren’t catty.

Dogs seldom outlive you