Todd says he first realized he was a Furry when he saw Walt
Disney's “Robin Hood,” an animated movie in which Robin Hood
and Maid Marian are foxes, Little John is a bear and King
Richard and Prince John are lions.
“I was just a kid, but something about that movie hit me
like no other movie ever did,” says Todd, who prefers not to
use his last name. “I just thought it was the greatest thing.
I was kind of obsessed with it, actually.”
A thickly-built waiter with a pleasantly boyish face, Todd
is a self-described “Furry” who spends his free time exploring
his passion for anthropomorphic cartoon animals, and attends
Furry conventions to meet others who share his passion.
With all the fan-based websites out there, it’s easy to
take stock of the numerous topics one can obsess over:
teenybopper music, indie films, Star Trek, collectible license
plates, Japanese anime — the list goes on and on. But one
little-known kind of fanatic obsesses over all things
Furry.
The most common response to the question “Have you ever
heard of Furries?” is “Aren’t those the people who like to
have sex wearing animal suits?” That’s because mainstream
media outlets have recently hyped Furries as insatiably kinky
animal fetishists. Vanity Fair’s “Pleasures of the Fur”
article breathlessly reported on stuffed-animal humping at a
Midwestern Furry convention; MTV’s “Sex2K” show aired a story
on fur suit sex; and sex researcher Katharine Gates includes a
section on Furries in her book “Deviant Desires: Incredibly
Strange Sex.”
All make it appear that Furrydom is possibly ersatz
bestiality, the latest fetish to surface in the Internet age.
One thing’s for sure, anyone who would want to get it on with
a pep rally mascot has to be a crazy, wild sex freak, right?
Right about the mascot thing maybe, but wrong about Furries
as a whole. In truth, the Furry scene is nowhere near as sexy
as the media have made it out to be. Furries are strange, sad,
eccentric, malcontented and geeky, but sexy? No. It’s much
more complicated than that.
“Ask 10 different Furries what Furry is all about and
you’ll get 12 different answers,” explains one Furry fan, “but
the common thread is anthropomorphics.” Furries enjoy
entertainment and art featuring animal creatures endowed with
human traits (like Bugs Bunny). But this common thread
immediately frays into several diverse sub-strings. There’s
Furry fiction fans, Furry art enthusiasts, Fursuiters,
Spiritual Furs, Furry rave kids, Plushies, and “Furverts.”
Furries spend a great deal of time inhabiting
computer-created fantasy worlds. Some of these worlds provide
sex, others don’t. But G-rated Furries clearly distance
themselves from those that enjoy a Furry jerk-off, especially
when discussing the recent media interest. This still leaves
the question of what would make someone cross the line from,
say, a Disney movie fan, to a self-identified “Furry” who
attends conventions. Furs howl that the press leaves the false
impression that Furries go to conventions to find sex, when in
fact, they go there to find acceptance.
“I spent high school running away from jocks who wanted to
beat me up. Then I found Furry and I finally found someplace
where I belonged. I found other people who realized how much
human beings suck,” says “Wolfstar,” echoing a typical Furry
sentiment.
“Our society makes you deny your animal nature,” says Todd.
He explains that he has no interest in people wearing fur
suits, or in putting one on himself. “I own a tail, but I
don’t even wear it anymore,” he says. Rather, he speaks of
Furry as a way to connect to his innate animal qualities.
When asked if he has any interest in Furry sex pictures,
Todd says, “It’s erotic and everything, “ but it’s not what he
attends conventions for. Yet Todd acknowledges that for some
people he knows, interest in things Furry is “a true fetish.
If the sex doesn’t involve fur or animal play, they’re not
interested.”
He also describes the G-rated Furries who distance
themselves from the hornier aspects of the fur world. It’s, in
a way, reminiscent of Straightedge Punks’ reactionary stance
against drinking and drugs.
***
TessaCat, a young, slender blonde who likes to wear ears, a
leotard and cat makeup to conventions, explains that she’s
been dressing like a cat at parties since age 17. A shy
teenager, she says she found that “You can be another person
when you’re in a cat suit, and then change back into your
regular clothes and not take any responsibility for your
actions.”
Tessa says she would go to parties in her leotard, get lots
of attention, flirt with every guy there, and not have to
worry about taking on the high school label of “slut.” When
she took the suit off, she could slip back into her shy
persona.
But a Furry convention isn’t all girls in cat suits. Anyone
expecting to find a group of particularly imaginative
hedonists would feel misled upon walking in the doors at any
of the several conventions held around the country. The most
striking thing one notices, aside from dozens of people in
full amusement park-style fur suits or simple ears and tails,
is the disproportionate number of people who are, shall we
say, of a modest level of attractiveness. Okay, downright
homely.
A sense of disconnect from their human bodies is something
many Furries seemed to have in common, which isn’t surprising.
Why wouldn’t an un-charismatic or obese techie who spent most
of his social life as an invisible character in a chat room or
net game feel that his body was misplaced or irrelevant? That
he’d be better off as a sleek panther or a loveable otter? And
why not dry hump someone wearing an expressionless cartoon
head instead of a real human, who might dole out more of the
rejection that had led him to retreat to the vibrant life of
an imaginary world? Furries, like all of us, want to be
beautiful. And despite many Furries’ insistence that they
don’t choose their animal spirits, that the animals choose
them, rarely is anyone’s totem or “Personal Furry” anything
that humans regard as unattractive. Foxes, wolves, cats and
tigers greatly outnumber weasels, sloths, and baboons.
***
But back to the Furry sex issue.
Guess which group of Furries MTV, Vanity Fair, Loaded
Magazine and other media outlets tend to focus on when
exploring the world of Furry? And the Furries — at least the
ones who aren’t in it for the spooge — just hate that. Many
Furries in fact take pains to distance themselves from the
sexual aspects of the fandom. The tension between these
opposing camps — the Furverts and the “Clean Furs” — presents
an interesting dichotomy. Many Furries describe their endeavor
as “a way to get in touch with your animal nature,” but
quickly add that they want nothing to do with animalistic sex.
Yet when are humans most closely intersecting with our animal
brethren than when eating, fighting, or fucking?
MTV’s Furry interviewee asserted, “Anyone who says that
Furry is not a sexual-based fandom is really kind of fooling
themselves,” while many other Furs’ hackles are raised by the
implication that Furry is little more than fetish. Yet
interestingly, this difference of opinion manifests itself not
as animosity between clean and dirty Furries, but between
Furries and the media. As a whole, Furries’ extremely
tolerant, live-and-let live attitudes are rivaled only by
their nearly universal scorn of the media. Furry convention
producers often have extremely restrictive media policies, in
one case insisting that a “director of media relations” or his
representative will escort media during the entire course of
their stay at the convention.
Although it’s hard to describe a fandom whose own members
don’t totally agree on what is and isn’t “Furry,” the media
have earned the Furries’ mistrust by getting a lot wrong.
Vanity Fair’s article “Pleasures of the Fur” contained a
lengthy digression into “crush freaks,” people who enjoy
seeing women step on bugs and worms; MTV’s “Sex2K” focused on
a Furry coming out to his mom about Fursuit sex; British
magazine Loaded’s article contained a lengthy interview with
two zoophiles who discussed their sexual relationships with
dogs. None of these are representative of Furry fandom, and
they’re not even accurate representations of Furry fetish.
There’s enough kink in the Furry world that filling in blanks
with separate perversions is unnecessary.
The assumption is that nothing but sex could make Furries
as passionate as they are about their culture. Yet media
coverage of other nerd subcultures like Trekkies hasn’t been
nearly as sex-centric, despite the existence of sexy aspects
of Trekkie fandom such as erotic fan fiction.
The sexual side of Fur, however, is no media fabrication.
Visit the vendor room at any Furry convention and you’ll see
binder after binder of really nasty Furry art. Search the
Internet for Furry art and you’ll notice that the sites that
are G-rated very explicitly say so. Those that aren’t may
feature sketches of humanoid cats being tit-tortured with
mousetraps, zebras with mammoth cocks being sucked off by
lions, orgies of lesbian wolves, and foxes lasciviously
fingering themselves for eager packs of on-looking dogs.
Fursuit sex and plush toy love also have vocal enthusiasts.
The fabrication, however, lies in the implication that Furries
are sexual superfreaks. In reality, they’re just
disenfranchised nerds.
Clean Furries are used to co-existing with their “yiffy”
(Furspeak for “sexed-up”) counterparts, but outsiders might be
put off by some of the more outré convention attendees. On
condition of anonymity, the author of a G-rated a comic book
featuring an animal character described his experience at a
Furry convention he was invited to attend, and how revolted he
was by the horny Furs he encountered. “They have convinced
themselves that all writers and artists who have ever placed a
talking animal in a story must in fact be closet Furries at
best, and that surely those creators would not be disturbed by
the sexuality of Furry fandom,” he says. “This includes even
the classics like Bugs Bunny, the Pink Panther, and Mickey
Mouse. They can’t wait to talk to you honestly about the
nastiest, most bizarre aspects of their make-believe
creatures.”
It’s true that Furries, who are accustomed to feeling like
an oppressed minority in the culture at large, may tend to go
overboard when they get to a convention where they can finally
be honest about their obsessions and engage in some
long-missed face-to-face interaction, as opposed to the
Internet chat room and gaming environment. And there’s no
denying that too much time spent in imaginary Internet lands
(known as Furry MUCKS) can further damage an already
underdeveloped personality.
Furries themselves will often cheerfully admit their
deficiencies. “Cat,” an electrical engineer with tiger-stripe
tattoos on his face and silicon implants in his cheeks, upper
lip and forehead, said bluntly in a discussion of Furry
spirituality, that “Furries as a rule are a pretty fucked-up
group of people.”
“It’s rough if you’re a transsexual – it’s even rougher if
you try to explain that you’re a cat in a human body,” says
another Furry fan, who bemoaned the fact that Furries can’t
opt to surgically change their species in the way transexuals
can change their gender.
These conversations are typical of what one will find at
Furry conventions, scheduled alongside social events like
dances and talent shows. Scattered here and there in private
hotel rooms, one might also find places like “The Nursery” —
where adult babies can get diapered — and Fursuit dry-humping
orgies, or Plushie parties, where people who disdain or can’t
find human sexual partners stick their organs into an SPH
(strategically placed hole) torn into a carnival prize
raccoon. But most of the Furries who get laid at the
convention will probably hook up through mutual interests,
physical attraction, flirtatious conversation, and a few
drinks, just like everybody else does. Maybe there’ll be a
little extra biting and scratching thrown in, but nothing
crazy.
The average furry is a lot like the average Trekkie: he
just likes his fictional humans crossed with animals instead
of Vulcans. Furry is simply a camaraderie based on mutual
interests. Just as Dungeons and Dragons gamers love orcs and
trolls, Pagans love faeries and nymphs, or as alterna-nerds
love every band on Sub-Pop, Furries love their fox- and
tiger-men. And when a glossy magazine reports that Furry is
only about perversion, it misses the target in the same way
that stories about things like raves and Burning Man typically
do.
“I (attend conventions) to see people who I don’t get to
see for a whole year, but whom I consider good friends,” says
Todd. “We keep in touch over the Internet, and we just feel
connected through our Furriness. So to get to spend a whole
weekend where I’m actually with them feels great.”
Get in touch with your inner furry at the ConFurence
convention, CF2003, which will be held at the Hilton Burbank
Airport and Convention Center April 25-27, 2003. For more
info, visit http://www.polarden.org/cf2003/.
More info on Furry can be found at http://www.furry.com/. |