Furries and fake babies: The worst of TikTok



As TikTok grows in popularity, so does the eccentricity of its users. And what some of them post for the entire world to see is a little disturbing — to say the least.

One TikTok user has been using the platform to document her travels with a realistic baby doll that she’s named “Peaches.”

“This was the first day that I brought Peaches out and about,” the TikTok user said in her video. “This is our new model baby Peaches, which I’m obsessed with. So when we got there I wanted her to get some sun, and then I made her a bottle, and then we were getting ready to go into the ocean but the sun was still so, so hot. So I went ahead and gave her some sunblock.”

The woman shows herself spraying sunblock on the fake baby, before bringing it into the ocean and plunging the doll underwater.

“I could hear people next to me, they were laughing. Some people were pointing fingers at me, but you know what, I love silicone dolls. I’m not hurting anybody,” she continued, concluding the video by saying, “Don’t forget, even as an adult, it’s okay to play.”

Allie Beth Stuckey of “Relatable” is horrified, calling it “something very dark.”

“You’re trying to fill a void that could be filled, should be filled with a human child. And I would even say if you can’t have kids, or even if you had a miscarriage, which obviously is very tragic, you should be investing your time and energy into real kids who need love — whether you are adopting them or fostering them.”

“It’s just so craven to me that our birth rate is declining and that the fake baby community is growing. There is something dark about that, and you can’t convince me otherwise,” she continues, adding, “I might even venture to say demonic.”

But fake babies aren’t the only delusional phenomena to make waves on social media.

Furries, people who dress up in animal costumes to go about their daily life, are also growing in numbers.

“Part of it is feeling different and unique, like, 'You don’t really know me, I’m secretly a wolf, you think I’m just Ethan, but I’m secretly howling at the moon every night,'” Stuckey comments. “I think having an underground kind of identity and community that the rest of the world doesn’t really understand, that seems to be a motivation,” she adds.




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Utah school district in 'furry' controversy issues new statement promising to take all allegations of harassment 'very seriously'



The Utah school district enmeshed in a controversy surrounding student "furries" — people who identify as animals, wear animal-like apparel, and mimic animal behaviors — has now slightly changed its stance from just a few days ago. Though it denied the existence of furries as recently as Thursday, it now claims to take all allegations of "harassment in our schools" — likely including harassment from furries — "very seriously."

As Blaze News previously reported, dozens of students and their parents staged a protest against the furries last Wednesday at Mt. Nebo Middle School in Payson, Utah, about an hour south of Salt Lake City. Students reported that furries had barked at them, chewed on sticks in class, played fetch in the halls, and even bit classmates who invaded their territory or sprayed them with air freshener.

Blaze News was able to provide several exclusive photos and videos supporting at least some of the claims about a furry problem. Those photos and videos appear to show students wearing animal masks and other animal-related paraphernalia, crawling about on all fours, and even bragging about spraying people in the face with chemicals.

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— Cortney Weil 🇺🇲 (@cortneyweil) April 19, 2024

Despite this evidence, which was readily available, Nebo School District repeatedly denied the existence of a problem. "There have been no incidents of biting, licking, costumes, or animal behavior at Mt. Nebo Middle School. These rumors are unfounded and are not occurring in our schools," district representative Seth Sorenson wrote to Blaze News.

The Salt Lake Tribune also published an article, more or less parroting district talking points about the furry allegations under the pretense of a fact check. "Fact check: Nebo School District responds to claims about student protest over 'furries,'" read the headline from Tribune education reporter Michael Lee on Wednesday evening, the same day as the protest. The article makes no mention of speaking with any students or parents who made furry allegations.

By Saturday, the district had sent Blaze News an amended statement that tacitly acknowledged the furry problem. Without referencing furries once by name or the disruptive behaviors in which they have allegedly engaged, the new statement denounced all instances of "any type of harassment in our schools."

The new statement from Seth Sorenson is long and discusses multiple subjects, so we will share the two paragraphs germane to the furry topic alone. Particular sentences that ostensibly reference the furries have been placed in bold:

We are again going to reiterate that we do not tolerate any type of harassment in our schools and take this very seriously. Administration had never told students that it is acceptable for any student, regardless of who they are, to be allowed to harass or injure other students. We take any and all harassment very seriously and investigate all allegations of these behaviors thoroughly. Our top priority is the safety and security of all students and creating an environment where they all feel safe and secure. Our administration would never allow any group of students to target and harass other students without intervention and consequences. We again encourage students that have experienced harassment or bullying to speak with administration so it can be addressed.
We take the education of these young 11 and 12 year old children at Mt. Nebo Middle School Very seriously. The teachers, staff and administration are all focused on creating an environment where students can learn, and foster a lifelong love of educating and improving themselves.

Blaze News reached out to the Salt Lake Tribune to see whether the outlet intended to update its reporting in light of the district's new stance on alleged harassment at Mt. Nebo Middle School. We did not receive a response from Lee, senior managing editor Sheila McCann, or executive editor Lauren Gustus.

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Contrary to Salt Lake Tribune 'fact-check,' photos and videos appear to show multiple students dressed and behaving as furries at Utah school



Earlier this week, a video went viral on social media, showing students protesting "furries" — people who identify as animals, wear animal-like apparel, and mimic animal behaviors — at Mt. Nebo Middle School in Payson, Utah, about an hour south of Salt Lake City, as Blaze News previously reported. Despite the number of students participating in the protest and the availability of evidence supporting their claims, the Salt Lake Tribune almost immediately issued a "fact-check" insisting that the furry allegations were likely false.

Blaze News spoke with multiple Mt. Nebo parents and students, including Kendalyn, the 13-year-old girl who orchestrated the walkout and the attending paper and online petitions. Through our conversations, Blaze News found evidence of students referring to one another as "furries," wearing animal clothing and masks in defiance of understood district dress code, and crawling about and growling in a manner that is likely to bother others. In other words, we have ample evidence that the allegations demand a good-faith investigation from the media, an investigation that the Salt Lake Tribune has thus far opted not to conduct.

'Just sprayed ... in the f***ing eyes': Clear evidence of a problem

Blaze News received nearly a dozen pieces of photographic and video evidence showing some students in animal outfits causing a disturbance and perhaps even physical harm. A former school employee, Katie Ogren, as well a sixth-grade student there confirmed to Blaze News that each of the following videos and photos, given to us by a separate source, were taken of Mt. Nebo students on school grounds.

The first video is the most damning. In addition to demonstrating that kids in animal masks regularly gather on school property, the video shows one student apparently bragging: "I just sprayed [inaudible] in the f***ing eyes!" Several demonstrators at the walkout reported that furries have occasionally sprayed unsuspecting students with Febreze. Kendalyn told Blaze News that her friend was victimized by such an attack in the girls' restroom, outside the purview of school surveillance cameras.

pic.twitter.com/fPvmjPTOdr
— Cortney Weil 🇺🇲 (@cortneyweil) April 19, 2024

Other videos show kids flailing about on all fours while screaming or barking. In one video, one female student can even be heard exclaiming near a group of girls in animal masks: "It's a furry in action!"

pic.twitter.com/sLeJ4F0Zne
— Cortney Weil 🇺🇲 (@cortneyweil) April 19, 2024


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— Cortney Weil 🇺🇲 (@cortneyweil) April 19, 2024


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— Cortney Weil 🇺🇲 (@cortneyweil) April 19, 2024

A small sampling of these photos also show kids routinely donning animal-like clothing and accessories. Though no photos show an animal tail, Ogren told Blaze News she found a tail lying on the ground the day she resigned from the district. "One furry lost their tail in the lunch room," she said. "And I saw it laying there, and I was like, 'Oh, they're gonna be sad that's gone!'"

Administrators plead for 'understanding ... and tolerance'

As strange as some of the Mt. Nebo student behavior and clothing has been, the response from adults in the building is perhaps more alarming. Various students at the walkout claimed to have reported to teachers and administrators incidents of furries barking, hissing, preening, and even biting, only to be either ignored or even disciplined for lodging complaints.

"If we try to do something to get away from [the furries], or we, like, tell them to stop, we get suspended," one boy told reporter Adam Bartholomew of Utah Main Street Media.

In late February or early March, Katie Ogren — who is not a licensed teacher but who, until recently, worked with struggling Mt. Nebo students as a "success coach" — received a report from a frustrated girl who claimed to have been bitten by a furry after she repeatedly asked the furry to leave her alone. When the girl reported the alleged bite to another teacher, the other teacher supposedly advised her to exercise greater tolerance.

"This teacher said we just have to be nice," the girl claimed, Ogren told Blaze News. "We can't discriminate."

Though Blaze News could not independently verify this incident, we did receive a copy of a memo sent to Mt. Nebo parents on Tuesday, the day before the walkout, that expressed a similar idea. It seems to ask students to demonstrate "curiosity, understanding, patience and tolerance" toward "a small group of students at our school," almost certainly a veiled reference to the furries.

The memo also issued a blanket warning against violating dress code and creating a hostile learning environment. Students at the walkout were frustrated that this warning was sent to all students rather than those like the furries who have allegedly disregarded those policies.

"They won't talk to [the furries] directly," one girl said. "They just sent out an email and have the school, like, tell everyone."

'Just what kids this age do': Salt Lake Tribune takes district at its word

At about 9:30 p.m. on the day of the Mt. Nebo walkout, at about the time Blaze News was speaking with walkout organizer Kendalyn and her parents, all three of whom reportedly attended the demonstration, the Salt Lake Tribune was publishing its "fact-check" article: "Fact check: Nebo School District responds to claims about student protest over 'furries.'"

The article, written by Tribune education reporter Michael Lee, appears to make little attempt to understand the nature or veracity of the furry allegations. Lee did not mention speaking with Mt. Nebo students or other members of the community, even though anywhere between 60 and 150 students attended the walkout despite a looming threat of suspension.

Instead, Lee hinted that the apparent furry clique at Mt. Nebo is little more than a boogeyman created by "conservative social media circles" to foment "right-wing outrage." "[The] video and claims had been picked up and spread by Libs of TikTok, an account on X that shares anti-LGBTQ posts," Lee fretted. He also pointedly noted that Cari Bartholomew, the wife of the Utah Main Street Media reporter who documented the walkout and spoke with students and parents for over an hour, "is running as a far-right candidate for the Utah State Board of Education in District 13."

In fact, the only source for Lee's self-identifying fact-check appears to be Seth Sorenson, described in the article as a spokesperson for Nebo School District. Sorenson's email signature provides two much more colorful job titles for him: Communications & Community Relations Administrator and Nebo Education Foundation Executive Director.

Sorenson emphatically denied the existence of a furry group at Mt. Nebo, dismissing the accusations as young kids occasionally playing dress-up. "You’ll have students that show up with headbands and giant bows; you’ll have students that show up dressed as their favorite basketball player or baseball player," he told Lee. "That’s just what kids this age do."

Sorenson also blamed at least some of the community outrage on parents who, he claimed, misunderstood a recent school memo. That memo, allegedly issued the week before the walkout, reportedly called for greater respect and tolerance among the diverse Mt. Nebo student body. Some parents and students mistakenly believed that the school was "taking the side of a single group, saying, 'We want you to be kind to this group, but they don’t have to be kind to anyone else,'" Sorenson said.

Lee admitted in the article that his outlet did not independently view the school memo, claiming it was not "immediately" available since "Sorenson said the campus and its staff had since dismissed for the day and he didn’t have a copy on hand."

Perhaps Lee should have insisted on being furnished with a copy, since Sorenson appears to have conflated two different messages, only one of which was directly given to parents. According to three Mt. Nebo parents, the school did not send a "direct message" about the issue "to families last week," as Lee asserted in the article. The only memo regarding respect and kindness parents have received lately is the "understanding ... and tolerance" memo discussed in the section above.

That email, sent on Tuesday and not last week, does reference another message of unknown content that Mt. Nebo teachers were told to relay to "their 6th period classes" on April 15. School administrators, it seems, entrusted middle-school students to pass along the message to their worried parents.

Blaze News reached out to Lee for comment but did not receive a response. We also reached out to the managing editors at the Tribune to find out whether there had been any editorial oversight on Lee's thinly sourced "fact-check." One editor responded and claimed that our inquiries had been passed along to executive editor Lauren Gustus. That was the last — and in fact the only — communication we received from the Tribune.

No 'masks or animal costumes': District denies furries' existence at Mt. Nebo

Blaze News also had several email interactions with Seth Sorenson, the representative of Nebo School District who likewise spoke with Lee. During these interactions, Sorenson repeatedly denied the existence of a furry problem at Mt. Nebo and even suggested that media outlets such as Blaze News had misled the public in their reporting.

In his initial email to us, Sorenson unequivocally stated that no Mt. Nebo student had worn "masks or animal costumes" at school or engaged in the frightening animal-like behaviors. "There have been no incidents of biting, licking, costumes, or animal behavior at Mt. Nebo Middle School. These rumors are unfounded and are not occurring in our schools," he insisted.

When Blaze News sent Sorenson an image and video that seemed to contradict some of his assertions, he became even more indignant. "None of the video or photographic evidence we have seen shows students dressing up as animals, or acting like animals, as that would not be allowed," he replied. "We can not (sic) even confirm that these videos are of our students and in our schools."

Blaze News then sent a copy of the video that apparently captures a student boasting about spraying someone with chemicals. Sorenson first claimed he could not open the video. We sent along yet another copy of the video, but he made no reply.

The last missive we did receive from Sorenson refused to acknowledge the existence of a furry problem and instead took aim at our previous coverage of the walkout: "Several [news outlets] have even written articles debunking the information your group presented as fact in your group's previous article, or simply decided that there really was no story and did not do anything on it," he wrote. He did not mention the names of any such outlets.

"Journalism requires investigation and research," he continued. "Just as a note, those media outlets who have taken the time to come to our schools and visit with the administration have seen that there is absolutely no validity to the wild accusations being thrown about online."

Kelly Taylor, the principal of Mt. Nebo, did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.

There is no indication that the Salt Lake Tribune or any other outlet actually spoke with the parents who were raising the complaints to determine whether they had any evidence to support their claims — evidence that the parents were readily able to provide to Blaze News.

'We're standing up': Demonstrators remain strong

Kendalyn, Katie Ogren, and others in the Payson, Utah, community who tell Blaze News they are fed up with furries and other disciplinary issues at Mt. Nebo have not been deterred by the reports from the district or the Salt Lake Tribune. If anything, they feel more compelled to speak out in the hopes of protecting students who just want to go to school without fear of torment.

Ogren, who attended the walkout even though she resigned from the district last week, claimed that for too long, victimized students have been trapped in a no-win situation. "It's this double standard, I believe, that if you don't have proof, nothing happened, nothing happened without proof," she said. "However, if they pull out their phone and record something, then they get in trouble for recording it."

"Because [they] are not a minority, [their] voices cannot be heard."

Kendalyn, who told Blaze News that school administrators are too "scared" to address the furry problem, feels emboldened by all the support she and her classmates have received from the community.

"I know I've got all these people here to support me," Kendalyn stated at the walkout she put into motion. "I've got the moms. I've got the city to support me. I have my parents to support me, and if we need to, I'll go to another school.

"But we're standing up for what we believe in."

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Man spends over $20,000 to transform himself into a DOG



Children are known to play pretend. Whether it’s mermaids, pirates, unicorns, Power Rangers, or anything in between, kids let their imaginations run wild.

And we love them for that. But at some point, they’re expected to grow up and fully root themselves in reality as human beings. This has long been the standard.

Until recently, that is.

Nowadays, anyone can be anything, including a dog, apparently.

A Japanese man by the name of Toko spent $20,000 to fulfill his childhood dream of transforming into a dog.

Toko’s YouTube channel, which is “cleverly” titled “I want to be an animal,” features a video of him in a hyper-realistic dog costume being petted by pedestrians who are acting like petting a man-dog is a normal, everyday experience.

The only one who seems to be disturbed by the situation is an actual dog.

“The dog was the only reasonable one in that entire video,” says Sara Gonzales.

“Bring your furry a** to Texas [where] it’s 110 degrees outside right now – we’ll see how long you stay in that coat,” jokes Chad Prather.

“Let’s just hold him to it,” adds Sky Corban. “If you want to identify as a dog … you can’t sign a lease, you can’t sign any contracts, [and] you can’t have $20,000.”

But all jokes aside, Toko’s strange transformation reveals a serious underlying condition.

“This is severe mental illness,” Sara says, adding, “The video has like over 3 million views on YouTube, so he’s going to financially benefit from his mental illness.”

But this situation is not just reflective of Toko’s psychological disturbance; it also indicates a deficit in society.

“You start affirming people’s delusions on age and … other attributes that are immutable, and all of a sudden, you get an entirely insane culture,” Sara explains.

“You get demonized for the things that are sane, and you get praised for the things that are insane,” adds Sky.


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Leftists enraged that kids cannot attend furry convention due to law ratified by DeSantis



Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has repeatedly indicated that Florida is where "woke goes to die." Having ensured that is the case, in part, by ratifying the Protection of Children Act, SB 1438, he has given leftists in the state another strange cause to mourn.

Megaplex is a "Furry/Anthropomorphic Arts Convention" in Orlando, Florida, that will be held in September at the Hyatt Regency Orlando. It is ostensibly a mecca both for perverts who sexualize cartoon animals and for the socially-stunted who enjoy dressing up in animal costumes.

Organizers for the annual event noted on May 24 that as a result of SB 1438, "it has been decided that for legal reasons and protection of our attendees, our venue, and the overall convention, Megaplex attendees must be 18 years of age at the time of registration pickup."

SB 1438, introduced by Republican state Sens. Clay Yarborough and Keith Perry, prohibits "a person from knowingly admitting a child to an adult live performance."

Furthermore, it prohibits a governmental entity from issuing a permit or otherwise authorizing a person to conduct an adult performance in front of minors.

"Adult live performance" is defined in the legislation as "any show, exhibition, or other presentation in front of a live audience which, in whole or in part, depicts or simulates nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement, or specific sexual activities ... lewd conduct, or the lewd exposure of prosthetic or imitation genitals or breasts."

DeSantis ratified the act on May 17. One week later, Megaplex indicated that its days of possibly exposing children to adult performances might be over.

While Orlando Weekly and other publications claim that it is a common misconception that "furries are a sexualized subculture," Vox indicated that a survey conducted at a similar furry convention revealed that nearly all of the male respondents and over 78% of female respondents admitted to viewing furry pornography.

A 2019 study published in the journal "Archives of Sexual Behavior" indicated that male furries "tended to report a pattern of sexual interests ... involving anthropomorphic animals. Both sexual attraction to anthropomorphic animals and sexual arousal by fantasizing about being anthropomorphic animals were nearly universal."

Fresh off advancing false allegations about a Florida school, Rolling Stone denounced DeSantis for having a hand in preventing dehumanized convention-goers from rubbing shoulders with children while incognito.

E.J. Dickson, a self-professed "Disney adult" who occasionally writes about porn for the magazine, suggested that "DeSantis has successfully sucked the pleasure out of many of life's little joys," adding that his ratification of a bill protecting children from deviant displays is no exception.

Unlike Orlando Weekly, Dickson was willing to admit that "there is a segment of furrydom that does treat it as a kink" and that furry conventions boast adult content but "typically save such programming for later at night ... or cordon off adult vendors so they are not in full view of other attendees."

Having acknowledged that there is adult content, adult intent, and adult merchandise, Dickson leapt to the conclusion that barring children from such an environment amounted to an assault on the LGBT agenda.

"The fact that the furry organizers felt pressured to bar children from the convention is yet another example of how it’s been seen as an attack on LGBTQ rights," wrote Dickson, adding that nearly 80% of furries identify as not-straight.

After stressing both that the event is not "inherently sexual" then highlighting the sexual preference of the super-majority of attendees, Dickson claimed that "many furries are marginalized in some way."

While Pink News indicated "there is an overlap between the LGBTQ+ community and the furry fandom," the LGBT activists' flag still has yet to include a stripe accounting for the marginalized furries who will have to convene in September without children present.

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Boston College professor brings furries into classroom, instructs literature students to make their own 'fursonas'



A Boston College professor brought furries into a lecture and instructed his literature students to create their own "fursonas."

Christopher Polt is an associate professor at Boston College — which describes itself as "grounded in the ideals that inspired our Jesuit founders." According to his profile on the institution's website, Polt has "taught courses on ancient and modern comedy, nature and the environment in the ancient world, and translation theory and practice, as well as a broad range of language courses from introductory to advanced." Polt currently teaches a class titled "Beast Literature."

Boston College describes the "Beast Literature" course as:

From Mother Gooses fairy tales to lolcats, we imagine animals often speaking as we do. But what are we saying when we use animals to talk with and about one another? And what does literature featuring articulate animals say about our attitudes towards humans, animals, and the lines we draw between them? This course explores beast literature in its various forms (fable, comedy, the novel, epic, debate poetry, etc), examining its incarnations through ancient Greece and Rome, Medieval Europe, and the modern world.

Fox News reported, "The class schedule lists names for each week’s lesson, including 'Sexy Beasts,' 'Dog Saints and Lambs of God,' 'The Golden A** 3, Gender and Control.'"

Polt reportedly assigned his literature students to watch "The Fandom" — a documentary that "dives headfirst into the imaginative world of 'furries,' fans of the anthropomorphic arts" and "traces the history of the fandom from its roots in the 1970s to the global community it is today."

Polt allegedly instructed his student to create their own "fursonas."

Fursonas are the personalized animal characters that someone selects for their furry persona.

"A furry's fursona is drawn from animals in nature or mythology that exhibit certain characteristics that they personally identify with, and they project their personalized fursonas, in appearance and behavior, in social interactions within the furry community in a variety of ways, such as through costume design, interactive role play, artwork, and creative writing," according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

On Feb. 23, Polt invited four furries to engage with his literature students during the class.

Phys.org defines furries as, "People who have an interest in anthropomorphism, which specifically refers to giving human characteristics to animals. In its most distilled form, furries are a group of people who formed a community—or fandom—because they have a common interest in anthropomorphic media, friendships and social inclusion."

Polt posted a photo of himself hugging the four furries who were invited to his literature class. The tenured Boston College professor also shared a photo of the furries sitting at desks in his classroom with the caption: "This is the most amazing class I've ever had."

According to an archived Twitter conversation, Polt was asked, "How many if any were furry or furry adjacent before the class?"

Polt replied, "One is already, and at least one other today said something along the lines of 'I...think I might be furry?' One more shared a fursona and explanation that almost made me cry, and I hope they sit with it and see if it can help."

Polt told a Twitter user that the fursona assignment was a "planned part of the course."

Polt gave his students cakes the read: "Sorry for making you furries."

Before protecting his Twitter account, Polt reportedly defended his furry class by tweeting: "I wholly stand by my teaching decisions and welcome *any* member of the administration to attend *any* of my classes, including the furry ones."

Polt allegedly identifies as an alpaca furry named "Tofte." Polt tweeted in 2021, "I first met alpacas about 10 years ago and instantly felt a connection."

Polt's Twitter account — which has been made private — proclaims that he is "working to preserve & share furry culture." He advises people to visit the "Fang, Feather, and Fin" — a website "dedicated to tracing and archiving the history of the furry fandom."

Polt's purported profile on the furry website reads:

Tofte Alpaca (he/him) is an Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Boston College, where he teaches courses on Greek, Latin, and ancient Mediterranean civilizations. His favorite course to teach is “Beast Literature,” which he developed to explore anthropomorphic and talking animals in ancient, Medieval European, and modern cultures. His academic research focuses on Latin poetry, Roman theater and spectacle, and animals in the Greek and Roman world. For Fang, Feather, and Fin, he’s especially eager to document furry media, especially comics and literature, and to record and understand the personal experiences of furries and their relationship to furry-ness.

In 2022, Polt was purportedly a featured speaker at Anthrocon — an annual furry convention that takes place in Pittsburgh every summer.

Polt was scheduled to give a lecture titled: "Ancient Fursuiting: A Brief History of Animal Costume, Disguise, and Ritual."

Polt's alleged profile on the furry convention website states:

Hiya! My name is Tofte, a.k.a. Christopher Polt — I'm an alpaca and a professor of Classical Studies who has taught at UNC–Chapel Hill, Carleton College, USF–Tampa, and currently Boston College. I specialize in Latin poetry, Roman entertainment and spectacle, anthropomorphic animals in the ancient world, and the reception of Greece and Rome in animated film.

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