Pit Bull Afraid of Doorways Overcomes Fear by ‘Moonwalking’ [Video]

“Pit Bulls are totally vicious, right? Our scary Pit Bull, Queso, is afraid of lots of things, like the kitchen floor, the printer and doorways,” writes his dog mom, Rhiannon Hamam, in the description of this video she posted on YouTube Saturday that’s now going viral.

So how does this poor little Pittie manage to walk into a room? By doing it backwards…which sort of looks like he’s moonwalking.

“Queso is a survivor!” writes Hamam. “Pit Bulls are great.”

I couldn’t agree more. But here’s hoping some positive reinforcement and good training help Queso overcome all his fears.

Photo via YouTube

Former Vick Dog Jonny Justice is ASPCA Dog of the Year

When Jonny Justice was rescued in 2007 from Michael Vick’s Bad Newz Kennels, the Staffordshire Bull Terrier forced to fight had likely had no positive interactions with people or other dogs during his short lifetime.

At the time, Humane Society of the United States President Wayne Pacelle said Jonny and the other rescued dogs would never be suitable as pets and should all be euthanized.

Fortunately, dog experts at BAD RAP and Best Friends Animal Society disagreed with Pacelle.

These non-profit organizations took in the dogs, rehabilitated them and found loving forever homes in which many of these “unadoptable” survivors thrived.

Just one year after he was rescued from Vick’s house of horrors, Jonny Justice became a therapy dog. His pet parents, Cris Cohen and Jennifer Long of San Francisco, had noticed how well he got along with children.

Since 2008, Jonny has been visiting terminally ill children receiving medical treatment, providing them with love and support (and probably lots of soothing Staffie smooches). Jonny has also helped improve literacy by participating in programs in which kids practice reading aloud to him.

In honor of Jonny’s service, this year the ASPCA is awarding him with its highest accolade: Dog of the Year. Jonny will receive the award tomorrow at a luncheon in New York City.

The annual ASPCA Humane Awards recognize animal heroes who have demonstrated extraordinary efforts as well as people who have shown great commitment to animal welfare during the previous year.

“The 2014 Humane Awards winners represent stories of tremendous courage and determination, but also remind us how important animals are to our lives, and the care and protection we can give them in return,” said ASPCA President and CEO Matthew Bershadker in a press release.

“We are proud to honor these winners, and hope their journeys inspire more humane action across the country.”

This isn’t the first honor bestowed upon Jonny. In 2012 he was named the grand prize winner and Most Beautiful Dog in a Facebook photo contest held by stuffed-animal manufacturer GUND.

One of the prizes? GUND created a limited-edition plush toy in his likeness.

(Reminder: There are fewer than 40 shopping days until Christmas!)

Photos via Facebook

Kevin Bacon Takes On the ‘Kissed By a Pit’ Challenge

Remember when everyone was dumping ice water on their heads for the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge? That was so yesterday. (And so successful, yay.)

Now the latest challenge going viral is “Kissed by a Pit.” Here’s how it works: On social media, you post a picture or video of yourself being smooched by a Pit Bull, with the hashtag #kissedbyapit. Then you donate $5 (or more!) to your favorite animal rescue organization or shelter.

Pawesome idea, right? It was thought up by Dog Park Publishing, whose mission is to “showcase and celebrate the Pit Bull, through our calendars and other products, as a majestic, affectionate and intelligent breed that is sorely misunderstood,” according to its website.

“We are thrilled with the response we have already received,” company co-founders Alisa Weberman and Jonathan Korzen told the Huffington Post in late August. “It means we are showing Pit Bulls in a positive light, and raising money for rescues and shelters across the world.”

The latest celebrity participant is Kevin Bacon, dog dad of a rescued Pit Bull named Lilly. You may recognize her from a video Bacon posted in July 2012 of the two of them jumping in tandem into a swimming pool. (Bacon’s wife, Kyra Sedgwick, talked fondly about Lilly on “The Late Show” a few years back. Semi-jokingly, David Letterman said, “Pit Bulls are dangerous, and they will kill you.” Sedgwick laughed and defended the breed very gracefully, but I really wished she’d responded, “Talk show hosts are cheaters, and they will have affairs with their interns.”)

In the caption for his video, Bacon wrote, “Dogparkpublishing.com #kissedbyapit challenge just made my donation to #AnimalHaven NYC who’s next?”

He didn’t nominate any celebrities, but I’d love to see Jon Stewart, dog dad of a three-legged Pit Bull, take up the challenge.

Dog Park Publishing is also donating $5 per order to animal rescues and charities this month. You can check out Bacon’s video and more Kissed by a Pit Bull challenge participants (and add your photo or video) on the Pit Bulls and Itty Pitties Facebook page.

Photo credit: Kevin Bacon on WhoSay

James Gandolfini’s Final Film ‘The Drop’ Features a Rescued Pit Bull

“The Drop” — in which James Gandolfini makes his final film appearance — was originally titled “Animal Rescue,” since the crime drama deals with a lonely Brooklyn bartender (Tom Hardy) who takes in a Pit Bull puppy that was beaten and left for dead in a trash can.

Gandolfini plays the main character’s cousin, who owned the bar until Chechen mobsters took it over. The film offers “an inside look at organized crime’s use of local New York City bars as money-laundering ‘drops,'” according to its official website (which also mentions that 1.4 million dogs are adopted each year).

“The Drop,” which premiered Friday at the Toronto Film Festival, opens in theaters Sept.12. It’s based on the short story “Animal Rescue” by Dennis Lehane, who also wrote “Mystic River” and “Shutter Island.”

So far, most of the reviews have been positive.

“It’s hard to remember the last time a canine was made so shamelessly pivotal a character in a mainstream movie (‘Marley & Me,’ perhaps), but ‘The Drop’ is at once upfront and highly effective in its manipulations, tugging at our heartstrings even as it flicks away at our nerves,” wrote Variety film critic Justin Chang.

In a featurette about Rocco (portrayed, as he grows, by three different Pit Bull puppies), producer Jenno Topping said it was hard to be around the four-legged actors “without smooshing and kissing” them.

“Our filmmaker felt very strongly that there was a thematic connection between a breed that was so traditionally misunderstood and our main character, who is both enigmatic and hugely misunderstood,” she said.

Gandolfini may have been attracted to this film since off screen, he himself was the devoted dog dad of a rescued Pit Bull named Duke. The two were often spotted near their home in New York City.

“I would see him getting coffee with his dog,” Sara Mattler told WNYC after Gandolfini’s death in June 2013. “He was always so sweet with his dog, and made sure the dog had water while he ran in on a hot day.”

Gandolfini was also the dog dad of a Puggle, a Pug/Beagle mix. (As much as he loved ducks and racehorses, can you imagine Tony Soprano cuddling a Puggle? Fuhgedaboutit.)

Here’s hoping one of Gandolfini’s legacies is that his final film helped change people’s minds about Pit Bulls.

And here’s hoping “The Drop” has a happier ending than “Marley & Me.” If you want to know the movie’s outcome before you see it, the website Does the Dog Die? is an excellent resource. (“The Drop” is not yet listed there — I checked.)

Hades the Hero Pit Bull Rescues Boy from Attacking Bees

As 8-year-old Jesse-Cole Shaver, his 14-year-old sister Jasmine and a few of their friends wandered along a creek behind their apartment complex in Oregon City, Ore., Tuesday, one of the kids stepped on a rotten log. A swarm of bees flew out and started stinging the group.

Jesse-Cole was stung more than 24 times. When his Pit Bull, Hades, saw what was happening, she raced to him.

“Hades saw me and came, and she dragged me up to the grass, and then stopped and let me crawl on her back, and then took me to mom,” Jesse-Cole told KPTV.

His sister Jasmine, who is deathly allergic to bees, was stung more than five times, and had to be treated with an EpiPen.

“It felt like a bunch of needles went into my skin, and I didn’t know what was going on until the girl started yelling, ‘Bees!'” she told KPTV.

Jesse-Cole and Jasmine’s mom, who declined to be identified, said she heard the kids screaming, “then I saw my dog dragging my son up by his pants.”

She took her kids to a hospital, where doctors found even more bees in their hair. Jesse-Cole and Jasmine were treated and released after a few hours.

Hades was also stung a few times, but is doing fine. If the rescued hero dog hadn’t come to her family’s rescue, “a couple of these kids could have got really sick or died, I’m sure of it,” the mom told KPTV.

“Oh, I thank my puppy. I’m so glad we adopted her.”

Photo via YouTube

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