Catmovie.com — 2021

By Alex Quirk

In a year defined by burnout and algorithmic anxiety, catmovie.com was the digital equivalent of a deep breath. Or maybe just a hairball. catmovie.com 2021

It was the digital equivalent of a punk rock show in a laundromat. The site didn’t track you. It didn’t ask for cookies. It didn’t even have a functional "Back" button. In an era of surveillance capitalism, Catmovie.com was a fortress of irrelevance. Its entire business model was nothing . Let’s rewind the tape. April 2021. The world was emerging from the first deep freeze of the pandemic, but we weren't out yet. We were tired. We had watched Tiger King . We had done the puzzles. We craved low-stakes chaos . By Alex Quirk In a year defined by

One viral tweet read: "I visited catmovie.com at 2:00 AM. The cat stopped knocking the glass. It just stared at me. I closed the tab. I heard the crash three seconds later." The site didn’t track you