Fishtopher, a 5-year-old cat, was reportedly “sad and depressed” as he sat at the Homeward Bound Pet Adoption Center in New Jersey waiting to be adopted.

The “Quiet” “Couch potato” seemed “out of sorts,” the center wrote in its Petfinder listing. He would only “eat when he has company,” and he “wouldn’t even look up for pictures.”

But on Thanksgiving, Fishtopher’s luck changed after a tweet sharing his Petfinder profile went viral. The tweet quickly amassed over 168,000 likes and 21,000 retweets. Many people in the replies shared their own cat adoption stories.

The shelter said in a Facebook post over the weekend that it received “hundreds of inquiries” about Fishtopher.

On Saturday, Laura Folts, 22, and her partner Tanner Callahan, 24, were the two who gave Fishtopher a forever home, according to Insider.

Representatives from the shelter did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Folts and Callahan also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Folts tweeted the journey home with Fishtopher. After popular demand, she also started Twitter and Instagram accounts dedicated to her new pet.

“he is very shy but once held he likes to hide his face into the crook of your arm,” Folts said of Fishtopher, replying to a tweet asking how he’s doing.

Fishtopher
Fishtopher’s profile on Petfinder said he was “sad and depressed.”Petfinder

“FISHTOPHER HAS LEFT THE BUILDING,” the shelter wrote in an update on Facebookon Saturday.

The couple drove two hours from Baltimore to Blackwood, New Jersey, to meet Fishtopher, according to Insider. Folts told the publication that they were interested in adopting Fishtopher after seeing the tweet about him. They said they got to the shelter an hour before it opened, and there were eight or nine others who were there to see Fishtopher.

While there’s only one Fishtopher, the shelter and Folts have been encouraging people to adopt other animals in need of new homes. Folts retweeted a number of posts about cats in need of homes from Fishtopher’s account.

More from NBC News’ Culture and Trends team

“i want to use this new audience to help other fishtophers and give people fun cat photos of him chilling at home (which is what the internet was made for),” a recent tweet from Fishtopher’s account read.

The Homeward Bound Pet Adoption Center also asked the people interested in Fishtopher to save its other rescues.

“We’re super happy for him, but if you were interested in him, have no fear. We have hundreds of other kitties who are just as wonderful and are wishing that people would come and stand in line for them,” the shelter continued in its Facebook post Saturday.

On its about page on its website, the Homeward Bound Pet Adoption Center shared that it is working with other animal welfare organizations to help get New Jersey to “no-kill” status by 2025, in accordance with the Best Friends Animal Society.

The initiative defines a “no-kill” shelter as having a 90% save rate or higher, meaning it has the resources to save every dog and cat it is able to. The benchmark is 90% because the share of dogs and cats entering shelters with “irreparable medical or behavioral issues” is typically no more than 10%, according to Best Friends. The Homeward Bound Pet Adoption Center reported a 96% save rate in 2021.

In addition to Fishtopher, the shelter shared on its Facebook page 16 other animals that were adopted this past weekend.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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