WEATHER ALERT

Serious interview derailed by cat

Feline wasn't too concerned about the cameras

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Cats.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 17/07/2018 (2919 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Cats.

They care not for your affection, your familiar voice or perhaps even for your overall existence.

And they certainly don’t care about your career as a respected academic or any fancy television interviews taking place in your office.

Polish historian Jerzy Targalski discovered this during an on-camera appearance on a Dutch news program when his cat unceremoniously climbed atop his head in the middle of the interview.

Targalski was speaking with a journalist from the Dutch public television station Nieuwsuur to weigh in on “the controversial forced removal of Polish top judge Malgorzata Gersdorf” by the country’s ruling conservative party, according to NTR reporter Rudy Bouma.

Partway through the taping, his orange tabby began pawing and mewing at Targalski’s right side. The cat then scaled up the professor’s arm like a personal Everest.

“Eh — we tolerate this?” Targalski asked. It was both a question and an apologetic statement, directed more to the camera crew and less to the cat, who by this point was already upon his neck.

Someone from behind the camera made a sound. Targalski smiled and pressed on, with the resignation of a man who has shared his home with a cat and thus knows his place in the feline-human order.

He spoke of the presence of secret-police agents in certain countries and what that means for the political transformation of those countries.

But he may as well not have been speaking at all for all the attention his cat was stealing.

As Targalski continued the interview, his cat nuzzled his ear, used his shoulders to get a closer look at a chandelier above and, at one point, curled its tail across Targalski’s face, covering his eyes.

The political scientist, who earned his doctorate with a thesis titled “Mechanisms of dismantling communism in Yugoslavia on the example of Slovenia and Serbia (1986-1991),” simply brushed the cat’s tail away and held it down for several moments to the side of his head.

Alas, none of that footage made it into the final Nieuwsuur segment. Lisio does, however, manage a cameo in the final cut that aired last week in a far less obtrusive manner — by lying in Targalski’s lap, getting petted as the professor conducts a seated interview.

Targalski, of course, is not the first person to have a television interview not go as planned, as international relations expert and Pusan National University political science professor Robert Kelly — better known as the “BBC dad” — can tell you after his two young children hilariously crashed his BBC appearance last year.

He’s not even the first to have a cat interrupt a television shoot. Last year, Dumka, a black cat belonging to Nils Usakovs, the mayor of Riga, Latvia, wandered into an online Q-and-A session his human was hosting, to the delight of many of the mayor’s Facebook followers, as the Washington Post reported.

Usakovs took it in good stride, writing later on Facebook: “Anything can happen if your office is ruled by cats.”

— Washington Post

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

First-aid volunteers treat folk fest attendees suffering from heat

Eva Wasney and Jill Wilson 3 minute read Preview

First-aid volunteers treat folk fest attendees suffering from heat

Eva Wasney and Jill Wilson 3 minute read Yesterday at 11:16 PM CDT

Shade was at a premium at Birds Hill Provincial Park over the weekend as Winnipeg Folk Festival goers tried to keep cool during an extreme heat wave.

Heat warnings were issued across southern Manitoba and temperatures peaked at 35 C Sunday afternoon.

First-aid volunteers were seen administering cold compresses to several overheated attendees. STARS air ambulance responded to a medical call at the park on Saturday night, but did not transport the patient to hospital. By Sunday at noon, EMS had been called to the festival nine times.

“This is not an unusual number of calls for us or other events of our size,” festival executive director Valerie Shantz said.

Read
Yesterday at 11:16 PM CDT

Three girls hospitalized after two collisions in Brandon — on same street

Staff 3 minute read Preview

Three girls hospitalized after two collisions in Brandon — on same street

Staff 3 minute read 4:47 PM CDT

Brandon police are ramping up traffic enforcement at intersections after three youth were hit and seriously injured by vehicles in three days on the same street last week.

A 16-year-old girl was walking at a crosswalk on Richmond Avenue near Shoppers Mall on July 7 when she was hit by an SUV.

Her mother, Krista McPherson, said her daughter was hospitalized in Winnipeg with nine broken ribs, a pelvis break, and other injuries. In a social media post Monday, she said her daughter remained in hospital but was set to be discharged in the coming days.

A 38-year-old woman was taken in for questioning by the Brandon Police Service, but no arrests have been made.

Read
4:47 PM CDT

Manitoba workplaces becoming increasingly violent

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview

Manitoba workplaces becoming increasingly violent

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Updated: 7:16 PM CDT

A middle school student file documenting more than 40 violent outbursts in a single year.

A gun kept under the pillow of a home-care patient who has dementia.

A drug-fuelled rage during which a man suffering from a contagious disease spat on and wrapped his hands around the throat of a first responder.

These are among the hazards that front-line employees in health care, education and other public sector positions are navigating when they clock in for a shift.

Read
Updated: 7:16 PM CDT

Bjorck inks three-year, entry-level contract with Jets

Ken Wiebe 7 minute read Preview

Bjorck inks three-year, entry-level contract with Jets

Ken Wiebe 7 minute read Updated: 6:13 PM CDT

Putting pen to paper was merely the next step in the journey for Viggo Bjorck.

Now that the eighth overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft has inked his entry-level deal with the Winnipeg Jets, the real fun begins.

This is standard operating procedure and was basically a formality after Bjorck’s club team Djurgardens announced publicly over the weekend that the skilled forward was leaving the Swedish Hockey League to pursue NHL opportunities.

Bjorck signed his three-year pact on Monday and it carries a cap hit of US $1.075 million in the NHL, with the ability to make another US$1 million per season if he hits his performance bonuses.

Read
Updated: 6:13 PM CDT

Hellebuyck, footy, AI, and more

0 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

Folk fest donates leftover food to Siloam Mission

Scott Billeck 2 minute read Preview

Folk fest donates leftover food to Siloam Mission

Scott Billeck 2 minute read Updated: 5:14 PM CDT

Thousands of meals will be served at Siloam Mission this week thanks to a massive food donation from the Winnipeg Folk Festival.

More than 4,200 pounds — about two tonnes — of surplus food from the four-day festival that wrapped up Sunday was delivered to the mission on Monday.

The donation, consisting of prepared food, protein, dairy and fresh produce, is expected to provide enough ingredients to prepare about 6,000 meals for people experiencing homelessness and poverty.

“We are part of the Winnipeg community and when we can give back, we do,” said folk festival executive director Valerie Shantz.

Read
Updated: 5:14 PM CDT