"Fur and Loathing" is the fifth episode in the
fourth season of the television series, ''
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation''. It was broadcast on October 30, 2003 on
CBS.
The episode was influential in introducing many outsiders to the
furry fandom
The furry fandom is a subculture interested in anthropomorphic animal characters. Examples of anthropomorphic attributes include exhibiting human intelligence and facial expressions, speaking, walking on two legs, and wearing clothes. The term ...
and presented stereotypes about the community.
Plot
Gil Grissom and
Catherine Willows
Catherine Willows is a fictional character, portrayed by Marg Helgenberger, from the CBS crime drama ''CSI: Crime Scene Investigation'' and its sequel, '' CSI: Vegas''. Helgenberger made her franchise debut in the first-season episode "Pilot". H ...
investigate the death of a female driver in a collision between her
Mercury Sable and a large eighteen-wheel truck. In the process they find another victim, a man in a raccoon
fursuit named Robert Pitt.
Their evidence leads the two to attend a fictional
Plushies and Furries Convention named PAFCON, where Grissom and Willows discover there is more going on among the attendees than just dressing up.
Meanwhile,
Nick Stokes and
Sara Sidle investigate a case where a man has been found shot dead and frozen to the floor of a cold storage room. A distraught man arrives at the station to report that he had been
kidnapped
Kidnapped may refer to:
* subject to the crime of kidnapping
Literature
* ''Kidnapped'' (novel), an 1886 novel by Robert Louis Stevenson
* ''Kidnapped'' (comics), a 2007 graphic novel adaptation of R. L. Stevenson's novel by Alan Grant and Ca ...
because he had witnessed the murder and was stuffed in a trunk until he escaped.
Reception
Toronto-based filmmaker Michael McNamara, who had been working on his own documentary episode on
furry fandom
The furry fandom is a subculture interested in anthropomorphic animal characters. Examples of anthropomorphic attributes include exhibiting human intelligence and facial expressions, speaking, walking on two legs, and wearing clothes. The term ...
, said that the CSI episode "portrayed the community as a community of sexual deviants who like to have sex in fur costumes" and expressed concern that "it winds up giving the whole fandom a bad name, which made them nervous and camera-shy, so it was tricky to get their trust".
He wrote that the deviancy "probably represents about two percent of fandom but it’s the one obviously that the press always gleefully jumps."
Greg Gaudio of ''
The Virginian-Pilot'' wrote that "The steamier side of the Furry Fandom – sexual behavior involving animal costumes and stuffed animals – has grabbed media attention in recent years, most notably as the subject of a 2003 episode of ''CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.'' The episode showed attendees at a furry convention engaging in a costume-clad orgy"; however, one of the furry fandom attendees he interviewed replied that such behavior "only involves a tiny percentage of furries and is not something that’s part of the local scene."
See also
*
Furry fandom public perception and media coverage
References
External links
*
"Fur and Loathing"at CSI Guide.com
"Fur and Loathing"at CSI Files
*
CSI and
PafCon at
WikiFur
The furry fandom is a subculture interested in anthropomorphic animal characters. Examples of anthropomorphic attributes include exhibiting human intelligence and facial expressions, speaking, walking on two legs, and wearing clothes. The ter ...
{{CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
2003 American television episodes
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episodes
Furry fandom
Works by Jerry Stahl