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'Loud and explicit': How a swearing parrot became the star of an animal shelter

Author
Washington Post,
Publish Date
Thu, 3 Jul 2025, 2:01pm
Hendrix, a blue-and-gold macaw, often used foul language at the Forever Paws Animal Shelter in Fall River, Massachusetts. Photo / Forever Paws Animal Shelter
Hendrix, a blue-and-gold macaw, often used foul language at the Forever Paws Animal Shelter in Fall River, Massachusetts. Photo / Forever Paws Animal Shelter

'Loud and explicit': How a swearing parrot became the star of an animal shelter

Author
Washington Post,
Publish Date
Thu, 3 Jul 2025, 2:01pm

Animal shelter employees were enjoying a rare quiet moment in the lobby when a yell came from a room designated for small animals: 鈥淪hut the f*** up鈥.

Four employees looked at one another in confusion. Then the shriek came again.

The culprit? Hendrix, a blue-and-gold macaw who came to the shelter the previous month, surrendered by his longtime owner.

The cursing only became louder after that late-May afternoon.

Chantelle Rogers, administrative assistant at the Forever Paws Animal Shelter in Fall River, Massachusetts, was tasked with writing a blurb to help Hendrix get adopted.

She opted for honesty.

鈥淚f you adopt Hendrix, you鈥檙e basically adopting Samuel L. Jackson,鈥 Rogers wrote on Facebook, referring to the actor who is known, in part, for his delivery of profanity-laced dialogue in movies.

鈥淭his bird鈥檚 language is not for the faint of heart.鈥

Her post only made people more interested.

Thousands of people shared the post, which got traction for its candour and its humour.

The next day, the shelter received a windfall of about 60 adoption applications, prompting employees to close applications that day.

One person was soon selected, and Hendrix鈥檚 new owner took the parrot home on June 21 after hearing the bird curse a few times.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so quiet without him,鈥 Rogers told the Washington Post. 鈥淲e do definitely miss him, but we know he鈥檚 where he鈥檚 supposed to be.鈥

Hendrix first arrived at the shelter in April. He was surrendered to Fall River Animal Control by his owner of two decades, said Cynthia Berard-Cadima, the department鈥檚 supervisor.

Blue-and-gold macaws can live for more than 70 years, according to the Australia Zoo, and Rogers said Hendrix is about 30.

Rogers said the first person who popped into her mind when she saw the colourful macaw was the late singer and guitarist Jimi Hendrix.

But many of Hendrix鈥檚 feathers were missing on his roughly 1m-tall body and wingspan, Rogers said, probably due to malnutrition.

The shelter mainly houses cats and dogs, so Hendrix was the only parrot in a room with a few rabbits and a guinea pig. Hendrix was initially scared of people, shaking when an employee approached his cage.

The shelter bought Hendrix an extra-large Chewy pineapple toy that employees hung in the parrot鈥檚 cage and discovered the bird鈥檚 favourite treats: strawberries, blueberries, dried bananas and peanuts.

A few weeks after arriving, Hendrix began opening up, saying 鈥渃racker鈥 when the parrot wanted a dried banana chip and 鈥渢hank you鈥 when he received one.

Hendrix once told Rogers: 鈥淕ood morning, baby鈥. Hendrix chirped when he wanted attention and tried to mimic barking noises he heard from the shelter鈥檚 dogs.

Near the end of May, employees heard Hendrix curse for the first time. After that, Hendrix used more vulgar language 鈥 and said it louder.

A new employee was cleaning Hendrix鈥檚 cage near the beginning of June when the parrot cursed at him.

Employees told customers that if they hear profanities, it鈥檚 coming from a parrot who wants attention, not a person.

Hendrix might鈥檝e learned the vulgar words by hearing them in his previous home, Rogers said, but his foul language probably meant he was becoming more comfortable at the shelter.

Hoping to discourage Hendrix鈥檚 language, employees turned around or left the room to laugh after Hendrix cursed.

鈥淗ow do you not laugh at that? Like, the bird just cussed you out,鈥 Rogers, 32, said with a laugh. 鈥淪o, like, you have to react at some point.鈥

While his language remained salty, Hendrix grew new feathers by eating soft-pellet bird food. By mid-June, Rogers said, Hendrix was ready to be adopted.

鈥淥ne day he will call you baby and the next day he鈥檚 calling you a ... hmm. MFer I guess is the politest way to type it out,鈥 Rogers wrote on Facebook on June 11.

鈥淗e says thank you when you give him snacks but will also tell you to shut up.鈥

鈥淭his bird is rated R, parental advisory required, a real sour patch kid if one side was sugar and the other side was arsenic,鈥 Rogers added.

Rogers wrote near the end of the post that they sought an owner for Hendrix who has a cage and experience owning large birds.

She added that the owner can鈥檛 live in an apartment or have children 鈥渂ecause he is loud and explicit鈥.

When one commenter asked whether the shelter can be more specific about the profanity Hendrix uses, Rogers replied: 鈥淔acebook will ban me if I repeat them鈥.

When Rogers went to work the following day, the shelter had received about 30 adoption applications from across the United States and Canada and more would come in throughout the day.

On June 12, nearly 28 hours after posting the advertisement, the shelter added to the top of its post 鈥淎PPLICATIONS NOW CLOSED!鈥

鈥淎nd just like that, I learned way more about most people than I wanted to,鈥 Rogers wrote on Facebook a few days later.

Shelter employees narrowed the applicants to the five most qualified and invited them to meet Hendrix. One woman who already had a room and toys in her house for birds she previously owned was the perfect fit, Rogers said.

When the owner took Hendrix home, Hendrix cursed a few times when employees moved his cage. After he left, the shelter became quieter; vulgar language no longer overlapped with dogs barking.

Rogers said the owner emailed her a few days later, saying that Hendrix is beginning to feel comfortable.

He might be ready to let a new torrent of obscenities fly.

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