An enterprising chicken is breaking down boundaries for hens across the world right now by going online to prove that she’s more than a piece of meat. She’s also good at Twitter. Betty is the four-year-old domestic fowl and social media marketing professional behind #ChickenTweet — a hashtag created by Australian fast food chain Chicken Treat for the exclusive purpose of documenting her recent work. Scoop has more:
While undoubtedly young for the job, and perhaps less qualified than others in her field, Betty has been doing a bang-up job of attracting people to the @ChickenTreat Twitter account since taking it over last week. “Betty the chicken is the real deal,” raves CNN of her tweets. “Unlike those imposters, who rely on human interlocutors to actually, you know, tweet, Betty’s down there in Australia doing the hard stuff herself.” While Betty doesn’t actually speak English (or likely even understand what she’s doing,) she does write her own tweets.
According to a video published by Chicken Treat about their Betty-centric marketing campaign last week, the plucky youngster has a computer in her coop that she can use to post “whatever’s on her mind.” What she appears to be using it for, however, is to peck at its keyboard when it’s covered in feed and to walk over it while completing her regular chickenly duties.
She will continue to do this until she successfully sends out a five-letter-long word in English, according to Chicken Treat. This, according to the company, will earn her a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records as “the first chicken to tweet.” Many online appear to find Betty’s nonsensical updates delightful. Some animal rights activists, however, have taken issue with her employer’s social media strategy. “Chickens don’t tweet they live tortured lives,” reads an image one critictweeted at the company in response to an update about Betty.