In the high-stakes arena of political discourse, you rarely expect a cartoon feline to be a heavyweight contender. Yet, for millions of followers, an account named “Catturd” has become a primary source of news and commentary. Would Memes alone be enough to build such an empire? Unlikely. The success of this account relies on a calculated, consistent, and highly aggressive content strategy that turned an anonymous troll into a digital power broker.
Here is a look at the tactics behind the avatar.
Who is Catturd?
Phillip Buchanan is a white cat that wears sunglasses on Twitter, and he’s a man in his 60s with a ranch in Wewahitchka, Florida, in real life. Buchanan, a self-described ex-musician who had his career derailed by arthritis that described himself as an ex-musician, created the account in September 2018.
What started as a getaway turned into a full-time gig. Buchanan used anonymity to craft a character he called a “common sense” outsider—a friendly voice to those who doubted official narratives. Unlike polished pundits, the character is rough around the edges, including typos, which only makes the connection with his audience more authentic.
Content Strategy Breakdown
Catturd’s growth wasn’t an accident. It was the result of specific engagement tactics that prioritized mobilization over mere observation.
Weaponizing Satire and Simplification
At the heart of the approach is distilling complicated, nuanced political matters down to easily digestible, shareable ridicule. By erasing the grey area of policy and boiling questions down to “us vs. them” jokes, the material is instantly digestible. It affirms the audience’s existing worldview without demanding much by way of reading, making the “share” button irresistible.
Coordinated Hashtag Campaigns
While many influencers hope to trend, Catturd explicitly commands it. A Media Matters analysis found that between 2019 and late 2021, the account issued at least 57 specific calls to action for followers to trend 43 unique hashtags.
This wasn’t passive growth; it was active coordination. For example, the Catturd Twitter account helped fuel the #EmptyShelvesJoe narrative in October 2021. By mobilising its follower base as a digital army—not an audience—the account can push narratives into the mainstream “Trending” sidebar, circumventing traditional media gatekeepers.
The “Insider” Outsider
Perhaps the most effective strategic pivot was transitioning from a complaining outsider to an amplified insider. While the account frequently claimed to be “shadowbanned,” leaked internal documents from X (formerly Twitter) in March 2023 revealed that Catturd was actually on a “VIP” list of accounts receiving artificial visibility boosts from the platform’s engineers. This duality, claiming victimhood while enjoying algorithmic privilege, kept engagement feverishly high.
By The Numbers: Growth and Engagement
The following data highlights the scale of the account’s influence and the specific milestones that cemented its status.
| Metric | Figure | Context |
| Total Followers | 3.9 Million | As of November 28, 2025 |
| Account Age | 7 Years | Founded September 2018 |
| Viral Reach | 69% Vote Share | A March 2023 poll by Catturd showed Trump leading DeSantis by this margin; Trump later cited this poll at a rally. |
| Hashtag Frequency | 255 Tweets | The number of times the account tweeted about “Fauci” between March 2020 and late 2021 to drive negative sentiment. |
| Campaign Volume | 57 Calls to Action | Specific requests for followers to trend hashtags (2019–2021). |
Impact and Influence
The ultimate measure of a content strategy is whether it moves the needle in the real world. In this case, the impact is undeniable. The account moved from shouting from the sidelines to being retweeted multiple times by former President Donald Trump to push election narratives.
Furthermore, the account’s direct line to platform ownership, evidenced by personal replies from Elon Musk regarding moderation policies, proved that the “Catturd” brand had transcended typical influencer status. It became a barometer for right-wing sentiment that politicians and platform owners felt compelled to monitor.
The Takeaway
Love the content or hate it, the strategy is a masterclass in community mobilisation. Phillip Buchanan identified a hungry audience, fed them consistent, validating satire, and gave them specific tasks (hashtags) to make them feel involved in the process.
For marketers and content creators, the lesson is clear: Passive audiences watch, but active communities build empires.





