Unless you’ve been sitting under a rock for the last year, you’ve heard of the Lolcatz phenomenon which has wreaked havoc upon our productivity in the office as much as it has sparked a revolution in internet hilarity. If you’re a fan of sites like I Can Has Cheezburger? which feature images of Lolcatz in conjunction with the requisite grammatically bizarre captions, you’ll probably love the Lolinator, a tool which converts the text of any web page into Lolcatz lingo.
What does this mean? It means when you plug a URL into the Lolinator (clearly, you’ll want to use the most stoic, serious content you can find, like a CNN news article), the Lolinator will generate a new page with the same text content, but altered to resemble the wording you might find in an Lolcat image (Srsly!). To use the Lolinator, all you need to do is find a page that you think would be hilarious translated into Lolcatz-ese, cut and paste it, and click “Lolinate!”. And there goes another 10 seconds of your time that you probably should have spent crunching numbers, or at the very least, explaining to your supervisor why there’s a stupid looking cat accompanied by a caption that says “Oh noes!” on your computer screen.
Lolinator.com In Their Own Words
“I can has website?”
Why Lolinator.com It Might Be A Killer
For lovers of everything Lolcatz, the Lolinator provides another outlet of amusement. It does a pretty good job converting English text into Lolcatz jargon, replacing “s” with “z”, “your” with “ur”, etc, and even inserting the occasional, randomly placed “oh hai!”. It even interlards the text translation with your favorite Lolcatz images.
Some Questions About Lolinator.com
Why doesn’t the Lolinator allow the translated site to retain its own interface? Somehow that would make this tool all the more comical. 







