The Underdog Club recently came to our attention and we quite simply fell in love with this band of creative individuals and their mandate of marketing the โ€œugly, old, and unpopularโ€ dogs out there in need of homes.

The club, begun in April, 2007, bills itself as the first-ever dog marketing agency, an apt description if ever there was one. A non-profit, volunteer-run organization, it helps โ€œclientโ€ rescue organizations and shelters in Montreal, Quebec, promote their hardest-to-place dogsโ€”in short, โ€œthe old, the ugly and the unpopular,โ€ as the club calls them, though Kristin McNeill, the clubโ€™s Director, is quick to assure us, โ€œWe lovingly, and with humour and compassion, place dogs into these categories!โ€

Currently comprised of a small and dedicated group of about a dozen people who use their specific skills to get these underdogs some notoriety and keep the organization running, it is a lean team of dedicated dog lovers using their disparate talents to help the most unfortunate dogs out there get a second chance. Theyโ€™re a bit like Cinderellaโ€™s fairy godmother, really. By day, they are writers, editors, photographers, graphic designers, artistic directors, accountants, web masters, fundraisers, and translators. By night? An inspiration.

Employing newspaper columns, the web, events, and a hefty dose of copy writing and design savvy, they get the word out; to date, they have helped over 250 hard-to-place dogs find forever homes. This is a feat in and of itself, of course, but takes only adoptions into account; thereโ€™s also the clubโ€™s contribution to education, rescue dog visibility, and fundraising for operations and behaviour modification. Pretty darn cool if you ask us.

We asked McNeill a few questions about the Underdog Club.

What inspired the creation of the Underdog Club?
A compassionate and supercreative woman named Fern Breslaw started the club. She was working in one of Canadaโ€™s top ad agencies and knew that so much of our ability to love something is about how itโ€™s packaged and presented. Her idea was simply to package and present โ€œundesirableโ€ homeless dogs in a way that made them look special. It was really an exercise in applying to these sad cases the same marketing that works for any product.

How do you choose the dogs you feature?
While certainly not a science, we remain committed to sticking to those dogs whose appeal is more hidden. We promote those who fall into the old category, those in their last years of life. We once
featured a dog who only had a few weeks to live. Someone read
his story and gave him a loving place in which to lie by the fire
and live out his final days.

We also concentrate on the unpopular, those dogs who suffer
from stigma associated with a specific breed, like the Pit Bulls,
Bull Terriers, Rotties. We believe there is almost always a good
dog underneath the behaviour (and yes, we feature the biters!)
and weโ€™re into promoting the idea that people can work to correct
the dogโ€™s behaviour versus euthanizing. We also see many
sad cases of dogs with disease or physical deformities.
And last, the โ€œugly.โ€ A take-off on the Clint Eastwood film [The
Good, the Bad, and the Ugly], this is a category in which we use
much leeway, because we donโ€™t really believe any dog is ugly!
Weโ€™ve helped promote hugely obese dogs. Weโ€™ve featured dogs
with crooked legs, hump backs, dogs with allergies that leave
their skin red and rawโ€ฆ

Why should someone adopt a dog? And why
should they specifically consider an ugly, unpopular,
or old dog?

We fully believe there is an abandoned dog who will fit nicely
into any home. Walk into any big shelter or peruse any good
rescue website, and you can pretty much find the dog you are
looking forโ€”there are that many abandoned or puppy millcreated
dogs out there. Have allergies? Donโ€™t like big dogs? Love
black, short-haired dogs? Looking for a canine companion that
fits in a purse? You can find them all in a shelter or rescue.
Why consider an old, ugly or unpopular dog? So that they can
have a shot at a better life. Look, weโ€™re all going to be old one
day, some of us may be ugly, and weโ€™ve all been unpopular at
one time or another, but that doesnโ€™t make us any less worthy
of love. Well, these dogs are like us: heck, we canโ€™t all be fancy
purebreds or fuzzy little puppies. These dogs are often forgotten
or ignored in rescues and shelters with little hope. We think that
just ainโ€™t right!

>> Check out the Underdog Club at underdogclub.org.