Composed by Leea Contractor
“Making programmes for children is the hardest job in the world,” Farooq Qaiser tells me on the phone late one evening. Qaiser, if you didn’t know, is the creator of Uncle Sargam, Maasi Museebatay, Rola and host of other puppets that became pop culture icons three decades ago.
“It’s a job where grown-ups have to make intelligent decisions by keeping the point of view of a child.” It’s like stepping into brightly-coloured shoes five sizes too small.
Making it work is a whole different ballgame, Qasier says — and it’s a much more difficult a job right now than it was in the ’70s.
Uncle Sargam, who first appeared in the children’s show Kaliyaan on PTV, and then years later turned his attention towards adults in Siyaasi Kaliyaan on Dawn News, is a relic of a bygone age. A reminder of simpler, less commercial times.
Since then, tastes — especially of kids, according to Qaiser — have matured, and dedicated programming, at least in the old sense of the world, has all but disappeared.
Despite the mushroom growth of television channels in Pakistan, indigenous children’s programming has all but disappeared from our television screens. What is the cause? And why is it necessary anyway?
Once, when state-run PTV reigned as the only option for televised entertainment, programming was segmented by the clock. There was a dedicated time for comedy, drama, infotainment (back at that time, they were called documentaries), and children.
Every day of the week, roughly between four and five in the afternoon, PTV offered syndicated cartoons, original dramas (Bahadur Ali, Ainak Wala Jinn) and music/variety shows for children (Sung Sung Chalein, for example). The object of this programming was unpretentious: to educate without being obvious.
As the ’80s turned into the ’90s, and the first semi-private network NTM (on STN) came into the picture, the point of view of creating (or importing) content remained the same — at least for the next few years. Then the marketing age happened — and children’s programming eventually became a casualty.
It was the same case all over: from India, whose state-run channel Doordarshan followed a similar routine, to American television which, despite a much more mature market, still had a committed slot for children. While television in American had stricter regulations in the form of the Children’s Television Act (better known as the Kid Vid rules), it too changed with the times.
Today, children’s content is restricted to 24/7 television channels such as Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon, internet platforms such as YouTube, Netflix or other streaming services, or motion pictures.
This might seem like success, but don’t root for this victory just yet. If you ask the veterans of the industry — or people who were young three decades ago — it’s like rooting for failure.
Misbah Khalid, a veteran producer-director and an advocate of original children’s programming, is very vocal about the lack of relatable home-grown content.
“We need concentrative programmes for children. There is so much to teach and so much to learn in a much more interesting way,” she tells me in a voice message from Spain. The animated characters we see on television don’t adhere to our sensibilities.
“There is so much you learn as a child that crafts your personality. If we want our children to grow up to become responsible, educated individuals, we have to start now when they are young. To give them the right morality, the right ethics and the right thoughts — things they can use to become better citizens of the world,” she says.
“Production of content — especially from private channels — is dictated by marketing and sales, and the emphasis for children’s programming from multinationals, who give advertisements to sustain these channels, is simply not there,” says Khaled Anam.
Anam, like Misbah Khalid, is known for his diligent advocacy of children-specific programming.
“[Since the days of PTV] we lost who was in charge,” he tells Icon on the phone. “Since television became a 24-hour business, it’s been a different ballgame.” Today, it’s less about content, and more about business and management, he says.
Initially, both Geo and ARY did run children’s programming, Anam says, but eventually they just gave up.
“Children’s programming worldwide is a billion dollar industry, and unfortunately we have not been able to take advantage of that because of shortsightedness,” Anam explains.
According to both Khalid and Anam, the government did extend an offer to launch a dedicated children’s channel but it has been nothing more than lip-service at best.
“Everyone — from channels to individuals — have tried on their own to develop children’s programming. The biggest concern, however, is not of programming but of quality,” Abdullah Kadwani, Group Managing Director at Geo Entertainment tells me during a detailed conversation.