I think Harish had sent to the list a link to Chandamama.

Subramani 



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Renuka
Warrier
Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2008 11:55 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Web avatar for two iconic kids story brands

I don't know if it is accable to us since I haven't gone through the
portal.  But we can suggest it to the sighted children.

Renuka.

Date:02/11/2008 URL:
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/11/02/stories/2008110255611100.htm 

Front Page 

Web avatar for two iconic kids story brands 

Anand Parthasarathy 

Amar Chitra Katha and Chandamama now have online portals to cater for
the new generation 
 
BANGALORE: Hello, Cyber Suppandi. Welcome, Shikari Shambu online. And as
for Vikram and Vetal, let the web wars begin!

Indian children (and quite a few parents) made these well-loved stories
and characters their own, for over 50 years, before the magazines that
carried them
slowly vanished from the news stands. Now, they are all set to reach out
to a new generation of kids, as new publishers step in to dust the
thousands of
stories and illustrations, all uniquely Indian, and breathe a 'second
life' into them - on the Internet.

The famous Chandamama monthly was first brought out in 1947 by filmmaker
B. Nagi Reddy and his associate, Chakrapani - with the aim of bringing
Indian folklore,
mythology and history to a new generation of children born in
independent India. It did just that - for half a century, appearing in
14 languages - including
Sanskrit and English.

Last year, Chandamama was surprisingly acquired by an Information
Technology company, Geodesic, which hired as its chief executive a
veteran IT journalist,
L. Subramanyan, the former editor at the Dataquest group and the
Jasubhai magazine group. Mr. Subramanyan steered the magazine towards a
new cyber avatar.
Having digitised all its archives (almost 15,000 stories in all), he
took Chandamama online three months ago, using free access to many of
the beloved
stories to draw today's young readers, even while creating a portal
where one could order reprints of many mythological story books from its
repertoire.
( 
www.chandamama.com).

Last week, Chandamama announced that the Thiruvananthapuram-based Toonz
Animation had begun work to turn one of the magazine's most popular
stories into
a full length animated feature film on a budget of Rs. 20 crore. Toonz
harnesses the efforts of over 500 animation artistes to create films for
some of
the world's leading television networks and movie production houses.

'Tinkling' online 

An almost identical road map has been followed by India's other iconic
children's story brand - Amar Chitra Katha - which was born at India
Book House in
1967, in the fertile brain of 'Uncle' Anant Pai. 

Cherished books 

Unlike Chandamama's magazine format, the 'kathas' were stand-alone story
books, based on the rich mother lode of Indian mythology, which many
families still
preserved in bound volumes long after the print sales stopped. For
younger children, the group brought out the Tinkle monthly with its own
stable of characters
- Shikari Shambu, Suppandi, and Kalia, the crow. Just over a year ago,
the entire repertoire was acquired by a company, ACK Media, with the
legendary Anant
Pai staying on as Editor Emeritus.

On September 17 this year, as 'Uncle Pai' turned 80, Amar Chitra Katha
went online ( 
www.amarchitrakatha.com
) at a portal where one could buy almost 240 of the 400-plus stories and
read the 'story of the day' for free. The site prices the books in
rupees and dollars:
much of the new interest stems from NRI parents who want their children
to enjoy the same wholesome and educative stories that they themselves
read. They
won't get them at the old price though! Dollar prices for shipped copies
range from $ 4 to $ 25 and direct downloads are 99 cents or Rs. 45.50 a
book.


More importantly, the portal, especially the one for Tinkle ( 
www.tinkleonline.com
) markets itself on the lines of the social networking sites - offering
safe and wholesome cyber friendships.

For parents all these web offerings will be good news - allowing them to
pass down to their kids the pleasure they themselves had in reading
stories firmly
rooted in Indian tradition. And no one will be surprised if many of them
sneak a peak themselves, as they relive their own childhood!

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