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Beyond 鈥楽esame Street鈥: African kids鈥 shows go local

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Courtesy of Limitless Studios
The 鈥淥moBerry鈥 cartoon series features characters from across Africa. The YouTube videos teach a range of subjects, from manners to history, and promote a sense of identity.

As a child in London in the 1980s, Agnes Soyode-Johnson spent her weekend mornings with her siblings, watching cartoons like 鈥淪cooby Doo,鈥 鈥淒ennis the Menace,鈥 and 鈥淚nspector Gadget.鈥澛

The child of Nigerian immigrants, she rarely stopped to think about why so few of the characters looked like her. Then, in 1992, she saw a movie that changed everything. As Aladdin and Jasmine rode their magic carpet over an Arabian desert kingdom singing about a new world, Ms. Soyode-Johnson marveled at their dark hair and brown skin.聽

鈥淚 loved it so much because I could relate,鈥 says Ms. Soyode-Johnson. 鈥淚 felt seen.鈥 Fast-forward three decades. Ms. Soyode-Johnson 鈥 now a TV producer living in Lagos, Nigeria 鈥 was trying to keep two toddlers busy during a global pandemic. Her house echoed with the songs and squeals of her kids鈥 favorite TV shows: 鈥淐ocomelon,鈥 鈥淧eppa Pig,鈥 鈥淧AW Patrol,鈥 and as in her own childhood, she noticed that all the shows her kids watched were from the West. She wanted her children to feel as she had when she saw 鈥淎laddin鈥 all those years ago. So she created 鈥淥moBerry,鈥 a YouTube cartoon that features a cast of young characters from across Africa.

Why We Wrote This

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African kids have long grown up on a diet of Western TV cartoons featuring characters whose lifestyles do not match their audiences. Now, African animators are offering an alternative.

The popular program is part of a larger movement by African animators to make shows that reflect the experiences of the continent鈥檚 children. Many, like 鈥淥moBerry,鈥 are self-published on YouTube and other free platforms, sidestepping the need for support from big Western animation producers.

鈥淐hildren鈥檚 literature is a socializing agent and it鈥檚 important for young ones of every color and creed to grow up seeing fictional characters who look and sound like them, and whose world mirrors their own,鈥 says Joyce Nyairo, a Kenyan cultural analyst who鈥檚 currently a fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin.

Carlos Mureithi
Nigeria-based Agnes Soyode-Johnson is the co-creator of the 鈥淥moBerry鈥 cartoons. 鈥淎frican kids deserve this ... and there is a market for it,鈥 she says.

But for African kids, that鈥檚 often easier said than done. Only recently have major Western media companies like Netflix and Disney started to create animated shows for and by Africans.聽

鈥淜iya & the Kimoja聽Heroes,鈥 a series about a 7-year-old African girl who has superpowers in dancing and martial arts, premiered on Disney Junior last month.聽And Netflix is developing a series called 鈥淪upa Team 4鈥 about a team of teenage superheroines in Lusaka, Zambia.

In the meantime, however, many African parents, like their counterparts around the world, are turning to YouTube. Children鈥檚 content is a big profitmaker for the platform, with 鈥淐ocomelon鈥 ranking as one of the most viewed channels in the site鈥檚 history.

African animators have tapped into a particular subset of this market called 鈥渆dutainment,鈥 which combines classic kids鈥 TV storylines with lessons about topics like science, history, and manners. Think 鈥淒ora the Explorer鈥 teaching Spanish vocabulary, or Count von Count on 鈥淪esame Street鈥 helping generations of kids learn their numbers. And now, there are the young people of the cartoon 鈥淯bongo Kids,鈥 who teach math and science as they solve mysteries in their Tanzanian village. And Super Sema, a Kenyan superhero who uses powers boosted by science and the arts to save her village from a villain.

鈥淥moBerry,鈥 meanwhile, has four main characters, who are all Nigerians between the ages of 5 and 7. They are joined by a supporting cast from around the continent on adventures that address topics such as manners, math, and African history.

In an episode called 鈥淓gyptian Pyramid Song,鈥 鈥淥moBerry鈥 characters visit Egypt to learn how pyramids were built.

鈥淎ncient means old,鈥 the characters sing. 鈥淔rom long long ago / When the rest of the world was in doubt / Africa figured it out.鈥

Courtesy of Ere Akinrinmade
Fara Akinrinmade voices Chiamaka, one of the main characters in 鈥淥moBerry,鈥 at a recording session at Digitrack Studios in Lagos, Nigeria, in September 2022.

Fara Akinrinmade, a 10-year-old who voices one of the show鈥檚 children, Chiamaka, says she feels good when she sees a character like her that looks like her, has hair like hers, and speaks like her.

鈥淚鈥檓 sure that if I met her one day in real life, I could really relate to her and we could be best friends,鈥 she says.

Drawn to Nigeria

Ms. Soyode-Johnson always felt a strong connection to Nigeria. Her mother, who moved to the U.K. in the 1960s, was very passionate about ensuring that all of her six children knew their identity and made a point of taking her children to Nigeria on holidays.

So even as Ms. Soyode-Johnson built her life as a television producer in the U.K., she always felt 鈥渁 part of me was missing,鈥 she says. In 2013, she moved to Nigeria, and soon became a decorated producer of a Nigerian web series.

But it was becoming a mother that made her see the opportunity in African animation.聽

Carlos Mureithi
Ayomide Oluwole, an 鈥淥moBerry鈥 editor, pauses at his home studio in Lagos, Nigeria, in February. Staff members are also located in South Africa and the United States.

鈥淚t was just really important for my kids to be able to experience an inclusive environment in the content that they watch, knowing that that wasn鈥檛 something that I was able to experience growing up myself,鈥 she says.

She decided to tackle this gap. She partnered with two colleagues in the entertainment industry 鈥 Gbenga Ajetomobi, a Nigerian 3D animator, and Charlie Buffin, an American entrepreneur 鈥 and started Limitless Studios. 鈥淥moBerry鈥 was their first project.聽

鈥淧aving the way for others鈥

The partners first raised money from family and friends in 2020 before launching the show the following year. So far, they have raised a total of $1.2 million for the show, mostly from venture capital firms.

This money goes to paying for a team of 25, largely in Nigeria but also as far afield as South Africa and the United States. They include animators, a scriptwriter, and an early learning expert.

鈥淥moBerry鈥 aims to be profitable in the next year and a half, Ms. Soyode-Johnson says, and currently generates revenue mainly from YouTube ads.聽

But it also has content licensing deals with other streaming platforms and sells branded merchandise in an online shop. Limitless Studios also recently signed a deal with Platoon, a music distribution company owned by Apple, to distribute 鈥淥moBerry鈥 music.

As of late-April, the 鈥淥moBerry鈥 YouTube page has 183,000 subscribers and its videos have garnered more than 65 million views.

鈥淲e just hope that OmoBerry is paving the way for others within the space to realize, 鈥極kay we can do this. African kids deserve this 鈥 and there is a market for it,鈥欌澛燤s. Soyode-Johnson says.

Episode 2: Hey Ma, I鈥檓 on TV!

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Diversity in media isn鈥檛 just about the way characters look; it鈥檚 also about how they sound. The creators of 鈥淢olly of Denali鈥 knew that when they started producing the animated kids鈥 show about the adventures of an Alaska Native girl. We talk to producers about what it takes to meaningfully portray Indigenous peoples on screen. And we meet a family in Fairbanks, Alaska, who share with us what it鈥檚 like to finally see their own experiences 鈥 and hear their people鈥檚 voices 鈥 represented in ways that make them proud.

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