By Philip Schweier
October 3, 2012 - 11:31
Public broadcasters in Southern Hemisphere celebrated summer by ushering in THE 99 in Australia on ABC and South
Africa on SABC. ABC, like its public broadcasting counterparts in Great Britain
and the United States, has the nation’s most prolific offerings of children and
family entertainment. Its website is one of the best children sites in all of
broadcasting, available from anywhere in the world.
In South Africa, THE 99 appears
weekly on the eclectic SABC1, South Africa’s favorite and most watched
television channel. THE 99 is offered
as family programming throughout South Africa. SABC is a unique brand of
public/private-funded television, the business model for which is being watched
closely by public broadcasters throughout the world.
THE 99 is an Islamic
comic book published by Teshkeel Media Group in Kuwait City. Created by Dr.
Naif Al Mutawa, it features a team of young heroes endowed with super-powers
who are gathered by Dr. Ramzi Razem to fight evil, in many ways similar to
Marvel's X-Men. Although the series is based on Islamic concepts, it is
promoted as appealing to universal virtues, and the religion of each character
is not made explicit.
Dr. Naif Al-Mutawa
The title debuted in the Middle East in June 2006, and six months later it was
outselling the Arabic language versions of the American comics Teshkeel
licenses. Since then it has spawned a popular cartoon series now in its second
season.
Praise and adulation? Scorn and ridicule? E-mail me at Philip@ComicBookBin.com