Swaroop
is the third cartoon I did centering around a modern East
Indian boy living in New Jersey with his traditional family.
It aired on Cartoon Network as part of it's revamped short
program now called "Cartoon-Cartoon".
At the end of the summer in 2000 They held a contest to
see which cartoon kids would like the most and kids could
vote online for their favorite cartoon. The winner got a
series. Swaroop came in third out of 12 cartoons.The winner
was Kids Next Door which is still airing on Cartoon Network
as we speak. Sigh...Not bad but not good enough either.
This
time Warner Bros and Cartoon Network decided to have a joint
venture and they teamed me up with an amazing writer named
Atul Rao and we became fast friends as we pldded along trying
to make the first cartoon that starred an East Indian.in
the US.
The story is thus: Swaroop rescues a "sacred"
cow from his beef-eating neighbor, Steve, who won the animal
in a poker game. Hiding at home with Swaroop's family, the
cow becomes a sacred nuisance taking advantage of their
hospitality. In an effort to get rid of this unwanted houseguest,
Swaroop ultimately dresses the cow like a rich lady and
puts her on a cruise ship to India where the animal will
be both safe and far away.
Atul and I tried to make Swaroop a "Bugs Bunny"
type of guy. He liked to mess with people and cause trouble
but with that sweet angelic grin on his face. Whether it
was selling his grandmother's sacred pinata to the local
kids for batting practice or by smuggling a cow dressed
in drag,
Swaroop
was always knee deep in fun. His brother Baljit was a Hipster
wanna-be and would say things like "Vhat are you
happening bromo?" He was sort of a predecessor
to Ali G in a way.Agee ( which means grandma in Hindi )
ruled the roost and the father Bahrat was always willing
to let her tell them all what to do as he was to busy checking
to see if his belly was "maturing splendidly".The
mother Neela tires to make the cow feel at home by making
alfalfa vindaloo but the cow gets wise nd begins to rule
the roost. She even takes over Swaroop's bed causing his
saying that she would be "sleeping on a bun with
a cheese blanket if it were not for him".
All in all it's a pretty funny cartoon and we got great
press from the Indian community in case you're thinking
it's offensive. Sadly Swaroop came to a sudden end when
the whole problem with Pakastan started after 9/11 and Cartoon
Network dropped the development on it. feel free to tell
them they should revisit it!
For this film I storyboarded, directed, and designed it.
As a side note, Atul voiced Swaroop as well as a few incidental
characters.