Thailand’s ongoing struggle against record flooding
has been complicated by often contradictory
statements from officials. To help calm a panicky
public, a group of young Thai animators created a
cartoon series to simplify flood information and
help people prepare. The animated series
RooSuFlood has become a
hit on television and the web.
|
Photo courtesy of
RooSuFlood
Thailand's RooSuFlood animated
series educates the public on
what do to in case of flooding.
|
Thailand’s devastating floods caught many people
unprepared, leaving hundreds dead and tens of
thousands homeless.
As authorities struggle to fend off waters closing
in on the Thai capital, Bangkok, ordinary people are
being swamped with mixed messages.
Officials with the national government and the
capital city government have often contradicted each
other in assessing the threat to Bangkok.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has struggled
with a consistent message.
Last week, she said if there is no more water coming
in, it might not get seriously flooded in Bangkok.
Several days later, she had starkly different
advice.
She says in Bangkok, people might have to adjust to
using boats instead of cars.
As officials alternate between overly optimistic and
overly pessimistic scenarios, the public is left
wondering what to do.
To cut through the confusion, and calm down a
worried public, a group of young animators got
together to create RooSuFlood.
“Know
and Fight Flood” is an animated series of public
service announcements designed to educate while
keeping the audience entertained.
Subtitles in English also help foreigners wanting to
know more about the situation, says Thawatchai
Saengthamchai, one of the series’ creators.
He says there is a flood of information with
academics saying this, the media saying that, the
government saying another thing and people on the
street saying something completely different. He
says the air is full of confused voices without
anything to organize the information.
To illustrate the magnitude of the crisis,
RooSuFlood depicts Bangkok’s encroaching flood
waters as 50 million blue whales.
The animated series shows the whales trying to make
their way out to sea through Bangkok’s Chao Phraya
River and crisscrossing canals only to spill out
onto the streets and into people’s homes.
Several students and recent graduates sit in front
of their computers in a modern, glass-walled gray
building.
Volunteer animator Sipparpad Krongraksa was flooded
out of his house and, for now, he not only works at
the office but also lives here.
He says normally he would be sitting around in his
room watching TV, but he feels that there are a lot
of people who are in trouble and Ru Su Flood allows
him to be more useful to society.
As floodwaters slowly spread in to central Bangkok,
the series turned to dealing with getting flooded
and evacuating safely.
Among the tips for leaving your home: pack a life
jacket, plug your toilets with sandbags, and carry a
large stick if you should be unlucky enough to meet
a crocodile while evacuating.




