Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

'He's Not Chotu': Video On Child Labour Grabbing Online Views

Darpan News Desk, 18 Nov, 2016 01:06 PM
    A satirical video titled "Hes not Chotu", which delves on problems of child labour in India, is garnering positive feedback in the online space.
     
     
    The Viral Fever (TVF) in association with the Kailash Satyarthi Children's Foundation has created the video, which was launched on Monday and has been viewed over 600,000 times on YouTube alone, read a statement.
     
    Through the format of an interview, the video describes the terrible lives of working children and the deplorable conditions they work under. These include missing meals, sleeping in cramped spaces, the loss of playtime and the separation from family and education. 
     
    The over five-minute long video has a child named Chotu (the oft-used moniker for working children), appearing for an interview to get a job as a domestic worker. He is shown to be accompanied by many other children who are also lining up in the recruitment agency's corridor to get hired.
     
     
    "He's not Chotu" has been released to build support for youth mobilisation campaign - "The 100 Million for 100 Million" -- which is being launched on December 11 at Rashtrapati Bhavan. The campaign is being launched during Kailash Satyarthi Children's Foundation's Laureates and Leaders Summit, hosted by President Pranab Mukherjee. 
     
    Arunabh Kumar, Founder and CEO of TVF, said: "As a child, I saw kids working on the roads, at dhabas... And every time, I used to think how can someone as young as me go through this. All of us have got this feeling at one point or the other."
     
    "This video is a small effort from our side to get a change in the society and to make people realise it can be done only through our realisation and hence we have to be the change."
     
    The summit will bring more than 25 Nobel laureates and leaders here to join their voice for the cause of children. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    White cup makes your coffee more intense

    White cup makes your coffee more intense
    Can the colour of the mug influence the taste of your coffee? Yes, say researchers, suggesting that coffee tastes more intense when served in a white cup....

    White cup makes your coffee more intense

    Math can predict how body fights disease

    Math can predict how body fights disease
    Researchers, using mathematical models, have defined for the first time how powerfully immune cells respond to infection and disease....

    Math can predict how body fights disease

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble
    Here's an "amusing trick", suggested by a reader. You get a barcode for Apple Inc. from the internet and glue it on a can of beans at your supermarket. ...

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found
    Potential "vampires" in 17th-18th century Poland were buried with rocks and sickles across their bodies to ward off evil, scientists have discovered....

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee
    A woman claiming to be a former NASA employee has stated that while watching some footage, she saw two humans walking on the Red Planet towards the Viking Mars lander in 1979.

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee

    Clamouring For New Mollusk: Researchers Say New Species One-of-a-kind Find

    Clamouring For New Mollusk: Researchers Say New Species One-of-a-kind Find
    VICTORIA — Ten years after an unusually scalloped clam was dragged up from the ocean floor off northern Vancouver Island, the tiny mollusk is making waves in the research world.

    Clamouring For New Mollusk: Researchers Say New Species One-of-a-kind Find