Meerkats have been subject to numerous cultural depictions, and have featured in television programmes, films, books, and other media.
Examples
The British television series Meerkat Manor, produced by
Oxford Scientific Films, features wild meerkats studied by the staff of the
Kalahari Meerkat Project[1] and primarily focused on a group of meerkats called the
Whiskers. The show, which aired on
Animal Planet, premiered in 2005, and the final episode aired in 2008. The series, which uses narration and traditional nature documentary style footage, has been described as a "
realitysoap";[2] the meerkats are given names and described as having human traits — for example, individual meerkats are characterised as being "courageous" or "caring".[3] A television movie serving as a prequel, Meerkat Manor: The Story Begins, was released in 2008, detailing the life of the Flower, who was the dominant female meerkat of the Whiskers. Unlike the TV series, the filmmakers did not use actual footage of the Whiskers group, rather, they primarily used various untrained wild meerkat "actors" to portray those in the story,[4] which was based on the research notes of the Kalahari Meerkat Project.
The 1987
BBCWildlife on One documentary Meerkats United, presented by
David Attenborough, played a large role in introducing the meerkat species to public consciousness in Britain.[5] It was once voted the best wildlife documentary of all time by BBC viewers.[5] A follow-up, Meerkats Divided, aired in 1996.[6]
The television advertising campaign
Compare the Meerkat is popular in the United Kingdom and Australia.[7][8] The campaign promotes the price comparison website
comparethemarket.com in the UK, and
comparethemarket.com.au in Australia. The campaign was launched in 2009 in the UK, and centers around the anthropomorphic character Aleksandr Orlov (voiced by
Simon Greenall[9]), an aristocratic Russian meerkat. Other meerkat characters have featured in the advertisements, such as Aleksandr's sidekick Sergei.[10][11]
The
Neighbourhood Watch scheme in the United Kingdom has used meerkat imagery in its branding and posters.[12]
In the book Life of Pi and its
film adaptation, the floating island is inhabited by tens of thousands of meerkats,[14] in an environment and grouping unlike real meerkats.
Billy, the protagonist of the German animated film Animals United, is an anthropomorphic meerkat.[15]
The 2008 wildlife drama film The Meerkats, produced by
BBC Films and
The Weinstein Company, uses footage of wild meerkats combined with narration written by
Alexander McCall Smith.
James Honeyborne directed the film, and is also credited for the story.
Paul Newman, in his final film credit, provided the voice of the narrator.[16][17]Guardian reviewer Philip French commented that the portrayal of the meerkats was "more Disney-anthropomorphic than Attenborough-authentic."[18]
A rolling version of the popular
Linux distribution
Ubuntu was called "Maverick Meerkat". It was released in October 2010.[19][20]
The
Pokémon species Watchog, first introduced in Pokémon Black and White, resembles a meerkat.[21][22] In official sources, each Pokémon species is given a category describing it; Watchog's category is "Lookout Pokémon".[23]
Komiya, a character from
Sanrio's anime series Aggretsuko, is an anthropomorphic meerkat.[24]
Meerkats appear in Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel. The chipmunk character Theodore is shown to be a fan of the TV series Meerkat Manor;[25] this later influences the plot of the film when, after running away from home, Theodore goes to a zoo and tries to join the family of meerkats there.[26]
Andre Norton's science fiction book The Beast Master (1959) included a pair of meerkats in the title character's telepathically-linked
Commando team. He described their function to another character as, "These were our saboteurs.... They dig with those claws and uncover things other people would like to keep buried. Brought a lot of interesting trophies back to base, too. They're born thieves, drag all sorts of loot to their dens. You can imagine what they did to delicate enemy installations in the field--"
Meerkats have been subject to numerous cultural depictions, and have featured in television programmes, films, books, and other media.
Examples
The British television series Meerkat Manor, produced by
Oxford Scientific Films, features wild meerkats studied by the staff of the
Kalahari Meerkat Project[1] and primarily focused on a group of meerkats called the
Whiskers. The show, which aired on
Animal Planet, premiered in 2005, and the final episode aired in 2008. The series, which uses narration and traditional nature documentary style footage, has been described as a "
realitysoap";[2] the meerkats are given names and described as having human traits — for example, individual meerkats are characterised as being "courageous" or "caring".[3] A television movie serving as a prequel, Meerkat Manor: The Story Begins, was released in 2008, detailing the life of the Flower, who was the dominant female meerkat of the Whiskers. Unlike the TV series, the filmmakers did not use actual footage of the Whiskers group, rather, they primarily used various untrained wild meerkat "actors" to portray those in the story,[4] which was based on the research notes of the Kalahari Meerkat Project.
The 1987
BBCWildlife on One documentary Meerkats United, presented by
David Attenborough, played a large role in introducing the meerkat species to public consciousness in Britain.[5] It was once voted the best wildlife documentary of all time by BBC viewers.[5] A follow-up, Meerkats Divided, aired in 1996.[6]
The television advertising campaign
Compare the Meerkat is popular in the United Kingdom and Australia.[7][8] The campaign promotes the price comparison website
comparethemarket.com in the UK, and
comparethemarket.com.au in Australia. The campaign was launched in 2009 in the UK, and centers around the anthropomorphic character Aleksandr Orlov (voiced by
Simon Greenall[9]), an aristocratic Russian meerkat. Other meerkat characters have featured in the advertisements, such as Aleksandr's sidekick Sergei.[10][11]
The
Neighbourhood Watch scheme in the United Kingdom has used meerkat imagery in its branding and posters.[12]
In the book Life of Pi and its
film adaptation, the floating island is inhabited by tens of thousands of meerkats,[14] in an environment and grouping unlike real meerkats.
Billy, the protagonist of the German animated film Animals United, is an anthropomorphic meerkat.[15]
The 2008 wildlife drama film The Meerkats, produced by
BBC Films and
The Weinstein Company, uses footage of wild meerkats combined with narration written by
Alexander McCall Smith.
James Honeyborne directed the film, and is also credited for the story.
Paul Newman, in his final film credit, provided the voice of the narrator.[16][17]Guardian reviewer Philip French commented that the portrayal of the meerkats was "more Disney-anthropomorphic than Attenborough-authentic."[18]
A rolling version of the popular
Linux distribution
Ubuntu was called "Maverick Meerkat". It was released in October 2010.[19][20]
The
Pokémon species Watchog, first introduced in Pokémon Black and White, resembles a meerkat.[21][22] In official sources, each Pokémon species is given a category describing it; Watchog's category is "Lookout Pokémon".[23]
Komiya, a character from
Sanrio's anime series Aggretsuko, is an anthropomorphic meerkat.[24]
Meerkats appear in Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel. The chipmunk character Theodore is shown to be a fan of the TV series Meerkat Manor;[25] this later influences the plot of the film when, after running away from home, Theodore goes to a zoo and tries to join the family of meerkats there.[26]
Andre Norton's science fiction book The Beast Master (1959) included a pair of meerkats in the title character's telepathically-linked
Commando team. He described their function to another character as, "These were our saboteurs.... They dig with those claws and uncover things other people would like to keep buried. Brought a lot of interesting trophies back to base, too. They're born thieves, drag all sorts of loot to their dens. You can imagine what they did to delicate enemy installations in the field--"