- Pants Pankuro
is the name of a series of animated shorts (each just over a minute in length) that aired on Japanese public television from April 2004 until March 2008. The series is geared to
toddler s and young children, and most episodes focus on the issues involved withtoilet training . It features a number ofanthropomorphic characters, including talkingtoilet s andwashing machine s, who instruct children about how to use the restroom and what to do in case of an accident.Characters
* Pants Pankuro, the protagonist, is about three years old. He has just started to wear underpants and use the toilet.
* Komingo is Pankuro's little sister. She is not yet toilet trained.
* Koricchi is a boy the same age as Pankuro; the two are intensely competitive. Koricchi speaks in a Japanese dialect known as Kansai ben, spoken by residents ofOsaka .
* Koin is a girl about the same age as Pankuro, who likes to spin and dance.
* Toire-sama is Pankuro's friendly householdtoilet . Pankuro usually treats Toire-sama with great respect, as though he were an older relative.
* Kamiko-san is Pankuro's toilet roll holder. ("kami" means "paper".)
* Watoire-sama is Koricchi's family's old-fashioned squat toilet.
* Makihime-san is Koricchi's toilet roll holder. ("maki" means to "roll up" and "hime" means "princess".)
* Toire-sensei is Koin's toilet. She speaks in Japanese and English.
* Sottoire Three outdoor toilets that Pankuro and his friends use when they're playing outside. They speak Japanese and French. (The name is a combination of "soto," meaning "outside" and "toire," meaning "toilet.")
* Sentako Hacchan is Pankuro's eight-legged washing machine, who is very eager to do the laundry. ("Sentako" is a combination of "sentaku," which means laundry, and "tako," which means octopus. "Hacchan" is a combination of "hachi," which mean "eight," and "chan," which is a diminutive suffix used for names, similar to adding a 'y' to the end of a name, as in Bill -> Billy.)
* Ko-hachi Sentako Hacchan's son. He washes one pair of Pankuro's pants at a time. "Ko" means "child."
* Mago-hachi Sentako Hacchan's grandson. "Mago" means "grandchild."
* Suberi-ika A slide that Pankuro and his friends play on outside. "Suberi" means "sliding."External links
* [http://www.nhk-ep.com/chara/pankurou/index.html Official "Pants Pankuro" site at NHK]
* [http://www.youtube.com/user/koricchi "Pants Pankuro" shorts on YouTube]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.