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Talk:Fearless Fosdick

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Mission infallible

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As a lifelong fan of fosdick, I must bring the light of contemporary politics to surround his efforts to link a possible threat, or a corruption of social norms.Fosdick was always in pursuit with self appointed authority towards any final solution of that corruption.His vision clear ,his mission infallible. The caricaturstic parallel is in the oval office today.

Low importance?

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As the most famous cartoon strip-within-a-strip ever, (one that ran successfully for more than 30 years), an acknowledged precursor to Mad, and one of the most recognizable "metafictional" creations ever - I suggest the importance rating given to this entry is absurd. BTW, the Li'l Abner entry has been rated High importance, by someone who is obviously more informed about popular culture previous to Family Guy. (13:02, 13 October 2009 Rackinfrackin) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rackinfrackin (talkcontribs)

Melvin Mole

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Harvey Kurtzman's story "Mole!" (from Mad #2, EC 1952) doesn't seem to be a specific, self-contained spoof of Dick Tracy. Tracy is never even mentioned once in the story. Instead, Mole's antagonist is a bald warden character, and some generic cops referred to collectively as "John Law". The protagonist, who is named Melvin Mole, bears only a superficial resemblance to Chester Gould's character. He's a midget, he wears glasses, and he doesn't usually speak of himself in the third person like Gould's Mole characteristically does, ("Digging in the earth has made the Mole's hands very strong..."). He also digs with spoons, toothpicks and nose hairs, not oversized hands like Gould's character. (Melvin's hands are very small.)

I'm not convinced they're really supposed to be the same character, and I believe the original wording of the passage in question is the most accurate. The fact remains that Kurtzman steered clear of satirizing Dick Tracy specifically in the early Mad, most likely because it had already been done with Fearless Fosdick. Kurtzman had already acknowledged Fosdick, Al Capp, Li'l Abner, Chester Gould and Dick Tracy in a Hey Look! parody strip that ran in Lana #2, Oct. 1948. It's reprinted in Kitchen Sink's Hey Look! anthology on page 122. (10:22, 26 November 2009 Rackinfrackin) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rackinfrackin (talkcontribs) center|thumb|400px Pepso2 (talk) 20:16, 28 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Also referenced in the MAD #2 story is Dick Tracy's B.O. Plenty. A bicyclist wears a shirt labeled "B.O." Pepso2 (talk) 21:38, 28 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Pepso2, do you think you could add a scanned image to the Shmoo entry? (I'm embarrassed to admit I don't know how to do that.) The article, as it stands, desperately needs an accompanying image from the comic strip. Thanks! (2:02, 30 November 2009, Rackinfrackin) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rackinfrackin (talkcontribs)

Fosdick only pay promotion

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After solving the impossible case of the Chippendale chair Fosdick receives a promotion of .50 cents to his $37.50 pay. of Course afterward the pay is scaled down to $22.50--and even half that for a running gag! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.213.67.10 (talk) 18:03, 3 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Another Running gag is Fosdick and his finance -one comic-has her happy at the propect of marrying Fosdick when after 20 years-Fosdick will be elgibale for a $10.00 pay raise to {$32.52}! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 208.102.156.37 (talk) 01:07, 10 February 2015 (UTC)[reply]