| The "ideel" of Li'l Abner, Detective Fearless
Fosdick was Al Capp's long-running parody of Chester
Gould's "Dick Tracy." Debuting in 1942, Fearless Fosdick became so
useful to Capp and so popular in his own right, that the strip-within-a- strip
became a regular feature in "Li'l Abner"
for over thirty years. Tracy fought horrible villains and, while sometimes
wounded, always emerged the classic comic strip hero. Fosdick was a farcical
and guileless hack and was never simply wounded. Perpetually riddled by flying
bullets, Fosdick's enduring trademark was the Swiss cheese bullet holes
revealing his truly two-dimensional comic strip body. He was extremely gullible
and unfailingly loyal to his department, even though absurdly underpaid. He
remained reverent of authority though his chief was a corrupt scoundrel. While
he never married his own longtime fiance, Prudence Pimpleton, Fosdick was
responsible for the unwitting marriage of his biggest fan, Li'l Abner to
Daisy Mae in an historic 1952 dailies episode.
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