Shmoo

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This article is about the cartoon creature. For other uses, see Shmoo (disambiguation)

A shmoo is a fictional cartoon creature, created and first drawn by the cartoonist Al Capp in his newspaper comic strip Li'l Abner. Their first appearance occurred on August 31, 1948. The shmoo is shaped like a plump bowling pin with legs, but no arms.

The primary purpose of the character was to satirize political debates about the supposed loss of personal incentive due to the growth of the "welfare state". According to the storyline in the comic strip, the leaders of government and big business spend great amounts of energy trying to exterminate the shmoo as a dangerous threat to civilization as we know it.

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[edit] Physical characteristics of Shmoos

The basic premise allowed Capp to ascribe a variety of characteristics to these creatures, each of which contains other layers of satirical social observations connected with the main theme:

  • Shmoos are delicious, and are so eager to be eaten that if they are looked at by someone who is hungry they will gladly jump into a frying pan, after which they taste like chicken, or into a roasting pan, after which they taste like beef (Raw, they taste like Oysters on the Half-Shell). They also produce eggs, milk, and butter (no churning labor needed.) Their fresh pelt is a perfect boot leather, or house timber depending on how thick it has been cut. Their eyes are ideal suspender buttons, and their whiskers are perfect toothpicks. Naturally gentle, they require minimal care, and are ideal playmates for young children. In short, they are simply the perfect ideal of a subsistence agricultural herd animal.
  • The frolicking of shmoos is so entertaining (such as their staged "shmoosical comedies") that people watching them feel no need to go to movies or turn on television to relieve their boredom.
  • A substantial colony of shmoos live in the Valley of the Shmoon (a play on The Valley of the Moon) near Dogpatch. There is no literature-based evidence of shmoos trying to "escape:" however, Li'l Abner stumbled into the Valley of the Shmoon and brought several hundred shmoos out with him to help the citizens of poverty-stricken Dogpatch. The corporate workers hated shmoos, therefore, they started rumors of "havoc" and destruction of society. Hence, the shmoos were almost destroyed. However, two of them returned to the Valley where they continued to live happily with thousands of fellow shmoos, never to be asked to help humans again. They had no need to escape, and no shmoo ever caused physical harm to anyone or anything. After the shmoos were destroyed in Dogpatch, they were never heard from again in-universe. There have been commercial attempts to integrate the character into a TV series (See below.)

[edit] Later uses of the character

The Shmoo ancestors Gleep and Gloop were members of the Herculoids, also a Hanna-Barbera cartoon.

The Shmoo gained its own animated series in the late 1970s, as part of the animated series Fred and Barney Meet The Shmoo (which consisted of reruns of The New Fred and Barney Show mixed with the Shmoo's own cartoons; the two pairs of characters didn't actually "meet"). The two pairs of characters did meet, however, in the early 1980s Flintstones spinoff The Flintstone Comedy Show. The Shmoo appeared in the segment Bedrock Cops as a police officer alongside part-time officers Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble; however, this Shmoo had little relationship to the L'il Abner character other than appearance. Also in one episode of The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, "Billy and Mandy Begins" the Shmoo can be seen dancing in the cauldron that held the Grim Reaper.

Another Hanna-Barbera venture in 1979 included Shmoo as a title character, The New Shmoo, where he is pegged as the helpful, shape-shifting mascot of Mighty Mysteries Comics, a group of teens who solve Scooby-doo-like mysteries. In this series, the Shmoo could morph into any shape.

Episodes of The New Shmoo include:

  • The Amazing Captain Mentor
  • The Beast of Black Lake
  • The Ber-Shmoo-Da Triangle
  • The Crystal Ball of Crime
  • Dr. Morton's Monster
  • The Energy Robbers From Space
  • The Flying Disc of Doom
  • The Haunting of Atlantis
  • Monster Island
  • The Pyramid of Peril
  • The Return of Dracula
  • Swamp of Evil
  • The Terror of the Trolls
  • The Valley Where Time Stood Still
  • The Wail of the Banshee
  • The Warlock of Voodoo Island
  • Lucky Number Slevin

[edit] Popular culture

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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