Don Wilder took over the writing duties in 1976 as Parker returned his focus to The Wizard of Id. After Wilder's death in 2008, Bill Rechin also wrote the strip.[2] When Bill Rechin was stricken with esophageal cancer in 2010, his son Kevin Rechin began to assist him with drawing it and his son-in-law Bob Morgan became the writer.[3] On Bill Rechin's death, Kevin Rechin and Morgan continued the strip until publication of new Crock strips ended with the May 20, 2012 Sunday comic.[4][5] Reprints of older strips by Bill Rechin have continued to run.[1][6]
Characters and story
King Features describes Crock as "the greatest and longest-running parody of the Foreign Legion classic, Beau Geste," written in 1924 by P. C. Wren and filmed several times. The comic strip is set in the middle of a barren desert at a desolate fort, where the tyrannical and corrupt Commandant Vermin P. Crock rules over a curious group of beleaguered legionnaires. The characters include:
the cowardly Captain Poulet (French for chicken),
Figowitz (who just wants a kind word),
the simple-minded Maggot who digs and digs,
Le Cesspool owner Grossie (Le Cesspool is a favorite, though dilapidated hangout for the characters) who is married to Maggot,
Grossie and Maggot’s son Otis,
the narcissistic Preppie,
Mario the Bartender,
Jules Schmesse who is always about to be executed,
the Arab horde and their stone god Nebookanezzer, who resembles a moai,
the ancient sage, never seen, who lives in a cave and dispenses wisdom and sarcasm,
the men of Outpost 5,
the Bookmobile,
the men being punished in the heat boxes,
Quench the ever-dry camel,
the Lost Patrol who have been wandering the desert for 20 years, trying to find their way back to the fort.
TV appearance
A live action Crock sketch was included in the special Mother's Day Sunday Funnies broadcast May 8, 1983 on NBC.[7]