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A person, new to The Wild West, who's seen as an acceptable target by the locals. By stereotype, a City Slicker is flashily dressed in big-city fashions, thinks rural folks are idiots, and is unused to manual labor.

The name comes from "slicker" being slang for a newborn calf, indicating how naive the newcomer is about the ways of the West. Yep, it's a subtrope of Naive Newcomer, and has a strong overlap with City Mouse.

If the city slicker is well-meaning, after a couple of pranks and some honest labor they'll toughen up and learn the new rules. But if they're dishonest folks trying to bilk the locals of their hard-earned cash or land, all bets are off as to their final fate. Note that some confident tricksters will pretend to be city slickers to make themselves seem easy targets.

One act of adolescent rebellion sometimes seen in Westerns is "dressing like a city slicker."

Actually, the Old West had many terms for newcomers, and we'll list a few and their distinguishing features here until they merit their own pages.

Dude: A tourist. Just here to soak up some Western flavor and see the sights. Plans to be going back East in a few weeks. Generally not malevolent, but can be pushy and inadvertantly offensive.

Greenhorn: Less emphasis on the flashiness and snobbery, more emphasis on the naivete. The Greenhorn wants to do the right thing, but doesn't know the ropes yet. Usually grows into a hardened veteran of the West.

Tenderfoot: The emphasis here is on the soft skin and weak muscles that city life cause. Expect this character to get blisters and be exhausted after even the least demanding chore. Like the Greenhorn, he'll soon toughen up and learn the value of hard work.

Tinhorn: Almost always paired with the word "gambler." The Tinhorn plays down the naivete, and emphasizes the flash and surface wealth. Generally a malevolent figure, though easily vanquished.

Examples of City Slicker include:


Comic Book[]

  • The title character in Tenderfoot (French title Le Pied-tendre), from the Lucky Luke comic book series. Waldo Badmington is an English aristocrat who inherits a ranch in the Wild West. The book's prologue sets the stage by giving funny examples of the notions of tenderfoot, greenhorn and dude.


Film[]

  • The City Slickers movie invokes this trope with the big city folk learning the value of hard work on a Cattle Drive.
  • Here's one for a non-Western setting: In Jaws, Quint is really apprehensive about going out to sea with Hooper and Brodie for similar reasons. Hooper is a rich guy (Quint derides his "soft hands... been countin' money all your life."), and Brodie is severely afraid of water, though in his case it might be less of a "city slicker" type deal than the fact that he's just The Landlubber.
  • Also, Pauly Shore in Son in Law. (Which was, against all expectation, a pretty good movie.)
  • Another non-western example: the titular character in the film Jean De Florette fits the "Greenhorn" trope to a T. However, he never becomes a hardened veteran of the west.


Live Action Television[]

  • Randy Discher, in the episode of Monk where he quits the force to take over his uncle's farm.
  • Amos Garrett in Deadwood is a perfect example of the first type. He is even literally referred to as "The Dude".
  • Simon in Firefly. One of the things unfortunately cut short by Too Good to Last was his potential to develop from this trope into a Con Man able to use his familiarity with the Alliance, respectable appearance and intelligence to pull jobs the border-dwelling rest of the crew couldn't otherwise pull off (for example, the hospital job in Ariel).


Tabletop Game[]

  • Of course, lots of them in Deadlands, of all types.


Video Game[]

  • In Red Dead Redemption, John comes across a writer from the East named Jimmy Saints, who's writing stories about the West. He's later encountered several times inexplicably captured by gangs of outlaws. Eventually he decides to just go back home and write about something else (presumably something that won't get him killed).


Web Comic[]

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