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Scott Adams persuading Barbaro in HELL

Actually, to be fair, he's in heaven because he accepted Jes...
assload
  01/13/26
RIP Scott
Candy Ride
  01/13/26
Dilbert was a good comic strip
MASE
  01/13/26
Scott Adams, whose experience as a bank and phone company mi...
UN peacekeeper
  01/13/26
Not sure why he didn't get more credit for God's Debris as a...
chadgpt-6
  01/13/26
People magazine: "Scott Adams, Disgraced Dilbert Creato...
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  01/13/26
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  01/13/26
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  01/13/26


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Date: January 13th, 2026 10:40 AM
Author: assload

Actually, to be fair, he's in heaven because he accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior on his deathbed.

RIP Scott.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49585797)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 10:46 AM
Author: Candy Ride

RIP Scott

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49585815)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 10:47 AM
Author: MASE

Dilbert was a good comic strip

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49585819)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 10:53 AM
Author: UN peacekeeper

Scott Adams, whose experience as a bank and phone company middle manager gave him the material to create the comic strip “Dilbert,” a daily satire of corporate life that became a sensation but was dropped by more than 1,000 newspapers after he made racist comments on his podcast in 2023, died on Tuesday. He was 68.

His death was announced by his ex-wife, Shelly Miles, in a livestream on his YouTube channel, Real Coffee with Scott Adams. She did not say where he died. He had been receiving hospice care at his home in Northern California.

Mr. Adams announced in May that he had aggressive prostate cancer and that he likely had only a few months to live. In November, he wrote on the social media platform X that his health was “declining fast,” and that his insurer had not scheduled a time to administer a drug that it had approved. He asked for help from President Trump, whom he publicly supported. “On it!” the president responded on his social media outlet, Truth Social.

For more than 30 years, “Dilbert” chronicled the absurdities of the high-tech workplace and skewered management. The title character was a frustrated engineer working from a cubicle at a high-tech company whose intelligent, anthropomorphic pet, Dogbert, dreamed of world domination. Other characters included Dilbert’s co-workers, Alice, Asok and Wally; the hapless Pointy-Haired Boss; and Catbert, the fire-red-colored cat and evil head of human relations.

At its peak, “Dilbert” was syndicated to about 2,000 newspapers internationally, placing it in the realm of other popular syndicated strips like “Peanuts,” “Doonesbury” and “Garfield.” Mr. Adams also published numerous “Dilbert” collections and wrote business books, including “The Dilbert Principle,” which posits that “the most ineffective workers are systematically moved to the place where they can do the least damage — management.”

The strip also led to production of a short-lived animated TV series, plush Dilbert dolls, computer games and the Dilberito, a frozen vegetarian burrito, which flopped in supermarket sales after a few years. Dilbert himself was the star of a $30 million advertising campaign for Office Depot in 1997.

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/10/27/multimedia/00adams-tmqf/00adams-tmqf-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp

“One of the reasons for his success was that he was the first one to have an office-based strip with recurring characters people could identify with, like Alice, a really smart woman who never got attention or praise,” Alan Gardner, the editor of The Daily Cartoonist website, said in an interview.

Mr. Adams suggested that Dilbert gave voice to isolated cubicle dwellers. “That’s the amazing thing I found when I went on line a couple of years ago,” he told The New York Times in 1995. “I heard from all these people who thought that they were the only ones, that they were in this unique, absurd situation. That they couldn’t talk about their situation because no one would believe it.”

Over the years, Mr. Adams made remarks about women and Jews that brought him negative attention outside the silo of beloved cartoonist. He used his podcast, “Real Coffee With Scott Adams,” to offer free-flowing commentary on the news, a platform that led to “Dilbert’s” downfall. In February 2023, he was discussing a new Rasmussen Reports poll that found that only 53 percent of Black Americans agreed with the statement, “It’s OK to be white,” a phrase that has been promoted by white supremacists, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

“If nearly half of all Blacks are not OK with white people,” he said on the podcast episode, then they are a “hate group.” He added, “I don’t want to have anything to do with them. And I would say, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from Black people.”

The blowback came swiftly. Many major newspapers, including The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times (in its international print edition) dropped “Dilbert.” So did the USA Today Network, which at the time had more than 200 newspapers.

Soon after, Andrews McMeel Universal, which by then was syndicating “Dilbert” to about 1,400 newspapers, cut its ties to Mr. Adams. So did the business imprint of Penguin Random House, one of the world’s largest publishers, which dropped plans to release his semi-humorous advice book “Reframe Your Brain.” Mr. Adams self-published it later that year.

Mr. Adams defended himself on a subsequent podcast, saying that he was not a racist, and that he had been using hyperbole when he called Blacks a “hate group.”

He acknowledged that his comments had damaged his career. “Most of my income will be gone by next week,” he said. “My reputation for the rest of my life is destroyed. You can’t come back from this, am I right?”

He quickly resurrected “Dilbert” as “Dilbert Reborn” and made it available by subscription on the Locals subscription platform.

Scott Raymond Adams was born on June 8, 1957, in Windham, N.Y., in the Catskill Mountains. His father, Paul, was a postal worker. His mother, Virginia (Vining) Adams, was a real estate broker and an assembly-line worker. In a quiet household where Scott was the middle child, he was a wisecracker.

“The cynical part of me comes from my dad,” Mr. Adams told The San Francisco Chronicle in 1998. “I don’t know whether he’s had a serious thing to say about anything as long as I’ve known him.”

Scott wanted to be a cartoonist from age 5. But “when you when you reach an age when you understand likelihood and statistics, you lose that innocence that anything is possible,” he told The Times in 2003. So he took a business path: He graduated in 1979 from Hartwick College, in Oneonta, N.Y., with a bachelor’s degree in economics.

He went to work that year as a teller at Crocker National Bank in San Francisco, but, because of dyslexia, he had trouble balancing his totals. He also was twice robbed at gunpoint, he said. After sending his boss a memo on how to run the bank better, he was sent to a management training program and rose to managerial positions while also completing an M.B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1986.

“Dilbert” emerged during dull meetings at Crocker when he sketched cartoons of his co-workers and bosses, he said. Colleagues faxed them around the bank.

The Dilbert character’s simply-drawn but distinctive look was based on a co-worker “who had an interesting potato-shaped body that was fun to draw,” Mr. Adams told Publishers Weekly in 2008. “Dilbert’s lack of social skills is modeled on my own personality; his professional skills are a composite of engineers I have known.”

He left for Pacific Bell in 1986 and, two years later, sent samples of the nascent strip to cartoon syndicates. United Feature Syndicate agreed in 1989 to distribute “Dilbert,” initially to 35 newspapers. He stayed at Pacific Bell until 1995, when writing and illustrating “Dilbert” became his full-time job.

“Dilbert’s” success gave Mr. Adams a platform to comment on a wide range of topics on his blog and podcast. Some of his views drew intense criticism. On his blog in 2006, he questioned whether the figure of six million Jewish deaths in the Holocaust was accurate or a big number “that someone pulled out of his ass.” Five years later, also on his blog, he wrote that “women are treated differently by society for exactly the same reason that children and the mentally handicapped are treated differently. Its just easier this way for everyone.”

In 2015, he gave Mr. Trump, then a New York real-estate businessman and former reality TV star, a 98 percent chance of winning the next year’s presidential election, based on his powers of persuasion.

“His complete ignoring of facts are actually part of the persuasion because he doesn’t give you targets, he doesn’t give you details of his policies, usually,” Mr. Adams said on the HBO current-events comedy show “Real Time With Bill Maher” in 2016 before the presidential election. “So he’s reducing the number of targets while making you feel good and focus on the things he wants.”

Mr. Adams wrote “Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don’t Matter” (2017), a book about President Trump’s power to persuade. It has a cover illustration of Dogbert wearing a Trumpian head of hair. The book earned him an invitation to the White House to meet the president.

“Apparently my book ‘Win Bigly’ made a big impact on his advisers, and he wanted to chat,” Mr. Adams said in a direct message on Twitter.

“I picked 98 percent as my prediction because the statistician Nate Silver of the forecasting website FiveThirtyEight.com was saying 2 percent,” he wrote in the book, referring actually to Mr. Silver’s forecast for who would become the Republican presidential nominee. “I did that for branding and persuasion purposes. It’s easier to remember my predictions both because of the way it fits with Silver’s prediction and for its audacity, which people perceived as ‘wrongness.’”

He said his support for Mr. Trump in 2016 proved costly.

“When I decided that I would throw away my entire social life to back Trump and when I eventually threw away my entire career — which even before I was canceled, my licensing business and book sales went to almost nothing — because I was supporting Trump,” he said on his podcast in October 2025. “I sacrificed everything. I sacrificed my social life. I sacrificed my career. I sacrificed my reputation. I may have sacrificed my health. And I did that because I believed it was worth it.”

Information about survivors was not immediately available. His marriages to Shelly Miles and Kristina Basham ended in divorce. He had two stepchildren; one, Justin Miles, died of a fentanyl overdose in 2018.

In a 2025 “Dilbert Reborn” strip, Dilbert is confronted by a character named Covid Carl, whose identity revolves around his refusal to get Covid shots. The character says that he will judge the credibility of what Dilbert says based on his vaccination history.

Dilbert: “Um … It looks like we’re getting some rain today.”

Covid Carl (angrily): “You’re wrong about the weather because you got the Covid jab. Stop believing everything the government tells you, fool.”

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49585847)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 11:51 AM
Author: chadgpt-6

Not sure why he didn't get more credit for God's Debris as a holistic integrator for Fractal Ontology, rip

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49586051)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 12:07 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,


People magazine: "Scott Adams, Disgraced Dilbert Creator, Dies at 68"

the author of the "disgraced" piece:

https://people.com/victoria-edel-8547097



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49586079)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 1:25 PM
Author: .,.,.,.,,,,.,,.,.,.,...,,..,,




(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49586350)



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Date: January 13th, 2026 1:25 PM
Author: .,.,.,.,,,,.,,.,.,.,...,,..,,




(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5821465&forum_id=2.#49586349)