The decision to can the Dilbert comic strip after cartoonist Scott Adams’ racist rant on YouTube was an easy one. We joined hundreds of other newspapers, a testament to Adams’ extraordinary success ...
You won't see these comics in any newspaper: “Dilbert” creator Scott Adams, inspired by the Apple employee who lost a new iPhone prototype in a bar only to see the device end up with a tech blogger, ...
Last weekend, Scott Adams saw the consequences of his actions: A recent racist rant, in which he called Black people a “hate group” and advised white people to “get the f*ck away” from them, led to ...
As a longtime (probably even “charter”) fan of the comic strip “Dilbert,” I’d like to express a view on that comic’s cancellation by LNP | LancasterOnline that I haven’t seen yet. I spent my career in ...
Somehow, the world will be safer without “Dilbert.” While we readers have enjoyed the strip for decades, we’ll all be safer without it. Thanks for protecting your readers from this insidious comic ...
The creator of the satirical comic strip about white-collar work has relaunched the cartoon in a very unfunny way. Scott Adams, creator of the comic strip Dilbert, talks about his work in 2006.
The Detroit Free Press has joined the parade of newspapers dumping "Dilbert," the comic strip whose creator basically stood up last week and waved his arms and shouted, "Hey! I'm saying racist stuff ...