A departure from the normal here due to Scott Adams' passing away sometime between Monday night and this morning. I've known since it became public that he had aggressive stage 4 prostate cancer and that it looked like he wasn't going to make it to the end of 2025. It looks like he got a longer extension than many. Some of that was undoubtedly personal; perhaps genetics, perhaps attitudes and we heard several times in his last year that he was familiar enough with and to people in high places that could help.
Like most, I got to know Scott Adams through Dilbert when the comic first started making papers and magazines. We have some Dilbert cartoon collections around the house but I'm not sure about his "real" books. By the time the TV series came out in 1999, I was a regular who watched every episode. This clip is one of my all time favorites from Dilbert's world.
Over the years, I've run many Dilbert cartoons.
I posted this on September 8, 2015.
This one was November 25, 2012.
This may be the oldest one I have. It says: Dilbert for September 30, 1995. Amazingly, I remembered it almost word-for-word.
Of course, this next one spoke to me. Alright, they all did, but this one in a different sense.
This one affected me for life:
Yes, I have bike shorts and always refer to them as my dorky pants. I used to have a printed version of this cartoon on my office wall.
Related to companies that patent minor things but sue any company that gets close to their turf.
When talk turned to grade inflation in college, this one had to show up:
I believe that's every Dilbert cartoon I've ever run, and it's a bit of guaranteed outcome that when I'm looking for some humorous thing to include, I'll go to cartoons I remember, but it's going to be tough for a while. I can't claim to have any tremendous insights into Scott as a person. His last interviews bring some things I can relate to, along with things we'll all face someday. One of my first quotes from Scott was in a post in the fourth month of the blog:
Like Scott Adams says on risk vs reward:
For a manager: Success: you get tons of money. Fail: someone under you gets laid off.
For an engineer: Success: you get a handsome certificate, suitable for framing. Fail: think Space Shuttle Challenger, Columbia, Hyatt Regency walkway. Money lost, possibly large numbers of people die.
Perhaps the most recent risk/reward quote of his will live much longer. From his final post to X about becoming Christian:
"I'm not a believer but I have to admit the risk-reward calculation for doing so looks attractive. So here I go," according to the statement by Adams.
"I accept Jesus Christ as my lord and savior and I look forward to spending an eternity with him. The part about me being a believer should be quickly resolved if I wake up in heaven."
So long, Scott. I hope we meet on the other side some day.








There are engineers and animals waiting to greet you Scott.
ReplyDeleteRIP Mr. Adams and thank you.
ReplyDelete