Scott Adams(II)
- Writer
- Producer
- Actor
Scott Adams, frustrated with the inanities of corporate America and its
idiot bosses, created the comic strip "Dilbert" to lampoon all he
considered repugnant-yet-funny in the workplace of cubicles. His title
character Dilbert, the bespectacled MIT graduate with no mouth and
flip-up tie, is part alter ego, part "every man." Dilbert was embraced
by the comic-strip-reading public in 1989, and as of 2001, appeared
through United Media's syndication efforts in an impressive 2,000
newspapers in 50-plus countries translated in 19 languages. Born on
June 8, 1957, Adams was raised in Windham, New York, and as a
youngster, he tried his hand at cartooning. He entered art contests
with little success. He was chosen valedictorian of his high school
class (he claimed it was because "the other 39 people in my class
couldn't spell valedictorian"). From 1979 to 1986, he worked at a San
Francisco bank in a variety of dead-end jobs (as a bank teller, he was
held at gunpoint twice), then worked at Pacific Bell from 1986 to June
1995, mostly in various engineering groups. Inspired from Adams' idle
doodlings during dull company meetings, nerdy Dilbert embodied many
characteristics of his co-workers. Adams kept his day job at Pacific
Bell for 8 years after the comic strip was launched, partly for
financial security and partly for relevant material. He was finally
asked to leave by a new boss because of "budget constraints." Adams'
education was not in art or engineering; he earned a bachelor's degree
in economics from Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York, then earned an
MBA from the University of California at Berkeley in 1986. Adams is
credited with being the first cartoonist to print his e-mail address in
his comic strip and dilbert.com was the first syndicated comic strip to
go online in 1995. As of 2001, it was the most widely read syndicated
comic on the Internet. Adams has also successfully launched a full
repertoire of Dilbert-emblazoned products from desk calendars to
T-shirts; a Dilbert Web site; a short-lived animated TV show in 1999;
and his own line of food products, including the "Dilberito," a frozen
vegetarian burrito. Adams' many best-selling Dilbert books include
"Build a Better Life by Stealing Office Supplies"; "The Dilbert
Future"; "I'm Not Anti-Business, I'm Anti-Idiot"; "Journey to
Cubeville"; and "Random Acts of Management." Adams is an irreverent
member of Mensa.