We can separate the nature of the person from the quality of their work. You almost have to. Some of the finest artists, writers, politicians and, yes, cartoonists had vile personalities while still achieving quality work/art/literature. I was stupefied by Scott Adams' beliefs (once he began making them public), but that doesn't negate the humor he found in the work environments that many of us (including Adams himself) lived through and had to function within.He was a racist, and also didn't believe the Holocaust ever happened. Worse, he never apologized for it.
We saw some of that back in 2023 when multiple newspapers chains cut ties to Scott Adams after that rant.He was a racist, and also didn't believe the Holocaust ever happened. Worse, he never apologized for it.
What I don't understand is why some celebrities throw away their career and the hard work to achieve it, by making public a stance or viewpoint that is sure to wreck your life, turn your fans against you and end your career. Roseanne Barr is another one like Adams that unbelievably didn't think their comments would have them 'cancelled'.We can separate the nature of the person from the quality of their work. You almost have to. Some of the finest artists, writers, politicians and, yes, cartoonists had vile personalities while still achieving quality work/art/literature. I was stupefied by Scott Adams' beliefs (once he began making them public), but that doesn't negate the humor he found in the work environments that many of us (including Adams himself) lived through and had to function within.
Whatever it was that rotted him from the inside out, RIP Scott Adams.
There were multiple compilation books published while Adams and Dilbert were a hot commodity. I'll bet your local public library has a few on the shelf. (Probably a used book store too.) That's the quickest way to plow through a curated bunch of them and get the flavor. Although if you've ever lived in "Cubicle-land", you already know implicitly the behaviors and foibles he was satirizing.)Thanks for bringing that up. I read that in a Huckabee Post email the other day and was glad to hear it. Never read the comic strip though. I'll have to see if I can find any archived/accessible.
Romans 11:33-36 KJB
Josh
Church Podcast: Pleasant View Baptist Church | SermonAudio
Personal Podcast: Back To The Old Paths
TIBPF Podcast: https://www.tibpf.sermon.net
There were multiple compilation books published while Adams and Dilbert were a hot commodity. I'll bet your local public library has a few on the shelf. (Probably a used book store too.) That's the quickest way to plow through a curated bunch of them and get the flavor. Although if you've ever lived in "Cubicle-land", you already know implicitly the behaviors and foibles he was satirizing.)
There were multiple compilation books published while Adams and Dilbert were a hot commodity. I'll bet your local public library has a few on the shelf. (Probably a used book store too.) That's the quickest way to plow through a curated bunch of them and get the flavor. Although if you've ever lived in "Cubicle-land", you already know implicitly the behaviors and foibles he was satirizing.)
Sad, but unfortunately, what else would you expect? Oh and sorry, I accidentally double-posted and can't figure out how to delete the extra one.Sad that People Magazine would choose to politicize his obit.
That Huckabee article had a lot more politicizing than People magazine, all about his love of Trump, and his commentaries (hate filled rants) he did for Huckabee. People, unfortunately, will be remembered for the bad and the good they do. A few chuckles at a comic strip doesn't erase that.Roger on that LOL. Thanks, I'll look into it/them ASAP. I'm more of an auditory reader/learner, so I'll look there, too.
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Saying goodbye to Scott Adams
Yesterday, we had the sad task of reporting that one of our favorite commentators of all time, the bestselling author and “Dilbert” creator Scott Adams, had passed away at age 68.huckabeepost.substack.com
Roger on that LOL. Thanks, I'll look into it/them.
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Saying goodbye to Scott Adams
Yesterday, we had the sad task of reporting that one of our favorite commentators of all time, the bestselling author and “Dilbert” creator Scott Adams, had passed away at age 68.huckabeepost.substack.com
Romans 11:33-36 KJB
Josh
Church Podcast: Pleasant View Baptist Church | SermonAudio
Personal Podcast: Back To The Old Paths
TIBPF Podcast: https://www.tibpf.sermon.net
Scott Adams is known to tens of millions of people as the cartoonist/satirist behind Dilbert, the guy who served time at Pacific Bell and turned that unpleasantness into a super-successful second career. But he's also known to a few thousands -- possibly a few tens of thousands, who knows? -- for his nut-fringe commentaries near the end of his life, probably after he'd already contracted the cancer that killed him, possibly after it had already been diagnosed and he was living with pain and stuck on a pill regimen that made him cranky and miserable. I didn't like the opinions that sprang forth in that last phase of his life, but anyone who's ever been sick, or tending to someone close to them who is, will understand and give him a little grace. I will remember him for all the laughs he gave me, especially the ones where I nodded and said "Man, that sh*t happened to me too." (And the one where I shared an experience with him and it ended up as the kernel for one of the Dilbert strips, but mutated enough that no one could ever trace it back to me.) Again, RIP.That Huckabee article had a lot more politicizing than People magazine, all about his love of Trump, and his commentaries (hate filled rants) he did for Huckabee. People, unfortunately, will be remembered for the bad and the good they do. A few chuckles at a comic strip doesn't erase that.