The Dilbert comic strip has gone interactive.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map ![]()
Scott Adams, creator of the global Dilbert empire, has revamped his website, dilbert.com, to allow fans to offer their own punch lines to his comic strips about life in a corporate cubicle. Soon, viewers will be able to author text for entire strips, and Adams will engage in back and forth about the mashups.
“I’m surrendering myself to the realities of the Internet,” Adams told the New York Times. “People can already doctor strips. We’re just making it easier so people have more reason to visit the site.”
“And it’s fun,” he added. “This makes cartooning a competitive sport. It’s a game changer.”
The revamped site, which debuted Friday, includes animation, colorized strips, an expanded archive, a “most popular” section, as well as the area where visitors can write their own punch lines. A software filter is supposed to prevent readers from posting offensive content by converting certain four-letter words to the “&*@!”-style cursing of comic strips.
Besides his insights into the existential dread of the modern-day office worker, Adams has shown surprising managerial acumen, building the Dilbert brand into a multimillion-dollar empire. One of the first cartoonists to post his strips to the Internet, he also syndicates them through United Media to more than 2,000 newspapers in 25 languages in 65 countries. He has written more than 10 books, authors a blog and oversees conceptualization of a small army of Dilbert-related products, from desk calendars to cards.
And his entrepeneurial spirit is evident in enterprises other than cartooning. Adams, a vegetarian, is a co-owner of Stacey’s Café, a pair of vegetarian restaurants in northern California where he lives, and was the CEO of Scott Adams Foods, a vegetarian food company in Newton, N.J. which pioneered the “dilberito,” before deciding to sell his interest in the company.
In the last five years, he has repeatedly appeared on a top 50 thinkers list, sponsored by the European Foundation for Management Development.
Born and raised in Windham, a small town in the Catskills in upstate New York, Adams likes to say he was high school valedictorian because “the other 39 people in my class couldn’t spell valedictorian.” He holds a BA in economics from Hartwick College, in Oneonta, New York, and an MBA from the University of California at Berkeley.
After getting his BA, he held what he has described as a “a variety of humiliating and low paying jobs” spending eight years at Crocker National Bank in San Francisco and eight years at Pacific Bell. He describes being a bank teller (robbed twice at gunpoint), computer programmer, financial analyst, product manager, commercial lender, budget manager, strategist, project manager and pseudo-engineer.
During this time. Adams said he entertained himself by drawing insulting cartoons of his coworkers and bosses in meetings. Eventually a bespectacled character named Dilbert emerged from the doodles. In 1988 Adams mailed some sample comic strips featuring Dilbert to the major cartoon syndicates.
United Feature Syndicate plucked Dilbert out of thousands of submissions received that year and offered Adams a contract. Dilbert launched in about 35 newspapers in 1989. Adams continued his day job at Pacific Bell until 1995, drawing Dilbert at 5 a.m. everyday before work. Today, he devotes himself full time to his cartoon creations.
0 Comments
There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.
Leave a Comment