Scott Adams, the cartoonist behind the iconic “Dilbert” strip that nailed the absurdities of cubicle life for millions, has passed away at 68 after a tough battle with metastatic prostate cancer.
His ex-wife, Shelly Miles, shared the news Tuesday via a livestream on his social media, reading a prepared statement from Adams dated January 1. “If you are reading this, things did not go well for me,” it began, before reflecting on his full life: “I had an amazing life. I gave it everything I had. If you got any benefits from my work, I’m asking you to pay it forward… Be useful. And please know I loved you all to the end.” Miles, fighting back tears, noted he was in hospice care at his home in Pleasanton, California, just days earlier.
A Career Built on Office Satire
Born June 8, 1957, in Windham, New York, in the Catskills, Adams grew up with a postal worker dad and real estate broker mom. He grabbed a bachelor’s from Hartwick College in 1979 and an MBA from UC Berkeley in 1986. While doodling on notepads as a bank teller and later scribbling on whiteboards at Pacific Bell in the 1980s, he created Dilbert—a mouthless, bespectacled engineer in a white shirt and crooked red tie, trapped in a Kafkaesque corporate hell of bureaucracy, pointless meetings, and pointy-haired bosses.
The strip debuted April 16, 1989, syndicated by United Media after Sarah Gillespie spotted its sharp take on office drudgery. “The take on office life was new and on target,” she once said. At its peak, “Dilbert” ran in 2,000 newspapers across 70 countries and 25 languages, spawning bestsellers like The Dilbert Principle (which coined the idea that the least competent rise to management), merchandise, Office Depot ads, and a short-lived animated series voiced by Daniel Stern.
Adams innovated early: In 1993, he added his email to the strip, sparking fan feedback that honed its focus on workplaces. Fans photocopied strips, pinned them up, and shared them online. He won the National Cartoonist Society’s Reuben Award in 1997, and Time named Dilbert the first fictional character on its list of top influential Americans, calling him a “mouthpiece” for cubicle warriors too scared to speak up. Characters like slacker Wally, rage-prone Alice, naive intern Asok, and megalomaniac Dogbert became legends, dishing out gems like “All rumors are true—especially if your boss denies them.”
One real-world ripple: In 2007, an Iowa casino worker got fired for posting a strip mocking “drunken lemur” decisions; a judge ruled for him, and Adams helped land a new gig.

Controversies and a Dramatic Fall
Adams’ worldview darkened over time, seeping into edgier comments on misogyny, immigration, even Holocaust numbers. He blogged widely, predicted Trump’s 2016 win, and wrote the 2017 bestseller Win Bigly, hailing Trump as a persuasion master (with Dogbert on the cover as POTUS). That earned him a White House visit.
The end came fast in 2023. On his YouTube show, Adams called Black people a “hate group” based on a poll, urging whites to “get the hell away” and saying he wouldn’t “help Black Americans.” He doubled down, calling it intentional. Newspapers axed the strip overnight; distributor Andrews McMeel cut ties. Some papers left blank spaces as a racism statement. A book deal vanished. Cartoonist Bill Holbrook put it bluntly: “He’s experiencing the consequences of expressing his views.”
Adams brushed it off on social media: “Only the dying leftist Fake News industry canceled me… Never been more popular in my life.” He rebooted as “Dilbert Reborn” on Rumble, a conservative haven, and kept podcasting “Real Coffee” on politics.
Final Days and Tributes
Adams went public with his prostate cancer in May 2025, the aggressive kind that spread to his bones—like Biden’s. He delayed sharing, fearing it’d define him as “just the dying cancer guy,” but offered compassion for Biden’s fight. By November, frustrated with Kaiser Permanente delaying an FDA-approved drug, he pleaded on X for Trump to intervene: “I am declining fast… That will give me a fighting chance.” Trump replied “On it!” and later mourned him Tuesday on Truth Social as a “Great Influencer” and “fantastic guy” who “bravely fought” and respected him early. “He will be truly missed.”
Adams leaves a legacy of laughs amid the mess—and a reminder that words carry weight.





