A 2014 photo of Scott Adams by Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle
Scott Adams, creator of the Dilbert comic strip and a racist right-wing podcaster, died at the age of 68 of metastatic prostate cancer. His comic strip was dropped from syndication in 2023 after Mr. Adams made racist remarks.
"His first ex-wife, Shelly Miles, announced the death Tuesday on a livestream posted on Adams’ social media accounts. “He’s not with us right anymore,” she said. Adams revealed in 2025 that he had prostate cancer that had spread to his bones. Miles had said he was in hospice care in his Northern California home on Monday.
"'I had an amazing life,' the statement said in part. 'I gave it everything I had.'
"At its height, 'Dilbert,' with its mouthless, bespectacled hero in a white short-sleeved shirt and a perpetually curled red tie, appeared in 2,000 newspapers worldwide in at least 70 countries and 25 languages."
"As a cancer survivor, I would never gloat when bad people die of cancer. Plenty are, which is troubling.
"Scott Adams was a bad person, who said vile things. Relentlessly, over many years. It's perfectly ok to discuss that, as we do with the loathsome Al Capp, whose infamous self-destruction outmatched that of Adams.
"Adams could have been remembered fondly as a guy who made a silly, very successful comic strip in the final era of newspaper comics. All he he had to do was just keep his mouth shut and his vile thoughts to himself. He, and he alone, chose not to do that. He leaned into far-right racist politics. He reveled in it. He gloated about it.
"In the end, most of the damage he did was to his place in comics history. And that's fitting.
"We look back collectively at the beloved cartoonists we've lost. Their work is still revered, and they're personally worshiped by us comics folk, and many of you civilians. Charles Schulz, Jack Kirby, Al Jaffee, Bill Mauldin, Kliban, Richard Thompson, on and on. Their work lives on. Their legacies grow and grow.
"A week from now, Scott Adams and Dilbert, on the other hand, will be forgotten and seldom mentioned again. That's his legacy, and he alone wrote it."





























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