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Dilbert cartoon first published on Sunday 11th June 1989

Dilbert//57, first published 37 years ago on Sunday 11th June 1989


Tags

best friends dog favor animals


Official transcript

Dilbert sits in his chair and says, "Don't think of it as fetching, think of it as doing a favor for your best friend."

As he leaves the room, Dogbert says, "It's still pretty degrading."

Dogbert lifts up the bed covers and finds Dilbert's slippers. He thinks, "Grumble, grumble, grumble . . ."

Dogbert says, "Uh oh! It looks like Mr. Hedge Clippers wants to speak to Mr. Slippers!"

Dogbert hands Dilbert his shreaded slippers. Dogbert says, "Will you be needing your bathrobe too, O Great Master?"

originally published on dilbert.com


Open source transcript

DON'T THINK OF IT AS FETCHING, THINK OF IT AS DOING A FAVOR FOR YOUR BEST FRIEND.

IT'S STILL PRETTY DEGRADING GRUMBLE, GRUMBLE, GRUMBLE UH OH! IT LOOKS LIKE MR. HEDGE CLIPPERS WANTS TO SPEAK TO MR. SLIPPERS!

WILL YOU BE NEEDING YOUR BATHROBE TOO, 0 GREAT MASTER ?

collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive


AI Analysis

Comic Strip Title: "Slippers and Bathrobes"

Summary:

The comic strip revolves around a conversation between Dilbert, an engineer, and his dog, Dogbert, about a pair of slippers that have become worn out. The strip consists of four panels, each with a speech bubble and a caption.

Panel 1: Dilbert sits in a chair, holding a pair of slippers, and says, "Don't think of it as fetching, think of it as doing a favor for your best friend." Dogbert responds, "It's still pretty degrading."

Panel 2: Dogbert stands next to the bed, looking at the slippers, and says, "Grumble, grumble, grumble..." Dilbert asks, "Will you be needing your bathrobe too, or great master?"

Panel 3: Dilbert holds up the slippers, saying, "Uh oh, it looks like Mr. Hedge Clippers wants to speak to Mr. Slippers!"

Panel 4: Dogbert stands next to the bed, looking at the slippers, and says, "Grumble, grumble, grumble..." Dilbert asks, "Will you be needing your bathrobe too, or great master?"

The comic strip humorously portrays the relationship between Dilbert and Dogbert, highlighting their banter and playful interactions.

generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct


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Jokes and Humour