Dilbert cartoon first published on Thursday 13th July 1989
Dilbert//89, first published 37 years ago on Thursday 13th July 1989
Tags
date movies antisocial entertainment
Official transcript
Dilbert and Dogbert sit on pillows on the floor. Dilbert says, "I asked Debbie for a date, but she said she was feeling antisocial tonight."
Dilbert continues, "Then I asked Laura, but she said she was feeling antisocial, too . . . So Debbie and Laura decided to go to the movies with each other."
Dogbert says, "Those antisocial people always seem to hang out together."
Dilbert says, "Yeah . . ."
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
I ASKED DEBBIE FOR A DATE, BUT SHE SAID SHE WAS FEELING ANTISOCIAL TONIGHT.
THEN I ASKED LAURA, BUT SHE SAID SHE WAS FEELING ANTISOCIAL, TOO... 50 DEBBIE AND LAURA DECIDED TO GO TO THE MOVIES WITH EACH OTHER.
THOSE ANTISOCIAL PEOPLE ALWAYS SEEM TO HANG OUT TOGETHER.
YEAH...
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
The comic strip is titled "Antisocial Antics" and features Dilbert, a white, egg-shaped character with a large head and small body, sitting on a rug. He is wearing a white shirt and red tie.
Panel 1: Dilbert asks Debbie if she feels antisocial, to which she responds that she does.
Panel 2: Dilbert then asks Laura if she feels antisocial, and she also responds that she does.
Panel 3: Dilbert decides to go to the movies with both Debbie and Laura, despite their antisocial nature.
Panel 4: The three characters are shown sitting together, with Dilbert saying, "Yeah... those antisocial people always seem to hang out together."
Summary: The comic strip humorously explores the concept of antisocial behavior and how people with similar traits can still find common ground and socialize with each other.
generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct
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