Dilbert cartoon first published on Monday 29th July 1991
Dilbert//835, first published 35 years ago on Monday 29th July 1991
Tags
dilbert dogbert psychologist invisible healthy juan cindy lecturer
Official transcript
Dilbert sits in his chair and Dogbert stands on the hassock. Dogbert says, "I've decided to become a pop psychologist and lecturer."
Dogbert continues, "My theory is that you can blame all of your problems on invisible people."
Dilbert replies, "That doesn't sound healthy."
Dogbert says, "Don't blame me. Talk to Juan and Cindy."
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
I'VE DECIDED TO BECOME A POP PSYCHOLOGIST AND LECTURER.
MY THEORY IS THAT YOU CAN BLAME ALL OF YOUR PROBLEMS ON INVISIBLE PEOPLE.
THAT DOESN'T SOUND HEALTHY.
DON'T BLAME ME. TALK TO JUAN AND CINDY.
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
Title: "The Invisible Problem"
Summary:
- A pop psychologist and lecturer, Dilbert, is introduced.
- He claims to have a theory that can explain all problems on invisible people.
- The theory is met with skepticism by the audience, who are confused and unimpressed.
- Dilbert's response is to blame the audience for not understanding his theory, and he invites them to talk to Juan and Cindy, two other characters who are also confused.
- The comic strip pokes fun at the idea of pop psychology and the tendency for people to seek out simplistic explanations for complex problems.
generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct
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