Dilbert cartoon first published on Friday 24th July 1992
Dilbert//1196, first published 34 years ago on Friday 24th July 1992
Tags
dilbert office workers office worker prairie dogs swamped holes
Official transcript
The caption says, "Prairie dogs."
Three prairie dogs peek out of their holes. The caption says, "Office workers."
Dilbert, Wally and a man peek over the tops of their cubicles. The caption says, "Prairie dog workers."
Three prairie dogs wearing glasses peek out of their holes. One prairie dog says, "Man, I'm swamped."
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
PRAIRIE DOGS OFFICE WORKERS PRAIRIE DOG WORKERS MAN, I'M SWAMPED.
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
The comic strip is titled "Prairie Dogs" and features a humorous scene where prairie dogs are mistaken for office workers.
Panel 1: Prairie Dogs A group of prairie dogs are shown in a desert landscape, with one standing upright and looking around. The caption reads, "Prairie Dogs."
Panel 2: Office Workers The scene shifts to an office setting, where a group of people are shown sitting at desks, looking uninterested. The caption reads, "Office Workers."
Panel 3: Prairie Dog Workers The scene returns to the desert, where the prairie dogs are now shown digging holes and looking around. One of them says, "Man, I'm swamped." The caption reads, "Prairie Dog Workers."
Summary The comic strip uses humor to highlight the differences between office workers and prairie dogs, poking fun at the idea that humans are always busy and productive, while animals are often seen as lazy and unproductive.
generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct
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