Dilbert cartoon first published on Tuesday 11th January 1994
Dilbert//1732, first published 32 years ago on Tuesday 11th January 1994
Tags
small group young funny single people socialize romances ski trips
Official transcript
"Dilbert, I'm forming a small clique of all the young, funny, single people in the department."
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
, I'M FORMING A SMALL CLIQUE OF ALL THE YOUNG, FUNNY, SINGLE PEOPLE IN THE DEPARTMENT WE'LL HAVE DRINKS DURING LUNCH, TALK ABOUT SKI TRIPS, AND HAVE ROMANCES WITHIN THE GROUP.
PLEASE...
JUST SHOOT ME NOW.
NO, NO...
WE NEED YOU TO DO OUR WORK.
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
The comic strip is titled "Dilbert" and was originally published in 1994.
Panel 1: Dilbert announces to his coworkers that he's forming a small clique of all the young, funny, single people in the department. He invites them to have drinks during lunch, talk about ski trips, and have romances within the group.
Panel 2: A woman responds with enthusiasm, expressing her interest in joining the group and participating in the activities.
Panel 3: Dilbert responds with a sarcastic tone, saying, "Please... just shoot me now. No, no... we need you to do our work." This suggests that Dilbert is not interested in forming a social clique and would rather focus on work.
Summary: The comic strip pokes fun at the idea of office cliques and the challenges of balancing social relationships with work responsibilities. It highlights the contrast between Dilbert's initial enthusiasm for forming a social group and his subsequent reluctance to engage in non-work-related activities.
generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct
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