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Dilbert cartoon first published on Wednesday 9th November 1994

Dilbert//2034, first published 32 years ago on Wednesday 9th November 1994


Tags

pile binders have view cubicle walls everyone binders


Official transcript

Wally stacks binders on his desk chair and tells Dilbert, ". . . And if I pile enough binders on my chair I'll have a window view!"

Wally stands on his chair and looks over the cubicle wall. Dilbert thinks as he walks away, "I've got to try that."

The Boss hands Ted a binder and says, "Wow! I've never seen so much interest in our business plan!"

Ted asks, "Can I have two?"

Behind them, Dilbert, Wally and their co-workers stand on their chairs looking out of their cubicles.

originally published on dilbert.com


Open source transcript

...

AND IF I PILE ENOUGH BINDERS ON MY CHAIR I'LL HAVE A WINDOW VIEW!

I'VE GOT TO TRY THAT.

WOW! IVE NEVER SEEN SO MUCH INTEREST IN OUR BUSINESS PLAN!

CAN I HAVE TWO?

collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive


AI Analysis

Title: "Office Antics"

This comic strip, originally published in 1994, showcases the humorous side of office life through the lens of Dilbert, a popular comic strip by Scott Adams.

Summary:

The strip begins with Dilbert, a bespectacled man with a distinctive appearance, standing in front of a window, gazing out at the view. His coworker, a balding man, approaches him and asks if he has enough binders to pile on his chair. Dilbert responds that he has tried, but the man insists that he must have missed something.

As the conversation progresses, the coworker becomes increasingly agitated, eventually exclaiming, "I've never seen so much interest in our business plan!" Dilbert, still looking out the window, replies, "Can I have two?"

The strip ends with the coworker holding up two binders, while Dilbert remains oblivious to the commotion around him.

Key Elements:

  • The comic strip highlights the absurdity of office politics and the quirks of human behavior.
  • The use of humor and satire to comment on the mundane aspects of office life.
  • The strip's visual style, featuring simple yet expressive characters and settings, adds to its comedic effect.

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


Accompanying textual content, such as title, tags and transcripts, is shown here if we have it. Not every comic has all of these, and they seem to be a bit hit and miss even on the official website.

Jokes and Humour