Back to today

Dilbert cartoon first published on Tuesday 19th November 2019

Dilbert//11175, first published seven years ago on Tuesday 19th November 2019

Meeting To Decide When To Meet


Tags

business, managers & supervisors, meeting, schedule, thursday, berate


Official transcript

boss: i need everyone to come to the thursday meeting so we can decide when to schedule our next meeting.

originally published on dilbert.com


Open source transcript

I NEED EVERYONE TO COME TO THE THURSDAY MEETING SO WE CAN DECIDE WHEN TO SCHEDULE OUR NEXT MEETING.

WHY DON'T WE JUST HAVE THE MEETING ON THURSDAY?

SEE ME LATER SO I CAN BERATE YOU FOR SAYING THAT.

DO WE NEED A MEETING TO SCHEDULE THAT?

collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive


AI Analysis

Comic Strip Title: "The Never-Ending Meeting"

Summary:

This comic strip, originally published in 2019, revolves around a group of employees discussing the scheduling of a meeting. The conversation begins with a request to schedule the next meeting, followed by a question about why they need to meet in the first place. One employee humorously suggests that they should meet more often, only to be met with skepticism from others. The comic strip pokes fun at the common phenomenon of meetings becoming unnecessary and unproductive, highlighting the absurdity of scheduling meetings to discuss meeting schedules.

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
Get your Dilbert fix on paper
  • Eagerly Awaiting Your Irrational Response (Volume 48) (Dilbert) by Scott Adams

  • When Did Ignorance Become a Point of View? (Dilbert Book) by Scott Adams

    • What Do You Call a Sociopath in a Cubicle?: Answer : A Coworker : A Dilbert Book by Scott Adams

    • How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life (The Scott Adams Success Series) by Scott Adams, Joshua Lisec

Search the Dilbert Archives