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Dilbert (TV series)

Dilbert is an American animated sitcom produced by Adelaide Productions, Idbox and United Media, and distributed by Columbia TriStar Television. The series is an adaptation of the comic strip of the same name by Scott Adams, who also served as executive producer and showrunner for the series along with former Seinfeld writer Larry Charles. The first episode was broadcast on January 25, 1999, and was UPN's highest-rated comedy series premiere at that point in the network's history; it lasted two seasons with thirty episodes on the network and won a Primetime Emmy before its cancellation.[1]

Dilbert
title card
Based onDilbert
by Scott Adams
Developed byScott Adams
Larry Charles
Voices ofDaniel Stern
Chris Elliott
Larry Miller
Gordon Hunt
Kathy Griffin
Jackie Hoffman
Jason Alexander
Theme music composerDanny Elfman
Arranged by
Steve Bartek
Opening theme"The Dilbert Zone"
ComposersAdam Cohen
Ian Dye
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes30 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersScott Adams
Larry Charles
ProducersJeffrey L. Goldstein
Ron Nelson
Kara Vallow
EditorMark Scheib
Running time22 minutes
Production companiesAdelaide Productions
Idbox
United Media
Columbia TriStar Television
DistributorSony Pictures Television
Release
Original networkUPN
Picture formatNTSC
Audio formatDolby Surround
Original releaseJanuary 25, 1999 (1999-01-25) –
July 25, 2000 (2000-07-25)

Synopsis

The series follows the adventures of a middle-aged white-collar office worker, named Dilbert, who is extremely intelligent in regards to all things that fall within the boundaries of electrical engineering.[2] Despite his intelligence he is unable to question certain processes that he believes to be inefficient, due to his lack of power within the organization. Thus, he is consistently found to be unsatisfied with the decisions that are made in his workplace, because he has many suggestions to improve the decision, yet is incapable of expressing them. Consequently, he is often found to show a pessimistic and frustrated attitude, which ultimately lands him in various comedic situations that revolve around concepts like leadership, teamwork, communication, and corporate culture.

History

The first season centers on the creation of a new product, the "Gruntmaster 6000". The first three episodes involve the idea process ("The Name", "The Prototype", and "The Competition" respectively); the fourth ("Testing") involves having it survive a malevolent company tester named "Bob Bastard", and the fifth ("Elbonian Trip") is about production in the famine-stricken fourth-world country of Elbonia. The prototype is delivered to an incredibly stupid family in Squiddler's Patch, Texas, during the thirteenth and final episode of the season, "Infomercial", even though it was not tested in a lab beforehand. The family's misuse of the prototype creates a black hole that sucks Dilbert in; he instantly wakes up in the meeting seen at the start of the episode, then locks his design lab to keep the prototype from being shipped out.[3]

The second season features seventeen episodes, bringing the total number of episodes to thirty. Unlike the first season, the episodes are not part of a larger story arc and have a different storyline for each of the episodes (with the exception of episodes 29 and 30, "Pregnancy" and "The Delivery"). Elbonia is revisited once more in "Hunger"; Dogbert still manages to scam people in "Art"; Dilbert is accused of mass murder in "The Trial"; and Wally gets his own disciples (the result of a complicated misunderstanding, the company launching a rocket for NASA, and a brainwashing seminar) in episode 16, "The Shroud of Wally".[4]

The theme music, "The Dilbert Zone", was written by Danny Elfman. It is an abbreviated instrumental rewrite of the theme from the film Forbidden Zone, originally performed by Elfman's band, The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo.

Conception

Sony Pictures acquired the rights to produce new animated Dilbert content, as the development and production for the animated series began once Sony bought the rights. Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert, decided to create the series for UPN because the network promised 13 episodes on air, while other networks would only consider the series against other programming options. Adams added to that "If we had gone with NBC, they would have given Dilbert a love interest with sexual tension." UPN was the sixth-ranked network at the time and picked up the show in hopes of broadening their appeal and to prove they were committed to riskier alternative shows. Adams stated about turning Dilbert into a series "It's a very freeing experience because doing the comic strip limits me to three (picture) panels with four lines or less of dialogue per issue, in the TV series, I have 21 minutes per episode to be funny. I can follow a theme from beginning to end, which will add lots of richness to the characters." Adams wanted the series to be animated because the live action version shot previously for FOX didn't translate well. Adams added to that "If Dilbert's going to be at the top of the Alps, you just draw it that way and you don't have to build an Alps scene. You can also violate some laws of physics, and cause and effect. People forgive it very easily. So it's much more freeing creatively."[5][6][7][8]

Cancellation

On November 22, 2006, when Adams was asked why the show was canceled, he explained:

It was on UPN, a network that few people watch. And because of some management screw-ups between the first and second seasons the time slot kept changing and we lost our viewers. We were also scheduled to follow the worst TV show ever made: Shasta McNasty. On TV, your viewership is 75% determined by how many people watched the show before yours. That killed us.[9]

On June 28, 2020, Adams claimed on Twitter that the show was cancelled because he was white and UPN had decided to focus on an African-American audience, and that he had been "discriminated against".[10]

Cast

Main

Griffin was starring in the NBC series Suddenly Susan during the time that Dilbert was in production. Under the terms of her contract with NBC, she could not receive on-screen credit for any roles in series that aired on other networks.[12]

Guest stars

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
113January 25, 1999 (1999-01-25)May 24, 1999 (1999-05-24)
217November 2, 1999 (1999-11-02)July 25, 2000 (2000-07-25)

Season 1 (1999)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
11"The Name"Seth KearsleyLarry Charles & Scott AdamsJanuary 25, 1999 (1999-01-25)101
Dilbert (Daniel Stern) is tasked with naming a product that hasn't even been designed yet, and the stress (brought on by a recurring nightmare) makes Dilbert think he's turning into a chicken.
22"The Prototype"Alfred GimenoJeff KahnFebruary 1, 1999 (1999-02-01)102
Dilbert and Alice (Kathy Griffin) must work together to stop a rival team led by the legendary "Lena" (Tress MacNeille) from stealing their ideas and presenting them to the Boss as her own.
33"The Competition"Seth KearsleyNed GoldreyerFebruary 8, 1999 (1999-02-08)103
Dilbert is fired from his job when he is suspected of being a spy for a rival company (which was a rumor cooked up by Dogbert's online newsletter) and gets hired at a company that actually treats their workers like people.
44"Testing"Chris DozoisDavid Silverman & Stephen SustarsicFebruary 22, 1999 (1999-02-22)104
The Gruntmaster 6000 prototype is put to the test by evil-masked test engineer Bob Bastard (Tom Kenny). Meanwhile, Dogbert (Chris Elliott) goes into space.
55"Elbonian Trip"Mike KimDavid Silverman & Stephen SustarsicMarch 1, 1999 (1999-03-01)105
Dilbert, Alice, Wally (Gordon Hunt), Dogbert, and the Pointy-Haired Boss (Larry Miller) take a business trip to Elbonia. Alice and Dilbert attempt to free the Elbonian people (Alice adopts an Elbonian baby while Dilbert introduces the workers to human rights) while Wally becomes a prophet, and Dogbert becomes a diplomat to Elbonia.
66"The Takeover"Andi KleinLarry Charles & Scott Adams and Ned GoldreyerFebruary 15, 1999 (1999-02-15)106
Dilbert and Wally become majority shareholders of their company after Dogbert manipulates the stock market.
77"Little People"Barry VodosDavid Silverman & Stephen Sustarsic
and Scott Adams & Larry Charles
April 5, 1999 (1999-04-05)107
Dilbert discovers that the office is inhabited by a race of former employees who have been "downsized" (literally shrunken down to size after they've been laid off) after finding all of his belongings used, the dry-erase markers disappearing, and X-rated websites on his computer.
88"Tower of Babel"Gloria JenkinsDavid Silverman & Stephen SustarsicMarch 22, 1999 (1999-03-22)108
The repetitive passing-on of the same cold strain in Dilbert's office causes it to mutate and turns the coworkers into monsters. Rather than eliminate the virus, the company decides to start fresh by moving everyone to a new office, which Dilbert is tasked with designing in exchange for a new office.
99"Y2K"Jennifer Graves, Bob Hathcock, and Andi TomAndrew Borakove, Rachel Powell,
and Scott Adams & Larry Charles
May 3, 1999 (1999-05-03)109
On the eve of the new millennium, everyone—except Dilbert—is making New Year's plans. While assuring everyone that the company is prepared for Y2K, Dilbert discovers that the computer mainframe's main processor isn't Y2K-compatible and all the company's systems will crash if it isn't fixed. Dilbert is rewarded for discovering this by being assigned to fix it, and he discovers that the system's original programmer was Wally. But have years of drudge work dulled his brain too much to be able to tackle this crucial task?
1010"The Knack"Michael GoguenNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams & Larry CharlesApril 21, 1999 (1999-04-21)110
Dilbert loses "the knack" for technology when he gets management DNA from accidentally drinking from the Boss's cup. His resulting missteps send the world back to the Dark Ages.
1111"Charity"Chris DozoisStephen Sustarsic & David Silverman
and Scott Adams & Larry Charles
May 10, 1999 (1999-05-10)111
Dilbert questions the idea of charity and is forced to be the coordinator for the "Associated Way" charity drive. Later, at the company charity carnival, Dogbert hits children in the face with baseballs.
1212"Holiday"Andi KleinNed Goldreyer, Stephen Sustarsic &
David Silverman, and Scott Adams & Larry Charles
May 17, 1999 (1999-05-17)112
Dilbert thinks there are too many time-wasting holidays; Dogbert concurrently convinces Congress to abandon all holidays in favor of a National Dogbert Day.
1313"The Infomercial"Todd Frederiksen and Joe VauxNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams & Larry CharlesMay 24, 1999 (1999-05-24)113
The pre-production, non-lab-tested Gruntmaster 6000 is scheduled to be tested by a Texan family whose ill treatment of it threatens to destroy the world. Meanwhile, the Boss begins predicting the future while asleep after injuring his head while making a commercial for the Gruntmaster 6000.

Season 2 (1999–2000)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
141"The Gift"Gloria JenkinsNed GoldreyerNovember 2, 1999 (1999-11-02)201
Dilbert's mother's birthday is coming up, and in search of the perfect gift, he returns to the mall where he was abandoned by his father (voiced by Buck Henry) years ago. 7 of 9 alarm clock voiced by Jeri Ryan.
152"The Trial"Chris DozoisJoe Wiseman & Joe PortNovember 23, 1999 (1999-11-23)202
Dilbert is arrested and sent to jail after the boss frames him for a fatal traffic accident that kills multiple nobel prize winners. Once inside, he applies his knowledge of mathematics and engineering to prison life and takes over his cell block.
163"The Shroud of Wally"Andi KleinScott AdamsNovember 9, 1999 (1999-11-09)203
Dilbert has a near-death experience at a gas station, and finds that the afterlife is exactly like the office. Meanwhile, a group listening to a multi-level marketing speech become hypnotized, and through a bizarre accident caused by a crashing space shuttle and the birthday kit create a religion based on Wally. Dilbert and Dogbert manage to cover up the crash, while Wally turns away his followers with his odd habits.
174"The Dupey"Michael GoguenLarry Charles & Scott AdamsDecember 7, 1999 (1999-12-07)204
Dilbert's attempts to design a Furby-style children's toy go horribly awry when the toys gain sentience and mutate into hideous but benevolent creatures that want independence.
185"Art"Linda MillerNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams & Larry CharlesNovember 16, 1999 (1999-11-16)205
Dilbert is assigned to create a digital work of art. The result, the "Blue Duck," ends up appealing to the lowest common denominator of society and destroys the value and popularity of classic artworks.
196"Hunger"Craig R. MarasScott Adams & Larry CharlesFebruary 1, 2000 (2000-02-01)206
Dilbert tries to end world hunger by creating a new, safe, artificial food, but it tastes so bad that even people dying of starvation refuse to eat it—until his mother (Jackie Hoffman) gets involved.
207"The Security Guard"Rick Del CarmenScott AdamsJanuary 18, 2000 (2000-01-18)207
After a heated debate, Dilbert and the building's security guard (voiced by Wayne Knight) trade jobs to see who can do the other's job better. Dilbert quickly finds himself in over his head when he discovers an illegal casino being run underneath the building.
218"The Merger"Jim HullStory by : David Silverman & Stephen Sustarsic
Teleplay by : Larry Charles & Scott Adams
January 25, 2000 (2000-01-25)208
The Boss decides that the company needs to merge with another, and chooses a company of brain-sucking extraterrestrials.
229"The Off-Site Meeting"Seth KearsleyRon Nelson, Mark Steen, and Scott AdamsFebruary 8, 2000 (2000-02-08)209
Dilbert's home is chosen as the location for an off-site meeting when a dendrophile sues his company because of their deforestation policies.
2310"The Assistant"Gloria Jenkins and Declan M. MoranMark Steen, Ron Nelson, and
Larry Charles & Scott Adams
February 15, 2000 (2000-02-15)210
To hide that there are engineering jobs elsewhere, Dilbert is unwillingly promoted to management and given an assistant (Andy Dick), sparking a showdown with the other engineers.
2411"Company Picnic"Chris DozoisDavid Silverman & Stephen Sustarsic and Scott AdamsJuly 11, 2000 (2000-07-11)211
The annual company picnic comes around and so does the softball game between Marketing and Engineering. This episode is based on Romeo and Juliet.
2512"The Virtual Employee"Perry ZombalasNed Goldreyer and Larry Charles & Scott AdamsMay 30, 2000 (2000-05-30)212
Dilbert and his co-workers find an empty cubicle and start dumping their obsolete computer equipment into it. To keep the marketing department from claiming the cubicle, they hack into the human resources database and create a profile for a fake engineer named Todd. The plan backfires when Todd is named project leader and develops a messianic reputation.
2613"The Return"Mike KunkelNed Goldreyer and Larry Charles & Scott AdamsFebruary 22, 2000 (2000-02-22)213
Dilbert tries to buy a computer online but gets the wrong model, leading to an unpleasant surprise when he tries to return it to the company warehouse. Jerry Seinfeld and Eugene Levy guest-star as Comp-U-Comp and the plug guard, respectively; Jon Favreau guest-stars as Holden Callfielder.
2714"Ethics"Michael GoguenLarry Charles & Scott AdamsJuly 25, 2000 (2000-07-25)214
After the company employees are forced to take ethical-training classes, Dilbert is put in charge of designing a nationwide Internet voting network. His scruples are put to the test when an attractive female representative of a tobacco special-interest group tries to seduce him.
2815"The Fact"Linda MillerRon Nelson, Mark Steen, and
Larry Charles & Scott Adams
July 18, 2000 (2000-07-18)215
Dogbert becomes rich and famous by writing a best-selling book about an imaginary disease, 'Chronic Cubicle Syndrome', and Dilbert finds himself saddled with the job of devising a cure.
2916"Pregnancy"Andi KleinLarry Charles & Scott AdamsJune 6, 2000 (2000-06-06)216
Ratbert accidentally sends Dilbert's model rocket into space. When it returns with samples of DNA from aliens, cows, hillbillies, engineers, and robots, it rectally impales Dilbert, impregnating him.
3017"The Delivery"Craig R. MarasLarry Charles & Scott AdamsJune 13, 2000 (2000-06-13)217
Dilbert's pregnancy turns into a media circus as the various "parents" of his baby sue for custody, with Steve Austin presiding over the hearing. Austin guest-stars as himself.

Syndication

Dilbert has aired on Fox Kids in different countries, and aired on Comedy Central from 2001 to 2005

Home media

 
The DVD cover for the complete series

Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Region 1 on January 27, 2004. The set included some special features including trailers and clip compilations with commentary by Scott Adams, executive producer Larry Charles, and voice actors Chris Elliott, Larry Miller, Kathy Griffin, and Gordon Hunt.[13] The DVDs can be played on some PCs and DVD players with Region 2.

The first disc contains seven episodes (1-7), the second disc contains six episodes (8-13), the third disc contains eight episodes (14-21), and the fourth disc contains nine episodes (22-30).

On November 8, 2013, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the home video rights to the series. They re-released the complete series on January 21, 2014.[14]

Reception

Ray Richmond of Variety.com liked the show stating "it's surely the wittiest thing the netlet has ever had the good fortune to schedule, and based on the opening two installments, it has the potential to score with the same upscale auds that flocked to "The Simpsons" and transformed Fox from a wannabe to a player a decade ago."[15] David Zurawik of The Baltimore Sun gave the show a positive review stating "sit down tonight in front of the tube with more reasonable expectations, and you will find yourself smiling, if not laughing out loud at least once or twice."[16] Terry Kelleher of People magazine picked Dilbert for "Show of the week" and said the show featured "smart, pointed humor aimed at corporate bureaucracy, mendacity and absurdity."[17] In 2017, James Charisma of Paste magazine ranked the show's opening sequence #13 on a list of The 75 Best TV Title Sequences of All Time.[18]

Ratings

Dilbert's premiere episode received a 7.3 rating from the nation's biggest 44 markets, the highest of the 1998–1999 season for UPN.[19] Across the whole country, the premiere episode received a 4.2 rating.[20]

Awards

  • Primetime Emmy: Outstanding Main Title Design – 1999[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Dilbert Debut Sets Record For Upn". Chicago Tribune. February 2, 1999. Retrieved September 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 249–251. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  3. ^ "Dilbert: The Complete Series : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "Dilbert: Complete Series : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  5. ^ Knutzen, Eirik. "An Animated Cartoon 'Dilbert' Comes To The Tube On Upn". The Morning Call. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  6. ^ Rubin, Sylvia (January 17, 1999). "Meeting of the Minds / 'Dilbert' creators slogged through corporate mire to bring lovable office dweeb to TV". SFGate. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  7. ^ Rozansky, Michael. "'Dilbert' Is Serious Business From The Cubicle To ... Practically Everywhere". philly.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  8. ^ Jicha, Tom. "Dilbert To Get A New Cubicle -- On Upn". SunSentinel. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  9. ^ Foster, Darren (November 22, 2006). "Scott Adams interview". GroundReport.com. from the original on February 9, 2014. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  10. ^ Sippell, Margareaux (June 29, 2020). "'Dilbert' Creator Scott Adams Says His UPN Show Was Canceled Because He Was White". TheWrap. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  11. ^ . The New York Daily News. Archived from the original on February 9, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2010.
  12. ^ "Chatty Kathy's credit no good on UPN's 'Dilbert'". New York Post. February 3, 1999. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  13. ^ . TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on November 9, 2013. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  14. ^ Mill Creek to Re-Release 'The Complete Series' on DVD 2013-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Richmond, Ray (January 25, 1999). "Review: 'Dilbert'". Variety. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  16. ^ Zurawik, David. "UPN is counting on 'Dilbert'". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  17. ^ Kelleher, Terry. "Picks and Pans Main: Tub". People Magazine. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  18. ^ Charisma, James (January 4, 2017). "The 75 Best TV Title Sequences of All Time". Paste. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  19. ^ Carter, Bill (January 27, 1999). "TV NOTES". The New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  20. ^ "TV Listings—January 25, 1999". TVTango.com. from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  21. ^ "Dilbert". The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved February 9, 2014.

External links

dilbert, series, dilbert, american, animated, sitcom, produced, adelaide, productions, idbox, united, media, distributed, columbia, tristar, television, series, adaptation, comic, strip, same, name, scott, adams, also, served, executive, producer, showrunner, . Dilbert is an American animated sitcom produced by Adelaide Productions Idbox and United Media and distributed by Columbia TriStar Television The series is an adaptation of the comic strip of the same name by Scott Adams who also served as executive producer and showrunner for the series along with former Seinfeld writer Larry Charles The first episode was broadcast on January 25 1999 and was UPN s highest rated comedy series premiere at that point in the network s history it lasted two seasons with thirty episodes on the network and won a Primetime Emmy before its cancellation 1 Dilberttitle cardBased onDilbertby Scott AdamsDeveloped byScott AdamsLarry CharlesVoices ofDaniel SternChris ElliottLarry MillerGordon HuntKathy GriffinJackie HoffmanJason AlexanderTheme music composerDanny ElfmanArranged by Steve BartekOpening theme The Dilbert Zone ComposersAdam CohenIan DyeCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons2No of episodes30 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersScott AdamsLarry CharlesProducersJeffrey L GoldsteinRon NelsonKara VallowEditorMark ScheibRunning time22 minutesProduction companiesAdelaide ProductionsIdboxUnited MediaColumbia TriStar TelevisionDistributorSony Pictures TelevisionReleaseOriginal networkUPNPicture formatNTSCAudio formatDolby SurroundOriginal releaseJanuary 25 1999 1999 01 25 July 25 2000 2000 07 25 Contents 1 Synopsis 2 History 2 1 Conception 2 2 Cancellation 3 Cast 3 1 Main 3 2 Guest stars 4 Episodes 4 1 Season 1 1999 4 2 Season 2 1999 2000 5 Syndication 6 Home media 7 Reception 7 1 Ratings 7 2 Awards 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksSynopsis EditThe series follows the adventures of a middle aged white collar office worker named Dilbert who is extremely intelligent in regards to all things that fall within the boundaries of electrical engineering 2 Despite his intelligence he is unable to question certain processes that he believes to be inefficient due to his lack of power within the organization Thus he is consistently found to be unsatisfied with the decisions that are made in his workplace because he has many suggestions to improve the decision yet is incapable of expressing them Consequently he is often found to show a pessimistic and frustrated attitude which ultimately lands him in various comedic situations that revolve around concepts like leadership teamwork communication and corporate culture History EditThe first season centers on the creation of a new product the Gruntmaster 6000 The first three episodes involve the idea process The Name The Prototype and The Competition respectively the fourth Testing involves having it survive a malevolent company tester named Bob Bastard and the fifth Elbonian Trip is about production in the famine stricken fourth world country of Elbonia The prototype is delivered to an incredibly stupid family in Squiddler s Patch Texas during the thirteenth and final episode of the season Infomercial even though it was not tested in a lab beforehand The family s misuse of the prototype creates a black hole that sucks Dilbert in he instantly wakes up in the meeting seen at the start of the episode then locks his design lab to keep the prototype from being shipped out 3 The second season features seventeen episodes bringing the total number of episodes to thirty Unlike the first season the episodes are not part of a larger story arc and have a different storyline for each of the episodes with the exception of episodes 29 and 30 Pregnancy and The Delivery Elbonia is revisited once more in Hunger Dogbert still manages to scam people in Art Dilbert is accused of mass murder in The Trial and Wally gets his own disciples the result of a complicated misunderstanding the company launching a rocket for NASA and a brainwashing seminar in episode 16 The Shroud of Wally 4 The theme music The Dilbert Zone was written by Danny Elfman It is an abbreviated instrumental rewrite of the theme from the film Forbidden Zone originally performed by Elfman s band The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo Conception Edit Sony Pictures acquired the rights to produce new animated Dilbert content as the development and production for the animated series began once Sony bought the rights Scott Adams the creator of Dilbert decided to create the series for UPN because the network promised 13 episodes on air while other networks would only consider the series against other programming options Adams added to that If we had gone with NBC they would have given Dilbert a love interest with sexual tension UPN was the sixth ranked network at the time and picked up the show in hopes of broadening their appeal and to prove they were committed to riskier alternative shows Adams stated about turning Dilbert into a series It s a very freeing experience because doing the comic strip limits me to three picture panels with four lines or less of dialogue per issue in the TV series I have 21 minutes per episode to be funny I can follow a theme from beginning to end which will add lots of richness to the characters Adams wanted the series to be animated because the live action version shot previously for FOX didn t translate well Adams added to that If Dilbert s going to be at the top of the Alps you just draw it that way and you don t have to build an Alps scene You can also violate some laws of physics and cause and effect People forgive it very easily So it s much more freeing creatively 5 6 7 8 Cancellation Edit On November 22 2006 when Adams was asked why the show was canceled he explained It was on UPN a network that few people watch And because of some management screw ups between the first and second seasons the time slot kept changing and we lost our viewers We were also scheduled to follow the worst TV show ever made Shasta McNasty On TV your viewership is 75 determined by how many people watched the show before yours That killed us 9 On June 28 2020 Adams claimed on Twitter that the show was cancelled because he was white and UPN had decided to focus on an African American audience and that he had been discriminated against 10 Cast EditMain Edit Daniel Stern as Dilbert 11 Chris Elliott as Dogbert Larry Miller as The Pointy Haired Boss Gordon Hunt as Wally Kathy Griffin as Alice Jackie Hoffman as Dilmom Jim Wise as Loud Howard Tom Kenny as Ratbert Asok additional voices Gary Kroeger as Additional voices Maurice LaMarche as The World s Smartest Garbageman Bob the Dinosaur additional voices Tress MacNeille as Carol Lena additional voices Jason Alexander as CatbertGriffin was starring in the NBC series Suddenly Susan during the time that Dilbert was in production Under the terms of her contract with NBC she could not receive on screen credit for any roles in series that aired on other networks 12 Guest stars Edit Stone Cold Steve Austin as Himself Jennifer Bransford as Ashley Andy Dick as Dilbert s Assistant Alfonso Jon Favreau as Holden Callfielder Gilbert Gottfried as Accounting Troll Tom Green as Jerrold Christopher Guest as The Dupey Buck Henry as Dadbert Harry Kalas as Baseball Announcer Wayne Knight as Path E Tech Security Guard Jay Leno as Himself Eugene Levy as Comp U Comp s Plug Guard Camryn Manheim as Juliet Mr Moviefone as Himself Chazz Palminteri as Leonardo da Vinci Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine Alarm Clock Jerry Seinfeld as Comp U Comp Billy West as Vibrating Chair Salesman Rioting Engineer Pilot episode only Episodes EditSeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired113January 25 1999 1999 01 25 May 24 1999 1999 05 24 217November 2 1999 1999 11 02 July 25 2000 2000 07 25 Season 1 1999 Edit No overallNo inseasonTitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd code11 The Name Seth KearsleyLarry Charles amp Scott AdamsJanuary 25 1999 1999 01 25 101Dilbert Daniel Stern is tasked with naming a product that hasn t even been designed yet and the stress brought on by a recurring nightmare makes Dilbert think he s turning into a chicken 22 The Prototype Alfred GimenoJeff KahnFebruary 1 1999 1999 02 01 102Dilbert and Alice Kathy Griffin must work together to stop a rival team led by the legendary Lena Tress MacNeille from stealing their ideas and presenting them to the Boss as her own 33 The Competition Seth KearsleyNed GoldreyerFebruary 8 1999 1999 02 08 103Dilbert is fired from his job when he is suspected of being a spy for a rival company which was a rumor cooked up by Dogbert s online newsletter and gets hired at a company that actually treats their workers like people 44 Testing Chris DozoisDavid Silverman amp Stephen SustarsicFebruary 22 1999 1999 02 22 104The Gruntmaster 6000 prototype is put to the test by evil masked test engineer Bob Bastard Tom Kenny Meanwhile Dogbert Chris Elliott goes into space 55 Elbonian Trip Mike KimDavid Silverman amp Stephen SustarsicMarch 1 1999 1999 03 01 105Dilbert Alice Wally Gordon Hunt Dogbert and the Pointy Haired Boss Larry Miller take a business trip to Elbonia Alice and Dilbert attempt to free the Elbonian people Alice adopts an Elbonian baby while Dilbert introduces the workers to human rights while Wally becomes a prophet and Dogbert becomes a diplomat to Elbonia 66 The Takeover Andi KleinLarry Charles amp Scott Adams and Ned GoldreyerFebruary 15 1999 1999 02 15 106Dilbert and Wally become majority shareholders of their company after Dogbert manipulates the stock market 77 Little People Barry VodosDavid Silverman amp Stephen Sustarsic and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesApril 5 1999 1999 04 05 107Dilbert discovers that the office is inhabited by a race of former employees who have been downsized literally shrunken down to size after they ve been laid off after finding all of his belongings used the dry erase markers disappearing and X rated websites on his computer 88 Tower of Babel Gloria JenkinsDavid Silverman amp Stephen SustarsicMarch 22 1999 1999 03 22 108The repetitive passing on of the same cold strain in Dilbert s office causes it to mutate and turns the coworkers into monsters Rather than eliminate the virus the company decides to start fresh by moving everyone to a new office which Dilbert is tasked with designing in exchange for a new office 99 Y2K Jennifer Graves Bob Hathcock and Andi TomAndrew Borakove Rachel Powell and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesMay 3 1999 1999 05 03 109On the eve of the new millennium everyone except Dilbert is making New Year s plans While assuring everyone that the company is prepared for Y2K Dilbert discovers that the computer mainframe s main processor isn t Y2K compatible and all the company s systems will crash if it isn t fixed Dilbert is rewarded for discovering this by being assigned to fix it and he discovers that the system s original programmer was Wally But have years of drudge work dulled his brain too much to be able to tackle this crucial task 1010 The Knack Michael GoguenNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesApril 21 1999 1999 04 21 110Dilbert loses the knack for technology when he gets management DNA from accidentally drinking from the Boss s cup His resulting missteps send the world back to the Dark Ages 1111 Charity Chris DozoisStephen Sustarsic amp David Silverman and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesMay 10 1999 1999 05 10 111Dilbert questions the idea of charity and is forced to be the coordinator for the Associated Way charity drive Later at the company charity carnival Dogbert hits children in the face with baseballs 1212 Holiday Andi KleinNed Goldreyer Stephen Sustarsic amp David Silverman and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesMay 17 1999 1999 05 17 112Dilbert thinks there are too many time wasting holidays Dogbert concurrently convinces Congress to abandon all holidays in favor of a National Dogbert Day 1313 The Infomercial Todd Frederiksen and Joe VauxNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesMay 24 1999 1999 05 24 113The pre production non lab tested Gruntmaster 6000 is scheduled to be tested by a Texan family whose ill treatment of it threatens to destroy the world Meanwhile the Boss begins predicting the future while asleep after injuring his head while making a commercial for the Gruntmaster 6000 Season 2 1999 2000 Edit No overallNo inseasonTitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd code141 The Gift Gloria JenkinsNed GoldreyerNovember 2 1999 1999 11 02 201Dilbert s mother s birthday is coming up and in search of the perfect gift he returns to the mall where he was abandoned by his father voiced by Buck Henry years ago 7 of 9 alarm clock voiced by Jeri Ryan 152 The Trial Chris DozoisJoe Wiseman amp Joe PortNovember 23 1999 1999 11 23 202Dilbert is arrested and sent to jail after the boss frames him for a fatal traffic accident that kills multiple nobel prize winners Once inside he applies his knowledge of mathematics and engineering to prison life and takes over his cell block 163 The Shroud of Wally Andi KleinScott AdamsNovember 9 1999 1999 11 09 203Dilbert has a near death experience at a gas station and finds that the afterlife is exactly like the office Meanwhile a group listening to a multi level marketing speech become hypnotized and through a bizarre accident caused by a crashing space shuttle and the birthday kit create a religion based on Wally Dilbert and Dogbert manage to cover up the crash while Wally turns away his followers with his odd habits 174 The Dupey Michael GoguenLarry Charles amp Scott AdamsDecember 7 1999 1999 12 07 204Dilbert s attempts to design a Furby style children s toy go horribly awry when the toys gain sentience and mutate into hideous but benevolent creatures that want independence 185 Art Linda MillerNed Goldreyer and Scott Adams amp Larry CharlesNovember 16 1999 1999 11 16 205Dilbert is assigned to create a digital work of art The result the Blue Duck ends up appealing to the lowest common denominator of society and destroys the value and popularity of classic artworks 196 Hunger Craig R MarasScott Adams amp Larry CharlesFebruary 1 2000 2000 02 01 206Dilbert tries to end world hunger by creating a new safe artificial food but it tastes so bad that even people dying of starvation refuse to eat it until his mother Jackie Hoffman gets involved 207 The Security Guard Rick Del CarmenScott AdamsJanuary 18 2000 2000 01 18 207After a heated debate Dilbert and the building s security guard voiced by Wayne Knight trade jobs to see who can do the other s job better Dilbert quickly finds himself in over his head when he discovers an illegal casino being run underneath the building 218 The Merger Jim HullStory by David Silverman amp Stephen SustarsicTeleplay by Larry Charles amp Scott AdamsJanuary 25 2000 2000 01 25 208The Boss decides that the company needs to merge with another and chooses a company of brain sucking extraterrestrials 229 The Off Site Meeting Seth KearsleyRon Nelson Mark Steen and Scott AdamsFebruary 8 2000 2000 02 08 209Dilbert s home is chosen as the location for an off site meeting when a dendrophile sues his company because of their deforestation policies 2310 The Assistant Gloria Jenkins and Declan M MoranMark Steen Ron Nelson and Larry Charles amp Scott AdamsFebruary 15 2000 2000 02 15 210To hide that there are engineering jobs elsewhere Dilbert is unwillingly promoted to management and given an assistant Andy Dick sparking a showdown with the other engineers 2411 Company Picnic Chris DozoisDavid Silverman amp Stephen Sustarsic and Scott AdamsJuly 11 2000 2000 07 11 211The annual company picnic comes around and so does the softball game between Marketing and Engineering This episode is based on Romeo and Juliet 2512 The Virtual Employee Perry ZombalasNed Goldreyer and Larry Charles amp Scott AdamsMay 30 2000 2000 05 30 212Dilbert and his co workers find an empty cubicle and start dumping their obsolete computer equipment into it To keep the marketing department from claiming the cubicle they hack into the human resources database and create a profile for a fake engineer named Todd The plan backfires when Todd is named project leader and develops a messianic reputation 2613 The Return Mike KunkelNed Goldreyer and Larry Charles amp Scott AdamsFebruary 22 2000 2000 02 22 213Dilbert tries to buy a computer online but gets the wrong model leading to an unpleasant surprise when he tries to return it to the company warehouse Jerry Seinfeld and Eugene Levy guest star as Comp U Comp and the plug guard respectively Jon Favreau guest stars as Holden Callfielder 2714 Ethics Michael GoguenLarry Charles amp Scott AdamsJuly 25 2000 2000 07 25 214After the company employees are forced to take ethical training classes Dilbert is put in charge of designing a nationwide Internet voting network His scruples are put to the test when an attractive female representative of a tobacco special interest group tries to seduce him 2815 The Fact Linda MillerRon Nelson Mark Steen and Larry Charles amp Scott AdamsJuly 18 2000 2000 07 18 215Dogbert becomes rich and famous by writing a best selling book about an imaginary disease Chronic Cubicle Syndrome and Dilbert finds himself saddled with the job of devising a cure 2916 Pregnancy Andi KleinLarry Charles amp Scott AdamsJune 6 2000 2000 06 06 216Ratbert accidentally sends Dilbert s model rocket into space When it returns with samples of DNA from aliens cows hillbillies engineers and robots it rectally impales Dilbert impregnating him 3017 The Delivery Craig R MarasLarry Charles amp Scott AdamsJune 13 2000 2000 06 13 217Dilbert s pregnancy turns into a media circus as the various parents of his baby sue for custody with Steve Austin presiding over the hearing Austin guest stars as himself Syndication EditDilbert has aired on Fox Kids in different countries and aired on Comedy Central from 2001 to 2005Home media Edit The DVD cover for the complete series Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Region 1 on January 27 2004 The set included some special features including trailers and clip compilations with commentary by Scott Adams executive producer Larry Charles and voice actors Chris Elliott Larry Miller Kathy Griffin and Gordon Hunt 13 The DVDs can be played on some PCs and DVD players with Region 2 The first disc contains seven episodes 1 7 the second disc contains six episodes 8 13 the third disc contains eight episodes 14 21 and the fourth disc contains nine episodes 22 30 On November 8 2013 it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the home video rights to the series They re released the complete series on January 21 2014 14 Reception EditRay Richmond of Variety com liked the show stating it s surely the wittiest thing the netlet has ever had the good fortune to schedule and based on the opening two installments it has the potential to score with the same upscale auds that flocked to The Simpsons and transformed Fox from a wannabe to a player a decade ago 15 David Zurawik of The Baltimore Sun gave the show a positive review stating sit down tonight in front of the tube with more reasonable expectations and you will find yourself smiling if not laughing out loud at least once or twice 16 Terry Kelleher of People magazine picked Dilbert for Show of the week and said the show featured smart pointed humor aimed at corporate bureaucracy mendacity and absurdity 17 In 2017 James Charisma of Paste magazine ranked the show s opening sequence 13 on a list of The 75 Best TV Title Sequences of All Time 18 Ratings Edit Dilbert s premiere episode received a 7 3 rating from the nation s biggest 44 markets the highest of the 1998 1999 season for UPN 19 Across the whole country the premiere episode received a 4 2 rating 20 Awards Edit Primetime Emmy Outstanding Main Title Design 1999 21 See also EditDilbertReferences Edit Dilbert Debut Sets Record For Upn Chicago Tribune February 2 1999 Retrieved September 9 2010 Erickson Hal 2005 Television Cartoon Shows An Illustrated Encyclopedia 1949 Through 2003 2nd ed McFarland amp Co pp 249 251 ISBN 978 1476665993 Dilbert The Complete Series DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video Dvdtalk com Retrieved September 8 2013 Dilbert Complete Series DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video Dvdtalk com Retrieved September 8 2013 Knutzen Eirik An Animated Cartoon Dilbert Comes To The Tube On Upn The Morning Call Retrieved February 10 2014 Rubin Sylvia January 17 1999 Meeting of the Minds Dilbert creators slogged through corporate mire to bring lovable office dweeb to TV SFGate Retrieved February 10 2014 Rozansky Michael Dilbert Is Serious Business From The Cubicle To Practically Everywhere philly com Retrieved February 10 2014 Jicha Tom Dilbert To Get A New Cubicle On Upn SunSentinel Retrieved February 10 2014 Foster Darren November 22 2006 Scott Adams interview GroundReport com Archived from the original on February 9 2014 Retrieved February 9 2014 Sippell Margareaux June 29 2020 Dilbert Creator Scott Adams Says His UPN Show Was Canceled Because He Was White TheWrap Retrieved June 25 2022 Upn hopes ride on dilbert s white shirttails new animated series just doesn t do the job The New York Daily News Archived from the original on February 9 2014 Retrieved October 26 2010 Chatty Kathy s credit no good on UPN s Dilbert New York Post February 3 1999 Retrieved January 5 2016 Dilbert The Complete Series Review TVShowsOnDVD com Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved September 8 2013 Mill Creek to Re Release The Complete Series on DVD Archived 2013 11 09 at the Wayback Machine Richmond Ray January 25 1999 Review Dilbert Variety Retrieved February 9 2014 Zurawik David UPN is counting on Dilbert The Baltimore Sun Retrieved February 9 2014 Kelleher Terry Picks and Pans Main Tub People Magazine Retrieved February 9 2014 Charisma James January 4 2017 The 75 Best TV Title Sequences of All Time Paste Retrieved January 16 2017 Carter Bill January 27 1999 TV NOTES The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2014 TV Listings January 25 1999 TVTango com Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved January 21 2016 Dilbert The Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Retrieved February 9 2014 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Dilbert TV series Dilbert at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dilbert TV series amp oldid 1128603845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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