dilBERT

bonddonraj

Par 100 posts (V.I.P)
Dilbert is an American comic strip written and illustrated by Scott Adams, first published on April 16, 1989.[1] The strip is known for its satirical office humor about a white-collar, micromanaged office featuring engineer Dilbert as the title character. The strip has spawned several books, an animated television series, a video game, and hundreds of Dilbert-themed merchandise items. Dilbert Future and The Joy of Work are among the most read books in the series. Adams received the National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award in 1997 and the Newspaper Comic Strip Award in the same year for his work on the strip. Dilbert appears online and in 2,000 newspapers worldwide in 65 countries and 25 languages.

The comic strip originally revolved around Dilbert and his "pet" dog Dogbert in their home. Many plots revolved around Dilbert's engineer nature or his bizarre inventions. Also prominent were plots based on Dogbert's megalomaniacal ambitions. Later, the location of most of the action moved to Dilbert's workplace and the strip started to satirize technology, workplace, and company issues. The comic strip's popular success is attributable to its workplace setting and themes, which are familiar to a large and appreciative audience;[3] Adams has said that switching the setting from Dilbert's home to his office was "when the strip really started to take off".[4] The workplace location is Silicon Valley.[5]

Dilbert portrays corporate culture as a Kafkaesque world of bureaucracy for its own sake and office politics that stand in the way of productivity, where employees' skills and efforts are not rewarded, and busy work is praised. Much of the humor emerges as the audience sees the characters making obviously ridiculous decisions that are natural reactions to mismanagement.

Themes explored include:

Engineers' personal traits
Idiosyncrasy of style
Hopelessness in dating (and general lack of social skills)
Attraction to tools and technological products
Business ethics (or lack thereof)
Esotericism
Incompetent and sadistic management
Scheduling and budgeting without reference to reality
Failure to reward success or penalize laziness
Penalizing employees for failures caused by bad management
Micromanagement
Failure to improve others' morale, lowering it instead
Failure to communicate objectives
Handling of projects doomed to failure or cancellation
Sadistic HR policies with evil rationale
Susceptibility to business trends and popular buzzwords
Corporate bureaucracy
ISO audits
Budgeting, accounting, payroll and financial advisors
Stupidity of the general public
Susceptibility to advertising
Susceptibility to peer pressure
Susceptibility to flattery
Gullibility in the face of obvious scams
Fourth World countries and outsourcing (Elbonia)
Dilapidation
Bizarre cultural habits
Lack of understanding of capitalism

Elbonia

The Republic of Elbonia is a fictional country to which Dilbert's company frequently outsources work. It is an impoverished and dysfunctional former communist state in Eastern Europe that has embraced capitalism,[6] although North Elbonia remains totalitarian. The entire country is covered in waist-deep mud; the inhabitants (aside from the occasional sentient pig) all have heavy beards and clothing similar to Orthodox Christian monks.
 
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