Trump, Musk Pay Tribute to âGreat Influencerâ Scott Adams
- - Trump, Musk Pay Tribute to âGreat Influencerâ Scott Adams
Miranda JeyaretnamJanuary 14, 2026 at 5:46 AM
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Adams poses for a portrait in his home office in Pleasanton, Calif., on Jan. 6, 2014. Credit - Lea SuzukiâThe San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images
âThere are three people that have changed this country in the last 10 years,â Fox News host Greg Gutfeld declared on air on Tuesday. âTrump, Musk, and Scott Adams.â
President Donald Trump and tech titan Elon Musk were also among those who paid tribute to the cartoonist, best known as the creator of the office-set satirical comic strip Dilbert and later in life as a conservative commentator, who died on Tuesday at age 68 after a battle with cancer.
Adamsâ first wife and caregiver, Shelly Adams, announced via livestream on Tuesday that Adams had died while in hospice care at his Northern California home. Adams, who later in his career became a podcaster, revealed last year that his prostate cancer had spread to his bones and appealed to the President, for whom he was a vocal supporter, for help. Trump at the time said he would intervene to help Adams with his treatment.
âSadly, the Great Influencer, Scott Adams, has passed away,â Trump posted on Truth Social on Tuesday. âHe was a fantastic guy, who liked and respected me when it wasnât fashionable to do so. He bravely fought a long battle against a terrible disease. My condolences go out to his family, and all of his many friends and listeners. He will be truly missed. God bless you Scott!â
Trumpâs son, Donald Trump Jr., added in his own post on X about Adams: âYour candid commentary and sights will be truly missed. You taught us all so much.â
Musk also eulogized Adams in a post on X.
âEven though I knew his death was coming, as he told us it would, I still canât believe he has died,â Musk wrote. âRest in peace, good and great man, rest in peace.â
Adams left his own final message for the world, sharing how his desire to âadd the most to peopleâs lives, one way or anotherâ took him from cartoonist to author of several nonfiction âuseful booksâ to host of a podcast âdedicated to helping people think about the world, and their lives, in a more productive way.â
âI had an amazing life. I gave it everything I had. If you got any benefits from my work, Iâm asking you to pay it forward as best you can. That is the legacy I want,â Adams wrote. âBe useful. And please know I loved you all to the end.â
Adams was married to Shelly Miles from 2006 to 2014, and to his second wife, Kristina Basham, from 2020 to 2022. He was a stepfather to Milesâs two childrenâone of whom died of a fentanyl overdose in 2018âand Bashamâs two children.
In the livestream announcing Adamsâ death, Erica, a friend of Adams, called him âour best friend, our internet dad, our uncle, our mentor, our sage.â
Popular cartoonist
Adams told the New York Times in 2003 that he had wanted to be a cartoonist since he was five-years-old, but âwhen you reach an age when you understand likelihood and statistics, you lose that innocence that anything is possible.â For years, he followed a corporate path, but along the way, through cartoons scribbled out to amuse his colleagues, Dilbert was born.
While working at California-based telephone service provider Pacific Bell, Adams sent a batch of Dilbert comic strips to cartoon syndicates. The first strip was distributed by United Feature Syndicate to 35 newspapers and officially appeared on April 16, 1989.
âFor many downtrodden office workers, posting a Dilbert cartoon in their cubicle became a tiny flag of independence,â libertarian writer and lecturer James Bovard wrote in a tribute to Adams for the New York Post that first published last month and was after Adamsâ death. âFor tens of millions of his fans, Adams will always be the guy who brightened their lives by brilliantly mocking the absurdities and indignities they faced each day.â
Dilbert was among the first comics to be situated in an officeâand came years before many popular workplace sitcoms like The Office. Dilbertâs titular character, an engineer working in a cubicle at a high-tech company, goes through many of the routine yet farcical aspects of corporate bureaucracy that many Americans were familiar with. Other characters in the comics included Dilbertâs anthropomorphic megalomaniacal pet, Dogbert; his oblivious manager, known only as Pointy-Haired Boss; his co-workers, Alice, Asok, and Wally; and the sadistic head of HR Catbert.
Dilbert became a household face and name: he was turned into plush doll merchandise, desktop computer games, and even a vegetarian microwave burrito called the Dilberito that contained 100% of the daily recommended intake for 23 essential vitamins and minerals. At the peak of its popularity, Dilbert appeared in around 2,000 newspapers in at least 70 countries and 25 languages.
Adams won the prestigious National Cartoonist Societyâs Reuben Award in 1997. That same year, Dilbert was the face of a $30 million advertising campaign for Office Depot and the character was named one of TIMEâs most influential Americansâthe first fictional character to make the list.
âWe are rooting for him because he is our mouthpiece for the lessons we have accumulatedâbut are too afraid to expressâin our effort to avoid cubicular homicide,â TIME wrote at the time.
Adams became the first syndicated cartoonist to include his email address in his strip in 1993, according to the . He told the Times in 1995 that he was amazed to find so many readers who could relate to his comics.
âI heard from all these people who thought that they were the only ones, that they were in this unique, absurd situation. That they couldnât talk about their situation because no one would believe it,â he said.
Dilbert was also made into an animated TV series that premiered in 1999 and ran for two seasons before being canceled in 2000âwhich Adams controversially claimed two decades later was due to him being white. The series, which was helmed by Adams and Seinfeld writer Larry Charles, won a Primetime Emmy Award in the year it premiered.
Adamsâs 1996 book The Dilbert Principle draws on an idea introduced in his strip that âThe most ineffective workers will be systematically moved to the place where they can do the least damageâmanagement.â
âThroughout history, there have always been times when itâs very clear that the managers have all the power and the workers have none,â Adams told TIME in 1997. âThrough Dilbert, I would think the balance of power has slightly changed.â
He eventually turned to writing more books, including several nonfiction ones about business. These have included How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big (2013); Win Bigly (2017); Loserthink (2019); and Reframe Your Brain (2023).
Adamsâs 2004 novel The Religion War tells the story of a man trying to stop a calamitous war between Christians and Muslims. Adams told Bloomberg in 2017 that his religion-themed books would be his âultimate legacy.â In his final message, he said that while he was ânot a believer,â he was converting to Christianity because âthe risk-reward calculation for doing so looks attractive.â
To admirers, Adams âobliterated the dogmas propagated by bootlicking Washington pundits,â Bovard wrote. Bovard added in a post on X that Adamsâs âBS radar deserves to be in the Smithsonian Institute.â
In 2015, Adams predicted Trumpâs 2016 electoral victory, against most political forecasters, and endorsed him for President, suggesting that a presidency under Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton would diminish the status of men. The cover of Win Bigly features an illustration of Dogbert wearing what appears to be a toupee resembling Trumpâs hair. The book won Adams the attention of Trump, who invited him to a meeting at the White House.
âYouâll probably never know the impact the book had on the world, but I know, and it pleases me while giving me a sense of meaning that is impossible to describe,â Adams wrote in his final message. In 2020, Trump tweeted a clip from Adamsâs podcast in which Adams mocked then-presidential nominee Joe Biden.
âScott Adams was a true American original, and a great ally to the President of the United States and the entire administration. My prayers go to Scott and all of you who loved him,â Vice President J.D. Vance posted on X on Tuesday. âWe lost one of the good ones but weâll never forget him.â
Gutfeld, who called Adams a âmentorâ and one of his âclosest friends,â wrote in a tribute to Adams on X, âyou changed more lives and made the world infinitely better. God bless you and thank you for everything you did for me. We will always love you.â
Controversial figure
Adams debuted his podcast Real Coffee with Scott Adams in 2018, on which he commented on social and political news.
In a column published by conservative outlet National Review prior to Adamsâs death, Kathryn Jean Lopez praised his free-flowing commentary, which he had delivered daily for years even through sickness. âHeâs talking about some of the news of the day while trying to stay awake,â she wrote. âHeâs doing what he has become accustomed to do. And you get the impression heâd really rather talk about the news of the day than the day he might die.â
In a February 2023 livestream, Adams shared a Rasmussen Reports poll that found that only 53% of Black respondents agreed with the statement, âItâs okay to be white,â a phrase that has been associated with the alt-right movement and co-opted as a slogan by white supremacists, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Adams called Black Americans a âhate groupâ and said he did not âwant to have anything to do with them.â
âAnd I would say, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give white people is to get the hell away from Black people,â he said in the episode. He added that he had previously âidentifiedâ as Black âbecause I like to be on the winning team,â but after seeing the poll would âre-identify as white.â
Adams later defended his remarks, calling them hyperbole and said his words had been taken out of context.
But by then, his reckoning was swift. Many newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, and the USA Today Network, as well as distributor Andrews McMeel Syndication dropped Dilbert. The Sun Chronicle, a local newspaper in Attleboro, Mass., left the space occupied by Dilbert blank for a month âas a reminder of how racism has pervaded our society.â
Portfolio, the business imprint of Penguin Random House, canceled the release of Adamsâs then-forthcoming book Reframe Your Brain, which he later self-published.
The controversy led to closer scrutiny of past comments Adams had made. In a since-deleted blog post from 2006, Adams questioned the official 6-million death toll of the Holocaust. In another blog post from 2011, Adams wrote that âwomen are treated differently by society for exactly the same reason that children and the mentally handicapped are treated differently. Itâs just easier this way for everyone.â In another post from that year, Adams compared banning rape to ordering lions not to eat zebras, spawning a Change.org petition at the time to âtell Scott Adams that raping a woman is not a natural instinct.â
In an episode of his podcast from January 2023, Adams said âanti-vaxxers clearly are the winners at this pointâ of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Keith Knight, an illustrator and cartoonist, told NPR in 2023, âIt begs the question, now that everyone is piling on him, what took so long?â
After losing much of his backing in 2023, Adams posted on Twitter, âOnly the dying leftist Fake News industry canceled me (for out-of-context news of course). Social media and banking unaffected. Personal life improved. Never been more popular in my life. Zero pushback in person. Black and White conservatives solidly supporting me.â
Adams relaunched his comic strip as Dilbert Reborn on the Rumble-owned subscription platform Locals in March 2023.
Adams âwas his own man, which is a rare thing,â conservative political commentator Matt Walsh posted on X. âHe also died well â something even rarer still. He faced his death with clarity, courage, and honesty. That was his final service to the world, and perhaps his most important.â
In another post, Walsh lambasted criticisms of Scott in light of his death. âTo have monsters celebrate your death is not a bad thing. In fact it is a tribute,â he wrote. âBut to die and have no one either mourn or celebrate, to die and be forgotten, to have left no impact of any kind on the world, to have your existence add up to nothing in the end â that is the greatest horror. And itâs the fate of basically every leftist who gloated over Charlie [Kirk], and gloats now over Scott.â
Battle with cancer
Adams shared on his podcast last May that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer, although he had been dealing with the condition privately prior to his announcement because he feared that âonce you go public, youâre just the dying cancer guy.â He said the cancer had spread to his bones and that taking ivermectin and fenbendazole had not helped.
âEvery day, Adams goes live to talk, even in pain,â Lopez wrote in another column for National Review earlier this month. âGod only knows how many people he is helping along the way with his public vulnerability.â
In November, he said in a social media post that he had been approved for Pluvicto, a targeted radioligand therapy used to treat prostate cancer that was approved by the FDA in 2022, but that his healthcare provider, Kaiser Permanente, had âdropped the ballâ in scheduling his intravenous infusion. He directly appealed to Trump for help in bringing forward his treatment schedule.
âOn it!â Trump posted on Truth Social in response.
The next day, Adams said he was scheduled to be treated with Pluvicto. âThe Trump administration works fast,â he posted on X.
But in December, Adams shared that he was âparalyzed below the waistâ and had to undergo radiation treatment, which would delay his Pluvicto treatment.
âI talked to my radiologist yesterday, and itâs all bad newsâthe odds of me recovering are essentially zero,â Adams said on his podcast on Jan. 1. âIâll give you any updates if that changes, but it wonât.â
âYou should prepare yourself that January will probably be a month of transition,â he added, âone way or another.â
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ