'Dilbert' author Scott Adams says comic strip about corporate office culture removed from 77 newspapers

Scott Adams has authored 'Dilbert' since 1989 but said newspaper owner Lee Enterprises has ended the comic in dozens of its publications

The "Dilbert" comic strip named after its title character struggling to make it up the corporate ladder and often pokes fun at office culture with satirical humor and social commentary has been canceled in nearly 80 markets, its author told Fox News. 

Scott Adams, who has written and illustrated the popular comic since 1989, said Lee Enterprises stopped printing it this week. The media company owns nearly 100 newspapers throughout the United States. 

"It was part of a larger overhaul, I believe, of comics, but why they decided what was in and what was out, that's not known to anybody except them, I guess," he told Fox News. 

Fox News has reached out to Lee Enterprises. 

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Scott Adams, the creator of "DILBERT" the comic strip, said the comic has been removed from 77 markets this week.   (Getty Images)

Adams noted that other comic strips were also permanently canceled but the decisions on which ones to get rid of were made individually. 

"Dilbert" appears in thousands of newspapers across 57 counties in 19 languages, according to Adams' website. The comic strip has been one of the most popular for many years and more than 20 million "Dilbert"-themed books and calendars have been printed. 

In recent years, Adams has poked fun at themes related to the workplace, most recently Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) issues and the introduction of a new character named "Dave," who is Black but identifies as White. 

Dave, who is named after Adams' brother, is a prankster who likes to mess with the boss, who is happy he has met his diversity quota, Adams said of the cartoon. 

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Scott Adams, cartoonist and author and creator of "Dilbert", poses for a portrait in his home office in Pleasanton, Calif.  (Lea Suzuki/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

Dilbert, the comic strip character struggling to make his way up the corporate ladder, is joined by William Burleigh (R), President and Chief Executive Officer of the E.W. Scripps Company, Douglas Stern (2nd from L), Pres. and CEO of United Media, and Richard Grasso (L), Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange. (HENNY RAY ABRAMS/AFP via Getty Images)

"All of the wokeness and anything that permeated from ESG… so that stuff made its way into the business world, and then it became proper content for Dilbert," Adams said. "The problem is that people see that even though it's a workplace-related joke, but it's more about how they implement it."

He said some newspapers voiced concerns after receiving complaints about the content, but he was not sure if that had anything to do with the removal of "Dilbert."

In Tuesday's strip, the supervisor is seen explaining to Dave how to increase the company's ESG rating.

"Dave, I need to boost our company's ESG rating, so I'm promoting you to be our CTO. I know you identify as White, so that won't help our ESG scores, but would it be too much trouble to identify as gay?" his boss asks. 

"Depends on how hard you want me to see it," Dave responds.

"Just wear better shirts," the supervisor replies. 

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"What I do is I talk about how the employees handle the situation. It's not about the goal of it. But that's enough to make people think that I must be taking sides politically," he said. 

Overall, the cancelation has dealt him a financial blow, Adams said. 

"It's substantial," he said. 

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