McDonald’s is now the blueprint for the fast food model, but its founders didn’t figure it out right away. You won’t believe what the restaurant used to sell.

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McDonald’s is now the blueprint for the fast food model, but its founders didn’t figure it out right away. You won’t believe what the restaurant used to sell.

Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews
Scott Adams, whose popular comic strip “Dilbert” captured the frustration of beleaguered, white-collar cubicle workers and satirized the ridiculousness of modern office culture until he was abruptly dropped from syndication in 2023 for racist remarks, has died. He was 68.
His first ex-wife, Shelly Miles, announced the death Tuesday on a livestream posted on Adams’ social media accounts. “He’s not with us right anymore,” she said. Adams revealed in 2025 that he had prostate cancer that had spread to his bones. Miles had said he was in hospice care in his Northern California home on Monday.
“I had an amazing life,” the statement said in part. “I gave it everything I had.”
At its height, “Dilbert,” with its mouthless, bespectacled hero in a white short-sleeved shirt and a perpetually curled red tie, appeared in 2,000 newspapers worldwide in at least 70 countries and 25 languages.
Adams was the 1997 recipient of the National Cartoonist Society’s Reuben Award, considered one of the most prestigious awards for cartoonists. That same year, “Dilbert” became the first fictional character to make Time magazine’s list of the most influential Americans.
“We are rooting for him because he is our mouthpiece for the lessons we have accumulated — but are too afraid to express — in our effort to avoid cubicular homicide,” the magazine said.
“Dilbert” strips were routinely photocopied, pinned up, emailed and posted online, a popularity that would spawn bestselling books, merchandise, commercials for Office Depot and an animated TV series, with Daniel Stern voicing Dilbert.
It all collapsed quickly in 2023 when Adams, who was white, repeatedly referred to Black people as members of a “hate group” and said he would no longer “help Black Americans.” He later said he was being hyperbolic, yet continued to defend his stance.
Almost immediately, newspapers dropped “Dilbert” and his distributor, Andrews McMeel Universal, severed ties with the cartoonist. The Sun Chronicle in Attleboro, Massachusetts, decided to keep the “Dilbert” space blank for a while “as a reminder of the racism that pervades our society.” A planned book was scrapped.
“He’s not being canceled. He’s experiencing the consequences of expressing his views,” Bill Holbrook, the creator of the strip “On the Fastrack,” told The Associated Press at the time. “I am in full support with him saying anything he wants to, but then he has to own the consequences of saying them.”
Adams relaunched the same daily comic strip under the name Dilbert Reborn via the video platform Rumble, popular with conservatives and far-right groups. He also hosted a podcast, “Real Coffee,” where talked about various political and social issues.
After Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show on ABC was suspended in September in the wake of the host’s comments on the murder of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, Adams stood for free speech.
“Would I like some revenge?” Adams said. “Yes. Yes, I would enjoy that. But that doesn’t mean I get it. That doesn’t mean I should pursue it. Doesn’t mean the world’s a better place if it happens.”
Adams, who earned a bachelor’s degree from Hartwick College and an MBA from the University of California, Berkeley, was working a corporate job at the Pacific Bell telephone company in the 1980s, sharing his cartoons to amuse co-workers. He drew Dilbert as a computer programmer and engineer for a high-tech company and mailed a batch to cartoon syndicators.
“The take on office life was new and on target and insightful,” Sarah Gillespie, who helped discover “Dilbert” in the 1980s at United Media, told The Washington Post. “I looked first for humor and only secondarily for art, which with ‘Dilbert’ was a good thing, as the art is universally acknowledged to be… not great.”
The first “Dilbert” comic strip officially appeared April 16, 1989, long before such workplace comedies as “Office Space” and “The Office.” It portrayed corporate culture as a “Severance”-like, Kafkaesque world of heavy bureaucracy and pointless benchmarks, where employee effort and skill were underappreciated.
The strip would introduce the “Dilbert Principle”: The most ineffective workers will be systematically moved to the place where they can do the least damage — management.
“Throughout history, there have always been times when it’s very clear that the managers have all the power and the workers have none,” Adams told Time. “Through ‘Dilbert,’ I would think the balance of power has slightly changed.”
Other strip characters included Dilbert’s pointy-haired boss; Asok, a young, naive intern; Wally, a middle-aged slacker; and Alice, a worker so frustrated that she was prone to frequent outbursts of rage. Then there was Dilbert’s pet, Dogbert, a megalomaniac.
“There’s a certain amount of anger you need to draw ‘Dilbert’ comics,” Adams told the Contra Costa Times in 2009.
In 1993, Adams became the first syndicated cartoonist to include his email address in his strip. That triggered a dialogue between the artist and his fans, giving Adams a fountain of ideas for the strip.
“Dilbert” was also known for generating aphorisms, like “All rumors are true — especially if your boss denies them” and “OK, let’s get this preliminary pre-meeting going.”
“If you can come to peace with the fact that you’re surrounded by idiots, you’ll realize that resistance is futile, your tension will dissipate, and you can sit back and have a good laugh at the expense of others,” Adams wrote in his 1996 book “The Dilbert Principle.”
In one real-life case, an Iowa worker was fired from the Catfish Bend Casino in 2007 for posting a “Dilbert” comic strip on the office bulletin board. In the strip, Adams wrote: “Why does it seem as if most of the decisions in my workplace are made by drunken lemurs?” A judge later sided with the worker; Adams helped find him a new job.
While Adams’ career fall seemed swift, careful readers of “Dilbert” saw a gradual darkening of the strip’s tone and its creator’s descent into misogyny, anti-immigration and racism.
He attracted attention for controversial comments, including saying in 2011 that women are treated differently by society for the same reason as children and the mentally disabled — “it’s just easier this way for everyone.” In a blog post from 2006, he questioned the death toll of the Holocaust.
In June 2020, Adams tweeted that when the “Dilbert” TV show ended in 2000 after just two seasons, it was “the third job I lost for being white.” But, at the time, he blamed it on lower viewership and time slot changes.
Adams’ beliefs began bleeding into his strips. In one in 2022, a boss says that traditional performance reviews would be replaced by a “wokeness” score. When an employee complains that could be subjective, the boss said, “That’ll cost you two points off your wokeness score, bigot.”
Adams put a brave face on his fall from grace, tweeting in 2023: “Only 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.”
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump remembered Adams as a “Great Influencer.”
“He was a fantastic guy, who liked and respected me when it wasn’t fashionable to do so. He bravely fought a long battle against a terrible disease,” the president posted on his social media platform Truth Social.
Politics
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One of the last well-known names in the world of newspaper comic strips has passed away.
Scott Adams — the cartoonist who created the character Dilbert and later launched a second career as a right-wing political influencer — has died.
He was 68 years old.

Word of Adams’ death comes courtesy of his first wife, Shelly Miles, who shared the news in a livestream on Tuesday morning.
“I had an amazing life,” Adams said in a statement shared by Miles. “I gave it everything I had.”
Adams revealed in May that he had been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer and given only months to live.
He explained that he was hesitant to reveal his diagnosis, as “once you go public, you’re just the dying cancer guy.”
However, Adams said that he decided to speak up after President Joe Biden revealed he had the same illness.

“I’d like to extend my respect and compassion for the ex-president and his family because they’re going through an especially tough time,” he said. “It’s a terrible disease.”
While working as an engineer for the Pacific Bell telephone company in the 1980s, Adams began doodling what would later become his most famous character.
Launching in 1989, Dilbert would eventually be published in more than 2,000 newspapers nationwide.
The comic’s influence is still apparent in workplace-skewering comedies like The Office.
In the early days of the internet, Adams proved to be adept at digital self-marketing, becoming one of the first mainstream cartoonists to launch his own website.

At the peak of his popularity, the Dilbert character appeared in commercials and television cartoons, and was nearly as heavily merchandised as predecessors like Garfield or Snoopy.
In his later years, Adams made an unexpected foray into the world of politics.
He first made headlines by predicting that Donald Trump would win the 2016 presidential election.
Adams was later invited to the White House following the publication of his Trump-themed book Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don’t Matter.
He continued to court controversy in the years that followed, and in 2020, “Dilbert” was dropped by hundreds of newspapers after Adams declared that Black Americans were “a hate group” and made numerous other racist remarks.
Adams continued to publish the comic strip online while steadily growing his influence among the far-right by posting incendiary remarks on social media.
At the time of his death, Adams had millions of followers across social media platforms.
Today, tens of thousands — including many who were disappointed by the comments Adams made in his later years — are paying tribute.
Scott Adams Cause of Death: ‘Dilbert’ Creator, Right-Wing Influencer Was 68 was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
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Is there anything more evil than an abusive parent?
Daytona Beach mother Talia Nelson will spend the next three decades behind bars for the torture and death of her teenage son.
At 14, he weighed only 33 pounds after years of imprisonment and abuse.
On January 1, 2024, first responders found an unconscious boy in a house of horrors.

In February 2024, a Volusia County grand jury indicted then-43-year-old Talia Nelson.
She faced multiple charges on the horrific death of her 14-year-old son.
The teenage victim, Zayke Smith-Nelson, weighed only 33 pounds at the time of his death.
On January 1 of 2024, emergency responders responded to a call about an unconscious child.
At the time, Nelson claimed that she had been cooking dinner when her son simply fell.

Smith-Nelson was pronounced dead at the hospital. The autopsy obviously revealed the cause of death to be homicide.
Authorities arrested Nelson on February 9.
Smith Nelson, a teenage boy, weighed only 33 pounds — the weight of a small dog. Put another way, he would be on the low end of the weight spectrum or underweight for a 4-year-old human.
The autopsy discovered severe malnutrition and dehydration. Scars and bruises covered the boy’s body.
To make this absolute horror even worse somehow, multiple bedsores indicated that he was likely unable to move much of the time.

The majority of abuse victims have few if any marks from the violence that their parents or other family inflict upon them.
However, in cases like the prolonged torture and killing of Zayke Smith-Nelson, the abuser realizes that they cannot send their victim to school.
This is why homeschooling and the barely existent regulation is the best friend of extreme abusers.
Indeed, officers who searched the residence found unopened homeschooling materials, possibly ordered to avoid questions.
Investigators found a room, presumably the victim’s, that contained no furniture and only soiled clothing. The room reportedly smelled of urine.
⚠️ WARNING: This post contains graphic descriptions of violence/gore/abuse
Talia Nelson, 45, of Daytona Beach, Florida, has been sentenced to 32 years in prison for the neglect & abuse that led to the death of her son, Zakye Smith-Nelson, 14. Nelson pleaded no contest to charges… pic.twitter.com/RzrDaWHBAj
— True Crime Updates (@TrueCrimeUpdat) January 6, 2026
Nelson claimed that her son had a rare bone disease, that he was lactose-intolerant, and that he was bulimic.
She also claimed that she could not recall the names of the doctors who had made these alleged determinations.
The investigation, however, showed that Smith-Nelson had not seen a doctor since 2020. Medical records showed that he had been in good health in June of that year.
Clearly, the three-and-a-half years that followed were filled with unthinkable torture at the hands of the woman who should have been protecting him.
Most abusers in our world tend to go unpunished, and often unreported. That is not the case for Nelson, however.

On January 5, now-45-year-old Talia Nelson entered no-contest pleas for aggravated manslaughter of a child and aggravation child-abuse.
As a result, she received a 32-year prison sentence.
Obviously, countless people have questions. Did this cruelty begin all at once, or was it a situation of escalating abuse? If Nelson had any co-conspirators, no reports or court records have mentioned them.
Ultimately, society as a whole failed to protect Zayke Smith-Nelson. Our legal system treats children as property of their parents in so many ways, trusting people to care for them simply because their reproductive systems happen to work properly.
How many other Smith-Nelsons are out there, unreported and undiscovered, buried under flower beds or locked in rooms waiting to die?
Talia Nelson: Daytona Beach Mom Will Serve 32 Years for Torture, Killing of Son was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
You may not have seen it yourself, but yes, certain branches of Aldi will sell goods from Trader Joe’s. However, you won’t see this in the States ever.

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