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Dilbert is an animated television series adaptation of the comic strip of the same name, produced by Adelaide Productions, Idbox, and United Media and distributed by Columbia TriStar Television. 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 UPN and won a Primetime Emmy before its cancellation.


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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. Although Dilbert's intelligence greatly surpasses that of his incompetent colleagues at work, 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 of the fact that many times 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.


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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 fifth ("Testing") involves having it survive a malevolent company tester named "Bob Bastard", and the sixth ("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.

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".

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

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."

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.


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Cast

Main

  • Daniel Stern - Dilbert
  • Chris Elliott - Dogbert
  • Larry Miller - The Pointy-Haired Boss
  • Gordon Hunt - Wally
  • Kathy Griffin - Alice (uncredited)
  • Jackie Hoffman - Dilmom
  • Jim Wise - Loud Howard
  • Tom Kenny - Ratbert, Asok, additional Voices
  • Gary Kroeger - Additional voices
  • Maurice LaMarche - The World's Smartest Garbageman, Bob the Dinosaur, additional voices
  • Tress MacNeille - Carol, Lena, additional voices
  • Jason Alexander - Catbert

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.

Guest stars

  • Stone Cold Steve Austin - Himself
  • Jennifer Bransford - Ashley
  • Andy Dick - Dilbert's Assistant Alfonso
  • Jon Favreau - Holden Callfielder
  • Gilbert Gottfried - Accounting Troll
  • Tom Green - Jerrold
  • Christopher Guest - The Dupey
  • Buck Henry - Dadbert
  • Harry Kalas - Baseball Announcer
  • Wayne Knight - Path-E-Tech Security Guard
  • Jay Leno - Himself
  • Eugene Levy - Comp-U-Comp's Plug Guard
  • Camryn Manheim - Juliet
  • Mr. Moviefone - Himself
  • Chazz Palminteri - Leonardo da Vinci
  • Jeri Ryan - Seven of Nine Alarm Clock
  • Jerry Seinfeld - Comp-U-Comp
  • Billy West - Vibrating Chair Salesman, Rioting Engineer (Pilot episode only)

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Episodes

Season 1 (1999)

Season 2 (1999-2000)


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Home releases

Sony Pictures 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. The DVDs can be played on some PCs and DVD players with Region 2. The complete series is available for free on Hulu and Crackle.

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

Four-Disc DVD

Dilbert: The Complete Series was released in 2004 on DVD with four discs.

  • The first disc contains episodes 1-7.
  • The second disc contains episodes 8-13.
  • The third disc contains episodes 14-21.
  • The fourth disc contains episodes 22-30.

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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." 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." 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." 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.

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. Across the whole country, the premiere episode received a 4.2 rating

Awards

  • Primetime Emmy: Outstanding Main Title Design - 1999

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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