Scott Adams, the influential cartoonist behind Dilbert who later became a prominent business writer and political commentator, has died after a prolonged battle with prostate cancer. He was 68.
According to the New York Post, the announcement was made Tuesday morning during Adams’ livestream by his ex-wife and caregiver, Shelly, who said he passed away shortly before the show began.
“Unfortunately, this isn’t good news,” Shelly told viewers. “Of course, he waited ’til just before the show started, but he’s not with us anymore.”
Shelly also read a final message Adams had prepared in advance.
“If you’re reading this, things did not go well for me,” the message began. “I have a few things to say before I go. My body fell before my brain. I am of sound mind as I write this, January 1, 2026.”
In the message, Adams reflected on faith, family, and purpose. He wrote that early in life he focused on becoming “a worthy husband and parent” and expressed gratitude for those years, even though his marriage eventually ended “in a highly amicable way.”
Adams publicly revealed in May 2025 that he had been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer. He later disclosed that the disease had progressed to Stage 4 and spread to his bones.
“I talked to my radiologist yesterday, and it’s all bad news — the odds of me recovering are essentially zero,” Adams said during a Jan. 1 episode of his “Real Coffee with Scott Adams” podcast. “So there’s no chance that I’ll get my feeling back in my legs.”
On Monday, Shelly confirmed Adams was receiving hospice care at his Northern California home and had only days left to live.
Adams first rose to fame through Dilbert, the long-running comic strip that skewered corporate culture and workplace dysfunction. The strip made him a household name and a defining voice for office workers navigating bureaucracy and managerial incompetence.
Later in his career, Adams gained a new audience through books and online commentary. His 2013 bestseller, How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big, promoted systems-based thinking and the idea of building a “talent stack” rather than chasing traditional credentials.
In 2015, Adams turned his attention to politics, drawing attention for predicting that Donald Trump would win the Republican nomination and the presidency. He analyzed political messaging through what he called a “persuasion filter,” judging rhetoric by effectiveness rather than truth claims.
That approach fueled his daily livestream, eventually titled Coffee with Scott Adams, which attracted millions of regular viewers and listeners.
Adams’ later years were marked by controversy, including accusations of racism in 2023 that led to his comic strip being dropped and publishing deals canceled. He responded by self-publishing and moving his work to independent platforms.
In his final weeks, Adams invited followers to share how his ideas had impacted their lives. He also confirmed a late-life embrace of Christianity, framing death as “just one more filter — and not one to fear.”














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