
© Lea Suzuki / The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images file
Cartoonist, author, and political commentator Scott Adams died Tuesday after
a battle with prostate cancer. He was 68.
His ex-wife and caregiver, Shelly, made the announcement on Adams's
live stream Tuesday morning.
"Unfortunately, this isn't good news," Shelly said. "Of course, he waited til just before the show started, but he's not with us anymore."
Shelly read aloud a "final message" that Adams "wanted to say" on the livestream.
"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."
After speaking about Christianity, Adams' message said, "For the first part of my life, I was focused on making myself a worthy husband and parent as a way to find meaning. That worked — but marriages don't always last forever, and mind ended in a highly amicable way. I'm grateful for those years and the people I came to call my family."Adams announced he was diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer in May 2025.
He said he had been
dealing with his condition privately for some time before his public announcement, but noted that the cancer 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 his
"Real Coffee with Scott Adams" podcast on Jan. 1. "I'll give you any updates if that changes, but it won't.
"So there's no chance that I'll get my feeling back in my legs, and I've got some ongoing heart failure, which is making it difficult to breathe sometimes during the day," the iconic artist continued. "However, you should prepare yourself that January will probably be a month of transition, one way or another."
On Monday, Shelly confirmed Adams was in hospice at his home in Northern California and
had only a few days left to live.Adams became famous through "Dilbert," the comic strip that poked fun at corporate culture with keen insight into the absurdity, cruelty and incompetence of management inside large organizations.In his last decade-and-a-half, however, Adams achieved wide influence through his business advice and political analysis. His 2013 bestseller, "How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big," is one of the most influential and entertaining business books of recent years.In it, Adams introduced the concept of using systems, rather than goals, to achieve success in life. He also advised readers to accumulate skills — a "talent stack" — rather than traditional credentials.
In 2015, Adams began commenting on politics after observing the first Republican presidential primary debate. When then-candidate Donald Trump responded to a moderator's question that accused him of mistreating women by interjecting, "Only Rosie O'Donnell," Adams took notice. A trained hypnotist, Adams predicted that Trump, then a huge underdog, would win the nomination — and the presidency.Adams drew ridicule for his bold claim. But he looked increasingly prescient as Trump dispensed with his opponents, the Republican establishment, and — eventually — Hillary Clinton.Adams used what he called the "persuasion filter": rather than judging whether political rhetoric was true or false, he simply evaluated it based on whether it was persuasive.
What began as a simple blog post became a daily live video stream — first on the now-defunct Periscope platform, then on a variety of outlets, including anti-cancel-culture Rumble (in which he had invested).
Adams began each show by brewing fresh coffee; he eventually called his livestream "Coffee with Scott Adams," and it became required viewing, or listening, for millions of fans, who poured their own mugs and tuned in at 10 a.m. Eastern for the "simultaneous sip."While he excelled at explaining Trump's tactics to a growing audience of Trump-supporting fans, Adams was also interested in explaining how Democrats, and the left-leaning media, interpreted events. He explained that the country was often watching "two movies on one screen," and argued — with great empathy for his opponents — that voters who felt genuinely frightened by Trump's ascent had been led into an emotional cul-de-sac by cynical leaders.Adams emphasized that he was not a Republican: "I'm further left than Bernie Sanders," he reminded viewers. He even endorsed Clinton in 2016 — for his own safety, he said. But he drew a conservative audience that soon included Trump's own advisers.
In 2017, Adams published
Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don't Matter, in which he extrapolated the lessons of Trump's unlikely victory. He followed that with
Loserthink, using his critiques of stale thinking in the media to teach positive mental habits.
During the coronavirus pandemic, Adams added an evening "swaddle," in which he wrapped himself in a flannel blanket, and offered advice for surviving lockdowns. One of his ideas was a concept he called "the user interface for reality." Given that we can only see reality through our own individual filters, he explained, we can choose which filter to use. The "Dilbert" filter, for example, predicted incompetence; the Trump filter anticipated victory. By adopting filters that guide us toward success, Adams argued, we not only convince ourselves that success is possible, but bend reality toward that outcome.
While generally pro-Trump, Adams was critical of the president on occasion, and also took unexpected political stances. When then-San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick began "taking a knee" for the national anthem in support of the fledgling Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement, Adams supported him, and admired the persuasive success of his protest. He even offered advice to leaders within BLM, notably New York's Hawk Newsome.
In 2023, he was accused of racism when he commented on a Rasmussen poll in which only 53% of black respondents agreed with the statement: "It's OK to be white." Adams quipped that it would be good to move away from people that felt that degree of hostility. He immediately found himself "canceled" — his comic strip dropped, his publishing contracts terminated.He began self-publishing his books, including "
Reframe Your Brain: The User Interface for Happiness and Success." He re-launched an edgier version of "Dilbert" on the independent Locals platform, and felt liberated to express his more controversial political views — such as that the 2020 election had likely been "rigged," given the increasingly evident corruption of nearly every other government system.
In the last weeks of his life, he posted on X, asking readers to share personal stories about how they had been affected by his teachings and podcasts. Adams shared intimate, and often painful, details of his life — losing a stepson to a fentanyl overdose in 2018, suffering through a second divorce in 2022, and fighting cancer.Despite his eventual paralysis from the waist down, Adams continued his live streams almost daily.He also embraced Christianity in his final days. While he would not divulge details about his faith, he confirmed his conversion in a final message that Shelly read on Tuesday's live stream.He reframed death, as he had reframed life: just one more filter — and not one to fear.
Reader Comments
In the end, it was inevitable that the Mediots would shit on him. In a way, that was a Good Thing, allowing him a long exit and on his own terms.
A life well-lived... and well left.
Salud!
Scott will be missed.
“Now you’ve got natural immunity and you have no vaccination in you. Can we all agree that that was the winning path? The smartest, happiest people are the ones who didn’t get the vaccination, and they’re still alive.”
I only ask cause my nieces husband is dead now as is a young gal but 20 years old from Wake Forest went to the same high school - Myers Park - as my girls did. And both my girls - so to speak - and my wife took the jab - and really evidence is getting monumental on this.
So - if you know - please share.
I should add, so I will - my niece's husband suffered from advance colon type cancer - and he had the BEST medical attention there is to offer being my family has connections - but he died nonetheless.
I was there when they put him in the ground.
Oh Lordy - there is going to be hell to pay...
Not kidding around.
BK
He definitely took the jab, multiple doses - apparently his main reasoning was he didn't want to be restricted from traveling and had a trip to Greece already scheduled.
But he skirted around saying directly that he regretted it, or blamed it for his cancer, making statements like the above stating that those who chose not to were the 'winners'. Which seems like an odd way to view things, since the majority who refused to take it were genuinely trying to warn others out of empathy and concern, not out of any desire to be right or to win anything.
This is a section of what he said in the same video, extremely sad (https://www.bitchute.com/video/45Tqi-KYzDE/)
"People were not using reason to make the decision [to take Covid shots]. …So I don't believe that the decisions were made on reason.
So I stand by that because people don't make decisions based on reason. I don't. You don't. People don't.
So everybody was dealing with their feelings, basically: What scares you the most? What makes you feel comfortable? In my case, it was based on my feelings about wanting to take a trip, basically. [That] is what pushed me over the line.
So here's what happened to me in the past years. That matrix-like mask kind of fell off. And I lost my illusion for a while. So being depressed is not about being in the wrong state of mind, which is the problem. In my case, being depressed was being in the right state of mind. …The part that made me depressed is when I saw things clearly. And I worked since then to rebuild my illusions. So when you ask me if I'm feeling better or depressed, I'm sort of in the process of rebuilding an illusion that I can live in without pain. And I'm not quite there yet because I could still see too much ugly. And I can't live happily in a world with this much ugly around me. I don’t mean physically ugly. I mean ugly ideas and thoughts. And I'm trying as hard as I can to rebuild a protective, imaginary shield of “everything's fine” when it isn’t. It definitely isn't. But you have to build up a little wall of imaginary protection. So I'm building up a little wall of imaginary protection as efficiently as I can. But it's hard work.
Then physically, I haven't figured out how to fix my physical problem. So, exercise — I don't know if I'll ever be able to exercise again.Let me just give you an idea. It's possible that I will never have another personal relationship for the rest of my life. It's possible that I'll never exercise again for the rest of my life. Because that's my current physical situation. Now, it could be that I can work through those things and everything will be fine. I can do better by next week. But the length of time it’s been, and the fact that I don't even have a clue of what's wrong — and I’m at that that certain age where things will fall apart — suggest that I could be at the end of my life. And on top of that, [I’m] feeling physically that I'm literally at the end of my life. But let me also tell you that I have a sort of at least a one-year minimum optimism buffer. So my one year optimism about it works like this. If it looks impossible, I still give myself a year. That's like a rule. So the system —doesn't matter what the problem is. Doesn't matter how much it hurts. Doesn't matter how much I want it to stop. I'll give myself one year to just fix that thing. So don't worry, I'm not gonna check out early, because I've got a year to fix this.
But I can tell you, if I felt like this in a year, I would look to kill myself. So let me say it directly. If I feel like this next year, I'm going to look to kill myself. Because I don't want to live like this. Like, I'm not going to do this — I'm not going to do this two years. I'll do this one year. I'll give you one year with this amount of pain. And then next — I’m not going to do two years. Promise you I won’t do two. "
Ken
What I have come to accept is sometimes "things" happen for a reason - makes it easier to live day-by-day with that philosophy that I think has merit.
Day by day I live.
I hear you and glad you're able to use it as opportunity to learn and grow. We can never let it win, but accept it as part of the challenge to find meaning in our existence in this often insane world, and there's no better approach than doing that on a day by day basis.
I like to think of Laozi's concept of being like water when current situations get me down...
“Water is fluid, soft, and yielding. But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield.”
We often think strength means resistance-pushing, grinding, overcoming, but water teaches something different: yielding without giving up. It doesn’t resist the rock. It flows around it. And slowly and quietly, it reshapes the landscape....
~
For me, my days of depression have been in remission for years now....but when I was younger - oh yeah - not sure I even knew "who I was" back then.....but as you say - "day-by-day"......sometimes there is wisdom in realizing - can't be "happy" all the time and then over time one can strive for balance. I know I do. I'm fortunate in that I have a supportive family and core group of long-time real-world friends - they help keep me balanced - I want to be the best I can be for them. Its a two-way street.
But seems this fella really was special based on the comments above.
May he rest in peace.
Condolences to the family.
RIP Scott Adams, condolences to the family, thanks for making my work days better. Damn, I'll miss Wally too!