Scott Adams
Blue Glow
Salon's TV picks for Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1999
Series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (8 p.m., WB) reruns the season opener, in which Buffy is having trouble adjusting to college life. The talking toy Dilbert designs for a fast-food restaurant turns evil on Dilbert (8:30 p.m., UPN). On Party of Five (9 p.m., Fox), the Salingers make sacrifices in order to cover Griffin’s hospital costs. Hey, he used to be family. Angel (9 p.m., WB) reruns the one where the man in (designer) black uncovers a demonic parasite that burrows into the bodies of lonely singles. Lily can’t turn her back on the vulnerable Jake on Once and Again (10 p.m., ABC).
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Specials
The animated classic Frosty the Snowman (8 p.m., CBS), narrated by Jimmy Durante, has its 30th anniversary airing. It’s followed by Frosty Returns (8:30 p.m., CBS), in which John Goodman has the voice of the roly-poly man of snow, who is threatened by an evil inventor’s snow-removal spray. And after he melts, they transplant his brain into the body of a young, muscular ice stud. (That’s a joke for “Now and Again” fans.) The week-long countdown of the 100 Greatest Videos Ever Made (8 p.m., MTV) marches on, as does the week-long I Love Lucy Marathon (9 p.m., Nickelodeon). America Undercover (10 p.m., HBO) profiles “Women Who Love Killers.”
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Sports
Basketball:
Spurs at Pacers (8 p.m., TNT)
Hockey:
Penguins at Devils (7:30 p.m., ESPN2)
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Talk
Rosie O’Donnell (syndicated) Liev Schreiber
David Letterman (CBS) Farrah Fawcett (rerun)
Jay Leno (NBC) Michael Caine, Christina Aguilera
Politically Incorrect (ABC) Clive Barker
Conan O’Brien (NBC) Jenna Elfman, Mark McKinney (rerun)
Joyce Millman is a writer living in the Bay Area. More Joyce Millman.
Blue Glow
Salon's TV picks for Tuesday, Nov. 9, 1999
Series
Willow and Oz may be headed for a breakup on Buffy the Vampire Slayer (8 p.m., WB), and all because Oz has the hots for a female werewolf. Dilbert has a near-death experience on a new episode of Dilbert (8:30 p.m., UPN). On Angel (9 p.m., WB), Angel’s police detective pal Kate asks our moussed hero for help in busting a crime lord. Debbie Reynolds returns as Grace’s mom on Will & Grace (9 p.m., NBC), and this time she’s brought a man for Will. On Judging Amy (10 p.m., CBS), Amy must decide the fate of a 15-year-old who killed a 10-year-old in a drive-by shooting. Rick is preoccupied with work, but Lily absolutely must have his undivided attention — yes, it’s another self-absorbed week on Once and Again (10 p.m., ABC). The Real World (10 p.m., MTV) says aloha to Ruthie and the gang in the final episode of its Honolulu season.
Continue Reading CloseJoyce Millman is a writer living in the Bay Area. More Joyce Millman.
Blue Glow
Salon's TV picks for Tuesday, Nov. 2, 1999
Series
On Buffy the Vampire Slayer (8 p.m., WB), Buffy attends a beer blast where the brew is laced with a demonic little something that brings out drinkers’ primal instincts. Must be Heineken. JAG (8 p.m., CBS) goes “X-File”-y with an episode in which the officer in charge of a psychic research project is charged with manslaughter when a subject commits suicide. Dilbert (8:30 p.m., UPN) has its season premiere. Dilbert revisits the mall where Dadbert abandoned him as a child, causing lifelong emotional trauma. Buck Henry and Jeri Ryan provide the guest voices. Cordelia moves into a new apartment, which happens to be haunted, on Angel (9 p.m., WB). Jeremy’s Y2K readiness test is a disaster on Sports Night (9:30 p.m., ABC). On Judging Amy (10 p.m., CBS), Amy presides over a child custody dispute between white foster parents and a black biological grandparent. Also, Maxine and a colleague (guest Marlee Matlin) disagree in a case involving a hearing-impaired child. Grace and Zoe meet their dad’s new girlfriend, and Rick and Karen are thrown into close quarters when they travel to Eli’s basketball tournament on Once and Again (10 p.m., ABC).
Continue Reading CloseJoyce Millman is a writer living in the Bay Area. More Joyce Millman.
Good times for Dilbert
Good times for Dilbert: By Janelle Brown. The world's best-loved cartoon engineer gets off on the tight job market, while his creator, Scott Adams, talks about Zippergate and the enduring stupidity of humankind.
People are stupid. That, in a nutshell, is the observation upon which Scott Adams, the doodler behind the “Dilbert” comic strip, has built his empire. Over the last nine years, Adams has unleashed a daily flood of cartoons — as well as books, calendars, a Web site and logo products galore — documenting the inanity of the workplace. Dilbert, the bespectacled engineer, has become a subversive hero to geeks worldwide who are frustrated with bad management.
Continue Reading CloseJanelle Brown is a contributing writer for Salon. More Janelle Brown.
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