![Dilbert creator Scott Adams was a comic-strip star. After racist comments, he says he's lost 80% of his income.](https://assets2.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2023/02/26/7a0d9cfc-096e-43c7-95b0-5ed5cb680e94/thumbnail/1200x630/d12b04f37e5d1b102f155085f2494c0d/ap23056731159869.jpg)
Dilbert creator Scott Adams was a comic-strip star. After racist comments, he says he's lost 80% of his income.
CBSN
Dilbert comic strip creator Scott Adams built a career based on his pointed and humorous views on the workplace. When it comes to describing his own current work environment, he summed it up on Sunday in two words: "train wreck."
Adams, who is White, is facing serious repercussions following recent comments he made on YouTube that were widely denounced as racist, hateful and discriminatory. Among other things, Adams referred to Black people as members of a "hate group" and urged White people "to get the hell away from Black people." Newspapers such the Los Angeles Times and the USA Today network as well as distributor Andrews McMeel Universal announced they would no longer work with the cartoonist or run his strip.
Adams, who quickly took to YouTube on Sunday to defend himself, disclosed details in the video about the impact of losing business. Adams said he is likely to lose 80% of his income from Dilbert due to the cancellations and expressed uncertainty about his future publishing career, which includes compilations of the comic strip as well as calendars and nonfiction books such as "How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big."