Tom Nawrocki
American citizen
- Dilbert was an important cultural signifier, the first time most white-collar workers had seen their work lives accurately and sympathetically portrayed in the media. You couldn't walk through an office in the 1990s without seeing a Dilbert strip posted in several cubicles. 1/3
- I interviewed Scott Adams in the late 1990s, and found him smart and earnest, but also painfully full of himself. It only got worse: You probably missed the book where he bragged about being able to learn any task, such as playing tennis at a master level, within the space of a few days. 2/3
- It got even worse when he found a kindred spirit in Trump, and Adams ended his days rightfully loathed by a great number of people. The moral: Even horrible people can create important art.
- Marshall Manning: This is hard for me to say, Dad, but I just don't want to do this with my life. Peyton Manning: But this is our family's tradition and legacy! It's what everyone knows us for! And you're great at it. Marshall Manning: I know, but I just don't like making TV commercials.
- Star of Roger Corman's original "Little Shop of Horrors."