This is a list of episodes of the Dilbert animated series in the order that they were aired.
Season 1 (1999)
| # | Title | Director(s) | Writer(s) | Airdate | Prod. code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "The Name" | Seth Kearsley | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
January 25, 1999 | 101 |
| Dilbert is tasked with naming a product which hasn't even been designed yet. | |||||
| 2 | "The Competition" | Seth Kearsley | Ned Goldreyer | February 1, 1999 | 103 |
| Dilbert is fired from his job when he is suspected of being a spy for a rival company. He then introduces the idea of a marketing department to a successful company with disastrous results. | |||||
| 3 | "The Prototype" | Alfred Gimeno | Jeff Kahn | February 8, 1999 | 102 |
| Dilbert and Alice must work together to stop a rival team led by the legendary "Lena" from stealing their ideas and presenting them to the Boss as her own. | |||||
| 4 | "The Takeover" | Andi Klein | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ned Goldreyer |
February 15, 1999 | 106 |
| Dilbert and Wally become majority shareholders of their company after Dogbert manipulates the stock. | |||||
| 5 | "Testing" | Chris Dozois | David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
February 22, 1999 | 104 |
| The Gruntmaster 6000 prototype is put to the test by an evil masked test engineer named Bob Bastard, whom Alice is in love with. | |||||
| 6 | "Elbonian Trip" | Mike Kim | David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
March 1, 1999 | 105 |
| Dilbert, Alice, Wally, Dogbert and the Pointy-Haired Boss take a business trip to Elbonia. Alice and Dilbert attempt to free the Elbonian people while Wally becomes a prophet. | |||||
| 7 | "Tower of Babel" | Gloria Jenkins | David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
March 22, 1999 | 108 |
| The repetitive passing on of the same cold strain in Dilbert's office causes it to mutate, in turn mutating his coworkers. Rather than eliminate the virus, the company decides to start fresh by moving everyone to a new office-- which Dilbert is tasked with designing. | |||||
| 8 | "Little People" | Barry Vodos | David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic, Scott Adams, Larry Charles |
April 5, 1999 | 107 |
| Dilbert discovers that his office is inhabited by a race of former employees who have been literally "down-sized". These tiny office mates are stealing supplies to fuel their dry-erase marker addiction. | |||||
| 9 | "The Knack" | Michael Goguen | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Andrew Borakove, Rachel Powell |
April 21, 1999 | 110 |
| Dilbert loses "the knack" for technology when he drinks from the Boss's cup by mistake and gets management DNA. His following goof-ups send the world back to the Dark Ages. | |||||
| 10 | "Y2K" | Jennifer Graves, Bob Hathcock, Andi Tom |
Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Andrew Borakove, Rachel Powell |
May 3, 1999 | 109 |
| Dilbert is assigned the task of making an ancient mainframe Y2K-compatible. He finds Wally is his only hope. | |||||
| 11 | "Charity" | Chris Dozois | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
May 10, 1999 | 111 |
| Dilbert is forced to be a charity coordinator for the "Associated Way" charity drive. | |||||
| 12 | "Holiday" | Andi Klein | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic, Ned Goldreyer |
May 17, 1999 | 112 |
| Dilbert is annoyed at the amount of holidays because he believes it to be a waste of time. Dogbert concurrently convinces Congress to abandon all holidays in favor of a National Dogbert Day. | |||||
| 13 | "The Infomercial" | Todd Frederiksen, Joe Vaux |
Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ned Goldreyer |
May 24, 1999 | 113 |
| The pre-production Gruntmaster 6000 is scheduled to be tested by a Texan family, despite not being tested in the lab first. | |||||
Season 2 (1999–2000)
| # | Title | Director(s) | Writer(s) | Airdate | Prod. code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | "The Gift" | Gloria Jenkins | Ned Goldreyer | November 2, 1999 | 201 |
| Dilbert's attempts to find his mother the perfect birthday present lead him to the mall, where he discovers his long-lost father has been holed up at the food court for the past ten years. | |||||
| 15 | "The Shroud of Wally" | Andi Klein | Scott Adams | November 9, 1999 | 203 |
| Dilbert has a near-death experience when he has an accident at a gas station. Meanwhile, a group listening to a multi-level marketing speech become hypnotized, and through a bizzare accident create a religion based on Wally. | |||||
| 16 | "Art" | Linda Miller | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ned Goldreyer |
November 16, 1999 | 205 |
| Dilbert is assigned to create a digital work of art. The result ends up appealing the lowest common denominator of society and as a result destroys the value and popularity of classic artworks. | |||||
| 17 | "The Trial" | Chris Dozois | Joe Port, Joe Wiseman |
November 23, 1999 | 202 |
| Dilbert is sent to prison after being framed by the Pointy Haired Boss for a fatal traffic accident; once inside, he applies his knowledge of mathematics and engineering to prison life and takes over his cell block. | |||||
| 18 | "The Dupey" | Michael Goguen | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
December 7, 1999 | 204 |
| Dilbert's attempts to design a children's toy go horribly awry when they gain sentience and mutate into hideous yet benevolent creatures that want independence. | |||||
| 19 | "The Security Guard" | Rick Del Carmen | Scott Adams | January 18, 2000 | 207 |
| Dilbert trades places with his building's security guard. | |||||
| 20 | "The Merger" | Jim Hull | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
January 25, 2000 | 208 |
| The Boss decides that the company needs to merge with another, and chooses a company of brain-sucking extraterrestrials. | |||||
| 21 | "Hunger" | Craig R. Maras | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
February 1, 2000 | 206 |
| Dilbert almost ends world hunger by creating a new, safe artificial food, but it turns out to taste so horrible that not even people dying of starvation will eat it. | |||||
| 22 | "The Off-Site Meeting" | Seth Kearsley | Mark Steen, Ron Nelson, Scott Adams |
February 8, 2000 | 209 |
| Dilbert's home is chosen as the location for an off-site meeting when his company is sued by a dendrophile because of their deforestation policies. | |||||
| 23 | "The Assistant" | Gloria Jenkins, Declan M. Moran |
Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ron Nelson, Mark Steen |
February 15, 2000 | 210 |
| Dilbert is unwillingly promoted to management and given an assistant. | |||||
| 24 | "The Return" | Mike Kuntel | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ned Goldreyer |
February 22, 2000 | 213 |
| Dilbert tries to buy a greatly advanced computer online but has problems when he gets the wrong model. Jerry Seinfeld and Eugene Levy guest star as Comp-U-Comp and the plug guard, respectively. | |||||
| 25 | "The Virtual Employee" | Perry Zombalas | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ned Goldreyer |
May 30, 2000 | 212 |
| Dilbert, Alice and Wally hack into human resources and create a profile for a fake employee, Tod, so as to take advantage of an empty cubicle which hasn't been assigned to anyone. The plan backfires when rumors begin that Tod is real, eventually leading to his becoming a messianic figure. | |||||
| 26 | "Pregnancy" | Andi Klein | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
June 6, 2000 | 216 |
| Ratbert accidentally sends Dilbert's model rocket into space; it returns laced with a variety of human and extraterrestrial gametes, and after rectally impaling Dilbert, he becomes pregnant. | |||||
| 27 | "The Delivery" | Craig R. Maras | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
June 13, 2000 | 217 |
| Dilbert fights over the rights to keep his baby, a human-alien-cyborg hybrid whose various "parents" sue for joint custody. Stone Cold Steve Austin guest stars as himself. | |||||
| 28 | "Company Picnic" | Chris Dozios | Scott Adams, David Silverman, Stephen Sustrastic |
July 11, 2000 | 211 |
| The annual company picnic comes around and so does the softball game between Marketing and Engineering. This episode is based on Romeo and Juliet. | |||||
| 29 | "The Fact" | Linda Miller | Larry Charles, Scott Adams, Ron Nelson, Mark Steen |
July 18, 2000 | 215 |
| Dogbert posts false information on the Internet and releases a book about a made up disease called “Chronic Cubicle Syndrome.” | |||||
| 30 | "Ethics" | Michael Goguen | Larry Charles, Scott Adams |
July 25, 2000 | 214 |
| The company employees are forced to take ethical training classes but then Dilbert is made project lead for the national internet voting network. An attractive female employee of a special interest group attempts to seduce Dilbert, putting his ethical limitations to the test. | |||||
External links
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