- Notable speakers have taken the stage at college graduation ceremonies in recent weeks.
- They've given new grads advice on taking risks, building community, and navigating AI at work.
- Here are some highlights.
High-profile writers, doctors, entrepreneurs, and actors are making their annual rounds through college commencement ceremonies.
They're dispensing some of their best advice to new grads preparing to take on the challenges that lie ahead, talking about everything from taking chances, surrounding yourself with the right people, and understanding your place in an AI-enabled workplace.
Here are some standout pieces of advice to the Class of 2025 from commencement ceremonies across the country:
Tech journalist Steven Levy
"You do have a great future ahead of you, no matter how smart and capable ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Llama get," author and tech journalist Steven Levy told graduates at the Temple University College of Liberal Arts on May 7.
"And here is the reason: You have something that no computer can ever have. It's a superpower, and every one of you has it in abundance," he said, according to Wired.
"The lords of AI are spending hundreds of billions of dollars to make their models think like accomplished humans. You have just spent four years at Temple University learning to think as accomplished humans. The difference is immeasurable," he said.
"Everything you have learned in the liberal arts — the humanities — depends on that connection. You bring your superpower to it."
Actress Jennifer Coolidge
"When you find the thing that you want to do, I really want to highly recommend — just friggin' go for it," Jennifer Coolidge, the star of HBO's White Lotus, told graduates at Emerson College on May 12.
"You really have to psych yourself up into bleeding absurd possibilities, and you have to believe that they are not absurd because there's nothing foolish or accidental about expecting things that are unattainable for yourself."
Kermit the Frog
Everyone's favorite Muppet shared "a little advice — if you're willing to listen to a frog" at the University of Maryland's commencement ceremony on May 22.
"Rather than jumping over someone to get what you want, consider reaching out your hand and taking the leap side by side. Because life is better when we leap together."
Actress Elizabeth Banks
"You're about to enter the incredibly competitive job market, so I can understand why you believe that life is a zero-sum game, that there's only so much opportunity to go around," actress Elizabeth Banks told graduates of the University of Pennsylvania on May 19.
"And if one person takes a bigger slice, everyone else has to make a smaller slice, and the total size of the pie remains the same. And that is true with actual pie," she said.
"But not with life, not with opportunity. So my advice to you is, as much as possible from here on out, take yourself out of that mindset."
Physician and author Abraham Verghese
Physician and author Abraham Verghese told Harvard graduates on May 29 to "make your decisions worthy of those who supported, nurtured, and sacrificed for you."
"The decisions you will make in the future under pressure will say something about your character, while they also shape and transform you in unexpected ways," he said.
Verghese also encouraged the Class of 2025 to read fiction.
"To paraphrase Camus, fiction is the great lie that tells the truth about how the world lives," he said. "And if you don't read fiction, my considered medical opinion is that a part of your brain responsible for active imagination atrophies."
Actor Henry Winkler
Actor Henry Winkler spoke about the power of positive thinking in his May 17 address to graduates of the Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences.
"A negative thought comes into your mind, you say out loud — you say out loud — 'I am sorry, I have no time for you now,'" he said. "Yes, people will look at you very strangely. But it doesn't matter. Because it becomes your habit."
Instead, when faced with doubts and negative thoughts about your goals, "you move it out; you move a positive in," he said.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told graduates of Princeton University on May 25 that "the combination of luck, the courage to make mistakes, and a little initiative can lead to much success."
"We risk failure, awkwardness, embarrassment, and rejection," he said. "But that's how we create the career opportunities, the great friendships, and the loves that make life worth living."
He reminded graduates that "each of us is a work in progress" and "the possibilities for self-improvement are limitless."
"The vast majority of what you need to know about work, about relationships, about yourself, about life, you have yet to learn," Powell said. "And that itself is a tremendous gift."
Y Combinator cofounder Jessica Livingston
Jessica Livingston, cofounder of startup accelerator Y Combinator, told Bucknell University graduates to "find the interesting people."
"Talk to people. Get introduced to new people. Find the people that you think are interesting, and then ask what they're working on. And if you find yourself working at a place where you don't like the people, get out," she said in her May 18 speech.
She also advised the Class of 2025 that "you can reinvent yourself" at any time.
"If you want to, you can just decide to shift gears at this point, and no one's going to tell you you can't," she said. "You can just decide to be more curious, or more responsible, or more energetic, and no one's going to look up your college grades and say, 'Hey, wait a minute. This person's supposed to be a slacker!'"
S&P Global CEO Martina L. Cheung
"Don't collect promotions. Collect experiences," S&P Global President and CEO Martina L. Cheung told graduates of George Mason University.
In her May 15 address, Cheung shared how lateral moves in her own career later prepared her for promotions.
"Most people think of their careers as a ladder," she said. "They see the goal as climbing the ladder with promotions or leaving one job to take a bigger one elsewhere. The truth is, moving up is not the only direction. It's not even always the best direction. Sometimes it's the lateral move."
YouTuber Hank Green
Writer and science YouTuber Hank Green reminded MIT graduates in his May 29 speech to stay curious.
"Your curiosity is not out of your control," he said. "You decide how you orient it, and that orientation is going to affect the entire rest of your life. It may be the single most important factor in your career."
Green also emphasized the importance of taking chances on your ideas.
"Ideas do not belong in your head," he said. "They can't help anyone in there. I sometimes see people become addicted to their good idea. They love it so much, they can't bring themselves to expose it to the imperfection of reality. Stop waiting. Get the ideas out. You may fail, but while you fail, you will build new tools."
He closed his speech on this inspiring note: "Do not forget how special and bizarre it is to get to live a human life. It took 3 billion years for the Earth to go from single-celled life forms to you. That's more than a quarter of the life of the entire universe. Something very special and strange is happening on this planet and it is you."
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever
Ilya Sutskever, cofounder and former chief scientist of ChatGPT maker OpenAI, spoke June 6 at the University of Toronto, where he received his graduate degree. He gave the graduates advice about artificial intelligence.
Sutskever believes there will come a day when AI "will do all the things that we can."
"How can I be so sure of that?" he said. "We have a brain, the brain is a biological computer, so why can't a digital computer, a digital brain, do the same things? This is the one-sentence summary for why AI will be able to do all those things, because we have a brain and the brain is a biological computer."
Sutskever encouraged graduates to "accept reality as it is, try not to regret the past, and try to improve the situation."
"It's so easy to think, 'Oh, some bad past decision or bad stroke of luck, something happened, something is unfair,'" he said. "It's so easy to spend so much time thinking like this while it's just so much better and more productive to say, 'Okay, things are the way they are, what's the next best step?'"
Actor Steve Carell
Actor Steve Carell danced as he addressed Northwestern University graduates on June 15. He also listed kindness and listening as great strengths to develop.
"An improv scene goes nowhere unless everyone listens to one another," Carell said, recalling his days doing improv. "The best way to see and understand another human being is to listen to them. To listen is to show respect."
Actress Sandra Oh
Addressing Dartmouth graduates on June 15, actress Sandra Oh said, "Nothing has taught me more than being with discomfort."
"It can be our greatest learning opportunity. And it is also inevitable," she said. "If you can train yourself not to turn away, but to learn to be with your discomfort and trust that it might be telling you something you don't yet know, it can help you develop an inner strength that will enable you to face the challenges life presents you with, without losing your values or your sense of self along the way."
She also encouraged new grads to be kind, though she explained she was "not talking about 'being nice.'"
"I'm talking about being able to hold your own heartbreak, so we can go on living, go on resisting, go on building, go on healing," she said. "So we can meet cruelty again and again and not lose our humanity."
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (via journalist Joanna Stern)
Wall Street Journal tech columnist Joanna Stern spoke at the Union College commencement on June 15. She'd emailed OpenAI CEO Sam Altman beforehand to ask if he had advice to share with graduates.
Stern relayed his response to the Class of 2025: " Get good at using AI tools and focus on learning skills like adaptability, resilience, and figuring out what other people want in a rapidly changing world."
Stern also shared some of her own advice to graduates. She played them a tune created by a song generator, which was followed by a live performance from a Union alum and folk-rock singer, Ashley Sofia, who played a song she wrote while still a student at the college.
Stern pointed out the differences in the songs.
"AI is a useful tool, but it lacks human soul and experience," she said. "What sets us apart from artificial intelligence is our emotion our creativity and vulnerability. So, lean into that."
Stern also encouraged new grads to "be the person who interrogates the information, not just consumes it" in an age of issues like deepfakes, misinformation, AI hallucinations, and more.