Vote, take risks, be fearless: Celebs offer advice to grads
Work hard, be true to yourself, embrace diversity and seize the moment.
It's the same advice graduation speakers have offered for ages, yet every year some addresses stand out. Some are powerful. Some are poetic. Some are political.
This year, colleges have invited speakers ranging from Hillary Clinton to Chance the Rapper, each bringing their own life lessons. As commencement ceremonies continue across the country this weekend, here are a few of the highlights so far:
JUSTIN TRUDEAU
Prime minister of Canada, speaking at New York University on May 16
As you go forward from this place, I would like you to make a point of reaching out to people whose beliefs and values differ from your own. I would like you to listen to them — truly listen — and try to understand them and find that common ground.
You have a world of opportunity at your fingertips, but as you go forward from here, understand that just around the corner a whole different order of learning awaits in which your teachers will come from every station in life, every education level, every belief system, every lifestyle. And I hope you will embrace that.
OPRAH WINFREY
At the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism on May 11
Vote, vote, vote. Pay attention to what the people who claim to represent you are doing and saying in your name and on your behalf. They represent you, and if they have not done right by you, if their policies are at odds with your core beliefs, then you have a responsibility to send them packing.
If they go low — thank you Michelle Obama — if they go low, we go to the polls. People died for that right. They died for that right. I think about it every time I cast a vote, so don't let their sacrifice be in vain.
TIM COOK
CEO of Apple, speaking at Duke University in North Carolina on May 13
Fearlessness means taking the first step even if you don't know where it will take you. It means being driven by a higher purpose rather than by applause. It means knowing that you reveal your character when you stand apart more than when you stand with the crowd.
If you step up without fear of failure, if you talk and listen to each other without fear of rejection, if you act with decency and kindness even when no one is looking — even if it seems small or inconsequential — trust me, the rest will fall into place.
NIKKI HALEY
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, speaking at Clemson University in South Carolina on May 10
Beware of social media. It's almost as if it was invented to destroy gratitude. Everyone presents their most carefully edited lives on Twitter or Instagram. We all do it, right? Posting the best pictures of the most exciting places we go and the most interesting things we see.
But our social media lives aren't the real world. Real life is usually messier. And whether we mean to do it or not, the fake lives we live on social media can evoke a kind of envy that is a lack of gratitude, that is very damaging.
CHANCE THE RAPPER
At Dillard University in New Orleans on May 12
To quote Bruce Lee, we must be like water: adapting to our container, always changing with the times. And that means being better than the people who came before us. Some people might find this kind of talk disrespectful but it's exactly the opposite. The highest form of respect that we can pay to the people who came before us, the people who sacrificed for us and gave us everything, is to be better than them.
Our parents, grandparents, ancestors sacrificed not so that we could keep doing the same thing that they were doing but so that we can be better. To simply copy them would be almost an insult to their sacrifice.
HILLARY CLINTON
At Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 20
I believe healing our country is going to take what I call radical empathy. As hard as it is, this is a moment to reach across divides of race, class and politics. To try to see the world through the eyes of people very different from ourselves, and to return to rational debate. To find a way to disagree without being disagreeable. To try to recapture a sense of community and common humanity.
When we think about politics and judge our leaders, we can't just ask, 'Am I better off than I was two years or four years ago?' We have to ask, 'Are we all better off? Are we as a country better, stronger and fairer?'
CHADWICK BOSEMAN
Actor who recently starred in "Black Panther," at Howard University in Washington, D.C., on May 12
I don't know what your future is. But if you are willing to take the harder way, the more complicated one, the one with more failures at first than successes — the one that has ultimately proven to have more meaning, more victory, more glory — then you will not regret it. Now, this is your time. The light of new realization shines on you today. Howard's legacy is not wrapped up in the money that you will make but the challenges that you choose to confront. As you commence to your paths, press on with pride, and press on with purpose.
QUEEN LATIFAH
Musician and actress, at Rutgers University's campus in Newark, New Jersey, on May 14
Teach, volunteer, show up at PTA meetings, show up at the Boys and Girls Club, vote, march, be a citizen. Because in a world of bullets and bots, divisions and distractions, we need more citizens pulling us together instead of trying to pull us apart. Give back to your home, as the kind of citizen who builds bridges, not walls. Graduates, home shapes you. You make sure you shape it back.
MICHAEL KEATON
Actor, at Kent State University in Ohio on May 12
You have to take risks. I'm going to ask you to take risks whenever you can. Put yourself on the line, don't be afraid to look foolish, make mistakes — take chances. It's one of the best things you can do. And what that will lead to is self-discovery, and it will lead you back to your natural, authentic self. And I really encourage you as you get older to go back to who you were when you were a kid, because that was the most authentic you that there has been.