This American Life - Ira (Reluctantly) Gives a Graduation Speech
Episode Date: May 1, 2026Ira always hated commencement speeches. Then he felt like he had to give this one. thisamericanlife.org/lifepartners...
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Hey, it's Ira Glass.
Here's a free sample of the newest bonus episode that we made for our This American Life Partners.
It starts this way.
Hey, everybody, Ira here.
I went to a high school graduation last year around this time.
And can I say, chat CBT has not been good for graduation speeches.
Though, honestly, like most graduation speeches were pretty bad before AI.
right?
Like, I don't know, that's when my experience
going into graduations.
Maybe it's been yours, too.
Though I think graduation speeches
are bad for reasons that are really
built in and nobody's fault.
When students give them,
understandably, they feel like they have to say
something about the experience that they just went through,
being in school.
And unless something very unusual and dramatic
happened that year in school with that particular
class, those stories all kind of, you know,
just sound the same.
Then there's a section acknowledging
and thanking teachers and parents.
And there should be a section like that.
Like, no question.
Of course there's a section like that.
But that's another section
that you can kind of predict
how it's going to go
from the moment it begins.
And then there's a section always
about the future
and the promise of the journey
that we're heading out on today
taking our first steps,
the grand adventure the graduates are heading out on,
which is really hard to do
without falling into a lot of puffy platitudes.
It's just a very difficult
kind of speech to make interesting and alive and fun to hear.
And when somebody does a good one, and there are some really great ones out there,
it's usually some of the, you know, like Steve Jobs or Michael Lewis,
people with surprising lives, telling surprising stories from their lives
and having surprising thoughts that go with those stories, it's hard to do well.
And when we get to graduation season, like we are entering right now in May,
I don't think I'm the only person who goes to those things dreading the speeches.
In 2012, a guy named Sanford Unger asked me to give the graduation speech at Galtrow College in Baltimore.
I knew Sanford Unger. Sandy had been my boss when I was in my early 20s at NPR on a daily news show called NPR Dateline.
And Sandy was the host. I was his tape cutter. There was a tiny staff. It was like, I think it was just like three or four or five people was the entire
staff for this daily show. And Saney and I worked very closely together, and I always really liked him.
He was a smart guy with immense self-confidence, which he wore lightly, charmingly, I thought.
He'd been a foreign correspondent. He'd been a reporter for The Washington Post. He'd been the host of all things considered, all before we did Dateline.
And when Dayline was canceled, he went on into a series of very fancy sounding jobs. He was the dean of the
School of Communication at American University. Then he was the head of Voice of America.
then he was president of Galtrow College,
which is how this call happened.
I'm from Baltimore.
I have some personal connections to Galtrow College,
but I did not want the job of graduation speaker
for all the reasons that I've already told you.
It just seemed a hard assignment,
but I decided to do it.
For reasons that I ended up putting into the speech
and telling the audience about,
I also included in the speech one very personal story
about me and Galture College
I remember I was not sure I should include in the speech, but I did, and it got a response.
Like, it turns out it was the right move.
And then I also got to tell them about the day my grandma Frida met Adolf Hitler back at 1932.
And so I'm saying all this because with graduation season upon us, I'm going to play the speech for you right now.
And so just to set the scene, this was a sunny day in 2012.
outdoors. The theme of the graduation that year was transcending boundaries. So that was a phrase
that was being repeated now and then during the day. That's the kind of day this was. Okay,
here's the speech. Graduates, parents, faculty, guests, President Unger, I'm honored to be
your commencement speaker. I still oppose on principle the idea of any commencement speech.
I believe that it is a doomed form, coying and impossible.
Commencement speakers give stock advice, which is then promptly ignored.
The central mission of the commencement speech is in itself ridiculous to inspire at a moment which needs no inspiration.
Look at yourselves at this moment.
Something incredible is happening to you right now.
The whole world is opening to you.
to have been in school your entire lives and you have completed something difficult that
took persistence and willfulness. Probably you questioned yourself again and again and now you're
off to face the world and do everything you have been dreaming. What can words add to that?
Except delay the moment you get your diploma. I oppose the form of the commencement speech and I
continue to oppose it even as I do one now. And I said yes only because of my first
personal connections to this school. One is your president, Sandy Unger, who I worked closely
with at NPR years ago, who as many of you know has a special gift for convincing people
to do things they do not necessarily want to do, which worked out great in this case because
I have a special gift for saying yes to people like that. As was said, another personal
connection I have to goucher is my grandma Frida, is my dad's mom, Frida Freelander, Goucher Class
of 31, a very defiantly proud Goucher grad. Are there members of
Phi Beta Kappa here? Can I hear Phi Beta Kappa? You are my grandma's sister in that
organization. I'm wearing her Phi Beta Kappa key. Grandma Frida wore her key to any special
dinner or occasion until she died and was not shy about talking about being a member of Phi Beta Kappa
with anyone who would listen, which makes her seem like some wacky cranked grandma, old lady.
But she was actually anything but she was smart and funny.
and awake to the world.
And I loved her enough that although I oppose the form of graduation speech,
I am standing here in front of you because I know it would please her a great deal.
My third connection to Goucher, I really was not going to talk about it all.
And this week, my wife and some friends insisted that you graduates would find it relevant.
And that is that I lost my virginity in one of the dorms here.
Not recently.
I was 20.
It was still an all-girl school.
The Gauter Sr., who did this was very much,
she made this happen.
I was not the instigator.
I had some good qualities of that age,
but I was kind of immature and scared.
She, however, was used to transcending boundaries.
Okay, so that is obviously just the beginning of that speech.
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that we made for our life partners.
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