原文地址
DARTMOUTH COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT
ADDRESS
Conan O’Brien
Hanover, New Hampshire
June 12, 2011
Before I begin, I must point out that behind me
sits a highly admired President of the United States and decorated
war hero while I, a cable television talk show host, has been
chosen to stand here and impart wisdom. I pray I
never witness a more damning example of what is wrong with America
today.
Graduates, faculty, parents, relatives,
undergraduates, and old people that just come to these things
----Good morning and congratulations to the Dartmouth Class of
2011. Today, you have achieved something special
----- something only 92 percent of Americans your age will ever
know: a college diploma.
That’s right, with your college diploma you now have a crushing
advantage over 8 percent of the workforce. I’m
talking about dropout losers like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Mark
Zuckerberg. Incidentally, speaking of Mr.
Zuckerberg, only at Harvard would somebody have to invent a massive
social network just to talk with someone in the next room.
My first job as your commencement speaker is to
illustrate that life is not fair. For example,
you have worked tirelessly for four years to earn the diploma
you’ll be receiving this weekend, and Dartmouth is giving me the
same degree for interviewing the fourth lead in Twilight.
Deal with it. Another example
that life is not fair: if it does rain, the powerful rich people on
stage get the tent. Deal with it.
I would like to thank President Kim for inviting me
here today. After my phone call with President
Kim, I decided to find out a little bit about the man.
He goes by President Kim and Dr. Kim.
To his friends, he’s Jim Kim, J to the K, Special
K, JK Rowling, the Just Kidding Kimster, and most puzzling, “Stinky
Pete.” He served as the chair of the Department
of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School,
spearheaded a task force for the World Health Organization on
Global Health Initiatives, won a MacArthur Genius Grant and was one
of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in 2006.
Good God, man, what the hell are you compensating
for? Seriously. We get it;
you’re smart. By the way Dr. Kim, you were
brought to Dartmouth to lead, and as a world-class anthropologist,
you were also hired to figure out why each of these graduating
students ran around a bonfire 111 times.
But I thank you for inviting me, Stinky Pete, and
it is an honor to be here. Though some of you
may see me as a celebrity, you should know that I once sat where
you sit. Literally. Late last
night I snuck out here and sat in every seat. I
did it to prove a point ---- I am not bright and I have a lot of
free time.
But this is a wonderful occasion and it is great to
be here in New Hampshire, where I am getting an honorary degree and
all the legal fireworks I can fit in the trunk of my
car.
New Hampshire is such a special place.
When I arrived I took a deep breath of this
crisp New England air and thought, “Wow, I’m in the state that’s
next to the state where Ben and Jerry’s ice cream is made.”
But don’t get me wrong, I take my task today very
seriously. When I got the call 2 months ago to be
your speaker, I decided to prepare with the same intensity many of
you have devoted to an important term paper. So
late last night, I began. I drank two cans of Red
Bull, snorted some Adderall, played a few hours of Call of Duty,
and then opened my browser. I think Wikipedia put
it best when they said “Dartmouth college is a private Ivy League
University in Hanover, New Hampshire, United States.”
Thank you and good luck.
To communicate with you students today, I have gone
to great lengths to become well-versed in your unique linquistic
patterns. In fact, just this morning I left Baker
Berry with my tripee Barry to eat a Billy Bob at the Bema when my
flitz to Francesca was Blitz jacked by some d-bag on his FSP.
Yes, I’ve done my research. This
college was named after the Second Earl of Dartmouth, a good friend
of the Third Earl of UC Santa Cruz and the Duke of the Barbazon
School of Beauty. Your school motto is “Vox
Clamantis in Deserto,” which means “Voice Crying Out in the
Wilderness.” This is easily the most pathetic
school motto I have ever heard. Apparently, it
narrowly beat out “Silently Weeping in Thick Shrub” and “Wimpering
in Moist Leaves without Pants.” Your school
color is green, and this color was chosen by Frederick Mather in
1867 because, and this is true, “it was the only color that had not
been taken already.” I cannot remember hearing anything so sad.
Dartmouth, you have an inferiority complex, and
you should not. You have graduated more great fictitious Americans
than any other college. Meredith Grey of Grey’s
Anatomy. Pete Campbell from Mad Men.
Michael Corleone from The Godfather.
In fact, I look forward to next years’
Valedictory Address by your esteemed classmate, Count Chocula.
Of course, your greatest fictitious graduate is
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner. Man, imagine
if a real Treasury Secretary made those kinds of decisions.
Oh, I know. You’re going to
say “We’ve got Dr. Seuss.” Well guess what, we’re all tired of
hearing about Dr. Seuss. Face it: The man rhymed
fafloozle with saznoozle. In the literary
community, that’s called cheating.
Your insecurity is so great, Dartmouth, that you
don’t even think you deserve a real podium. What
the hell is this thing? It looks like you stole
it from the set of Survivor: Nova Scotia.
Seriously, it looks like something a bear would
use at an AA meeting.
No, Dartmouth, you must stand tall.
Raise your heads high and feel proud.
Because if Harvard, Yale, and Princeton are your
self-involved, vain, name-dropping older brothers, you are the
cool, sexually confident, Lacrosse playing younger sibling who
knows how to throw a party and looks good in a down vest.
Brown, of course, is your lesbian sister who
never leaves her room. And Penn, Columbia, and
Cornell …..well, frankly, who gives a shit.
Yes, I’ve always had a special bond with this
school. In fact, this is my second time coming
here. When I was 17 years old and touring
colleges, way back in the fall of 1980, I came to Dartmouth.
Dartmouth was a very different place back then.
I made the trip up from Boston on a mule and,
after asking the blacksmith in West Leb for directions, I came to
this beautiful campus. No dormitories had been
built yet, so I stayed with a family of fur traders in White River
junction. It snowed heavily during my visit and I
was trapped here for four months. I was forced to
eat the mule, who a week earlier had been forced to eat the fur
traders. Still, I loved Dartmouth and I vowed to
return.
But fate dealt a heavy blow.
With no money, I was forced to enroll in a small, local commuter
school, a pulsating sore on a muddy elbow of the Charles River.
I was a miserable wretch, and to this day I
cannot help but wonder: What if I had gone to
Dartmouth?
If I had gone to Dartmouth, I might have spent at
least some of my college years outside and today I might not be
allergic to all plant life, as well as most types of rock.
If I had gone to Dartmouth, right now I’d be
wearing a fleece thong instead of a lace thong.
If I had gone to Dartmouth, I still wouldn’t know
the second verse to “Dear Old Dartmouth.” Face
it, none of you do; you all mumble that part.
If I had gone to Dartmouth, I’d have a liver the
size and consistency of a bean bag chair.
Finally, if I had gone to Dartmouth, today I’d be
getting an honorary degree at Harvard. Imagine
how awesome that would be.
You are a great school, and you deserve a historic
commencement address. That’s right, I want my
message today to be forever remembered because it changed the
world. To do this, I must suggest groundbreaking
policy. Winston Churchill gave his famous “Iron Curtain” speech at
Westminster College in 1946. JFK outlined his
nuclear disarmament policy at American University in 1963.
And today, I would like to set forth my own
policy here at Dartmouth: I call it The Conan Doctrine.
Under The Conan Doctrine:
-
All bachelor degrees will be upgraded to masters
degrees, all masters degrees will be upgraded to PhD’s, and all MBA
students will be immediately transferred to a white collar
prison.
-
Winter Carnival will become Winter Carnivale and
be moved to Rio. Clothing will be optional and
all expenses will be paid by the Alumni Association.
-
Your nickname, the Big Green, will be changed to
something more kick-ass like “The Jade Blade,” the “Seafoam
Avenger” or simply “Lime-Zilla.”
-
The D-Plan and “quarter system” will finally be
updated to “the one sixty-fourth system.”
Semesters will last 3 days and students will be
encouraged to take 48 semesters off. They must,
however, be on campus during their Sophomore 4th of July.
-
I will re-instate Tubestock.
And I will punish those who tried to replace it
with Fieldstock. Rafting and beer are a much
better combination than a field and a beer. I
happen to know that in two years, they were going to downgrade
Fieldstock to Deskstock --- 7 hours of fun
sitting quietly at your desk. Don’t let those
bastards do it!
And finally, under the Conan doctrine, all
commencement speakers who shamelessly pander with cheap, inside
references designed to get childish applause, will be forced to
apologize…..TO THE GREATEST GRADUATING CLASS IN THE HISTORY OF THE
WORLD. DARTMOUTH CLASS OF 2011 RULES!!!
Besides policy, another hallmark of great
commencement speeches is deep, profound advice like “reach for the
stars.” Well today, I am not going to waste your
time with empty clichés. Instead, I am going to
give you real, practical advice that you will need to know if you
are going to survive the next few years.
-
First, adult acne lasts longer than you think.
I almost cancelled 2 days ago because I had a zit
on my eye.
-
Guys: this is important -- you
cannot iron a shirt while wearing it
-
If you live on Ramen Noodles for too long, you
lose all feeling in your hands and your stool becomes a white gel.
-
And finally, wearing colorful Converse high-tops
beneath your graduation robe is a great way to tell your classmates
that this is just the first of many horrible decisions you plan to
make with your life.
Of course there are many parents here and I have
real advice for them as well. Parents, write this
down:
-
Many of you haven’t seen your children in four
years. Now you are about to see them every day
when they come out of the basement to tell you the WiFi isn’t
working.
-
If your child majored in Fine Arts or Philosophy,
you have good reason to be worried. The only
place where they are really now qualified to get a job is ancient
Greece.
-
The traffic today on East Wheelock is going to be
murder, so once they start handing out diplomas, you should slip
out in the middle of the K’s.
-
You will spend more money framing your child’s
diploma than they will earn in the next six months.
It’s tough out there, so be patient.
The only people hiring right now are Panera Bread
and Mexican drug cartels.
Yes, you parents must be patient because it is
indeed a grim job market out there. And one of
the reasons that it’s so tough finding work is that aging baby
boomers refuse to leave their jobs.. Trust me on
this. Even when they promise you for five years
that they are going to leave….and say it on television --- I mean
you can go on YouTube right now and watch the guy do it…there is no
guarantee they won’t come back. Of course I’m
speaking generally.
But enough. This is not a time
for grim prognostications or negativity. No, I
came here today because, believe it or not, I actually do have
something real to tell you.
Eleven years ago I gave an address to a graduating
class at Harvard. I have not spoken at a
graduation since because I thought I had nothing left to say.
But then 2010 came. And now
I’m here, three thousand miles from my home, because I learned a
hard but profound lesson last year and I’d like to share it with
you. In 2000, I told graduates “Don’t be afraid
to fail.” Well now I’m here to tell you that,
though you should not fear failure, you should do your very best to
avoid it. Nietzsche famously said “Whatever
doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” But what he
failed to stress is that IT ALMOST KILLS YOU.
Disappointment stings and, for driven, successful
people like yourselves it is disorienting. What
Nietzsche should have said is “Whatever doesn’t
kill you, makes you watch a lot of Cartoon Network and drink
mid-price Chardonnay at 11 in the morning. “
By definition, Commencement speakers at an Ivy
League college are considered successful. But a
little over a year ago, I experienced a profound and very public
disappointment. I did not get what I wanted, and
I left a system that had nurtured and help define me for the better
part of seventeen years. I went from being in the
center of the grid to not only off the grid, but underneath the
coffee table that the grid sits on, lost in the shag carpeting that
is underneath the coffee table supporting the grid.
It was the making of a career disaster, and a
terrible analogy.
But then something spectacular happened.
Fogbound, with no compass, and adrift, I started
trying things. I grew a strange, cinnamon beard.
I dove into the world of social media and started
tweeting my comedy. I threw together a national
tour. I played the guitar, did stand-up, wore a
skin-tight blue leather suit, recorded an album, made a
documentary, and frightened my friends and family.
Ultimately, I abandoned all preconceived
perceptions of my career path and stature and took a job on basic
cable with a network most famous for showing re-runs, along with
sitcoms created by a tall, black man who dresses like an old, black
woman. I did a lot of silly, unconventional,
spontaneous and seemingly irrational things and guess what ----
with the exception of the blue leather suit, it was the most
satisfying and fascinating year of my professional life.
To this day I still don’t understand exactly what
happened, but I have never had more fun, been more challenged, and
this is important ---- had more conviction about what I was
doing.
How could this be true? It’s
simple: there are few things more liberating in this life than
having your worst fear realized. I went to
college with many people who prided themselves on knowing exactly
who they were and exactly where they were going.
At Harvard, five different guys told me that they
would one day be President of the Unites States.
Four of them were later killed in motel
shoot-outs. The other one briefly hosted “Blues
Clues,” before dying senselessly in yet another motel shoot-out.
Your path at 22 will not necessarily be your
path at 32 or 42. One’s dream is constantly
evolving, rising and falling, changing course.
This happens in every job, but because I have
worked in comedy for twenty five years, I can speak best about my
own profession.
Way back in the 1940’s there was a very funny man
named Jack Benny. He was a giant star and easily
one of the greatest comedians of his generation.
And a much younger man named Johnny Carson wanted
very much to be Jack Benny. In some ways he was,
but in many ways he wasn’t. He emulated Jack
Benny, but his own quirks and mannerisms, along with a changing
medium, pulled him in a different direction. And
yet his failure to completely become his hero made him the funniest
person of his generation. David Letterman wanted
to be Johnny Carson, and was not, and as a result my generation of
comedians wanted to be David Letterman. And none
of us are --- my peers and I have all missed that mark in a
thousand different ways. But the point is this:
It is our failure to become our perceived ideal that ultimately
defines us and makes us unique. It’s not easy,
but if you accept your misfortune and handle it right, your
perceived failure can be a catalyst for profound re-invention.
So, at the age of 47, after 25 years of obsessively
pursuing my dream, that dream changed. For
decades, in show business, the ultimate goal of every comedian was
to host The Tonight Show. It was the Holy Grail,
and like many people I thought that achieving that goal would
define me as successful. But that is not true.
No specific job or career goal defines me and it
should not define you. In 2000, I told graduates
to not be afraid to fail, and I still believe that.
But today I tell you that whether you fear it or
not, disappointment will come. The beauty is that
through disappointment you can gain clarity, and with clarity comes
conviction and true originality.
Many of you here today are getting your diploma at
this Ivy League school because you have committed yourself to a
dream and worked hard to achieve it. And there is
no greater cliché in a commencement address than “follow your
dream.” Well I am here to tell you that whatever
you think your dream is now, it will probably change.
And that’s okay. Four years
ago, many of you had a specific vision of what your college
experience was going to be and who you were going to become.
And I bet, today, most of you would admit that
your time here was very different from what you imagined.
Your roommates changed, your major changed, for
some of you your sexual orientation changed. I
bet some of you have changed your sexual orientation since I began
this speech. I know I have. But
through the good and especially the bad, the person you are now is
someone you could never have conjured in the fall of 2007.
I have told you many things today, most of it
foolish but some of it true. I’d like to end my
address by breaking a taboo and quoting myself from 17 months ago.
At the end of my final program with NBC, just
before signing off, I said “Work hard, be kind, and amazing things
will happen. “ Today, receiving this honor and speaking to the
Dartmouth Class of 2011 from behind a tree-trunk, I have never
believed that more.
Thank you
very much, and congratulations.
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【TEA字幕组】Conan O'Brien Dartmouth学院毕业演讲 http://t.cn/aNFilf
翻译稿我看了好几次了,刚才第一次看成品,绝
!严重推荐所有路过的人都看看,可能这24分半改变不了你的人生轨迹,但它没准儿会给你带来一丝希望&一份感动。特别感谢@溟涟
@贺姿齐 @宋二 @谷大白话 等人的字幕支持
2011-07-03
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