Actor Matt Damon offers the 2016 MIT Commencement Address

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Maaaatt Daaamon

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 14 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/BNaloCacoC πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

Don't know what it is about videos like that I click to watch only a few minutes of and end up watching the whole thing. Thanks for the share OP.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/Sicksies πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies
πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/theillistpillpopper πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

Id imagine at least 20% of the graduating class are going into investment banking...

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/BlueCranium πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

maaaaaaaaaat damon

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 2 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/theillistpillpopper πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

What's Ya Major Dude?

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 2 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/shaunh68 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

What great guy.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/The_Music πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

I love Matt's work, and while this was a great speech he did seem to have a personal agenda

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/StupidGeek314 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies
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all right thank you thank you so much Thank You president rife Thank You class of 1966 that was that was alarming walking along and seeing 66 and then somebody saying oh it's their 50th I just I almost had a heart attack time time flies and mostly thank you to the class of 2016 it is such an honor to be part of your day it's an honor to be here with you with your friends your professors and your parents but let's be honest this is an honor I didn't really earn I'm just going to put that out there I mean I've seen the list of previous commencement speakers Nobel Prize winners the UN secretary-general president of the World Bank president of the United States and who did you get the guy who did the voice for a cartoon horse if you're wondering which cartoon horse that spirit stallion of the Cimarron a movie some of you might have grown up watching it's definitely one of my best performances as a cartoon horse well look I don't even have a college degree as you might have heard I went to Harvard I just didn't graduate from Harvard I got pretty close but I started to get movie roles and I didn't finish all my courses but I put on a cap and gown and I walked with my class my mom and dad and brother were there and everything I just never got an actual degree you could say I kind of faked graduated so you can imagine how excited I was when president rife called to invite me to speak at the MIT commencement and then you can imagine how sorry I was to learn that the MIT commencement speaker does not get to go home with a degree so yes for the second time in my life I am fake graduating from a college in my hometown and my mom and my dad and my brother are here again and this time I brought my wife and my four kids so welcome kids to your dad's second fake graduation you must be so proud so as I said my mom is here she's a professor so she knows the value of an MIT degree she also knows that I couldn't have gotten in here I mean Harvard but you know barely or a safety school like Yale look I'm not running for any kind of office I can say pretty much whatever I want no I couldn't have gotten in here but I did grow up here I grew up in the neighborhood in the shadow of this imposing place my brother Kyle and I and my friend Ben Affleck brilliant guy good guy never really amounted to much we all grew up right here in Central Square children of this sometimes rocky marriage between this city and its great institutions to us MIT was kind of like the man this big impressive impersonal force at least that was our provincial knee-jerk teenage reaction anyway and then Ben and I shot a movie here now one of the scenes in Good Will Hunting was based on something that actually happened to my brother Kyle he was visiting a physicist that we knew at MIT and he was walking down the infinite corridor he saw those blackboards that lie in the halls and so my brother who's an artist picked up some chalk and wrote an incredibly elaborate totally fake version of an equation and it was so cool and completely insane that no one erased it for months this is a true story anyway Kyle came back and he said you guys listen to this they've got black boards running down the hall because these kids are so smart they just need to you know drop everything and solve problems it was then we knew for sure we could never have gotten in but like I said we later made a movie here which did not go unnoticed on campus in fact I'd like to read you some actual lines some selected passages from the review of Good Will Hunting in the MIT school paper if you haven't seen it will was me and Sean is played by the late Robin Williams a man I miss a hell of a lot so I'm quoting here Good Will Hunting is very entertaining but then again any movie partially said at MIT has to be but there's more in the end the reviewer writes the actual character development flies out the window Will and Shawn talk bond solve each other's problems and then cry and hug each other after said crying and hugging the movie ends such feel-good pretentiousness is definitely not my mug of eggnog well that kind of hurts but don't worry I know now better than to cry at MIT but look I'm happy to be here anyway I might still be a knee-jerk teenager in key respects but I know an amazing school when I see it we're lucky to have MIT in Boston and we're lucky it draws the people that it does people like you from around the world I mean you're working on some crazy stuff in these buildings stuff that would freak me out if I actually understood it theories models paradigm shifts I'm going to tell you about one that's been on my mind simulation theory most of you probably heard of this maybe even took a class with Max tegmark but for the uninitiated there's a philosopher named Nick Bostrom at Oxford and he's postulated if there's a truly advanced form of intelligence out there in the universe it's probably advanced enough to run simulations of entire worlds maybe trillions of them maybe even our own so the basic idea as I understand it is that we could be living in a massive simulation run by a far smarter similar civilization like a giant computer game and we don't even know it and here's the thing a lot of physicists a lot of cosmologists they won't rule it out I just watched a discussion online a few weeks back it was moderated by Neil deGrasse Tyson of the Hayden Planetarium and by and large the panel couldn't and wouldn't give a definitive answer Tyson himself put the odds of 50/50 now I'm not sure how scientific that was but it had numbers in it so I was impressed but it it got me to thinking what if this all of this is a simulation I mean it's a crazy idea but what if it is and if there are multiple simulations how come we have to be in the one where Donald Trump becomes the Republican nominee for president can we like transfer to a different one well professor tegmark has an excellent take on all of this my advice he said recently is to go out and do really interesting things so the simulators don't shut you down now then again what if it isn't a simulation either way my answer is the same either way what we do matters what we do affects the outcome so either way MIT you've got to go out and do really interesting things important things inventive things because this world real or imagined this world has some problems that we need you to drop everything and solve so go ahead take your pick from the world's worst buffet economic inequality that's a problem how about the refugee crisis massive global insecurity climate change pandemics institutional racism Appleton nativism fear driven brains working overtime here in America and in places like Austria where a far-right candidate nearly won the President presidential election for the first time since World War two or the brexit for God's sakes that insane idea that the best path for Britain is to cut loose from Europe and drift out to sea I mean what is Europe even going to look like in 25 years and add to that an American political system that's failing we've got congressmen on a two-year election cycle who are incentivized to think short-term and simply do not engage with long term problems and add to that a media that thrives on scandal and people with their pants down anything to get you to tune in so they can hock you products that you don't need and add to that a banking system that steals people's money it's all right I'm not running for office but by the way while I'm on this let me just say to this to the bankers specifically the ones who brought you the biggest heist in history it was theft and you knew it it was fraud and you knew it and you know what else we know that you knew it so yeah you sort of got away with it you got that house in the Hamptons that other people paid for is their own mortgages went underwater and you might have their money but you don't have our respect and just so you know when we pass you on the street and look you in the eye that's what we're thinking and I don't know if justice is coming for you in this life or the next but if justice does come for you in this life her name will be Elizabeth Warren alright so before my little banking digression I rattled off a bunch of big problems and a natural response is to tune out and turn away but before you step out into our big troubled world I want to pass along a piece of advice that Bill Clinton offered me a little over a decade ago actually when he said it it felt less like advice and more like a direct order but what he said was turned toward the problems you see you have to engage and turn towards the problems that you see except it sounded like turn towards the problem that you see but when he said this to me he literally turned his body for emphasis towards me yeah no listen it seemed kind of simple at the time but the older I get the more wisdom I see in this that is what I want to urge you to do today to turn towards the problems that you see and engage with them walk right up to him look him in the eye and then look yourself in the eye and decide what you're going to do about them now in my experience there is just no substitute for actually going and seeing these things I owe this insight like many others to my mom when I was a teenager mom thought it was important for us to see the world outside of Boston and I don't just mean Framingham she took us to places like Guatemala where we saw extreme poverty up close and it changed my whole frame of reference and I think it was that same impulse that took my brother and me to Zambia in 2006 as part of the one campaign the organization that bono founded to fight desperate and what he calls stupid poverty and preventable disease in the developing world and on that trip in a small community I met this girl and I walked with her to a nearby borewell where she could get clean water she'd just come home from school and I knew the reason that she was able to go go to school at all was clean water namely the fact that it was available nearby so she didn't have to walk miles back and forth all day to get water for her family like so many girls and women do around the world so I asked her if she wanted to stay in her village when she grew up and she smiled and said no no I want to go to Lusaka and become a nurse so clean water something as basic as that had given this child a chance to dream and as I learned more about water and sanitation I was floored by the extent to which it undergirds all these problems of extreme poverty the fate of entire communities economies countries is caught up in that glass of water something the rest of us get to take for granted people at one told me that water is the least sexy and cool aspect of the effort to fight extreme poverty and water goes hand in hand with sanitation so if you think water isn't sexy you should try to get into the business but I was hooked already I the enormity of it the complexity of the issue it just it just hooked me and getting out in the world and meeting people like this little girl is what put me on the path to starting water.org with a brilliant civil engineer named Gary white and for Gary and me seeing the world and its problems its possibilities heightened our disbelief that so many people millions 660 million in fact can't get a safe clean drink of water or a clean private place to go to the bathroom there are more people with a cell phone than access to a toilet on our planet and this heightened our determination to do something about it now you see some tough things out there but you also see life-changing joy and it all changes you there was a refugee crisis back in oh nine that I read about in this amazing article in The New York Times people were streaming across the border of Zimbabwe to a little little town in northern South Africa called Messina while I was working in South Africa at the time so I went up to Messina to see for myself what was going on I spent a day speaking with women who had made this perilous journey across the Limpopo River dodging bandits on one side crocodiles in the river bandits on the other every woman that I spoke to that day had been raped every single one on one side of the river or both and at the end of my time there I met a woman who was so positive she was so joyful she had just been given her papers so she'd been granted political asylum in South Africa and in the midst of this joyful conversation I mustered up my courage and I said ma'am do you mind my asking were you assaulted on your journey to South Africa and she replied still smiling oh yes I was raped but I have my papers now and those bastards didn't get my dignity human beings will take your breath away they will teach you so much but you have to engage I only had that experience because I went there myself it was difficult in many ways but of course that's the point there is a lot of trouble out there MIT but there's a lot of beauty too and I hope you see both but again the point is not to become some kind of well-rounded high-minded voyeur the point is to eliminate your blind spots the things that keep us from grasping the bigger picture and look even though I grew up in this neighborhood in this incredible multicultural neighborhood that was a little rough at that time I find myself here before you as a middle-aged American white male movie star I don't have a clue where my blind spots begin and end but looking at the world as it is and engaging with it is the first step towards identifying our blind spots and that's when we can really start to understand ourselves better and begin to solve some problems and with that as your goal there's a few more things I hope you'll keep in mind first you're going to fail sometimes and that's a good thing for all the amazing successes I've been lucky to share and few things have shaped me more than the auditions that Ben and I used to go on as young actors where we'd get on a bus we'd show up in New York we'd wait our turn we'd cry our hearts out for a scene and then be told okay thanks meaning game over we used to call it being okay thanks and those experiences became our armor all right now you're thinking great thanks Matt failure is good and thanks a ton tell me something I didn't hear at my high school graduation to which I say okay I will you know the real danger for MIT graduates it's not getting okay thanks to the real danger is all that smoke that's been blown up your graduation gowns about how freakin smart you are well you are that smart but don't believe the hype that's thrown at you you don't have all the answers and you shouldn't and that's fine you're going to have your share of bad ideas for one are for me one was playing a character named Edgar wacker I wish I could tell you I'm making that up that's but as the great philosopher Benjamin a slack once said judge me by how good my good ideas are not how bad my bad ideas are you've got a suit up in your Armour you've got to get ready to sound like a total fool not having an answer isn't embarrassing it's an opportunity don't be afraid to ask questions I know so much less the second time I'm fake graduating than the first time the second thing I want to leave you with is you got to keep listening the world wants to hear your idea is good and bad but today is not the day you switch from receive to transmit once you do that your education is over and your education should never be over even outside of your work there are always ways to keep challenging yourself listen to online lectures I just took a retook a philosophy course that I took at Harvard when I was 19 you go to MIT OpenCourseWare go to wait but why dot-com go to ted.com I'm told there's even a Trump University I have no earthly idea what they teach there but whatever you do just keep listening even to people you don't agree with at all I love what President Obama said at Howard University's commencement last month he said democracy requires compromise even when you are 100 percent right I heard that and thought here is a man who has been happily married for a long time not that the first lady has ever been wrong about anything just like my wife never wrong not even when she decided last month it in a family with four kids what was missing in our lives was a third rescue dog that was an outstanding decision honey I love you the third and last thought I want to leave you with is that not every problem has a high tech solution now if anybody has the right to think we can pretty much tech support the world's problems into submission its you think of the innovations that got their start at MIT or by MIT alums the world wide web nuclear fission condensed soup that's true you should be very proud of that but the truth is we can't science the you-know-what out of every problem there is not always an app for that I mean take water again as an example people are always looking at some quite scientific quick fix for the problem of dirty and disease-ridden water a pill you put in a glass of filter etc but there's no magic bullet the problem is just too complex yes there is definitely absolutely a role for science there's incredible advances being made in clean water technology companies and universities are getting in on the game and I'm glad to know that professors like Susan Merck out at D lab are focusing on water and sanitation but as I'm sure she'd agree science alone can't solve this problem we need to be just as innovative in public policy just as innovative in our financial models and that's the idea behind approach an approach we have at water credit at water or called water credit it's based on Gary's insight that poor people we're already paying for their water and they know less than the rest of us want to participate in their own solutions so water credit helps connect the poor with microfinance organizations which enables them to build water connections and toilets in their homes and communities and this approach is really working helping four million people so far and it's only the start our loans are paying back at ninety nine percent and above which is a hell of a better deal in those bankers I was talking about earlier gave anybody and I agree it is still not sexy but it is without a doubt the coolest thing I have ever been a part of so thanks so let me ask you this in closing what are you going to be a part of what is the problem that you will try to solve whatever your answer it is not going to be easy sometimes your work will hit a dead end sometimes your work will be measured in half steps sometimes your work will make you wear a white sequined military uniform and make love to Michael Douglas alright maybe that's just my work but for all of you here your work starts today and seriously how lucky are you I mean what are the odds that you are the ones who are here today in the Earth's 4.5 billion year run with a hundred billion people who have lived and died and the seven billion of us here now here you are yes here you are alive at a time of potential extinction level events a time when fewer and fewer people can cause more and more damage a time when science and technology may not hold all the answers but are indispensable to any solution what are the odds that you get to be you right now the MIT class of 2016 with so much on the line there are potentially trillions of human beings who will someday exist or not whose fate in large part depends on the choices you make on your ideas on your grit and persistence and willingness to engage if this were a movie I was trying to pitch I'd be laughed out of every office in Hollywood Joseph Campbell himself would tell me to throttle down and lower the stakes but I can't because this is a fact this is not fiction this improbable thing is actually happening there is more at stake today than in any story ever told and how lucky you are that you're here and you're you and how lucky we are that you're here and you are you so I hope you'll turn toward the problem of your choosing I hope you'll turn toward the problem of your choosing I hope you'll drop everything and I hope you'll solve it this is your life class of 2016 this is your moment and it is all down to you ready player one your game begins now thank you congratulations
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Channel: MIT Video Productions
Views: 552,687
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Matt Damon, MIT, Commencement, 2016, science, math, business, education, robotics, actor, acting, speech, graduation
Id: vj-cK_KfjsI
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 23min 46sec (1426 seconds)
Published: Mon Jun 06 2016
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