Conan O'Brien's Speech to
the Harvard Class of 2000
I'd like to begin by
thanking the class marshals for inviting me here today. The last time I
was invited to Harvard it cost me $110,000. So I was reluctant to show
up. I'm going to start before I really begin by announcing my one goal
this afternoon. I want to be half as funny as tomorrow's Commencement
speaker, moral philosopher and economist Amartya Sen. That's the job.
Must get more laughs than seminal wage-price theoretician. By the way,
enjoy that. Bring a calculator. It's going to be a nerd fest.
Students of the Harvard class of 2000, 15 years ago I sat where you sit
now. And I thought exactly what you are now thinking. What's going to
happen to me? Will I find my place in the world? Am I really graduating
a virgin? Still have 24 hours. Roommate's mom very hot. Swear she's
checking me out. There was that Rob Lowe movie.
Being here today, on a sincere note, is very special for me. I do miss
this place. I especially miss Harvard Square. Let me tell you, you don't
know this, Harvard Square is extremely unique. Nowhere else in the world
will you find a man wearing a turban and a Red Sox jacket working in a
lesbian bookstore. I'm just glad my dad's working.
It's particularly sweet for me to be here today because--this is
true--when I graduated I wanted very badly to be a Class Day speaker.
Unfortunately, my speech was rejected. So if you'll indulge me I'd like
to read a portion of that speech. This is the actual speech from 15
years ago. "Fellow students, as we sit here today listening to that
classic A-ha tune which will definitely stand the test of time, I would
like to make several predictions about what the future will hold. I
believe that one day a simple governor from a small southern state will
rise to the highest office in the land. He will lack political skill,
but will lead on the sheer strength of his moral authority. I believe
that justice will prevail and one day the Berlin Wall will crumble,
uniting East and West Berlin forever under Communist rule. I believe
that one day a high-speed network of interconnected computers will
spring up worldwide, so enriching people that they will lose their
interest in idle chitchat and pornography. And finally, I believe that
one day I will have a television show on a major network seen by
millions of people at night which I will use to reenact crimes and and
help catch at-large criminals." Then I had a section on the death
of Wall Street, but you don't need to hear about that.
The point is that although you see me as a celebrity, a member of the
cultural elite, a demigod if you will, and potential husband material, I
came here in the fall of 1981 and lived at Holworthy Hall as a student
much like you. I was, without exaggeration--this is true--the ugliest
picture in the freshman facebook. When Harvard asked me for a picture
the previous summer, I thought it was for their records, so I jogged in
the August heat to a passport photo office and sat for a morgue shot. To
make matters worse, when the facebook came out, they put my picture
right next to Catherine Oxenberg, a stunning blonde actress who was
expected to join the class of '85, but decided to defer admission so she
could join the cast of Dynasty. Folks, my photo would have looked bad on
any page, but next to Catherine Oxenberg, I looked like a mackerel that
had been in a car accident.
You see, in those days, I was 6 feet 4 inches tall and I weighed 150
pounds. True. Recently, I had some structural engineers run those
numbers into a computer model, and according to the computer, I
collapsed in 1987, killing hundreds in Taiwan.
After freshman year, I moved to Mather House. Mather House,
incidentally, was designed by the same firm that built Hitler's bunker.
In fact, if Hitler had conducted the war from Mather House, he would
have shot himself a year earlier. Saved us a lot of trouble.
1985 seems like a long time ago now. When I had my Class Day, you
students would have been seven years old. Seven years old! You realize
what that means? Back then I could have beaten any of you in a fight.
And I mean really badly. Like no contest at all. If anyone here has a
time machine, seriously, I will kick your seven-year-old butt right now.
A lot has happened in 15 years though. When you think about it, we come
from completely different worlds. When I graduated in 1985, we watched
movies starring Tom Cruise and listened to music by Madonna. I come from
a time when we huddled around the TV set and watched the Cosby Show on
NBC, never imagining that there would one day be a show called Cosby on
CBS. In 1985 we drove cars with driver's-side air bags. But if you had
told us that one day there would be passenger-side air bags, we'd have
burned you for witchcraft.
Of course I think there is some common ground between us. I remember
well the great uncertainty of this day, the anxiety. Many of you are
justifiably nervous about leaving the safe, comfortable world of Harvard
Yard and hurling yourself headlong into the cold, harsh world of Harvard
grad school, a plum job in your father's firm, or a year abroad with a
gold Amex card and then a plum job at your father's firm. Let me assure
you that the knowledge you gained here at Harvard is a precious gift
that will never leave you. Take it from me, your education is yours to
keep forever. Why, many of you have read the Merchant of Florence, and
that will inspire you when you travel to the island of Spain. Your
knowledge of that problem they had with those people in Russia, or that
guy in South America--you know, the guy--will be with you for the rest
of your life.
There's also sadness today. A feeling of loss that you're leaving
Harvard forever. Let me assure you that you never really leave Harvard.
The Harvard fundraising committee will be on your ass until the day you
die.
This is true. I know for a fact that right now a member of the alumni
association is at the Mount Auburn Cemetery shaking down the corpse of
Henry Adams. They heard he has a brass toe ring and they aim to get it.
These people just raised $2.5 billion and they only got through the Bs
in the alumni directory. Here's basically how it works. Your phone
rings, usually after a big meal when you're tired and most vulnerable,
and a voice asks you for money. Knowing--you've read in the paper--that
they just raised $2.5 billion, you ask, "What do you need it
for?" There is a long pause, and the voice on the other end of the
line says, "We don't need it, we just want it." (Sinister
laugh).
Let me see--by your applause--Who here wrote a thesis? That's nice. A
lot of hard work went into that thesis. And no one is ever going to
care. I wrote a thesis--this is true, I don't lie--"Literary
Progeria in the Works of Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner."
Let's just say that during my discussions with Pauly Shore, it doesn't
come up much. For three years after graduation I wanted to show it to
everyone, and so I kept my thesis in the glove compartment of my car, so
that I could show it to a policeman in case I was pulled over.
What else can you expect in the real world? Let me tell you. As you
leave these gates and re-enter society, one thing is certain. Everyone
out there is going to hate you. Never tell anyone in a roadside diner
that you went to Harvard. In those situations, the correct response to,
"Where did you go to school?" is "School? I never had
much in the way of book learnin' and such." And then get in your
BMW and get the hell out of there. Go.
You see, kids, you're in for a lifetime of "And you went to
Harvard?" Accidentally give the wrong amount of change in a
transaction, and it's "And you went to Harvard?" Ask at the
hardware store how the jumper cables work, and hear "And you went
to Harvard?" Forget just once that your underwear goes inside your
pants, and it's "And you went to Harvard?" Get your head stuck
in your niece's doll house 'cause you want to see what it's like to be a
giant, and it's "Uncle Conan, you went to Harvard?"
So you really know what's in store for you after Harvard, I have to tell
you what happened to me after graduation. I'm going to tell it simply,
I'm going to tell it honestly, because, first of all, I think my
perspective may give many of you hope, and, secondly, it's such a cool,
amazing rush to be in front of 6,000 people and just talk about
yourself. It's just great. It's so cool. And I can take my time.
You see, kids, after graduating in May, I moved to Los Angeles. I got a
three-week contract at a small cable show. I got a $380-a-month
apartment, a terrible dump, and I bought a 1977 Isuzu Opal, a car Isuzu
only manufactured for a year because they found out that technically
it's not a car. Quick tip, graduates--no four-cylinder used vehicle
should have a racing stripe.
So I worked on that show for about a year, feeling pretty good about
myself, when one day they told me that they were letting me go. I was
fired. I hadn't saved any money. So I tried to get another job in
television as best I could and couldn't find one. So with nowhere else
to turn--true story--I went to a temp agency and filled out a
questionnaire. I made damn sure that they knew I had been to Harvard,
that I had written this thesis, and that I expected the very best
treatment. And so the next day I was sent to the Santa Monica branch of
Wilson's House of Suede and Leather.
When you have a Harvard degree, and you are working at Wilson's House of
Suede and Leather, you are haunted by the ghostly images of your
classmates who chose graduate school. You see their faces everywhere--in
coffee cups, in fish tanks, you think you're going crazy, and they're
always laughing at you as you stack suede shirts no man in good
conscience would ever wear.
I tried a lot of things during this period. Acting in corporate
infomercials. Serving drinks in a nonequity theater. I even took a job
entertaining at a seven year-old's birthday party. In desperate need of
work, I put together some sketches and scored a job at the fledgling Fox
network as a writer and performer for a brainy show called the
"Wilton North Report." I was finally on a network and really
excited. The producer told me the show was going to revolutionize
television. And, in a way it did. The show was so hated and did so badly
that when four weeks later news of its cancellation was announced to the
Fox affiliates, they burst into spontaneous applause.
Eventually, though, I got a big break. I had submitted along with my
writing partner a batch of sketches to Saturday Night Live, and after a
year and a half they read it, and they gave us a two-week tryout. The
two weeks turned into two seasons, and I felt, hey, this is success, I'm
successful now. Successful enough to write a TV pilot for an original
sitcom. When the network decided to make it, feeling good, I left
Saturday Night Live.
This TV show was going to be groundbreaking. It was going to resurrect
the career of TV's Batman, Adam West. It was going to be a comedy
without a laugh track or a studio audience. It was going to change all
the rules. And here's what happened. When the pilot aired, it was the
second-lowest-rated television show of all time. It is actually tied
with a test pattern they show up in Nova Scotia.
So I was 28 and, once again, no job. I had good writing credits in New
York, but I was filled with disappointment and I had no idea what I was
going to do next. And that is when the Simpsons saved my life. I got a
job there and started writing episodes about Springfield getting a
monorail or Homer going to college. I was finally putting my Harvard
education to good use--writing dialogue for a man who is so stupid that
in one episode he forgot to make his own heart beat. Life was good.
And then an insane, inexplicable opportunity came my way, a chance to
audition for host of the new "Late Night" show. I took the
opportunity very seriously, but at the time--I have to be honest--I had
the relaxed confidence of someone who knew he had no real shot, so I
couldn't fear losing a great job that I could never hope to have. And I
think that actually that attitude made the difference.
I will never forget being in the Simpsons recording basement that
morning when the phone rang. It was for me. My car was blocking a
firelane. But a week later I got another call and got the job. So this,
finally, was undeniably it. The truly life-altering break that I had
always dreamed of. And so I went to work. I gathered all my funny
friends and poured all my years of comedy experience into building the
show over the summer. I gathered the talent, figured out the
sensibility, found Max, found Andy, found my people. We debuted on
September 13, 1993, and I was really happy, really happy, with our
effort. I felt like I had seized the moment, that I had put my very best
foot forward.
And this was what the most respected and widely read television critic,
Tom Shales, wrote in the Washington Post. "O'Brien is a living
collage of annoying nervous habits. He giggles and jiggles about and
fiddles with his cuffs. He has dark, beady little eyes like a rabbit. He
is one of the whitest white men ever. O'Brien is a switch on the guest
who won't leave: he's the host who should never have come. Let the Late
Show with Conan O'Brien become the late Late Show, and may the host
return to whence he came." There's more, but it gets kind of mean.
Needless to say, I took a lot of criticism, some of it deserved, some of
it excessive, and, to be honest with you, it hurt like you would not
believe. But I'm telling you all this for a reason. I've had a lot of
success. I've had a lot of failure. I've looked good. I've looked bad.
I've been praised. And I've been criticized. But my mistakes have been
necessary. I've dwelled on my failures today because, as graduates of
Harvard, your biggest liability is your need to succeed, your need to
always find yourself on the sweet side of the bell curve. Success is a
lot like a bright white tuxedo. You feel terrific when you get it, but
then you're desperately afraid of getting it dirty, of spoiling it.
I left the cocoon of Harvard, I left the cocoon of Saturday Night Live,
I left the cocoon of the Simpsons. And each time it was bruising and
tumultuous. And yet every failure was freeing, and today I'm as
nostalgic for the bad as I am for the good. So that's what I wish for
all of you--the bad as well as the good. Fall down. Make a mess. Break
something occasionally. Know that your mistakes are your own unique way
of getting to where you need to be. And remember that the story is never
over.
If you'll indulge me for just a second, I'd like to read a little
something from just this year. "Somehow, Conan O'Brien has
transformed himself into the brightest star in the late-night firmament.
His comedy is the gold standard, and Conan himself is not only the
quickest and most inventive wit of his generation, but quite possibly
the greatest host ever."
Ladies and gentlemen, class of 2000, I wrote that this morning. As proof
that when all else fails, you always have delusion. I will go now to
make bigger mistakes and to embarrass this fine institution even more.
But let me leave you with one last thought. If you can laugh at
yourself, loud and hard, every time you fall, people will think you're
drunk. Thank you. |