Cheers, jeers, and laughs: The speeches about AI that drew strong responses from 2026 grads

College graduates know about AI. Speakers, including former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, have learned to tread carefully when discussing it commencement.

  • AI is a hot topic at 2026 graduations, sparking mixed reactions from graduates and speakers.
  • Eric Schmidt faced boos at the University of Arizona for mentioning AI.
  • Comedians like Conan O'Brien have found it's a great source for material.

College graduates know they are entering a world reshaped by AI. With few exceptions, they don't want to be reminded about it just before they accept their diplomas.

Across the country, graduation speakers are finding out that AI is one of the most polarizing topics to discuss before the class of 2026.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt was roundly booed at the University of Arizona. Journalist Fareed Zakaria felt compelled to give "a trigger warning" before addressing Bard College. The mere announcement of Chris Duffey, head of Adobe's artificial intelligence products and platforms, as Marquette's commencement speaker sparked backlash before the Marquette alum could even return to campus.

AI has become so unpopular that comedians like Conan O'Brien are finding it to be a useful foil.

Here is how business leaders, tech executives, and celebrities are talking about AI at graduations.

Eric Schmidt

Eric Schmidt

Eric Schmidt gave a commencement address during the University of Arizona's graduation ceremony.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt received audible boos from students at the University of Arizona's commencement ceremony.

"The question is not whether AI will shape the world. It will," Schmidt said. "The question is whether you will have shaped artificial intelligence."

Schmidt said no one intended to build technology "that would polarize democracies and unsettle a generation of young people," but that's what occurred anyway.

"I know what many of you are feeling about that. I can hear you. There is a fear," Schmidt said, stopping briefly as the shouts intensified. "There is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics are fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create."

Steve Wozniak

Steve Wozniak

Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak received cheers for a clever wordplay he made about AI during Grand Valley State University's graduation ceremony.

"You have AI — actual intelligence," Wozniak said.

Wozniak said AI was one of many efforts "to create a brain."

"It would take too long to go deeply into what I think about AI, but we've been trying to create a brain," Wozniak said. "Is there a way we can duplicate a routine a trillion times and have it work like a brain? AI is one of those attempts."

Ed Bastian

Ed Bastian, chief executive officer of Delta Air Lines Inc., during an interview on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025.

Delta CEO Ed Bastian said premium passengers were driving up its sales.

Delta CEO Ed Bastian said he asked AI to lend him a hand when he was crafting his speech to Emory University graduates. He said the results lacked "soul or warmth."

"You want to hear from me, not some algorithm of me," he told the graduates. "So, don't worry, I threw it away, and took pencil to paper."

Bastian was applauded for his anecdote, which he included as a warning to graduates about taking the easy way out of situations.

"Many times, doing the right thing comes at a cost," he said. "I must admit, taking a shortcut or pushing the 'easy button' can sometimes be more tempting. But they never yield an enduring result or an effective solution."

Scott Borchetta

Scott Borchetta performs during Country Radio Seminar

Scott Borchetta

Record executive Scott Borchetta told Middle Tennessee State University that AI was already rewriting the rules, much like streaming had upended the music business.

"Streaming rewrote the economics. Social media rewrote the discovery model," he said. "AI is rewriting production as we sit here."

As the boos began, Borchetta, who signed Taylor Swift to her first contract and later had a falling out with the superstar over rights to her masters, remained defiant.

"I know it. Deal with it," Borchetta replied, adding, "Like I said, it's a tool."

Borchetta refused to back down.

"Hey, like I said, You can hear me now, or you can pay me later," he said. "Hey, then do something about it, okay? It's a tool. Make it work for you."

Conan O'Brien

Conan O'Brien speaks at Harvard's 2026 commencement

Comedian Conan O'Brien used a joke about AI to jab at one of Harvard's rivals, Princeton.

Comedian Conan O'Brien leaned into AI's growing unpopularity during his address at Harvard's commencement.

"Don't worry, despite your fears, trust me when I say AI cannot replace you," O'Brien said, adding, "It'll be too busy replacing those creeps from Princeton, anyway."

O'Brien also poked fun at the ways he imagined Harvard professors were catching students using AI.

"Luckily, AI is not a problem at Harvard," O'Brien said. "Here, professors have been able to quickly flag students' use of AI thanks to the sophisticated AI software they use to grade papers."

Jeremy Scott

Fashion designer Jeremy Scott poses for a photo

Fashion designer Jeremy Scott gave the commencement address at the Kansas City Art Institute's graduation ceremony.

Fashion designer Jeremy Scott took ripping AI literally when he spoke at the Kansas City Art Institute's commencement ceremony.

Scott congratulated students on reaching the "threshold of a new beginning."

"Sounds kind of cliched, right? Doesn't sound authentic, does it? Sounds like you've heard it before, right? It's because it's AI," he revealed.

Scott then ripped up his AI speech to cheers and applause from the audience. He then extolled what makes human artists truly different.

"Because you know what AI can't do? It can't do what you do. It can't have an original idea," he said. "It can't even differentiate the difference between a good idea, a unique idea, and one that's mediocre."

Magic Johnson

Magic Johnson poses for a photo

Magic Johnson

Basketball legend and billionaire Magic Johnson impressed upon Tuskegee University graduates the importance of learning AI.

"AI is not going to replace you at your job," Johnson said. "But somebody who knows AI will replace you at your job."

Johnson, who delivered similar advice during a second commencement address at Stillman College, said students at historically Black colleges and universities need to recognize that AI is "such a huge opportunity for our people."

"This is going to be a $15 trillion global opportunity by 2030," Johnson said. "You have to be involved in AI. Very important."

Ronny Chieng

Ronny Chieng speaks behind "The Daily Show" desk

Ronny Chieng

Comedian Ronny Chieng had a simple message for Harvard students: "Fuck AI."

"I'm here to tell you the mission of your generation is to destroy AI," Chieng said to cheers. "Kill it."

Chieng told attendees at Harvard's 2026 class day event that other graduation speakers telling students to master AI are missing the point.

"The creating is the fun part," he said. "I know this platitude is almost worthy of AI, but the reason shortcuts to skip to the end aren't always good is because the journey isn't just how we acquire skills. The journey is the point of all of this."

Fareed Zakaria

Fareed Zakaria, dressed in a navy suit with a blue tie, talks onstage.

Journalist Fareed Zakaria is the latest commencement speaker to receive booes while talking about AI. But he took a different view from the other speakers.

Journalist Fareed Zakaria told Bard graduates that society is asking the wrong questions about AI.

"So people naturally ask: 'What will be left for human beings to do?'" he said. "But, perhaps that's the wrong question. The better question is, 'What does AI tell us about all the things we humans already do — and that are distinctive and irreplaceable?'"

Zakaria gave students "a trigger warning" that he was going to talk about AI in light of the response to Schmidt and other commencement speakers around the country who had been jeered when bringing up the technology.

"Feel free to get the booing out of the way," he said.

The rest of Zakaria's speech focused on HI, or human intelligence, the biology and resulting characteristics that make humans exceptional.

"A machine can write a sad poem, but it cannot weep at a funeral," he said. "The more powerful AI becomes, the more we may rediscover how much we value the distinctly human."

The post Cheers, jeers, and laughs: The speeches about AI that drew strong responses from 2026 grads appeared first on Business Insider