Education

Why the Class of 2026 Booed Every AI Speech This Spring

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<p>On May 8&comma; inside the University of Central Florida&&num;8217&semi;s Addition Financial Arena&comma; Gloria Caulfield&comma; vice president of strategic alliances at Tavistock Development Company&comma; told a room full of humanities and communications graduates that artificial intelligence was &&num;8220&semi;the next industrial revolution&period;&&num;8221&semi; The boos started almost immediately&period; Caulfield spun toward the other speakers on stage and asked&comma; out loud&comma; &&num;8220&semi;What happened&quest;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That was the opening act&period; Over the following nine days&comma; at four separate ceremonies spread across Florida&comma; Tennessee&comma; and Arizona&comma; the Class of 2026 delivered the same verdict on the technology their schools&comma; employers&comma; and commencement speakers have been promoting since generative AI went mainstream in late 2022&period; The pattern deserves close attention&comma; because the graduates in those arenas are the same people the industry needs to adopt&comma; trust&comma; and eventually build on top of its AI platforms&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Four Ceremonies&comma; One Running Verdict<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The incidents were not clustered at one type of school or one part of the country&period; Each added a different detail to the same underlying picture&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>May 8&comma; University of Central Florida&colon;<&sol;strong> Caulfield called AI &&num;8220&semi;the next industrial revolution&&num;8221&semi; before an audience of arts and humanities graduates&period; Sustained booing followed&semi; one graduate yelled &&num;8220&semi;AI sucks&&num;8221&semi; clearly enough to register on the university&&num;8217&semi;s own livestream&period; When Caulfield then noted that &&num;8220&semi;only a few years ago&comma; AI was not a factor in our lives&comma;&&num;8221&semi; the same crowd erupted in applause&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>May 9&comma; Middle Tennessee State University&colon;<&sol;strong> Scott Borchetta&comma; chief executive of Big Machine Records and the executive who first signed Taylor Swift to a label deal&comma; told graduating students that AI was &&num;8220&semi;rewriting production as we sit here&period;&&num;8221&semi; When the boos came&comma; Borchetta responded&comma; &&num;8220&semi;Deal with it&period; Like I said&comma; it&&num;8217&semi;s a tool&period;&&num;8221&semi; The crowd did not take the advice quietly&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>May 16&comma; University of Arizona&colon;<&sol;strong> Eric Schmidt&comma; who served as Google&&num;8217&semi;s chief executive from 2001 to 2011&comma; became the most prominent name on the receiving end of the season&&num;8217&semi;s dissent&period; His remarks on AI and technological transformation drew sustained boos that interrupted his speech at multiple points&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>May 16&comma; Glendale Community College&comma; Phoenix&colon;<&sol;strong> The college deployed an AI announcer to read graduates&&num;8217&semi; names as they crossed the stage&period; The software mispronounced and misordered several names&comma; forcing administrators to stop the ceremony entirely and restart with a human reader&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>Glendale&&num;8217&semi;s episode carries a different charge from the rest&period; Nobody was booing an executive there&period; The AI simply failed at its assigned task&comma; in front of the students most skeptical of the technology&comma; on the day those students were receiving their degrees&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image aligncenter featured-image" style&equals;"margin&colon;1&period;5em auto&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><img class&equals;"aligncenter" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2026&sol;05&sol;class-of-2026-graduates-booing-artificial-intelligence-commencement-speeches-acr&period;webp" alt&equals;"Class of 2026 graduates booing artificial intelligence commencement speeches across US universities&period;" style&equals;"width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;max-width&colon;800px&semi;height&colon;auto&semi;border-radius&colon;8px&semi;display&colon;block&semi;margin&colon;0 auto&semi;" &sol;><figcaption style&equals;"text-align&colon;center&semi;font-size&colon;0&period;85em&semi;color&colon;&num;888&semi;margin-top&colon;0&period;5em&semi;">Class of 2026 graduates booing artificial intelligence commencement speeches across US universities&period;<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<h2>What the Polling Already Knew<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>None of this happened in a vacuum&period; Pollsters had been tracking the sentiment shift among young Americans for months before the first mortarboard was thrown&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>22&percnt;<&sol;strong> of Gen Z respondents ages 14 to 29 said AI makes them excited in <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;news&period;gallup&period;com&sol;poll&sol;708224&sol;gen-adoption-steady-skepticism-climbs&period;aspx" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">Gallup&&num;8217&semi;s February 2026 survey of 1&comma;572 young Americans<&sol;a>&comma; down from 36&percnt; the prior year&comma; a 14-point drop&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>31&percnt;<&sol;strong> said AI makes them angry&comma; up from 22&percnt; in the prior year&&num;8217&semi;s survey&comma; a nine-point rise in twelve months&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Just <strong>18&percnt;<&sol;strong> said AI makes them feel hopeful&comma; down from 27&percnt;&comma; a nine-point decline in hopefulness over the same period&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>69&percnt;<&sol;strong> of Gen Z workers said they trust work completed entirely by humans&comma; compared to 28&percnt; who trust AI-assisted work and just 3&percnt; who trust work produced solely by AI&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>Gen Z&&num;8217&semi;s actual use of AI tools held steady&comma; with just over half &lpar;51&percnt;&rpar; using it at least weekly&comma; unchanged from the prior survey&period; What shifted was the emotional register&colon; consistent use accompanied by climbing anger&period; Zach Hrynowski&comma; senior education researcher at Gallup&comma; said the rising anger may be driven specifically by AI dimming prospects for entry-level workers entering a tightening labor market&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A separate Gallup study&comma; published in April 2026&comma; found that 42&percnt; of bachelor&&num;8217&semi;s degree students had already reconsidered their chosen major because of AI&comma; a figure that underscores how far the technology&&num;8217&semi;s shadow had stretched into students&&num;8217&semi; decisions long before graduation day&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Why Arts Graduates Led the Charge<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The most-watched of the three speech incidents took place at a ceremony specifically for arts and humanities graduates&period; That is not a coincidence&period; The fields packed into that UCF arena are precisely where generative AI has made its deepest early incursions into entry-level work&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<table>&NewLine;<thead>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<th>Field<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Common Entry-Level Roles<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>AI Disruption Pattern<&sol;th>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;thead>&NewLine;<tbody>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Communications &sol; PR<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Social media coordinator&comma; copywriter<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>AI content tools reducing junior copywriting hires at agencies<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Journalism &sol; Digital Media<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Reporter&comma; digital editor<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Automated summaries compressing content team headcount<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Advertising &sol; Marketing<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Account coordinator&comma; creative assistant<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>AI design and copy tools pushing creative labor toward senior roles<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Film &sol; TV Production<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Video editor&comma; production assistant<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Generative video tools compressing freelance and contract demand<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;tbody>&NewLine;<&sol;table>&NewLine;<p>Houda Eletr&comma; a graduate of UCF&&num;8217&semi;s Nicholson School of Communication and Media who joined in the booing&comma; described Caulfield to the Orlando Weekly as a &&num;8220&semi;corporate mouthpiece&period;&&num;8221&semi; From the perspective of a graduate heading into a media job market reshaped by AI&comma; an address celebrating AI&&num;8217&semi;s promise reads less like inspiration and more like a sales pitch for the technology narrowing her options&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At the University of Arizona&comma; graduate Olivia Malone&comma; bound for law school&comma; put the central contradiction directly to the Associated Press&period; &&num;8220&semi;We as students are discouraged from using it and penalized for using it&comma;&&num;8221&semi; she said&period; &&num;8220&semi;And then to have our speaker be the champion of AI is just like&comma; OK&quest; Why&quest;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>More than half<&sol;strong> of college students report that their institution either discourages or bans AI use in academic work&comma; according to recent survey data&comma; while their future employers are simultaneously listing AI proficiency as a top hiring criterion&period; Graduates this spring have been graded under one set of rules and then asked to applaud a technology operating under a completely different one&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Schmidt at Arizona&colon; A Lesson in Reading the Room<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Of all the executives who faced dissent this season&comma; Schmidt came closest to understanding the moment&period; He still could not get through the speech without sustained interruption&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Acknowledging the Room<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>When sustained boos broke through his May 16 address at the University of Arizona&comma; Schmidt stopped and named what was happening around him&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>There is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written&comma; that the machines are coming&comma; that the jobs are evaporating&comma; that the climate is breaking&comma; that politics are fractured&comma; and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>He called those fears <strong>rational<&sol;strong>&period; That concession was unusual&semi; most executives in comparable situations work around the unease in the room rather than articulating it back&comma; point by point&comma; in the audience&&num;8217&semi;s own voice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Schmidt also made a sharper admission about the technology&&num;8217&semi;s track record than most people in his position volunteer&period; He acknowledged that the platforms built during his tenure at Google&comma; while connecting people and &&num;8220&semi;democratizing knowledge&comma;&&num;8221&semi; also &&num;8220&semi;degraded the public square&comma;&&num;8221&semi; rewarded outrage&comma; and amplified people&&num;8217&semi;s worst instincts&period; For a former chief executive of one of the world&&num;8217&semi;s largest technology companies&comma; that is not a standard concession&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>The Pivot That Lost Them<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The problem arrived in the very next movement&period; After cataloguing rational fears and admitting to real past harms&comma; he told graduates the future had not yet been written and urged them to help shape where AI goes&period; &&num;8220&semi;The future is not yet finished&period; It is now your turn to shape it&period;&&num;8221&semi; The crowd&&num;8217&semi;s response&comma; across multiple remaining points in his remarks&comma; was not warm&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For graduates entering a labor market already being reshaped on someone else&&num;8217&semi;s terms&comma; an instruction to help steer the technology reads less like empowerment than an invitation to accept disruption quietly&period; The gap between his clear-eyed enumeration of their fears and his prescription for what to do with those fears was precisely where the goodwill he had briefly built ran out&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There were also grievances in that hall beyond AI&period; Student groups had organized opposition over a pending sexual assault lawsuit filed by his former partner&comma; per reporting from The College Investor&comma; which added a layer of hostility unrelated to any speech about machine learning&period; The boos at the University of Arizona were carrying more than one grievance&comma; and he was navigating that room without a map&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Delta CEO Who Threw Out His AI Draft<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Ed Bastian&comma; chief executive of Delta Air Lines&comma; addressed Emory University&&num;8217&semi;s graduating class of more than 5&comma;000 students in Atlanta on May 11&period; His opening move was different from every other executive in this story&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In preparing the speech&comma; he told the Emory crowd&comma; he had asked AI to write it&period; The result was quick and easy to produce&period; But the draft lacked &&num;8220&semi;soul nor warmth&comma;&&num;8221&semi; was not his personal voice&comma; and did not express his genuine appreciation for the occasion&period; &&num;8220&semi;You want to hear from me&comma; not some algorithm of me&comma;&&num;8221&semi; he said&period; So he threw it out&comma; picked up pencil and paper&comma; and started over&period; The applause came when he said so&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Three executives told graduates to accept&comma; adapt to&comma; or get on board with AI and left their respective stages to boos&period; One admitted he had tried the technology&comma; found it wanting in precisely the dimension these graduates fear it is wanting&comma; chose the human version&comma; and said so plainly&period; He got applause&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bastian was not arguing against AI as a business tool&period; Delta uses it across flight scheduling&comma; maintenance prediction&comma; and customer operations&period; What he did was validate a specific instinct&colon; that some tasks require something AI cannot reliably produce&period; The graduates in those four May venues are not wrong to want that acknowledged&period; They spent four years learning to produce exactly that something themselves&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Narrative Gap That Graduation Season Exposed<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Commencement has a quality no other civic moment replicates&colon; the audience is completely captive&period; Graduates cannot walk out without disrupting the ceremony and disappointing their families&period; The only release valve is noise&period; Booing is the voice of an audience with no other option but to sit&comma; so it stops sitting quietly&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That structural dynamic amplified the visible backlash&comma; but it did not manufacture the sentiment beneath it&period; Anger about AI among young Americans aged 14 to 29 had already climbed nine points in a single year before graduation season began&comma; while excitement had fallen 14 points to <strong>22&percnt;<&sol;strong> and hopefulness had dropped to just 18&percnt;&comma; per Gallup&&num;8217&semi;s research published in April 2026&period; Between 2023 and 2025&comma; LinkedIn added more than <strong>639&comma;000 AI-related job postings<&sol;strong> in the United States&comma; per the company&&num;8217&semi;s own data&comma; with the fastest-growing title being AI engineer&period; The opportunity is not absent&period; What is absent is a credible on-ramp for graduates whose entry-level positions are contracting while the senior and technical roles expand&comma; and whose schools told them not to use the technology their employers now demand they know&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If next May&&num;8217&semi;s commencement speakers arrive with a more honest accounting of what they are asking graduates to navigate&comma; the graduation circuit will look different&period; If they show up with the same instructions to get on board and figure it out&comma; they should read the Delta CEO&&num;8217&semi;s Emory speech first&period; He drafted it twice&period; The second version was the one that got applause&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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