Well, graduation season is upon us (or for some of us, like yours truly, it has already passed...St. Peter's College, where I teach, had its graduation ceremonies on May 17).
But I was just amused to see what a class of true Einsteins UCLA is unleashing on the world in its graduation class of 2009.
According to this story, a large number of UCLA students were outraged that the actor James Franco (Spider-Man, Pineapple Express) was going to give a speech at their commencement ceremony. Franco had received his UCLA BA degree last year (he had first enrolled in the university in 1996). But a lot of UCLA students, it seems, are not happy with this. They feel that he "hasn't had time to accomplish anything with his degree" since his graduation.
This is the reason for rejecting Franco? Are you out of your fracking minds?
There were probably a lot of really outstanding keg parties and a great deal of excellent dope smoked by the UCLA student body over the last four years.
How about letting him speak because he is a person who obviously does not need a college degree to make a living these days but still valued education enough to get that degree? Maybe he would have said something like he completed his degree and now wanted to let other students appreciate the value of knowledge for its own sake and beyond the dollar value of a salary.
Franco, apparently, said that he backed out of giving the speech because of work conflicts. It's a reasonable way to safe face.
But at least he's probably happy that with a degree from UCLA, he just might look forward to a promising career in the entertainment industry.