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Ellen DeGeneres at Tulane's 2009 Commencement Speech

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    Thank you, President Cowen,
    Mrs. President Cowen,
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    (audience laughs)
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    distinguished guests,
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    undistinguished guests,
    you know who you are,
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    (audience laughs)
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    honored faculty,
    and creepy Spanish teacher.
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    (audience laughs)
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    And thank you
    to all the graduating class of 2009,
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    I realize most of you are hung over
    and have splitting
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    headaches and haven't slept
    since Fat Tuesday
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    but you can't graduate till I finish,
    so listen up!
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    (audience cheers and applauses)
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    When I was asked to make
    the commencement speech
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    I immediately said yes.
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    Then I went to look up
    what commencement meant,
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    (audience laughs)
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    which would've been easy
    if I had a dictionary but most
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    of the books in our house are Portia's
    and they're all written in Australian.
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    (audience laughs)
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    So, I had to break the word
    down myself,
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    to find out the meaning.
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    Commencement.
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    Common and cement.
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    (audience laughs)
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    Common cement.
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    You commonly see cement on sidewalks.
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    Sidewalks have cracks and if you step
    on a crack you break your mothers back.
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    (audience laughs)
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    So there's that.
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    (audience laughs)
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    But I'm honored that you've asked me here
    to speak at your common cement.
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    (audience laughs)
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    I thought that you had to be a famous
    alumnus, alumini, aluminum, alumus,
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    you had to graduate from the school.
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    (audience laughs)
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    I didn't go to college, here,
    and I don't know if President Cowen knows,
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    I didn't go to college at all,
    any college.
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    And I'm not saying you wasted your time
    or money but look at me,
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    I'm a huge celebrity.
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    (audience laughs and applauses)
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    Although I did graduate
    from the school of hard knocks,
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    our mascot was the knockers.
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    (audience laughs)
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    I spent a lot of time here growing up.
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    My mom worked at Newcomb
    and I would go there
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    every time I needed to steal
    something out of her purse.
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    But why am I here today?
    Clearly not to steal.
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    You're too far away
    and I'd never get away with it.
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    I'm here because of you.
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    Because I can't think of a more tenacious,
    more courageous graduating class.
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    I mean, look at you all
    wearing your robes.
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    Usually when you're wearing a robe
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    at ten in the morning,
    it means you've given up.
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    (audience laughs)
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    I'm here
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    (audience laughs)
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    because I love New Orleans.
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    I was born and raised here,
    I spent my formative years here,
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    and like you, while I was living here,
    I only did laundry six times.
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    (audience laughs)
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    When I finished school
    I was completely lost.
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    And by school, I mean middle school,
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    but I went ahead and finished
    high school anyway.
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    And I really had no ambition.
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    I didn't know what I wanted to do.
    I did everything.
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    I shucked oysters, I was a hostess,
    I was a bartender,
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    I was a waitress, I painted houses,
    I sold vacuum cleaners.
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    I had no idea and I thought
    I'd just finally settle on some job
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    and I would make enough money
    to pay my rent,
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    maybe have basic cable, maybe not,
    I didn't really have a plan.
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    My point, is that by the time
    I was your age,
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    I really thought I knew who I was,
    but I had no idea.
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    Like, for example, when I was your age,
    I was dating men.
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    (audience laughs and cheers)
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    So what I'm saying is when your're older,
    most of you will be gay.
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    (audience laughs and applauses)
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    Is anybody writing this stuff down?
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    Parents?
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    (audience laughs)
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    (Ellen laughs)
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    Anyway, I had no idea
    what I wanted to do with my life
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    and the way I ended up on this path
    was from a very tragic event.
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    I was maybe 19
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    and my girlfriend at the time
    was killed in a car accident.
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    And I passed the accident
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    and I didn't know it was her
    and I kept going.
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    And I found out shortly after
    that it was her.
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    And I was living in a basement apartment.
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    I had no money,
    I had no heat, no air.
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    I had a mattress on the floor
    and the apartment was infested with fleas.
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    And I was soul-searching.
    I was like, "Why is she suddenly gone
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    and there are fleas here?
    I don't understand."
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    There must be a purpose
    and wouldn't it be so convenient
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    if we could just pick up the phone
    and call God, and ask these questions.
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    And I started writing
    and what poured out of me
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    was an imaginary conversation with God,
    which was one-sided,
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    and I finished writing it
    and I looked at it and I said to myself --
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    and I hadn't even been doing stand-up,
    ever, there was no club in town --
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    I said I'm gonna do this
    on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson --
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    at the time, he was the king --
    and I'm gonna be the first woman
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    in the history of the show
    to be called over to sit down.
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    And several years later,
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    I was the first woman
    in the history of the show,
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    and the only woman
    in the history of the show to sit down
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    because of that phone conversation
    with God that I wrote.
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    And I started this path of stand-up
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    and it was successful and it was great,
    but it was hard
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    because I was trying to please everybody,
    and I had this secret that I was keeping
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    that I was gay, and I thought if people
    found out they wouldn't like me,
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    they wouldn't laugh at me,
    then my career turned into,
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    I got my own sitcom and that was
    very successful, another level of success
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    and I thought, "What if they find out
    I'm gay? Then they'll never watch."
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    This was a long time ago,
    this was when we just had
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    white presidents
    but anyway, this was back
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    (audience laughs)
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    many years ago.
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    (audience laughs)
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    And, I finally
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    decided that I was living with so much
    shame and so much fear.
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    That I just couldn't live that way anymore.
    I decided to come out, make it creative,
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    my character would come out
    at the same time.
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    It wasn't to make a political statement
    or do anything other than to free myself
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    up from this heaviness
    that I was carrying around.
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    I just wanted to be honest
    and I thought,
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    "What's the worst that can happen?
    I can lose my career."
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    I did.
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    I lost my career.
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    The show was cancelled after six years
    without even telling me.
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    I read it in the paper.
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    The phone didn't ring for three years.
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    I had no offers,
    nobody wanted to touch me at all.
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    Yet, I was getting letters from kids
    that almost committed suicide
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    but didn't because of what I did,
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    and I realized that I had a purpose
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    and it wasn't just about me
    and it wasn't about celebrity
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    but I felt like I was being punished.
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    It was a bad time.
    I was angry, I was sad.
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    And then I was offered a talk show
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    and the people that offered me
    the talk show tried to sell it
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    and most stations
    didn't want to pick it up.
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    Most people didn't want to buy it because
    they thought nobody would watch me.
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    Really, when I look back on it,
    I wouldn't change a thing.
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    It was so important for me
    to lose everything
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    because I found out
    what the most important thing is,
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    is to be true to yourself.
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    Ultimately, that's what's gotten me
    to this place.
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    I don't live in fear, I'm free,
    I have no secrets,
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    and I know I'll always be okay
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    because no matter what,
    I know who I am.
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    So, in conclusion,
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    when I was younger
    I thought success was something different.
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    I thought, when I grow up,
    I want to be famous,
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    I want to be a star,
    I want to be in movies.
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    When I grow up, I want to see
    the world, drive nice cars,
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    I wanna have groupies,
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    (audience laughs)
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    to quote the Pussy Cat Dolls.
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    How many people thought
    it was boobies by the way?
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    It's not, it's groupies.
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    (audience laughs)
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    But my idea of success is different today
    and as you grow,
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    you'll realize the definition
    of success changes.
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    For many of you, today's success is being
    able to hold down 20 shots of tequila.
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    (audience laughs and cheers)
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    For me, the most important
    thing in your life
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    is to live your life with integrity
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    and not to give into peer pressure
    to try to be something that you're not.
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    To live your life as an honest
    and compassionate person,
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    to contribute in some way.
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    So to conclude my conclusion,
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    (audience laughs)
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    follow your passion,
    stay true to yourself,
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    never follow someone else's path
    unless you're in the woods
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    and you're lost and you see a path,
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    then by all means
    you should follow that.
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    (audience laughs)
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    Don't give advice,
    it'll come back and bite you in the ass.
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    Don't take anyone's advice.
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    So my advice to you is to
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    (audience laughs)
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    be true to yourself
    and everything will be fine.
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    I know a lot of you are concerned about
    your future but there's no need to worry.
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    The economy is booming,
    the job market is wide open.
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    (audience laughs)
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    The planet is just fine.
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    (audience laughs)
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    It'll be great.
    You already survived a hurricane.
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    What else can happen to you?
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    Some of the most devastating things
    that happen to you
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    will teach you the most.
    Now you know the right questions
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    to ask for your first job interview,
    like, "Is it above sea level?"
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    (audience laughs)
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    So, to conclude my conclusion
    that I previously concluded
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    in the common cement speech,
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    I guess what I'm trying to say
    is life is like one big Mardi Gras,
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    but instead of showing your boobs
    show people your brain,
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    and if they like what they see
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    you'll have more beads
    than you know what to do with.
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    And you'll be drunk most of the time.
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    (audience laughs)
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    So to the Katrina class of 2009,
    I say congratulations
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    and if you don't remember
    a thing I said today, remember this.
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    You're gonna be okay
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    dum-do-dum-dum-dum
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    just dance.
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    (audience laughs and cheers)
Title:
Ellen DeGeneres at Tulane's 2009 Commencement Speech
Description:

Ellen DeGeneres addresses Tulane University's graduating 'Katrina Class' - 16-May-2009

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
09:31

English subtitles

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