• Robert A. Brown

    Robert A. Brown is president of Boston University. Profile

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There are 134 comments on POV: A Lesson from BU’s 150th Commencement

  1. Agreed, and thank you for stating as much, Pres. Brown. The few students shouting in the middle of his speech were trying to implement a heckler’s veto. Protesting is an enshrined right, but what we witnessed at Commencement was antithetical to what a university is and how it should operate. Our students must learn this before they graduate, or the cycle will never stop. As Jenny S. Martinez, Dean of Stanford Law School, stated when the Stanford Law community was shamefully impacted by cancel culture: “With regard to the norms of this community, the cycle of degenerating discourse won’t stop if we insist that people we disagree with must first behave the way we want them to. Nor will it stop if we try to shame each other into submission (shaming, the research shows, has precisely the opposite effect in communities constituted by difference). The cycle stops when we recognize our responsibility to treat each other with the dignity with which we expect to be met. It stops when we choose to replace condemnation with curiosity, invective with inquiry” ( https://law.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Next-Steps-on-Protests-and-Free-Speech.pdf ).

    Boston University, if it is to be a true university and not a church, must encourage the widest range of viewpoints and intellectual diversity, free from institutional orthodoxy and from internal and external coercion.

    1. “The widest range of viewpoints and intellectual diversity, free from institutional orthodoxy and from internal and external coercion” includes the students standing up to Zaslav — thanks for your support!

    2. The number of people here siding with disgrace Robert Brown to protect a multi-millionaire’s ego is telling. You are wildly out of touch with the youth today and the world.

    3. “The cycle stops when we recognize our responsibility to treat each other with the dignity with which we expect to be met.”

      Very well said, and as someone who thinks that underpaid workers should be treated with the dignity they deserve, I’m glad you stand in solidarity with the WGA strike :)

    4. No sir they exercise their right to free speech it was their graduation that they paid for. So if they say they don’t want someone to speak then they should have listened I spent 6 years in the military so they can do exactly what they did. People like you will cry about your second amendment right but are really quick to deny anyone their first amendment rights. What a hypocrite

  2. Alumni

    It was the day of our classes commencement, a glorious day and believe it or not in 1987, students also had issues with the commencement speakers. It did not impact graduation negatively. I was not interested in protesting as it was my day to celebrate with my parents and classmates. And I barley paid attention. The BU President had lost touch of the student body long ago. That is the reflection here.

  3. As a parent and alumni, I agree and disagree with what you are saying. Yes, respect is critical and freedom of speech is essential. However, the speaker was also disrespectful and he never confronted the elephant in the room by acknowledging the writer’s strike. That is all he had to do to look better and say sometimes life brings challenges that are not what we desire but need to be negotiated…. The speaker did not seem to come down from his privilege to just gracefully address the issue and educate the audience. He seemed like a well-trained attorney just tolerating the audience. And did he really want to be there? He turned down last year’s opportunity to speak, and stated at this one he had to leave right after…

    What was his message to students I ask you as you reflect? I came away with nothing positive but arrogance….

    1. Thank you for highlighting what the key issue, I 100% agree. Freedom of speech and respect for voices must be given both ways.

      You cannot expect one side to be polite when the other is not even acknowledging the pain from the others’ perspectives!

      It would have been different if he showed any sign of understanding that he is able to live comfortably with a home and resources to live a sustainable life due to the collaboration and hard work of the writers who support his business, who unfortunately, don’t have even the baseline comforts to live and eat on a sustainable wage.

      To call their outburst “cancel culture” as well signifies that there was bias amongst leadership as well which is disappointing. Being able to hold ourselves accountable to the facts even if we disagree is the only way conversation can stay civil.

    2. I wholeheartedly agree with Jane Cohen. I too am a graduate of BU… class of 1968… SED and DGE…as well as the proud mother and grandmother of BU graduates. I was shocked that the speaker never addressed “the elephant in the room.” He had no problem bragging about all of his accomplishments… but he failed the graduates by delivering a speech all about himself … thinking he was sharing important life lessons which actually were more suitable for a group of ten year olds. (No disrespect to young children intended , for sure.). The graduates’ heckling was far less of a behavioral disappointment than the insensitivity of the speaker.

      1. When my daughter told me who the commencement speaker would be, I just thought what an uninspired choice. And then thinking of it in context of the writer’s strike and I thought what a completely unaware choice. And then to sit through that boring, boorish juvenile speech was just salt in the wound. The incessant blabbering about all the great men he’s met and the steps he took to advance his career, which had little or nothing to do with the education he received. Never once did he pause to say to the students, this education you received is a great privilege; go do something extraordinary with this privilege. But he wasn’t able to impart that to the students because he himself has never done anything extraordinary, despite his yammering to the contrary. It couldn’t have been more telling that the day after graduation you could not find a mention of his name on BU social media and the fact that he shared a stage with Supreme Court Justice Jackson was such an affront. I’m sorry that this man is out there in the world representing BU. He’s done nothing more than sign a couple contracts, and get lucky for being as bold as a white educated man needs to be. I couldn’t be more supremely disappointed in this dressing down the President Brown has done here with this tone- deaf essay. He should’ve been extraordinarily proud of those students who stood up for something important, especially on this day when it was all about the future, and where the path may lead them. I have great faith in the students that they will do right in the world, despite not having the leadership and guidance that they had every right to expect and absolutely deserved.

  4. Unfortunately, when you invite individuals who do not treat employees as well as actors you run the risk of “incivility”at events. You can not expect people to sit back and take injustices at events that are about them and not about the speaker. His invitation should have been rescinded for a better individual. I would not have attended had this been my own graduation. Listening to someone talk about WHEN to pick a fight when his writers are asking for fair wages was a slap in the face.

    1. Listening and responding with civility to those with whom you disagree *is* the essence of an academic environment … and also civil society. Verbal abuse is never an appropriate response to
      disagreement.

      If you don’t like what the speaker had to say, write an op-ed.

      1. Yeah, the millionaire CEO is definitely gonna sit down to read a college kid’s op-ed about him—great idea!

        This graduating class took advantage of an exceedingly rare opportunity—the opportunity for regular people to confront an ultra rich business executive *directly* and call them out for their horrific injustices *directly*—and I couldn’t be more proud of them.

      2. “write an op-ed”

        Yeah, I’m sure the CEO of a multi-billion-dollar company would’ve taken time out of his day to read a Daily Free Press article about how students don’t like him. I’ll admit people shouldn’t have yelled obscenities, but I can’t help laughing off people suggesting that something like an op-ed would’ve been an effective alternative to protesting. The protests were covered by massive publications ranging from the BBC to NPR and The Hollywood Reporter, putting a massive spotlight on the tensions between David Zaslav and the writers strike. You can’t tell me with a straight face that an op-ed would’ve been anywhere near as successful. As for the arguments about freedom of speech, vocally expressing your disapproval is not the same thing as censorship. Additionally, we’re talking about a man who runs one of the largest entertainment studios in the world. Zaslav has the power to say whatever he wants whenever he wants; his freedom of speech wasn’t ever in danger because some graduates booed him.

        1. The ends don’t justify the means. There are many things that would have been much more effective than protests … but they are illegal or immoral because we don’t want to live in North Korea.

          1. Yeah, no one wanted to cause any serious harm, which is why people booed and held up signs. That’s peaceful protest. Zaslav got to deliver his full speech and there was never any threat of violence. Students put pressure on him to do the right thing and no one got hurt. Again, the obscenities were a bit much, but other than that, what’s the big deal? We’re not about to become North Korea because a billionaire who is screwing over his employees got booed.

        1. I’m intrigued by how quickly we have transformed from stamping out microaggressions to full-throated defense of abuse.

          Academia is an ideal of civil exchange of ideas. If you want a backstabbing “might makes right” cesspool, may I suggest a career in US politics?

          1. Academia is an ideal civil exchange of ideas, but we don’t live in a bubble. Apparently, you are conflating something that briefly irritated you with uproar and anarchy. To dub this as an instance of backstabbing “might makes right” indicates complete willful ignorance to how labor rights have been achieved in this country– achievements which we should be proud of as a nation. You don’t need to mask your feelings of being inconvenienced with false claims about decorum.

      3. Write An op-ed is a lame and ineffective afterthought . If it were my graduation and some bloated, self satisfied, corporate shill was invited to speak to my graduating class during a writer’s strike it would have made me furious. Students have a right of say over who should represent their school at their own graduation. The university president falls on the wrong side of history, the entertainment business and the integrity of Boston University to invite this speaker. It’s a giant failure and complete lack of respect for the students and the times we live in.

  5. Yeah… it really is time for him to step down. This is the most tone-deaf and ironically disrespectful response I’ve read. He’s most certainly missed the point of the protestors… Instead of throwing the term “cancel culture” around, maybe spend a few minutes understanding the writers guild and strike? It’s pretty disappointing to see someone in such a high position of power lack this much empathy and understanding. The students were protesting a union buster (and TBH it was a bad speech, regardless of the context).

  6. Well said, President Brown. We may not always agree with others, but always one must treat others with respect and kindness. I sat on the platform along with you that afternoon, and witnessed all the cringe worthy moments being hurled at our speaker and receiving horrified texts from two sets of parents I knew sitting in the audience. Not unlike receiving personal attacks in a course review; amounting to bullying, is not productive and does not bring about the intended change.

  7. I applaud your comments Mr Brown, I too believe in free speech but what my family and I witnessed that Sunday was appalling and unacceptable. Like so many families we came from from far away, (Houston), and what we heard turned a beautiful ceremony into a circus. I couldn’t believe that nothing was done to stop it and frankly some of our older family members decided to leave early. Not what I imagined my daughters graduation would turn out to be, after investing all that time and money!! Cancel culture has no place in our society, but universities have allowed this to continue for too long, I hope BU learned a lesson and not allow this to happen again!

    1. Toni, why is it “free speech” when you’re supporting bourgeois corporate executives but “cancel culture” when students are supporting underpaid striking workers? Sounds to me like you want to cancel them even though they’re practicing free speech!

      1. It seems as if you are conflating two different things. If you want to protest Mr. Zaslav, then by all means feel free to do it, respectfully. It is your right in this country that many have died to maintain. The issue at hand is that Mr. Zaslav was trying to give a commencement address and individuals chose to try and drown him out by shouting and spewing vulgar terms. It was an attempt to keep him from speaking to an audience that overwhelmingly wanted to hear him. That is not free speech. It is a path to anarchy and mob rule. This behavior was an attempt to cancel him. It was disrespectful to him, the event, the university, the graduates and the prinicipals of free speech that so many have died defending. I would suggest you read Dare To Speak: Defending Free Speech For All by Suzanne Nossel.

        1. Do you genuinely believe that Zaslav would have been affected by a silent protest given by students? He would have given his speech and gone on without a single thought given to those picketing outside. This disruption garnered national attention for the Union efforts. You can’t claim mob rule when the outcries lasted twenty minutes and the speaker walked off with a smug smile on his face. Disrespect is not invalid, amoral, or indicative of anarchy just by virtue of being disrespect. Zaslav was able to speak even after BU knew that this was at risk — that’s free speech. He may have been momentarily silenced (pauses between paragraphs), but he is an elite billionaire, so his true voice will never be rendered irrelevant. It is far more likely that the voices of these new graduate students will be, thanks to his actions. That’s why it’s important.

  8. Well said. As a parent I was there to witness greatness as my daughter graduated and I was not allowed this opportunity. Where has common sense and common decency gone? If you wanted to protest do so peacefully, without obscenities. There is no grace or glory in that behavior and most find no respect for you as a result. These were entitled children acting like children. Stand, turn your back, and even exit the ceremony but do not scream and throw a tantrum. There was even worse behavior in the stands as a girl pushed her signed into parents faces and yelled obscenities. But then she had no problem standing and cheering for her loved one. You want respect then be respectful.

    1. Unless I missed all the national news headlines about explosive acts of violence orchestrated by the Boston University Woke Class of 2023 against David Zaslav, I’m pretty sure this was a very peaceful protest.

  9. I volunteered at Commencement and share Dr. Brown’s sentiment. Thank you for writing this POV.

    I saw degree candidates who chose to stand on their chairs and protest throughout the ENTIRE speech tell other degree candidates to “shut the F up” when asked politely to sit down so others could see and hear. Not only were they trying to silence Zaslav, they were also trying to silence fellow degree candidates who simply wanted to see and hear the speaker.

    I can’t imagine how I would’ve responded to being yelled at during my own graduation by a peer for something I had no control over (see: WGA Strike) and had no bearing on my BU experience the prior four years.

    Setting aside my personal feelings of solidarity with the writers and opinion that Zaslav’s speech was pretty boilerplate (and boring), the actual BEHAVIOR I witnessed from a minority of degree candidates was in fact rude, selfish, offensive and petulant. I share Dr. Brown’s embarrassment and felt awful for the parents, families and friends in the audience.

    1. Alumni

      The underlying issue is that the President and Provost have insulated and surrounded themselves with so much staff and a bloated bureaucracy that they are out of touch with the student body. It does not excuse a lack of civility and respect for the graduates. However. Alumni and students have been saying for years that the BU President has lost touch with the student body. And the staff surrounding the President needs to be changed. They know and are worried that with a new President there is going to be a needed cleaning of the bloated inner office.

    2. Oh no!!! A student used the critical thinking skills they gained through their education to understand that a man starving 11,000 workers of a liveable wage was morally wrong, but didn’t just sit down and listen instead. And why didn’t they show their anger in a meek voice *some times* instead of standing and shouting over that man for the “ENTIRE” speech, never mind that that man had a literal mic? And of course, it’s clear as day, that even though the “politely [asking]” student requested for their peer to sit down and stay quiet, it was the response that silenced other students.

      Your personal sentiments may be for the writers but your actions (including the writing of your tone policing comment) is for the system that upholds their exploitation. Don’t tell yourself otherwise. By the way, the first paragraph was sarcasm, since you clearly have an issue with tone.

      1. Wow!

        Your comment is so aggressive and filled with assumptions and inferences that I don’t even know where to start.

        If you think students berating other students at a shared ceremony equates with being morally correct, then I’m not sure you understood my point.

        Godspeed in the real world. Clearly, we have failed in teaching you nuance and basic decency.

        Warmly,
        The So-Called Tone Police

        1. And you have been failed by history in abilities to recognize effective protests.

          Nuance and basic decency are a luxury for those who are privileged to live in comfortable lifestyle.

          Today’s day and age where we as a nation are more interconnected than ever has provided our younger generation of citizens the ability to look into the lives of others and empathize on a level we never had access to in the past.

          While I also don’t condone using offensive language and tone, I found the protest still to be quite MILD in comparison to the ones experienced in the past and in my youth. If we want to prevent such behavior from boiling up we need to address and prepare for such conversations which this administration had MONTHs to take care of. Do not blame the students, it’s a symptom of a longer, broken system….

      2. Those “starving” Hollywood writers? Please. They make a far better living then most Americans and don’t sniff the poverty line. Despicable display at BU commencement from a bunch of entitled whiners that think their heliocentric view entitles them to forgo common courtesy.

  10. I did not attend the commencement. I am a graduate student in Sargent PP-OTD. It leaves me both tired and disappointed that BU students behaved in the manner described by President Brown. As an undergrad at BU I often felt social pressures presaged social norms and behaviors on Campus and beyond. Frankly, I did not like on campus culture at BU and when my daughter decided for Brown University (the other BU) I was not wholly disenfranchised – her choice to partake of a culture that is several leagues more disciplined and focused is quite obvious to me on my visits – gives me hope that the smart new gen is capable. What makes BU such a social pressure cooker if not a restive environment? Maybe its the draw to a fight.

  11. Dr. Brown is right, every word of his statement pitch perfect. Dismayed students had the right to protest. But to suppress the words of our commencement speaker makes a mockery of free, unfettered speech.Stand up and turn your back, fine, placards, fine , bi-plane with a banner, fine, But let the man speak.!!The irony is that Mr.Zaslav had a great story to share, replete with valuable insights for our graduatng seniors in a wickedly competitve job market. Pity that an otherwise beautiful afternoon was sullied by the grotesque behavior of a few.

  12. Well, when the university/admin/faculty bend to every juvenile whim of its students, coddle them, and treat them as both valuable customers and incapable children, you shouldn’t be surprised when their behavior reflects that.

    1. I think it has more to do with the graduating class—and do remember that these graduates will be at the bottom of the career totem pole as they enter the workforce—being made up of many who will go on to work under tyrants like Zaslav. These students saw the struggles of the underpaid striking writers and experienced something I hope you can experience too someday: empathy. They’re standing up against injustice and you’re calling them coddled and incapable in order to defend someone who makes more money in a year than most people will ever have in their life. Who’s really the coddled one here?

    2. Give me a break with the old conservative “coddled snowflakes” argument. It’s especially laughable when this tiresome shtick is trotted out to defend a billionaire who is treating his employees like garbage so that he can make his insanely large bank account even bigger. The graduates who protested are about to enter an extremely competitive industry where most will start off at minimum wage and have to spend years working their way up. Zaslav has enough money he could quit his job tomorrow and spend the rest of his life living in pure luxury. It’s wild that anyone could take a look at this situation and come to the conclusion that the protesters are the coddled ones.

      1. I’m not defending a billionaire, nor am I criticizing the students, at least directly. The students would be very capable if they were ever given a chance to be. I’m just pointing out that the university system does indeed encourage a sense of helplessness and immaturity among its students. Ask me how I know. I’m also sympathetic to the strike and in the same uncertain economic boat as them and the graduates. I just think yelling obscenities at people’s grandparents is a juvenile form of “protest.”

        1. Bingo.

          From my vantage point on Nickerson, I saw degree candidates yelling obscenities at Zaslav and each other, taking selfies of themselves giving Zaslav the finger, standing on chairs obstructing other degree candidates’ views and claiming “it’s my Commencement, I can do what I want,” and booing the audience in the grandstand that applauded Zaslav when his contributions to preserving Holocaust history were brought up in his introduction.

          This kind of behavior dilutes the protest and makes Boston University students look like a bunch of selfish, immature kids.

          Admittedly, Zaslav would’ve been well-served to acknowledge the strike and protest. I was surprised he did not and believe this escalated the situation.

  13. The Contention between satisfying the investor and the investment. The irony is that sooner or later, the investment will begin to work for the investors. They all do eventually, even as entrepreneurs. Some of these students will go on to work for Mr. Zaslav. Some may become smaller versions of Mr. Zaslav and repeat the same actions that they protest. But who will be there to protest against them when that time comes?. Education must go beyond equiping students with just something to protest against. Education must encourage an internal reflection to do better for the weak and helpless when we get into positions of power. *Imagine this: The possibility that Mr Zaslav protested against people in authority when he was a student. How ironic would that be? Do not be assimilated into the systematic cycle. Be truly different from inside. Start with an internal reflection.

  14. I am an older alumnus (1955) who watched the commencement to see how Zaslav and the students would interact. My grand-daughter graduated last year but several of her friends whom I have met were in this class. While I couldn’t hear all the comments (fortunately), it seems clear that a minority of students went way beyond the normative bounds, as President Brown has pointed out. The issue , however, really is Zaslav. He is the one who “picked the fight” by not withdrawing several weeks before the event, knowing full well what would happen. By not doing so, he put the University in a terrible and irreversible spot. I don’t know how this would have worked but perhaps Kejanji Brown Jackson would have agreed to move her speech from the Law School to the event at the field? And thank you, President Brown, for your years of faithful service to the University. I may not hav agreed with everything that has happened but, like thousands of alumni, I have made donations each year to a school that was instrumental in my life and training,

    1. The only reasonable comment here. This whole article has to be a joke there’s no way Brown is putting blame onto students for this.

  15. I was there. Zaslav should have acknowledged the strike and the protestors in the crowd. Several things he said in his speech were tone deaf to the moment.

    I heard chanting but no obscenities.

    1. He was incredibly tone-deaf. He said things that were incredibly demeaning to graduating COM/CFA majors. And so many of his indirect comments were said with a smirk. Then he went on to brag about his first job post LAW school being very lucrative…read the room dude…there are students here graduating into the strike your studio is part of!! They aren’t going to be making a lot of money, stop rubbing it in.

      Then he finished his speech when he got to his 5-point summary and *kept talking*. I later learned he did go off-script/off-teleprompter when he kept adding stuff at the end and it all seemed to be targeted at demeaning the students.

  16. I disagree with what the President said. By inviting a speaker who is against what the university stands for: against oppression, the university disgrace itself and nullify the chance of celebration of many students.
    By using the power of authority and the power of the majority, the president shows how blindfolded he is.
    Personally, I am disappointed by President Brown. I thought he was effective and kind, much different from the infamous Silber. I am disappointed as a BU graduate.

  17. “Conservatives” clutching their pearls and swooning because people disagree with their choice to present a graduation speaker whose signal achievement is becoming obscenely wealthy is far too typical. No one was “cancelled” that day. No one prevented Zaslav from speaking. They simply expressed their opinion of him, and of BU’s choice of him as commencement speaker, as is their right and as is expected in a university. Zaslav was a terrible choice even before the writers’ strike, and even before he gave a platform to Trump on CNN. I am proud of the graduates for making their opinions known — even though I may not like the particular word choices some of them made.

  18. Since many have already spoken to the content of the speech (and I agree), I want to add that Mr. Zaslav could have respectfully removed his sunglasses when addressing the students, parents, and guests of the University.

  19. This is a bizarre take from someone who was trusted with leadership of the university for so long. As an alum, I was so proud to hear the students that participated in the protests making their voices heard.

    The graduates leave this event intact, ready for a week or two of celebration, the parts of their commencement that were directly relevant to them were untouched. I pity those who cannot separate an effective protest of a terrible speaker from a very successful commencement. I spoke to several graduates, many of whom I knew when I attended BU, who felt that the protest increased their enjoyment of the event, as it was one last opportunity to achieve something together as a class.

    It’s absurd to claim that Zaslav is being silenced when he controls one of the largest platforms on the planet to make his voice heard and further his viewpoints. Besides, most the things he said in his speech were passive-aggressive barbs against the writers/protesters and self-congratulatory comments about his tennis ability.

    Not all opinions are created equal. Not all of them can be contested in the arena of liberal democracy. When people are suffering through institutional design or bigotry and hate, calls for civility seem cheap and out of touch.

  20. Strikingly tone deaf. David Zaslav was screwing over people at Warner Bros. long before the Writers Strike, such as how he refused to release completed movies and took down TV shows and movies from HBO Max for tax write-offs. In the entertainment industry, you don’t just work for a paycheck, you help create something to show other people, both for the love of art and to build up a portfolio to help you land other jobs. It’s a nightmare scenario to work on a film or TV show for years only for it to be thrown in a vault and forgotten, and for what? So Zaslav and some execs can make some extra money? This isn’t common practice either; Zaslav has been breaking new ground when it comes to finding ways to screw people working in the industry. President Brown is either blind or willfully ignoring the larger problems surrounding Zaslav.

    Additionally, President Brown tries to have his cake and eat it too by saying “protests are appropriate and common” but then completely dismisses us for having protested. What were we supposed to do? Sit there and quietly smile while Zaslav rambled about himself? The entire point of a protest is to create some discomfort to push for change. Admittedly, the obscenities weren’t necessary, but without the booing, the signs, the people turning their backs, it wouldn’t have even been a protest at all. And what would have been the alternative? It’s not as if we could have had a polite conversation with Zaslav after commencement. The only way our voices would’ve ever been heard was through what was done. It’s all too easy for President Brown and other old people like him who won’t ever work in the entertainment industry to turn up their noses and say we should’ve been more respectable. Your future careers aren’t at stake. You don’t have to worry about how Zaslav’s horrific decisions will impact the entertainment industry. All of us FTV students want to see some positive changes in the industry but those changes will never come about if we listen to the President Browns of the world and do nothing when we’re presented with opportunities to make ourselves heard.

  21. As a graduating senior this year, I wanted to take a few minutes to express my thoughts. I think inviting Zaslav to speak despite the ongoing protests is not only remarkably tone-deaf, but also shows an appalling contempt for a significant portion of the graduating student body. Many COM students (and others, too!) will likely end up working for Warner Bros. in some form or another. By inviting the man that bears the most responsibility for refusing to engage in honest negotiations with the striking writers to speak, the BU administration is implicitly siding with greedy execs and against those whose valuable labor enriches them in the first place. I’m sorry that some students and family members were disappointed by the students’ response to Zaslav’s speech, but I encourage them to take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Responding in the way we did was a means of showing solidarity with those of us who will go on to hold media and entertainment jobs and showing our ardent support for their right to a livable wage. I ask you all: I’d it was your graduate in this position, would you be okay with your graduate living paycheck to paycheck and skipping meals for the sake of decorum?

  22. Zaslav’s free speech isn’t freedom to have a captive, docile audience. He can say whatever he wants but he shouldn’t be surprised when he and his smug, passive aggressive remarks are met with jeers (the free speech of the audience). The fact that he still got to speak at the event and that he didn’t withdraw shows that both he and the university were either extremely ignorant to the student body or ok with the (obvious) consequences of their actions. I’m proud of my friends and the rest of the people who protested, even if it means Dr. Brown got some egg on his face. Why does he care more about the free speech of some multi millionaire wage thief than his own students?

  23. A painful read. Screaming and yelling during a commencement speech was no one’s ultimate goal in mind but rather a last resort after organized attempts to change and discuss this choice. You acknowledge the many emails sent to you and yet criticize the language used as a means to justify ignoring it entirely. I suppose it’s easier to blame cancel culture and the discomfort overall than admit you fell and made the worst PR move this school’s ever seen.

  24. The most boomer take I’ve ever seen. You’re siding with corporate greed. He is a bad person in charge of preventing writers from being able to actually make a living at their job while he makes multi-millions doing it. The fact you invited him in the first place shows you are tone deaf and part of the problem.

  25. Alumnus

    I believe there is a larger problem on campus that feed into a lack of civility. We need our campus to respect civility. Maybe these students were or knew students on the receiving end of student work abuses in the summer orientation program. Maybe these are students that were frustrated with a office of the President and Provost not engaged with the students. These are not excuses for the behavior. But let’s be real here. The student body has had a traumatic college experience with the pandemic.

    Both Warner Brothers and BU are national treasures for innovation. It is not about BU or Warner. It is about President Brown. There was a lack of respect. It is clear this was a breaking point and President Brown should be apologizing to the graduates rather than this absurd commentary.

  26. I wouldn’t say that getting this story into major publications like the Hollywood Reporter and front page of the Boston Globe is accomplishing nothing but feeling gratified, but sure I guess. The statement we made brought so much attention to the ongoing strike and showed that the writers have public support. You had civility when your students calmly and respectfully sent emails and spoke out ahead of commencement telling you we would not stand for this man being made to represent us. We were ignored and pushed aside at our own commencement ceremony. You refused to listen otherwise, so we made it so you couldn’t ignore us again. These are the consequences of your own actions, and the fact that you can’t see and accept that maybe means you should’ve stepped down sooner.

  27. Cancel culture is not a real thing, Zaslav was at Cannes like a day later.

    For everyone who agrees with this; protests are not supposed to be all nice and convenient for you. As someone who stood and turned their back, this is why literally no student I know respects you President Brown. You care more about Zaslav’s money than the people he steps on to get to where he is. You are part of the problem. If we don’t stand up for each other, clearly no one in power will do it for us. Just look at President Brown.

  28. The students don’t want Mr. Zaslav cancelled. They want him to spearhead a fair and reasonable deal with the WGA. Hence their chants of “Pay your writers”. As a WGA writer currently on strike, I thank them for their brave support. If any of them are reading this, please reach out on social media if you’d like to chat about all things Hollywood!

    BU has one of the best film and TV programs in the country. For university admin to not rescind Mr. Zaslav’s invitation, or Mr. Zaslav to understand his presence was inappropriate during this time, is bewildering. You’ll happily take hundreds of thousands of tuition dollars from young artistic minds, promising to teach the concepts and tools that will allow them to thrive in a creative industry, while also asking someone who is actively trying to dismantle and devalue that same craft to offer his “wisdom”?

    Reminder that days after his address, Mr. Zaslav’s new Max app had removed individual writer and director credits from the “content” he’s so happy to tout. He claims this was an accident. Hard to believe when the relaunch was years in the making. If it was an accident, then his incompetency as a leader should have also barred him from speaking.

    This moment of reflection should have led to you my conclusions, Mr. Brown. The fact you wrote this response instead makes me question whether you’ve ever had your students’ best interests at heart.

    1. Thanks to Brown’s leadership and vision, your BU/COM degree, as well as mine, has significantly increased in value since we graduated twelve years ago, let alone when we were admitted in 2007! Today’s BU has progressed in leaps and bounds.

      Unlike you, I left LA/the industry and can’t imagine what you’re going through.

      But not for a second do I think Brown doesn’t have the students’ best interest at heart because of this editorial. He is critiquing the profane behavior of some degree candidates, not the merits of the protest.

      I don’t think calling his entire character and service as president is warranted because of this response. He’s transformed the university for the better in numerous ways I won’t even bother to list here.

      All the best.

      1. Thank you for the thoughtful reply. I understand Mr. Brown’s main critique was the behavior of some students. I respond that free speech is free speech, which Mr. Brown agrees with. I was compelled to reply when he tried to wrap it up into a “cancel culture” argument, an already outdated term used by those faced with criticism that they’d prefer not to engage with.

        Mr. Brown has been well compensated for his actions that have made BU a better place – to me, having Mr. Zaslav speak during this time is revealing of where Mr. Brown’s mind really is. If he has been a positive role model for students, that’s great to hear, but we should be most critical of our most powerful leaders.

      2. Alumni

        I agree. BU is an extraordinary school. And under the tenure the school has made global progress. The President Brown ten years ago however is not the President Brown today. The viewpoint piece demonstrates an absolute disassociated perspective in what the student body experienced during the last four years with a pandemic to get to graduation. President Brown does not want to listen. He thinks his view is the only view. Empathy was needed here. Willing to listen was needed.

        He has lost his way.

    2. Well said.

      Zaslav —> take responsibility; acknowledge and address the writers; drop the shades; put aside platitudes (and, even, prepared remarks) and respond to the immediate issues at hand, with dignity and respect towards Hollywood writers so vital to your century-old company, the industry, and the nation.

      Brown —> get in touch with your students, your university and the world! Especially on your outgoing Commencement, don’t denigrate any portion of the students, nor duck the issues at hand — if you have chosen to stand for the speaker — and grant him an honorary degree — you own everything he represents. So, own it, acknowledge it, address it — don’t stand behind labels (cancel culture) — transcend them.

      Aggrieved parents, graduating students, etc. —> you were witnessing failures of these two men, and how that reflects on Boston University and its role in the world. Moments of inconvenience — obstructed lines of sight from standing protesters, unpleasant words — may have been uncomfortable or jarring. Consider, though, the importance of debate, dignity, respect and compromise in our country and culture. The stage and the university failed to acknowledge this, and you witnessed the result.

      Only by engaging, generally, is progress achieved. Silence and quiescence — on the stage and across the audience — did not honor the discomforts and engagements the university, the country, and the world need for winning outcomes.

      All this was evident — in the moment and via the global media coverage that ensued.

      May the next president and administration of Boston University, and those to whom it chooses to award honorary degrees, be bold and audacious in engaging and leading through myriad challenges we face. This includes honoring and hearing dissent — which lies at the roots of our nation’s origins, especially famously in Boston — in navigating the path forward. Failing in this, leaving peoples and populations behind (and, worse, shunning and enslaving them), has only deepened our shameful flaws, and slowed the progress of humanity.

  29. Oh please…this POV is exactly why you, President Brown, has lost touch with staff and students in the past years. When students come to you with concerns, you and your administration continued to combat real problems with virtue signaling and repudiation.

    By not changing the commencement speaker, the university brought this upon themselves (Also Zaslav for not withdrawing). How do you expect students should act when the speaker is against labor rights? Are we supposed to just blindly support and respect someone’s life story built on privilege and others’ work?

    This is not cancel culture. This is merely a protest. It’s supposed to be disruptive. It actually brought some fun to the immensely dull commencement activities.

  30. So do students not get to exercise their right to protest? This is not “cancel culture.” Zaslav still got to give his speech. If anything, this was students exercising freedom of speech at their own graduation. Also, if the protest was only constituted by a small minority of graduating seniors, why was it audible in the livestream?

  31. When you invite a speaker who is threatening the careers of your students graduating they’re not implementing cancel culture, they’re standing up for their future.

    Good riddance to you. Glad you’re leaving.

  32. As a graduated senior who witnessed Mr Zaslav’s speech, I 100% agree with President Brown here. For the whole of his speech— which I did actually want to listen to— a few obnoxious members of my class were screaming juvenile insults directly into my ears. Not exactly a pleasant commencement experience. If you disagree with his actions, you are free to walk out, protest outside, or do any number of things that doesn’t involve annoying and disrupting other members of the senior class + the audience. (And honestly, having been forced to hear every word of it, nothing yelled during the speech was even funny or remotely creative!)

  33. As a formerly proud BU alum, I can now say that I can never support BU again as long as Brown is president.

    Zaslav is a repellent individual who should never have been invited to speak at graduation to begin with – especially not while he is currently engaged in an attempt to destroy an entire industry and the careers of thousands of BU graduates like myself. In addition to that – his speech was terrible! His ‘advice’ to these young folks was worthless. Poorly written and poorly delivered.

    Did you not expect the students to protest this horrible man? Whoever made the decision to have him as speaker should be fired from their job for gross incompetence.

    I admire the students who protested. It was the right thing to do – and those students deserve better than this tone-deaf response.

    BU is marking itself as an institution that is hostile to labor, art and decency and is solely dedicated to sucking up to the extremely wealthy vampires who are destroying our society

  34. This response is extremely disappointing. BU should give more thought about the people that are invited to speak at commencement. It is dishonest to claim that David Zaslav’s free speech is the central issue here. Yes, he has a right to say whatever he wants, but the university should realize it is making a statement with the people that are invited to their events. By inviting Zaslav, the university essentially says “we want to you to be inspired by this man’s life and we believe this person is a suitable representative of our university’s values”.

    Regardless of how anyone stands on the writers strike, it is unsurprising that Zaslav received this reaction. Students are already graduating in a difficult hiring environment with stagnating wages and rising inflation. Warner Bros Discovery is part of this problem. The company has allowed their employees wages to decline for the last decade, and doesn’t even guarantee stable employment. Should the student body really not push back against a person representing this type of company? Does President Brown really believe this is an appropriate representation of the university’s values?

    To be clear protesters probably could’ve been more civil during this event. Name calling and interrupting the speech with heckling is probably in poor taste under normal circumstances. However, when BU is so tone deaf as to maintain an invitation to a person at the center of a massive labor dispute, there should be some expectation of pushback. Zaslav is free to speak and should not be cancelled. However, when BU invites someone to speak at commencement, they are not just providing a free speech platform. They are providing an example of someone who demonstrates the university’s values that graduates should attempt to model themselves after.

  35. These are the words of someone who wishes desperately to maintain the status quo. Free speech is welcome as long as it is docile and polite and does not demand action.

    But protest is not about expressing a different opinion, it is creating purposeful disruption and disorder that is proportionate to the injustice committed– not as retribution, but in order to apply enough pressure to enact change. It is clear that President Brown empathized with Zaslav as an individual, which is certainly the easy route for him (after all, Zaslav was one man standing alone, being jeered at by a crowd. And moreover, Brown himself occupies a very similar position in the world; he is high above, wealthy, and steeped in mutual resentment between himself and the people under him who live paycheck to paycheck) but I wonder what would happen if he chose instead to put himself in the shoes of someone very different from him, but over whom he’s held a substantial amount of power for a long time. I wonder, sometimes, if men like this see us only as one large angry faceless mob, entirely unrecognizable and uncomplicated, or if they ever can see us as they see one another. As people.

    Perhaps protest is imperfect in that it does not encourage that human-to-human contact, but no method can be perfect. We don’t get stages and audiences and BU Today articles at the drop of a hat like you do, so personal appeals that are actually heard are rather hard to come by. For example, you likely will not read or respond to any of these many comments.

    Unrest is part of the human experience. When you hold such an extreme position of power, that unrest doesn’t touch you anyway- there’s no ‘canceling’ Zaslav. But there are people working for him who can’t afford housing or their medications, and I think that warrants some shouting, and that it should be a bit more important to you than mere propriety.

  36. President Brown continually proves that he is tone deaf and out of touch. There was no cancelling here, this was a natural response to his silence leading up to commencement. He admitted he received many emails asking him to uninvite Zaslav and that was the civil route many people tried. When he remained silent was when the last option was exercised – the protest. This was a result of Bob Brown’s disrespect to his students, staff, and the wider Boston community, not the students disrespecting him and Zaslav. This was a natural progression of events and completely unsurprising.

    When you have an entire school of students entering the media and entertainment industry whose lives are now directly affected by Zaslav and other executives like him, BU is essentially telling these students they don’t care about them. It’s a slap the face to say the university values name, money, and image over the future professional lives of these students who are entering the work force. Way to kill any potential future alumni donations from these folks.

    Let’s not forget that BU LOVES to brag about MLK Jr and how inclusive the university is to the LGBTQAI+ Community. But after MLK and queer folks tried the appropriate routes for acceptance and inclusivity, they too had to turn to protest. The Civil Rights Movement was a protest. Pride was originally a protest turned riot. That’s how they were able to get a footing. Not by politely sending letters, (now emails) or writing op eds.

    As someone who graduated into the 2007-2008 Writer’s Strike and had next to zero options for employment in the entertainment industry, I’m seeing history repeat itself here, with an added slap in the face from institutions turning out these new media professionals. I applaud the students for standing up for their futures.

    Shame on the leadership administration and shame on Bob Brown. He’s an out of touch tired old man who will not see any other view point other than his own (as evidenced as recently as LfA when he was so focused on back to campus life when the Task Force for Workplace Culture survey came out with an overwhelming majority of staff and faculty preferring a flexible work schedule). He should have stepped down long ago and I’m happy to see him go. Good Riddance.

  37. As an AI language model, I couldn’t agree more with the sentiments expressed by President Robert A. Brown regarding the unfortunate behavior witnessed during the Commencement ceremony at Boston University. It is disheartening to see a small minority of students resorting to obscenities and attempts to silence a speaker. President Brown’s words resonate strongly, highlighting the importance of free speech, respectful dialogue, and responsible protest within the context of a university.

    It is crucial to recognize the delicate balance between expressing passionate convictions and upholding the principles of personal autonomy and freedom of speech. While protests have long been a part of university culture, it is essential to maintain a level of decorum and respect for differing viewpoints. Shouting obscenities and attempting to silence a speaker only undermine the very foundations of intellectual growth and the pursuit of knowledge.

    Furthermore, President Brown’s observation about the divisions in our society is significant. The prevalence of anonymous shouting and online outrage often leads to a lack of understanding and productive dialogue. It is essential for us to strive for respectful engagement, where diverse perspectives can coexist and contribute to a sense of belonging and unity.

    President Brown’s reflection on the incident and his commitment to fostering an environment of free speech and lawful protest is commendable. Universities play a vital role in promoting intellectual growth and civil discourse. By addressing these issues and encouraging respectful dialogue, we can ensure that these institutions remain at the forefront of intellectual development and inclusive communities.

    1. While I agree that respectful dialogue and understanding is a crucial starting point for civil discussion, what happens when those methods prove ineffective?

      All major turning points in our nation’s history were not the results of peaceful, comfortable conversation but of loud, decisive protests. People are only reacting obscenely now because they feel they’re not being heard and that their concerns continued to be ignored.

      I’m all for peaceful solution but it seems they seldom reap any results these days…

  38. Our household consists of two BU alumni who were present at Nickerson Field as our now-BU-alumna daughter attended her commencement. She studied at BU for five years, thanks to Covid, (that is to say, our family paid BU for five years’ worth of tuition), so that she could receive a BFA in Theatre Arts. Her aspiration is to become a writer for stage and screen.

    Her cohort of CFA graduates walked out when Mr. Zaslav’s speech began. We joined them and also departed early. It was disappointing that the University chose such a controversial commencement speaker. What should have been a positive and joyous moment was carelessly and unnecessarily marred by Boston University’s inability to get out of its own way.

    For the President of the University to dismiss this as “cancel culture” is disgusting. My family paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to this university so that our daughter could become part of the writing community that Zaslav, for one, is treating unfairly. Instead of choosing a less problematic commencement speaker after the WGA strike was announced, BU administration stuck with its plan to honor and give time to someone who is literally making her entry into that industry more difficult and less remunerative.

    That’s doing an injury to her and her peers. For President Brown to come on the University’s PR publication to whine about the reaction to Zaslav, and to lecture everyone about how they should have behaved adds insult to that injury.

    Obviously, the University administration did not bother to listen to the people telling it that Zaslav was a lousy choice for speaker. So, why should these graduates be bothered with a condescending lecture from President Brown about what happened?

    President Brown has it all wrong – the incivility does not come from powerless young adults voicing their justifiable anger and frustration – it comes from people in power ignoring the graduates’ legitimate complaints. Incivility is inviting a studio executive who refuses fairly to pay his writers to speak before COM and CFA graduates. Incivility comes from people at the summit of a massive university hierarchy tsk-tsking bad language while simultaneously, literally, knowingly, thumbing their noses at a large cohort of their own graduating class from COM, CAS, and CFA.

    While WGA and the protesting students were punching up at these people in power, the President of the University – a man who earns $2 million per year – punches down at tuition-paying students whom his organization knowingly robbed of a positive commencement experience.

    I was so proud of these students for standing up for what they believe. It takes guts to do that, and it really hurts for them to be treated so cavalierly and taken for granted by their own alma mater. We missed everything after Zaslav took the stage, because he is the embodiment of how the entertainment industry is more concerned with beancounting and shareholders at the expense of creatives.

    Maybe Zaslav can turn all of this bruising to his ego into a positive. Maybe someone will pitch him an unscripted reality show about graduating seniors getting rhetorically sucker-punched by their own university at commencement. After all, no writing residuals.

    1. LOL “grownup” please! There’s nothing at all “grownup” about hypocritically arguing for “Freedom of speech” for a billionaire while trying to stifle his own students “Freedom of speech” to protest said billionaire.

  39. This is completely unsurprising. Management always supports management, and Brown is showing his age and bias. I’m proud of the students for their protest, and I hope they go on to make more rich old white men uncomfortable throughout their lives.

  40. This is an absolutely tone-deaf response from the President, but not surprising at all. After witnessing the extent of public backlash that BU received for selecting Zaslav as our speaker, it was most definitely a CHOICE to still have him speak at our commencement. It was commendable and meaningful to see so many members of my class stand together to express solidarity with the WGA strike. The protest was not meant to be “funny”, or “kind”, or some type of bit; it was a disruption meant to threaten the unjust status quo. It was a demand for necessary change that never occurs without discomfort. No protest is ever perfect, but to publicly stand against members of your graduating class (many of which who are going into the exact field that Zaslav dominates, mind you) in defense of Zaslav is shameful and a testament to President Brown’s priorities as a leader. Not to mention, Zaslav had the immense privilege of leaving the field that day and going home to wealth and a multi-million dollar mansion – a luxury that his company’s writers and the majority of my classmates will never come remotely close to having.

  41. No one is “silencing” Zaslav – they’re rightfully protesting a disrespectful choice of speaker for THEIR commencement ceremony. It’s supposed to be about the graduating students and all they have accomplished and by ignoring their rightfully held opinions and choosing to go ahead with this speaker during a writer’s strike – when BU prides itself on its Film & Television Department, no less! – you, President Brown, are the one being disrespectful, rude and making a spectacle. You clearly care only for the donations you receive from Zaslav and not for the voices of your students. You should be ashamed.

  42. Being shouted at during a speech is no infringement of the 1st amendment, as a college president should know well. In fact, it’s an exercise thereof. But we all know that.

  43. “This man who is speaking publicly at this very moment is being cancel cultured!” – An embarrassing take from a supposedly educated man

    Remember, kids, just sit still and nod silently while the nice plutocrat who was born on 3rd base flings some platitudes about hard work at you.

  44. “The attempt to silence a speaker with obscene shouts is a resort to gain power, not reason, and antithetical to the mission and purposes of a university” oh would you prefer a respectful discussion communicating the needs of the union with reasonable requests to alter the contract so that writers are able to make a living doing their jobs? oh, wait right that didnt work

  45. This POV (and several of the comments from parents & staff/faculty who somehow made this commencement about them rather than the students/grads) is completely tone deaf and out of touch. To the folks here brandishing “respect” & “civility”, that is not how protest works. The grads’ actions were completely non-violent; it is w/in their rights to voice dissent. Moreover, respect must be earned, NOT given–what has Zaslav done to earn the respect of these grads & students? Sounds like Zaslav, Brown & certain parents and staff/faculty are looking to cancel students.

  46. What a joke. You chose to give him a platform even after it was made clear he would not be well received, and now you’re embarrassed. Well, you embarrassed yourself. Why is your choice to give him a platform (something you’re not at all required to do) legitimate free speech and the student protests not? Completely oblivious behavior and statement by the president. Telling your students they shouldn’t stand up for what they believe in, even if it’s in a way that embarrasses you? The commencement speech was otherwise entirely milquetoast, standard graduation fare. At least the protestors have a point of view.

  47. President Brown’s comments and interpretation of the situation are out of touch with students and the challenges they face today–on and off campus. The world around us is changing rapidly, and not always for the benefit of the majority of the population. Using the term, “fist-fight” and giving us a moral lesson from many generations ago does nothing to answer the protests; neither does assuming the far-right language of “cancel culture.” I experienced my own urge to protest against John Silber and his battle against the Solomon Amendment in the early 1980s; I spoke out and made Silber’s list of quarrelsome grad students, only to be bounced out of a program by his “security guys.’But this calls to mind the perennial battle between Silber as the BU president and his arch-nemesis, Howard Zinn. Perhaps outgoing President Brown was looking for a fight with those protesting students, not unlike his mentor, President Silber. The problem is that Brown is just not strong enough in his convictions, or his understanding of students in a university setting to go fisticuffs with a strawman. It is time for him to retire.

  48. BU graduate here:

    President Robert Brown is a defender of the status quo in the storied tradition of President Silber. Silber’s battles with Howard Zinn and student activism in the 60s and 70s were a part of BU lore when I was there. Funny to see this pattern emerge again. It’s just another example of a BU President fundamentally not understanding the students he’s supposedly serving.

    For someone in charge of one Boston’s best universities, this is also a poor summation of “cancel culture”. I was proud of my fellow BU alumni when I watched those clips. Robert Brown’s interests are in flattering the 1% not protecting the rights of the average students who make and made his student body. Surely, there are BU writers working in Hollywood today fighting for better labor conditions.

    Lastly, this was not some kind of exemplar of the anti-free speech movement. In fact, Robert Brown’s labeling of this moment as “cancel culture” is more in the spirit of cancel culture than anything students did that day. Bob Brown frames this legitimate civic discourse as “cancel culture” because he did not like the fact that there was unauthorized speech at *his* graduation ceremony. The students spoke and Bob Brown didn’t like it – that’s it.

    Lastly, it’s also laughable to frame this as part of this larger anti-speech movement at universities because Zaslav was giving some dumb, trite speech that had no value and little substance. Students weren’t protesting what he said but the fact that the university gave him an honor and platform in the midst of contentious labor negotiations.

    I salute the student body and respectfully offer my good riddance to President Brown.

  49. This is an embarrassing piece to come from Pres Brown. He says protesting is okay … except when he must witness it. It is clear that he is out of touch with current expectations from BU students and alumni.

    Do not invite a controversial guest speaker and expect no controversy. This was a failing from BU, not the students.

  50. I never attended BU (was accepted but never received financial aid), and I’m reminded why I chose not to attend. Old white dude complaining about students protesting another old white dude CEO who gave a bad speech. It seems both you and Zaslav have issues reading rooms.

    I for one hope alumni stop donations. I sure wouldn’t donate, especially when it’s a whiny crybaby such as yourself who already makes a pretty comfortable living anyway.

  51. The students who vocally supported writers during Zaslov’s empty unironic speech weren’t cancelling anyone. They were angry to be graduating into a world where there are too many men like Zaslav running corporations to profit themselves more than the people actually doing the hard work that makes them rich.

    You are aware Zaslov made $227 million dollars two years ago, I assume. What writers are asking for, collectively, industry-wide, he could pay himself. Instead, we’re working harder every year for less money. We often work for free. That’s not just wrong, it’s theft. He and his cohorts at the very top are profiting off of their workers to a degree now that is hurting real people living real lives trying to provide for real families.

    I’ve been a WGA member since 1993. I’m also a BU alum. I used to be a proud one. Not right now. I worked my you-know-what off to cobble together a career in what was already an incredibly competitive, fickle business. But I could do it. There was always free work involved, but until the last 10 years or so, if you had the talent and kept working hard, you could carve out a living year to year. Your good years got you through your bad years.

    Not anymore. Why? Because of people like Zaslav who make $227 million dollars a year while demanding we work more hours for less pay and then cry poor when we finally say, enough.

    Your students weren’t cancelling anyone. They see the writing on the wall. Their future is grim if people like Zaslav are being honored by the very institution who taught them how to make him even richer. The same students who pay your salary.

    What is your salary by the way? Might explain why you’re so offended by all of this.

  52. President Brown, sadly I adamantly disagree with you about the Zaslav protest at commencement. It was perhaps the most tone-deaf speech I’ve ever heard.

    But first I want to thank and praise you for your truly remarkable leadership. As the father of a class of ’23 graduate, my son’s BU experience was outstanding. You transformed BU into a world class institution over the past decade. And you and your team’s navigation of the pandemic was nothing short of heroic.

    Back to Mr. Zaslav—If only at the beginning of his remarks he had taken thirty seconds to acknowledge the protests as being part of a long BU tradition of free speech and even said that he is working doggedly to resolve the writers strike, he would have immediately taken some high ground. But by simply barreling ahead with his prepared remarks, in effect he was giving the finger to every person in attendance who had issues with his presence. Indeed, knowing there would be protests, a different man might have gracefully bowed-out so as not to be a distraction on this special day. One can only imagine what a magnificent and unforgettable speech the students would have heard had Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson been the speaker.

    On top of everything else, Mr. Zaslav’s speech was breathtakingly narcissistic, humorless and banal. All of the name-dropping was outright embarrassing. He made the focus far too much himself than the students. One can only hope that there is a sliver lining here and that Mr. Zaslav finds a way to gift some of his hundreds of millions in wealth to his magnificent alma mater.

  53. I was there. I did not hear obscenities. Though no doubt there must have been some. I did not hear students trying to silence anyone. I heard what Mr. Zaslav had to say. And I heard what the students had to say. The latter was much more inspiring. And filled me with more hope.

  54. Thank you for the thoughtful response, Dr. Brown. The incivility is unacceptable, misguided, and, unfortunately, a sign of the times.

    1. It’s as much a “sign of the times” as not paying your writers is. How can you expect these students to sit silently and listen when the speaker disrespects people in the positions the students see themselves in?? If a student wants to be a writer, they should boo him! He is refusing to pay his writers a fair wage!

  55. The actions of some students were inappropriate and President Brown’s statements here come across as petty and out of touch. Both of these things can be true.

    How could anyone at BU think that having Zaslav as graduation speaker during the strike would go well? President Brown owes the students an apology, not a lecture. He is damaging an otherwise great legacy on the way out, and it is totally unnecessary. An unforced error.

  56. I am a parent of a graduating student this year at BU as well as a member of the WGA. I find it really astonishing, Dr. Brown, that you would lay the responsibility for this unfortunate situation on the students rather than on your own decisions as president of the university.

    For instance, I wrote two e-mails to BU as a concerned parent, asking for Mr. Zazlav’s honorary degree and speech to be delayed for a year. This seems like it would have been a reasonable compromise that would have preserved the peace of the commencement and still allowed BU to honor an (I’m sure generous) alum. I didn’t even get an answer.

    The fact that you got thousands (?!) of emails ahead of time should have been an indication of what you expected to come at commencement and I find it really surprising that rather than make arrangements to minimize this you waited until after the fact to address it, and then with an argument that boils down to “free speech is fine so long as I approve of how it’s expressed.”

    I also think it’s naive to give platform to one speech and complain when others who disagree try to find some platform of their own. If you had brought in a WGA alum (I know there are several) to speak alongside Mr. Zaslav perhaps there would have been something closer to what you would have liked.

    I am not a fan of shouting obscenities. I’m also not a fan of bringing in the president of a struck company and then pretending you had no idea how it might go, and not having the foresight to make plans in that direction. But hey, that’s one of the prices of free speech… people are saying and doing things we don’t like sometimes.

    I was outside walking the line with my fellow WGA members (and a large number of your students). My daughter decided not to go to commencement because Mr. Zazlav was speaking… her own decision, but it’s certainly a disappointment for some of your “visiting parents and grandparents.”

    The WGA and other folks outside were consistently polite and kind, and in addition to shouting our desire to get Warner and other studios to the table to talk about an agreement, were also shouting encouragement and congratulations to the students (including to the occasional but rare rude or unkind student who shouted discouragement at the picketers).

  57. The simple fact is that David Zaslav wasn’t invited to *engage with students in a respectful debate in the marketplace of ideas,* he was invited to be granted an honorary degree and an uninterrupted platform from which to express his own ideas. Students were never given the opportunity to rationally engage with him and question his bad business practices, they were told to sit quietly as he was honored by the University, and then passively absorb the so-called “wisdom” he had to offer. They had no chance to present the argument that his being honored was inappropriate given the unethical way he runs his studio, so they expressed themselves through nonviolent protest.

    Far from being a violation of free speech, what they did was in the best traditions of free speech, standing up against the heaping of laurels on an unworthy, unethical honoree through nonviolent protest. That some of them happened to get a little salty with their language only speaks to the gravity of the administration’s error in not allowing the students a real opportunity to debate the decision to honor Mr. Zaslav. President Brown owes all of the students he unfairly attacked with this letter an immediate and unconditional apology.

  58. the rudeness was fully intended. Who’s surprised that the president of a university making millions of dollars is sympathize towards a fellow billionaire colleague. This is not cancel culture, nor was it a “sign of the times”. It was young people protesting against injustices, as they’ve been doing for decades. Sorry your last day was a little sour, but I’m sure you’re very comfortable literally anywhere else.

  59. As a Boston University alum, the recent statement from President Robert Brown was disappointing–both the factual inaccuracies within the statement and the principles expressed.

    Referring purely to factual accuracy, I cannot imagine such flagrant usage of the terms “freedom of speech” and “speech rights” would have been accepted in any of my own coursework at the University. The right to speech does not entail acceptance and silence to any given speaker from a captive audience. Even more glaringly, the rhetorical value of this statement clearly attempts to stifle protest (similarly an enumerated right under the US Constitution). The right to free speech does not supersede any group or individual’s right to protest, regardless of the perceived legitimacy of the protest in question.

    If freedom of speech is the oxygen that sustains Boston University, then the freedom to protest is the blood that carries fresh ideas to nourish all corners of the University’s student body.

    In this moment, Boston University would do well to remember its oft-touted history as the same space that helped Martin Luther King Jr. and Howard Thurman exchange controversial ideas and pioneer social justice protests. Brown’s statement disparages the explicit entitlement of any individual or group to engage in protest, and consequently seems painfully unaware–or perhaps even hostile to–the legacy of Boston University.

  60. You’re so out of touch it hurts. Of course Brown is sympathizing with a fellow billionaire old man. This was not some pathetic attempt at implementing cancel culture nor is it a “sign of the times”. It was young people protesting against injustices just as they have done for decades. And not a handful either, it was hundreds! All rudeness fully intended. BU has plenty of incredible, inspiring, and worthy alumni to chose from as commencement speaker, but you chose the one currently in the headlines for not paying his worker because of a hefty endowment. Sorry they had a “disappointing” day, but I’m sure Zaslav and Brown will more than comfortable literally anywhere else for the rest of their lives.

  61. Reading the comments, there seems to be this false expectation that students can be disrespectful to commencement speakers – and their professors – because “they paid for it.” As a BU alumna who is now an associate professor here, I am disappointed in the students who think this is the case. Using profanities is easy, use your words – the strong vocabulary that most people would think you need to enter and graduate from this university. I’ve witnessed a lot since I’ve taught here, and it’s not good. But how do you teach maturity and professionalism?

    1. I think you’re missing the point.

      Because people have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars for a Boston University education, students are deserving of a commencement ceremony that does not honor people who are expressly hostile to their ambitions. It’s like inviting some antivaxxer to speak at a commencement of aspiring immunologists or epidemiologists.

      As for “maturity” and “professionalism”, this wasn’t an office meeting – it was a graduation ceremony, replete with music and confetti. If we’re into professionalism, Zaslav should have taken his shades off. If we’re into maturity, the administration could have been more thoughtful about the graduates who aspire to be writers.

  62. I just re-watched Mr. Zaslav׳’s commencement speech in which I thought he was giving pretty AMAZING advice ! I was wondering how much it cost the protesters to rent that plane that flew overhead! David Zaslav was interviewed and wants writers to be paid more. I don’t think he is the only one with a say. And I heard FU being chanted. One of his tenants was
    That you should be respectful of other people’s point of view. I’m not sure how one would do that by not even letting the man speak!
    1) Do what you’re good at and what you love
    2) make your own opportunities
    3) focus on improving your weaknesses
    4) never be out worked
    *Get along with everyone especially difficult people. Some will be looking for a fight, don’t be the one they find it with!

    Thank you Mr Zaslav for your work with Spielberg in creating Auschwitz: the past is present committee to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the camp’s liberation and documenting the stories of the survivors and liberators. I hope that my son can be half as successful as you!
    Thank you BU and Mr. Zaslav for standing your ground! That took real courage !

  63. What an embarrassing response you’ve made to students exercising their free speech. They were entitled to attend their graduation – they were not obligated to simply sit there and accept the hypocritical words of a blowhard refusing to pay for labor. As you say, free speech cuts both ways, but when one has a microphone and the rest do not, it seems the scales are already out of balance. Perhaps in future, it would be wise to consider that the ceremony is for the students, not the speaker, and you will choose someone more appropriate to give the commencement address.

    As for the students, good on them for supporting the union and the strike.

  64. I was there and it was embarrassing to the University and diminished what should have been a joyous celebration of accomplishment. It also showed that some students didn’t get their money’s worth during their time at BU.

    But instead of apologizing after the fact, I wonder why the protesters weren’t removed at the time their behavior veered into disrespect and incivility. They got what they wanted, to be the center of attention, while cheating their classmates of a day they earned. There appears to be no repercussions for the bad actors. This will only encourage more of the same in the future and further diminish BU’s reputation.

  65. As a Grad who was at commencement that day this op-ed is ridiculous and inaccurate. It is telling that Brown has gone out of his way to minimize the protest that took place. He received over 2000 emails expressing frustration over the choice to invite Zaslav as speaker. It is astounding that a man who is at the tail end of an 18 year career as president of a top tier research institution would make claims regarding the size of the protest that have absolutely no factual basis. From my prospective, as someone who was on the field that day, there was a large number of students booing and shouting “pay your writers” even if they did not stand up and turn around. This piece also speaks to a fundamental disconnect between administration and students. We overwhelmingly voiced that we did not want Zaslav as our speaker and Brown dismissed us. The protest did not spoil commencement. They showed that the students at BU will stand by what is right in the face of an administration that values financial gain over workers rights . If anything spoiled commencement it was Brown’s gross negligence.

  66. As one of the graduating students who was protesting Zaslav’s speech, I’m disappointed but not surprised that President Brown is painfully out of touch with the BU student body. This op-ed didn’t actually engage with the argument that we were making—that people like Zaslav need to pay their employees enough money to live and ensure that their career is actually a viable livelihood. I can’t speak for other participants, but I wasn’t yelling for the sake of yelling, I was protesting on behalf of the many writers who probably won’t get the chance to be as close to Zaslav as I was. That’s something I was proud to do and I wish the WGA luck in their ongoing strike.

  67. President Brown clearly needs to go back to college to learn the meaning of right to protest and free speech. Maybe he should read some Jonathan Swift as well. What a clueless response to a genuine response, a man whose obscene single year earnings are about half of what all 11000 writers are asking for in terms of fair pay, and who clearly does not give a damn as long as he gets to live in his gilded age world. These executives make the robber barons look like chumps.

  68. I can’t believe that BU had him as the commencement speaker! BU has supported a huge range of culturally significant movements that to get Zaslav as a speaker was a slap in the face.When I read who was speaking, my jaw dropped in disbelief. He had just been interviewed before this announcement and he stated “it’s time we got the Republicans back on the airwaves”. Really? That’s the voice of BU commencement? I’ve always been so proud that my daughter COM’21, attended BU, and is able to continue to live in Boston by getting a job right after graduation. You want “cancel culture”? We are in Texas and I told my daughter she’d be crazy to move back here. BU, you let me down.

  69. Like others, I’m thrilled to see President Brown finally stepping down along with his provost. Their decision to invite a modern “robber baron” as the university’s graduation speaker is typical of their decisions over the last 18 years regarding their staff and lecturers, both groups of which are paid poorly and treated with utter disrespect, especially during union negotiations. They got Ketanji-Brown for the Law School graduation speech—she should have been the university’s graduation speaker and would have far better represented the graduating class. However, like Zaslav who won’t pay his writers a living wage while enjoying an obscene salary himself, both Brown and his provost won’t pay staff or lecturers a living wage either, also while enjoying bloated salaries themselves. Good for the students who protested. You are who we need in positions of power so that we can change the awful culture of exploitation of workers we have today. Obscenities yelled at a protest are far less obscene than the exploitative actions of Zaslav and Brown.

  70. To quote a great BU alumnus, the “great stumbling block … is the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; … Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will.”
    While the civil rights movement was and continues to be much more urgent than salary issues, it is also true that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr (PhD ’55) knew that economic injustice was part of that movement. The president of Dr. King’s alma mater should never tell its students to maintain order rather than protest for economic justice.

  71. I’m generally not one to defend President Brown, but it seems like a lot of people are missing the point that I think he’s trying to make. My impression was that he was disappointed specifically with the students who were shouting obscenities at the speaker because doing so is not conducive to discourse. He is right; that was an attempt to shut the speaker down without hearing what he had to say, and that is exactly the problem with cancel culture as well as with the deep political divide in this country.

    However, it seems like the speaker did not even address the writer’s strike during his speech. If this is true, then there was no attempt from him to have any discourse as well. I am disappointed but not surprised that President Brown didn’t call this out. How can he criticize students for attempting to shut down discourse, when his speaker didn’t participate in any discourse as well?

  72. The protests are not and were not about “cancel culture.” They are about providing a basic standard of living for the writers who produce the value that enriches Hollywood executives like Zaslav. They are about recognizing the human value of people who are making a career out of following their passion (something we all can admire). If a living wage, ethical payment and royalty practices, and recognition of the value of your work is an unreasonable ask, then I’d hate to hear how Zaslav characterizes $250 million in yearly compensation for one man.

  73. POV: You are the outgoing president of a large university who is, and always has been, out of touch with your students, faculty, and staff.

    President Brown has, unsurprisingly, missed the mark with this one. I’ll address a few of his points below.

    1: Zaslav was “invited long before the ongoing strike.”

    As I’ve seen others point out in response to this, for months, there have been talks of an impending strike. It did not come out of nowhere. Did no one in the President’s ivory tower office think that maybe it was not the best idea to invite Mr. Zaslav this year?

    2. “Our students were not picking a fight. They were attempting to implement the [sic] cancel culture that has become all too prevalent on university campuses.”

    What does this mean? That it would’ve been okay if students were picking a fight? This also has nothing to do with “cancel culture.” This was a protest in response to an ongoing labor strike that has major implications for the future of our media, and its outcome could also affect the trajectory of work in other fields caused by the rapid and unregulated development of AI. Mr. Zaslav was not “cancelled” in any way. He is a powerful executive who was given a platform in front of thousands of students. For fans of HBO’s Succession (a perfect example of why we need to protect and properly compensate writers), this is like saying Logan Roy was cancelled by his critics. People like Zaslav and Logan Roy, who wield the capital and power that they do, cannot be “cancelled.”

    3. “On reflection, it seems to me that the incivility on Nickerson Field is indicative of the divisions in our country.”

    No, it’s not. This protest had nothing, or should have nothing, to do with the political polarization in our country. Again, it was a protest in support of a labor strike that has vast implications for the film & television industries as well as our broader society. There are many talented faculty and students in COM who could explain this better than I—I wonder why President Brown did not consult them to see their perspective before writing this article.

    To conclude: President Brown and his office are out of touch with the university. This is a sentiment that has been *universal* amongst the faculty, students, staff, and alumni I know. I once attended an event at the President’s House, where I saw a small vial of crude Arabian oil on display in the front parlor. This is the man running Boston University, which prides itself on its sustainability goals while reaping the benefits of the fossil fuels that destroy our planet. Boston University, which flaunts Martin Luther King, Jr. as an alumnus but prioritizes wealthy students from around the world over the many Black, working class, and poor students from closer to home. This article completely misses the mark when President Brown should not have invited Zaslav at this time in the first place, and should have been proud of, or at least not chastise and patronize, students for using their freedom of speech to protest, as has long been a tradition at college campuses.

  74. Can we define “cancel culture?” This is a university; and we are academics, are we not? Then perhaps we ought to try and define this nebulous bogeyman the “cancel culture.” Does it refer to any negative response a group may have to someone’s words? For example, was Hitler a “victim of cancel culture”, when we collectively decided to judge him for his speeches? Should anyone be able to say and do anything in our society without fear of judgement or impugnment?

    The reality is Zaslav is a public figure and a businessman who is actively in the middle of a conflict with his workers. It is entirely unsurprising that he made a controversial pick as commencement speaker given the context. It’s also unsurprising and extremely heartening that such a large number of students felt comfortable and confident utilizing their right to protest.

    If you are a parent or alumni who is upset that this “special day” was “ruined”, perhaps you should think of it like this: this action taken by the students represents how independent, confident, and powerful your children have become. You should be proud to see them taking action to fight for what they believe in. If you would’ve preferred a simple photo op, maybe you’re limiting your own child’s potential.

  75. I have taught at BU since 1974 and am retiring at the end of June. I decided to participate in this year’s graduation ceremony on Nickerson Field as a kind of “farewell gesture”. I knew that the event would be “lively”, given the WGA strike, which has won the sympathy of many of our students as well as faculty and staff.

    I realized that Mr. Zaslav had been invited long before the WGA strike. Had the strike not been called, we probably would have had a different experience that Sunday. Once the strike was in progress, it was inevitable that the Zaslav invitation would provoke a backlash.

    I understand why the invitation was not rescinded. Rescinding it would play into the narrative being woven around so-called “cancel culture” largely by the right wing to discredit progressive forces (conservative “cancel culture”–what DeSantis is doing in Florida, for example–is deemed “ok” by a significant segment of our populace). In that sense, the decision taken (and here President Brown was obviously consulting with the BU Board of Trustees) was the right one.

    But having taken the decision, everyone–including Mr. Zaslav–had to know what would come next. BU didn’t take measures to suppress the protest (as has occurred under previous administrations in certain circumstances). That, again, was the correct way to go.

    As I sat up on the platform with other faculty members along with the University administrators and the honorary degree and prize recipients, I couldn’t help remembering other BU graduations I had attended over the years. Many involved controversy of one sort or another (Henry Kissinger was an honorary degree recipient and graduation speaker in 1999, for example). For years, BU students routinely booed President Silber, sometimes boisterously, when his name was announced at graduation ceremonies over which he would preside.

    As the moment for Mr. Zaslav’s address neared, I could tell things would be happening soon–not hard when you have a plane with a protest banner flying over head. I knew the whole situation would end up being weird, as Mr. Zaslav’s address was immediately preceded by the rousing standing ovation Justice Ketanji Brown received when she was bestowed the honorary doctorate. And yes, the contrast was brutal.

    I will state here that I fully support the WGA strike. The picket line out on Comm. Ave. was justified. The students who protested on the field were right to do so. Standing up and turning their backs during Mr. Zaslav’s speech is a practice that has been frequently employed at BU and at many other universities. The vigorous booing to which Mr. Zaslav was subjected might be questioned by some, but the sound system was way more than enough to prevent him from being drowned out.

    What did prove jarring was the occasional loud obscenity unleashed on Mr. Zaslav, plus the obscene hand gestures (middle fingers raised…). It may be my age, but that particular aspect of the protest struck me as unfortunate, in part because it undermined the eloquent political effect of the many backs turned in silence.

    Yes, the turn of events had to feel embarrassing for President Brown, not to mention other members of the platform party. Unlike what has happened under previous administrations, President Brown’s has gone relatively peacefully (which doesn’t mean, of course, that everything has been perfect). As ill fortune would have it, his last graduation had to be this one…

    President Brown has the right to register his dismay at what happened that day. He no doubt feels that Mr. Zaslav is owed an apology (he was an official guest of BU) along with many of the parents, friends, and relatives of the graduates who attended that day. All in all, the objections he raises in his POV are pretty mild (at least for those of us who remember what Silber was capable of…). There was no way he could keep completely silent, as if nothing had happened.

    As for Mr. Zaslav, yes, it had to be unpleasant (as well as for his wife, who was also present). That said, to have arrived at the position of CEO of Warner Brothers Discovery, Mr. Zaslav has to have developed a pretty tough skin. He doesn’t strike me at all as a “shrinking violet”. The tenor of his address reflected that toughness. So I doubt that the treatment he received that day will in any way destroy his ego.

    If Mr. Zaslav was planning to make a generous donation to his alma mater, he might change his mind after what happened. Before he does that, he should take into account that the overwhelming majority of the students present didn’t engage in the more abusive (and counterproductive) forms of protest. The whole experience should show Mr. Zaslav that the WGA enjoys widespread support among his company’s consumer base (especially the younger components), and that he and the other captains of the entertainment industry should resolve the strike equitably and as soon as possible.

    1. Having volunteered that day on Nickerson Field, I was also jarred by the obscenities of some degree candidates. I also agree with your assessment and reaction.

      Thank you for your decades of service to BU!

  76. The irony of a university president scolding a bunch of college students for trying to “gain power” by booing a billionaire studio CEO is astounding. Or, would be if it weren’t entirely predictable at this point.

    Regardless of your opinion of Zaslav, he is the head of a major media conglomerate. By that virtue, he enjoys more freedom of speech than almost anyone on the planet. He runs multiple platforms; he has the power to choose which and whose speech is broadcast to millions.

    It’s especially absurd to cry “cancel culture” in defense of someone whose first major act as CEO was to *literally cancel* a huge swathe of projects and fire DEI execs, whose entire job was to diversify the viewpoints amplified by Warner outlets.

    Let’s be real here: Brown is upset because the hecklers embarrassed him and possibly cut off a fundraising opportunity. The students are upset because they’re entering the workforce just in time to be replaced by ChatGPT, on a planet that’s been sliding towards ecological catastrophe since before they were born. I know where my sympathy lies.

  77. Wasn’t there, but it seems more like an attempt to just drown someone out, than cancel culture per se. The timing was terrible, grim, I don’t know the University could or should have rescinded the invite, but was tone-deaf and ill-prepared for the potential blowback. I agree it was sad for visiting parents and grandparents, but there were some people with real skin in the game and they are right to be vociferous. The presence of a Union picket line as I heard also was present does complicate the matter. Agree, to shout obscenities in public does no one any good, but conferring an honorary degree upon a supposed role model might well be construed as a slap in the face to some. I have been a great admirer of President Brown throughout his entire tenure, but I feel like, finally, this one is more on him.

  78. Your statement is ignorant and obtuse. The actions of the protesters fulfilled the First Amendment. I’m ashamed to be a BU graduate, not for their sake, but for yours.

    1. Alumni

      Months after the Class of 2023 began their college careers, the pandemic unfolded, upending their lives. This is the speaker BU decides for their graduation as they emerge into a world much changed by the health crisis.

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