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Kermit the Frog gives commencement speech at University of Maryland (apnews.com)
17 points by ChrisArchitect 11 months ago | hide | past | favorite | 14 comments


In the video, Kermit takes stage around 1h58m

https://www.youtube.com/live/hLFa8zGeotI?t=7093


That link doesn't work, maybe because it's not live anymore?

This link is just Kermit's speech:

https://youtu.be/hLFa8zGeotI


Thx, weird YouTube url behaviour, with the timestamp switch it kind of works (have to rewind), but loads on desktop, logged in and not.




Kermit should have talked about trophy wives, like the great orators of our day.


Huh. This release doesn't even bother to mention the only relevant question: who wrote the speech?

Is this considered a special event because the muppet that appeared has played Kermit in an official capacity? Because he's voiced by Jim Henson? (Unlikely, since he's dead.) Because he's voiced by Matt Vogel? (If so, who would care?) Because he looks and sounds like Kermit the Frog?

Speeches are usually given by people who are felt to have interesting things to say, which for Kermit would mean whatever scriptwriter(s) are credited for the wisdom that made Kermit an attractive choice. Does anyone know who they are? Were they commissioned for this?


https://www.msnbc.com/top-stories/latest/kermit-frog-commenc...

> The speech — written and spoken by puppeteer Matt Vogel, who has performed Kermit since 2017

It's considered special because of the historical connection between Kermit, Jim Henson and the University of Maryland.

Why do you think the graduating students had no idea of what was going on?

Kermit/Vogel was also part of the 2024-25 Arts & Humanities Dean's Lecture Series Featuring Kermit the Frog in September, https://calendar.umd.edu/2024-25-arts-humanities-deans-lectu... , making these two visits symbolically bookends for the academic year.


> Why do you think the graduating students had no idea of what was going on?

I don't; I think I had no idea what was going on after reading the entire "article", which makes me question the writing of the article.

Does Matt Vogel normally write Kermit's lines? Did he write anything that people admire about Kermit?


Your exasperation about your lack of knowledge seems like something you could figure out and share, rather than complain about.

If you don't like the article - which didn't cost you anything - find another article.

Does Stephen Colbert normally write Stephen Colbert's lines?


> Does Stephen Colbert normally write Stephen Colbert's lines?

No, he doesn't. So why was this speech written by Matt Vogel?


Exactly!

Colbert gave a commencement speech. (He even wondered if he was the one invited, or his eponymous character was the one invited.)

Since others normally write his lines, do you grouse that you don't know who wrote Colbert's commencement speech?

If you think he wrote it, do you wonder why he wrote his own speech instead of his writers?

Which is why your question "Does Matt Vogel normally write Kermit's lines?" makes it sound like you just want an argument.


> Since others normally write his lines, do you grouse that you don't know who wrote Colbert's commencement speech?

> If you think he wrote it, do you wonder why he wrote his own speech instead of his writers?

No, I think Stephen Colbert is viewed as an interesting person whose life many people would like to emulate. Which would mean the answer to "who got invited" was the actor and not the character.

But none of that applies to Kermit the Frog; he's not even alive. I don't think Matt Vogel is seen that way.

Here, it appears that the character was invited, but without the ability to speak. How does that make sense?


Glad you posted, my initial response was "What?!?!?". But Kermit speaking makes sense at this Univ.




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