9 thoughts on “Columbia University Valedictorian Plagiarizes Comedian

  1. I fail to see what harm was done. He retold a story that was appropriate for the occasion. The value of ideas is that they can be recycled. Seems like it would have encumbered the speech to include a citation in the midst of it.

  2. “I fail to see what harm is done.” The harm to Columbia University’s reputation is considerable — this guy was supposedly the best in his class. One comment was “Stupidest valedictorian EVER.” Damage to Columbia is why a Columbia administrator got involved and publicized the speaker’s apology. Moreover, people like to get credit for their ideas. This paper was based on my work. Notice the great similarities and how poorly it credits my work. The lack of attribution bothered me then and bothers me now. See also this perfectly appropriate rant by Patton Oswalt (whose joke the valedictorian stole) complaining that Nick Madson, another comedian, stole his work (via Andrew Gelman). At the time my work was used with poor attribution I consoled myself that intellectual theft was the sincerest form of flattery; now I can console myself that it also happened to Oswalt, whom I admire.

  3. There’s a difference between a scholarly article and a feel-good speech. And, yes, the anecdote is much more enjoyable to the audience when told as a first-person account rather than through citing a source as one might do in the case of a scholarly article.

  4. Vic, I think the audience’s enjoyment might have been tempered when they later heard that they’d been lied to — and their expensive education devalued — by the fraudulent Brian Corman.

  5. The very last bit of the Columbia education of the Class of 2010 includes some high-profile plagiarism in which they were taken in . . . . it will be interesting to see how their later charitable contributions to Columbia compare to earlier and later classes.

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