176. Graduation Ceremony (3)

Matthew Lewis grabbed his phone and quickly ran to his room where he had a laptop.

It was because I couldn’t properly check the contents of the e-mail on my cell phone.

Knock-!

(Matthew! Did you decide on the entrance music for the graduation ceremony? But didn’t you say you had an appointment today?)

A room-sharing motive called out, but Matthew prioritized checking his laptop.

(No! I’m texting you today! That’s not the point!)

(But what’s so busy?)

(You didn’t get the mail? From school?)

(I did come, but this week is the graduation ceremony right now. Well, you can take it slow. Enjoy your graduation, friend! It’s like a little fun before taking the first step towards hell.)

Matthew Lewis shook his head and waved his hands.

(Check it out now! It’s crazy mail!)

(What is it?)

(Just! Crazy!)

Matthew Lewis turned on his laptop and began to shake his legs nervously.

Seeing that, his roommate Sören Bier also felt unusual and sat down in front of the computer.

The e-mail from the school, which I saw briefly on my cell phone, contained my portfolio and feedback.

I wondered what kind of feedback it was at this point when graduation was just around the corner. I also wondered if the school had sent the wrong feedback in the past due to an administrative mistake.

Besides, isn’t Matthew himself a character design student who hasn’t even found a job yet?

First of all, an American college student who is struggling to pay his tuition and has to find a part-time job to live on.

That’s why I wanted to do something, so I opened the file and it contained something tremendous.

The laptop turned on, which felt infinitely slow, and Matthew, who entered the mailbox, carefully checked the contents of the mail and clicked on the attachment.

[I am attaching a file containing the personal feedback of Mr. Song Jae-ik of Challenge Everything, for whom this graduation congratulatory speech is scheduled.

This is a feedback made by Jae-Ik Song’s personal favor, and the faculty member checks all feedback before sending it. As always, it is up to you to accept it.]

(Oh. f*ck. This is real. Song Jae-ik. That Song Jae-ik.)

It was a very simple content, but even the content was by no means light.

It’s Song Jae-ik’s feedback. what does this all of a sudden mean? It’s not someone else, it’s Song Jae-ik!

(Why did he give me feedback? What happened with our school?)

The file that opened with a bit of stuttering clearly had a picture of the portfolio he had submitted for graduation, and on the next page, Jaeik’s handwritten feedback was written tightly.

Not just one piece, but across the entire portfolio!

(Oh, my God. God.)

In the feedback, he presented his own problems of working without drawing a sketch and various solutions to them.

And that too in a completely new way. In particular, the intuition for painting and the feedback from the anatomical Jaeik were really great.

It’s because he draws a picture without drawing a sketch, and in the process, he tells you how to use the skill to raise the balance as if it’s easy.

(Like this? Um… Oh, my God. This guy is a real genius. A genius. This kind of approach is possible. You hit a blind spot.)

It seemed that his drawing skills could be developed one step further. I felt that certainty.

furthermore.

[If possible, it would be nice to study 3D modeling once. It seems that an unexpected path may open.

May the future of Matthew Lewis shine brightly. – Song Jae-ik]

(3D modeling?)

At Jaeik’s advice, Matthew Lewis fell into serious trouble.

Arts colleges had very shallow departmental boundaries. There were a lot of collaboration works with students from other departments, and it is not uncommon for students to feel aptitude for that department and transfer majors.

He also learned 3D modeling or something like that in the process. But it’s fun, but I’ve already sold this one for over 10 years, so I just passed it on because it was a waste of time.

(I have to work on my portfolio again. Oh my god, before graduation, upgrading. Oh my God. That’s crazy. Uh-ha-)

(Oh, shh! What is this! Is this real?!)

Søren Bier’s screaming voice came from the living room.

(Song Jae-ik! That Song Jae-ik’s feedback!)

This situation was not unique to Matthew. It was because all the students who checked the emails to the email notifications of some graduates who rang simultaneously showed similar reactions.

And the eyes of the graduates turned to the upcoming graduation ceremony. It felt like it was going to be a fairly noisy graduation ceremony.

The California Arts College graduation ceremony was special, if very special.

There were no graduation caps and gowns we know, and it felt like a kind of festival.

Students were free to enter with the music they wanted for 10 seconds in the background, and they were free to dress.

And, befitting an art university, it was a graduation ceremony where all kinds of eccentricities came out. Even the story of a couple getting married during the 10 seconds they entered to receive their diplomas became like a legend.

And today’s graduation ceremony was the same. Music rang out and graduates dressed in various outfits climbed onto the podium to receive their diplomas.

Some cheer and some blow kisses.

In a word, should I say it’s like a huge festival? All graduates and professors who participated in this huge festival continued to glare at someone on the podium for a short time.

‘This is true. It’s embarrassing. I should have come a little later.’

Of course it couldn’t have been.

Most of the graduates who came up to the podium looked at Jaeik with strange eyes or eyes mixed with various emotions.

Of course those are negative emotions, not positive ones.

Amazement, awe, wonder, respect. Those feelings that cannot be expressed in words.

Among the more than 100 people who sent feedback to Jaeik, there was not a single person who did not accept the feedback. Among those sassy California Arts College students.

This means that Jaeik’s feedback was both professional and excellent. In the first place, it was the feedback that the faculty checked once and sent, but even the faculty members for the inspection saw the feedback and nodded their heads.

Rather, it was to the extent that it was said that he had learned a number.

And after all the diplomas were awarded, Sue Jones stood in front of the microphone with a proud expression.

It was finally the moment graduates wanted.

(Everyone, congratulations on your graduation once again. And various people came to congratulate you on your graduation.)

At that, the buzz died down and all the alumni and parents listened.

(Recently, thanks to the feedback from this person, I heard that the graduates have been quite noisy.)

Sue Jones’ words caused laughter everywhere. A student who ignores opportunities for self-development will not survive this graduation race. Didn’t that temper suddenly go somewhere after graduating?

And that feedback was like gold that could possibly raise one’s abilities to another level or more.

(I really like this person’s writing. I also enjoy watching his dramas and movies. Besides, I recently realized that he has a great ability to teach others. And maybe next year, he will give a special lecture at our California Arts College. It seems.)

At the word special lecture, the graduation hall was buzzing. Because the special lecture itself was a very unusual case. If you look at the instructors at the art college, the special lectures were composed of a lineup that was unnecessary.

(In the documentary, did director Spielberg say that? An all-round genius? This is Mr. Song Jae-ik of Challenge Everything Factory.)

At Sue Jones’ embarrassing introduction, Jaeik cleared his throat and stood in front of the podium. About two hundred graduates.

And I was a little nervous about saying something in front of a large group of over 400 people, including the reporters who knew that his family and Jaeik were giving a congratulatory speech at the graduation ceremony, but I caught my breath and glanced at the manuscript.

The manuscript had already been memorized in my head without a single misspelling, and the digested speech talent lowered Jaeik’s tension a little.

(California Art College graduates, you did it. What I couldn’t.)

The first greeting, which alludes to dropping out of college, made the students burst into laughter. Just because Jaeik dropped out of college, there was no one to laugh at or ignore him. Because I’ve built something bigger than them. even at the bottom.

(Actually, after receiving the offer of a congratulatory speech, I pondered over what to say. The stereotyped words? Or the harsh reality that will unfold before you?)

After a moment of deliberate silence, Jaeik spoke with precise diction.

(Yes. You are now f*cked.)

Cheers and laughter erupted from everywhere. Some even followed Jaeik’s words.

(All I can guarantee you is that you can’t avoid it. The many problems that will come your way. Sure, this may not seem fair. But life is never. Never fair.)

Read at readwn. com

Life is never fair. And the reality that will come before graduating students will never be fair.

(That’s why. I gave that noisy feedback in the hope that it would be a very small, very small help in that unfair future life. I hope that at least a small beacon of light will shine for you to move forward.)

(Oh, I’m sorry to the department students who didn’t give feedback. That’s not my area of expertise. I wonder if I learn it again.)

It was literally just a small goodwill. good will without cost. The graduates responded to the goodwill without the cost.

(Did Nietzsche say? What doesn’t kill me makes me stronger? Rejection doesn’t kill you. Failure doesn’t kill you.)

(Disappointment will surely come to you. But that failure will turn into the word success in the process of taking action.)

(Everyone, start right now, whatever it is. And move on. Simple, right? If you get rejected, if you experience failure. Look in the mirror and say to yourself.)

(Next.)

(Next!!!)

All the graduates who sat in the seats cheered and followed Jaeik’s words.

After the 20-minute long congratulatory speech by Jaeik, The graduation ceremony was enveloped in silence for a very short moment, but soon the loudest cheers and applause echoed endlessly throughout the graduation ceremony schedule.

And all of this series of events took place the day after Jaeik’s graduation ceremony. It immediately hit the internet community.

[California Art College Graduation Ceremony – Jaeik Song. (Feat. Bad Feedback)]

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