Chartreuse snake old lady #fish #fishing #wildtrout #pawilds #browntrout #trout #drone #djimavicpro2 #flyfishing #bugseason #ericchurch #higherwire https://www.instagram.com/p/BxgB1hMhU9A/?igshid=1ews8fq7u9uwn


#iwtv#interview with the vampire#the vampire armand#assad zaman#amc tvl



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Chartreuse snake old lady #fish #fishing #wildtrout #pawilds #browntrout #trout #drone #djimavicpro2 #flyfishing #bugseason #ericchurch #higherwire https://www.instagram.com/p/BxgB1hMhU9A/?igshid=1ews8fq7u9uwn
Jensen singing Wrecking ball by Eric Church during the SNS at the Creation entertainment Nashville SPN convention 2018. Can this man be any more talented than he already is??? @jensenackles @ericchurch . . . #jensen #jensenackles #Creationent #supernatural #spnnash #tennessee #livemusic #music #sns #concerts #2018 #nashville #atthewhimofthewindsphotography #gaylordoprylandresort #coverofericchurchswreckingball #canhebeanymoretalented #countrymusic #ericchurch (at Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center)
Church is always great. #ericchurch #firstniagracenter #keybankcenter #newyork #talladega #tbt
Seeing #ericchurch tomorrow night so here's some pics from when I saw him last time. <3 Can't wait.
121 pictures, photos and videos of Eric Church at SaskTel Centre (formerly Credit Union Centre) - Saskatoon, SK on March 09, 2017 https://www.crowdalbum.com/album/58c1287d7574690514005001/Eric-Church_20170309
167 pictures, photos and videos of Eric Church at Pinnacle Bank Arena - Lincoln, NE on January 13, 2017 https://www.crowdalbum.com/album/58788940757469790c000028/Eric-Church_20170113
Eric Church's 2026 Commencement Speech
There’s something strangely powerful about a commencement speech when it stops sounding like a corporate HR seminar written by six consultants trapped in a beige meeting room. Most of them blur together eventually. “Dream big.” “Work hard.” “Believe in yourself.” Humanity really does love repackaging the same five phrases with different background music. Yet every now and then, one cuts through the noise and actually feels human.
That’s exactly how I felt watching Eric Church deliver the 2026 commencement speech at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Now, I’ve watched many commencement speeches over the years. Two that always stood out to me were Steve Jobs and his legendary 2005 Stanford commencement speech, alongside Tim Cook with his “Be Fearless” speech at Duke University in 2018. Those speeches carried weight because they came from people who had actually built something, suffered for it, and understood what it meant to stand apart from the crowd. They weren’t polished motivational slogans wrapped in applause. They were reflections from people who had stared failure, uncertainty, and pressure directly in the face.
But after watching Eric Church’s speech, I genuinely have to say it was one of the most impactful commencement speeches I’ve heard to date.
What struck me most was its honesty.
Eric Church didn’t come across as someone trying to impress the audience. He spoke like someone who understood life beyond headlines, fame, and curated perfection. There was grit in it. Reflection. Humanity. The kind of realism people are starving for in an era where everyone online pretends they’ve got life perfectly assembled while, internally, operating like a laptop with 73 browser tabs open and a dying battery.
The speech carried something deeper than career advice. It spoke about identity, purpose, failure, and having the courage to remain authentic in a world constantly trying to sand away individuality. That resonated with me heavily because, truthfully, too many people today are terrified to stand firm in who they are. They bend themselves into whatever shape gains approval the fastest.
Church’s words reminded me that success without authenticity eventually becomes hollow.
That’s also why the Steve Jobs Stanford speech remains timeless. Jobs spoke about connecting the dots, love, loss, and mortality. Tim Cook spoke about fearlessness and moral courage. Eric Church, in his own way, carried that same spirit forward. Different industries. Different personalities. Same underlying truth: life means very little if you spend it trying to become what everybody else expects.
Another thing I appreciated was that the speech felt grounded. It wasn’t obsessed with status. It wasn’t screaming about becoming rich or famous. It focused far more on becoming real. There’s wisdom in that. The modern world encourages people to build brands before character, influence before wisdom, image before substance. Then society acts surprised when everything feels artificial and emotionally bankrupt.
The older I get, the more I value people who speak plainly and sincerely.
That’s why this commencement speech stayed with me enough to write about it.
Not because it was flashy.
Not because it went viral.
Not because it was perfectly polished.
But because it felt true.
And truth, genuine truth, has become increasingly rare in the modern age.