A Kentucky middle school graduation took an unexpected turn after one student used his moment at the podium to publicly criticize his school in front of classmates, teachers and families, and the internet has not stopped talking about it since.

Daniel Mattingly, an eighth grader at Stuart Academy in Louisville, became the center of a viral social media storm after footage from the ceremony spread online. In the now widely shared clip, Daniel accuses the school of fostering discrimination before encouraging fellow students to “stand up for themselves.”

The speech, according to Daniel, was never supposed to happen that way.

A Speech That Changed At The Last Minute

Daniel told local outlet WAVE News that he had originally prepared remarks focused on perseverance, acceptance and personal hardship. As a member of student council, he had been selected to speak during the graduation ceremony and hoped to share a message rooted in empathy.

“The theme that I was given for the speech was acceptance,” Daniel said. “A majority of it was just explaining that I see that people are going through trauma and going through oppression today.”

Part of the speech centered on his own experience losing both parents to cancer. Daniel said he wanted classmates facing difficulties to hear that trauma does not have to define their future.

“Whenever I was in fourth grade, I was taken to the living room by my parents, and they told me that they were diagnosed with cancer,” he said. “My parents are dead, and I feel like people need to know that the trauma that you face…the trauma that you face doesn’t have to shape you.”

According to Daniel, school staff repeatedly pushed back on earlier drafts of the speech because they felt the tone was not upbeat enough for graduation. He said he revised the remarks multiple times before arriving at the ceremony believing he would still be allowed to speak.

That changed the morning of graduation.

Daniel said staff informed him he would no longer be speaking at the event. He attempted to rewrite the speech one more time but ultimately decided to abandon the approved version altogether.

The Moment That Went Viral

When Daniel walked onstage, he delivered a far different message than administrators expected.

“This school is built on racism, sexism and homophobia,” he said during the ceremony. “I encourage everyone here today to stand up for themselves even if it makes a scene.”

Video from the event shows audible reactions from the audience as the speech continued. Another clip circulating online includes Daniel saying, “this school is f*cking ridiculous,” a line that quickly fueled conversation across TikTok, Instagram and X.

Daniel later explained that he felt remaining silent would have contradicted everything he originally hoped to express.

“All these teachers told me to speak from my heart for this speech, and I realized I shouldn’t chicken out, because I need to speak from my heart and tell these people what they need to be told,” he told WAVE.

The student said he initially assumed the speech would only be remembered by people in the auditorium. Instead, his uncle uploaded footage online, where the clip rapidly gained traction.

At the time of local coverage, the video had already amassed hundreds of thousands of views.

Social Media Reactions Split Viewers

Reaction online has been sharply divided.

Supporters praised Daniel for speaking candidly about discrimination and student experiences they say are often ignored in school environments. Many commenters applauded his willingness to address topics like homophobia publicly, especially at a young age.

Others questioned whether graduation was the right setting for criticism directed at faculty and administrators. Some argued the ceremony should have remained focused on celebration rather than protest.

The debate has continued to spread across platforms as more users repost clips from the ceremony and weigh in on whether Daniel’s comments crossed a line or reflected a student advocating for himself.

Despite the backlash, Daniel appears largely unfazed by the attention.

“I’m on the news,” he said. “So I’m like…it got where it needed to be.”

He also clarified that he did not intend to humiliate the school publicly, saying his goal was to speak honestly about his experience as a student.