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MIT in popular culture

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The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts in the United States, has been mentioned in many works of cinema, television, music, and the written word. MIT's widespread overall reputation has greater influence on its role in popular culture than does any particular aspect of its history or its student lifestyle. Because MIT is well known as a seedbed for technology and technologists, the makers of modern media are able to use it to effectively establish character, in a way that mainstream and international audiences can immediately understand. A smaller number of creative works use MIT directly as their scene of action.

MIT as metaphor[edit]

The use of "MIT as metaphor" is relatively widespread, so much so that in popular culture, "the MIT of" is an idiom for "top science and engineering university", or "elite technical institution", like "Cadillac of" for "most luxurious", or "an Einstein" for "intelligent person". Similarly, any regionally prominent science or engineering school is likely to be called "the MIT of" that region. For example, the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Texas at Dallas have also been popularly and historically referred to as "the MIT of the South".[1][2][3] Additionally, US Senator Richard Shelby (R-Alabama) touted the University of Alabama in Huntsville as a possible "MIT of the South".[4] Other examples,[5] make "X is the MIT of Y" an example of a snowclone (a family of formulaic clichés).

Films and television[edit]

Frequently, when a character in Hollywood cinema is required to have a science or engineering background, or in general possess an extremely high level of intelligence, the film establishes that he or she is an MIT graduate or associate. (MIT can also be a comparative or a metaphor for intellect in general: "Would they think of that at MIT?"). Numerous films and television series resort to this technique, including:

James Burke's nonfiction television series The Day the Universe Changed (1985) explicitly employed the snowclone metaphor for a more academic purpose. In the episode "Point of View", which describes the discovery of perspective geometry and its ramifications, Burke spent some time in the Italian city of Padua. This city, which hosted the second-oldest Italian university after Bologna, boasted a large concentration of intellectuals. In Burke's phrase, Padua was "the MIT of the fifteenth century". An episode of his later series Connections 2 (1994) uses a similar shorthand to characterize the seventeenth-century Royal Society.

Films set at MIT are less common than those that use the MIT name as metaphor. Nevertheless, MIT has been part of movie settings, in such films as the action thriller Blown Away (1994), the drama Good Will Hunting (1997), the biographical drama A Beautiful Mind (2001), the heist drama 21 (2008),[18][19] and the science fiction thriller Knowing (2008, also featuring exteriors of the Haystack Observatory). Most of the scenes for these movies, especially indoor scenes, are in fact filmed elsewhere due to MIT's reluctance to give permission to film on campus. Although portions of Blown Away were shot on the MIT campus,[20] the film still makes several geographical errors about MIT and Boston in general.[21] An incidental scene in neo-noir The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973) was shot on location outside of MIT Baker House. A scene in the drama A Small Circle of Friends (1980) was shot in Walker Memorial, an MIT cafeteria and gymnasium; ironically the movie setting portrays Harvard University, but Harvard declined to allow the filming on their own campus.

The television series Numbers (2005–2010) has several different connections to MIT locales and people. The pilot episode was shot in Boston. Co-creator and Executive Producer Cheryl Heuton explained, "We originally tried to choose MIT for the show. We originally set the show in Boston, and Charlie [Eppes, one of the main characters,] was going to be a professor at MIT. We contacted MIT, and their answer was they're not in the film and TV business..."[22] Multiple episodes of the show mention that Charlie studied at MIT. Dylan Bruno, the actor who plays Colby Granger, has earned a bachelor's degree in environmental engineering from MIT.

HBO's docudrama television miniseries From the Earth to the Moon (1998) contains segments set at MIT, most notably in the episode covering Apollo 14.[verification needed] The series portrays the Institute's denizens as very slightly eccentric engineers at the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory who do their part to keep the Apollo program running successfully.

Some cinematic references to MIT betray a mild anti-intellectualism, or at least a lack of respect for "book learning". For example, the adventure drama Space Cowboys (2000) features the seasoned hero (Clint Eastwood) trying to explain a piece of antiquated spacecraft technology to a whippersnapper novice. When the young astronaut fails to comprehend Eastwood's explanation, he brags that "I have two master's degrees from MIT", to which Eastwood replies, "Maybe you should get your money back". Similarly, Gus Van Sant's introduction to the published Good Will Hunting screenplay suggests that the lead character's animosity towards official MIT academia reflects a class struggle with ethnic undertones, in particular Will Hunting's Irish background versus the "English aristocracy" of the MIT faculty. Help! (1965), The Beatles' second film, ties MIT to the mad scientist stereotype when Professor Foot (Victor Spinetti) declares, "MIT was after me, you know. Wanted me to rule the world for them!"

"Inside" MIT references also appear in film and television without attribution. In the comedy Stir Crazy (1980), the opening close-up shot of Grossberger, played by Erland Van Lidth De Jeude (MIT Class of 1976, SB in Computer Science and Engineering), clearly reveals his actual "Brass Rat" class ring. In superhero film Iron Man (2008), several close-ups of Terrence Howard clearly show his character ("Jim Rhodes") to be wearing a Brass Rat; Robert Downey, Jr.'s character ("Tony Stark") appears to wear one as well in the movie.

In the second-season episode "Bread and Circuses" (1968) of Star Trek: The Original Series, the starship visits a planet dominated by a Roman Empire possessing 20th century technology. An establishing shot early in the program shows stock footage of the classic view of the MIT Great Dome, as viewed from Memorial Drive.

In The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (2000), a background image of "Whassamatta U." is recognizable as the centerpiece Great Dome of the main MIT building complex. A story arc from the original 1960s television series Rocky and Bullwinkle, "Goof Gas Attack", starts with a psychoactive gas attack that induces stupidity at the "Double Dome Institute of Advanced Thinking". The MIT campus is noted for its two prominent neoclassical domes.

MIT is referenced in some Japanese anime: the sci-fi series Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995) mentions MIT as the location of one of the replica MAGI supercomputers; and the comedy series Pani Poni Dash! (2001–2011) revolves around an 11-year-old student who graduated from MIT and travels to Japan to become a high school teacher. The CIA character "Ed Hoffman" in the action thriller Body of Lies (2008) can be seen wearing an MIT shirt in multiple shots.[23]

Individual characters in single episodes of television series are often described as MIT graduates. For example, in the 1992 episode "The Corporate Veil" of the crime-solving television series Law & Order, both mother and son protagonists are said to be electrical engineering graduates of MIT.[24] MIT was also mentioned in the year 2000 pilot episode of the comedy-drama television series Gilmore Girls.

In the comedy drama television series Las Vegas (2003), Mike Cannon (played by James Lesure), one of the main characters, is a highly intelligent, and technically very gifted MIT graduate engineer. The character Eli Wallace in the science fiction television series SGU Stargate Universe (2009–2011) is a genius MIT dropout.[25]

In separate episodes of the satirical Da Ali G Show (2003–2004), Ali G (played by Sacha Baron Cohen) interviewed two real-life MIT professors: Jerome Friedman, Institute Professor and Professor of Physics Emeritus; and Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor Emeritus.[26]

Randal Pinkett, the 2005 winner of the reality television season 4 of The Apprentice, is an MIT alum, with an SM in Electrical Engineering (1998), an MBA from Sloan School of Management (1998), and a PhD in Media Arts & Sciences from the MIT Media Lab (2001).

Two lead characters in the science fiction crime-solving television series Fringe (2008–2013) have MIT backgrounds: Walter Bishop earned a PhD at MIT, and his son Peter Bishop has falsified an MIT degree.[25]

The action comedy movie Keeping Up with the Joneses (2016) depicts its protagonist, Jeff Gaffney (Zach Galifianakis), pretending to be a scientist named Dr. Rascal Flatts, about whom his wife says, "He's very smart. MIT."[27]

An episode of the fantasy television series The Magicians (2016) introduces a character named Kira (Yaani King Mondschein),[28] who says, "I went to MIT, but I didn't study a lick of magic in school".[29]

In the science fiction time-travel television series Timeless (2016), a protagonist named Rufus Carlin (Malcolm Barrett) often mentions on the show that he is an alumnus of MIT. In one episode, Carlin time travels to 1893 and meets real-life MIT alumna Sophia Hayden (MIT Class of 1890), who assumes that Carlin must be Robert Robinson Taylor (MIT Class of 1892), the first African-American student at MIT.[30]

In the comedy animatic series, Tenacious D in Post-Apocalypto (2018), the protagonists meet a group of scientists who say, "Where are we from? MIT, where else? We are the top uttermost scientists in all of the world, surviving."[31]

The title character of the action-comedy movie sequel Shaft (2019) is a cybersecurity expert with a degree from MIT.[13]

In a 2019 episode of the science fiction television series Lost in Space, principal character Judy Robinson's biological father, Grant Kelly, is described as having had "a scholarship to MIT when he was 17 and graduated top of his class".[32]

Radio, spoken word, and podcasts[edit]

Tom Magliozzi and his younger brother Ray were "Click and Clack, The Tappet Brothers", the hosts of National Public Radio's comedy car advice show Car Talk. Both were MIT alumni — Tom earned a degree in chemical engineering (1958), and Ray earned a degree in humanities and general science (1972) — and they regularly used that fact in their humorously self-deprecating attempts to establish their credibility on technical matters. After campaigning on-air for years, they were finally invited to speak at MIT's 1999 commencement exercise.[33] Although their radio show had stopped new programming in 2012, and Tom died in 2014, archived episodes continue to be aired nationally as The Best of Car Talk.

The comedian James Mattern, in his comedy album No Segues (2019), tells this story: "When they invented emojis years ago in Cupertino, California, who had the gall to go to Steve Jobs like, 'Steve, I've got a great idea — how about drips of water?' 'Eureka, Merv, way to use your MIT degree.'" [34]

Written works[edit]

Also see References in the main article, and the bibliography maintained by MIT's Institute Archives & Special Collections


Nonfiction works have examined MIT, its history, and its various subcultures. In addition to books like Nightwork, which recount the Institute's hacking tradition, Benson Snyder's The Hidden Curriculum (1970) describes the state of MIT student and faculty psychology in the late 1960s. Noted physicist and raconteur Richard Feynman built up a collection of anecdotes about his MIT undergraduate years, several of which are retold in his loose memoir Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! Some of this material was incorporated into Matthew Broderick's film Infinity (1996), in addition to Feynman stories from Far Rockaway, Princeton University, and Los Alamos, New Mexico.

In fiction, the novel Now, Voyager (1941, by Olive Higgins Prouty) features a key character, Jeremiah Duvaux Durrance, who studied architecture at MIT.[35] The novel The Gadget Maker (1955, by Maxwell Griffith) traces the life of aeronautical engineer Stanley Brack, who performs his undergraduate studies at MIT. Ben Bova's novel The Weathermakers (1966) about scientists developing methods to prevent hurricanes from reaching land, is also set in part at MIT. Patricia Vasquez visits (or comes from) MIT in Greg Bear's Eon (1985). Neal Stephenson hints at MIT in Quicksilver (2004), and other books of The Baroque Cycle, by having Daniel Waterhouse found the "Massachusetts Bay Colony Institute of the Technologickal Arts" in the 18th century.

Ayn Rand's 1943 novel The Fountainhead begins with architecture student Howard Roark being expelled from the fictional "Stanton Institute of Technology". As that institute is depicted as being located in a seashore suburb of Boston, it seems that MIT – specifically, its School of Architecture – was alluded to.

Focusing principally on campus architecture, Robert B. Parker wrote in Mortal Stakes (1975, the third Spenser novel), "Across the river MIT loomed like a concrete temple to The Great God Brown".[36]

Jhumpa Lahiri's 2003 debut novel The Namesake features a character, Ashoke, who received his PhD in Fiber Optics from MIT.

When the novel The Magicians by Lev Grossman was first published in 2009, the principal review of the book in The New York Times described the story's academic location, Brakebills College, as "kind of like the M.I.T. [sic] for magic".[37]

The 2012 historical fiction novel The Technologists, by Matthew Pearl, is set in the MIT of 1868, during its first decade of existence. The protagonists are some of the first students to enroll in the fledgling college, and include both fictional composite characters and real-life historical figures, such as Ellen Swallow Richards and Daniel Chester French. In response to a high-tech terrorist attack on the City of Boston, the students form a secret research laboratory to discover the perpetrator and to forestall further attacks. They interact closely with prominent historical figures, such as William Barton Rogers (the founder of MIT), Harvard professor Louis Agassiz (pioneer of modern geology and paleontology), and Charles William Eliot (then an MIT professor, and soon to become the longest-serving president of Harvard University). The author spent many hours doing background research in the MIT Archives while writing the novel, and weaves many historical details into his narrative of mystery and adventure.[38][39][40][41][42]

Geeks & Greeks (2016) is a semi-autobiographical graphic novel by Steve Altes and Andy Fish, set at MIT. The story was inspired by MIT's hacking culture and Altes's experiences with fraternity hazing.[43][44]

In Thornton Wilder's play "Our Town" (1938), the stage manager mentions the gravestone of Joe Crowell, whom he describes as "awful bright – graduated from high school here, head of his class. So he got a scholarship to Massachusetts Tech. Graduated head of his class there, too. It was all wrote up in the Boston paper at the time. Goin’ to be a great engineer, Joe was. But the war broke out and he died in France. – All that education for nothing."

In the 2008 historical novel People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks, Dr. Hanna Heath's research is funded by "an MIT math genius who'd invented an algorithm that led to some kind of toggle switch that was used in every silicon chip. Or something like that."[45]

Kurt Vonnegut[edit]

MIT is a recurring motif in the works of Kurt Vonnegut, much like the planet Tralfamadore or the Vietnam War. In part, this recurrence may stem from Vonnegut family history: both his grandfather Bernard and his father Kurt, Sr. studied at MIT and received bachelor's degrees in architecture. His older brother, another Bernard, earned a bachelor's and a PhD in chemistry, also at MIT. Since so many of Vonnegut's stories are ambivalent or outright pessimistic with regard to technology's impact on humankind, it is hardly surprising that his references to the Institute express a mixed attitude.

In Hocus Pocus (1990), the Vietnam-veteran narrator Eugene Debs Hartke applies for graduate study in MIT's physics program, but his plans go awry when he tangles with a hippie at a Harvard Square Chinese restaurant. Hartke observes that men in uniform had become a ridiculous sight around colleges, even though both Harvard and MIT obtained much of their income from weapons research and development. ("I would have been dead if it weren't for that great gift to civilization from the Chemistry Department of Harvard, which was napalm, or sticky jellied gasoline.") Jailbird notes drily that MIT's eighth president was one of the three-man committee who upheld the Sacco and Vanzetti ruling, condemning the two men to death. As reported in The Tech, June 7, 1927:[46]

President Samuel W. Stratton has recently been appointed a member of a committee that will advise Governor Alvan T. Fuller in his course of action in the Sacco-Vanzetti case, it was announced a few days ago by the metropolitan press. The President is one of a committee of three appointed, the others being President A. Lawrence Lowell of Harvard and Judge Robert Grant. It was stated at Dr. Stratton's office that this appointment was very reluctantly accepted, for not only has the President not had experience with criminal law procedure, but he has not been following the case at all in the newspapers. It is thought by some that this very fact may result in an entirely unbiased review of the case, which might not be possible had he followed the case closely.[46]

Palm Sunday (1981), a loose collage of essays and other material, contains a markedly skeptical and humanist commencement address Vonnegut gave to Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York. Speaking of the role religion plays in modern society, Vonnegut notes:

We no longer believe that God causes earthquakes and crop failures and plagues when He gets mad at us. We no longer imagine that He can be cooled off by sacrifices and festivals and gifts. I am so glad we don't have to think up presents for Him anymore. What's the perfect gift for someone who has everything?
The perfect gift for somebody who has everything, of course, is nothing. Any gifts we have should be given to creatures right on the surface of the planet, it seems to me. If God gets angry about that, we can call in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. There's a very good chance they can calm Him down.

Isaac Asimov[edit]

Kurt Vonnegut was friends with fellow humanist and writer Isaac Asimov, who resided for many years in Newton, Massachusetts. During much of this time, Asimov chose the date for the MIT Science Fiction Society's annual picnic, citing a superstition that he always picked a day with good weather. In his copious autobiographical writings, Asimov reveals a mild predilection for the institute's architecture, and an awareness of its aesthetic possibilities. For example, In Joy Still Felt (1980) describes a 1957 meeting with Catherine de Camp, who was checking out colleges for her teenage son. Asimov recalls:

I hadn't seen her for five years and she was forty-nine now, and I felt I would be distressed at seeing her beauty fade.
How wrong I was! I saw her coming down the long corridor at MIT and she looked almost as though it were still 1941, when I had first met her.

Asimov's work, too, trades on MIT's reputation for narrative effect, even touching upon an anti-academic theme. In the short story "The Dead Past" (1956), the scientist-hero Foster must overcome the attitudes his Institute physics training has entrenched in his mind, before he can make his critical breakthrough. Several jokes in Isaac Asimov's Treasury of Humor and its sequel Asimov Laughs Again hinge upon MIT, its reputation for scientific prowess, and the technocentric focus of its students. In a similar vein, the satirical newspaper The Onion published an article entitled "Corpse-Reanimation Technology Still 10 Years Off, Say MIT Mad Scientists", among many others in the same general tradition.[47]

Joe Haldeman[edit]

From 1983–2014, science fiction writer Joe Haldeman has been an adjunct professor teaching writing at MIT,[48][49] and has known the Institute well. This is very evident in The Accidental Time Machine (2007) where MIT at various past and future times in its history plays a central role. The institution is described with considerable affection and much "insider" knowledge of the hidden corners in the MIT campus (as well as conspicuous parts of its geography such as the Green Building and the Infinite Corridor), of the relations between students and lecturers, and of various wild and rather illicit student practices.

The book begins with MIT student Matt Fuller accidentally discovering a phenomenon, and using it to create the time machine of the title. He jumps a decade forward to find that his professor has taken credit for his discovery and gotten a Nobel Prize for it; jumps centuries ahead and finds a theocracy where MIT is the Massachusetts Institute of Theology; and after more adventures winds up in the past, in the late 19th century when MIT was still in its original location on Boylston Street. In all time periods visited, under vastly differing circumstances, the protagonist becomes an MIT full professor.

Comic strips[edit]

Several comic strips make use of MIT. In Doonesbury, Kim Rosenthal almost earned her PhD in computer science, but dropping out because it was "too easy". In the fall of 2006, Kim and Mike Doonesbury's daughter Alex entered MIT as a freshman. (The 3 October 2006 Doonesbury strip satirizes the "MIT of" snowclone; Zipper Harris declares the fictional Walden College to be "the MIT of southern Connecticut".)

Dilbert, the title character in the comic strip about engineers and corporate management, received a degree from MIT Course VI-1.

Bill Amend's FoxTrot has also made MIT allusions, in keeping with the strip's genial satire of nerd subcultures. On Christmas Day 2005, the comic strip Baby Blues featured a character reading the instruction manual accompanying a gadget that he has given to his child as a Christmas present. The first volume of instructions begins, "Assembly InstructionsStep 1: Obtain a master's degree in mechanical engineering from M.I.T. Step 2: ..."

Computer and video games[edit]

Some genres of computer and video games have characterization requirements like those of movies. For example, a game involving a team of commandos might require a member who can break into computers, crack security systems, or work with explosives. This character's background would typically have to be established very quickly and efficiently, perhaps within one screen of introductory text. Stating that a commando or top-secret operative "graduated from MIT" is one way to accomplish this.

MIT is mentioned in the computer games Area 51 (1995), Half-Life (1998), Half-Life 2 (2004), Metal Gear Solid (1998), and in the Fallout series (1997–2015).

In the case of the Half-Life series, the main protagonist, Gordon Freeman, is an MIT graduate and has a PhD in Theoretical Physics.

The Infocom game The Lurking Horror (1987), written by MIT alumnus and interactive fiction pioneer Dave Lebling, is set on the campus of the George Underwood Edwards Institute of Technology, which strongly resembles MIT. Its fictional culture also parodies the MIT culture. For instance, G.U.E. Tech's class ring is known as the "brass hyrax", parodying MIT's Brass Rat.

In the Fallout games, MIT is known as the "Commonwealth Institute of Technology". As nuclear war began, researchers from the university hid below the main building and continued with their research without making contact with other survivors. Eventually after many years, they took on the title of simply "The Institute", and became well known as a shady organization with extraordinary technology and the ability to create androids. The institute is featured as a major faction in the 2015 title, Fallout 4. In Fallout: New Vegas, one of the main characters in the story is Edwin Robert House, also called Mr. House, is a graduate of the institute, as stated in his obituary.

Music[edit]

The song and music video "MIT" by PomDP the PhD rapper [50] was released on May 23, 2020 and played during MIT's 2020 pre-commencement ceremony.[51] The song and music video feature the contributions of a number of renowned alumni from MIT, including Richard Feynman, Patrick Winston, Isaac Chuang, Claude Shannon, Marvin Minsky, and Rafael Reif. The song introduces a new form of tech rap music, and was the first rap song to be featured in an MIT commencement.

In 2012, MIT students released "MIT Gangnam Style", a light-hearted parody of the K-pop viral hit video, "Gangnam Style". Within a week, the parody video reached 4 million views on YouTube, and it also won approval from Psy, the featured performer in the original music video.

"Weird Al" Yankovic's satirical song "White & Nerdy" (2006) riffs upon MIT, along with a plenitude of other geek culture references — Star Wars Holiday Special, pocket protectors, and editing Wikipedia, to name a few. Yankovic claims that he graduated "first in [his] class here at MIT" (however, in actuality MIT does not assign class rankings or confer traditional Latin honors upon its graduates).

The 2001 song "Etoh" by the Australian electronic music group The Avalanches describes MIT as "the home of complicated computers, which speak a mechanical language all their own". This lyric can be taken literally, or it can be read metaphorically as a description of MIT student life and culture.[citation needed]

"Nerdcore" rap artist MC Hawking's song "All My Shootin's Be Drive-bys" (1997) takes tropes associated with gangsta rap and plays them out in a more academic setting. He speaks of taking revenge for the death of a friend, part of his Cambridge, UK crew:

I saw Little Pookie just the other day.
Pookie was my boy we shared Kool-Aid in the park,
now some punks took his life in the dark.
I ask Doomsday who the ############s be,
"some punk ### ####### from MIT".

When the narrator learns the identity of Pookie's killers, he decides to "give a Newtonian demonstration, of a bullet its mass and its acceleration", leaving six MIT students dead in the street.[52]

In the Broadway musical Rent (1996–2008), a major character, Tom Collins, is expelled from teaching at MIT, "for [his] theory of actual reality".

Rhythm and blues group Tony! Toni! Toné! mentions MIT in the song "Born Not to Know" from their 1988 debut album Who? In the song, a pretentious individual rattles off a long list of his impressive academic credentials—culminating with a "PhD from MIT"—only to then ask, "so, can I get a job?" Tony! Toni! Toné! responds with a resounding "No!"

Allan Sherman's 1963 paean to initialisms, "Harvey and Sheila", notes that Harvey "works for IBM; he went to MIT, got his PhD".[53]

The mathematician and satirist Tom Lehrer taught for a time in MIT's political science department in the 1960s, lecturing on quantitative methods and statistics. This experience led him to write a song called "Sociology", played to the tune of Irving Berlin's "Choreography". The lyrics conclude,

They consult, sounding occult,
Talking like a mathematics Ph.D.
They can snow all their clients,
By calling it "science"—
Although it's only sociology![54]

MIT students have also written many of their own songs during their stays at the Institute. This tradition, which goes back at least to The Doormat Singers[55] of the 1960s, continues with several present-day vocal groups, such as The Logarhythms and The Chorallaries.

List of fictional characters[edit]

List of fictional characters in movies[edit]

List of fictional characters in TV shows[edit]

List of fictional characters — other[edit]

  • Stanley Brack in the novel The Gadget Maker
  • Dilbert-has an MIT degree.[63]
  • Alex Doonesbury- character in the comic strip Doonesbury, daughter of Mike Doonesbury and J. J.[64]
  • Gordon Freeman, Half-Life – Degree in theoretical physics
  • Harvey, from Allan Sherman's song parody "Harvey and Sheila" ("He went to MIT and got his PhD")[53]
  • Sou Touma (燈馬 想, Tōma Sō), Q.E.D (manga), a-15 year-old genius graduated from MIT's mathematics undergraduate
  • Mei Ling, Metal Gear Solid
  • Black Mass (comics) was a physicist at MIT before he was granted powers by the Overmaster
  • Rebecca Miyamoto (レベッカ 宮本, Rebekka Miyamoto), Pani Poni Dash (manga), 11-year-old MIT graduate[25]
  • Otacon, Metal Gear Solid
  • Jim Rhodes, Marvel Comics' Iron Man
  • Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic Marvel Comics The Fantastic Four
  • Tony Stark, Marvel Comics' Iron Man – enrolled in MIT's undergraduate program and easily graduated with double honors majors in electrical engineering and physics at the age of 17.
  • Ed Straker, commander of SHADO
  • Djinn Makhmud, Virgil Ayres, and Anne Saint James met at MIT and teamed up as the engineers in the novel New Jersey's Famous Turnpike Witch by Brad Abruzzi. Makhmud received "wholly unsolicited admission to [MIT's] class of 2012", Ayres was Makhmud's classmate, and Saint James was a "townie [who had permission] to haunt with impunity the student-only computer clusters at MIT".[65]
  • Alex Altschuler, in Mind's Eye by Douglas E. Richards "finished his doctorate at MIT in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in only four years".[66]
  • In the novel Split Second by Douglas E. Richards, the character Edgar Knight says, "Long story short, the head of Black Ops R&D got wind of my abilities and plucked me right up after I graduated MIT".[67]
  • Elena Janev (also known as Sally Bins née Sally Petracova), in the novel 3:34 a.m by Nick Pirog, "was awarded a full-ride scholarship to MIT where she studied chemistry with a minor in psychology. She graduated in 1970." [68]
  • Anna Thurman in the novel First Shift - Legacy by Hugh Howey. "Her research at MIT had been in wireless harmonics; remote charging technology; the ability to assume control of electronics via radio".[69]
  • The novel MindWar by Douglas E. Richards includes the character Lucas, who "had just graduated from MIT with a PhD in physics and robotics, the youngest PhD the school had minted in over a decade".[70]
  • In the novels Extinction Code and Extinction Countdown by James D. Prescott, Rajesh Viswanathan "help[ed] to pioneer [an android powered by artificial intelligence]'s creation, a move that has made him one of MIT's rising stars."[71]

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    University College of Dublin the MIT of Ireland [5]
    Middle East Technical University the MIT of the Middle East [6]
    Mapúa Institute of Technology the MIT of the Philippines Mapúa Institute of Technology
    Indian Institutes of Technology the MIT of the India Indian Institutes of Technology
    Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology the MIT of the Korea [7]
    "
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  54. Video of Tom Lehrer performing five math-related songs for Irving Kaplansky's birthday celebration, available via the Internet Archive
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  65. Abruzzi, Brad (2014). New Jersey's Famous Turnpike Witch. Amazon Digital Services. ASIN B007YXJHWI. Search this book on
  66. Richards, Douglas (2014). Mind's Eye. Paragon Press. ISBN 978-0-615-95394-6. Search this book on
  67. Richards, Douglas (2015). Split Second. Paragon Press. ISBN 978-1-517-15315-1. Search this book on
  68. Pirog, Nick (2015). 3:34 a.m. Amazon Digital Services. ASIN B00YID9WJ0. Search this book on
  69. Howey, Hugh (2016). Shift. Mariner Books. ISBN 978-0-544-83964-9. Search this book on
  70. Richards, Douglas (2016). MindWar. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1-539-61691-7. Search this book on
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