Monday, December 30, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 12/30/19

In this my last report of the decade, I wish all my readers a preemptive Happy New Year. Despite all the grim news, I remain hopeful that mankind will come to its senses, and miraculously we will all unify to solve the problems of the world. Albeit an ambitious goal, my New Year’s resolution is to do more good than harm.

I’ve never been a fan of New Year’s Eve celebrations, and in the past twenty years Shauna and I have not gone out to celebrate New Year’s Eve. Instead, we’ve elected to prepare a good meal at home and to watch the televised broadcast of the ball drop at Times Square. For several years, when I still lived in Buffalo, I hosted a big dinner, and afterwards, I and all my guests went downtown to watch Buffalo’s version of the ball drop. The weather was typically awful, and eventually that tradition fizzled like flat champagne.

When I moved up to Toronto, our last big First Night outing was legendary for its badness. It was a black-tie event at a recently opened high-end restaurant near our apartment building. Shauna and I knew the owner and wanted to show our support, but the night turned into a complete disaster. The party was an expensive, prix fixe, multi-course, (allegedly) gourmet dinner, including live music. At the last minute, our party of four turned into a party of three, and the evening went downhill from there. The food was terrible, courses were served out of order and horribly late, plates were dropped, and food was spilled in laps. The live music might have been tolerable, but the band was set up in a narrow walkway, removed from the diners and therefore inaudible. By the end of the night, the atrociousness of the evening became laughable. Looking back, most of my New Year’s Eve experiences have been less than satisfactory. I vowed that we would never again go out for dinner on New Years Eve.  

When I was a young teen, my introduction to inebriation occurred at a sleepover party at my friend’s house on New Year’s Eve. His mother told us that she would permit us to drink sparkling wine that one night, so long as we did not get drunk, and if we remained in the house for the entire evening. For the four of us inexperienced teens, that was a license to guzzle. Probably because it was so cheap, as our intoxicant of choice, we chose Cold Duck, which tastes a bit like bad soda pop. We went through several bottles of that rotgut alternative to champagne, and three out of four of us had a pretty good time. One drinker did not pace himself, downing four or five 7 oz. glasses before the rest of us had finished our first. That amateur became violently ill, and within an hour of his over-indulgence, began to projectile vomit all over the room. It was like a mob hit; there was barf everywhere. Nothing kills a good buzz like the smell of vomit. To rub salt into the wound, we had to clean up the mess. While I and the host of that ill-fated party hosed off our sleeping bags in the basement laundry room, we could hear our then very unpopular friend upstairs moaning about how he felt so sick that he wanted to die. At that moment, the rest of us might have been ok with that.  

My final New Year’s Eve disaster story involves a girl I dated in Buffalo, back when I was in my late twenties.  At that time, she was writing her dissertation for a PhD in Urban Geography at The University of Buffalo. We attended an abominable New Year’s Eve party at the home of one of her scholarly friends. I was not pleased about what promised to be a boring evening, and I made the stipulation that I would only go if she agreed to be my designated driver. I did not know one person at the party, and as I suspected, none of those arrogant university types, who made it their blood sport to make me feel like the stupid guy at the party, were in any way warm or hospitable to me. Anticipating their (possibly correct) assessment that I was the Luddite of the party, I sat alone in the corner drinking copious amounts of Meyers Rum and orange juice (which I brought). Finally, one friendly attendee took pity on me and began to talk to me. As luck would have it, he too liked Myers Rum and orange juice. He and I became fast friends and, as we got pleasantly plastered, we made light of the anti-celebration unfolding in front of us.  We discussed everything but academia and occasionally took pleasure in mocking the room full of self-important academics, for whom the highlight of the evening seemed to be lighting the Baked Alaska at midnight. Later, as we drove home from that abysmal party, my friend appeared to be a little nervous. She asked me a lot of questions about the man to whom I had been talking at the party. What did we discuss, did we talk about her, and what were we laughing about so heartily? It turned out that the man, with whom I had had such a good time, was the head of the UB Geography Department, and the most senior academic at the party. He was also her advisor. I’m not sure how he felt about the evening, but Meyers Rum sure made the party more enjoyable for me.

Again, Happy New Year! I hope the next year is a healthy and productive one for you. Make sure you make travel arrangements that do not include driving while inebriated, and whatever you do, have a good time! Be good to each other, and yourselves, and try do more good than harm.

Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com

Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.






Monday, December 23, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 12/23/19


To my readers, Merry Christmas, Happy Chanukah, Happy Three Kings Day, and  Merry Kwanzaa. Whatever you celebrate, I hope you enjoy yourselves. I for one will be participating in my annual ritual of attempting to watch every Christmas movie and TV special. This list includes, but is not limited to, “It’s A Wonderful Life”, “A Christmas Carol” (the Alastair Sim version of course), “A Charlie Brown Christmas”, “The Grinch Who Stole Christmas”, “Miracle On 34th Street”, and at least one maudlin, Mystery-Science-Theatre version of a tacky Hallmark Christmas special. It would not be uncommon for me to watch some of those programs more than once during the week. I make no apologies; this is who I am.

To follow is another old Oppenheimer Report reprised from the vault for your reading pleasure. Clearly, I had something against Michael Jackson at the time. Again, this report is over 20 years old, and so it may seem a little dated:

The Oppenheimer Report – 12/23/96 …
The stabbings, beatings, shootings, and general hand-to-hand combat continue over the “Tickle-Me-Elmo” toy shortage. Major arenas in the Western New York Area and parts of Ohio are forming in this emerging, violent crisis, and Henry Kissinger has been called in to mediate. Yes, it’s a battlefield out there; a messy, bloody, in-your-face holiday hell hole, and if you’re going to venture out to the malls, you’d better carry your stun gun and wear a flak vest. Retail has never looked so ugly before.
Marge Schott, notorious bigot and one-time owner of The Cincinnati Reds, recently banned from pro baseball, at least for the time being, has been admitted to the hospital. Guess where she ended up? The Cincinnati Jewish Hospital. I guess she would say “those people” make good doctors. Taste the irony.

O.J. Simpson won the custody battle for his little boy and girl. I think that’s nice. Now those kids can spend Christmas with the guy whom almost everyone believes cut off their mommy’s head.  I’m sure those kids will grow up to lead normal lives. O.J. … the news story that keeps on giving.
Speaking of endangered children, Michael Jackson’s baby receptacle will receive $1.25 Million for producing The Gloved One’s issue, and she will continue to receive about $300,000 per year, as long as she remains “with” Jackson.  I assume this fee includes adherence to a gag order, prohibiting her from revealing any juicy family secrets. If she goes nine rounds, she could rake in a few million bucks, but personally, I think she got hosed. A few million bucks to carry the bleached one’s baby does not seem like adequate compensation. Try adding a zero to that number, and maybe include a lifetime supply of Prozac.    

Two celebrities died last week: film star Marcello Mastroianni and astronomer Carl Sagan. I watched Carl Sagan being interviewed shortly before his death. As usual, he put it all into perspective, dismissing his mortality as an insignificant event in the grand scheme of things. What an interesting man he was, and how he inspired us to use our imaginations! I loved his show “Cosmos”. Why is it that more people know who Michael Jackson is than know who Carl Sagan is? This is probably for the same reason that Michael Jackson gets paid over fifty times what the most prominent heart surgeon makes. Go figure.

To follow is part of a holiday song I wrote years ago, entitled “Nothing Comes For Free”:

“REINDEER ON THE ROOFTOPS, RED LIGHTS IN THE TREES
CHRISTMAS CARDS AND CAROLERS, SANTA ON TV

SHOPPING MALLS ARE MANIC, BUYERS ON A SPREE
TRAFFIC JAMS AND WAVING HANDS AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE

ARMY BELLS ARE RINGING, CALLING YOU AND ME
RINGING FOR SALVATION BUT SALVATION HAS A FEE

ONE DAY CHRISTMAS KINDNESS AND GOODWILL FILL THE STREETS
THE NEXT DAY THINGS ARE DIFFERENT, I THINK YOU WILL AGREE

Cho:
IT’S WHISPERED IN THE SNOWFALL, I HEAR IT IN THE TREES
IT’S WRITTEN IN THE SKY TONIGHT, NOTHING COMES FOR FREE…”

Have a Merry Christmas everyone, and remember, Christmas shouldn’t be about gift giving.  Spend less money and give more love. From the North Pole, this is Santa’s favorite industrial real estate broker, signing off.

Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com

Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 12/16/19

Last weekend, Shauna and I attended an annual Christmas party, held a few houses down the shoreline from us. I’ve enjoyed going to this party for the past 3 or 4 years, but this is the first time that Shauna felt well enough to join me. It was her long-awaited introduction to several of our year-round neighbors. She had a genuinely good time and so did I.

Historically, I have loathed Christmas parties, and this probably due to the fact that our office Christmas parties in Buffalo were legendary for their awfulness. Commercial real estate offices are generally competitive and rather high stress workplaces to begin with, and as a result,  most of the workers in our office would not have chosen to socialize with each other after hours. Insist that all the competitors gather in a social situation, and add alcohol into the mix and one has the recipe for disaster. Frankly, I’ve never really understood the concept of office Christmas parties anyhow. Don’t we see those people for most of the waking hours of our day, and wouldn’t we rather celebrate with friends and family? I used to go out for a beer after work with one or two of my co-workers, but I generally I had little interest in socializing with my entire office in a party setting.

For the last five years of my career as an industrial real estate salesman, when I moved up to Canada, I worked for one of the larger commercial real estate firms in Toronto. Every holiday season, the firm threw a big, fancy, black-tie Christmas party at some fancy club. To the completely unnecessary pomp and ceremony of a black-tie affair, add the over-inflated egos of more than one hundred commercial real estate brokers and salesmen, along with all their staff, and you have the ingredients for an anti-celebration. It was always one of the more uncomfortable social events in which I felt obligated to participate.  The last party Shauna and I attended before I left the firm was so bad it was ludicrous. There were long, rambling, self-absorbed speeches by intoxicated, arrogant big shots. As if that was not insufferable enough, in addition to the speeches, some officious organizer had the brilliant idea to tax the limited attention spans of the celebrants by having various salesmen regale the audience with parodies of Christmas carols. I was charged with writing those parodies, which were to include cryptic and amusing references to salespeople and staff. Nothing could go wrong there. I congratulated myself on my diplomacy in somehow managing not to offend too many attendees with the subject matter. Nevertheless, in an event which was already running very late, these unrehearsed “performances” of my parodies were abysmal. Everyone just wanted the whole thing to be over, including Shauna and I, but the there was one final nail to be hammered into the coffin. The grand finale of this disastrous Christmas party fiasco was the performance of a very inebriated secretary singing “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”. She was so hammered she could hardly stand up and, amidst the horrified, stunned (and silent) audience of 150+ attendees, this woman blundered her way through her performance during what seemed like an eternity. Shauna and I desperately fought to stifle our uncontrolled guffaws, and it might have been the most embarrassing performance I’ve ever witnessed in public. Keep in mind, I’ve attended hundreds of open mics.

I don’t know why Christmas is notorious for these obligatory and insincere celebrations. To all of you who enjoy your workplace holiday celebrations, I don’t mean to rain on your parade. Far be it from me to judge how you celebrate.  My problem, especially with Christmas celebrations, is that the enforced routine frequently becomes an unpleasant obligation. Aren’t holiday parties supposed to be fun?

That said, the afore-mentioned annual holiday gathering down the lake which Shauna and I attended last weekend was great fun. Nobody got too hammered, nobody said horribly inappropriate things, and the spirit was one of community and good will. I think you will agree that when you find yourself loathing an annual social encounter, it’s time to find a better, more joyful way to spend the holidays.


Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com

Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.





Monday, December 09, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 12/9/19


So this happened. Last Saturday night, as your ever-faithful Hunters Bay Radio cub reporter (hah!) and video correspondent, I was attending the annual Burk’s Falls Santa Claus Parade in order to post a live video feed to the Hunters Bay Radio Facebook page. I’ve made a few cellphone videos to record live local events, and they seem to be a hit with people who couldn’t attend in person. I enjoyed the parade, and when it was over, I chatted with a few folks before heading back to my wife’s car. When I tried to unlock it with the electronic key fob, nothing happened. I tried several times to no avail, and eventually used the manual key option to open the door. I could not start the car with the electronic key, and this is odd, because I’d recently replaced the fob battery. Mildly freaking out, I walked to the local convenience store to see if they had any batteries, knowing that the chances of finding a specialized wafer battery at a local convenience store were slim to none. With no success, I went back to the car and immediately called Shauna at home. I didn’t want to make her drive to Burk’s Falls to give me the extra key, but that seemed to be the only option. She decided to go online first to investigate possible options if your electronic key fob fails. By the way, the owner’s manual for my own car is provided as a CD, not a booklet, and contains 500 pages of information. A lot of good that CD will do me in my car!  There was, by the way, no indication on the instrument panel (as there usually is if the battery is dead) that the fob battery was dead.

We learned that sometimes the signal can get scrambled and then the fob will not properly “communicate” with the car. Add this to the constellation of technological glitches I don’t understand!  The online advice was to push the start button multiple times while holding the manual key as close as possible to the starter button. To my great surprise, this eventually worked, and it seemed to reset the fob so that it worked properly. That saved Shauna a trip out in the cold. With no indication that there was a problem with the fob, it simply stopped working, and this made me wonder what was wrong with using a simple ignition key? Had I been in the middle of nowhere, without cell service, I’d have been SOL. Car batteries can die as well, and during the winter any number of things can go wrong with a car, but why complicate matters with yet another temperamental electronic gadget? Anyhow, all’s well that ends well, and I was safe and home in no time.

I put out a notice on Facebook that I’ll be doing my annual show of weird Christmas songs Thursday, December 19th. Some selections will be unusual novelty songs I’ve dredged up over the years, and as well, some will be listener requests. I’ve already had some good suggestions that are new to me. The trick is to pick some songs that are truly under the radar. I will give special consideration to original songs from local and Canadian songwriters. Someone suggested Bob and Doug Mackenzie’s version of “The Twelve Days Of Christmas” which I have not heard in years. Of course that will be in the playlist. The audience participation shows are always great fun for me, and I look forward to airing this one. I already have 15 or 20 “keepers” for the playlist. December 19th will be a busy night for me, because I’ll also be performing a rare live set on Silver Lake Joe’s “Live Drive” from 6-7pm.  Of course, I’ll be playing one of my two original Christmas songs. It involves an intoxicated Santa and his elf.
Remember that tip about the electronic key fob, and to replace your fob battery every so often. It might just save you some aggravation on a cold winter night!

Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com
Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.

Monday, December 02, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 12/2/19

As some of you may know, I’ve been writing this weekly “report” since 1992. It started out as a New Year’s resolution to write a page per week about my opinions on current events. Now, almost 28 years later, I’m still writing it. Now that it is officially December, I decided to pull out some of the seasonal reports I wrote over the decades, partly because I think they might be of interest, and partly to take a break. During this month, I will be reprising several of those older reports. Never a big fan of Christmas, I tended to be a bit cynical, and going back 28 years, my writing was far more politically incorrect and sometimes offensive. I apologize in advance for the rants of a younger man. Some of the very earliest reports I won’t even reprint. To follow is an Oppenheimer Report I wrote ten days short of 20 years ago:
12/12/99 - The “Mars Polar Lander”, which apparently landed on Mars last week, has not been heard from since. At first, scientists were confident the unit would correct itself and begin communicating with Earth, but as of now, it’s a piece of one-hundred-million-dollar space debris.  Oops.  Coupled with the recent failure of another Mars probe, and the Hubble Telescope debacle, this latest NASA glitch highlights the difficulty in funding space exploration: it’s expensive, and when you screw up, everyone knows about it.
I read an article the other day about little boys who want Barbie Dolls for Christmas. Certainly this flies in the face of conventional perceptions of what little boys want for Christmas, but noted Barbie psychologists (you think I’m kidding here) agree this is nothing to worry about; that is, as long as your little boy is only three or four years  old. If he’s asking for Barbie and he is over six or seven, it might be time to enroll him in a military school. There, he can learn “the truth” about men and women. And speaking of gender identification, did any of you catch that piece on “Sixty Minutes” about the man who was politely pushed out of the Sacramento school system, after revealing his intentions to become a woman?  Most of the parents of kids in that school didn’t care, but the few who did got this man/woman canned.  I’m not going to go into my usual prolonged tirade on yet another subject about which I know so little, but I don’t understand why we choose decent people to stigmatize in our society. Why not focus on the real bad guys (pedophiles, rapists, killers, white collar criminals, etc.) to publicly humiliate, and leave those of ambiguous gender to sort out their complicated lives on their own. This isn’t an ax murder about which we are talking; he/she was apparently a well-respected and effective teacher. If this man chooses to be a woman, so what?  Will this cause some  repressed youth to bite the bullet and “come out?” Maybe, but probably not if he/she wasn’t going to anyhow. Perhaps we should encourage our children to bottle up their feelings until they explode in orgies of frenzied violence, but hey, that never happens, right?  I don’t think being gay or “gender displaced” or whatever, is a moral crime of any sort, and if that’s the kind of intolerance we’re teaching our kids, then heaven help us for the future. Remember folks, it’s the holidays, so be nice to each other.

A few comments on Christmas ... why not buy a video of Roseanne singing “Me and My Bobby McGee,” dressed like Dale Evans’ evil twin. I saw that performance the other night, and it was, well, REALLY awful. Take THAT Kris Kristofferson.  I have another great gift idea to fill the shelves recently purged of Pokemon paraphernalia: Mars Polar Lander toilet paper holders. I still do not really know what Pokemon is. Is it that little tooth-shaped yellow blob that looks like a mustard stain? Is that what kids are killing each other for?  I have received at least three versions of a game via the Net called “Elf Bowling.”  I can only imagine what viruses I have introduced to the hard drive of my computer by opening and playing this game, but it’s pretty funny. Santa bowls and the elves are the pins. Before each turn, the elves yell rude things to taunt Santa, and sometimes the pin return machine rips off one of their little heads. Also, various animals run across the bowling alley from time to time, blocking the path of oncoming balls. I mashed a frog on one of my turns. Lots of blood. Rumour has it, Christmas day this game will wipe out my hard drive. I wouldn’t be surprised.   Nineteen days and counting. Ho friggin’ Ho.- Jamie Oppenheimer


Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com

Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.




Monday, November 25, 2019

The Oppenheimer Report 11/25/19


I woke up the other day, and as I often do, the first thing I did was to consult my cell phone for messages. Lately, it seems as if the phone, the computer, and the television are taking up a larger and larger chunk of my free time. I regret this. When I picked up my phone, and sleepily swiped the touch screen, the first thing I saw was some “news” feed about the new moon in November. The gist of the message was that, astrologically speaking, we’re all screwed for the next 30 days. The stars are aligned for a chaotic month. Great.

A friend from Florida sent me an interesting link the other day, of comedian Sacha Baron Cohen addressing an audience at the ADL (Anti-Defamation League) Leadership Awards. Normally, I don’t have the patience to watch such speeches, because I have the attention span of a three-year-old, but because it was Sacha Baron Cohen, I was intrigued. Best known for his over-the-top comedic characters, like Ali G and Borat, Cohen’s comedy is risqué. I’ve always suspected he was intelligent, and in much the same way that I appreciated the guerrilla comedy of Andy Kaufman, I think Cohen’s outrageous characters are hilarious. Ostensibly puerile and offensive, much of Cohen’s comedy ridicules hatred and bigotry. Like so many of the great comics I have admired, including Rickles, Pryor, and Kinison, he exposes the secret prejudices that many of us unwittingly embrace.

Cohen’s eloquent speech really moved me, because it gave me some insight into my recent anxiousness, and that which I feel all around me. He spoke about the irresponsibility and unaccountability of various social media platforms, who routinely allow the dissemination of misinformation and propaganda. He was particularly indignant about multi-billionaire Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who argues that any attempt to censor misinformation is somehow an impingement upon free speech. When that free speech negatively impacts a race or ethnicity, is it still our “right”? Cohen asks us to imagine what would have happened if Hitler could have used the internet to spread his toxic messages. Social media is a blessing and a curse. On the one hand, it facilitates almost instant communication between family and friends, but at the same time, it allows corrosive, nefarious manipulators to spread hateful lies with the same immediacy. It is very likely the reason an oaf like Rump was elected President of the United States. Cohen suggests that social media platforms should be held accountable and liable for all the disinformation that it allows to spread unpoliced. In most of the civilized world there are laws in place to punish people who commit hate crimes, be they physical, libelous, or slanderous. Why then are these social media platforms virtually unregulated? Where do we draw the line on this issue of free speech? I’m not sure, but I think things are getting out of control. Maybe it’s the new moon.

This Thursday marks the American Thanksgiving, and I usually celebrate by re-connecting with some of my family. Going back to my earliest childhood, our Thanksgivings in Buffalo were always my favorite holiday of the year. Mom and Dad, or one of my other relatives, hosted a big dinner, and the underlying spirit at those gatherings was one of acceptance, goodwill, inclusiveness, and kindness. I miss those genuine celebrations of thankfulness, and as the years pass, I have become more and more thankful.

So, as we approach this coming month of “new moon” chaos and uncertainty, it might be a good time for me to take a Facebook holiday. I’m already well aware of my unhealthy dependence on cell phones, computers, and televisions. As much as my intention is to limit their influence on me, clearly this is easier said than done. So far, I’ve only reduced my exposure by about fifteen minutes per day. More music, less video; that’s the plan. I am beginning to realize that much of my anxiousness is attributable to the sense that there is less and less justice or accountability for bad behavior. Exactly the things that have oppressed minorities for centuries are now beginning to oppress the rest of the world as well. Many of us don’t even know it’s happening to us; we simply feel things are getting worse. I can’t fix the world’s problems; I wouldn’t know where to begin, but I’m no longer naïve enough to think it is somebody else’s problem. I know that pulling away from the barrage of spin, disinformation, bad news, and negativity is a start. As this Thursday approaches, I will be thinking of my late mom and dad, and all the good lessons they taught me. I will always be thankful for them. I’m going to try and to stay off Facebook for the day, or even for part of the day. Baby steps. I would say I won’t watch television, but I can’t miss the Macy’s Day Parade.

Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com
Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.




The Oppenheimer Report 11/18/19


Last week, there was a big hullabaloo over the news that Don Cherry, former co-host of CBC’s “Coach’s Corner”, was fired for his incendiary remarks while broadcasting on “Hockey Night In Canada”. Cherry was ranting about the fact that some Canadian immigrants, to whom he referred as “you people”, did not wear poppies to commemorate Remembrance Day. He felt that it was unpatriotic and disrespectful to the men and women who fought (and fight) to preserve Canada’s freedom. Co host Ron MacLean sided with the CBC who abruptly fired Cherry. Just judging from the reaction on the Hunters Bay Radio Facebook page, this is a sore subject, and it unleashed a flurry of angry, indignant, sometimes disrespectful comments. I’m not interested in weighing in on this issue, because I’m not in a position to judge Don Cherry; I really know nothing about the man other than the character who hosted “Coach’s Corner”. I very much doubt that is a clear picture of who Don Cherry really is. Also, there seems to be plenty of blame to go around for this mess. For decades, CBC certainly capitalized on Cherry’s outspoken personality. I was saddened to read some of the personal attacks and the nastiness that this controversy unleashed. We seem to have reached a boiling point.

As I began writing this report on Friday afternoon, the U.S. Presidential impeachment hearings were airing on CNN, and former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch was stoically enduring the verbal attacks of some bullying Republican lapdog of the Commander-In-Tweet. The partisan vitriol spewed during that hearing was incredible. As I watch seemingly credible career diplomats and other decent individuals fall into the Trump grist mill, I am appalled by the partisan circus presently spinning out of control. How did we get to this point? I’m certainly no historian. Political science was never my strong suit, but if one watches the news or consults social media, one hears a steady stream of divisive, disrespectful, sometimes hateful rhetoric.

An old classmate of mine, Bob O’ Connor, wrote a self-help book several years ago entitled “Gumptionade”. The book is full of tools and exercises we can use to be more productive and effective in our daily lives. The overall message is that we should strive to do more good than harm. While this is a simple message, how many of us can say we practice this behavior? The other day, I had yet another perplexing computer problem wherein I lost some project on which I was working, I am not sleeping properly because I worry about the constellation of little problems I cannot solve, and because some SOB claiming to be a Microsoft technician keeps calling me up in the wee hours of the morning to try to scam us (from an untraceable number), the news is all bad, and on and on and on. I don’t know wherefrom my anxiousness originates. I only know that it is growing worse. If I don’t repair me, I can’t help or love anyone else. My goal is to become more mindful of my purpose in life, and to learn how to do things that make me feel empowered and help me to heal and repair. These are not unattainable goals. I’m slowly learning that the only thing that truly gives me peace is making someone else’s life better. Every time I speak negatively, every time I gossip, every time I show anger and impatience, I am the one who suffers the most. My so-called altruism is really just a selfish desire to feel better.

I spoke a few months ago about meditation, and that I am consciously making time to concentrate on my breathing for five or ten minutes, twice per day. You might laugh, because it sounds foolish to simply concentrate on breathing. We all do that right? I don’t! I shallow breathe, especially when I am anxious, and simply taking the time to focus on my breathing for a few moments a day has been therapeutic for me. I’m also forcing myself to listen, even when my instincts are to talk. It seems like the less talking I do the better I feel. Do less harm. I don’t know who’s right and who’s wrong anymore. Everyone seems to have an opinion, and everyone seems to be clawing for the moral high ground. I’ve done a lot of things wrong in my life so far, and I own those wrongdoings. I simply want to do better now. Maybe that involves making a friend laugh, or stopping to listen to the problems of a relative stranger. Maybe it means not calling someone an idiot because they don’t agree with my opinion of Don Cherry’s dismissal, or Donald Trump’s impeachment hearings.     


Written by Jamie Oppenheimer ©2019
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
jamieoppenheimersongwriter@gmail.com
Jamie Oppenheimer, Songwriter, Author, Blogger, Radio Producer, & Host has been writing THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT every MONDAY since 1992 and has published the articles on his blog since 2006. We are including Jamie's weekly reports, as a feature of #HuntersBayRadio, The Bay 88.7FM.