Many of you have probably already heard of this, but I can't help but wonder if Kevin O'Leary is in some kind of competition with Donald Trump for the title of world's most obnoxious blowhard.
UPDATE: Thanks to ThinkingManNeil, who offers this comment and the video that follows:
Mr. O'Leary needs to learn how to work a real job earning and honest living like 3.5 billion others try to. May I suggest he go try mining sulfur by hand in the crater of Kawah-Ijen? Maybe then he'll get some perspective...
Lorne, I have a term for people like Kevin O'Leary, Donald Trump, Rex Murphy et al. I find that "jumped up little shit" seems to work perfectly.
ReplyDeleteI rather like the sound of that, Mound. Succinct yet strangely evocative.
DeleteThis guy is a bigger clown than Donald Trump.
ReplyDeleteOn his CBC 'Lang & O'Leary Exchange' program he was saying that Tar Sands and Keystone Pipeline is the best thing ever happened for Canada. Amanda lady asked him about the environment. His answer was environment will be okay. Just some crazy people are making lot of noise on environment for nothing.
More and more of the CBC's soul is being given up to the right-wing, LD. If you haven't already done so, check out Mound's post on Rex Murphy.
DeleteIs it part of Mr. O’Leary’s deal with the CBC that his daily commentary as chief business analyst be introduced with a mention that he is also the “Chair of O’Leary Funds”? I’ve wondered about that for some time.
ReplyDeleteI think that the important story here is that "the Chair of O'Leary Funds" is getting media exposure that may help him market his shtick internationally. Look at the sly little grins and the glint in the eye obvious in the video as he spews his nonsense. I think he knows that it's nonsense. It’s been designed to beg for attention.
This guy doesn't believe in anything besides running his business. And for several years one of his main businesses seems to have been marketing himself as a caricature of the iconic greedy capitalist. Now they're writing about him in the Independent. That's the scoring play - his money shot. That's why he likes to mention his U.S. show when being interviewed - international exposure. In the U.S. ‘they call him Mr. Wonderful’. Yes - that's probably because someone told them he was known by that handle in other circles without mentioning that it’s likely he made it up. It's how you create and sell a product. And the product is the act.
The act may have taken over the person and the act may have started long before the advent of O'Leary TV; but it's still just about making the sale, whether it's dog food, a worthless corporate asset or a cartoon character.
The Lang & O'Leary Exchange isn't a business news programme; it’s third-rate entertainment with a little synergistic libertarian propaganda along for the ride. And the worst part of it is that you can’t escape exposure to its juvenile propaganda efforts by not tuning in. At every station break the network is sure to broadcast one of their promotional spots for the show featuring inserts of still close-ups of Mr. Wonderful’s wonderfully-manicured digits posed in that silly configuration that he seems to have come to prefer. In each of these spots his sidekick, Amanda, stumbles into a staged ambush that Mr. O’Leary can accomplish by rhyming off some line that could have come from the Market Libertarian’s Handbook for Disturbed Teenagers: “If you want a share, become a shareholder” or “The market will decide.” God has spoken.
O'Leary is serious about what he's doing - getting a paycheque and getting exposure for his fund and his comedy act. But his sparring partner provides the best comedy on the show. She presents herself in a manner that suggests she considers herself to be a journalist, while she actually just plays one on a boring TV show. Maybe it’s just part of her “straight-man” act. Whatever the case, she does it very well.
I’m still puzzled about one thing: did he come up with the thing with the hands or did he have to pay a personal stylist to do it?
Thank you, John, for this insightful commentary. I do not watch the show, committing as I am to avoiding such unnecessary vexations to the spirit, but you are quite right. His presence is inescapable thanks to the frequency of the ads promoting the Lang and O'Leary exchange.
DeleteHe strikes me as a self-promoter in the same vein as Trump, who lends his name but not his money to projects.
His presence on CBC is further testament, in my view, to the Corporation's policy of appeasement of the Harper government. Indeed, the Mound of Sound wrote a post yesterday you might want to check out on this subject:http://the-mound-of-sound.blogspot.ca/2014/01/is-rex-murphy-cbcs-in-house-tipping.html
John, I am taking the liberty of making your comments a 'guest post' to provide them a wider readership than the comments' section affords.
Mr. O'Leary needs to learn how to work a real job earning and honest living like 3.5 billion others try to. May I suggest he go try mining sulfur by hand in the crater of Kawah-Ijen? Maybe then he'll get some perspective...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5UV_wUN_2wI
N.
Thanks for the link, Neil. The video provides what we used to call 'a teachable moment.' I am going to add it as an update to the post.
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