The New Zealand Herald

Sure, your kids rock — but not like these

Even OJ believes his thoughts are worth sharing

- Matt Heath

OJ Simpson is on twitter now. It’s pretty weird. He’s sharing his thoughts on everything from the democratic presidenti­al debates to cyber security and gun violence.

The Juice has wisdom he believes you need to hear. Every video starts with “Hello twitter world” and ends with “I’m just saying” followed by a friendly “take care”.

Seems like everyone no matter how dodgy thinks their special opinions are worth sharing. So anyway, here are my special opinions for the week. Your kids are average, there should be personal drinking

licences and grown-ups need to stop freaking out whenever someone says something mean about them.

Your kids are average

Everyone thinks their children are amazing and uniquely talented. They can’t all be. Chances are you have nice, average offspring. Which is great.

I went to School of Rock — The

Musical in Brisbane last weekend. Those kids are genuinely talented. All the rock instrument­s in the show are played by children acting their real ages. So you get a 10-year-old behind the drums who is as good as any adult you’ll see.

The show is coming to New Zealand next month. It’s a rollicking good time. I had a smile right through. It started to hurt near the end. Based on the 2004 Jack Black movie and produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber, it has grossed hundreds of millions of dollars around the world.

The guy playing lead character Dewey Finn was great. But adults are

adults, you’d expect a big-budget musical to find talented grown-ups. Where did they find the kids? Perfect comic timing, spectacula­r pipes and real rock-music chops. Lovely as they are, your children are almost certainly not as talented as the show’s cast. So take them along.

It might inspire them towards excellence and will entertain the hell out of the whole family. I don’t need to take my kids They are uniquely special and amazing already.

Drinking licences needed

A 28-year-old woman was in a bind last Tuesday. While intoxicate­d she had grabbed a constable’s genitals from behind, causing “excruciati­ng pain, bruising and swelling”.

Turns out drink had been a factor in earlier conviction­s, including assault and drink driving.

If there was a drinking licence she’d have hers taken off her.

Most Kiwis drink responsibl­y. We don’t get in fights, drive if drunk or grab cops’ bits from behind. A tiny percentage of our population do these bad things. Yet booze laws are focused completely on them.

Surely we should be treated on the basis of our behaviour, not theirs? On the content of our drinking character.

So how about licences that afford drinking freedoms? You turn 18, you go to a special course and get your drinking licence. You answer some multi-choice questions. Then a drinking-test officer takes you out for a night.

If you behave, you get your licence. The licence means you can buy alcohol free from punitive taxes and enter bars even when intoxicate­d. But if you attack someone, rob somewhere or drive drunk you lose your drinking licence and all the rights that come with it. No booze for you.

Currently our alcohol laws punish all of us to get to the bad drunks. The drinking licence would treat you with respect until you show you don’t deserve it.

Proper adults can handle nasty words

Last week the Auckland Council urged members of the public to stop abusing officials on social media. Seems hopeful.

Nasty comments have always been a part of life. You can’t expect to be completely protected from meanness. So learn how to deal with it. That’s one of the key difference­s between being an adult and being a child. You learn to deal with unpleasant things such as paying taxes, working all the time and the unstoppabl­e march towards decay and death.

All these things hurt more than someone’s half-arsed opinion on social media. If these Auckland Council officials are proud of what they do and who they are, who cares what a few rude people say?

Some of the nasty stuff might even be constructi­ve. Either way, proper adults who have bothered to grow up can handle a few mean words here and there.

I’m just saying . . . take care.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Auckland’s Sophie Brown won a contest to have her song Lifeline included in School of Rock.
Auckland’s Sophie Brown won a contest to have her song Lifeline included in School of Rock.
 ??  ?? Listen to Matt Heath on the Radio Hauraki Breakfast. 6am-9am weekdays.
Listen to Matt Heath on the Radio Hauraki Breakfast. 6am-9am weekdays.
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