Tearful Jim Breuer delivers powerful message about dealing with tragedy, faith, and blessings in life: 'I'll never be mad at God'



Jim Breuer has been making people laugh for decades. He has been doing stand-up comedy consistently from 1989 until the present and has several comedy specials. In the 1990s, Breuer rose to national fame as a star on "Saturday Night Live" with his portrayal of Joe Pesci and his unforgettable "Goat Boy" character. In 1998, Breuer was featured in the cult comedy classic "Half Baked."

However, one of Breuer's latest efforts is not funny. But it might be one of the most important contributions that the stand-up comedian has ever made.

"I feel a lot of people need this, I need this, everyone needs what I'm about to put out there," Breuer began.

Breuer then revealed the story of how he found out that his wife had stage 4 cancer in a recent episode of his "The Breuniverse Podcast."

Breuer said of his wife's cancer diagnosis, "The doctor says, 'Nothing we can do. It's everywhere.'"

The doctor gave his wife only a few months to live.

"Your life as you know it, changes like that," he explained. "Your whole life flashes."

Breuer turned to a close friend for help on how to deal with his wife's terminal cancer diagnosis.

The friend told Breuer, "I know you're spiritual and you believe in God, and your wife is deep into the word of Jesus, and born-again, she found her faith many years ago. How does that affect that now?"

The friend then asked, "Are you mad? Are you mad at God? Does that screw up your faith?"

Breuer then told his friend, "I said to be dead honest with you, not at all."

"If anything, I'm not mad at what I will not have," he said. "I'm not mad of what's being taken away. I'm not mad about what I'm not gonna have anymore, but I am so damn blessed for what I had, and what I still have."

Breuer's friend reacted by saying, "Woah!"

The comedian gushed, "Do you know how many people never had the relationship I did and still have? Do you know how many incredible, lifesaving, emotional, deep-saving moments I've had with my wife Dee?"

Breuer noted that his wife of 29 years blessed him with three beautiful children.

"As a matter of fact, I see it even deeper now. I thought I saw it, but I see it deeper now," he beamed.

When it comes to tragedy, Breuer advised, "You can either turn your back and be mad or you can look at it as, 'Wow! I didn't realize how beautiful life is and was when it's right in front of you.'"

"Start looking at the beauty right in front of you with yourself," he said with tears in his eyes.

"I'll never be mad at God," he declared. "I cannot believe the beauty that surrounds me, I can't believe the beauty that is given to me."

An emotional Breuer uttered, "I got to hold my dad to his last breath. Do you know what a blessing that is?"

"I pray to God that everybody gets that opportunity," he said. "If you get the opportunity to hold someone to the end – do it."

He emphasized, "No college, no education, can ever fill your cup up with such beauty, with such grace, then have those real-life experiences. Please, go out and enjoy life."

"This really has to do, in my opinion, a deeper spirituality, God the Lord, however you want to put it," he said, "I hope you find it, I hope you tap into it. It'll help you spread light to so many others. So many others."

At the end of the podcast, Breuer revealed that his wife has survived for five years with her terminal cancer.

"So anyone out there that's dealt the card of 'your days are numbered,' do yourself a favor – don't give up, don't give up," Breuer concluded.

(WARNING: Explicit language)

Jim Breuer's Got Something Heavy To Say | The Breuniverse Podcast #35 youtu.be

These are the definitive recordings of 35 favorite Christmas carols: Don't argue, just listen



Because nobody doesn't love a list and everybody is an expert nowadays, I've compiled a list of the definitive recordings of 35 of the most loved classic Christmas carols.

Don't agree? That's OK — you're allowed to be wrong. (Spoiler alert: There are zero Josh Groban or Pentatonix songs on this list. If you find that upsetting, this probably isn't the list for you anyway. Just click on something else.)

Merry Christmas! And happy listening:

#1: SILENT NIGHT — Dean Martin


This one was a gimme — that way we don't start out the list fighting.


***

#2: HAVE YOURSELF A MERRY LITTLE CHRISTMAS — Ella Fitzgerald


Yes, I know, I know, Judy did it first for "Meet Me in St. Louis"; however, that does not make it the best. If you think Garland's rendition is better than Ella's, you're probably also a Liza Minnelli fan.


***

#3: JOY TO THE WORLD — Whitney Houston


Now, a lot of people will tell you that Mariah Carey has cornered the market on this old hymn, but that's only because she was hitched to Sony's Tommy Mottola when she cut the holiday album that features the song. If Whitney were still around today and able to get the press Mariah does, I'm pretty sure everybody would be saying "Mariah who?" when it was time to drop the needle on "Joy to the World."


***

#4: IT'S THE MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR — Andy Williams


If you fight me on this one, we can't be friends.


***

#5: THE CHRISTMAS SONG — Nat King Cole


C'mon. Mel Torme wrote the song (with Bob Wells) and gave it to Cole to sing, knowing he was the guy to make this song unforgettable. Other people can roast their chestnuts all they want — many have done it well — but Cole's take will never be topped. Ever.


***

#6: HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING — Amy Grant


Truthfully, Jewel's arrangement of "Hark!" is superior, but the problem is ... Jewel, the woman who sings like she has marbles in her mouth and can't decide if she's going to do an adult voice or a little girl voice. Advantage: Grant.


***

#7: ADESTE FIDELES — Celine Dion


No one really knows who wrote "O Come, All Ye Faithful," but anyone with any sense knows who did best. (Though I have to give a nod to David Osmond's strong performance on Glenn Beck's "Believe Again" album.)


***

#8: WHITE CHRISTMAS — Bing Crosby


There's a reason this Crosby record is the best-selling single in the world — not just in the holiday genre, but best-selling single of all time. Nothing has ever topped it, and it's likely nothing ever will.


***

#9: RUDOLPH, THE RED-NOSED REINDEER — Gene Autry


Yes, Burl Ives was the narrator for the TV special. Yes, I get a warm, fuzzy feeling from Ives' record. No, it's isn't the best version. That belongs to The Singing Cowboy.


***

#10: IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A LOT LIKE CHRISTMAS — Johnny Mathis


Crosby and Como both killed it when they recorded this song, but the Mathis version has the edge — not just in quality but also culturally with its inclusion in "Home Alone 2," which gave it a massive surge in popularity.


***

#11: I'LL BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS — Perry Como


Is there really any question? No. No there isn't.


***

#12: JINGLE BELLS — Frank Sinatra


Don't question this one either: Frank knows people who know how to hurt people. (Well, at least, he used to.)


***

#13: SANTA CLAUS IS COMIN' TO TOWN — Jackson 5


The Boss would say different. But you and I know the truth.


***

#14: ANGELS WE HAVE HEARD ON HIGH — Mormon Tabernacle Choir


The "Gloria, in excelsis Deo" chorus requires a powerful choir. Good luck finding a choir more powerful than the one the LDS folks put together.


***

#15: FROSTY THE SNOWMAN — Jimmy Durante


The Ronettes produced a very good version and it gets way more airplay, which is a shame: Durante's recording is a musical number Rankin & Bass actually got right.


***

#16: A HOLLY JOLLY CHRISTMAS — Burl Ives


This is Ives' song. No one else should even try to sing it.


***

#17: WINTER WONDERLAND — Perry Como


Admit it, you were expecting me to say Darline Love here. It's OK. It's a normal and fairly logical guess. But it also happens to be incorrect. Not only did Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass cut a version that was better (though wordless), both of Perry Como's versions (here and here) are objectively better. Here is the track from his 1946 album "Perry Como Sings Merry Christmas Music."


***

#18: LET IT SNOW! LET IS SNOW! LET IT SNOW! — Lena Horne


Lots of artists have made great "Let It Snow!" records (including Harry Connick Jr., who deserves a mention). But none of them ever reached the smoothness — and, frankly, sexiness — of Lena Horne's.


***

#19: THE FIRST NOEL — Third Day


It's a more modern version of an old hymn with some cool rhythm. It's also the best version ever recorded.


***

#20: SILVER BELLS — Elvis Presley


After The King walked out of the studio the day he laid this down, there was no reason for anyone to ever bother trying to do it better.


***

#21: SLEIGH RIDE — Ella Fitzgerald


You want me to say Arthur Fiedler & The Boston Pops Orchestra. Not gonna happen. Lady Ella owns this — and always will.


***

#22: DECK THE HALLS — Ashley Hess


Ashley Hess is not likely a name you recognize at first. But if you're a Glenn Beck fan, you'll remember this after a quick listen. And then you'll agree.


***

#23: GOD REST YE MERRY GENTLEMEN — Barenaked Ladies


Here's one that had me going back and forth for hours. Everything Nat King Cole touched was superb, so I could easily put his recording here and be done with it. But ... the Barenaked Ladies put a spin on this classic that has just the edge needed to bump it ahead of Cole.


***

#24: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS — John Denver & The Muppets


The LP of this 1979 Christmas special (which has never been released on home video) is full of great music. The most notable is the Muppet Gang's clever rundown of the many gifts the writer's obnoxious "true love" gave him. Bah-dum-bum-bum.


***

#25: ANGELS FROM THE REALMS OF GLORY — Julie Andrews


If you like Andrews' style, you'll absolutely love all of her Christmas songs. Her best Christmas record happens to also be the best version of that song.


***

#26: DO YOU HEAR WHAT I HEAR? — Perry Como


I know he's already got a couple wins on this list, but I've got to give Como this one, too, with Andy Williams coming in a close second.


***

#27: IT CAME UPON A MIDNIGHT CLEAR — MercyMe


Another modern take on a hymn. On first listen, you'll disagree with me on its ranking. But then you'll listen again and again and be forced to admit that, well, the fat Blaze editor was right once more.


***

#28: LITTLE DRUMMER BOY — Bing Crosby & David Bowie


It's a beautiful song — it's also the strangest Christmas song. Crosby and Bowie's awkward video didn't help make it less weird. But you can't argue with the talent they brought to the studio when it was time to record.


***

#29: WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS — Alvin and the Chipmunks


Every Christmas music list is required to include Alvin and the Chipmunks. It's scriptural.


***

#30: ROCKIN' AROUND THE CHRISTMAS TREE — Leann Rimes


"Brenda Lee!" you're shouting as you read this. "You're nuts!" I'm shouting back. Lee's famous record doesn't have 1 percent of the feel (or talent, for that matter) that Rimes' does.


***

#31: O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM — Andy Williams


I was torn on this one — all the way up until it was time to post this. My brain tells me to go with Mahalia Jackson's soulful version. But my heart says this is another song that The King of Christmas just nailed.


***

#32: WHAT CHILD IS THIS? — Vince Guaraldi Trio


Guaraldi's "Charlie Brown Christmas" album is arguably the best complete holiday album ever produced. No one has ever made "Greensleeves" sound better.


***

#33: GOOD KING WENCESLAS — Ames Brothers


Though a lot of folks will say The Velvet Fog's jazzy turn on this tale of a ruler who looked out for others should be tops, I've got a soft spot in my heart for the Ames Brothers' record. The majesty of the music sets the tone for understanding the lesson we can learn from Wenceslas.


***

#34: O HOLY NIGHT — David Phelps


Here's another hymn that could have gone to a couple artists. Critics have rightfully celebrated Celine Dion for her rendition, but David Phelps really brought it home. (Plus, Celine is Canadian, so the thought of giving her more than one song on this list was nauseating.)


***

#35: MY FAVORITE THINGS — Tony Bennett


No one has ever explained to me how this became a Christmas song. Julie Andrews really made it famous on "The Sound of Music," and since then, scads of very notable vocalists have covered it for Christmas — no one better than Bennett. (Barbra Streisand can get bent.)

This post originally ran Dec. 25, 2019.