Roy Masters (commentator)

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Roy Masters
Masters speaking in Selma, Oregon in May 2014
Born
Reuben Obermeister

(1928-04-02)2 April 1928
London, United Kingdom
Died(2021-04-22)April 22, 2021
Career
ShowAdvice Line with Roy Masters
StationBroadcast on 190 radio stations[1]
Time slot9P.M.–midnight PT Monday-Friday
CountryUnited States
Websitewww.fhu.com

Roy Masters (born 2 April 1928, died 22 April 2021) was an English-born American author, radio personality, businessman and hypnotist. He was the creator of a type of

mindfulness meditation exercise, which has appeared in his books and recordings. Masters is the founder of the Oregon non-profit organization, The Foundation of Human Understanding. His forays into radio broadcasting included his own show, Advice Line, and the Talk Radio Network, a long time popular conservative talk radio
syndicator.

Roy Masters died peacefully in Oregon on April 22, 2021.

Early life in Britain

Roy Masters was born Reuben Obermeister in London in 1928 to a Jewish family of diamond cutters. Like his father, Boris, Masters uses the common anglicisation of his original surname.

Masters' father died in 1943, when Masters was 15 years old.[citation needed] His family could only afford to pay for higher education for his older brother, so Masters did not attend college.[2] He was sent to Brighton, England to apprentice in diamond cutting at his uncle's company, Monnickendam Ltd.[3]

Career

Diamond cutting

Masters made implausible claims to have served in the Royal Sussex Regiment of the British Army during World War II; however, Masters was only 11 years old when the United Kingdom entered the war.[4] Following the war, he apprenticed in diamond cutting. He pursued his trade in many places, including Amsterdam; Brussels; Belgium; and Johannesburg in 1947, where he spent two years.[3][5]

In 1949, Masters emigrated to the United States. In his early twenties, he traveled across America, giving lectures about the topic of diamond cutting in 40 different states. He was invited to participate in radio and TV interviews about the subject, and he briefly hosted a daily radio show which was titled Story of Your Diamond.[4][2]

Masters met and married his wife Ann in Birmingham, Alabama, and they eventually moved to Houston, Texas. He developed an interest in hypnosis, and he sold his diamond cutting business to start a new company, the Institute of Hypnosis.

Lessons in hypnotism

During his early years in Brighton, Masters saw a stage hypnosis presentation in which the hypnotist easily induced volunteer subjects to do strange and outlandish things. Masters remembered pondering the question: "Why can't hypnotism be used to make people act sensibly, rather than foolishly?"[6]

Upon further exploration of hypnotism in the 1950s, Masters repudiated hypnotherapy, but he soon opened the Institute of Hypnosis in Houston. There, he saw as many as 30 clients a day for consultations, and he said he "unhypnotised" them instead of hypnotizing them.[2]

Masters called hypnosis a "duplication of life's errors":

When I was a hypnotist, they used to say to me "You're a hypnotist, are you? When are you going to put me to sleep?" And I would say "Well when are you going to wake up? Because you're already asleep." Hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness...When a person is hypnotized—or reacts to stress, which is the same thing—he's not aware that he's being influenced. And when he is under the influence, he moves and has his being according to somebody else's will. And we don't realize that but when we do realize it, we make excuses. We deny. We deny that somebody else is controlling us other than us. That's our problem.

— Roy Masters, appearance on The Joe Franklin Show

About his decision to change his profession from diamond cutting to hypnosis, Masters said the following in an interview: "I had my own business, but I left that lucrative work because I had a calling for this kind of work. I'm more interested in what I'm doing now than anything else."[7]

Masters set the

jail.[2]
(For the medical practice of hypnotism, see hypnotism precursors, such as Dave Elman.)

The Foundation Of Human Understanding

Masters lived in Los Angeles, California, buying a house trailer and living in Venice, CA in 1961. He later profited from his investment in gold at its price highs in 1980 and he purchased Tall Timber Ranch in Selma, Oregon, and he relocated his family to Grants Pass, Oregon, where he moved the non-profit Foundation of Human Understanding.[7][9] He produced an observational or meditation recording titled How Your Mind Can Keep You Well, which became the title of his radio show and the title of one of his books.

Talk radio show

In 1961, Masters started a talk radio counseling show, which is currently broadcast with the title Advice Line, as a syndicated program. The show has been on the air continuously since its start. Masters passed his hosting duties to his sons, David and Alan, shortly before his death.[10]

Media appearances

Masters appeared on CNN's

The Drudge Report.[11]

Publications

References

  1. ^ "Introduction to Roy Masters". Foundation of Human Understanding. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e William Wolf, Healers, Gurus and Spiritual Guides (pdf), 1969, 1975, 2005, published by the Foundation of Human Understanding (Originally published by Sherbourne Press, 1969)
  3. ^ a b "British Diamond Cutter Shows Skills of His Trade". Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  4. ^ a b "Diamond Cutting art comes to Birmingham". The Birmingham News. 7 September 1952. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  5. ^ "Untitled". Action. 1950's. Savannah, Georgia. Junior Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  6. ^ Amazon.com. "Roy Masters Biography". Amazon. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  7. ^ a b Metlova, Maria (1 September 1963). "Between You & Me". Valley News. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  8. OCLC 969931327. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help
    )
  9. ^ "IRS Letter" (PDF). 11 July 2014.
  10. ^ "Advice Line: A Voice of Reason in a Perilous World | Radio America".
  11. ^ "Call Roy Masters on 'Advice Line'". Retrieved 26 October 2012. Millions have seen or heard Roy Masters on such popular shows as Sean Hannity's WABC Show, CNN's "Larry King Live," "Sally Jesse Raphael," "Crossfire," and "The Drudge Report."

External links