I understand what you’re saying, and I realize the term ‘working hard’ is subjective... like some people’s bodies are broken down or ruined from the work they do. I don’t know if Oprah has ever made bales of hay or run a jackhammer or swung a sledgehammer to pound iron stakes into the ground all day in 0 degree weather with 50 mph winds, and the list goes on and on. Just watch some episodes of Mike Rowe’s Dirty Jobs and you’ll see all sorts of people doing brutal work to eek out an honest living. More often than not those types of jobs are supporting the very structures of the world we take for granted every day and very few of those people receive any praise for the work they do. Those people are tough as nails and I respect them for what they provide for us much more than being able to watch a cushy couch interview on tv, or a movie. The point is that there is a monetary imbalance that is beyond comprehension and is inexcusable. I don’t really think Oprah is a harder worker than a lumberjack, but somehow what she did/does is worth billions of times more than what any lumberjack does, and yet, I guarantee she wouldn’t last a day doing a lumberjack’s work. It makes no sense. I don’t respect inequality.