Tuesday, June 03, 2025
37.0°F

Songs for superheroes

DEVIN WEEKS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 3 months AGO
by DEVIN WEEKS
Devin Weeks is a third-generation North Idaho resident. She holds an associate degree in journalism from North Idaho College and a bachelor's in communication arts from Lewis-Clark State College Coeur d'Alene. Devin embarked on her journalism career at the Coeur d'Alene Press in 2013. She worked weekends for several years, covering a wide variety of events and issues throughout Kootenai County. Devin now mainly covers K-12 education and the city of Post Falls. She enjoys delivering daily chuckles through the Ghastly Groaner and loves highlighting local people in the Fast Five segment that runs in CoeurVoice. Devin lives in Post Falls with her husband and their three eccentric and very needy cats. | February 20, 2021 1:07 AM

"Even heroes have the right to bleed."

Lyrics from Five for Fighting's song, "Superman."

"It's not easy to be me."

The song takes on a whole new meaning when these words are sung by emergency department workers whose entire lives are dedicated to saving lives. Interspersed with images of exhausted health care workers in face masks and scrubs, it gives people pause.

"In our daily work routine, it's been really hard," Kootenai Health lab assistant Carli Osika said Friday. "Everybody’s gone through staffing issues and having more patients than we have staff.

"We have to support each other," she said. "When somebody else is having a rough day, we have to support each other and be there for each other."

Osika is one of several hospital employees who participated in an affecting tribute to health care workers. A YouTube music video, "ER coworkers cover Superman (It's Not Easy)," highlights the natural voices and talents of medical staff whose voices have so long been muffled by masks.

The concept for the video, found at www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1T9BkJzp54&feature=youtu.be, came from the heart of Lane Sumner, a longtime local musician and music instructor who now works as a Kootenai Health guest services associate. He said he had this idea "floating around in my head for weeks."

Even though he's not medical staff, he wanted to contribute something to show appreciation and lift up those around him.

"Most of those people I’d never heard sing before, so I didn’t know what I was getting into,” he said, smiling beneath his mask. “It came out way better than I anticipated."

Sumner discovered the talent of the ER workers when one of them took guitar lessons from him and let him in on the secret that a number of them could sing.

“I spent my whole career taking people and making them sound good at music,” Sumner said. "This is just an extension of what I spent 30 years doing."

Sumner played all the musical parts on the video, which was shot in his North Idaho studio. He also spent countless hours putting it all together. When his computer program almost failed, one of his former students, Jimmy Magnuson, contributed his talent to master the music and prepare it for the video session.

"Once I heard this song, I was like, 'Oh my God, this needs to get out to people.' When I was mastering it, I couldn't stop crying," Magnuson said. "I cry because they're my heroes."

Magnuson shared that he has suffered from alcoholism and depression through the years, and the workers at Kootenai Health, including Sumner, have always provided encouragement with no judgment when he has found himself in their care.

"It makes me feel amazing," he said. "I’m so blessed it could come together and I could help get that message out there."

A first video covering Bill Withers' "Lean on Me" was released Aug. 31 and had thousands of views in the first week. It's now beyond 11,500 views.

"They did such an amazing job,” Kootenai Health communications specialist Andrea Nagel said. "It’s always fun to see your coworkers' hidden talents. The first video they did was really popular and really helped to boost morale, especially in the emergency department. It’s a good morale booster and puts a smile on people’s faces."

Every Friday, Sumner and his guest services colleague Lorena Brewer perform during the lunch hour in the cafeteria as The Lorena and Lane Trio — music for people who are bad at math. Sumner plays guitar and Brewer plays the flute and the bass flute. They started performing weekly just after the pandemic shut down everything.

“When COVID started, all the live music stopped, so after a month or so, I made a suggestion to our manager and said, 'How about Lane and I play music?’” Brewer said. "We had nurses coming up in tears. They’d say, ‘Oh my gosh, I haven’t heard music for a while.'"

They play songs including the Beatles' "Hey Jude," Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy" and "Unchained Melody" by the Righteous Brothers.

"I love the live music," Kootenai Café employee Tiffany Schultz said. "I think it gives everyone in the hospital — the workers, the patients and the visitors — it gives them a little ray of sunshine, a ray of hope that it’s not really all that bad."

Brewer said it's all a labor of love.

"All of this is done from the heart," she said.

As for the videos, Sumner said, "I honestly only did it for my coworkers."

"The fact that someone outside of our little group here wanted to watch them is remarkable to me," he said.

photo

DEVIN WEEKS/Press

Lorena Brewer and Lane Sumner perform in the Kootenai Health cafeteria on Friday. The musicians have played every Friday since just after COVID hit and have been involved with music videos featuring Kootenai Health medical staff singing covers of songs to lift up workers in their industry.

photo

DEVIN WEEKS/Press

Lorena Brewer plays the flute and Lane Sumner plays guitar for Kootenai Health staff, patients and visitors on Friday. They have performed every Friday since the pandemic began and have participated in music videos featuring emergency department staff to pay tribute to health care workers everywhere.

photo

Screengrab via YouTube

Katelyn Weatherly, a Kootenai Health emergency room staff member, sings a cover of "Superman" by Five for Fighting in a new video featuring ER workers as a tribute to health care workers everywhere. The video idea came from Kootenai Health guest services staffer Lane Sumner, a longtime local musician and instructor who played all the instruments for this song.

photo

Screengrab via YouTube

Carli Osika, a Kootenai Health lab employee who works with emergency room staff, sings "Superman" in a video released Tuesday featuring hospital workers paying tribute to frontline workers everywhere.

Video

ER coworkers cover Superman (It's Not Easy)

A tribute to health care workers highlights the natural voices and talents of medical staff whose voices have so long been muffled by masks.

A tribute to health care workers highlights the natural voices and talents of medical staff whose voices have so long been muffled by masks.

ARTICLES BY DEVIN WEEKS

Coeur d'Alene Garden Club grant supports Lake City High garden project
June 3, 2025 1:08 a.m.

Coeur d'Alene Garden Club grant supports Lake City High garden project

Coeur d'Alene Garden Club grant supports Lake City High garden project

Students in the outdoor studies program, Coeur d'Alene Garden Club members and some happy honeybees gathered in the Lake City High School xeriscape garden Monday afternoon as final touches were added. The students and garden club members have been working together the past several months to replant and revive the little garden that was first planted to the north of the school entrance about 13 years ago. “This is a huge project for me,” said junior Emily Zuetrong. “I want to be a firefighter, so I love being out in the environment and doing all these things and having this here."

At long last, first-time homeowners move into Post Falls' Britton neighborhood
May 30, 2025 1:08 a.m.

At long last, first-time homeowners move into Post Falls' Britton neighborhood

At long last, first-time homeowners move into Britton neighborhood

Puffy white clouds rolled across the deep blue sky as that new home smell wafted on the breeze. The sun shined on the celebration unfolding on Britton Road in Post Falls. And just as happens on a lucky wedding day, the skies opened long enough to sprinkle rain and blessings on the first-time homeowners who received the keys to their brand-new homes. "We are standing in the middle of a first-in-the-nation solution to restore the American Dream of homeownership for our hard-working families whose wages have not and will not catch up to our escalating market rate prices for real estate," Panhandle Affordable Housing Alliance Executive Director Maggie Lyons said Thursday.

Panhandle Health's Ekizian leads charge for Medical Reserve Corps volunteers
June 1, 2025 1:08 a.m.

Panhandle Health's Ekizian leads charge for Medical Reserve Corps volunteers

Panhandle Health's Ekizian leads charge for Medical Reserve Corps volunteers

Although she didn't grow up in a family of doctors or first responders, Jennifer Ekizian found her calling in the realm of public health. This was after she set off to become a nurse but ended up obtaining an emergency medical technician license and a master’s degree in public safety and leadership with an emphasis on fire and working in law enforcement and fire dispatch. “However, I ended up doing my internship with the Office of Emergency Management," she said Wednesday in her Panhandle Health District office in Hayden. "That was my first exposure to emergency preparedness.” While continuing her emergency response training and experience, she spent years working in real estate, which was never a truly fulfilling career for her. “I just got to a point in my life when I wanted to help people," she said.