Howard Stern

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Howard Stern
Stern in May 2012
Born
Howard Allan Stern

(1954-01-12) January 12, 1954 (age 70)
EducationBoston University (BA)
Occupations
  • Broadcaster
  • media personality
Years active1975–present
Political partyLibertarian[1]
Spouses
Alison Berns
(m. 1978; div. 2001)
(m. 2008)
Children3
Websitehowardstern.com

Howard Allan Stern (born January 12, 1954)

Sirius XM Radio
since 2006.

Stern landed his first radio jobs while at

WNBC in New York City from 1982 until his firing in 1985. In 1985, he began a 20-year run at WXRK in New York City; his morning show entered syndication in 1986 and aired in 60 markets and attracted 20 million listeners at its peak. In recent years, Stern's photography has been featured in Hamptons and WHIRL magazines. From 2012 to 2015, he served as a judge on America's Got Talent
.

Stern has won numerous industry awards, including

issued fines totaling $2.5 million to station owners for content it deemed indecent. Stern became one of the highest-paid radio figures after signing a five-year deal with Sirius in 2004 worth $500 million.[3]

Stern has described himself as the "King of All Media" since 1992 for his successes outside radio. He hosted and produced numerous late-night television shows, pay-per-view events, and home videos. Two of his books, Private Parts (1993) and Miss America (1995), entered The New York Times Best Seller list at number one and sold over one million copies. The former was made into a biographical comedy film in 1997 that had Stern and his radio show staff star as themselves. It topped the US box office in its opening week and grossed $41.2 million domestically. Stern performs on its soundtrack, which charted the Billboard 200 at number one and was certified platinum for one million copies sold. Stern's third book, Howard Stern Comes Again, was released in 2019.

Early life and education

Howard Allan Stern was born on January 12, 1954, the second child of Ben (1923–2022) and Ray (

Jewish, and their families are from Poland and Austria-Hungary.[4] Ray was an office clerk in New York City[4][5] before she became a homemaker and later took up work as an inhalation therapist.[6] Ben served in the U.S. Army on Long Island and in California during the war. He later worked as a radio engineer at WHOM in Manhattan[7] and as a co-owner and operator at Aura Recording Inc., a Manhattan recording studio where cartoons and commercials were cut.[7] Stern described his older sister Ellen as the "complete opposite" of himself and "very quiet".[8]

In 1955, the family moved to Roosevelt, New York, on Long Island,[9] where Stern attended Washington-Rose Elementary School followed by Roosevelt Junior-Senior High School.[10] Stern also attended Hebrew school where he was given the name Tzvi.[11] As a youngster Stern took five years of piano lessons[12] and took an interest in marionettes, using them to entertain his friends with explicit shows. He formed a band with two school friends, the Electric Comicbook, on vocals and keyboards.[13] From the age of nine to his second year at university, Stern spent his summers at Camp Wel-Met, a youth camp in Narrowsburg, New York where he worked camper, kitchen, and counselor duties. He recalled his time there as "the greatest experience".[14]

When I saw my father as a recording engineer ... I was enamored. Looking at how my father was so reverential to those people, I thought that maybe he could look at me with that kind of respect if I could get behind a microphone.

— Stern on his father's influence[15]

Stern wished to be in radio at the age of five.[16] He was an infrequent listener in his youth, but names talk personalities Bob Grant and Brad Crandall as early influences.[15][17] His father set up a microphone, tape machine and turntable in the basement of his home which Stern used to record his make-believe radio shows, incorporating different characters and pre-recorded prank calls, sketches, and commercials.[18] He made several visits to his father's recording studio and witnessed "some of the great voice guys" work with him, including Don Adams and Larry Storch voice Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales, which began his desire to be on the air and "do a show", rather than play records.[17][19][20]

In the late 1960s, Roosevelt became a predominantly black area; Stern remembered just "a handful of white kids" had remained in his school and repeated instances of bullying from black students.[21] In June 1969, the family moved to nearby Rockville Centre, and Stern, at age fifteen, transferred to South Side High School where he became "a total introvert".[22] He graduated from the school in 1972;[23] his yearbook lists Stern's sole student activity, a membership of Key Club.[24]

In 1972, Stern declined a place at

LSD during his studies, but he quit after he experienced a difficult trip on too much LSD.[19]

In 1974, he gained admission to the university's

FCC exams.[31]

In May 1976, Stern graduated

grade point average. His major was broadcasting and film and his minor English and speech.[26] In the past, he funded a scholarship at the university.[32]

Career

1976–1981: WRNW, WCCC, and WWWW

In his search for radio work following his graduation, Stern took up an offer to work evenings at WRNW, a progressive rock station in Briarcliff Manor, New York.[33] He was unsure of his talent and questioned his future as a professional in the industry, writing "I freaked out. I got real nervous that I wasn't good enough".[33] Stern accepted a marketing role at Benton & Bowles, a New York advertising agency, which he soon "quit without giving notice" in favor of a position in the creative department. He lasted three hours before he was fired "because their personnel department realized that I was the guy who just quit".[33] Stern then worked in Queens as a radio salesman selling advertising time without considerable success. He wrote, "All of a sudden ... I realized I had turned down a job in radio". With encouragement from his mother and girlfriend, Stern contacted WRNW for work and agreed to take cover shifts surrounding the Christmas holidays in 1976.[31][34] Impressed with his reliability and professional approach, the station's director hired Stern full-time for a four-hour midday shift for six days a week, for $96 a week.[29] After several months, Stern became the station's production director, which lasted until November 1977 when he became its program director for an increased salary of $250 a week.[31][35] To save money, Stern rented a room in a monastery in Armonk, New York.[36]

In 1979, Stern spotted an advertisement in

Shell Oil Company, a stunt that attracted media attention.[41] It was at WCCC where Stern first met Fred Norris, the overnight disc jockey, who went on to become Stern's writer and producer since 1981.[42] Stern left WCCC in early 1980 after he was denied a "lousy, stinking twenty-five-dollar-a-week raise".[43] At the same time, local rival station WHCN had assembled tapes and press clippings of Stern and forwarded them to Burkhart/Abrams, a radio consulting firm, to get Stern out of the Hartford market as a rise in his ratings increased his threat to the station's numbers.[44] The tapes were received by Dwight Douglas, a consultant at Burkhart/Abrams, who offered Stern work in Columbus, Ohio, but Stern declined.[43]

In his search for new work, Stern found an advertised position in Radio & Records for a morning host at

Arbitron ratings released in January 1981 showed no signs of a strong audience, causing the station to change formats overnight from rock to country music, to Stern's surprise and annoyance. He lasted another two weeks before "it was time to hit the road again. Somehow, I couldn't see myself as Hopalong Howie".[50] He declined offers to work at WXRT in Chicago and CHUM in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.[48][51]

1981–1985: WWDC and WNBC

Douglas found Stern's next job, hosting mornings at album-oriented rock station WWDC in Washington, D.C. Stern was cautious about the offer at first as the general manager "was not really aware of what I did," but he accepted the offer and started on March 2, 1981.[52] During his time relocating from Detroit, Stern spent several weeks planning out a new show, determined to become more successful as the station presented a good chance for him to work in New York City, his career goal. He was determined to "kill my competition. I was going to say whatever the fuck I was going to say ... The first step was to put my team together". He sought a co-host with a sense of humor to riff with on news and current events.[53] The station then paired Stern with Robin Quivers, a former nurse in the air force and news reporter at WFBR in Baltimore.[54] Quivers was sent a tape of Stern interviewing a prostitute on the air, and she accepted the job without meeting him. She assumed she "would come in and do the news ... but it wasn't that way".[55] Despite several issues management had over content, which led to the installation of a seven-second delay to censor questionable moments,[56] Stern "kept chipping away at management's archaic approach, and we began to assemble the program I had envisioned", which included the addition of Norris as his writer and producer. In one incident, Stern revealed his wife's miscarriage on the air. In January 1982, Stern had the second highest-rated morning show in the city.[57]

Impressed with his rapid rise in the ratings, WWDC management offered Stern an initial one-year extension to his contract, but Stern wished for a more long-term deal.

14th Street bridge, the site of the crash, and if it would be a "regular stop". But Stern said it was false, claiming "no one ever complained about it".[62] In his last few months, Stern secured a $35,000 advance deal with Wren Records to produce a comedy album of song parodies with Norris, titled 50 Ways to Rank Your Mother. It was reissued in 1994 as Unclean Beaver.[63]

In April 1982, four months before he started at WNBC,

Virgin Mary around a singles bar in Jerusalem.[65] The station then hired an attorney to operate a seven-second delay if Stern said something potentially offensive. This soon became the task of program director Kevin Metheny, who Stern infamously feuded with and nicknamed "Pig Virus".[65][69] While at WNBC, Stern also began his longtime feud with its morning host Don Imus
.

In 1984, Stern acquired Don Buchwald as his agent, who supervised Stern's new three-year contract with WNBC in early 1985.

People magazine, increasing his national exposure.[46] Around this time Stern appeared in the low budget comedy film Ryder, P.I. (1986) as Ben Wah, an out of control newscaster, for which he was paid $1,000.[71] In May 1985, Stern claimed the highest ratings at WNBC in four years with a 5.7% market share of the afternoon audience.[72] In a sudden turn of events, Stern and Quivers were fired shortly before they were to go on air on September 30, 1985, for what WNBC management termed "conceptual differences" regarding the show.[73] Program director John Hayes explained: "Over the course of time we made a very conscious effort to make Stern aware that certain elements of the program should be changed ... I don't think it's appropriate to say what those specifics were".[74] Stern was not told whose decision it was. In 1992, he believed Thornton Bradshaw, chairman of WNBC owner RCA, heard his "Bestiality Dial-a-Date" segment that aired ten days before his suspension and ordered the show's cancellation.[68]

1985–1993: WXRK and early television and video projects

After his firing from WNBC, Stern kept in touch with his audience by booking dates at clubs with a live stage show.

Infinity Broadcasting worth an estimated $500,000[76] to host afternoons on its rock music station WXRK from November 18.[73] WNBC agreed to let Stern out of his contract. Otherwise, the station was obliged to pay him for the remainder of his deal.[76] Determined to beat Imus and WNBC in the ratings, Stern moved to the prime time morning slot in February 1986. The show entered syndication on August 18 that year when WYSP in Philadelphia began to simulcast the program.[73] In the New York market, Stern had the highest-rated morning radio program between 1994 and 2001.[77] During Stern's twenty years at WXRK, his show was syndicated in 60 markets[78][79] across North America and gained a peak audience of 20 million listeners.[80][81][82]

Stern's first venture into television began when the

Daily News which sparked media attention, though no investigation was made.[36] In October 1989, fans sold out Nassau Coliseum in four hours for Howard Stern's U.S. Open Sores, a live event that featured a tennis match between Stern and his producer Gary Dell'Abate following an on-air challenge.[36][73]
Stern released both events for home video.

In its 1990 feature on Stern,

radio show staff. Initially produced as four, one-hour specials and broadcast during the summer, the show continued to air and entered syndication in 1991 to a peak of 65 markets across the country, including cities where the radio show did not air.[88] In the New York area, the show frequently beat Saturday Night Live
in the ratings during the thirty minutes when the two overlapped. Stern ended the program after 69 episodes, in 1992.

By this time, the radio show had been the subject of several fines issued by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) over material it deemed indecent. As part of his rally against the FCC's actions, Stern released a compilation album of censored radio segments titled Crucified by the FCC in early 1991.[89]

Stern's rise as a popular radio and television figure in 1992 led to the first instance of his self-proclaimed title "King of All Media".[90] This was initially a tongue-in-cheek jab at Michael Jackson, who had been dubbed "King of Pop".[91] In October 1992, Stern became the first to have the number one morning radio show in the New York and Los Angeles markets simultaneously.[92] In the same month, Stern released Butt Bongo Fiesta, a home video containing the highlight feature of "butt bongoing", an act Stern described as "frenetic spanking in time to a rock record playing in the background".[93] The video was a commercial success; approximately 260,000 copies were sold for a gross of over $10 million.[89][94] In November 1992, Stern returned to Saturday night television as the host of The Howard Stern "Interview", a weekly one-on-one celebrity interview series on the E! network which ended in 1993.[95] Stern appeared at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards as Fartman, a fictional superhero originating from the humor magazine National Lampoon. Presenting an award with Luke Perry, Stern appeared on stage in the Fartman costume with his buttocks exposed. According to the trademark Stern filed for the character in October 1992, he first used Fartman at WWDC in July 1981.[96] Development for The Adventures of Fartman, a feature film based around the character, began in late 1992 with Stern reaching a verbal agreement with New Line Cinema to release it.[97] Screenwriter J. F. Lawton was hired to prepare an outline to a script and to direct the film with producer David Permut, and it received a budget of $8–11 million. Lawton described the film as "a real comedy with a beginning, middle and an end with a strong story".[98] In 1993, the project was abandoned due to disagreements between Stern and New Line regarding the film's content, rating, and merchandising rights.[99][100]

In November 1993, Stern was again in talks with Fox to host a late-night talk show, this time replacing Chevy Chase, whose show had been cancelled in October of that year.[101]

1993–1994: Private Parts and run for Governor of New York

After The Adventures of Fartman was shelved, Buchwald started to pitch deals with book publishers as "there was a perception that [Stern] had taken a hit ... we thought of the book as something that would both produce income and suggest to people that Howard had economic clout".

The New York Times Best-Seller list at number one and stayed on the list for 20 weeks.[106] Stern held book signings across the country, with sessions lasting as long as seven hours.[107] The first, held in New York City, was attended by an estimated ten thousand people.[103]

In its twentieth anniversary issue in 1993, Radio & Records named Stern "the most influential air personality of the past two decades".

Interstate 295, south of Trenton, New Jersey. A $1,000 plaque was installed at the stop, which was stolen days later and mailed to Stern.[113] The rest area closed in 2003 as part of budget cuts by Governor Jim McGreevey.[114]

Stern held his second pay-per-view special,

The New York Post called it "The most disgusting two hours in the history of television".[115] The show was released for home video in early 1994, entitled Howard Stern's New Year's Rotten Eve 1994. It cost Stern a second television deal with Fox after network executives had disliked the content of the event and ceased discussions.[116]

Stern at the Libertarian Party convention during his candidacy for Governor of New York

During his radio show on March 22, 1994, Stern announced his candidacy for

death penalty, remove highway tolls to improve traffic flow and limit road work to graveyard shifts hours. Stern announced that once those three goals were accomplished, he would resign and pass the governorship to his lieutenant.[117] At the party's nomination convention on April 23, Stern won the required two-thirds majority on the first ballot, receiving 287 of the 381 votes cast; James Ostrowski finished second with 34 votes.[118] To place his name on the final ballot, Stern was obliged to state his home address and complete a financial disclosure form under the Ethics in Government Act. Stern applied for an injunction as he wished to avoid stating his income; the request was denied by a judge on August 2.[119] Stern withdrew his candidacy in an on-air press conference two days later, saying: "I spend 25 hours a week telling you all the most intimate details of my life ... One fact I've never revealed is how much I make and how much money I have ... it's none of your business".[120] In the gubernatorial election on November 8, Cuomo was defeated by George Pataki, whom Stern backed. In August 1995, Pataki signed a bill that limited construction on state roads to night hours in New York City and Long Island, which was named the "Howard Stern Bill" in honor of Stern originally proposing the plan.[121] Stern has since felt "firmly opposed" to the death penalty.[122]

In June 1994, Stern founded the Howard Stern Production Company for "original film and television production enterprises as well as joint production and development ventures". He intended to assist in a feature film adaptation of Brother Sam, the biography of comedian

Howard Stern ran for eleven years; the last original episode aired on July 8, 2005.[125]

1995–1997: Miss America and Private Parts film

On April 3, 1995, three days after the

Justice of the Peace of Harlingen, Texas, issued an arrest warrant on Stern for disorderly conduct that carried a potential maximum fine of $500 if he entered the state.[128] Stern was never arrested on the warrant.[129]

In 1995, Stern signed an advance deal with ReganBooks worth around $3 million to write his second book, Miss America.[130] Stern wrote about various topics, including his cybersex experiences on the Internet service Prodigy, a private meeting with Michael Jackson, his suffering with back pain and obsessive–compulsive disorder, and his run for Governor of New York.[131] Following its release on November 7, 1995, Miss America sold 33,000 copies at Barnes & Noble stores which set a new one-day record for the chain,[132] and 120,000 in its first week. It entered The New York Times Best-Seller list at number one and stayed on the list for 16 weeks.[106] According to Publishers Weekly, 1.39 million copies were sold in 1995 alone which ranked it the year's third best-selling book.[133] As with Private Parts, Stern's book signings attracted thousands. His November 30, 1995, appearance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno caused controversy after he appeared on the show with two bikini-clad women who kissed each other and received spanks from Stern. Leno, who urged that both acts would be edited out from the final broadcast, walked off the stage after the segment without thanking Stern.[134]

In February 1996, production began on a biographical comedy

The Dust Brothers
.

In October 1997, Stern filed a $1.5 million lawsuit against Ministry of Film Inc., claiming the studio recruited him for a film called Jane starring Melanie Griffith while knowing it had insufficient funds. Stern, who remained unpaid when production ceased, accused the studio of breach of contract, fraud, and negligent representation.[142] A settlement was reached in 1999 which resulted in Stern receiving $50,000.[143]

1998–2004: Television and film projects

In April 1998, Stern announced his return to Saturday night television after he signed a deal with

Channel 9 show we used to beat Saturday Night Live in New York ... I didn't think [the CBS show] was a good idea actually because [the radio show] was already running on the E! network. It was a mistake ... they ultimately wanted what the Channel 9 show was doing".[149]

In the first

FX.[150] The show was not renewed for a fourth season.[155]

Stern in 2000

On December 16, 2000, Stern's last live radio show of the year, he announced the signing of his new contract with Infinity Broadcasting to continue his show for five years after four months of negotiations.[156] Forbes estimated his new earnings ranged between $17 million and $20 million a year.[157] Stern spoke at The Concert for New York City in October 2001 in a hazmat suit with his buttocks exposed similarly to his 1992 MTV Music Video Awards appearance.[158] In November 2001, Stern's production company had begun development on a weekly television sitcom titled Kane for CBS, originally intended to replace The Howard Stern Radio Show following its cancellation, with Ron Zimmerman as the writer of its pilot episode. Its premise followed "an oddball southern family and its strong-willed patriarch. The lead character's life is altered when his previously long-lost wife returns home to him and their group of eccentric children". The project was canceled before the filming stage.[154][159] In late 2002, Stern acquired the rights to the comedy films Rock 'n' Roll High School (1979) and Porky's (1982) with Arclight Films. He expressed a wish to use a remake of the former as a launchpad for an unknown band. Under the deal, Stern was served as executive producer and was allowed to place "Howard Stern Presents" in the titles. He reasoned, "If I say to ... my audience, this is 'Howard Stern Presents', it means something to them ... it's going to be crazy. It means that it's going to be different, and they know I'm not going to be giving them any schlock".[160] Development for Porky's came to a halt in 2011 following legal action regarding the ownership of the film's rights.[161]

In March 2003, Stern filed a $100-million lawsuit against

Spike ordered thirteen episodes of Howard Stern: The High School Years, an animated series set during Stern's childhood that he was to executive produce.[165] By late 2005, episode scripts and some test animation had been completed,[166] but the project was soon shelved. Stern explained the series could have been produced "on the cheap" at $300,000 per episode, but the quality he demanded would have cost over $1 million each.[167] Actor Michael Cera was cast as the lead voice.[168] Stern also worked on a pilot with Robert Schimmel for The WB, based around the comedian's real-life experience of falling in love with his daughter's best friend following his battle with cancer, but was not picked up.[169]

2004–2010: Signing with Sirius and terrestrial radio departure

The

Viacom were fined for content the FCC deemed indecent, the situation culminated on October 6, 2004, when Stern announced the signing of a five-year deal with Sirius Satellite Radio, a subscription-based satellite radio
service exempt from the FCC's broadcast regulations, starting in 2006. It was a move that has been regarded as the start of "a new era of radio". Stern's final live show on terrestrial airwaves aired on December 16, 2005.

Stern's first contract with Sirius was worth $500 million; a budget of $100 million a year for production, staff, and programming costs. In 2005, he formed two channels,

Celebrity 100 list in June 2006.[177] When Sirius merged with rival service XM Satellite Radio in 2008 to form SiriusXM, the company paid Stern $25 million as per a clause in his contract.[178] In 2006, Stern filed a trademark for the name "King of All Media".[179]

On February 28, 2006,

Leslie Moonves, and a distraction to the failure of the company's radio division in the aftermath of his departure from terrestrial radio as it struggled to attain ratings as strong as Stern's.[182] A settlement was reached out of court in May 2006 which involved Sirius paying CBS $2 million for the rights to Stern's radio shows since 1985 as CBS initially prohibited Stern from playing them on Sirius.[183]

2010–present: Sirius contract renewals, America's Got Talent, and third book

In December 2010, Stern renewed his contract with SiriusXM to continue his radio show for a further five years.[184] His new deal allows him to work a reduced schedule from four to three live radio shows each week.[185] On March 22, 2011, Stern and Buchwald filed a lawsuit against SiriusXM for $300 million, claiming further annual bonuses were not paid despite Stern meeting subscriber growth targets.[186] On April 17, 2012, Judge Barbara Kapnick disagreed with their suit and dismissed it "with prejudice", thus preventing Stern and Buchwald from filing other suits over similar allegations against the company.[178] The pair filed an appeal to the decision, but it was rejected by an appeal court.[187]

By mid-2011, Stern had reduced his time playing chess and took up photography. Among his first shoots was taking layouts for

North Shore Animal League,[190][191]
and established his photography company Conlon Road Photography, a reference to the name of the road he lived on while growing up in Roosevelt.

Later in 2011, Stern announced his return to network television as a replacement for

tenth[198] seasons. Stern left at the end of the show's tenth season in September 2015 to devote more time to his radio show.[199][200]

Stern was inducted into the

National Radio Hall of Fame in 2012.[201] He has been openly critical of the organization.[202]

In August 2013, Stern and Simon Cowell shared first place on Forbes' list of America's highest-paid television personalities with $95 million earned between June 2012–13.[203] Stern and Cowell tied first place in the following year's poll with the same amount earned from June 2013–14.[204] In 2015, Forbes placed Stern as the world's highest paid media personality and the fifth highest earning celebrity worldwide, at $95 million.[205]

In February 2015, Whalerock Industries announced its partnership with Stern to set up a future direct-to-consumer digital "media hub" service, with a potential mix of free and subscription-based programming.[206] On December 15, Stern announced his new deal with SiriusXM to continue his radio show for an additional five years. The agreement also gives Sirius the rights to his radio and video archives for an upcoming on-demand streaming application until 2027.[207]

In October 2015, Howard Stern gained fame with his rants against

Palestinian minorities in the Middle East denouncing them as a people that "do not exist" or "did not live there [Palestine]". His comments, calling Arabs "dogs", were denounced as "racist" by the international press.[208]

In April 2018, Stern inducted Bon Jovi into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.[209]

In March 2019, Stern announced his third book for

Simon and Schuster entitled Howard Stern Comes Again. It was released on May 14, 2019.[210]

In May 2020, Stern admonished Trump supporters that listen to his SiriusXM show, saying President Trump despised his own supporters.[211][212] In response to Stern's criticisms of Trump, Donald Trump Jr. tweeted video from the Miss Howard Stern New Year's Eve Pageant in which Stern parodied Ted Danson's Friars Club appearance by wearing blackface and repeatedly using the N-word and other racial slurs.[213][214] Stern admitted, "The shit I did was fucking crazy" and that he has since toned down his show, crediting years in psychotherapy for his evolution.[215][216]

In December 2020, Stern renewed his contract with SiriusXM, agreeing to produce his show for five more years.[217]

In June 2022, Stern stated his interest in running for President of the United States in 2024, if Donald Trump becomes the Republican nominee once again.[218]

FCC fines

Between 1990 and 2004, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) fined owners of radio station licensees that carried The Howard Stern Show a total of $2.5 million for content it considered to be indecent.[219]

Stern blamed the Bush administration for increased FCC fines and scrutiny of radio broadcasts in 2004 following the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy that February, and that year began openly promoting John Kerry's presidential campaign and urged listeners to oust Bush.[170][220]

Personal life

Family and relationships

Stern met his first wife, Alison Berns, while at Boston University through a mutual friend. He featured Berns in a student film he made about Transcendental Meditation.[221][222] Stern wrote, "Within a week after our relationship began, I knew I was going to marry her".[223] They married at Temple Ohabei Shalom in Brookline, Massachusetts, on June 4, 1978; both were 24 years old.[224] They have three daughters: Emily Beth (b. 1983), Debra Jennifer (b. 1986), and Ashley Jade (b. 1993).[225] In October 1999, they decided to separate.[226] Stern said, "I was totally neurotic and sort of consumed with work. I took work as the most important thing and the only thing".[227] He moved from the home he shared with Berns in Old Westbury, New York[228] into a 4,000-square-foot apartment in Millennium Tower in the Upper West Side of Manhattan which he bought in 1998 for $4.9 million.[229][230] The marriage ended in 2001 with an amicable divorce and settlement.[221] Stern has since bought a home in Southampton, New York on Long Island.[231]

Stern and wife Beth Ostrosky in 2011

In the several months when Stern was single, he dated Angie Everhart[232] and Robin Givens.[233] He started seeing a psychotherapist.[227] In 2000, he started to date model and television host Beth Ostrosky.[234] He announced their engagement on his radio show on February 14, 2007.[221] They married at Le Cirque restaurant in New York City on October 3, 2008. The ceremony was officiated by Mark Consuelos.[235] In 2017, Stern purchased a home in Palm Beach, Florida, for $52 million.[236]

Other activities

In the early 1970s, Stern's parents began to practice Transcendental Meditation and encouraged him to learn. Stern credits the technique with helping him quit smoking, achieve his goals in radio, beat obsessive–compulsive disorder, and cure his mother of depression.[237] As of 1997, he continued to practice it.[238] Stern has interviewed Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of the technique, and thanked him for relieving his mother's depression.

Stern revealed his suffering with obsessive–compulsive disorder in Miss America. His condition originated while at university and continued into his radio career.[239] As part of the Staff Revelations Game on his radio show in January 2006, Stern revealed that he had undergone rhinoplasty and had liposuction under his chin in the 1990s.[240] In 2012, Stern said he had adopted a

pescetarian diet.[241] In 2019, Stern revealed that he had a cancer scare two years prior, after a growth was found on one of his kidneys. It turned out to be a benign cyst.[242]

Stern is a longtime supporter and fund raiser for North Shore Animal League America.[243] Stern and Ostrosky have been fostering cats in their Long Island home since 2014. Approximately 200 cats come through their home every year.[244]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1986 Ryder, P.I. Ben Wah, a news reporter
1997 Private Parts Himself
  • Blockbuster Entertainment Award
    for "Favorite Male Newcomer" (1998)
  • Nominated – Golden Raspberry Award for "Worst New Star" (1998)
  • Nominated –
    Golden Satellite Award
    for "Best Male Actor Performance in a Comedy or Musical" (1998)

Home video

Year Title
1988 Howard Stern's Negligeé and Underpants Party
1989 Howard Stern's U.S. Open Sores
1992 Butt Bongo Fiesta
1994
Howard Stern's New Year's Rotten Eve 1994

Television

Year Title Channel/Notes
1987 The Howard Stern Show
Fox
, five test pilots that never aired
1990–1992
The Howard Stern Show
WWOR-TV and affiliates
1992–1993 The Howard Stern "Interview" E!
1994–2005
Howard Stern
E!
1998–2001
The Howard Stern Radio Show
CBS affiliates
2005–2013
  • Howard Stern On Demand
    (2005–2006)
  • HowardTV
    (2006–2013)
in DEMAND digital cable

Discography

Year Album Label Notes
1982 50 Ways to Rank Your Mother Wren Records Re-released in 1994 as Unclean Beaver on Ichiban/Citizen X labels
1991 Crucified By the FCC
Infinity Broadcasting
1997
Private Parts: The Album
Warner Bros. Reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, certified Platinum

Bibliography

  • Stern, Howard;
    OCLC 28968496
    .
  • Stern, Howard; .
  • Stern, Howard (2019). .

References

  1. ^ a b Colford 1997, p. 232.
  2. Biography.com. Archived from the original
    on November 19, 2020. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
  3. ^ Ahrens, Frank; Kurtz, Howard (October 7, 2004). "Sirius Lands a Big Dog: Howard Stern". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c Colford 1997, p. 2.
  5. ^ Stern & Sloman 1993, p. 44.
  6. ^ Stern & Sloman 1993, p. 92.
  7. ^ a b Colford 1997, p. 7.
  8. ^ Stern & Sloman 1993, p. 46.
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Sources

External links