Howard Stern's Week: Radio Antics, Health Jokes, & SiriusXM Contract Musings
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About this listen
Howard Stern’s week has been filled with classic radio antics, trademark candor about his life, and a few behind-the-scenes wrinkles that could set the stage for bigger headlines. His staff kicked things off by airing major frustrations over the Disney-YouTube TV standoff, which managed to outrage fans of both football and reality TV on his show this Tuesday. As staffers debated who to blame, Howard dryly cut through the noise asking, “Who do we blame? Disney, YouTube, they’re both gazillionaires,” capturing that all-too-familiar Stern sense of exasperated humor—reported by the official Howard Stern channel.
Stern’s own health drew some attention after he joked on-air that his nose turning red would “set off tremendous tremendous headlines” and he was “too famous” to be seen in public with such an affliction, knowing the tabloids would have a field day. He poked fun, saying people would worry about his health and speculate wildly if he dared appear with anything less than a flawless face. These signature self-deprecating comments landed, as always, in the middle of riffing on his everyday fame, and his hesitation about public outings with wife Beth.
On the more serious side, SiriusXM contract negotiations linger in the background, with Stern openly musing about the future of his deal and the possibility of taking an ownership stake if he stays on. Andy Cohen recently interviewed Howard, and while Stern professed his affection for SiriusXM, he made it clear nothing is guaranteed, a point highlighted by The Hollywood Reporter.
Meanwhile, Howard stirred conversation on social media after comments about his show’s football blackout frustration and again when he referenced the heated online campaigns swirling during the recent Kimmel affair, including his brief boycott of Disney+ until Jimmy Kimmel returned. Instagram chatter also briefly reignited old moments, such as a viral post recirculating Aaliyah’s discomfort with his 2000 MTV Movie Awards questions.
The show itself kept up its frenetic pace with familiar gags—Sal’s disastrous limo experience with Ronnie, staff venting, and even Howard’s satirical recollections about his war “service” designed more for laughs than for fact-checkers. Pop culture nostalgia remained in force on-air, with Stern’s deep dive into music history and a playful quiz segment on the relative value of classic TV costumes.
Beth Stern, ever the animal advocate, stayed visible on her own Instagram, highlighting foster cats and their morning play, a warm parallel to Howard’s on-air rough edges.
If there’s a headline, it’s that Stern remains a master at blending cultural commentary, personal drama, and playful chaos—never far from the next must-read gossip tidbit or business bombshell.
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