Howard Stern - 2006
The big stories of 2006 were classic Stern, but unshackled. There was the ongoing war with American Idol judge Simon Cowell, whom Stern relentlessly mocked as a fake, arrogant pop puppet. There was the awkward, fascinating departure of beloved cast member Artie Lange—though his struggles were still bubbling beneath the surface, 2006 showed a man at his hilarious, self-destructive peak, riffing with Stern about everything from heroin to the mob.
The prevailing narrative at the time was simple: He’s finished. Critics and rival shock jocks predicted that audiences would never pay for what they had always gotten for free. But 2006 became the year Stern proved that his power wasn’t in the frequency—it was in the relationship. howard stern 2006
By the end of the year, Sirius quietly announced that subscriber growth was beating projections, thanks in large part to “churn reduction” (people not canceling once they signed up for Stern). The financial verdict was still out, but the cultural one was settling: Stern’s audience had followed him to the wilderness. The big stories of 2006 were classic Stern, but unshackled
If 2005 was the year Howard Stern blew up the map, 2006 was the year he had to live in the rubble. After a quarter-century of terrestrial radio domination—complete with FCC fines, strippers, and the infamous “Fartman”—Stern walked away from free airwaves on January 1, 2006, and landed with a $500 million thud on subscription-based Sirius Satellite Radio. The prevailing narrative at the time was simple: