Why TDS has destroyed Howard Stern's career.

Your TDS is how conservatives online personalities are making money.
Not from me. I dont care who the sheep give their money to. In fact. Here you go.

 
So Stern fans in the 80's and 90's were all stupid people?

More of that famous lefty narcissism on display.
The Neanderthal fans of Stern in the 80s/90s? No. They are real salt of the earth bros. Real winners. I'd never think anything but.
 
I lived in the DC area from 4-14.

Howard Stern was morning drive on DC101, the local hard rock station.

He was fun as **** back then and my and most of my friends listened to him.

That was in the Air Florida days.

It is bizarre how these people flip left….like Bill Burr when he started working for Disney. They lose who they were.
You guys are funny as shit. Bill Burr mostly rants to expose either his own shortcomings or to make fun of cultural oddities. He has been married to a black woman since 2013 who is the mother of his kids so if you think he is full of racial and sexist jokes in his past but changed you just arent very smart.
 
It is not as funny for a 70 year old multimillionaire to be irreverent as it is for a 30 year old phenom on a local rock station
 
Howard Stern gained popularity by being a pervert.
 
Trump and his cult must circle their wagons, to defend their dear leader against ANYONE who strays from praising him.

Just like his daddy.

No Laughing Matter: Comedy and Censorship in Putin's ...​

1754669664698.webp
The Moscow Times
https://www.themoscowtimes.com › News
Aug 8, 2016 — In the 16 years of Putin's rule, many Russian comedy shows have suddenly been axed; others have been subject to restrictions.
 

Glenn Beck recalls how Stern made light of the Air Florida Flight 90 tragedy in 1982 when a plane crashed into the 14th Street Bridge, killing 78 people.

“While they were digging bodies out of the Potomac, [Stern] called the airline and tried to book a seat live on the air,” Glenn says.

Despite his brashness, Stern was popular because he brought something to radio that the industry had never seen before: edginess.

“He was like punk rock,” Glenn says. “You didn’t necessarily listen to punk rock because you liked punk rock. You listened because nobody else was saying anything like that.”

Stern’s approach had both dark and light sides. “He fought the government and won. ... He was a trailblazer for freedom of speech, but he was also a trailblazer for just degrading our society, the degrading of women and relationships and everything else,” Glenn says.

“He was a pox on our culture for a very long time,” but “he was an innovator, to be sure.”

Then sometime in the early 2000s, Stern began to change.

“He started to just concentrate on interviews, and he became one of the best interviewers of anybody on radio or television,” Glenn says, recalling how he found himself telling Stern things he “hadn’t told anybody before” during their 2015 interview.

The COVID-19 pandemic, however, was when Stern lost all touch with the rebel he used to be.

“I think COVID radicalized him into this big-state monster,” Glenn says, noting how Stern now embraces the very people and systems he used to spit on.

“I mean, the 20-year-old Howard Stern would be disgusted with the 70-year-old Howard Stern,” he says.

Some leftists claim that Stern’s departure has something to do with Donald Trump, but Glenn dismisses it as completely unfounded. “Donald Trump was a regular on [Stern’s] show for a very long time, and Howard Stern loved him until he became president of the United States ... because he was on his journey of just becoming this diehard Democrat,” he says.

“As soon as Donald Trump became the candidate, he went nuts and never changed on that, and then COVID happened and he went even crazier.”

Stern’s impending cancellation mirrors Stephen Colbert’s, he says. “You’ve just lost touch with what you do and who you are.”

Both Stern and Colbert made the fatal mistake of “taking [themselves] so seriously” that they started to believe it’s their destiny to “change the world.”

“I think that’s the problem,” Glenn says.


To hear more of his analysis, watch the episode above.

I'm always reminded me of how on Sterns show they would go through the news of the day with Howard mockingly joking about all the news they covered................EXCEPT................when they talked about news involving the mob. Howard then comically refused to comment so as to give the appearance he valued his life more than cracking jokes about mobsters.

In a way, this is how I see Howard when it comes to politics. He is just a scared little school girl at heart, and scared to death of the largest and most powerful mob in the entire world, namely, the democrat party. He would much rather Trump take on all the endless lawfare and flying bullets around him than he tackling that crowd himself.
I just looked up his net worth. At 70 years old and a net worth of 650 million dollars, it's OK if his career is over.
 
Stern once said he hated Trump and anyone supporting Trump shouldn't watch his show

Self inflicted
 

Glenn Beck recalls how Stern made light of the Air Florida Flight 90 tragedy in 1982 when a plane crashed into the 14th Street Bridge, killing 78 people.

“While they were digging bodies out of the Potomac, [Stern] called the airline and tried to book a seat live on the air,” Glenn says.

Despite his brashness, Stern was popular because he brought something to radio that the industry had never seen before: edginess.

“He was like punk rock,” Glenn says. “You didn’t necessarily listen to punk rock because you liked punk rock. You listened because nobody else was saying anything like that.”

Stern’s approach had both dark and light sides. “He fought the government and won. ... He was a trailblazer for freedom of speech, but he was also a trailblazer for just degrading our society, the degrading of women and relationships and everything else,” Glenn says.

“He was a pox on our culture for a very long time,” but “he was an innovator, to be sure.”

Then sometime in the early 2000s, Stern began to change.

“He started to just concentrate on interviews, and he became one of the best interviewers of anybody on radio or television,” Glenn says, recalling how he found himself telling Stern things he “hadn’t told anybody before” during their 2015 interview.

The COVID-19 pandemic, however, was when Stern lost all touch with the rebel he used to be.

“I think COVID radicalized him into this big-state monster,” Glenn says, noting how Stern now embraces the very people and systems he used to spit on.

“I mean, the 20-year-old Howard Stern would be disgusted with the 70-year-old Howard Stern,” he says.

Some leftists claim that Stern’s departure has something to do with Donald Trump, but Glenn dismisses it as completely unfounded. “Donald Trump was a regular on [Stern’s] show for a very long time, and Howard Stern loved him until he became president of the United States ... because he was on his journey of just becoming this diehard Democrat,” he says.

“As soon as Donald Trump became the candidate, he went nuts and never changed on that, and then COVID happened and he went even crazier.”

Stern’s impending cancellation mirrors Stephen Colbert’s, he says. “You’ve just lost touch with what you do and who you are.”

Both Stern and Colbert made the fatal mistake of “taking [themselves] so seriously” that they started to believe it’s their destiny to “change the world.”

“I think that’s the problem,” Glenn says.


To hear more of his analysis, watch the episode above.

I'm always reminded me of how on Sterns show they would go through the news of the day with Howard mockingly joking about all the news they covered................EXCEPT................when they talked about news involving the mob. Howard then comically refused to comment so as to give the appearance he valued his life more than cracking jokes about mobsters.

In a way, this is how I see Howard when it comes to politics. He is just a scared little school girl at heart, and scared to death of the largest and most powerful mob in the entire world, namely, the democrat party. He would much rather Trump take on all the endless lawfare and flying bullets around him than he tackling that crowd himself.
First you guys said he was getting cancelled because he was old and sucked. I heard he's actually getting a new mega contract now.

I understand Howard did a brave thing and it probably him half his listeners.
 
Howard Stern got boring.
That's what people who don't listen to Howard have been saying. I wonder who told you to say that? If enough of you say it, maybe the company will get wind and fire him. That's what you want right? Even though he has a huge audience. You don't care about free market capitalism and all that.
 

Glenn Beck recalls how Stern made light of the Air Florida Flight 90 tragedy in 1982 when a plane crashed into the 14th Street Bridge, killing 78 people.

“While they were digging bodies out of the Potomac, [Stern] called the airline and tried to book a seat live on the air,” Glenn says.

Despite his brashness, Stern was popular because he brought something to radio that the industry had never seen before: edginess.

“He was like punk rock,” Glenn says. “You didn’t necessarily listen to punk rock because you liked punk rock. You listened because nobody else was saying anything like that.”

Stern’s approach had both dark and light sides. “He fought the government and won. ... He was a trailblazer for freedom of speech, but he was also a trailblazer for just degrading our society, the degrading of women and relationships and everything else,” Glenn says.

“He was a pox on our culture for a very long time,” but “he was an innovator, to be sure.”

Then sometime in the early 2000s, Stern began to change.

“He started to just concentrate on interviews, and he became one of the best interviewers of anybody on radio or television,” Glenn says, recalling how he found himself telling Stern things he “hadn’t told anybody before” during their 2015 interview.

The COVID-19 pandemic, however, was when Stern lost all touch with the rebel he used to be.

“I think COVID radicalized him into this big-state monster,” Glenn says, noting how Stern now embraces the very people and systems he used to spit on.

“I mean, the 20-year-old Howard Stern would be disgusted with the 70-year-old Howard Stern,” he says.

Some leftists claim that Stern’s departure has something to do with Donald Trump, but Glenn dismisses it as completely unfounded. “Donald Trump was a regular on [Stern’s] show for a very long time, and Howard Stern loved him until he became president of the United States ... because he was on his journey of just becoming this diehard Democrat,” he says.

“As soon as Donald Trump became the candidate, he went nuts and never changed on that, and then COVID happened and he went even crazier.”

Stern’s impending cancellation mirrors Stephen Colbert’s, he says. “You’ve just lost touch with what you do and who you are.”

Both Stern and Colbert made the fatal mistake of “taking [themselves] so seriously” that they started to believe it’s their destiny to “change the world.”

“I think that’s the problem,” Glenn says.


To hear more of his analysis, watch the episode above.

I'm always reminded me of how on Sterns show they would go through the news of the day with Howard mockingly joking about all the news they covered................EXCEPT................when they talked about news involving the mob. Howard then comically refused to comment so as to give the appearance he valued his life more than cracking jokes about mobsters.

In a way, this is how I see Howard when it comes to politics. He is just a scared little school girl at heart, and scared to death of the largest and most powerful mob in the entire world, namely, the democrat party. He would much rather Trump take on all the endless lawfare and flying bullets around him than he tackling that crowd himself.

Same thing happened to Stephen King. Trump broke these guys so completely, they can't do their jobs anymore.
 
That's what people who don't listen to Howard have been saying. I wonder who told you to say that? If enough of you say it, maybe the company will get wind and fire him. That's what you want right? Even though he has a huge audience. You don't care about free market capitalism and all that.
I used to listen to Howard Stern. He was hilarious, then he was the same hilarious every day. It got boring so I stopped. Today he has a very small audience because his shtick never changed.
 
15th post
I used to listen to Howard Stern. He was hilarious, then he was the same hilarious every day. It got boring so I stopped. Today he has a very small audience because his shtick never changed.
I heard he got resigned. His audience is bigger than you think. You are trying to get him cancelled. You're the other side of the cancel culture coin.
 
I heard he got resigned. His audience is bigger than you think. You are trying to get him cancelled. You're the other side of the cancel culture coin.
The Trump has ALWAYS projected.
They are the kings of projection.
 
I never had interest in tuning in Howard Stern's show. He became a nationwide radio personality roughly the same time as Rush Limbaugh, later part of the 80's I'd guess. I tried listening to Rush but within a few weeks decided I didn't care for being talked to like I couldn't figure things out for myself. Have to hand it to both of them for having successful careers. I did like Larry King's old radio show from Miami before he went to TV. It is sort of unrealistic to expect any radio personality to stay ahead of the pack throughout their career.
 
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