In 2006, Howard Stern didn’t just go to satellite. He jumped the rails of the entire industry and dared it to follow. Most didn’t. But for the millions who paid $12.95 a month, the silence of the bleep machine was the sound of freedom.
Did anyone actually buy Sirius? The stock market was skeptical. For months, analysts hammered Stern on subscriber growth. Sirius had promised that Stern would bring a million new subscribers. By mid-2006, it was clear that number hadn’t materialized as quickly as expected. The press turned hostile. Headlines read: “Is Howard Stern Worth $500 Million?” Stern responded on-air with characteristic paranoia and honesty—raging against executives, threatening to walk, then admitting he loved his new freedom. It was the most human he had ever sounded. howard stern 2006
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. In 2006, Howard Stern didn’t just go to satellite