After nearly 20 years on SiriusXM, The Howard Stern Show may be coming to an end. According to a report, the satellite radio company doesnât plan to renew Sternâs contract when it expires later this year.
Sternâs potential exit isnât just about money, itâs about relevance. Once the voice of the working-class outsider, Stern alienated much of his original audience by embracing mainstream politics and Hollywood elites, making it about the agenda instead of good content.
His open support for Hillary Clinton, attacks on Trump supporters, and shift to sanitized interviews and âwokeâ commentary have fractured his listener base. For many longtime fans, the shock jock became the sellout he used to mock, losing the cultural grip that once made him untouchable.

What happened? SiriusXM Ready To Move On
Insiders told The Sun that SiriusXM may make an offer to retain Sternâs back catalog, but not to continue the show:
âSternâs contract is up in the fall and while Sirius is planning to make him an offer, they donât intend for him to take it.â
âSirius and Stern are never going to meet on the money he is going to want. Itâs no longer worth the investment.â
Another source claimed Sternâs political leanings may have alienated listeners and executives alike:
âItâs more likely everything to do with the political climate.â

Trump Responds: âHe Went Down When He Endorsed Hillaryâ
Donald Trump was asked about Stern during a press conference this week and didnât hold back. Via The Daily Mail:
âHoward Stern is a name I havenât heard â I used to do his show, we used to have fun â but I havenât heard that name in a long time. What happened, he got terminated?â
Trump then pointed to a turning point in Sternâs career:
âYou know when he went down? When he endorsed Hillary Clinton, he lost his audience. People said, âGet me a break.â He went down when he endorsed Hillary Clinton.â
Stern has also hosted Vice President Kamala Harris on his show, drawing criticism from Republicans.

Stern Says Heâll Be BackâBut Avoids the Topic
Stern didnât directly address The Sunâs report on his SiriusXM status, but during Wednesdayâs surprise episode, he made it clear heâs not gone yet. Via the Daily Beast:
âWe will be back though, very soon. Weâll be back on the air, live. Iâve been refueling, so to speak.â
He also reminded listeners that heâs always off during the summer and plans to return after Labor Day.
According to the Daily Mail, Stern first learned about the report through a Google alert and only spoke about it with Jimmy Kimmel in a private call. The surprise episode reportedly followed a staff âteam buildingâ event in New York.

How Stern Alienated His Audience and Sold Out
Commentators like Chris Gore and Nerdroticâboth former diehard fansâblame Sternâs downfall on his shift toward mainstream politics and celebrity appeasement.
Chris Gore (Film Threat):
âHoward Stern stood up for working people. He connected with his audience. Then he became part of the system.
He did blackface jokes on his old local show in New York. He did every raunchy⊠He made fun of gay and transgender people. Current day him is the complete opposite. He sold out to the mainstream, but COVID changed him.â
Gore said he used to pay for Sternâs raunchy specials like Butt Bongo Fiesta and New Yearâs Rotten Eve, but the current version of Stern would never create anything like that:
âHe was little by little changing because he got more fame, got bigger guest bookings, whatever, he was changing, but after COVID, I couldnât listen. I couldnât listen. He fundamentally changed as a person. I donât know anyone who listens to him anymore.â

Gary Buechler (Nerdrotic):
âOver a decade, when the video got out of him, kind of doing that staff meeting, and we learned later on they did not want to do comedy skits anymore. They wanted to get more big guests, and also creating fake Twitter accounts, he got busted doing that, too.â
âItâs pretty much everybody lays it on his second wife, Beth Ostrosky. She kind of started running the show and wanted to make it mainstream and cucked him.â
Buechler recalled when Empire Strikes Back âstompedâ Private Parts in theaters and Stern âwent off onâ George Lucas and Star Wars fans out of spite:
âThatâs the first time I actually got mad at him. Iâm like, âF-ck you, dudeâ ⊠ I think he just wanted to be part of the club. I donât know how you turn a leaf that quick from what he did. He also got paid. Heâs got enough money. He can retire tomorrow. He doesnât need any money. Heâs got a giant house. Heâs part of the club.â
âBut he wanted to be accepted by celebrities. So, all those working people he supposedly had the back of, they didnât give a sh-t about you. Never did.â

The End of the Shock Jock Era?
Stern rose to fame in the â80s and â90s for pushing the envelope and tearing down the establishment. But after decades on air and a shift in tone, reports say his show is no longer seen as a worthwhile investment by SiriusXM.
His fall from graceâfrom throwing bologna at strippers to cozying up to politicians and Hollywoodâhas left former fans calling it a betrayal.
