News
release: Rogers Cable Will Censor Howard Stern TV for Abusive Comment
Note that CHUM Ltd. bought Stern's tv show for City TV in 1998 but cancelled it
before airing any episodes because, according to CHUM, the show would contravene Canadian
broadcasting standards. This is referenced in the MediaWatch
intervention below.
MediaWatch
Intervention on Howard Stern (2000)
Resolution
from the Colorado House of Representatives re Stern's disgusting and
hateful comments on the Columbine High School massacre
News
release: CBC
involvement with Howard Stern should be priority for new Heritage Minister
News
release: CRTC
should yank Sirius Canada's licence if they broadcast Howard Stern
Letter to:
CBC
union re involvement with Howard Stern show
Howard Stern coming to Canadian TV
June 6, 2021
Canadian Press
TORONTO (CP) - The lewd antics of shock
broadcaster Howard Stern are coming to Canadian TV.
Rogers Cable, the country's largest cable
carrier, announced Tuesday that effective immediately, Howard TV - Stern's
digital channel - will be available on the company's Personal TV On Demand
service.
"We understand Howard's fans desire to
see the King of All Media on their own time and now that it's available On
Demand with Personal TV, our customers can watch what they want when they
want," said David Purdy, vice president and TV general manager at
Rogers.
Personal TV subscribers will have unlimited
access to uncensored Stern content totaling more than 30 hours of new
programming each month, Rogers said.
The audio version of Stern's program is
also available on digital radio.
Tips
on civil protest for Howard Stern fans
Arrest Made In Howard Stern Hate EMail Case
1010 Wins (CBS affiliate)
February 17, 2021
(HACKENSACK, NJ) - A Glen Rock journalist
says his criticism of shock jock Howard Stern led to threats from his
fans. Chaunce Hayden says he began receiving threatening and hostile
e-mails after he publicly criticized Stern. Hayden runs an entertainment
magazine called ``Steppin Out.''
For years, he was a regular guest on
Stern's show. But they had a falling out after Hayden criticized Stern for
encouraging fans to switch over to Sirius Satellite Radio, promising that
nothing would be off-limits. Stern later said he had to follow some
guidelines on the show.
The Bergen County prosecutor's office has
charged one woman with making terrorist threats against Hayden. They're
investigating three other people.
'Canadian government hates us': Stern
February 6, 2021
Toronto Star (CP)
Howard Stern says the Canadian government
hates him. The infamous American radio shock jock's Sirius satellite radio
show made its Canadian debut Monday morning with a lengthy discussion
about the Super Bowl followed by the usual raunchy fare.
But he also informed his viewers that it
was the first day for his show to air on Sirius Canada, nearly a month
after his U.S. debut.
"That whole Canadian Sirius thing is
weird," Stern said. "Like on the one hand they want us because
they know that we sell radios, but on the other hand they kinda want to
keep us low-key because the Canadian government hates us."
His on-air sidekick Robin Quivers observed
that the Canadian carrier didn't want to have to field expected complaints
from listeners.
"I mean they gotta embrace it,"
Stern replied, adding that his Howard 100 news department was looking into
the situation.
Stern also put a caller on the air who said
he was listening in Canada but via the grey market, meaning an
unauthorized receiver picks up the U.S. signal after the customer provides
a fake across-the-border address.
The talk show, which airs on the Howard 100
channel, had no shortage of profanity and political incorrectness. There
were also commercials despite Sirius being a subscription-based service.
The self-proclaimed King of all Media was
dropped by CHOM-FM in Montreal in 1998 and in 2001 by Q-107 in Toronto
after thousands of complaints to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council
� the industry's voluntary watchdog agency.
Sirius Canada has said it does not expect
Stern to run into censorship trouble this time because his satellite show
is a pay service and has developed special lockout technology for
customers. But a spokesperson for the CRTC has said that any abuse of
human rights under the Broadcasting Act would still be investigated if
there are complaints.
Sirius Canada is 40 per cent owned by the
CBC, 40 per cent by Standard Radio and 20 per cent by Sirius in the U.S.
Stern announced last year that he was
jumping from conventional radio to satellite to avoid the jurisdiction of
the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. He's also taken potshots in
the past at Canadian regulatory bureaucrats he said lacked a sense of
humour.
Why you won't hear Sirius pumping Stern in Canada
February 6, 2021
Globe and Mail
By Grant Robertson, Media Reporter
As Sirius Canada Inc. begins broadcasting
controversial shock jock Howard Stern on satellite radio today, the
company and its owners are steering clear of a high-profile marketing
campaign.
In stark contrast to U.S.-based Sirius
Satellite Radio Inc., which blocked off New York streets and spent
millions on billboards to promote Mr. Stern over the past year, the
Canadian debut is being rolled out in low-key fashion.
Though a major ad campaign could occur in
the coming days and weeks, little has been done in advance.
As of yesterday, the home page of Sirius
Canada's website only made a vague reference to the launch, not mentioning
Mr. Stern by his name.
Despite the $500-million (U.S.) price tag
New York-based Sirius Satellite Radio is paying to broadcast the show over
five years, there are concerns about the reaction in Canada, where the
program could draw fire from federal broadcast regulators.
The company's owners, which include CBC and
Standard Radio, who both hold a 40-per-cent stake, and New York-based
Sirius, which owns the remaining 20 per cent, have had mixed reactions to
the decision.
"We have expressed some reservations
about the programming," CBC spokesman Jason MacDonald said. "But
this is a business decision on the part of Sirius Canada."
Mr. Stern is a radio juggernaut, drawing
bigger audiences and advertising dollars than any other on-air personality
in the industry.
He also has been accused of bigotry,
misogyny and homophobic slurs on air and was slapped with more than
$2-million (U.S.) in fines in his past career on conventional radio.
"We came to the conclusion that [Mr.
Stern] is a powerful force in the entertainment business and we thought
that it was important to add him to our lineup," said Sirius Canada
chief executive officer Mark Redmond.
In bringing the show to Canada, the owners
now find themselves juggling a highly lucrative asset that also has the
potential to be one of their biggest public relations headaches.
Though Mr. Stern's show began on U.S.
satellite radio Jan. 9, the Canadian operation held back its launch for
nearly a month. Mr. Redmond said the delay was to ensure Sirius Canada had
an opt-out service in place where customers who don't want mature content
can block out the signals to their receivers.
After announcing the Canadian launch last
week, Sirius Canada barely promoted the show on its homepage and has yet
to launch its ad campaign. In contrast, Stern's image features prominently
in all of the company's U.S. marketing, where satellite radio is not
subject to U.S. federal broadcast regulations.
Complaints are already being launched in
Canada.
Toronto-based activist Valerie Smith, who
opposed Mr. Stern's show when it was on conventional radio in Ontario
until 2001, accused Sirius and its owners of endorsing "extremely
abusive programming" in a letter to the companies.
Mr. Redmond said the ability for Sirius
Canada customers to block channels is a compromise between fans who want
access to mature content and those who don't. Sirius took its time on the
launch to ensure those measures were in place, he added.
The month-long delay may have cost the
company listeners though. Some fans in Canada have been downloading the
broadcasts from file-sharing sites that have prompted a lawsuit from
Sirius in the United States.
Since Sirius Canada is privately held and
doesn't report its subscriber numbers, the impact of adding Mr. Stern on
the company is difficult to gauge.
Mr. Redmond wouldn't say how many new
subscribers the company expects the new program to draw.
In the United States, Sirius had fewer than
700,000 customers before it announced the $500-million deal with Mr. Stern
in late 2004 to cover his salary and production costs over five years.
At the end of 2005, its subscriber base had
grown to 3.3 million, with the company attributing much of that to the
show.
"It's clear based on those numbers
that Howard has contributed greatly to our growth. You just have to look
at the before and after picture," said Jim Collins, a vice-president
at Sirius in New York.
Taking stock of a shock jock
The launch of Howard Stern's talk show on
Sirius Canada Inc.'s satellite radio service today leaves its owners,
including CBC and Standard Radio, in a tough spot. The legendary New York
shock jock is the most lucrative name in radio, but he's also the biggest
lightning rod for controversy.
The upside
There is no bigger name in North American
Radio than Stern. While at CBS radio, he amassed an audience of 12 million
listeners and attracted $100-million (U.S.) in advertising revenue.
His move to Sirius is estimated to have
added more than a million subscribers in a two-year span. Despite paying
$500-million for the show over five years, the company figures it will
make $50-million from him. Sirius Canada is hoping the Stern name will
drive similar growth in Canada.
The downside
Stern set a record for fines with
$2-million (U.S) worth of sanctions for offensive conduct on air. In
Canada, a barrage of listener complaints in 2001 drove him from
conventional FM radio in Toronto. Though satellite radio is not regulated
as heavily in the United States, Canadian operators must abide by the same
rules as conventional radio, which could land Sirius in hot water, along
with CBC and Standard as owners.
The launch
Though Sirius has promoted Stern's show
heavily in the United States, the Canadian launch is more subdued, with
little advance hype. That picture differs from New York, where Stern held
an outdoor press conference that stopped traffic after his deal with
Sirius was announced. Sirius has also launched a major billboard campaign
in the United States.
Will the CBC and the shock jock get along?
As part-owner of Sirius Canada, the broadcaster is involved, however
indirectly, in airing Howard Stern, writes GUY DIXON
February 4, 2021
Globe and Mail
By Guy Dixon
The CBC and Howard Stern: Could they be any
more culturally opposite? Yet the CBC find itself with a potential
public-relations conundrum regarding the American shock jock.
As the 40-per-cent owner of the digital
satellite-radio service Sirius Canada, the CBC is now involved, however
indirectly, in the business of broadcasting Stern in Canada.
Come Monday, the CBC will be sharing its
Sirius Canada dial with Howard 100, a channel devoted to Stern's show and
related segments.
Because the whole concept of satellite
radio is to offer the entire spectrum of radio programming in one product,
Sirius Canada already carries mature content, such as an uncensored
adult-comedy channel. And its competitor XM Canada, with its equally broad
assortment of radio channels, has shock-jock programs such as The Opie and
Anthony Show and other mature shows.
However, none attracts the same level of
attention as Stern and what many consider his highly offensive, racist and
misogynistic brand of humour. When he was still on traditional radio, the
last Canadian holdout to air his show, Toronto's Q107, ran an edited
version of each broadcast after numerous listener complaints. It
eventually cancelled Stern in 2001.
Yet his fans are legion. Nearly 4,900
signed an on-line petition demanding that Sirius Canada air Stern, who has
been on Sirius in the United States since Jan. 9. Sirius, which only owns
a 20-per-cent stake in Sirius Canada and is a separate company from its
Canadian counterpart, boasted back in late 2004 that it would need to
attract a million new subscribers in order to cover the cost of Stern's
massive $500-million (U.S.) five-year contract. Stern at the time had an
estimated 12-million listeners; Sirius wound up with two-million new
subscribers in 2005.
In Canada, the privately owned Sirius
Canada won't divulge its subscriber numbers, or its estimates of how many
subscribers Stern will attract.
Also, unlike in the U.S., where satellite
radio is unregulated, Sirius Canada and rival XM Canada still fall within
the purview of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission (CRTC) and broadcast-standards rules. The CRTC did not forbid
Sirius Canada from broadcasting Stern as a condition of its licence, but
it still has the power to act on complaints from the public.
So where does this leave the CBC?
"It's no secret that Howard Stern's
program is not consistent with the kind of programming that you find on
our [the CBC's] airways. But Sirius Canada made a business decision that
was right for it, a decision that was based on the market's demand,"
said CBC spokesman Jason MacDonald.
As Sirius Canada and the CBC have said, all
decisions about channels to include on the service are made by Sirius
Canada's board of directors, not the CBC.
"We've expressed concerns about some
aspects of the content. But Sirius Canada has in place significant
safeguards to make sure that the people who are going to hear Howard Stern
are the people that want to hear Howard Stern," MacDonald said.
Sirius Canada can only be heard on special
Sirius-compatible radios. Subscribers can block certain channels on their
radios with the use of a password, explained Sirius Canada president Mark
Redmond. Customers also have the option of telling the service itself to
block certain channels from their subscriptions.
"This is one channel out of 100 on the
service. The CBC is not carrying Howard Stern. Yes, we're a partner in
Sirius Canada," said the CBC's MacDonald. "There is a lot of
value and benefit for us to be involved in satellite radio."
It was the CBC that first approached Sirius
three years or so ago about partnering to establish a Canadian
satellite-radio service, said Michel Tremblay, the CBC's vice-president of
strategy and business development. Radio giant Standard Radio was brought
in as a third partner and owns the other 40 per cent. Without acquiring a
stake in the service, the CBC probably wouldn't have been able to get its
channels onto satellite radio to the extent that it has, Tremblay argued.
Sirius Canada is competing tooth and nail
with XM Canada after both services were launched a few weeks before
Christmas. XM doesn't carry the CBC, although the CBC would be willing to
talk further to XM about carrying Radio One, for instance, Tremblay said.
Radio One, as carried on Sirius Canada, is
slightly different than on ordinary radio. Most of the shows are the same,
but they are often in different timeslots, and there's little local
programming, since it is a national feed. Sirius Canada also doesn't carry
Radio Two because, Tremblay said, the programmers were more interested in
"exposing new talent." Some CBC observers, however, have seen
this as a snub to Radio Two and to Canadian new-music and classical
composers.
Sirius Canada cost its owners $40-million
to get off the ground (although Tremblay wouldn't disclose how much of
that was paid by the CBC) and is expected to break even within four or
five years.
Many undoubtedly wonder what the CBC is
doing investing in a private company, regardless of Stern, and how it can
even afford to do so? The CBC's share in the investment is said to have
come, according to an insider familiar with the details, not from the
budget of its regular programming and traditional services, but from the
sale of certain "non-core" assets. Also, some of the CBC's stake
is effectively paid for through content and technical services the CBC
provides Sirius Canada. The CBC has no plan to sell its stake in the
company if it starts to make money, but is in it "for the long
haul," Tremblay said.
The CBC's partnership with U.S.-based
Sirius to develop the Canadian service was in place before the U.S. deal
with Stern was signed in 2004, Tremblay said. And although he notes that
the CBC has some say in programming, decisions ultimately lie with Sirius
Canada. The CBC "does not control the company," he said.
If Stern succeeds in attracting customers,
the CBC's stake in Sirius Canada will no doubt be worth more. Still, the
question remains: Will listeners think of Sirius Canada more as the CBC's
satellite service, or Stern's?
CBC admits to qualms about Stern's return
February 2, 2021
Globe and Mail (CP)
Toronto � The CBC and Howard Stern?
Not exactly a conventional media marriage.
And the public broadcaster, part owner of the new satellite radio service
that will bring the shock jock back to Canadian airwaves next week,
admitted Thursday it has qualms about the move.
"It's no secret that Howard Stern's
programming is not consistent with the kind of programming you would find
on CBC/Radio Canada's airwaves, but this is a Sirius Canada
decision," said CBC spokesman Jason MacDonald.
"Have we expressed concerns? Sure
we've expressed some concerns about it."
Stern's satellite radio program, which
began in the United States on Jan. 9 will finally come to Sirius Canada on
Monday morning.
The subscription-based network is 40 per
cent owned by the CBC, 40 per cent by Standard Radio and 20 per cent by
Sirius in the United States.
"Sirius Canada is a separate
company," noted MacDonald.
"Yes, we're partners and Sirius Canada
made the decision that was right for it based on what the market
demands."
After initially opting to exclude Stern
from its lineup, Sirius Canada was deluged with complaints from Canuck
fans of the controversial DJ.
It's been suggested that the CBC held up
Stern's arrival, but MacDonald said that was "unfair," noting
that network program lineups are reviewed regularly.
He said new technology that allows Sirius
Canada subscribers to block out Stern if they so choose was a significant
factor in finalizing the deal.
For his part, Stern has called his pending
return to Canadian radio "good news."
A posting on his website says he told
listeners he'd been thrown off Canadian airwaves in the past for alleged
"hate speech."
In fact, the self-proclaimed "King of
all Media" was dropped by CHOM-FM in Montreal in 1998 and in 2001 by
Q-107 in Toronto after thousands of complaints to the Canadian Broadcast
Standards Council � the industry's voluntary watchdog agency.
Sirius Canada has said it does not expect
Stern to run into censorship trouble this time because his satellite show
is a pay service.
In the U.S., satellite radio is not
federally regulated while in Canada, it falls under the jurisdiction of
the CRTC.
"It's really up to the public to
decide whether it wants to submit a complaint, regardless of the fact that
it's a service that is purchasable," says CRTC spokeswoman Miriam
Gennaro.
She couldn't immediately say, however,
whether different standards will apply to satellite radio.
'Shock jock' Stern added to Sirius Canada lineup
February 2, 2021
CTV.ca
News staff
Controversial radio host Howard Stern will
soon be heard via satellite radio in Canada after Sirius confirmed it was
adding him to the lineup.
The self-proclaimed "King of All
Media" and infamous shock jock hits the Canadian airwaves Monday
where he will be heard on his Howard One channel.
This follows his debut on Sirius in the
United States on Jan 9.
Mark Redmond, Sirius Canada president and
CEO, told The Canadian Press Wednesday that Stern was clearly a powerful
force in the entertainment world and that while "he's not to
everybody's taste" it was time to get him on board.
A longtime New York radio personality,
Stern, 50, attracted millions of listeners across North America each week
with his raunchy sense of humour.
Forbes magazine ranked him 27th on its list
of the most powerful celebrities in North America in 2005.
However, Stern found himself frequently
under fire from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, which
repeatedly fined him for indecency and obscenity violations.
Stern also has a checkered history on
Canadian radio. Rock stations in Toronto and Montreal imported his
syndicated show in the 1990s in an effort to boost ratings.
But after a flood of complaints to the
Canadian Broadcast Standards Council and the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commision, Stern was eventually dropped by CHOM-FM in
Montreal and Q-107 in Toronto.
One of those complaints came from Fo Niemi,
from the Centre for Action on Race Relations. Niemi believes there's no
place for Stern's often offensive humour on Canadian airwaves.
"It's a kind of humour that has been
condemned because that kind of humour violates human dignity," Niemie
told CTV.
The complaints made a different. The
Canadian Broadcast Standards Council urged stations to get the offensive
content off the air, and they did, implementing tape delays and bleeping
out anything that crossed the line into offensive.
Redmond dismissed suggestions that Stern
will once again run afoul of the CBSC, saying there are now three levels
of control.
First, he said, it's a subscription
service; second, there are parental controls on the receivers that can be
used to block channels; and third, the service can be purchased with or
without Sirius Canada's six channels of "mature" content.
Redmond also played down reports that
Sirius may have lost thousands of potential subscribers because of the
nearly one-month delay in launching stern in Canada.
Many Canadian fans are believed to have
already purchased American receivers to access Stern's satellite channel
from the U.S.
"At this point we're more concerned
with addressing future subscribers," he told CP.
Andre Arthur, a former radio shock jock in
his own right, and one of Quebec's new MPs, is thrilled that Stern will be
back on the air in Canada.
Having been condemned by the CRTC for his
own controversial beliefs, he has sympathy for those who push the
boundaries of free speech. He believes what Sirius is doing is good for
the industry.
"I hope there will be a confrontation,
and I hope the CRTC loses badly," Arthur said.
Sirius Canada is co-owned by the U.S.
Sirius Satellite Company, the CBC and Standard Radio. It launched its
subscription service in early December.
Shock jock Stern back in Canada
Move 'to give our subscribers the best, most compelling radio out there':
Debuts Monday on Sirius
February 2, 2021
Financial Post
By Barbara Shecter
Howard Stern, the radio shock jock who has
racked up record fines from U.S. regulators for his raunchy routines, is
coming back to Canada, beginning Monday on Sirius Canada satellite radio.
Mr. Stern's satellite radio show debuted in
the United States last month, but was not initially added to the 100
channels of the newly launched Canadian subscription service, whose
backers include the CBC.
Mark Redmond, chief executive of Sirius
Canada, said the service first wanted to ensure it had technology in place
to allow subscribers to tune out Mr. Stern's show if they don't want it.
But there are those who want to hear him,
he said, pointing to those who have been tuning in to the so-called grey
market for U.S. satellite signals, which drew an estimated 100,000
Canadians before the Canadian services launched.
"It was important for us to add him
[Mr. Stern] to the lineup to give our subscribers the best, most
compelling radio out there," Mr. Redmond said.
Some observers said Sirius Canada may have
been reluctant to air Mr. Stern because satellite radio is regulated in
Canada, while it isn't in the United States. Others contend the CBC, one
of three partners in Sirius Canada, has resisted putting Mr. Stern on the
air until now because the public broadcaster was reluctant to be
associated with the shock jock.
Mr. Redmond said the decision to bring Mr.
Stern's show to Canada was made by the full board of Sirius Canada, which
includes two members from the CBC, two from Sirius and two from the third
partner, Standard Broadcasting Corp.
"We believe we will get more
subscribers because of it," he said.
Sirius Canada is a private company and has
not revealed subscriber numbers to date. But, in the United States, Mr.
Stern's five-year, US$500-million production contract helped narrow the
gap between Sirius and XM, the clear No. 1 satellite radio service there.
Mr. Stern jumped to subscription satellite
radio from conventional radio, citing heated battles with regulators over
his freedom to discuss anal sex and stage antics involving bodily
functions and insults.
Mr. Stern also once referred to French
Canadians as "cowards" and "pussies."
Clear Channel Communications Inc. paid a
US$1.75-million settlement with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission
in 2004 after more than 200 indecency complaints were filed against Mr.
Stern's nationally syndicated radio show. Clear Channel dropped the show.
Mr. Stern's show, which first aired in
Canada in 1997 on radio stations Q107 in Toronto and CHOM-FM in Montreal,
as well as Toronto's Citytv, was eventually dropped by 2001.
"He's a proven flop in Canada,"
said Stephen Tapp, president of Sirius Canada's main rival, XM Canada, and
former general manager of CHUM Ltd.'s Citytv. "He hasn't been in this
country in years.
A spokesman for the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission said the commission and
other regulators won't interfere with Mr. Stern's broadcasts unless there
are complaints.
Mr. Redmond said he hopes joining the
industry's self-regulating Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, and
taking other steps to block offensive broadcasts, will be enough. Sirius
has agreed to prevent Mr. Stern and other "mature" content
channels such as a gay and lesbian channel from reaching the receivers of
subscribers who don't want them by blocking them at the source.
"I don't really want to speculate on
what concerns or complaints we may have in the future, because I don't
know," Mr. Redmond said. "We believe the levels of controls
we've now put in place are sufficient to alleviate any of the concerns of
the CRTC."
In 2004, the CRTC took the rare move of
stripping a Quebec radio station of its licence after repeated complaints
about abusive language and the outrageous acts of one of its shock jocks.
Howard's back! Sirius-ly
Stern warning for sensitive Canadians -- U.S. shock jock to invade our
airwaves on satellite radio
February 2, 2021
Toronto Sun
By Jim Slotek
Lock up your strippers and tell the
guardians of decency the news -- shock jock Howard Stern is returning to
Canada with Robin Quivers, Artie Lange et al.
Following weeks of rumours that Sirius
Canada was reconsidering its no-Stern policy, the company announced
yesterday it will begin carrying the all-Stern Howard 100 channel starting
next Monday -- one of two Stern channels that originate on Sirius in the
U.S.
Ironically, Howard is taking a spot
earmarked for Cosmo, a women's channel that's due to debut at the end of
the month.
"It's good news," Sirius Canada
president Mark Redmond said of the acquisition. "I'm happy if we have
happy subscribers. I don't care what they listen to."
Sources in the company had said Sirius
Canada was avoiding Stern because of concerns of flak from the CRTC.
Others speculated the stumbling block was Stern's high price tag (the U.S.
service is paying him a staggering $100 million a year).
Redmond denied the cost was a factor, but
said there was a delay while Sirius Canada shored up "the necessary
controls to allow somebody to block it out if they didn't want to listen
to it."
In fact, Sirius subscribers can phone up
and have Stern blocked at source.
Redmond said they only took one of the two
Stern channels because "we have 100 channels in total, but only 99 up
and active." The 100th spot was for the Cosmopolitan magazine
channel. Redmond said a current channel could "potentially" be
bumped when Cosmo comes on.
What this means for Stern fans is that
they'll get his morning radio show, the Wrap-up Show and Howard 100 News,
but not Channel 101 Stern spinoff programming like Bubba The Love Sponge
and Heidi Cortez Tissue Talk.
In lieu of Stern, thousands of fans have
been buying "grey boxes," U.S. Sirius radios, registered with an
often-made-up U.S. address and billed to Visa. Industry observers have
suggested the company couldn't afford not to have Stern.
The New York-based Stern debuted in Canada
on Sept. 2, 1997 on Toronto's Q-107 and Montreal's CHOM-FM, and started
things off by blasting the French (calling them "peckerheads"
and saying, "the French should bend over for me the way they did for
Hitler"). That first broadcast alone inspired more than 1,000
complaints to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council.
Stern lasted on CHOM until August 1998.
Q-107 took flak from the regulators and stuck with the experiment through
November 2001.
Not everybody was singing Welcome Back
Howard yesterday. Stephen Tapp, president of rival satellite radio service
XM Canada (which carries Stern's shock jock competitors Opie &
Anthony) called Stern "a proven failure in Canada -- pulled off TV
and radio not because of censorship but because of performance."
He added, "I wouldn't want to have the
future of my company to rest on the shoulders of one guy."
And media watch-dog and anti-violence
crusader Valerie Smith said in a recent release vis rumours of Stern's
return: "It's unfortunate that there is a market for Stern's misogyny
and abusive comments directed at other vulnerable groups. (But) the CRTC
imposed licence conditions to prevent him from being carried on the new
satellite services ... They need to act quickly to punish Sirius Canada
should the company be dumb enough and irresponsible enough to put him on
their schedule."
For his part, Redmond said, "we
believe that the levels of control and access we've put in place are
sufficient to alleviate any of these concerns."
CURSES FOILED AGAIN FOR STERN
January 23, 2021
New York Post
By Don Kaplan
Howard Stern may be coming down with a
Sirius case of the bleeps.
High-level executives of the satellite
broadcaster are developing an internal standards-and-practices document
that will set boundaries for Stern and other shock jocks, The Post has
learned.
�It�s something that�s being taken
very seriously," a Sirius source said.
Stern's new show also is being broadcast on
a time-delay, giving him the opportunity to censor the program � which
he already has done.
Stern moved to Sirius in part because
satellite-radio services such as Sirius and XM � unlike free terrestrial
radio � are not policed by the FCC, which spent years waging an
indecency war against him.
The battle resulted in big-bucks fines
against Stern and his former employers at Viacom.
XM, which is now home to shock jocks Opie
and Anthony, confirmed that it has had its own guidelines in place for
some time, but declined to provide details.
The standards of the private satellite
broadcasters can be far looser than those imposed by the FCC on the public
airways.
Sirius' move toward self-censorship comes
as pressure continues to mount in Congress to regulate programming on
cable and satellite radio and TV.
For years, cable executives have resisted
government threats of regulation, claiming that self-policing has been
sufficient.
It's a move satellite radio seems to be
getting ready to emulate.
But even with Stern safely out of the FCC's
reach, his foes, including self-appointed anti-obscenity crusaders like
John B. Thompson, argue that other government agencies should take up the
cause.
"The DOJ [Department of Justice] now
has the chance to make amends for its laxity during Stern's criminal
conduct on terrestrial radio for 25 years," the Florida lawyer wrote
to Bruce Taylor, who oversees the DOJ's Criminal Division in a Jan. 9
letter obtained by The Post. Meanwhile, Stern himself has asked for some
restraint on his show, encouraging his staff not to use profanity too
often.
On one occasion last week, Stern even
"dumped" out a minor bit of his own broadcast to protect the
identity of a staff member's family.
On Stern's old show, the dump switch was
controlled by station officials, who frequently bleeped out racy material.
It's not clear whether Stern knew he'd be
subject to any limitations when he signed on with Sirius, which is paying
him about $100 million a year.
He also was awarded $220 million in stock
after the company reported that it had signed up more than 3 million new
subscribers, boosting its total to 3.3 million. XM has more than 6 million
subscribers.
Sirius officials did not return calls for
comment on the proposal.
The imposition of loose standards is not
likely to put much of a dent into Stern's free-for-all broadcasts or scare
off any of his advertisers, an expert said.
"I believe this is just an attempt to
put things in place if and when [the government] turns up the heat on
satellite radio, much like it has with cable from time to time," said
Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular
Television at Syracuse University.
"In the end, it won't mean much to the
average listener or advertiser."
Advertisers are paying less for Stern's
spots on Sirius than they did for his show on traditional radio �
especially since there is no way to verify how many Sirius subscribers are
tuning in to his show.
Sources said it may be as little as half of
the $20,000 per 30-second spot that had been floated when he signed up.
Howard Stern On Sirius Canada In Spring 2006?
December 5, 2020
Digital Talk Central
Howard Stern, the self-proclaimed
"King of All Media" may be on top of the game when it comes to
US satellite radio, but in Canada, he's been placed on the bench.
When Sirius Canada announced its channel
line-up for the Canadian launch, they also had some bad news, well, bad
news if you happen to be a Stern fan. Sirius currently has 100 channels
available Canada, but Howard Stern will not be beamed into Canada on the
Sirius Canada service.
The move to exclude Stern on the Canadian
network will likely cause dedicated Canadian Howard Stern fans to purchase
US subscriptions and receivers. That's not a "Good Thing" for
the Canadian service when the main event with all its hype is blocked.
However, Digital Talk Central has an industry scoop.
According to well placed sources in the
industry talking with Digital Talk Central on the condition of
annonyminity, we can report that Howard Stern is expected to be included
on the Sirius Canada service in the spring of 2006.
So, what's the full meal deal?
First of all, we'd like to make it clear
that this is just a rumour (advice from our legal team) and this
"exclusive" rumour has not been confirmed by Sirius Canada.
Howard Stern makes satellite debut
January 9, 2021
Canadian Press
By Erin Carlson
NEW YORK (CP) - Howard Stern began his new
satellite radio show on Monday by putting to rest rumours that he got
married to his longtime girlfriend, model Beth Ostrosky - in a comment
complete with a U.S. federally banned expletive.
"I am not married. It's a nice feeling
that we get along great. We're very happy and I don't want to (blank) it
up," said Stern, who is finally free of government decency laws on
Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. Stern has promised everything from stripper
poles to live sex on his new show.
Sirius Canada launched its service at the
beginning of December but is not carrying the Stern program.
"At this time Howard Stern is not part
of the official lineup," spokesman Jason Mercier said Monday.
"However, over the coming weeks the
company is going to be looking at the lineup and getting some audience
feedback."
Stern used only a moderate amount of
swearing on Monday and said his show was more about ideas, not the use of
the f-word. Cursing, he said, would be part of the natural progression of
speech.
"I feel this is a culmination of
dreams for me," Stern said in an on-air news conference.
"The only limit is our mind," he
said.
At the time his October 2004 deal with
Sirius was announced, the company said it could be worth up to $500
million US over five years to headline two Sirius channels.
Stern broadcast his last FM radio show on
Dec. 16 as thousands of fans gathered outside his New York City studio.
At the start of the show Monday, Stern
dished up some phone sex with Playboy bunny Heidi Cortez, who has her own
phone-sex nighttime show lined up on Sirius.
Stern also introduced George Takei as his
new on-air personality. Takei, who played Sulu on Star Trek and who last
year publicly said he is gay, will serve as announcer. After the first
week, he will record segments for the show but will not be in the studio.
"The revolution has begun" in new
radio, Takei said Monday.
Even before his first day on the job, the
shock jock recruited listeners for the $13-per-month service: The Sirius
audience expanded from 600,000 at the time the switch was announced to
more than 3.3 million subscribers, Stern said Monday. At the same time,
Sirius stock has roughly doubled.
That's hardly a surprise. Stern's wildly
popular syndicated show proved a cash cow for Infinity Broadcasting, now
the CBS Radio unit of CBS Corp., raking in about $100 million in annual
advertising revenues and capturing 12 million listeners with raunchy,
boundary-pushing programming.
Stern had frequently tested and sparred
with the U.S. regulatory Federal Communications Commission during his
25-year run on the public airwaves, often having his morning show
interrupted by censors.
Weeks after Janet Jackson's Super Bowl
"wardrobe malfunction," Clear Channel Communications Inc. yanked
Stern from six stations amid an FCC crackdown. Stern signed with Sirius
five months later.
"I thought Clear Channel and companies
like that were going to fight the FCC," Stern, 51, told the
Associated Press last month. "I kept hanging around. And they never
fought back. ... They are cowards. They bow, and they deserve to be
destroyed."
In Toronto, Mercier dismissed reports that
suggested the Canadian company was concerned about Stern's steep carriage
fees. Another report said there were concerns Stern would violate the
guidelines of the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, the voluntary
industry watchdog, and that the federal regulator, the CRTC, would only
make them remove Stern anyway.
Sirius Canada is a corporation owned by the
U.S. Sirius satellite company, the CBC and Standard Radio.
As callers phoned in on Monday, the
self-proclaimed King of All Media said he's annoyed when fans wish him
good luck.
"I've been doing years and years of
shows but I get irritated when people wish me luck," he said.
"You should have wished me luck 25 years ago."
During the on-air news conference, Stern
was asked how he felt about listeners having to pay to hear his new show.
"I believe that people will pay for
radio," he said. "It's everything IPod can't be. IPod can't give
you content and we can."
Canadian Stern fans go grey
Thousands signing up for U.S. service
Sirius won't carry shock jock here
January 3, 2021
Toronto Star
By Greg Quill
When New York shock jock Howard Stern
disappeared from Canadian commercial radio in September 1997, Canadian
radio operators breathed a sigh of relief.
The CRTC ruling that even the heavily
edited version of his live morning show breached domestic broadcast
standards accomplished in a single move what the Federal Communications
Commission could not in 25 years. That despite millions of dollars in
fines against Stern's employer, Infinity Broadcasting, and stations that
carried his program, and floods of listener complaints for its
over-the-top sexual and racial humour, exploitation of guests, and
bigoted, often homophobic and misogynistic commentary.
Canadians might fight for their own
cultural icons, but no Canadian broadcaster is going to risk losing a
licence over an American. It was thought that the outrageously expensive
and troublesome radio star had gone away. He would no longer be a
seductive, albeit contentious, ratings powerhouse in this country.
Wrong.
Stern's move from American FM airwaves in
mid-December, pending a much publicized debut this coming Monday on Sirius
Satellite Radio in the U.S., has suddenly hurled him back onto the
Canadian horizon, and he's more contentious and seductive than ever.
Earlier this week, Sirius broke the
three-million-subscriber mark, a feat the company attributes to recent
sign-ups of Stern fans. That's 800,000 new subscribers since Sept. 30, a
revenue gain that drove Sirius stock up by 16 cents to $6.85 a share.
What must rankle the operators of Sirius
Canada � Toronto's Standard Radio and CBC, who own an 80 per cent share
in the Canadian company, partnered with the New York-based SSR � is that
a good number of those new subscribers are Canadians. As many as 80,000,
by some estimates, are signing on to the U.S. service via "grey
market" U.S. billing addresses just to get American receivers that
will pick up Stern. At $14.95 per subscriber per month, and between $70
and $300 per receiver, that's got to hurt.
Fearing the wrath of the CRTC as much
Stern's astronomical carriage fee, Sirius Canada's owners � who also own
terrestrial radio property that comes under much more rigid scrutiny than
it's believed satellite radio will have to endure � have decided not to
carry Stern's channels on this side of the border.
It's presumed he'll breach codes
established by the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, by which all
radio operators in this country abide.
The irony is that by denying Canadians
access to Stern, Sirius Canada is driving domestic subscribers into the
American "grey market," an illegal realm that Canadian satellite
applicants promised the CRTC would be shut down upon approval of their
licences.
"We're not carrying Stern,"
Standard Radio chief Gary Slaight told the Star. "That's what we
decided and I don't think we'll be changing our minds ... for now.
"Our programming will continue to
evolve as we receive feedback," he said, referring to an
Internet-based lobby group that has bombarded Sirius Canada with a
petition to carry Stern allegedly signed by more than 10,000 of his
Canadian fans.
Caught in a serious Catch-22 � whether to
risk offending the CRTC, which has already deemed Stern not suitable for
Canadian consumption, or to risk losing potential millions in subscription
revenue � Slaight says he and the CBC are "concerned over the grey
market situation."
"If we don't carry Stern, we're
handing his Canadian audience over (to the American company's subscriber
base). We're aware of that and we'll be dealing with it as things
progress.
"As of now, we have not changed our
decision not to carry Howard Stern.
"Then again, we have until Jan.
9."
Stern's shift from terrestrial to satellite
radio is controversial in itself. Stern, 51, will trade his "free
radio" American audience of 12.2 million for a pay-radio audience of
just three million: those willing to part with $12.95 (U.S.) a month for
Sirius's 120-channel package of music, news, sports, information, world
radio, traffic, weather and talk.
The satellite radio operator has given the
lanky, long-haired talk radio prodigy $500 million (U.S.) to build not
one, but two channels on its platform. Production costs and salaries come
out of Stern's mammoth inducement.
Stern's making the move, he says, in the
pursuit of that most fundamental of American constitutional rights, free
speech, and he's doing it with the backing of both liberal and
conservative cultural observers in the U.S.
They have apparently become convinced that
the FCC is too powerful, too wilful and something of a renegade in its
relentless campaign to silence Stern.
Suddenly the potty-mouthed rude boy of
American radio is a cause c�l�bre, a media darling. The New York Times
Sunday magazine last May published an essay defending Stern by National
Public Radio star Ira Glass, the very epitome of heightened cultural
sensibilities. Stern has been a guest of honour on every American TV talk
show of substance in recent weeks and was profiled at length by Ed Bradley
on 60 Minutes. His image sneers from magazine stands across the continent.
Billboards announcing his flight to pay-radio loom across the Manhattan
skyline.
Whether Stern will be � or can be � as
provocative, as imaginative or even interesting in the vast satellite
radio universe remains to be seen.
Stay tuned.
Sirius challenge: Stern competition
December 21, 2020
Globe and Mail
By Grant Robertson
Sirius Canada Inc., which launched
satellite radio this month, is about to face competition from an unlikely
source - its sister company in the United States.
Plans by New York-based Sirius Satellite
Radio Inc. to add controversial talk show host Howard Stern to its lineup
on Jan. 9 could put the Canadian company, which is not picking up the
program, in a fight for listeners with its part-owner.
Although Canada's new satellite radio
industry is expected to diminish much of the grey market that thrived over
the past few years, where listeners tap into U.S. signals, Mr. Stern's
show threatens to lure Canadian listeners away.
Analysts estimate there are as many as
60,000 grey market listeners in Canada who subscribe to U.S. satellite
radio. Converting that audience to Canadian subscriptions is now a key job
for Sirius Canada and Canadian Satellite Radio Inc., operator of the XM
network.
Both companies were granted licences by
Ottawa in the fall and have started operating in the past few weeks.
"The Canadian owners of the XM and the
Sirius franchises have an important stake in making sure the Canadian grey
market subscribes to Canadian service," said Jeff Leiper, an analyst
with Yankee Group in Ottawa, which tracks the sector.
Grey market listeners subscribe to American
providers through U.S. addresses and receive more channels than the two
Canadian services. Although receiving the signals contravenes Canadian
law, the radio sector is nearly impossible to track compared with the
satellite TV market. It's a potential audience loss that Canadian
companies would like to avoid.
"In the first couple of years, even
20,000 or 30,000 people is still a significant drain on revenue." Mr.
Leiper said.
One Sirius Canada customer, who declined to
be named, said he is considering switching to the U.S. service to pick up
Mr. Stern.
Over the past two decades, Mr. Stern has
become a broadcasting juggernaut and one of the largest single draws on
radio. Known for his lewd conduct on air, which is laced with toilet
humour and sexual references, he has drawn more than $2-million (U.S.) in
fines from U.S. regulators since the 1980s.
But the show also raked in $100-million in
advertising revenue for CBS radio, that network said. His switch to
satellite radio came after Sirius in New York offered him $500-million
over five years to produce programming for two channels, as well as
increased freedom to say what he wants. Mr. Stern's old program was picked
up by FM stations in Montreal and Toronto in the late nineties but
eventually was dropped.
Mr. Stern's impact on satellite radio has
been significant. When the lucrative contract was signed in 2004, Sirius
had just 600,000 subscribers in the United States then but its numbers
have grown quickly. Some analysts have suggested that as many as two
million fans could follow Mr. Stern to Sirius over the next few years. The
company has 2.2 million subscribers now, less than half of XM Satellite
Radio.
An Internet rumour this week that Sirius
Canada is planning to add Mr. Stern to its lineup this spring was denied
by the company Wednesday. A spokesman said Sirius Canada will be reviewing
that policy, but there are no immediate plans to pick up the show.
While satellite radio programs aren't
regulated by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, the show could
run into problems in Canada, where the CRTC has control over the licences.
Luring grey market subscribers is a big
prize for Canada's two providers early on. Mr. Leiper of the Yankee Group
estimates the industry will attract 50,000 new subscribers by the end of
the first quarter. Only half of the grey market is expected to convert
during that period, leaving roughly 30,000 Canadians still receiving the
U.S. signal.
Free speech ends - Shock jock says bye to regular radio ... now pay up
fans
December 17, 2020
Associated Press
By Larry McShane
NEW YORK -- The free ride for Howard Stern
fans ended yesterday.
Stern, a New York radio fixture for 20
years and host of a syndicated show for 12 million daily listeners, bid
farewell to his fans with a final show on terrestrial radio.
On Jan. 9, Stern makes his move to
satellite radio -- where his once-free speech will cost U.S. listeners on
the Sirius satellite feed $12.95 US a month.
Canada will remain a Stern-free zone. A
spokesman for Sirius Canada yesterday said the situation with Stern has
not changed: "He is not part of our initial lineup."
Sirius Canada launched Dec. 1.
Gary Slaight of Standard Broadcasting, one
of the owners of Sirius Canada, told the Sun last month that it is
unlikely Stern's new U.S. Sirius show will ever be picked up here because
of anticipated grief from federal broadcast regulators.
Yet rumours persist the provider might do
an about-face. The standard "no-comment" from Sirius Canada on
that score is "we will continue to review our channel lineup."
Stern opened his AM/FM radio grand finale
yesterday with: "Good morning, and welcome to the last show on
terrestrial radio," as the sound of taps played in the background.
The show opened with a Stern-centric remake
of the classic What A Wonderful World, and John Lennon's Imagine.
As the show went on, several thousand
people stood in a steady drizzle along 56th Street between Fifth and Sixth
avenues; many waved signs praising Stern and attacking the Federal
Communications Commission, which oversees broadcasting in the U.S. Among
those onstage there were Stern regulars "Jeff the Drunk" and
"Beetlejuice," who led a sing-along.
"I'm a dedicated listener. I wanted to
see this happen," said Chris Casavant, who drove up at 4:30 a.m. from
Farmington, N.J. Asked why she was there, Donna Casavant made a face and
pointed at her husband.
After the show wrapped up at 10 a.m., Stern
took a "victory lap" through midtown Manhattan, standing on the
top level of a double-decker bus as fans screamed and waved.
"What a day, it's crazy," Stern
said as the bus rambled through Times Square while an image of the
self-described "King of All Media" appeared on a giant
television screen above. "You don't get to do something like this too
often."
Addressing his fans before the bus ride,
Stern bellowed "Long live the 'Howard Stern Show' audience,"
before departing like a rock star.
Fans screamed for an encore, but they were
left to wait until his "reincarnation" next month.
The crowd on 56th Street was a circus, with
a Stern look-alike standing near the stage. Stern's parents appeared to
huge cheers, while the station manager at WXRK-FM -- the shock jock's
terrestrial home -- was booed loudly.
Stern leaves behind a plethora of imitators
spawned in the wake of his radio success, when his show enjoyed an
unprecedented ratings run to hit No. 1 in New York, Philadelphia,
Washington and Los Angeles.
John B. Thompson, Attorney
at Law
1172 South Dixie Hwy., Suite 111
Coral Gables, Florida 33146
December 9, 2020
Mel Karmazin
Chief Executive Officer
Sirius Satellite Radio
1221 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020
Via Fax
Re: Broadcasting Obscene Material on
Sirius� Howard Stern Show
Dear Mr. Karmazin:
You know from your stint at Viacom as
Howard Stern�s facilitator of the mental molestation of minors for money
that I secured from the FCC multiple fines against his show for the
illegal airing of indecent material. These were criminal acts as defined
by federal statute 18 USC 1464, punishable by two years in prison. I got
Stern off all Clear Channel radio stations by knowing what I was doing. I
know what I�m doing now.
Howard and you are about to be reunited
again in what appears to be yet another criminal activity, this time at
Sirius Satellite Radio on its Channel 100, which will launch the new and
worse Howard Stern Show on January 9.
Howard has been running around to various
media in the last few days explaining that his satellite show will be far
more pornographic than what his zoo keepers at Viacom/Infinity allowed,
and I believe him. Howard tells the truth about some things, not about the
First Amendment, of course, but when Howard promises porn, I believe him.
The show that Howard is promising, in great
graphic detail, looks as though it will not be �indecent,� as that
legal term is defined. It looks to all the world that the show will
probably, in fact, be obscene, as that is defined under the Supreme Court�s
long-standing and accepted definition in Miller v. California.
As you and Howard may or may not know or
may not want to admit, obscene material cannot be distributed, by any
means whatsoever, whether paid for or not, by subscription satellite
service or not, to adults, even to perverts like those who constitute
Howard�s hard core fan base. Thankfully, many of them don�t own cars
and live in their parents� basements.
So, here�s a heads-up, Mel, to you, also
to the King of All Toilets, and to Sirius and its fingers-crossed
shareholders. Yesterday on CNBC�s Final Bell I predicted that some
prosecutors somewhere, either local, state, or federal, may prosecute your
company and those Sirius individuals responsible for the airing of obscene
material on Sirius. I know who they are. The �community standard� that
will be applied in any such prosecutions, under Miller v. California,
will be the standards of Topeka or Tuscaloosa or Terre Haute or Charlotte
or Austin or Baton Rouge. The standards of Viacom/Infinity or of Sirius
board directors do not apply. These are communities whose law enforcement
personnel and prosecutors will have no political downside in going after
obscenity, especially given Howard�s history of wedding racism to
misogyny. That doesn�t play well in Alabama or anywhere else outside of
your strange universe.
So, Mel, I look forward to seeing whether
Howard Stern, ultimately, can broadcast his Sirius show from a county
jail.
Finally, the statute of limitations has not
run yet on the Justice Department�s power to prosecute Howard Stern
criminally and individually for the indecent material he aired while on
terrestrial radio in violation of 18 USC 1464. I�m not so sure the
terrestrial radio community, whose product Howard has labeled �dead�
while lining up on his exit ramp to oblivion, will rally behind Howard if
he is prosecuted individually for those past crimes. After all, Howard is
now competing with them in an entertainment modality designed to obsolete
their product. Money and politics make strange bedfellows. Think Clear
Channel wouldn�t like to see Howard Stern in an orange jumpsuit?
Look for House Judiciary Committee Chairman
James Sensenbrenner�s suggestion that indecent broadcasts result in
criminal prosecutions to be acted upon, especially if you and Howard step
over the line at Sirius.
Laws, Mel, are good things. If you actually
ever read the First Amendment, you found that the people have a �right
to petition their government for a redress of grievances.� They
petitioned. Laws were passed. The indecency and obscenity laws are already
on the books. Good luck trying to repeal them, but you have a First
Amendment right to try. You can even try to repeal the obscenity laws, but
they�re there, staring you and Howard in the face until they are
repealed.
There are those of us out here who are
looking to enforce them.
Please govern yourselves accordingly, if
you can. Nasty letter to follow, and it will.
Regards,
Jack Thompson
Satellite radio: Do you really want to pay for it?
December 6, 2020
Globe and Mail
By GUY DIXON
Satellite radio has arrived and is likely
to usher in a new area of radio-channel surfing. But what exactly is it?
Sirius and XM Canada, two competing U.S.
services newly launched in Canada, offer a plethora of music divided by
minute genre distinctions, along with talk-radio, news, sports and comedy
channels.
XM Canada carries more than 80 channels and
Sirius Canada has around 100. They require a special radio, which start at
$70 to $90, and you must subscribe to the services ($12.99 a month for XM,
$14.99 a month for Sirius).
The question now is whether Canadians will
find this a fascinating new world of digitally transmitted radio or, as
with cable and satellite TV, a vast array of nothing.
Both services are relying heavily on
exclusive concerts to attract listeners. "I think those are things
that both satellite services would use, just to break up the
predictability," said Ross Davies, vice-president of programming for
XM Canada, noting that XM in the United States recently had Paul McCartney
perform in its studio.
Both satellite services have also had to
rush various car and portable receivers to market after first getting
regulator approval in June -- then watching and waiting for the legal
appeal by CHUM and Astral Media to finish (the appeal was rejected in
favour of the satellite radio companies in September). The race has meant
that not all products are ready yet. For instance, Sirius won't have a
hand-held portable radio compatible with its service on sale in Canada
until next month.
Despite its name, Satellite radio doesn't
carry a selection of the best stations from around the world. True, Sirius
does carry CBC Radio One (with a slightly rearranged schedule), a 24-hour
version of the CBC's alternative music program Radio 3, BBC Radio One,
National Public Radio and others. Both companies carry the BBC World
Service, CNN Radio and CNBC Radio.
But the majority of the channels offered on
XM and Sirius are commercial-free music channels operated solely for their
respective services. They aren't traditional radio stations. So for
album-oriented 1970s rock, XM listeners have XM's "deep" classic
rock broadcast on channel 40 which plays less-obvious album rock tracks.
There's also classic rock on channel 46, progressive rock and jam bands on
51, acoustic rock on 50, seventies rock on 7 and so on, each channel
ever-so-subtly catering to its own classic rock niche.
Sirius similarly has its own multitude of
rock channels.
Sirius Canada is a privately owned company
and so wouldn't divulge yesterday how many Canadian subscribers it has. XM
Canada's owners, meanwhile, are in the process of issuing stock and
couldn't release that information for financial regulatory reasons.
Canadian content, meanwhile, remains a
hotly debated issue during the regulatory hearings. For good reason, the
U.S. content is overwhelming, and some independent Canadian artists, who
initially saw satellite as a way to get more airplay, now feel Canadian
content is being drowned.
Sirius, which is operated through a
partnership of the CBC, Standard Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio U.S., is
offering 10 Canadian channels dominated by various CBC offerings, but also
includes music channels operated by Standard and Astral Media. XM Canada,
run by the company Canadian Satellite Radio through a partnership with XM
Radio in the U.S., operates eight Canadian channels, including (un)Signed
on channel 52, which is produced in Toronto and features Canadian
independent acts.
There are no plans yet to offer Howard
Stern's new program, which begins next month for American Sirius
customers. This wasn't a condition of Canadian regulatory approval, said
Mark Redmond, head of Sirius Canada, and his company may consider offering
Stern in the future. XM's version of shock-jock radio is The Opie &
Anthony Show produced out of New York on channel 202.
The main selling point is that the services
have far more variety and longer play lists than ordinary commercial
radio. However, neither service has the Internet's selection of stations
from around the world, nor do they have short-wave radio's sense of
distant voices in the night.
There's also less of that old feeling of
station identification. Instead, satellite radio is all about drilling
down to consumers' tastes. If you like traditional and be-bop jazz, Sirius
and XM have channels for that. If you feel more like contemporary jazz --
which can sometimes swing into funk -- they have that, too. But what if
you want contemporary without the funk? Or what if you want reggae (both
have reggae-only channels), but only Bob Marley, roots-era reggae?
No radio service can drill down far enough
to every individual's fickle tastes. More stations may just mean more
channel-flipping.
Satellite radio a lot of static
November 25, 2020
Toronto Sun
By Jim Slotek
Confusion continues to surround the launch
of satellite radio in Canada. Look no further than the Yonge/Dundas Future
Shop, which this week had a display trumpeting Howard Stern on Sirius
Canada.
A call to Sirius Canada dispelled that
newsflash. Out of deference to CRTC concerns, the shockjock remains
persona non grata on the service which still has yet to launch.
Sirius Canada says it will be up "by
the end of the year." Stern makes his presumably no-holds-barred
pay-radio debut on Sirius in the U.S. Jan. 9.
A Sirius Canada spokesperson said the
Future Shop display was "an in-house promotion for which we were not
consulted. We're following up with Future Shop on that." The manager
of the Future Shop outlet did not return calls.
Meanwhile, the competition, XM Canada,
launched this week with competing U.S. shockjocks Opie & Anthony. This
is the same Opie & Anthony who were kicked off broadcast radio three
years ago for broadcasting a contest-stunt wherein a couple had sex in New
York's St. Patrick's Cathedral.
The station WNEW-FM was fined $375,000 by
the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
"I would not put Opie & Anthony in
the same category as Stern," said XM Canada president Stephen Tapp.
"We like to think of these guys as being generally more fun and
entertaining as opposed to being mean-spirited." As far as past
indiscretions go, he said, "We offer channel blocking capability, we
have extreme language advisories. There are regulations in place, and we
plan to live by them. We informed the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council
that we planned to air Opie & Anthony and the CRTC knows we're
carrying them.
"Stern has some pretty bad history in
this country, obviously, particularly in Quebec. We believe that Opie
& Anthony will be performing in a way that's acceptable to the
standards of our communities, given that we are a pay service and we have
a higher threshold for that reason. We'll deal with any complaints."
Having said that, Tapp agreed that people
who pay to hear Opie & Anthony are unlikely to complain about them.
Though XM is now delivering pay-radio -- 80
channels worth, including eight all-Canadian music services, NHL games, an
all-hockey talk radio station and a comedy station programmed by Yuk Yuk's
boss Mark Breslin -- only about 4,500 people across the country are now
able to hear it. Those would be the early-birds who signed up over the
Internet and had their satellite radio devices delivered to them
personally.
The general public will be able to tune in
next week when XM "plug and play" radios are available from $100
and up in stores like Future Shop, Best Buy, Canadian Tire etc. As well,
some 50 lines of GM cars include XM radios in their 2006 models. The
service itself costs $12.99 a month.
Similar devices for Sirius Canada are also
expected in stores within a week or so, although there's no service to
play on them as yet. When it's up and running, Sirius Canada will cost
$14.99 a month for 100 channels.
Stern can't beam here on radio
November 16, 2020
Toronto Sun
By Jim Slotek
Space may be the final frontier for Howard
Stern in the U.S., but Canada remains a no-fly zone.
The superstar American shock-jock becomes
the king of satellite radio in the U.S. in January, courtesy of a
$500-million deal with Sirius Satellite Radio.
But Sirius Canada, which plans to start
beaming to your car and home before the end of this year, has no plans to
include Stern and his no-holds-barred morning show that includes the likes
of Stuttering John, Baba Booey and butt-bongo stunts.
Stern's show might be Sirius' biggest
attraction in the U.S. His hardcore fan base is buying the service just to
keep on hearing him.
So, Sirius Canada, isn't this like
acquiring the Pittsburgh Penguins and deciding you don't need Sidney
Crosby?
"Well, what if Sidney Crosby was going
to be arrested and put in jail within two weeks?" said Gary Slaight,
the CEO of Standard Broadcasting, which co-owns Sirius Canada along with
the CBC.
"The CRTC, who we are licensed to,
would eventually force us to take Stern down, because we have standards we
have to abide by in this country when you own a broadcasting licence."
Conversely, satellite radio providers in
the U.S. are not licensed by the American equivalent of the CRTC, the
Federal Communications Commission, Slaight said, "so they can do
whatever they want.
"When we applied for a licence, the
CRTC pushed us about this," he said. "(Stern) was definitely a
topic of conversation. We (Standard) are a big broadcaster and have to
deal with the CRTC on other issues. And the CBC obviously has a cultural
mandate to be concerned with."
The New York-based Stern debuted in Canada
on Sept. 2, 1997 on Toronto's Q-107 and Montreal's CHOM-FM, and started
things off by blasting the French (calling them "peckerheads"
and saying, "the French should bend over for me the way they did for
Hitler"). That first broadcast alone inspired more than 1,000
complaints to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council.
Stern lasted on CHOM until August 1998.
Q-107 took flak from the regulators and stuck with the experiment through
November 2001.
Sirius satellite radio on air by Christmas
November 3, 2020
Toronto Star
By Greg Quill, Entertainment Columnist
Sirius Canada, one of two
subscription-based digital satellite radio operations recently licensed by
the federal broadcast regulator, will be up and running before Christmas,
with 100 channels of music, news, sports, talk and entertainment available
for $14.99 a month.
Receivers will be on sale at major
appliance, hardware and electronics stores within a month. Two initial
receivers will retail for $79 and $99 respectively.
Ten of the Sirius channels will be
Canadian, programmed in Canada and compiled by personnel already employed
by majority shareholders Standard Radio, CBC and its French-language
counterpart, Radio Canada, Sirius Canada president Mark Redmond said
yesterday.
The Canadian broadcasters each own 40 per
cent of the Canadian franchise and New York-based Sirius Radio, which is
responsible for programming 90 of the 100 channels, retains a 20 per cent
interest in the Canadian business.
"One of the conditions of the Canadian
satellite radio licences is a 9-to-1 ratio between U.S. and Canadian
channels, Redmond said.
Sirius Canada (http://www.sirius-canada.ca)
will carry four English-language and five French-language channels, in
addition to one multilingual channel.
All 10 are commercial-free, but only two
are dedicated to English-language music.
The Canadian channels are:
CBC Radio One.
CBC Radio 3, the former Internet service
specializing in independent English-language music and culture.
Iceberg Radio, Standard Broadcasting's
Internet English-language pop music service rejigged for satellite radio
and programmed by leading Canadian music programmer/consultant Liz Janik.
Hardcore Sports Radio, Canadian sports news
and talk provided by Score Media.
Premi�re Plus, Radio-Canada's
French-language magazine service comprising news, current affairs and the
arts.
Infoplus, French-language news 24 hours a
day, combining programs from Radio-Canada with those from other public
broadcasters around the world, including Radio France Internationale.
Bandeapart, a Radio-Canada channel
dedicated to emerging Francophone pop, rock, electronica, hip-hop, punk
and world music.
Rock Velours, a French-language Canadian
soft-rock channel.
Energie2, a French-language channel
featuring pop, modern rock and urban music.
RCI Plus, Radio Canada International
programming for Canadians in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic,
Russian, Ukrainian and Mandarin.
Sirius Canada will carry 60 music channels
in all, covering the entire musical spectrum. The remaining 40 channels
will be devoted to sports, public broadcasting and commercial network
news, comedy, talk, and lifestyle programming.
Sirius Canada's rival, Canadian Satellite
Radio, could not confirm its launch date or programming details yesterday.
One question remains as to the delivery of
so-called shock jock radio programming.
The controversial Howard Stern, who has
reportedly signed a $500 million (U.S.) five-year contract, is scheduled
to jump to Sirius in the New Year, but Redmond said that initially at
least he's not part of their programming.
FCC Investigating February Howard Stern Broadcast
August 23, 2021
FMQB.com
Howard Stern said on his show last
Wednesday (8/17) that he had "heard a rumor" the FCC would be
dropping another fine on him before he would be able to get out the door
to Sirius Satellite Radio.
"They've come up with some sort of
fine or something, or some sort of Notice of Apparent Liability, they're
after me again," said Stern. "I don't care how many times, as
long as they don't come after me personally."
FMQB has learned that the FCC's Enforcement
Bureau is indeed investigating an early February broadcast in which
allegedly indecent material was aired on The Howard Stern Show. The
complaint, submitted by Florida-based decency crusader Jack Thompson, was
filed against Beasley Broadcast Group's WRXK/Ft. Myers and Infinity
Broadcasting's WXRK/New York.
Specifically, the FCC is looking into
material aired on the February 4, 2021 broadcast at approximately 8:55
a.m. in which The Stern Show was in the midst of the Stupid Bowl, a
contest that featured women golfing with strap-on dildos on their
foreheads, followed by the contestants attempting to sing "Amazing
Grace" with a four-inch sausage down their throats.
In his complaint, Thompson wrote:
"Porn stars were using dildos in the described fashion, among the
sexual banter, and they were then allowing sausages to be stuffed down
their throats, in a simulation of fellatio, while trying to sing, despite
the gagging, 'Amazing Grace.'"
In a follow-up letter to the FCC, Thompson
has asked that the investigation "expand to include each and every
radio station that aired any of the particular Stern programs on the dates
which are currently under investigation," providing the FCC with a
list of all current affiliates of The Howard Stern Show.
Infinity is required to respond within ten
business days of the FCC's August 15 letter. Should this complaint result
in a Notice of Apparent Liability being issued, it could mean the end for
Stern and company until they reappear at Sirius due to the $3.5 million
Consent Decree Viacom agreed to on November 23, 2004.
Contained within the Consent Decree was a
provision stating: "If a Viacom-owned station receives a Notice of
Apparent Liability for a broadcast occurring after the Effective Date
which relates to violation of the Indecency Laws, all employees airing
and/or materially participating in the decision to air such material will
be suspended and an investigation will immediately be undertaken by
Viacom."
Shortly after the Decree was signed, FMQB
warned this scenario might be how The Stern Show's run on terrestrial
radio could end, as the previously mentioned provision essentially means
if a NAL were to be issued regarding Stern that involved a Viacom
property, it would mean he would be suspended from the airwaves and be
sidelined until the investigation was concluded.
The current complaint the FCC is
investigating meets those requirements.
Should a Notice of Apparent Liability lead
to a Forfeiture Order, all participating offenders in the decision to air
the material deemed indecent by the FCC would be "subject to further
disciplinary action up to and including termination."
Stern to be beamed in by satellite
Shock jock jumps to Sirius radio
October 7, 2021
National Post
By Paul Brent
Calling
it "the most important deal in radio history," Sirius Satellite
Radio Inc. inked a five-year, US$500-million deal to spirit shock jock
Howard Stern from the public airwaves and make him the star draw of its
subscription-based radio system.
Sirius' description of the hiring
may be public relations hyperbole, but markets paid attention to the move
by the second-biggest satellite radio provider, sending its stock up more
than 15% amid analyst predictions that the aggressive firm will soon catch
market leader XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. in subscriber totals.
While big news at the New York
Sirius headquarters, the hiring of the salty Stern has created some
headaches for the Canadian partners of Sirius who have to convince the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission next month of
the benefits of allowing the commercial-free music service to operate here
legitimately.
"We are not even close to
deciding what our strategy will be" on Stern's show, said Gary
Slaight, president of Toronto's Standard Broadcasting, one of the
corporate partners of the Sirius venture.
The subject of broadcasting Mr.
Stern's controversial show in Canada via satellite becomes even more
complicated because public broadcaster CBC is the other Canadian backer of
Sirius.
Sirius Canada said yesterday that
it could block Mr. Stern's show from its offering here if it proves to be
a major issue with the Commission. It could also put it in its main
offering as Sirius will do in the U.S. or offer the show as a premium
service for an extra charge to subscribers.
Sirius is one of three digital
radio hopefuls that will present their case to the federal broadcasting
regulator in hearings next month. One of the others, U.S. satellite rival
XM teamed with Toronto businessman John Bitove, has a similar
satellite-delivered service offering minimal Canadian content -- just four
dedicated channels apiece.
The other digital radio proposal, a
terrestrial-delivered service from CHUM Ltd. and Astral Media Inc., would
mirror the CRTC's 35% Canadian content minimum levels for commercial
radio.
Less ambitious than the U.S.
services that rely on signals beamed from orbiting satellites, the
CHUM-Astral service would only be available in major centres and,
initially at least, offer about half as many channels with 50 proposed
during the early years of operation.
Mr. Stern's show was broadcast on
Toronto's Q107 (owned by Corus Entertainment) but was dropped voluntarily.
"They pulled him off for political reasons as much as anything
else," said Standard's Mr. Slaight. "The ratings were pretty
good. It was just a lot of work to deal with the complaints."
Mr. Stern's decision to leave
commercial airwaves when his contract expires with Viacom Inc.'s Infinity
radio division was caused by increasing U.S. scrutiny of the airwaves in
the wake of Janet Jackson's brief breast exposure at the MTV half-time
show during this year's Super Bowl.
"I'm tired of the
censorship," Mr. Stern said during his broadcast which is heard in 46
U.S. cities.
Because satellite radio is a
subscription-based service, it is not subject to decency standards imposed
by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. Satellite radio, already
boasting millions of subscribers and poised to grow faster as automakers
make satellite signal receivers standard equipment, is fast becoming like
cable television with such shows as The Sopranos and Six Feet Under, a
haven for risky programming.
In August, XM Radio signed on the
controversial shock jock duo of Opie & Anthony to broadcast a morning
show. The two were yanked off the air by Infinity Broadcasting in 2002 for
broadcasting descriptions of their radio listeners having sex in public.
Infinity was fined US$357,500 by the Federal Communications Commission for
the stunt.
Sirius has 600,000 subscribers and
has said it has to have two million before it becomes profitable. XM has
2.1 million subscribers but it, too, is losing money as both are ramping
up their offerings in an effort to gain customers. Last year Sirius said
it would pay $220-million for the right to broadcast National Football
League games.
At this time, it is not clear
whether the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission
will adopt a hands-off policy toward satellite radio service in Canada (as
in the U.S.) should it give the service its official blessing.
While satellite radio is not
authorized by the CRTC as yet, an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 Canadian
subscribers are receiving XM or Sirius signals through a U.S. address. For
people willing to subscribe to "grey market" services, be they
satellite radio or U.S. satellite television, it is unlikely the CRTC will
ever prove much of a hinderance.
"Today if you still want to
get American [satellite television], you can do it," said Kevin Shea,
president and chief executive of Sirius Canada. "I didn't see the
RCMP arrest a consumer yet.
"There is really no way at the
end of the day we can stop people who really would want to get
anything."
DIGITAL HOPEFULS:
CHUM Satellite Radio
50 channels. $9.95 a month in major
cities only
- - -
Canadian Satellite Radio Inc.
(XM and John Bitove)
101 channels for $12.99 a month
GM, Honda and Toyota vehicles
- - -
Sirius Canada Radio
(CBC, Sirius, Standard Radio)
78 channels for $12.95 a month
DaimlerChrysler, Ford vehicles
- - -
Not widely available for sale in
Canada, satellite radio receivers are currently offered for automobile use
by major car manufacturers and home units are offered for sale by major
retailers such as Best Buy Co.
Stern to go to satellite broadcasts
By ROB SHAW
Globe and Mail, UPDATED AT 6:32 PM
EDT Thursday, Oct 7, 2021
Howard Stern, the controversial
radio host whose off-colour comments have propelled him to stardom on
American radio, signed a $500-million (U.S.), five-year deal with a
satellite radio company yesterday that could bring his show back to a
Canadian station.
The deal will see Mr. Stern's show
jump from Viacom Inc. to Sirius Satellite Radio in January of 2006. The
move will give a large boost to a fledgling satellite radio industry, and
allow Mr. Stern to circumvent U.S. federal regulators who have frowned
upon such segments as Lesbian Dial-A-Date.
"Those religious kooks think
they've won," Mr. Stern told Reuters news agency yesterday.
"They're wrong. I volunteered to go off into a whole new
medium."
He was pulled off the air in six
cities by Clear Channel Communications Inc. in February because of
indecent content in his show.
Sirius, the second-largest
pay-radio service in the United States, will have to boost its base of
600,000 subscribers to more than two million to cover the cost of signing
Mr. Stern. The so-called shock jock has 12 million listeners and Sirius is
hoping some will migrate with him.
Unlike public airwaves, satellite
radio requires special equipment and a monthly subscriber fee. But the
breadth of expected channels from across North America, and features such
as instantly identifying song titles, is driving growth of the format in
the United States. Some car manufacturers are expected to equip new
vehicles with the service soon.
In Canada, Sirius Radio has
partnered with CBC Radio-Canada and Standard Radio as one of three groups
applying for a radio broadcast licence in November from the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. Standard Radio is
Canada's largest privately owned broadcaster, and runs such stations as
97.3 FM EZRock in Toronto and Z95.3 FM in Vancouver.
If successful, the group plans to
have 125 channels of satellite radio in Canada by early 2005, at a cost of
$12.95 a month, said joint-venture chief executive officer Kevin Shea.
Sirius has full intentions of
bringing Mr. Stern to Canada, he said.
"There's probably a portion of
audiences that would have an interest in [Mr. Stern's show]," said
Mr. Shea, a former executive with Bell Globemedia, Alliance Atlantis and
Global Television.
"Two years from now, Howard
Stern could have found God and have a completely different program. Who
knows?"
After a run in Canada a few years
ago, the country's airwaves are free of Mr. Stern's sexually charged,
raucous segments. He was dropped by Toronto's Q-107 FM in late 2001,
despite high ratings, and was also dropped by CHOM-FM in Montreal in 1998
after complaints from more than 140 callers. |