logo
Radio rival slams Horawd Stern amid cancellation rumors

Radio rival slams Horawd Stern amid cancellation rumors

Daily Mail​2 days ago
One of Howard Stern 's longtime radio rivals has weighed in on rumors that the self-proclaimed 'King of All Media' may be parting ways with SiriusXM . Anthony Cumia, who is best known as one-half of the former shock jock duo Opie and Anthony, said that Stern has 'no friends' and is no longer relevant in a blistering rant on his Compound Media podcast.
He added, 'I don't think these are friends he could rely on.' Stern is reportedly in negotiations with SiriusXM now that his five year $500 million contract with the company is coming to an end.
The radio legend's popularity has taken a major dip in recent years, with many critics accusing the former provocateur of 'going woke.' His broadcasting career fell from having 20 million listeners a day at his peak to figures as low as 125,000 listeners a day, according to The New York Post .
He has predominantly broadcast The Howard Stern Show from his home over the past five years, citing fears over COVID-19. Cumia predicted that Stern will receive a 'low' offer from SiriusXM to stay with the company, despite the star previously commanding around $100 million annually since joining the network in 2004.
'I think he really resents the fact that Joe Rogan got over $200 million a year deal from Spotify and he wasn't the big highest-paid guy anymore,' Cumia claimed. Opie & Anthony's feud with The Howard Stern Show kicked off in the late '90s and went on for years, especially after both shows left traditional radio for SiriusXM.
Cumia was infamously fired from SiriusXM in 2014 after posting a series of racist tweets. Cumia now hosts his own podcast called Compound Media with controversial Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes. Meanwhile, Stern is said to be deep in negotiations with SiriusXM over his future with the company.
Stern first launched The Howard Stern Show in 1986 on traditional radio. His popularity peaked in the '90s when he became a media sensation for his shock jock stunts and outrageous no-holds-barred interviews.
In 1997, he starred in his own feature film about his life and career called Private Parts and released a handful of best-selling books. The 20th season of The Howard Stern Show is set to premiere on SiriusXM on September 2.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pessimism hasn't served us in dating – it's time we followed Taylor Swift's lead
Pessimism hasn't served us in dating – it's time we followed Taylor Swift's lead

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Pessimism hasn't served us in dating – it's time we followed Taylor Swift's lead

Is there anything more nauseating than a really ostentatious romantic gesture? You know, the kind where someone proposes by hiding a diamond ring in a chocolate soufflé while a string quartet arrives out of nowhere, or sends 100 red roses to your office so you can barely get to your desk amid the endless floral arrangements, not to mention mockery from your colleagues. While some of these acts might have us wincing or reaching for the sick bag, for others, it's a literal dream come true. At least, that was the case for Taylor Swift, who has revealed the details behind her unlikely, almost cinematic, meet-cute with her boyfriend, American footballer Travis Kelce. Speaking on Kelce's podcast, New Heights, which Kelce hosts with his brother, Jason, Swift, after announcing her upcoming new album, The Life of a Showgirl, told listeners: 'This podcast got me a boyfriend'. The 35-year-old musician went on to explain how Kelce had famously spoken on their podcast about attending one of Swift's concerts and feeling disappointed that he hadn't met her. 'If I had never gone to that show and been mesmerised and just been captivated, and then left with such a desire to want to meet you, I would have never gone on here and told everybody how butt hurt I was,' Kelce recalled. The plan had been for him to give Swift a friendship bracelet with his phone number on it. "He thought because he knows the elevator lady, that he could just talk to her about getting down to my dressing room," Swift said of Kelce's unsuccessful attempt to meet her. For whatever reason, though, his public declaration worked, and the two met soon after. 'This felt like I was in an '80s John Hughes movie, and he was just standing outside my window with a boombox, being like, 'I want to date you!'' Swift said, adding: 'This is sort of what I've been writing songs about; what I've wanted to happen to me since I was a teenager.' Kelce replied: 'And I was sitting there at the Eras Tour listening to every single one of those songs, like, 'I know what she wants me to do'.' It's all too easy to write this off as saccharine celebrity nonsense because, away from a Hughes film, these are the kinds of stories that could only happen to two incredibly attractive, wealthy, and famous people. They already exist in another realm, so of course, their romantic relationships will be just as otherworldly. Why wouldn't we mere mortals be cynical of that amid all of the ghosting, catfishing, and general disappointment that make up the modern dating landscape? Consider Dua Lipa and Callum Turner, another celebrity couple whose love for one another couldn't be more apparent, both on social media (take a look at Lipa's feed) and in paparazzi photos (check out those snaps of the pair canoodling in front of the Eiffel Tower). Or Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis, who recently went viral for being captured dancing together at a Backstreet Boys concert. Part of me wants to squirm and recoil at all this, to dismiss it all as empty showmanship designed to make us resentful about our objectively inferior lives. But another part of me is a little less jaded and thinks that these over-the-top, incredibly public displays of romance are actually exactly what we need to see more of right now. Dating has never had worse PR – just ask anyone single. There are far too many stories of regret, heartbreak, and shattered expectations. But pessimism serves none of us. So perhaps it's time to challenge our inner cynic and look at stories like Swift's with a more hopeful, inspired gaze. We might live in different worlds, but love can happen to all of us. Who's to say it can't do so with a little pomp and pageantry?

Food at the woke Tesla Diner? The paper boxes probably taste better than some of the contents, says Joel Stein
Food at the woke Tesla Diner? The paper boxes probably taste better than some of the contents, says Joel Stein

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Food at the woke Tesla Diner? The paper boxes probably taste better than some of the contents, says Joel Stein

The world's first Tesla Diner opened in West Hollywood last month, on a Monday at 4.20pm. That is, according to stoners everywhere, the time of day at which one is supposed to smoke marijuana, which perhaps tells you all you need to know about how Elon Musk expects people to operate his self-driving Teslas. Four days after its opening, I'm driving to meet my 16-year-old son there. Despite all the Trump-heiling and USAID-cutting and subsequent Tesla car burnings, Elon Musk has built his first diner/recharging station in one of the most liberal corners of one of the most liberal cities in America. When we arrive at 9.30pm, it's mayhem. 'I think this is now the most dangerous neighbourhood in Los Angeles,' my son says about what is normally a pleasant stretch of the city. Teslas are queuing around two blocks. Over the blare of Tesla horns, Tesla owners scream out of their Tesla windows at each other, and especially at the staff trying to manage the parking-lot entrances. People weave through the crowd jammed into the lot, recording everything on their smartphones as if they were war reporters. Eventually we find my friend Igor, who lives a few blocks away, standing in a very long line. An Elon Musk fan (who has kept that fact quiet recently), he has been excited since the project was announced seven years ago and has watched the diner and its 80 charging stations slowly being built over the past 18 months, turning his neighbourhood into the world's premier Tesla tourist attraction. Now Igor surveys the Mad Max chaos around us and says, 'As a local resident, I'm horrified.' One of the challenges was finding a chef. Suzanne Goin, who runs all the food at the Hollywood Bowl, said no – and then exchanged her Tesla for an electric BMW. Wolfgang Puck, the famous Austrian chef, declined. When Walter Manzke, the Michelin-starred chef of LA restaurant République, told the New York Times that the diner sounded 'exciting', the online backlash was so furious, he quickly backtracked. When those queueing on the sidewalk are told there is a three-hour wait, most of them don't leave. Igor tells me that if you're driving a Tesla, which I am, you can park in a charging station and order food from the screen in your car. But those parking spots are all full, too. I've never seen anyone literally jump up and down with excitement until Igor spots a Tesla exiting the lot. I grab the lone empty Supercharger spot in the parking lot/drive-in movie theatre. We plug in the car and giddily order £95 worth of food from the dashboard screen (you can also order inside on screens that look just like Tesla dashboards). The charging is so fast that my car is filled in ten minutes. Half an hour later a guy approaches with two bags of food. He is not, as promised in Musk postings on X, a woman on roller-skates or a robot, which are the two main male-fantasy ways to have food delivered. But we do not want to eat in our car. We have come here to see the Tesla Diner. Luckily, the woman at the door lets us past the red velvet ropes keeping back the angry crowd. The reason, she explains, was that we were nice, as opposed to screaming at her. Inside, it's pretty cool. In 2023, Musk promised the diner would be 'Grease meets The Jetsons with Supercharging' and that's exactly how it looks. The circular chrome retro-futuristic structure was designed by Stantec, the Canadian architecture company that built the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. It looks a bit like Pizza Planet from the Toy Story movies. The white spiral staircase is sort-of futuristic, though the much-hyped humanoid Optimus robot prototypes that Tesla is developing, displayed behind glass, feel a bit Hard Rock Cafe. The robot dishing out popcorn has finished up for the day, which is a surprise since I did not know robots had time off. But this is very much a union town. The upstairs closes at 11pm, which seems weak for a '24-hour diner' (especially since its wraparound deck offers a great view of LA). It transpires that service is 24 hours only for Tesla drivers who order on the app, from their cars. For everyone else doors open at 6am and close at midnight. But the most surprising aspect, considering Musk's rants against transgender rights (despite the fact that Vivian Jenna Wilson, one of his 14 known children, is trans) are the bathrooms. All of them are marked 'gender neutral'. This is a woke diner. The food is sourced from bakeries, dairies and farms that are within the charging range of a Tesla (about 350 miles). The chef who eventually took the job is someone I know called Eric Greenspan. He responded to my email a few weeks before the diner opened by writing the most ominous of messages: 'Hey, Joel. Good to hear from you. I've got no comment on that project currently, but it certainly seems like a cool place. Looking forward to checking it out when it opens.' His food, which I've enjoyed before in forms from grilled cheese to Peking duck delivery, is even more underwhelming. It comes in paper boxes that look like Tesla Cybertrucks and probably taste better than some of the contents. The tuna melt (£10.50) is great, the strawberry shake (£6) is nicely packed with real berries, the Tesla Burger (£10) is OK. The rest is awful. The Lime Rickey soda (£6) is flat. After one bite of the egg sandwich on a buttermilk waffle (£9), Igor declares: 'This should be sent to Mars.' Is the impossibly flavourless waffle raw? You would return it if you'd bought it at a corner shop while you were really stoned. Musk had demanded that all the dishes be 'epic', which these definitely are not. The 'Epic Bacon' is in fact simply 'bacon'. Most of our fries are left untouched, along with all of that Lime Rickey soda. But no one inside seems to care. Teens happily crayon their version of the future Tesla on their placemats. The nice couple sitting next to us, one of whom teaches special-needs kids, own two Teslas and buy up all the merch they can, including a wind-up Tesla destined to be played with in the classroom. The most surprising thing is the lack of protesters. A few had been there earlier, but they were overwhelmed by the Tesla lovers. Sure, Musk is feuding with Trump, but the enemy-of-my-enemy-is-my-friend theory falls apart when they're both cool with Nazis. The people enjoying their non-epic burgers and fries aren't excited about a diner. They are excited about optimism. For decades every sci-fi movie and TV show has been dystopian. Everyone I know in LA is sure they're leaving their kids a worse world. That's not what the Tesla Diner says. It says that drive-ins and burgers are the right direction. Clean energy. Huge metal trucks. Local ingredients. Robots making popcorn. Gender-neutral bathrooms. Driving home through West Hollywood, I pass a bunch of self-driving Waymo cars on the street, and food-delivery robots on the pavement. The future, for the first time in a while, felt like it might just be OK. Though I suspect a lot of what I am feeling comes from putting the Tesla Diner in my rear-view mirror.

LIZ JONES: ‘I've come to realise I am simply too good for the vast majority of men'
LIZ JONES: ‘I've come to realise I am simply too good for the vast majority of men'

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

LIZ JONES: ‘I've come to realise I am simply too good for the vast majority of men'

'I am not issuing this statement in defense [sic], nor in heartbreak. I am issuing it in power. In silk gloves and sharpened wit. I will not be engaging in performative forgiveness, nor am I interested in the optics of 'grace'. What Andy has done is not just humiliating – it is banal. Common. A man of ambition brought down by his own astonishing lack of imagination… I am not spiraling [sic], I am ascending. I don't cry for clowns…' So posted Megan Byron on Instagram of her husband's affair. He was filmed, remember, at a Coldplay concert in Boston, canoodling with his company's head of HR. The part that struck me most was where she describes her husband as 'banal', 'common' and lacking 'imagination'. Men who cheat, who make the lives we live foolish, believe, mistakenly, that the ability to lie and have multiple partners renders them virile, desirable, masculine. The opposite is true. It makes them ugly, small, destined to end up alone, doubtless penniless. The women they choose are generally inferior to us, the cheatee, because no woman of value would sleep with another woman's husband or partner. What man would risk losing Megan, who is clearly funny, intelligent and strong? She is already taking ownership of what now, deservedly, belongs to her, and consulting lawyers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store