Friday, 6 June 2025

ARTICLE: Radio Ga Ga - Private Parts


In his pomp, crude dude radio personality Howard Stern was a force to be reckoned with. In a twenty-year run with WXRK, his syndicated radio show drew in 20 million listeners at its peak. His crass antics would be a frequent source of juvenile myth and controversy. This was back when the media monoculture meant something, however. Now, in his seventies, Stern is still a decent draw on subscription-based satellite radio station, Sirius, a move made to avoid the ever-watching eye of the FCC and their broadcast regulations. Joe Rogan now rules the roost of somewhat problematic audio presenters, however, it’s difficult to see the existence of the latter without the presence of the former.

I became aware of Stern through pop culture osmosis. The DJ would turn up in shows like The Simpsons (1989 – present) and The Critic (1994-1995) without any real context of his radio controversies. His unconventional appearance and minor ridicule on certain American shows were all I knew of him at the time. Then came Private Parts. Betty Thomas’ 1997 comedy biopic of Howard Stern was one of the mid-level 90s oddities that occupied my brain space in my formative years.  Private Parts, alongside Serial Mom and The People versus Larry Flint, were movies I gleefully indulged in due to the advent of satellite TV entering the house. I watched Private Parts before I knew that Betty Thomas was the director of Stern’s quasi-fictional biography and The Brady Bunch Movie, the latter being a delightfully subversive and underappreciated comedy.  

As part of my mini-marathon of movies centred around radio, I watched Private Parts to see if it held up. Does something like a Howard Stern biopic fit into today’s fractured media era? Shock Jock Howard Stern was far more of a prominent entity back then than he is now. Then again, the idea of radio shock jocks a la Stern feels passe in an era of Andrew Tate and Joe Rogan. So, watching this nearly 30-year-old film gave me a feeling of discombobulation.

Private Parts is a product of its time of a character who now feels like a relic. Watching Stern descending from the rafters as "Fartman" during the MTV Music Awards doesn’t have the same allure as perhaps watching the scene as an adolescent. By the summer of 1997, South Park unleashed a different wave of vulgarness. Far more unrepentant in tone and by 1999 (with a movie in tow) having far more to say. Private Parts takes a lot of time to establish Stern as a far more sympathetic creature than considered by his detractors. This softening of Sterns's edges helps slot himself into a typical biopic plot. However, it feels odd, even possibly disingenuous at first, to see Stern exclaim that he’s a misunderstood artist. Particularly when considering this is a DJ who openly mocked pop star Selena, days after her fatal shooting, causing widespread controversy two years before.  

However, with history written by the winners and Stern, with his power of final script approval, Len Blum’s screenplay happily portrays him as a misunderstood loser. Narrating himself as a near-do-well that no one believed in. With his gangly frame and rockstar hairstyle doing much to hide a more vulnerable young man who almost stumbled upon his success while obtaining a very understanding wife at the same time. However, when reading articles about Stern and the making of this movie, many of the film’s key players have a particular view of the gangly shock jock. At first, they are indifferent and hostile due his personality on his radio show. However, after interacting with the man, their perspective is transformed, as they can now see him as a nice guy with a bad-boy persona.

Because of this, Stern’s sympathy angle gains a fair amount of weight, with the film’s more dramatic scenes having a good dose of compassion. One of the film’s stand-out scenes is Stern making jokes on air about his wife’s miscarriage. In the previous scene, the couple were happy to crack wise confidentially, as part of their private healing process. Stern’s need to turn his own life into content at that moment raises the conflict between the personal and the person that has travelled throughout my mini-marathon of movies involving radio. However, the swift quashing of that issue, along with the absence of Sterns's more contentious moments expressed on his show, reducing much of his antics to juvenile horniness, highlights that Stern, who rejected a multitude of scripts before settling on the one which got made, only wants to grapple with the battle of free speech on his terms.

But while Private Parts’ humanism of Stern feels more shocking than its protagonist’s profanities, this may be due to the outright psychopaths who try and ape people like Stern these days. Today’s media thrives even more on directing people towards some outrageous yet needless controversy. The scenes focusing on how Howard Stern's radio persona affects those close to him are fascinating, as they argue that Stern cares about those around him. This cannot always be said about the controversial industrial complex to the social media superhighway these days. When Stern states he is merely misunderstood, the film builds a case that there may be truth to the claim. 

Furthermore, Private Parts is still funny in a juvenile, nineties way.  Stern is a relic, but he and the film can set up a decent guffaw or giggle, partly because Private Parts is a looser comedy in terms of theme than the comedies released now. Where jokes nowadays are funnelled down even more narrow parameters than in the 90s. But much of this stems from Betty Thomas' decent comic directing chops, while Stern, for his worth, is a watchable comic leading man. Private Parts may have sanded some of Sterns's sharper edges, and the lesbian sequences go beyond sophomoric and more into the realms of Neanderthal. Yet the film captures that element of Stern that makes him an engaging figure.

Strangely, perhaps the most notable thing about Private Parts now is that it’s the breakout role for one Paul Giamatti who has a fantastic role as Kenny "Pig Vomit" Rushton. A composite of different network executives who encountered Stern during his life, including one real-life character he disliked immensely, Rushton is Private Parts’ unfortunate “Walter Peck” character. In hindsight, Rushton’s attempted mission to contain Stern is understandable. And when you consider what Stern has said on air in the past, it’s not surprising, but this biopic portrays Howard Stern as more morally righteous than on his actual radio show. Private Parts had already done the groundwork. Providing sympathy to Stern through Thomas' direction. Meanwhile, Giamatti’s performance has him oozing with smarminess, making him the perfect antagonist to get under the skin. What Pig Vomit wants to do makes sense, yet we call him Pig Vomit because he's mean to Howard.

 

Much like Talk Radio and Pump up the Volume, Private Parts’ lead argues for freedom of speech on the airwaves. But while Barry Champlain and Hard Harry used provocation to advocate something greater than themselves, Stern’s war of words with Pig Vomit seems to be for him to make dick and fart jokes with impunity. Partway through their dispute, Stern and his co-hosts Robin Quivers and Fred Norris (both played by their real counterparts) re-enact his “match game” skit: A sketch which has the team skirting around FCC rules on obscene language by using words which have double meanings implied through tone.  It's an amusing use of language, smartly utilised by the man whose alter ego is Fartman. Yet it’s interesting to look at this with a 2025 lens. Watching Stern bending the rules while avoiding accountability, wherein the film Robin, a Black woman is consequently fired after his antics, hits differently now. The internet is rife with copycat edgy podcast tryhards inadvertently doing their best Stern impressions with none of the wit but all the intention of punching down on their perceived opponents. All for the laugh and none of the accountability. In addition to this, Stern is also known for a car crash interview with Different Strokes star Dana Plato, who took her life a day later. Private Parts highlights its banter as merely the freedom for its misunderstood star to have some shits and giggles. For the most it is. However, this only enhances the erasure of the DJ's darker controversies, leaving a strange taste in the mouth.

But the modern-day flattening view of media doesn’t wholly upend what is an amusing feature. The Brady Bunch Movie leans more effectively into Thomas' sensibilities as a comic director, as its protagonists are chirpy, friendly cyphers, who are thrown into a then hyper-ironic, deeply cynical decade. There’s simply a lot of fun to be had there. But Private Parts holds its own as a comic trifle. It understands why Stern became successful, particularly in the 90s. Stern and Quivers are entertaining in playing tweaked versions of themselves, while Giamatti has a blast stealing scenes as if he had a starving orphanage to feed. There are plenty of gags, and the timing is solid. And yet, watching Stern (dressed as Fartman) in the film's opening, he walks backstage at an award ceremony while catching poisonous looks from a crowd of famous celebs. He looks around, somewhat confused as to why such a humble DJ would gain so much scorn. But this is Howard Stern, the self-proclaimed king of all media, a man whose persona has been buffed and shined for his Hollywood biopic. Private Parts showcases Stern as a goofy man who prides himself on saying what's on everyone's mind. However, it’s also a film that knows when its star should keep quiet.  


Private Parts can be found on various streaming platforms

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