NEW YORK -- Howard Stern began his new satellite radio show Monday by putting to rest rumors that he got married to his longtime girlfriend, model Beth Ostrosky.\n"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.\nStern has promised everything from stripper poles to live sex on his new show.\nHe used only a moderate amount of swearing and said his show was more about ideas than the use of the f-word. Cursing, he said, would be part of the natural progression of speech.\n"I feel this is a culmination of dreams for me," Stern said in an on-air news conference.\n"The only limit is our mind," he said. \nAt the time his October 2004 deal with Sirius was announced, the company said it could be worth up to $500 million during five years to headline two Sirius channels.\nStern broadcast his last FM radio show Dec. 16 as thousands of fans gathered outside his New York City studio.\nAt 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.\nStern also introduced George Takei as his new on-air personality. Takei, who played Sulu in "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.\n"The revolution has begun" in new radio, Takei said Monday.\nEven 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.\nStern'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.\nStern had frequently tested and sparred with the regulatory Federal Communications Commission during his 25-year run on the public airwaves, often having his morning show interrupted by censors.\nWeeks 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.\n"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."\nOn Monday, caller after caller wished Stern luck.\n"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."\nDuring the on-air news conference, Stern was asked how he felt about listeners having to pay to hear his new show.\n"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."\nOne guest who joined Stern on Monday was the shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge, who Clear Channel fired two years ago. Stern recruited the DJ, who legally changed his name from Todd Clem, to host an afternoon drive time show on Channel 101, one of two Sirius channels managed by Stern.
Howard Stern returns to airwaves with promise of strippers, moderate cursing
Sirius Satellite Radio welcomes shock jock to air
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