'Stuttering John,' of Howard Stern fame, sues Sirius XM

The former sidekick was suing because his likeness was used without his permission

NEW YORK (Reuters) - John Melendez, who became known as Stuttering John as a longtime sidekick to radio and television host Howard Stern, has sued Sirius XM Holdings Inc for using his name, likeness and voice without permission on channels dedicated to Stern.

Stocks In This Article:

HOWARD STERN COULD RECEIVE MAJOR PAYDAY WITH RENEWED CONTRACT: REPORT

Melendez, who left Stern’s radio show after more than 15 years in 2004 and became the announcer for NBC’s “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” accused Sirius of exploiting his celebrity to attract more listeners and advertising.

He said Sirius responded to his recent cease-and-desist letter by marginalizing his contributions to Stern’s show and threatening to take his current show, “The Stuttering John Podcast,” off its Pandora streaming service.

The complaint filed on Wednesday in Manhattan federal court seeks unspecified damages for Sirius’ airing of old recordings of Melendez on two channels dedicated to Stern, which Melendez said violated California law and his right of publicity.

Melendez said he averaged a $35,000 annual salary while working for Stern. His departure came just before Stern moved his show to Sirius from nationally syndicated radio.

HOWARD STERN STAYING AT SIRIUS XM ANOTHER FIVE YEARS

Sirius had no immediate comment. A lawyer for Melendez also had no immediate additional comment.

Melendez, who has had a speech impediment since childhood and got his Stuttering John moniker from Stern, became known for asking impertinent and outlandish questions in what he called “gotcha” interviews with celebrities and politicians.

He said his encounters with people like Billy Crystal, Ringo Starr and the Dalai Lama were beloved by his fans and fans of Stern, “a fact that is well-known” to Sirius.

1 WAY HOWARD STERN MAY BE MORE VALUABLE TO SIRIUS XM HOLDINGS NOW THAN EVER

Melendez estimated that more than 13,000 hours of “The Howard Stern Show” feature his voice, name and identity.

The case is Melendez v. Sirius XM Radio Inc, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 20-06620.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

Load more..