Howard Stern Interview 1997 (Private Parts) Brian Linehan's City Lights

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • In this interview from 1997, the tables are turned and shock-jock and self-proclaimed "King of All Media," Howard Stern, answers the questions posed by Brian Linehan about his film, Private Parts. He discusses his producer Ivan Reitman, his director Betty Thomas, Hollywood culture and his marriage.
    From 1974 to 2000, Canada’s Brian Linehan conducted thousands of in-depth interviews with the greatest actors and directors from over 60 years of film history. His programs City Lights and Linehan have not been seen since they first aired and are now available for the first time for licensing. Linehan, a stylishly gifted broadcaster, meticulously did all his own research and that, coupled with his knowledge and passion about film and film-making, puts him in a class all by himself.
    With 20,000 hours of music footage spanning 90 years and thousands of hours of in-depth interviews with the 20th century’s icons of Film and Television, Politics, Comedy, Literature, Art, Science, Fashion and Sports, Reelin’ In The Years Productions is now the World’s Premier Source For Footage Of Musical Artists, Entertainers & History Makers.
    reelinintheyear...
    Note: these clips are available on CZcams for producers, directors, researchers and clearance companies for potential use in their projects. Our website on the screen is to protect the footage from being used without our consent and so industry professionals can find us to properly license the footage.
    Brian Linehan, who passed away in 2004, left his entire estate to The Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation to provide training, work opportunities and promotion for young actors of exceptional talent. All of the income of his Foundation is donated to not-for-profit institutions for that purpose. In the decade since his death, recipients of the Foundation’s support have included extraordinary young actors affiliated with the Canadian Film Centre, The National Screen Institute of Canada, the Stratford Shakespearean Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival, which, since Brian's passing, has preserved and housed Brian's personal archive and tape library.

Komentáře • 59

  • @angelzap100
    @angelzap100 Před 4 lety +31

    For those showing disrespect towards the late Brian Linehan, he was a brilliant interviewer. He was famous for his thorough research on his guests, and for getting sincere responses from them. His show ran for 23 years. It only ended because he died of a serious disease.

    • @Cabledeluz1977
      @Cabledeluz1977 Před 3 lety +3

      What serious disease did he die of? AIDS?

    • @robinmarshall5704
      @robinmarshall5704 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Cabledeluz1977 Blood cancer: non-Hodgkin's lymphoma

    • @leanneevangelista3361
      @leanneevangelista3361 Před 3 lety

      I didn't mind him

    • @user-pp1on4fk7d
      @user-pp1on4fk7d Před rokem

      Oh be quiet!

    • @sampson3121
      @sampson3121 Před 4 měsíci +1

      When you take chances sometimes you rub some the wrong way.
      It's better than the same interview with the same BS fluff questions.
      When he hit he really connected with the people he interviewed.
      Got the best out of them because they didn't know where he was going until you saw the light in their eyes with bewilderment because he is actually having an intelligent conversation with them.

  • @laurenl5843
    @laurenl5843 Před 3 lety +9

    Brian Linehan was such a great interviewer. How I miss his well researched fascinating interviews. What a talented man. Gone too soon. I'm grateful to have found these on CZcams. Thank you!

  • @kanealson5200
    @kanealson5200 Před 6 lety +13

    I don't know how Brian Linehan did what he did but it was fascinating. He had the ability to draw the interviewee out completely and a sort of catharsis happens. He had this effect on almost everyone he interviewed. They talk and reveal the most deep parts of themselves and then feel glad they did. Something real happened that you never saw anywhere else. He was like a magician who possessed some sort of empathic receptivity which might have come natural. Also, he really knew his subject before the interview by doing research. He was absolutely brilliant. Very sad that he's no longer with us. I watched him as a child as he was a mainstay on Canadian television for decades and rightfully so.

  • @aneeksaha7068
    @aneeksaha7068 Před 3 lety +5

    Great show, beautiful sax intro at the beginning.

  • @Dvp1169
    @Dvp1169 Před 3 lety +8

    Brian Linehan could teach the interviewers of today how it's done♥️

  • @jimwoodman8158
    @jimwoodman8158 Před 3 lety +2

    These are two fascinating individuals. Brian Linehan is a smart, knowledgeable, sincere interviewer, and Howard Stern is thoughtful, intelligent and honest interviewee.

  • @ironpirites
    @ironpirites Před 6 lety +7

    Wonderful. I'm glad these Linehan things are available now. Howard looks so relaxed in the afterglow of Private Parts. I see the old clips of him and Robin and roll my eyes at him saying how ugly he is. He was a good looking guy at this age and the younger Robin was so cute. Brian Linehan often makes me cringe with his style of interviewing but the interviews are almost always outstanding, and this one certainly was.

  • @twennywonn
    @twennywonn Před 6 lety +18

    It was a great interview

  • @jcmilosmith4622
    @jcmilosmith4622 Před 3 lety +5

    Linehan confidence was in the preparation and he was the confident ever

    • @jcmilosmith4622
      @jcmilosmith4622 Před 3 lety +1

      Linehan's confidence was in the preparation and he therefore was the most confident interviewer ever.

  • @Skibble5150
    @Skibble5150 Před 5 lety +8

    Excellent interview.

  • @embracinglogic1744
    @embracinglogic1744 Před 5 lety +16

    I prefer this Howard Stern over the 2019 Howard Stern.

    • @Gustavo-xz8os
      @Gustavo-xz8os Před 3 lety +3

      So does everyone else who listened to his show

  • @aneeksaha7068
    @aneeksaha7068 Před 3 lety +2

    Great anchor, thanks for doing this

  • @pajamasflannel
    @pajamasflannel Před 6 lety +1

    I just saw a 35mm print of Eraserhead on a big screen. The audience applauded when it started and when it ended.

  • @user-pp1on4fk7d
    @user-pp1on4fk7d Před rokem

    When interviewer Brian Linehan asked a question, you forgot what the question was by the time he finished asking it!

  • @CanuckFluter
    @CanuckFluter Před 2 lety +1

    I hope someone will post linehan interviewing megan follows.

  • @aneeksaha7068
    @aneeksaha7068 Před 3 lety +3

    Best of luck for your movie career. I would punt on you succeeding according to my analysis

  • @HorrorLe1L
    @HorrorLe1L Před 4 lety +1

    Wow. All I can say 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @natalieps2387
    @natalieps2387 Před 5 lety +4

    It all sounds great with the test audiences. It wasnt a bomb but I'm surprised it made only 41 million worldwide . That surprised me bc he had 20 million listeners I thought the movie would have broke 100 million with the popularity howard had plus all his own publicity he did on his radio show for free . I def thought it was a good movie and funny and entertaining . Usually a movie overseas does really well sometimes as much or more than america. I dont know is 41 million good for 97. I think it did well on video after. What also surprises me is he didnt make an anniversary celebration for the 20 th anniversary of private parts . Maybe its wierd for him bc it's really a love story about him and allison and they broke up pretty soon after the movie . Hes remarried obviously to beth so its probably awkward to celebrate a movie that was about his first wife . Also he never did a part in a film again. Anyway the interviewer is really good and it was nice to see howard do a straight interview not all the schtick u see on leno or letterman .

    • @natalieps2387
      @natalieps2387 Před 4 lety +2

      @Just a pelican and his horse thanks. That movie cost that much to make ? Where did the 28 million go ? No special effects and not too much location. It did have a large soundtrack I'm sure that cost a good amount but still if u ever saw the late shift which was a movie made for hbo it looks kinda similar to this. I'm trying to figure what all that money went to. Didnt have a cast of high paid a list actors paul giamatti wasnt a name yet and mary mac wasnt a a lister and still isnt the rest was Howard's real life radio crew. It honestly looks like it could have been made on 10 million tops. Knowing howie he probably was paid a fortune for his own movie. Stern def didnt have international appeal as It made a paltry 1 million over seas. I guess the question is was this a movie that needed to be made ? A movie about a shock jock.? Radio is the lowest rung on the food chain. Plus shows u not much to watch it ends in 83 when his wife is about to have their first baby. Seems howard wants to bury this movie he has never had an anniversary thing for it .

    • @mr.butterworth
      @mr.butterworth Před 4 lety

      @Just a pelican and his horse films don’t need to make twice their budget to break even. They just need to make their money back, plus taxes. So figure a gross of anywhere between 100-125% return is breaking even. Deferred production costs could raise that higher, and whether they are guaranteed payments or not.

    • @kevvyd2128
      @kevvyd2128 Před 3 lety

      Im sure he said on air that he really wanted to release a proper dvd version with all the extra scenes and outtakes but whoever owns the rights didnt want to

  • @Gustavo-xz8os
    @Gustavo-xz8os Před 3 lety +3

    This interviewer was pretty good. Based on his pompous demeanor i thought he would be interrupting constantly but he let howard talk and asked solid questions

    • @Dvp1169
      @Dvp1169 Před 3 lety +6

      He's Canada's beloved Brian Linehan, best known for his meticulous preparation for interviews, all the obscure facts he knows about his subject. I miss him on television

    • @js2010ish
      @js2010ish Před 2 lety +1

      @@Dvp1169 The Narduwar of cinema perhaps

  • @shanemane4249
    @shanemane4249 Před 3 lety +1

    This movie is by far one of my favorite comedies. It was really well done.

  • @clee3133
    @clee3133 Před rokem

    This is an outstanding interview. Does anyone know why Stern didn't take the followup movie offers?

  • @aneeksaha7068
    @aneeksaha7068 Před 3 lety

    Genius as usual

  • @poppycock31185
    @poppycock31185 Před 3 lety +7

    Just when you thought Stern could not get any more monstrous looking it turns out that his eyes not only dart around non stop like a maniacal lizard but they are also so far apart that they are practically on the side of his head. What part of New York is Howard from again? Plum Island? 🤔😅

  • @BOBBYSOX86
    @BOBBYSOX86 Před rokem

    Where's Mancow's movie? Its long overdue.

  • @adamclark9004
    @adamclark9004 Před rokem +4

    Get over yourself howard the movie was good not great. He acts like it's the second coming of gone with the wind and he's an Oscar winning actor

  • @audio-agenda7221
    @audio-agenda7221 Před 4 lety +2

    The interviewer is Ralph's dad. You can tell by the berry in the exact spot on his face.

  • @estebancomulet
    @estebancomulet Před 2 lety

    Always found this film so strange. Just as you think it's building to something really interesting, and it's got a proper momentum, it ends...could've done with another 30 mins to see how far his career actually goes (not the way his actual career has gone now lol, interminable and unlistenable, but at least until the year when the film was made)...

  • @uniqe23
    @uniqe23 Před 4 měsíci

    This was about the time where the Howard Stern show was about to take off on the longest run 97-03 Era.

  • @aneeksaha7068
    @aneeksaha7068 Před 3 lety +3

    Brilliant as usual Howard. You would be having an IQ of 148 according to the Stanford Binet scale. It shows in the way and speed of your speech, because to talk so fast, your mind needs to work at the speed of light as well. These dialogues cannot be memorized, you have to think it on the spot.

  • @ASwagPecan
    @ASwagPecan Před rokem +2

    bad movie

  • @bean7039
    @bean7039 Před 4 lety +1

    Damn this interviewer is a straight up robot.

    • @ABCDuwachui
      @ABCDuwachui Před 3 lety +3

      He knew stern was full of shit

    • @user-pp1on4fk7d
      @user-pp1on4fk7d Před rokem

      When interviewer Brian Linehan asked a question, you forgot what the question was by the time he finished asking it!

  • @lilly4069
    @lilly4069 Před 4 lety +2

    That interviewer is bizarre

  • @paulk7390
    @paulk7390 Před 3 lety

    Horrible, same interview and questions as any other

    • @js2010ish
      @js2010ish Před 2 lety +2

      11:05 "same question as any interview" lol, yea right.

    • @sampson3121
      @sampson3121 Před 2 lety +3

      Stern thanked him sincerely for a great interview. I agree.
      Brain was the best

    • @user-pp1on4fk7d
      @user-pp1on4fk7d Před rokem

      ​@@sampson3121When interviewer Brian Linehan asked a question, you forgot what the question was by the time he finished asking it!

  • @ruling528
    @ruling528 Před rokem

    The book was great, the movie was crappola.