John Melendez

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John Melendez
Born (1965-10-04) October 4, 1965 (age 55)[1]
Other namesStuttering John[1]
Occupation
  • Radio personality
  • comedian
  • singer
  • actor
  • writer
  • announcer
  • podcaster
Years active1988–present
Spouse(s)Suzanna Keller (m. 1997–2012)
Children3

John Edward Melendez (born October 4, 1965), also known as "Stuttering John," is an American radio personality, comedian, singer, actor, television writer, announcer, and podcast host.

He is best known for being on The Howard Stern Show from 1988 to 2004. Initially working as an intern, Melendez became known for asking celebrities impertinent questions at events and press conferences with his stuttering. He left the show to become the announcer on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and also worked on Leno's later shows. In April 2018, he launched The Stuttering John Podcast.

Early life[]

Melendez grew up in Massapequa, New York on Long Island and attended Plainedge High School.[1][2][3] Melendez was born to a Puerto Rican father and a Danish mother. According to Melendez, he began to stutter when he was in the second grade as a result of psychological mistreatment from his father after he witnessed an argument between his parents.[4] He attended Plainedge High School, where he was picked on by the neighborhood bullies because of his stuttering.[4]

In 1988, Melendez attended New York University's film school and belonged to a band called "Rock Slide." His college roommate, comedian Mitch Fatel, was on the verge of quitting his internship with The Howard Stern Show, when Melendez asked him for a recommendation for an internship there. The show's producer, Gary Dell'Abate, mentioned Melendez's stuttering to Howard Stern who, without seeing him and even before he was interviewed, told the producer to hire him.[5]

Career[]

1988–2004: The Howard Stern Show[]

On Stern's show, Melendez's primary role was answering phones and screening listener calls before they were allowed on the air. At the time of his joining, the show had just added Washington, D.C., as its third market in addition to New York City and Philadelphia.

Over time, Melendez became known for segments in which he asked celebrities confrontational questions at red carpet events, functions, promotional appearances, and press conferences. The puerile questions—written by Howard Stern, Fred Norris, and Jackie Martling—centered around a given celebrity's private life and were premised on the idea that they would not want to look bad by refusing an interview from someone who stuttered. Melendez sported long hair and metal T-shirts, asking questions by reading them from a sheet of paper. As he became better known, he occasionally wore a disguise consisting of an overcoat, fedora, and fake mustache. His interviews were characterized by punchline-free "joke" questions, such as asking actress Melanie Griffith how her father, Andy, was.

The absurdity of the questions Melendez asked was often amplified by the fact that he himself appeared to lack common pop culture knowledge and often did not even seem to know who the subjects of his interview were or why they were famous. Melendez would thus frequently be unaware of why his questions would provoke such angry reactions, such as when he asked Ally Sheedy if she had vomited lately, unaware that the actress suffered from bulimia. Some celebrities were a personal target of Stern's, such as Ted Williams, who was interviewed by Melendez because Stern disapproved of athletes charging money for autographs. Celebrities would often react angrily, but other times, they would take the questions in good humor.

Melendez notably interviewed Gennifer Flowers, Ringo Starr, and the Dalai Lama.[6] At Gennifer Flowers' news conference playing the 'Clinton Tapes', he asked her if she planned to sleep with any other candidates before the election, to which she reacted by laughing.[7] He asked the Dalai Lama if anyone ever greeted him with "Hello Dalai!", in a joking reference to the play and movie; the Dalai Lama's translator whispered the translation to the Dalai Lama, who chuckled. Another time Melendez interviewed Debbie Gibson about losing an award to Wilson Phillips, to which she jokingly agreed with his idea that "the fat one would eat the statue." Melendez also provided comic interest with his misadventures, poor grammar, and sloppy pronunciation.[8]

National exposure[]

Melendez started receiving national exposure in the early 1990s[8] as Stern's syndicated morning radio show acquired more markets (including Los Angeles and Cleveland) and particularly from June 1994 when its condensed version began airing nightly on E!: Entertainment Television, a basic cable network with national coverage in the United States. In 1994, Melendez signed a record contract with Atlantic Records and released his self-titled album with a music video broadcast on MTV's Headbangers Ball.[6] That year, he was being paid $20,000 annually by the Stern show, which had 15 million listeners.[6]

During his 15-year run as Stern's employee, Melendez also starred in the Off-Broadway show Tony n' Tina's Wedding where he met his future wife, Suzanna. He appeared in such films as Airheads, Meet Wally Sparks, Dude, Where's My Car?, and Osmosis Jones, as well as Howard Stern's film Private Parts. He has also appeared on television in episodes of Wings, Baywatch Nights, and the 2003 United States version of the reality series I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!.[3]

Melendez was also the protagonist of some of the show's more outrageous moments. In 2001, during A.J. Benza's appearance, Melendez got slapped in the face by Benza who did not appreciate the incessant lampooning of his failed late-night show, seeing Melendez as the main culprit. The on-air slap prompted extended fracas and resulted in Benza being permanently banned from Stern's show.

Throughout the early part of 2002, Melendez and WXRK afternoon deejay Lee Mroszak (aka "Crazy Cabbie") had numerous on-air spats, which were used by Stern as fodder for multiple segments on the show. Their feud eventually culminated in a boxing match scheduled for Friday morning May 31, 2002, at Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City and was promoted on the show as "The Flunky versus the Junkie" with 2,500 tickets going on sale for $100 each. The 7 a.m. fight, essentially an extended segment on the show which itself was broadcast from around the ring that morning, was set for five two-minute rounds with a two-minute break in between each round. It went the distance, with the 175 lb Melendez winning over the 262 lb Cabbie by unanimous decision.

Following a guest appearance on The Tonight Show to promote I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! in 2003, Melendez received an offer from Jay Leno to become the late-night show's New York 'correspondent' who would ask celebrities questions on the red carpet, similar to one of his roles on the Stern show. Melendez claimed that he turned down the offer because he could not get a private conversation with Stern to ask him about it. Stern later claimed how "lame" an idea it was for Leno to reuse Melendez the way he did (in a less edgy way).

In parallel with his duties on the Stern show in the morning, Melendez got a daily afternoon show on New York City's WXRK (The Howard Stern Show flagship station) from noon to 1 pm called Out to Lunch, consisting mostly of taking musical requests by e-mail and playing them. The show was canceled on August 21, 2003, with Stern turning it into a 45-minute segment at the end of his live broadcast that day by having WXRK program director Robert Cross (aka Chuck Roast) come in and break the bad news on the air to Melendez.[9]

Leaving the show[]

In February 2004, the New York Post revealed that Melendez had been offered the announcer position on The Tonight Show while Stern's show was on vacation. Many perceived the move as an attempt by Leno to attract a younger demographic. Melendez's offer, which was made without Stern's knowledge, prompted a rift between Stern and Leno. Stern berated Leno on his show for weeks on end, with insults such as "To an 18- to 25-year-old male, Jay Leno is gay. He might as well put a dress on," as well as accusations that Leno was "ripping him off."[10]

Following Melendez's departure, Stern organized an on-air contest to find his replacement. Billed as "Win John's Job" (much like "Win Jackie's Money" after writer Jackie Martling walked out), the contest resulted in the hiring of Sal Governale (aka "Sal the Stockbroker") and Richard Christy. Although for several years, L.A. radio disc-jockey "Scary Gary" (from 97.1 KSLX, which played Stern's radio show in Southern California) did Stuttering John style interviews that Stern would play on his show. Also, in his latter years on the Stern show, John had become too recognizable for the amount of celebrity interviews he became niche-famous for.

Comments since departure and relationship with Stern[]

On February 27, 2008, more than four years removed from his time on The Howard Stern Show, Melendez was interviewed over the phone by Adam Carolla on his radio show with discussion of Melendez's 15 years as Stern's employee dominating the conversation. Carolla brought up the fact that on-air personnel on radio shows, even long-running hit shows, earn very low salaries compared to the show's host and wondered what kind of money Melendez made considering he was down in the show's pecking order, behind Stern, Robin Quivers, Fred, Jackie, and Gary. Melendez revealed that his first salary on The Howard Stern Show in 1990 was $10,000 per year before adding that, much to his disappointment, he only got an additional $10,000 per year once the show began to be broadcast on E! in 1994.[11]

Asked explicitly by Carolla if, considering that the station manager Tom Chiusano would not increase his salary, he ever thought, hoped or expected that Stern (who earned more than $20 million per year) would "kick something down to [him]," Melendez answered:

Of course, Adam. I mean, listen, you know, I love Howard and all, but my biggest beef has always been on that show that, you know, they just don't take care of people financially... That bothered me... Well, you know what, this is the thing, Howard always said that he doesn't want to get involved in people's salaries, but you know what, man, at some point I think you do... I didn't look at Howard bitterly then, but the only problem I had was, then when you would go out and do these ancillary gigs he would then be angry that you're doing them. And that's where it becomes a problem, because in other words he's saying: 'I'm not gonna pay you, I'm not responsible for your pay, but if you do these other gigs I'm not very happy with you to do them'.[12]

In response, Stern devoted a 30-minute tirade to Melendez's comments with Carolla, calling the former employee a "no-talent ingrate" who should stick to holding up the mug on The Tonight Show, "I didn't have a beef with him before, but I do now. He's delusional. He can go fuck himself. I officially want nothing more to do with John. I've had it with him, and he's a talentless fuck. All he did was stutter. He just asked questions that we wrote for him."[13]

Commenting on Melendez's claim that Stern did not like him doing side gigs away from Howard's show such as stand-up, rock music and writing books. Stern retorted, "That's because they were horrible and he was slapping my name on them." He also touched on the fact the Melendez's then-wife Suzanna and Stern's then-fiancée Beth are friends by saying he does not want them phoning each other anymore: "I'm going to have a talk with Beth about that". Stern also had choice words for Carolla over what he saw as a fellow radio host's attempt to get Melendez riled up: "He calls me 'Stern', and I'm not sure what that's about".[13]

2004–2014: Jay Leno's shows[]

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno[]

Melendez debuted on The Tonight Show on March 29, 2004, taking over for Edd Hall.[14] On the show, he was identified simply as "John Melendez" as opposed to "Stuttering John."

In late September 2004, only six months after Melendez joined the show, NBC announced that Leno would be succeeded by Conan O'Brien in 2009. Throughout his first run on the Tonight Show, Melendez regularly appeared in the show's comedy sketches and did correspondent pieces.

The Jay Leno Show[]

In September 2009, Melendez reunited with Leno and former Tonight bandleader Kevin Eubanks as a member of the writing staff on The Jay Leno Show.[15] Confirmation of his status on Leno's new prime time show came later than that of Eubanks, weeks after the end of Leno's tenure on The Tonight Show, which led to speculation that he would not appear at all. Melendez's ambiguous job status prompted a sarcastic job offer from his former boss Stern.[16]

When asked about Melendez's new role, Leno stated that Melendez would appear in comedy segments during the show and that the new show would not have a studio announcer. He described his interplay with Melendez on Tonight as "awkward," saying "I'd throw to Kevin Eubanks, and I'd throw to John, and I realized that my guy is Eubanks."[17]

Return of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno[]

With the return of Leno's Tonight Show in March 2010, Melendez continued in the writing role, which he had previously performed on The Jay Leno Show. Melendez did not return as an announcer on the second incarnation of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (the job went to Wally Wingert) and was employed as a staff writer and occasional on-air segment host until Leno's departure from The Tonight Show on February 6, 2014.

2014–present: Other projects[]

On November 4, 2015, Melendez announced that he had become the executive producer and an on-air contributor to The Stephanie Miller Show, a progressive radio talk show.[18] His role was later reduced to one hour per week on Fridays, and as of fall 2016, he is no longer part of the show.

Melendez announced in 2017 that he would be running for U.S. Senate for California against incumbent Dianne Feinstein for the 2018 election. It was later reported that he had withdrawn.[citation needed]

The Stuttering John Podcast and Trump prank call[]

In April 2018 he launched his new podcast, The Stuttering John Podcast. During Melendez's podcast on June 28, 2018, he prank-called the White House by pretending to be an assistant to Senator from New Jersey, Bob Menendez. Melendez ultimately received a call back from President Donald Trump as he was traveling on Air Force One. Melendez then impersonated Senator Menendez and had a four-minute conversation focusing on immigration reform and the Supreme Court vacancy. Notably, President Trump was congratulatory regarding the outcome of Senator Menendez's ethics lawsuit.[19] The White House has confirmed the security breach.[20]

On July 2, 2018 Melendez announced that he had retained lawyer Michael Avenatti, to represent him in relation to the prank call after being visited by Secret Service agents over the previous weekend.[21]

Published work[]

Melendez's book Easy for You to Say was released in October 2018.[22]

Personal life[]

After moving to California in 2004 to work on The Tonight Show, Melendez lived in Calabasas with his wife Suzanna Keller and their three children. The couple filed for separation in October 2011 and divorced in 2012.[23]

Releases[]

CDs

Actor

Writer

  • The Howard Stern Show
  • The Howard Stern Radio Show
  • One, Two, Many (2008)[25]
  • The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (2010–2014)

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Stuttering John Biography. Archived 2009-04-13 at the Wayback Machine AOL Music. Retrieved on 2008-03-04.
  2. ^ Controversial personalities who stutter. Archived 2008-04-18 at the Wayback Machine Minnesota State University, 1998-10-12. Retrieved on 2008-03-02.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b John Melendez. National Stuttering Association. Retrieved on 2008-03-02.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Comics". Archived from the original on 2019-10-03. Retrieved 2020-03-19.
  5. ^ "Stern Spotlight: Stuttering John - Day 1. 04/14/08. 6:00am". marksfriggin.com. Retrieved 2008-09-25.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Richard Lei, Nothing's Out of the Question, Washington Post, April 28, 1994
  7. ^ larmcc (22 April 2008). "Classic Stuttering John Interviews" – via YouTube.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b "H-H-H-HERE'S JOHNNY! ASK A STUPID QUESTION, AND HOWARD STERN WILL HIRE YOU AS STUTTERING JOHN". Entertainment Weekly. 16 July 1993. Archived from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  9. ^ "MarksFriggin.com - Stern Show News - Archive".
  10. ^ "Stern Rails Against Leno for Lifting 'Stuttering John'". Fox News. February 24, 2004. Archived from the original on 2012-10-26. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
  11. ^ Stuttering John on the Adam Carolla Show; February 27, 2008
  12. ^ Stuttering John on the Adam Carolla Show; February 27, 2008
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b Stern stuttering mad at John. Archived 2008-03-09 at the Wayback Machine New York Post, 2008-03-03. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.
  14. ^ The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: John Melendez as Announcer. Archived 2006-09-07 at the Wayback Machine NBC.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-02.
  15. ^ A new 'Leno' taking shape Variety. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.
  16. ^ Howard Stern: If Jay Leno Doesn't Hire 'Stuttering John' Melendez Back, I'll Rehire Him. The BlogTalkRadio Blog. Retrieved on 2009-06-08.
  17. ^ Jay Leno Q&A: 'The Jay Leno Show' Will Not Be Another 'Tonight Show'. Archived 2009-09-12 at the Wayback Machine Starpulse Entertainment News. Retrieved on 2009-09-07.
  18. ^ Stuttering John Melendez announces new job as Executive Producer and on-air contributor to The Stephanie Miller Show. (Retrieved 11-04-2015 Official Twitter account)
  19. ^ Tatum, Sophie; Diaz, Daniella; Ganim, Sara (June 29, 2018). "Comedian claims to have successfully prank called Trump". CNN. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
  20. ^ Nelson, Louis (June 29, 2018). "White House scrambles to figure out how prankster got on the phone with Trump". Politico. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
  21. ^ "Stormy Daniels's attorney picks up a new client: 'Stuttering John,' who prank-called Trump last week". Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-07-03.
  22. ^ Melendez, John (October 2018). Easy For You To Say. ISBN 978-1947856196.
  23. ^ Stuttering John getting divorced;Examiner, May 7, 2012
  24. ^ Luxoflux. True Crime: New York City. Activision. Scene: Pause menu credits, 4:30:29 in, VOICE TALENT.
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b Orndorf, Brian (April 17, 2008). "National Lampoon Presents: One, Two, Many". DVD Talk.

External links[]


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