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Fartman

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Fartman is a fictional superhero , popularized and portrayed by American radio " shock jock " Howard Stern . The character first appeared in an issue of the National Lampoon humor magazine in the late 1970s (Vol. 2, No. 11, June, 1979, Page 28). A recorded version of the character also appeared on National Lampoon's White Album in 1979. Stern began using the character on The Howard Stern Show in the early 1980s. According to the trademark that Howard Stern filed for the character on October 16, 1992, he first used Fartman in July 1981, when Adam West was a guest on his show, to which he made an impromptu Fartman outfit in five minutes, although the original outfit contained a toilet seat necklace which Stern later discontinued from his motif.

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16-455: Fartman can refer to Fartman (Howard Stern) , a flatulent superhero Matshishkapeu , literally "Fart Man", in Innu mythology Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Fartman . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to

32-671: A glossy paper insert. In April 2006, the Howard Stern Film Festival took place at the Hudson Theatre in New York City , NY. While announcing the competition, Stern encouraged fans to make short films about not only the show and its cast, but popular bits and characters such as Fartman. Many films included Fartman, but while none of those were chosen as finalists, one submission did find a degree of success. Director Tammy Caplan's Fartman: Caught in

48-574: A Tight Ass stars Fartman and introduces the evil villain, Tight Ass, who has the ability to squeeze weapons from his ass. It also features a love interest for Fartman, the beautiful Labia Lips. The film was first chosen as a potential finalist in the festival, but later disqualified for using professional actors from the Screen Actors Guild . Following the festival, Fartman: Caught in a Tight Ass began airing on Howard TV , Howard Stern’s iN Demand Cable Channel as part of their “Best of

64-481: A one time character for WrestleMania , but he and Howard Stern had different views on how to show him. Stern wanted to have his character knock out a wrestler with flatulence, but McMahon wanted Stern to get pummeled by a wrestler. In November 1995, ReganBooks released Miss America , the second book by Stern, which includes a five-page comic book story featuring Fartman. It was written and drawn by Tom Morgan , based on Lawton's unproduced screenplay, and printed as

80-470: The Scott Peterson case, and those by political commentator Sean Hannity . Though ultimately owned by politically active Rupert Murdoch , ReganBooks disavowed any political agenda, publishing, for example, books both supportive of and critical of George W. Bush . In August 2004, ReganBooks had three books on The New York Times Best Seller list , including the top two non-fiction positions, and

96-523: The Film Festival” series. This is the first live action Fartman movie ever to be shown on television. In 2007, Fartman: Caught in a Tight Ass first appeared on Atom Films . ReganBooks ReganBooks was an American bestselling imprint or division of HarperCollins book publishing house (parent company is News Corporation ), headed by editor and publisher Judith Regan , started in 1994 and ended in late 2006. During its existence, Regan

112-492: The air. In the early 1990s, Stern considered producing a movie based on this successful and well-received character from the show. Stern first revealed his intentions to make a Fartman movie in 1992. On November 25, 1992, Variety reported that J. F. Lawton , writer of Pretty Woman and Under Siege , was planning to write and direct New Line Cinema 's Stern's film project, titled The Adventures of Fartman . The film, which would be budgeted at $ 8 million-to-$ 11 million,

128-413: The highest profit ratio at HarperCollins. In 2005, ReganBooks announced plans to move from Manhattan to Los Angeles , making it one of the first major book publishers to move from the east to the west coast. In November 2006, ReganBooks announced plans to publish O. J. Simpson 's book If I Did It ; publication was later cancelled by News Corporation chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch. After

144-447: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fartman&oldid=1173336873 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Fartman (Howard Stern) Fartman generally attacks evil using his super powered flatulence , which also allows him to fly through

160-490: The movie was on hold. Though he had a script, and two studios willing to produce it, he was unsure that it was the right time to do it. Stern also didn't want to make a PG-13 version of the film, the way the studios wanted it to be. In 2002, Stern considered shooting the Fartman movie on video for his fans, but to date no official productions have been greenlit. Fartman was considered by Vince McMahon to be brought in as

176-509: The opening scene being a reenactment of Stern’s Fartman appearance at the 1992 MTV Music Awards . In 1999, Stern hoped to follow up the success of Private Parts with a movie about the Fartman character. Early in the year, Howard revealed he was in talks with studios to finally produce Fartman . He said that it would go into production in the summer of 1999, and that there were studios prepared to finance it. In December, Stern stated that

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192-504: The public fallout Newsweek reported, "Regan's meddlesome-free days are almost certainly over" and Murdoch will be "clamping" down on control. On December 15, 2006, Regan was fired from HarperCollins, over anti-Semitic comments. The staff at ReganBooks were reassigned within the HarperCollins General Book Group. The New York Times reported that ReganBooks' offices were closed and "a stunned Ms. Regan

208-462: Was called, by LA Weekly , "the world's most successful publisher". The division reportedly earned $ 120 million a year. ReganBooks focused on celebrity authors and controversial topics, sometimes from recent tabloids . Prominent ReganBooks titles include Jenna Jameson 's How to Make Love Like a Porn Star , biographies by General Tommy Franks , professional wrestler Mick Foley , and radio talk show host Howard Stern , three different books on

224-458: Was confronted by security guards who arrived with boxes and ordered her to leave." Regan sued News Corporation for $ 100 million for defamation over the anti-Semitism charge, asserting that it was "completely fabricated"; in January 2008 News Corporation settled the lawsuit and publicly stated, "After carefully considering the matter, we accept Ms. Regan's position that she did not say anything that

240-473: Was expected to go into production the following May in New York. David Permut would produce the film under his Permut Presentations Banner, which has a first-look deal at New Line. According to Lawton, The Adventures of Fartman would revolve around the superhero and his alter ego, a magazine publisher in the mold of Screw magazine's Al Goldstein . On June 28, 1993, Time magazine reported that Lawton

256-496: Was working on a screenplay for The Adventures of Fartman . Lawton told Time , "There's a lot of nudity, some harsh language, a lesbian love scene, and the main character works for an underground sex magazine. We told New Line Cinema the plot, and they said, 'Yeah, it sounds great. But can't we make it PG-13?'" The Fartman movie was not put into production. Instead, Stern made a movie out of his bestselling book, Private Parts . Private Parts hit theaters on March 7, 1997, with

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