Howard Stern says Donald Trump 'really does want to be loved'
The legendary shock jock has traveled in the same celebrity orbit as the business-mogul-turned-reality-show-star-turned-president for decades, and has had Trump on his show numerous times (Trump was even at Stern's wedding to Beth Ostrosky).
So in the last week, where polls show that Trump's approval rating is historically low, you have to wonder how he's taking it all. Stern has some thoughts, and it sounds like he thinks Trump cares quite a bit about his public perception.
"I know something about Donald Trump," said Stern on his radio show recently. "He really does want to be loved, he does want people to really love him, that drives him a lot. I think he has a very sensitive ego. And when you're president of the United States people are going to be very, very critical and I think in his mind right now he's saying 'I want to protect the country'… I think his motive is 'People will love me because I'm going to keep terrorists out of the country.' I think he's genuinely shocked when people come back and say 'Wait a second, there's more to this.'"
Stern went on to say that he and Trump talked a lot over the phone when Trump announced his presidency, and, along with Stern telling him he was a staunch Hillary Clinton supporter, he also tried to talk Trump out of running.
Stern - who still considers Trump a friend, though Stern voted for Clinton - also stated that he was surprised at the current political views Trump has taken.
"I don't believe that he's had some rethink on abortion, he's playing to his constituency, which is this religious right," Stern said.
And when it comes to the press and Hollywood being critical of Trump, Stern believes that's the deepest wound of all.
"He loves the press, he lives for it," said Stern. "He loves people in Hollywood, he only wants to hobnob with them."
Stern's theory is that Trump's whole run for presidency was just a negotiation maneuver to get more money out of NBC while he and the network were discussing a new season of "The Apprentice."
Now being president, Stern is concerned about the health of his friend.
"This is something that's going to be detrimental to his mental health because he wants to be liked, he wants to be loved, he wants people to cheer for him," he said.
"There are people who are better suited for this kind of thing," said Stern of the presidency, "and he didn't need this in his life."
Listen to Stern's thoughts on Trump as president below: