Today we’d like to introduce you to Randi Lavik.
Hi Randi, thanks for joining us today. We’d love for you to start by introducing yourself.
I’m so proud to be a Southern California Native, born & raised.
When my Grandpa was married and settled down, he and my Grandmother ran a Mid-Century Furniture Store on Sunset… in the Mid-Century.
My ‘Nana’ Marion was sharp, from head to toe, her entire life. Perfectly accessorized. She took interest in me because I found her to be absolutely fascinating, and took me on outings when Los Angeles was beautiful, always in a big Oldmobile.
She fabulously chain-smoked Benson & Hedges Menthols, leaving Revlon Coral lipstick on the tips.
She gave a speech at my older Brother’s Bar Mitzvah in a surprisingly formal restaurant on National Boulevard, around the corner from our house, and cried tipsy happy tears with a hot mic in her hand.
My Mom attended Hamilton High and soared when it came to Home Economics. She’s very good with her hands and infants.
By the age of 18, she was married with children and worked nights. Vicki was a cute little waitress at Dupar’s in the Farmer’s Market, the Head Cocktail Waitress at Gazzarri’s on the Sunset Strip, and served in the TWA Lounge at LAX. She preferred Trini Lopez over The Doors. I D.I.E.
My Mom had kids in her teens, 20s and 30s, five in total.
My parents, alive, well and still in love, met running lunch trucks and brought hot coffee and meals to workers in factories and shipyards all over Southern California, before drive-thru’s.
Morgan Freeman’s ‘Easy Reader’ character taught me to read. ‘The Electric Company’—–learning, combined with ‘The Funk’ caught my attention early. My musical memory is strong.
As a Showbiz-savvy, goofy kid, I read the ‘Calendar Section’ in the L.A. Times at age 10 or so. ‘MAD Magazine’ and ‘The Dr. Demento Show’ on KMET were massive influences on both my humor and politics, to this day. I couldn’t get enough books, not ever.
I babysat neighbor Dave Lopez’ kids and was obsessed with the Emmy on his TV (Dave was a Reporter/Anchor for CBS news for decades).
In 1985, my high school Counselor (a female person) steered me towards Cerritos (our nearest Junior College) and advised me to go look for a Husband, saying “You’ll never graduate Randi, you’re an idiot.” (I went on to earn four degrees, going on five, Mrs. S.).
After graduation, I worked for both Disneyland and the Walt Disney Studios, and in college I excelled in Journalism and landed an Internship in radio; this changed my life absolutely, college credit or not. In my case, not. Journalism courses were ‘non-transferable’ and my cute boyfriend Bob was the Sports Editor.
I worked at KROQ-FM during its ‘Rock of the 80s’ heyday for three years and learned who does what at a radio station.
I went on to work at KLOS-FM, KRLA-AM, and KQLZ ‘Pirate Radio’ with Scott Shannon.
Academia became my joy when I started to get positive feedback from Professors I admired so much. When my daughter was a baby, I wanted to learn to sew and obtained a degree in Fashion Design too.
I started Grad School & still have 3 courses to go. Sorry Pop. My ultimate dream was always Motherhood, and we have recently sent our two off to college… whew!
In addition, I started to write here and there and spent three years with a Co-Author, writing what we referred to as ‘The Definitive Oral History of KROQ-FM, the 1980s years’.
I still write music articles, but there isn’t enough Lawyer Money to publish my former dream project; what we learned about the record industry in the 1980’s is nothing anyone should read about. I hear Adam Carolla and Jimmy Kimmel, KROQ alums from the early ’90s, were Producing a KROQ documentary? I use my platform for good these days.
My program is called ‘The Drop Sound’ and I’m the first DJ in the US, possibly outside of Asia, to play the 10+ year catalog of the music group BTS from South Korea. Frankly, I wanted to hear them on the radio, so I did something about it.
Radio programming freedom is an incredibly rare gift. We go live via our FM signal locally and can be heard worldwide via our Apps and station website.
Programming is my joy.
My format is ‘BTS and The Greats’–Beatles/Monkees/Who/
One time I “Googled” myself and found articles in the South Korean News and screenshots of my tweets(!) worldwide.
Seeing feedback from my audience in ‘real time’ is a Communications miracle in my opinion and any DJ’s good dream. I got a million eyeballs on a tweet and it was life-changing, absolutely. Our show is the highest-rated music show at our station; our fans famously broke the server twice.
BTS has a very large fan “ARMY” and I’ve been a member for years. I think they will be writing about BTS in 50 years.
The success of The Drop led to a Podcast for Snippet.fm called BTS7, and my Co-Host Sylvia Park and I are proud to have written and presented 12 smart, bilingual episodes for Spotify/Anchor.
If you asked me how I got here so unexpectedly, I might give credit to the combination of my lucky L.A.-in-its-Prime upbringing, early cultural sensitivity, a good public education, smart Mentors and our regionally-shared collective musical memories.
I’m sure you wouldn’t say it’s been obstacle free, but so far would you say the journey has been a fairly smooth road?
Former A-Paper student and Perfectionist here. I was almost a Librarian.
I was so motivated! Curiosity killed this cat. TMI.
I quit caring so much.
When I stopped listening to everyone’s opinions (and took a healthy break from Facebook/Social Media), my creative life soared.
I’m misunderstood by many, and it’s aok by me.
I have been a volunteer for years at our nonprofit station. It’s my honor.
As you know, we’re big fans of you and your work. For our readers who might not be as familiar what can you tell them about what you do?
Late bloomers forever! I found my voice in my 40s… if anyone tells me they are too old to do this or that… I ain’t buyin’ it.
I work for my Audience. I love them like family. It took years to earn their trust and I’m proud to present BTS–#First!
Are there any books, apps, podcasts or blogs that help you do your best?
I’ve read so many showbiz autobiographies and books about the Arts and watch ‘Turner Classic Movies’ religiously.
Real Life Mentors are the best.
Jimmy Alvarez, Host of ‘TNN Radio’ & Publisher of the ‘O.C. Music News’ taught me the radio business all over again.
Greg Friedman, Host of ‘Inner Journey’ on KX FM, taught me to find my gratitude.
LA Filmmaker/Writer/Performer/
Contact Info:
- Website: The Drop Sound: www.kxfmradio.org, BTS7 Podcast: www.snippet.fm
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/randi_lavik/ https://www.instagram.com/thedropsounds/ https://www.instagram.com/bts7_podcast/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/randilavik https://twitter.com/TheDropSound https://twitter.com/BTS7_FM
Image Credits
The gentleman in the photo with me is Mentor Jimmy Alvarez.
The grainy photo was taken at KROQ, in the studio with Dusty Street and Lewis Largent, late 1980s.
The onstage photo subject is Kim Seokjin, BTS, my photo, Rose Bowl, 2019.
