Richard Blade Interview
An Interview with Richard Blade in Los Angeles
Iām on my second book as a follow up to GREAT IDEA and its called Thatās how it was and I am following the careers of International DJs with their love of music and what happened throughout their career and Iāve got some fascinating stories, Iāve got guys from Radio Caroline, one of them on the ship when it sank, some amazing stories, your story is amazing too so what I want to ask you first you were in Scandinavia because I remember that and I met you when you were Dick Sheppard you went to America fairly early.
I went to America in November 1976.
What were the reasons? Fame and Fortune? California sun, California girls?
All of the above - Fame, Fortune, Blue Skies and California girls!
Well, that is a good enough reason. Obviously the first thing you did was to try to make your name as a DJ and you were different you were English; you clearly got a lot of work and then you obviously became very well known on the circuit and started to compere gigs with bands and host shows. From the DJ bit what happened then?
When I first came to America it was to get into radio and thatās why I chose America because they had so many radio stations. It was also important the country be English-speaking as my gift for languages is very limited. That meant my list included America, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. But my top choices were America or Australia. When I first arrived here I immediately tried to get a radio gig and I knocked on all the doors of stations in L.A. and was refused every single time. They said you will never work in this town with your accent, English DJs werenāt popular at the time, so I continued DJāing in clubs - disco was just starting in Southern California at the time. There were very few discos and no pub scene, no pubs at all over here. I found out about a restaurant chain that was putting a brand-new disco into one of their locations - and looking for a DJ. I went down and auditioned, and got the job. The club took off and everyone was happy. Then Hollywood intervened and Saturday Night Fever opened and that was the moment everything changed in America. It seemed everyone wanted to be a part of the disco scene and even have their own disco party at home. With that, mobile discos began over here, and I started doing a few on the side - people in the club would like the music and would say, hey, can you DJ a party for me?
I started doing a few of those and I got asked by a caterer if I would DJ a party for a client of hers, but she couldnāt tell me the name of the client but would meet her in Malibu? So I caravanned over and followed her car and went to this house outside of Malibu, a place called Paradise Cove and the person turned out to be Barbra Streisand. It was to be her sonās Bar Mitzvah, Jason Gould, who she had when she was together with Elliot Gould. It was a star-studded event and it seemed everyone who was hot was there, you know, Larry Hagman, Donna Summer, Neil Diamond, James Caan ā almost half of Hollywood showed up so I got a lot of referrals for āthe guy who DJād Barbra Streisandās party. Larry Hagman booked me to DJ the wrap party for DALLAS - now I know who shot JR! I did a bunch of parties and premieres for Paramount Pictures, and did a lot of other Bar Mitzvahs for wealthy peopleās kids, and a number of parties for Michael Jackson.
It got to the point where I had so many bookings that I left DJāing clubs and bought myself a mobile system; my dad ordered me a Roger Squires mobile DJ console and shipped over to me along with a little Citronic outfit, so I was DJāing with that, and things were booming but it wasnāt why I had come to the States, I still wanted to get into radio. I was constantly making audition tapes and sending them out and getting nowhere. Then there was contest held in the Spring of 1980 by K-WEST, a rock station, to find the best unsigned DJ. I put together a new tape and sent it in and I was one of the two winners they picked and was given an hour to do a show on the radio and while I was on air they taped it for me. I made copies of the tape and mailed it out and suddenly, three days later, I got a call with the offer of a job in Bakersfield. This is what I had been after, so I quit everything and moved to Bakersfield and did a year there on a hard-rock station ā KMGN, Magic 98 FM, as their music director and initially, their evening jock. I went from being Disco Dick Sheppard to going into this rock station. I needed to be sure what they were looking for if I was to be music director, and asked what the criteria was for adding music and they dropped the needle on on Ted Nugentās Double Live Gonzo album, - and played me the track āWang Dang Sweet Poontang!ā and said, this is as mellow as we get!
Thatās a bit extreme, isnāt it?
It was crazy. We literally could not play āStairway to Heavenā by Led Zeppelin during the night because it was too mellow. We only could play it during the day. It was called dayparting. At night times it was just balls to the wall, Van Halen, AC/DC, Ted Nugent, Black Sabbath, Ozzie Osbourne, Motorhead ā the kind of music to keep your neighbours awake all night!
Did you know the repertoire or just picked it up quickly?
Didn't know it at all, I just had to listen to it and learn. But that was OK as it was part of my education into American radio. I spent 12 - 14 hours a day at the station learning everything I could, how to produce commercials, how go on sales calls with sales people so I could see how that works and basically find out how all the equipment functioned. I wanted to know how the tape cartridges loaded, the instant start decks worked, rather that the Technics or Garrard turntables I was used to. I gave myself a deadline, Iāll be there for a year and pay my dues then go back and try to make it in L.A. I told the owners this, that in twelve months Iād be leaving, because Bakersfield is a place you donāt want to be in. It really is a shithole. After the year was up, our ratings were great. And by then I had been promoted to morning guy and program director. When I gave them my notice they didnāt believe me. I said I told you I would only be here one year. Thatās it, I want to go back to L.A. and make it there. And they said, we have other stations including one on the coast, San Luis Obispo, thatās going for its very first ratings period and we would like you to go there as program director and morning DJ and get us through that rating period. Would you do it? I said, no, not interested. That was because Bakersfield is the 70th market in America and San Luis Obispo was the 150th and it would mean I was stepping down in rank, which is a big no-no.
**I did a little research here as to how radio stations are rated, this is what I found:
Nielsen rates 210 radio DMAs or designated market areas in the United States. New York City is number one. Glendive, Montana in number 210. These market designations change from year to year and are typically available for free online. So itās fairly easy then to determine if a radio station is in a rated market.
AQH stands for average quarter hour persons. Thatās the number of different people listening to a radio station for at least five minutes during a 15 minute period. AQH is the best number to use when trying to determine how many people will actually hear your commercial.
So itās easy to figure out whether a radio station is in a rated market
I told them I had to move up. Itās the only way I could go. They said what you donāt understand is we will give you a raise and you will be PD and morning drive there, but I repeated it was a step down. They countered with, letās fly you to San Luis Obispo and you can take a look at the station. Now that sounded fun, Iād never been on a private plane before. Okay, I told them, Iāll take a look. The flight was only 40 minutes and it was a Piper Cub not a jet, but cruising over the mountains to the Pacific was pretty cool. After we landed they drove me to the station. It was a cool little station, better than Bakersfield. It had all the latest gear, everything you needed to do a good radio show. I met with everyone and they had a consultant, Mark Driscoll, a big DJ formerly from New York, to help me and he had been there already for a few weeks. He invited me out to lunch and we walked through this little town, and itās a California Beach town ā I was no longer in the desert - and when I was walking, all I could see were lovely cute girls packing the street. I sat down with Mark and asked him what the deal was with all the hot blondes? Well, he said they go to CAL POLY which is the big university on the central coast. He continued, āAnd you know the KZOZ is the only rock station on the entire coast. Our only rival is the big country station (KSLY) and they are a monster! They are the one we are going up against.
(Incidentally, there are over one thousand listed licensed radio stations in California alone).
**You might also wonder why American Licensed Radio Stations have a K or W prefix?
Why? Because the government said so.
In the days of the telegraph, operators started the practice of using short letter sequences as identifiers, referring to them as call letters or call signs. Early radio operators continued the practice, but without a central authority assigning call letters, radio operators often chose letters already in use, leading to confusion.
To alleviate the problem, the Bureau of Navigation (part of the Department of Commerce) began assigning three-letter call signs to American ships in the early 1910s. Ships in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico got a K prefix; in the Pacific and the Great Lakes, a W. The precise reasons for choosing these two letters, if there were any, are unknown (bureaucracy works in mysterious ways). At the 1912 London International Radiotelegraphic Convention, ranges of letters were assigned to each of the participating nations and the U.S. was told to keep using the W and most of the K range. (Military stations used N.
When the federal government began licensing commercial radio stations soon after, it had planned to assign call letters to the land-based stations in the same way. Somehow, things got flipped during implementation, though, and Eastern stations got W call signs and the Western ones got Ks. Where exactly does the Bureau of Navigation draw the line between East and West? For a while it ran north along state borders from the Texas-New Mexico border, but shifted in 1923 to follow the Mississippi River.
Some areas, however, might have both a K and W station in the same vicinity. Why? When the dividing line switched, some stations were made to change their call signs, while others weren't. For about a year in the 1920s, the Bureau of Navigation decided that all new stations were going to get a K call sign no matter where they were located. Still other exceptions were made by special request, station relocations, ownership changes, and even human error.
Now you know, anyway back to the interview with Richard.
I thought about Markās words, that I was being asked to be the morning guy on the only rock station in a beach town where all the girls between the ages of 18 to 24 are going to be listening to my station. It was a no-brainer. OK, Iāll do it. Iāll stay here for six months to get KZOZ through the first ratings period. We had 90 days to gear up and then 90 days of ratings. The ratings would come out in February and the goal was to get a 5 rating and come in number two to KSLY, the big country monster that had been around forever. There was no doubt they would dominate the ratings book, but if we could just get a good showing, all would be good. I wanted to get our stationās name out there ā Z93 ā so I put together a big promotion with DATSUN, now NISSAN. I went to the local Datsun dealership and basically sold our souls and promised them theyād be on the air every hour for six months if they would give us a Datsun Z ā their sports car, to give away. And, they said OK, weāll do it. I had two hundred thousand bumper stickers printed and started an on-air campaign, āWin a Z from Z93ā which caught on quickly, and so all over Californiaās central coast, people were sticking on our bumper stickers and they would listen at certain set times and we would announce the license plate numbers for them to call in within 15 minutes, and if they did, they would be put into the draw. It seemed that winter every car had a Z93 sticker on it. We had a winner and gave away the car, the New Year rolled around and we nervously waited for the ratings to come out. I remember the day really well; I was just getting off the air and the call from Rogers Brandon - that was his name - Rogers Brandon, who owned the station, came. I asked āDid we come in number two to KSLY?ā āNo, no you didnāt,ā he replied. Shit I thought, but before I could say anything and apologise, he cut in with, āYou came in Number One. We are Number One in the market. We wanted a 5, but thatās what KSLY got. We got a 27!ā I was speechless as Rogers continued, āThis is going to be so great for us. We are the Number One station on the entire Central Coast going into this sales period. Everyoneās going to get a bonus, itās going to be a fantastic time for all of us.ā
I didnāt want to kill his excitement but I had to say, āWell, I wish you luck with it.ā
He said, āWhat do you mean you wish me luck?ā
I explained, āI told you Iād take you through the ratings period, Iām going back to L.A. now.ā
He couldnāt believe what I was saying, āYouāre leaving the Number One radio station along the entire central coast of California?ā
āI know. Itās great, youāve been great, everyone at the station has. God bless you man, itās fantastic, Iāll be watching how you doā.
He still was in disbelief, āDick, you canāt just quit. No one leaves a number one stationā
I sighed and said āI just didā and two weeks later I left Z93 behind and took the ratings book and went down to L.A. to start knocking on the doors again. This time, with the impressive numbers from Bakersfield and San Luis Obispo, I was received differently and got hired doing an overnight shift on what we call an alternative station playing B-52s, Elvis Costello and Duran Duran.
Richard, one question, when did you change your name to Richard Blade?
Iām coming to that (roars with laughter)
Youāre still Dick Sheppard at the moment?
Iām still Dick Sheppard!
OK, Ok, carry onā¦
I started working at KNAC in Long Beach, in late February 1982. And they were paying me hardly anything. I made $1000 per month before taxes, which was a big step down from KZOZ where I had made twice that, but it was L.A and people could hear me, and if I could get noticed I could keep moving up. To make extra money, I still had my mobile disco stored there, so I started doing some gigs because living in L.A. was expensive. And, while I was out doing these gigs I heard the buzz in town there were two stations that really were in line with what I did. I wasnāt a Top 40 DJ and I didnāt want to try that format as I wanted to be myself on air and not put on some faked, hyped voice. But the two stations making all the noise were KMET, a rock station and KROQ, which was a small underground station. KROQ had a bad reputation for not paying its DJs but it did have the buzz, all the kids were listening to it. And, one of the clubs I was working at, the Hot Club in Encino, were buying commercials on KROQ and asked if I would voice an ad for them rather than pay to have their DJs do it and save $400. I said sure. KROQ told me come out to the radio studio to record the commercials, so I drove out to Pasadena but couldnāt find this little hole in the wall radio station and Iād almost given up, and was about to so a U-turn and go home when I finally spotted it, right above a medical clothing shop called Uniform Circus. It was hardly glamorous. I walked into their cramped production room because I was expected, and the Production Manager, John Logic, looked at me and said āDo you know how to work the gear?ā I answered, āAh yeah, I think I doā
He replied āGood. Iām going to lunch, see youā. And he walked out leaving me alone there. It was wild, he had no clue who I was. I was looking at this reel-to-reel machine, checking out the decks and thinking I could walk out with this shit. They didnāt know who I am from Adam, this is crazy. But instead of grand theft, I voiced a commercial, put in on a cart, then typed a label for it based on the style the other commercial carts around me had. The one thing I couldnāt work out was what the dots on the label meant. Red, Blue, Green and Yellow dots. I labelled and got it ready and John came back, he said āOh my gosh, youāve put it on a cart already. I was going to dub it for you but youāve even typed the label rightā. I said yeah, but admitted I didnāt know what the dots were for.
He said āWell, the red dot shows itās an exciting spot ā like a movie or concert ad - so it runs first in a commercial set, and blue dot runs second, the green dot runs third and the yellow is the worst commercial of all, just some guy yapping, like an insurance spot, thatās when people tune out so we run it last right before we go back to music.ā
āSo, what dot do I get?ā John grinned, āYou get a red dot, your ad is about clubs and music, which the listeners like, so yours goes first.ā
That meant people would hear my voice on this hot radio station and sure enough they did. And it wasnāt only the listeners, the DJs said āWe like your English accent. Would you come in and do jingles for us?ā I said sure, so I drove back out five days later and Ramondo and Evans were the morning show team and they came up with this thing to tied them in with the late-night show hosted by April Whitney. The jingle had me saying in my best Oxford accent, āGo to bed with April and wake up with Ramondo and the Evans.ā It sounded fun on the air and the audience loved the double entendre. Then all the DJs wanted me to do one for them. Suddenly my voice was all over the radio station. And, as I was working on a different radio station, it was really weird.
Then other advertisers heard my drops and I got asked to do other spots like car dealerships and clothing stores and they would pay me 25 dollars for each one, which was hardly anything but better than nothing, so now my voice was basically on KROQ twenty-four hours a day. Then I got this momentous phone call. āI need you to meet Rick Carrollā.
Rick Carroll was the program director who had created KROQās format, but he was rarely at the station because Rick had, what we call āpersonal problems.ā I met with Rick and was expecting him to say we canāt use you anymore because you work at another radio station. Instead he said āall my DJs are going on vacation, and because KROQ couldnāt pay for them to have a paid vacation we have this thing where they work with a travel agency and do a KROQ trip to Hawaii. and if the DJs sell 20 trips and mention the agenciesā name, they get to go as well. And this year they are all going because weāve sold it out.ā Then Rick said, āIāve got these celebrities who will be filling in for the DJs, one of them is Elvira, another is Danny Elfman from Oingo Boingo, whoās going on as Moscow Eddie.ā
āElvira and Danny are doing afternoons, the lead singer from the Cramps is going to handle nights, but in the middle of the day from 10 until 1 we donāt have anyone, would you want to do it for two weeks?ā I said sure, but then Rick dropped the hammer blow and told me he couldnāt pay me, Iād be working for free. That didnāt bother me, so I said Iād do it. But Rick hadnāt finished, he now followed up with a kick to the balls. āYou have to quit your job at KNAC because they compete with us, playing some of the same music.ā I took a deep breath and said OK, because KROQ was much bigger than KNAC and the visibility would be great. Rick still wasnāt done, he added, āwhen the DJs come back, we wonāt have a job for you. This is just going to be for two weeks then youāre gone.ā. I said āYou want me to quit my job, do this for free and then leave?ā Rick nodded. I had one more question for him, āWill you be going to Hawaii?ā āHe replied āNo Iām staying hereā āSo youāll be in town to hear my show. He said, āYeah but it has taken me about 18 months to put this team together and they are like the Saturday Night Live of radio, there is no shitty talent on KROQ. And, when they come back, they are all going to have their jobs, and you wonāt.ā
āIāll take that risk if youāll hear my show because I know youāll find something for me.ā
Rick shook his head and waved me out of his office.
The next day at KNAC I told them I was leaving for KROQ and giving them two weeksā notice, and they said āWell, weāve gotta hire someone else, so youāre out of a gig but best of luck to youā. I liked everyone there, the program director Jimmy Christopher, the morning guy and the afternoon girl, I got along with them great. Because of that I didnāt want to steal listeners from this little radio station by going to a big radio station like KROQ.
Thatās why I decided to change my name. Dick Sheppard was going to fade into the past and all I knew was that I wanted to go back to Richard which was my real name. Dick Sheppard was given to me when I was DJāing at college by someone much bigger than me. I went with the nickname as the guy who decided I would be āDickā was captain of the field hockey team and had a bad temper and lived in the same house as us. I would use this opportunity to go back to Richard but I didnāt know what the last name would be. I was getting ready to go on the air and still hadnāt decided and was looking at a newspaper, the Los Angeles Times desperate to try and find the inspiration for a name. I looked at all these names, like a writer called Robert Hilburn, no Richard Hilburn doesnāt sound right, worse than Richard Sheppard. Then I saw an ad for a movie opening soon, Blade Runner. I thought thatās great, I am going to call myself Richard Runner. I could even steal the Rolls Royce logo and use that as my logo. R.R. Richard Runner, perfect!
It was a big newspaper, back in the day, not like today when theyāre down to magazine size. Anyway, the newspaper was massive, the studio was small and the song was finishing. I dropped the paper on the floor so I could see it and I opened the microphone and said āThat was a Flock of Seagulls with a song called āTelecommunicationā but their fans just called it ātelecomā Jed the Fish is in Hawaii and Iām filling in for him for two weeks and my name isā¦ā and I looked down because I was so nervous knowing thereād be a lot of people listening that Iād forgotten the one I had chosen. I looked at the paper, but it had folded over when it fell and now I could only see āBladeā. The movie hadnāt opened and no one had heard of Blade Runner and I couldnāt remember the title, so I panicked and the next words out of my mouth were, āIām Richard Blade! And, Iām going to be with you for the next couple of weeks on KROQ.ā Then I announced the next band, which was Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, and hit the play button, it started and I thought oh my God ā Iām Richard Blade?
I DJād my 3-hour shift, said goodbye and waited for Moscow Eddie a.k.a Danny Eltman to come in and take over. Nothing. So I kept going for about 10 - 15 minutes and the red hot line lit up. I punched it on so I could talk to whoever it was, without it going over the air . I said āHi, whoās this?ā āThis is Danny Eltman and Iām stuck in the studio and I canāt get away. Can you fill in for me, whoever you are?ā I said, sure Iāll keep going, and he said āSee you tomorrow, gotta goā. I did another three hours and I was wrapping up my now six hour show and signing off again, my second sign off in six hours with āTalk to you all tomorrow, itās been greatā. I waited in the studio for a few minutes, but again nothing! Elvira didnāt show up, so I walked outside to the office and asked ādoes anyone know when Elvira was coming in?ā It was about 4.20 p.m. They said āwe donāt knowā. I bumped into Pat Welsh who was the general manager of the radio station and he said, āOh, we got a call from Elvira, sheās not coming in, can you fill in for her?ā I went āOK ā¦..Iāll do itā (disguising a long sigh), āIāve just come off doing the overnight shift with six hours, so no problem!ā I did another three hours on the air and whilst doing it I was reading a live commercial in my final hour about for the Parrot Place in Van Nuys, and saying that theyāve got a special this month Green parrots are on sale for only $49.99 and if you go down to there and say KROQ, theyāll give you another 10% off that so you can buy yourself a parrot for just $45.99ā
As Iām talking, a white-haired guy walks in during the middle of the live commercial and barks at me, āWhereās Snakeskin?ā Freddie Snakeskin was the afternoon drive DJ, but he was in Hawaii and was the person who Elvira was meant to be covering. I said, hitting the mic off, āIām on the air!ā I flicked the switch back on and said āGo on down and say KROQ and get a great price on one of these parrotsā and the guy again says āWhereās Snakeskin?ā I turned it off again. āHeāsā¦in ā¦H A W A I Iā. I turned the mic back on again and said, āThatās just one of the great specials!ā If you want a parrot withā¦ā
And the guy interrupted the commercial again āI need to speak to Snakeskin; I turned the mic off once more in irritation and yelled āYou are not going to speak to fucking Snakeskin unless you can talk loud enough to be heard in Hawaii but right now everyone in L.A can hear you so shut the fuck up and get the hell out of here or I will throw you out!ā I turned the mic back on again because I was not going to be interrupted during my show by some random stranger. I finished the ad, put the recorded commercials on, wrapped my show and finally the next DJ comes in, the lead singer of the Cramps, and I thought oh good, finally I can relax. I walk outside and Pat Welsh is there, the general manager, who said āThatās great man, I didnāt realise you were on for nine hours, I am so sorry but you sounded good, Iāve got someone who wants to talk to you,ā I said āOKā and walked with Pat to his office and sitting behind Patās desk, in Patās chair, that no one is allowed to sit in because he is the general manager, is the white haired guy. Pat turned at me, āI want you to meet Ken Roberts, he owns the radio station.ā I looked at Ken but he looked at Pat because he doesnāt want to look at me because I am way too insignificant for him to pay attention to and says to Pat āAsk him why he told me to fuck off.ā So, Pat repeats āWhy did you tell Ken to fuck off?ā
I knew I had zero to lose at this point and my fate had already been decided, so I stepped up to the desk put my hands on it and leaned forward, āI might be new to KROQ but Iāve worked at three other radio stations and as far as I know the only way a radio station is legally allowed to make money is by selling commercials. And some strange guy walks in on my show when I am reading a live commercial and interrupts me three times when I told him twice very nicely that Iām on the air. If the client had heard that, they wouldnāt pay the station for an interrupted commercial. And, when Iām on the air no one is ever going to take money away from the radio station I am working for. For the next two weeks Iāve been asked to do a show for KROQ and sell commercials for them on the air, and I promise, KROQ is going to make money during my show. I didnāt know who you were, but even now, if you did it again tomorrow and cut me off during a paid-for spot, Iād tell you to fuck off again. For me, the station always comes first.ā Ken Roberts was silent for a moment then looked at Pat and goes āI like the kid, hire himā And I got the job that day at KROQ. They found a job for me which was weekends and production director.
After the DJs got back I did Saturdays, Sundays and produced all the commercials and filled in if anyone got sick. Four weeks later, Mike Evans got into an argument with the program director and left the morning show to go over to KMET to do sport. That night I got a phone call asking if I could be at the station at 5.30 the next morning to be the new morning drive guy with Ramondo, it went from Ramondo and Evans to Ramondo and Blade. The rest is as they say is history.
Then a few weeks later I had a phone call about a TV show that was starting called MV3 which was a broadcast version of MTV to be on in fifty cities and they asked if I had my own hair and my own teeth. I said yeah, so the producer said come down and audition. I did and got the TV show and everything really started taking off.
And, over the next twenty, thirty years you met all the stars and hosted shows. Tell me about some of that, who were the people you met that you really liked
I really like Duran Duran and Iām very close with them, especially John Taylor who came over to my house to record the first chapter for the audio version of my autobiography, World In My Eyes, because I wasnāt in that chapter. Iām friends with the guys from Depeche Mode, Danny Eltman, OMD, Spandau Ballet, I went on tour with the Spands in Australia in 1986 when they had the Parade album out. Martin Fry of ABC, Boy George from Culture Club, Midge Ure, English Beat, Terri Nunn from Berlin who I dated for quite a while, The Motels, The Go-Goās, The Bangles, all of them I became friends with.
Your first book was āWorld In My Eyesā.
Yes, and it got its name from the title of a Depeche Mode song. I called Martin Gore and asked if I could use the title and he said āyesā right away. His only requirement was that he could write a blurb on the cover about our friendship, which he did. Great guy.
Iāve been following you and your book writing. After your autobiography, World In My Eyes, you morphed into real fiction - an historical action piece with a twist, your Roman novel SPQR. I mean that was quite a leap, thatās terrific, tell me about that.
Iāve always liked writing. I wrote for a magazine called Disco International based in London (whose editor was Ben Cree). I was their American editor for several years. I always wanted to write, so after World In My Eyes took off ā it was a crazy best seller, two years at number one in the music categories on Amazon, it was nuts, I actually ended up buying the rights back, it was so successful. I wanted to do other stuff with it, including perhaps a film or a streaming series. But the writing process excited me and I wanted to try writing fiction. I had written things for TV, and some screenplays, one of which got made as a movie, Long, Lost Son, which starred Chace Crawford in his debut role, and Chace went on to do Gossip Girl and a big hit show on Amazon called The Boys. Chace plays one of the superheroes in that. And, Gabrielle Anwar who did Scent of a woman.
I also wrote for a Sci Fi series called Seven Days which was on a network called UPN now called CW over here, so I had written a number of screen plays which all got great response but in typical Hollywood fashion āWe love this, we will get right back to you on it ā¦.ā and you wait for the phone to ring and ā¦.nothing! Then your agent tells you, they loved you, loved the story but it was too big a budget for a first time writer (without a big hit I was still considered a first time writer). So, I had these screenplays lying around which had gotten great reviews and one of them was SPQR and I thought Iām going to use this as a backbone for a book and so I did just that. When it came out in 2019, it shot to number one in multiple categories, Alternative History, Action Adventure and all that.
I really enjoyed doing it so I started on my next book immediately, which is called Birthright. Itās a mystery case/thriller along the lines of a Dan Brown Novel, whose book Da Vinci Code was a massive seller and became a blockbuster film.
And, itās kind of Indiana Jones versus James Bond because itās has a British Royal theme in which MI6 are hunting an American kid for reasons that unravel during the chapters. After that I wrote another book āImpostersā based on a true story which ironically is about the guy I replaced at KROQ - Mike Evans ā and itās something he did in the late 60ās when heād been drafted for Vietnam and needed to disappear and he did it by getting together with his best friend and taking on the identity of a real life singing duo from the 50s. Itās an amazing tale, he was this eighteen-year-old boy saying he had a hit ten years before which would have made him eight years old at the time. But he managed to pull it off and he toured America for three years pretending to be one half of this chart-topping duo. Next I released The Lockdown Interviews which was based on a series of long Zoom interviews I had done with twenty bands during Covid. In the book youāll find The Go-Goās, Culture Club, Duran Duran, Midge Ure, The Alarm, OMD, Sparks and so many others. Itās like a Whoās Who of 80ās stars and itās done done incredibly well, and Iāll be putting out a sequel to it called The Unlocked Interviews ā post Covid, and that will feature conversations with Roxy Music, Blondie, Simple Minds, Soft Cell and many others. Right now, I was just doing some edits on my next book when you called and itās also based on one of my screenplays, āGhosts of the Congo.ā Itās about a massive kidnapping that happens when an oil refinery opens in the Congo, financed with American money, and on hand for the ceremony are the richest man in the world, along with the Vice President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary for Energy and the First lady, and they are all kidnapped and disappear into the jungles of the Congo. The American government canāt find them and desperately put together a special team to try to locate them before the deadline is reached and they are killed.
Any of these books being made into film?
Hopefully that might happen. All the reviews say things like ā āthis was made for the big screen.ā. If you go to reviews on Good Reads or Amazon, youāll see the reviewers saying, hey this book reads like a film. I could see it as a film. And, the reason is it was written first as a film, so when I get back from Mexico next summer, I plan to try to set up some meetings to take them back out but this time when Iām pitching the screenplay Iām going to plop the book down on the desk and say read this, it was a best seller, so, we will see. Nothing is ever real until it is made so you wonāt get me saying itās gonna be a movie. Iād love them to become movies but who knows.
Is the Richard Blade of today in his Californian home more of a writer or a DJ? What do you spend your time doing most?
Both! Because I am on the radio every day on SiriusXM, which is the biggest radio company on the planet right now. Itās got thirty-six million subscribers. Thatās just in the US, thereās another seven million in Canada. And, who knows how many from SiriusXM app around the globe. Itās in every car in North America, and I do the same kind of show Iāve always done, you know, playing Duran Duran, Depeche Mode, New Order, The Smiths, those kind of superstar acts every day.
What time is your show?
My show is on East Coast 3p until 9p. West Coast Time from noon until six. And, itās heard all across the country, all over Canada, itās also on Dish Network and on the SiriusXM app so. If you are in the Caribbean, they listen to SiriusXM there because thatās how they get their music. The App is only $4.99 whereas if you do it through your car it is $14.99. The App has around 12 - 14 million listers I believe.
You are not doing six-hour shows, six hours a day surely?
No, I voice track it. If anything important happens I have the ability to jump on it and go live at any time, so, God forbid if a celebrity dies or thereās a tour cancelled like Erasure recently cancelled their shows, I jump on and go live. Duran Duran recently announced they are doing a special performance at a hotel in Los Angeles that will be filmed a week on Thursday, so I went live and broke the news, and also when Super Bowl or World Series results come out I go live and put that on, but the show is on every day on SiriusXM. I also do a lot of live gigs, not only in California, but because of SiriusXMās reach, all over North America. In the last couple of months Iāve DJād events and corporate shows in Vegas, Toronto, Cancun and New York.
And now, I hear, you have quite an honour thatās been given you.
Yes. The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce called to say I had been awarded a star on the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame. Iāll be getting it the summer of 2023 and itāll be placed by the Capitol Records building near stars of The Beatles, Sinatra, The Beach Boys and my friends, Duran Duran. It was a total surprise to me because there are very few DJs who have been given that honor. My only regret is my Mum & Dad are no longer around to see me get it.
Thank you, Richard, thatās a terrific story. Itās going in the book with many top DJās like you, and when I get the book finished, I will send you a complimentary copy.
I would love that, Alan. I fondly remember all those great gigs you got me. Those stories of my days with you and IDEA are in World In My Eyes.
..and hopefully if you think this book has value maybe you can show it to one of your publishers if it could be of interest elsewhere in your market.
Absolutely
Richard Blade Fact File
Richard Blade (born Richard Thomas Sheppard; May 23, 1952 in Bristol, England) is a British-American Los Ćngeles-based radio, television, and film personality from Torquay, England. He is best known for his radio programs that feature new wave and popular music from the 1980s. He was a disk jockey at KROQ in Los Angeles from 1982 to 2000 and has been a host for SiriusXM's 1st Wave classic alternative station since 2005.
Blade appeared in such television series as Square Pegs and Hunter and appeared as a real contestant (as "Dick Sheppard") on such game shows as Win, Lose or Draw and Card Sharks.
He also appeared in several films, including Girls Just Want to Have Fun (1985), Depeche Mode 101, (1989), Rock 'n' Roll High School Forever (1990), and Spellcaster (1991). In August 2007, Blade made an appearance on the reality show Rock of Love. He made regular cameo appearances on Glory Daze, set at a college frat house in 1986.
Personal life: Blade lives in Southern California with his wife Krista, whom he wed in 2000. He became a United States citizen in 1988.