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http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2008/02/28/entertainment/radio/12_22_062_27_08.txt
Entertainment: Radio
Last modified
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
1:05 PM PST

By:
RANDY DOTINGA - For the North County Times
Ted Herring is just your ordinary, run-of-the-mill jazz-station
disc jockey who marries people and gives massages for a living
even though he can't see. It's not exactly what he had planned.
Back when he still had his sight and was a student at
San
Diego
City College,
Herring expected to be a radio news reporter. He got an on-air
gig at the tiny campus radio station and strolled into work on a
September morning in 1978. He was the only newsman on the air at
the station. The other two reporters didn't bother showing up
because a PSA airplane had just crashed into the North Park
neighborhood. Herring stayed on the air during a very difficult
day but vowed to never cover news again.
"It was just that tragedy seems to be one of the big highlights
of news, and it didn't seem like a lot of fun as a career,"
Herring recalled.
And it didn't help that he could barely hold in his emotions.
But Herring didn't leave the airwaves. Herring, known as "T,"
will celebrate his 30th year as a disc jockey this year. His two
weekly KSDS blues shows are now heard throughout the world
online ---- he's gotten notes from fans in the Netherlands and
Australia ---- and he manages to stay on the air even though a
degenerative eye disease robbed him of his sight.
"It's just a matter of reinventing myself," said Herring, who's
alone in the studio during his shifts. "I'm just a blind guy
running a radio station."
KSDS,
which can now be heard throughout most of North County thanks to
a recent signal boost, is unusual in many ways. For one, it
plays traditional jazz (along with blues, Dixieland and swing),
one of only a handful of stations to do so in the country. For
another, most of its disc jockeys moonlight at the station while
working full-time jobs somewhere else.
"We have a meat department manager at Vons, a pizza
restaurateur, an attorney, several hi-tech engineers and
computer gurus, a big-time club DJ, a real estate agent, a real
estate appraiser and several social workers," said
KSDS program director Mark DeBoskey.
And that's not all. There's also a teacher, an event planner, a
mail carrier, college librarian, a county parks maintenance
worker and a record store owner.
But nobody quite compares to Herring, who's 59, married and a
licensed minister. (The license comes from the ubiquitous
Universal Life Church, which licenses anybody.)
Herring has performed about 150 weddings during the past 13
years.
"I call them truth-and-growth weddings," he said. "I find out
about how they met, and on the day of the wedding I tell the
story. One of the great joys you can have is to tell someone's
love story in front of them."
This next weekend, in fact, he'll perform the wedding of KSDS
disc jockey Ida Garcia, and he'll perform a wedding for another
station host, Claudia Russell, in October.
Herring began speaking in public after he started to lose his
sight. He's now blind but has adjusted his KSDS routine ---- his
live shows air Saturday and Sunday evenings ---- by having
someone else read information about the songs into a tape
recorder. He then listens to the recording before speaking into
the microphone to announce titles and artists.
It is, he said, a blessing that he's able to use CDs instead of
records, since he uses clicks on a CD player's knob to figure
out
which track is the right one. One might think a disc jockey who
has played the blues for years might get a bit ---- um ----
what's the word? Oh yeah. Blue.
Not so, Herring said.
"You can get blue and you can work the blue side of the feeling.
But for as much sadness as there is, it's balanced with joy and
feeling good as well. The state of blue can be many different
things."
Hence the name of his Saturday night show ---- "Every Shade of
Blue."
"That way," he said, "I can play it all." |