INGLEWOOD, Calif. — When you meet someone with three NBA championship rings, radio probably isn't the first thing that comes to mind. But Aundrae Russell has been a mainstay behind the microphone for three decades. He was once the music coordinator for the Lakers during the Kobe and Shaq three-peat era.

“Kobe Bryant — I’ll never forget his first game,” Russell said. “He and Derek fisher. I met him, the moment he stepped off the bus."


What You Need To Know

  • KJLH is celebrating the 25th Anniversary of its Spread The Word  Gospel Show

  • Aundrae Russell is the show's host and was once the station's program director

  • Russell earned three NBA Championship rings while working as the music coordinator for the Lakers organization

  • KJLH is the only black-owned station in Southern California and is owned by Stevie Wonder

For the listeners of KJLH, he’s the man guiding the Spread the Word gospel show which is celebrating its 25th anniversary.

“So many people call up with testimonies and people going through issues and problems and things of that nature,” Russell said. “You’d be surprised sometimes. A song sometimes can just help somebody through a tragedy or something major.”

For many years, Russell was also the program director for the station which serves L.A., Long Beach, Inglewood, and Compton. Stevie Wonder is its owner, making it the only black owned-station in all of Southern California.

“There have been other black-owned stations in L.A. but they’ve all gone away,” Russell explained. “So, it says something to be a black-owned station and to be sustained and still going on all these years, over 50 years later.”

When listeners call in it’s the clear the community connection that makes this station special.

“People look to this radio station for things like ‘the pandemic is going on, where do I go to shop? Where do I go get my food? Where do I go do this?’" Russell said. "I mean people will come here with all types of questions and they look to us to be the answer."

It’s why he is proud to have been at the station since the administration of George H.W. Bush.

“It’s like god said one day ‘who wants to be the luckiest man in the world?’ and I looked around and said ‘I guess me.'”