Steve Slaton is an American rock and roll disc jockey and music director. He is best known as an on-air personality for Seattle radio station 102.5 KZOK-FM and, formerly, 99.9 KISW-FM. He began his career in 1971 at the Tacoma station KLAY-FM. In 1973, Slaton moved to KISW-FM in Seattle, where he would spend the next nineteen years. In 1993, Slaton was hired by KZOK-FM, where he hosted the midday and afternoon shows for the following seventeen years.
Slaton was born and raised in Tacoma, Washington. He attended Lincoln High, and in 1969, at age 16, he began studying radio broadcasting at a local vocational school in Tacoma. In 1972, he began hosting the evening show at the Tacoma-based KLAY-FM (now known as KBKS-FM or KISS 106.1).
Slaton began his time in Seattle radio in 1973 hosting the late night show at 99.9 KISW FM. During the late '70's, he coined himself as "Sinsemilla Steve." After three years, he moved to early evenings, where he would stay for the next eight years. His most frequently played artists consisted of AC/DC, Metallica, Van Halen, Def Leppard, Scorpions, Tom Petty, Heart, Led Zeppelin, and others. Slaton became an early fan of the band AC/DC and began devoting an hour or more of airtime to the band each night, including one instance where he played the AC/DC song 'Bad Boy Boogie' for one hour straight.
Metal Shop, Stump Slaton, and Livetime became regular features on Slaton's show. By the early 1990s, Time magazine was quoting Slaton on the emerging Seattle grunge scene, describing him as the "regent of the local deejays."
Slaton hosted a nightly show on KISW called "Disco Destruction" during which he would "blow up" disco records.
In September 1992, Slaton was fired from KISW due to creative differences following the purchase of KISW-FM by Nationwide Insurance. In response to his departure, Slaton stated "For a boy from the wrong side of the tracks in Tacoma to be at a great station like KISW for such a long time was a great privilege," he said. "So I can't feel too bad about it."