Karen Haze
Corporate Development Account ExecutiveKaren Haze served as a account executive in KPBS' corporate development department. She was responsible for developing successful, long-term partnerships with members of the business community who seek to reach the KPBS radio, television, and digital audiences and support KPBS through sponsorship. Karen has worked in England as well as the East Coast and West Coast of the United States with for profit and non-profit organizations alike. She offers a diversified set of qualifications to the KPBS corporate sponsors with whom she works. Karen is driven to help corporate sponsors achieve their goals by using market research for a targeted approach, combining trusted programming with a quality audience. Karen enjoys live music, art, film, theatre, hiking, and volunteering with local organizations including The Challenged Athletes Foundation, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, Home Start, and the San Diego Repertory Theatre.
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The artists are in National City this week showcasing indigenous weaving practices at workshops hosted by PASACAT Philippine Performing Arts Company.
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The move follows calls from tribal nations, Indigenous community leaders and others for the permanent protection of nearly 120,000 acres of important cultural and environmental land.
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Capt. Jerry Boylan was sentenced on Thursday. He was found guilty of one count of misconduct or neglect of ship officer last year.
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The University of California’s campus safety plan was designed to calm protests by limiting law enforcement. Yet as tensions grew to violence against a UCLA student encampment erected in protest over the war in Gaza, many are criticizing law enforcement’s initial lack of intervention.
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San Diego County released its $8.48 billion recommended budget for the next fiscal year Thursday, an increase of $317.7 million, or 3.9%, over the 2023-24 adopted budget.
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Coming Soon! Premieres Mondays, May 6 - June 3, 2024 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App. Told in present tense and full of unexpected bombshells, this is the story of a family that has lived under intense public scrutiny their entire lives. Prince Harry recently described it as akin to living in "The Truman Show." Like most families, the royal family has had to deal with crises – feuds, heartbreak, sibling rivalries, affairs, divorces and deaths. But they also have had to face assassination attempts, kidnappings, tabloid scandals and terrorist bombs.
- UCSD students establish pro-Palestine encampment on campus
- Trump dice que utilizaría a la Guardia Nacional para deportar inmigrantes si vuelve a la presidencia
- San Diego's senior population to increase in coming years, raising concerns for elder orphans
- San Diego's Big Exchange returns: 10 places to visit with a museum membership
- Island life for these unhoused San Diegans means few police — and many hazards