
Arielle "Kai" Taramasco
Web ProducerArielle (Kai) Taramasco joins the KPBS newsroom after covering local and international news as a broadcast journalist in San Diego. She began her career interning as a surf photographer with Zak Noyle in her native Hawaii before studying abroad with Semester At Sea. She obtained her bachelor’s degree in multimedia journalism from Point Loma Nazarene University. Her work has since been featured in Honolulu Star Advertiser, FreeSurf Magazine and The Buttonwood Tree. She’s also won an award for creative media from the San Diego Society of Professional Journalists.
RECENT STORIES ON KPBS
-
Entre 30,000 y 70,000 niños adoptados por familias estadounidenses de otros países nunca obtuvieron la ciudadanía de EE. UU., según la Campaña por los Derechos de los Adoptados.
-
Some call the rise of Botox, fillers and plastic surgery "aesthetic inflation." How do we talk about their effects without being rude?
-
La Cámara de Representantes dio la aprobación final a la solicitud del presidente Donald Trump de recuperar alrededor de 9.000 millones de dólares para la radiodifusión pública y la ayuda exterior a primera hora del viernes, mientras los republicanos intensificaban sus esfuerzos por apuntar a instituciones y programas que consideran inflados o desalineados con su agenda.
-
La información permitirá a los funcionarios de ICE encontrar “la ubicación de extranjeros” en todo el país, dice el acuerdo firmado el lunes entre los Centros de Servicios de Medicare y Medicaid (CMS, por sus siglas en inglés) y el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional. El acuerdo no ha sido anunciado públicamente.
-
Premieres Monday, July 21, 2025 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS app. Turning 21, Samuel wants his independence. Yet every rite of passage is fraught with challenges and social barriers. Seizures and uncontrollable movements. Inaccessible housing. Degrading ableist encounters. "No one tells you how to be an adult," he says, "let alone an adult with a disability." Can a community of disability activists help him follow his dreams?
-
México anunció el viernes la expansión de una tarjeta bancaria, que se puede conseguir en los consulados o pedir por internet, con la que los mexicanos esquivarían el impuesto del 1% a las remesas aprobado por Estados Unidos.
LATEST IN PODCASTS
- Thousands of adoptees were never given US citizenship. Now they risk deportation
- Emily Brontë, Kate Bush and a classic novel celebrated in The Most 'Wuthering Heights' Day Ever
- California steps in to keep LGBTQ+ crisis line alive after federal cuts
- Debt-free at a tech job: How the powerful UC system lands students at Apple and Google
- The USDA wants states to hand over food stamp data by the end of July