
Bryan Logan
Saturday Morning AnchorBryan Logan is KPBS' Saturday morning News Anchor whose career spans news and talk radio, print, cable, and television news. His full time job is as editor, producer, and reporter at KFI in Los Angeles. He has bylines in the Hollywood Reporter and has appeared on BBC News. Bryan was born and raised in Los Angeles. He earned a bachelor’s degree at San Francisco State University, where he studied journalism and sang in the campus gospel choir. Bryan plays drums, alto saxophone, and piano and has backed artists on stages at the House of Blues, Avalon Hollywood, and Dodger Stadium. He also enjoys cooking and finding new music in his spare time.
RECENT STORIES ON KPBS
-
NPR has compiled a timeline of when local, state and federal officials posted warnings on social media as well as the timeline of events as presented by local officials.
-
Search and rescue efforts continue in Central Texas where flash flooding has left at least dozens of people dead.
-
The concepts in the MingKwai typewriter underlie how Chinese, Japanese and Korean are typed today. The typewriter, patented in 1946, was found last year in an upstate New York basement.
-
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said he wants the luxury resort on the eastern seacoast to become a "world destination," but the country has been reluctant to allow in foreign tourists.
-
Papilio is a picture book told in three parts about three stages of a butterfly's life (there are really four stages but egg time is pretty boring). It's also written and illustrated by three friends.
-
The Prince and Princess of Wales will join the King and Queen in granting Royal Warrants — a sort of "seal of approval" — on certain goods and services.
- California bans masks meant to hide law enforcement officers' identities
- Defense Secretary Hegseth requires new 'pledge' for reporters at the Pentagon
- Trump nominates White House aide to be top U.S. prosecutor for office probing Letitia James
- Earlybirds Club: for ladies who want to get down and also get to bed on time
- Social media is shattering America's understanding of Charlie Kirk's death