
David Streib
KPBS Broadcast DesignerKPBS' Broadcast Designer/Network Analyst David Streib, M.F.A., M.A., has received 16 Emmy nominations including three Emmy Awards for outstanding achievement in the areas of Art Direction, Graphic Design and Editing. Strieb holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in film and video from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as a Master of Arts degree in Art and Design from Northern Illinois University. In addition to his creative work at KPBS, Streib's technical expertise is key to the development and system administration of the cost effective state-of-the-art High Definition Production Center at KPBS. The KPBS HD graphics laboratory features Academy Award-winning Discreet Flame/Smoke digital compositing and editing systems and Academy Award-winning Alias/Wavefront MAYA visual effects software. Streib's technical know-how stems from his past work experience in high-end Chicago advertising production, large scale Hollywood digital production, and 3D technical visualization for local San Diego high tech companies. Streib creates approximately 150 original motion graphics (Branding IDs, 3D set visualizations, underwriter spots, community outreach designs, fund raising materials, show openers, documentary graphics) each year for KPBS and its clients.
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With the number of survivors rapidly declining and their average age now exceeding 86, this year's anniversary is considered the last milestone event for many of them.
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The study from UC Merced shows that the decline in labor participation during a week of aggressive enforcement was similar to the first month of the Great Recession.
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This man in Mozambique is one of many who've received a cash sum with no strings attached. The Trump administration has criticized and curtailed the practice. Advocates are pushing back with evidence.
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When Dana's son was hospitalized last year, it led her to a path of discovery about predatory online networks that groom children into harming themselves and others. Their reach is global and growing.
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Charming critics and audiences with New Threats From The Soul, his funny, loose, reference-packed album, the veteran Louisville musician is having an unlikely breakthrough at 40 years old.
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Sixty years after the Voting Rights Act became a landmark law against racial discrimination, legal challenges heading to the Supreme Court could curtail its remaining protections for minority voters.
- After 6 years, San Diego approves 380-unit housing project next to Blue Line trolley
- New ‘warning’ signs for Tijuana sewage go up, and they're not at beaches
- ICE arrests parent near elementary school in Encinitas
- Parents push Encinitas to act after daughter’s crosswalk death
- Politics Report: Padres do some polling