
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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Inflation remained elevated last month as President Trump's tariffs continued to make their way into the prices that consumers pay. The average cost of living in July was up 2.7%.
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Just published this week: A portrait of the lucrative drug-treatment industry; a memoir of a female firefighter; debut fiction from an Emmy-winning TV writer; and a brand new Karin Slaughter thriller.
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Rates of the world's deadliest cancer appear to be low in sub-Saharan Africa. But that statistic is masking the scope of the disease, doctors say.
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Washington, D.C., Attorney General Brian Schwalb says Metropolitan Police Department officers must follow local policies that govern their policing, even as Trump vows to crack down on crime.
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Russia lost a war in Crimea in the 1850s. To pay off war debts, Russia sold Alaska to the U.S. Now, Presidents Trump and Putin will meet Friday in Alaska to discuss another war involving Crimea.
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President Trump's executive order extends a reprieve from the threat of rising tariffs between the world's two largest economies.
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