
Eric Smith
Corporate Development Account ExecutiveEric Smith is a business development professional with more than 20 years of experience in advertising, sales, and marketing. When not advancing the KPBS mission, Eric enjoys traveling with his family, going to the beach, spending time in the mountains and exploring the outdoors.
RECENT STORIES ON KPBS
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Lions, leopards and cheetahs are threatened across their ranges. Man-made factors are driving their declines - from habitat loss to poaching. But in the Okavango, all three species are thriving due to the protection that this unique place offers.
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As night falls, Anna and Greg are following the Xudum pride mums and cubs. The cubs, led by Mathata, start to hunt a small herd of male buffalo. For the first time, the cubs and lionesses work together and succeed in bringing a bull down. But the rest of the buffalo herd return — they are not leaving their comrade behind.
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In anticipation of a redrawn congressional district map aimed at shifting five U.S. House seats to Democrats, Ammar Campa-Najjar has announced that he will run again for the East County district seat he lost to incumbent Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Bonsall, in 2020.
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Israeli forces killed 22 people, including five journalists, in two strikes on Gaza's Nasser Hospital, drawing global condemnation and prompting a rare admission of regret from the Israeli government.
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The countdown has begun for the decaying building in the heart of downtown to either be sold or demolished. The nearly 100-year-old California Theatre has been shuttered since 1990 due to structural safety concerns.
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Virginia Giuffre was one of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's most outspoken accusers. Six months after her death, Giuffre's book detailing her life will be published.
- Has Trump kept his campaign promises to American workers? Here's what some say.
- How Trump is decimating federal employee unions one step at a time
- Don't let a selfie be the end of you
- How 3 Hawaiian teen princes brought surfing to the mainland
- More students head back to class without one crucial thing: their phones