
John Carroll
General Assignment Reporter & AnchorJohn Carroll is a general assignment reporter and anchor at KPBS. He loves coming up with story ideas that are not being covered elsewhere, but he’s also ready to cover the breaking news of the day.
John studied broadcast journalism at Pepperdine University, having fallen in love with the medium after a high school internship at WMAQ TV in Chicago. Over the years, he has worked in Reno, Los Angeles, and San Diego. He has worked as a reporter for San Diego’s Channel 10 and a weekend reporter/anchor at San Diego’s CW6.
John loves being at KPBS because he’s given the support and the resources needed to do the kind of thorough, fair reporting the KPBS audience relies on.
MORE STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR
-
Meet the candidates and learn what's at stake with KPBS' Nov. 5, 2024 election guide for California State Assembly races.
-
San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria sparred over issues including homelessness and housing, public safety and “money matters,” including cost of living and city finances.
-
Ground was broken Monday on a project to repair a critical piece of infrastructure that controls the flow into the plant.
-
A memorial is now part of a new prayer garden at St. Augustine High School, while another is a plaque at the crash site.
-
The council voted unanimously Tuesday on a resolution, calling on Hilton to come back to the bargaining table.
-
Federal, state, and local officials toured the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant to assess ongoing efforts to address sewage flows from the Tijuana River.
MORE STORIES FEATURING WORK BY THIS AUTHOR
-
County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher announced that bank employees, public transportation workers and childcare providers who serve food must now wear non-medical grade facial coverings at work.
-
The county also reported deaths by racial breakdown for the first time on Wednesday: 15 white, 10 Hispanic/Latino, two Asian and the remaining nine fatalities unidentified by race or ethnicity.
-
The new cases are the fewest reported in the county since March 28 and the second fewest in two weeks, but the number of deaths is by far the largest increase since the public health emergency began.
- How this long-lost Chinese typewriter from the 1940s changed modern computing
- More than 50 dead in catastrophic Texas flooding and dozens missing from girls camp
- North Korea has a new luxury beach resort. But the country isn't open to most tourists
- Will Trump's megabill help Democrats win the House?
- Ukraine says it struck a Russian airbase as Russia sent drones into Ukraine