
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
-
Organizers said this year's event went very smoothly.
-
The band camp was founded by a local music teacher to counter the lack of musical education in schools decades ago.
-
A new report from Zillow says the city just edged past San Francisco.
-
The service is being offered for free because a lot of animals run away during loud Fourth of July fireworks displays.
-
Imperial Beach City Council voted to institute the moratorium so city staff can craft gun sales regulations.
-
The company will shed 415 workers by mid-July.
MORE STORIES FEATURING WORK BY THIS AUTHOR
-
Cunningham piloted the first manned Apollo mission, a key step in the drive to reach the moon, but he never flew in space again. He was a physicist who later became known as a climate-change skeptic.
-
The event will run Friday from 3 to 11 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
-
Polls closed in the 2022 Midterm Election Tuesday night, and final tallies will be trickling in over the next few days.
- A Maryland town backed Trump's cost-cutting pledge. Now it's a target
- San Diego County Farm Bureau takes 'wait-and-see' approach to possible tariffs
- Warmer weather expected this week for San Diego County
- Trump restricts funding for 'gain-of-function' research — calling it dangerous
- What’s one fix for coastal railroad tracks in North County? Try 7,700 tons of boulders