
Karen Haze
Corporate Development Account ExecutiveKaren Haze served as a account executive in KPBS' corporate development department. She was responsible for developing successful, long-term partnerships with members of the business community who seek to reach the KPBS radio, television, and digital audiences and support KPBS through sponsorship. Karen has worked in England as well as the East Coast and West Coast of the United States with for profit and non-profit organizations alike. She offers a diversified set of qualifications to the KPBS corporate sponsors with whom she works. Karen is driven to help corporate sponsors achieve their goals by using market research for a targeted approach, combining trusted programming with a quality audience. Karen enjoys live music, art, film, theatre, hiking, and volunteering with local organizations including The Challenged Athletes Foundation, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, Home Start, and the San Diego Repertory Theatre.
-
NPR wants to hear from listeners whose lives have changed due to an increase in ICE operations, throughout the country.
-
Alex Morgan didn’t retire as much as she shifted. The two-time Women's World Cup winner was always more than merely a soccer player, but since she’s stepped away from the game she’s thrown herself into her different business ventures.
-
The report issued Tuesday by experts commissioned by the United Nations' Human Rights Council calls on the international community to end the genocide and take steps to punish those responsible.
-
A movie star to his core, Robert Redford has died after a visionary career in cinema, including founding the Sundance Institute that transformed the market for independent films.
-
For the first time in decades, the U.S. has decertified Colombia as a drug control partner — a symbolic blow to one of Washington's closest allies in Latin America.
-
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., talks about the cancel culture that has followed Charlie Kirk's assassination and what it means for free speech.
- County official overseeing animal shelters complained of 'shit dogs,' too few euthanasias in voice message
- 20 free ways to explore San Diego Design Week 2025
- New trash cans are coming to San Diego curbs in October
- Encinitas rescinds vote on ICE emergency, then reaffirms most prior actions
- Kirk shooting videos spread online, even to viewers who didn't want to see them