
Matthew Bowler
Video JournalistMatthew Bowler is an award-winning journalist from San Diego. Bowler comes from a long line of San Diego journalists. Both his father and grandfather worked as journalists covering San Diego. He is also a third generation San Diego State University graduate, where he studied art with a specialty in painting and printmaking. Bowler moved to the South of France after graduating from SDSU. While there he participated in many art exhibitions. The newspaper “La Marseillaise” called his work “les oeuvres impossible” or “the impossible works.” After his year in Provence, Bowler returned to San Diego and began to work as a freelance photographer for newspapers and magazines. Some years later, he discovered his passion for reporting the news, for getting at the truth, for impacting lives. Bowler is privileged to have received many San Diego Press Club Awards along with two Emmy's.
-
UC San Diego said it will continue what Sally Ride and her co-founders started — an ambitious effort to make science, technology, engineering and math education more accessible to young women and historically underrepresented students.
-
San Diego Unified School District wants its students to remember cafeteria food fondly, so changes are afoot.
-
An Environmental education conference in San Diego is focusing on teaching the facts not the politics of the environment.
-
Gov. Brown signed a bill designed to help dyslexic children, but proponents say more needs to be done.
-
Target has opened a small store in South Park, but neighbors and business owners are cautious.
-
San Diego’s Fire-Rescue Department along with the Fire Rescue Foundation are fundraising for a kit called the Personal Escape System.
-
Staff and volunteers will knock on more than 200 doors between Thursday and Saturday to ask residents about their physical and mental health.
-
The event, which will feature music, art and a fashion show, is meant to help residents reimagine the space as a neighborhood.
-
Wireless gear shifting is a better way to change gears and it’s also a way for hackers to sabotage riders in competitive cycling.
- The biggest piece of Mars on Earth is going up for auction in New York
- Los Angeles houses of worship plan for possible ICE raids
- Camp Mystic asked to remove buildings from government flood maps despite risk
- Israeli settlers beat U.S. citizen to death in West Bank
- Wildfire destroys a historic Grand Canyon lodge and other structures