
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.
-
California School Board Association, Special Education Local Plan Area and the California Teachers Association oppose a bill that would make dyslexia screening compulsory.
-
Federal officials have seized more than 56,000 pounds of cocaine in the Eastern Pacific only six months into the new year.
-
"Take Back The Week" includes film screenings, art and discussions on masculinity
-
School officials checked out Crawford High's farm-to-table program
-
More than 250 protesters marched in downtown San Diego to voice their opposition to Senate Bill 277.
-
UC San Diego’s Rady School of Management announced Wednesday a $100 million donation from Evelyn and Ernest Rady, and the Rady Family Foundation.
-
Nearly all students in the Mountain Empire Unified School District take the school bus. To get food to those students, Feeding San Diego and school administrators had to adapt.
-
The United Ways of California study recommends policymakers expand affordable child care, public benefits and tax credits for families with young children.
-
In the last two months another two San Diego neighborhoods finished having their power lines put underground. The city’s about a third of the way done with a project it started in 1970.
- Trump administration cancels $679 million for offshore wind projects at ports
- How 3 Hawaiian teen princes brought surfing to the mainland
- Rudy Giuliani hospitalized with broken vertebra after car accident, spokesperson says
- Don't let a selfie be the end of you
- Photos: Mother Nature must be really annoyed at our fakery