
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.
-
Chula Vista Elementary School District might have violated state mandates last spring when students with disabilities were denied testing modifications.
-
KPBS Midday EditionLabor Day is a good time to look at how jobs and the economy are doing. The nonpartisan California Budget Project has some good and bad news.
-
Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez said the corruption scandal in the Sweetwater Union High School District inspired her to write a new law that would forbid public school administrators from raising money for school-board candidates.
-
As Common Core standards officially kick in at schools around California this year, student teachers might have an edge in tackling its education strategies.
-
Campus officials say the allegations involve members of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity
-
Lindsay School has started a preschool this year for the teens' children
-
Tijuana is home to thousands of migrants waiting to ask for asylum in the United States. Now many of them will be turned back after the Supreme Court on Wednesday lifted an injunction on a new Trump administration policy
-
KPBS Midday EditionThe therapy is called a hydrogel. And it can be injected directly into damaged heart muscle tissue.
-
The San Diego County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to take another step toward creating a public energy purchasing program that would aim to beat the prices charged by SDG&E.
- Thousands of adoptees were never given US citizenship. Now they risk deportation
- No badge? No problem: Best offsite Comic-Con 2025 events happening in San Diego
- Hundreds protest Trump administration in El Cajon 'Good Trouble Lives On' rally
- California steps in to keep LGBTQ+ crisis line alive after federal cuts
- Senate panel approves federal judge nomination for Emil Bove, who defended Trump