
Maya Trabulsi
KPBS Evening Edition AnchorMaya Trabulsi is an Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist who anchors KPBS Evening Edition. Maya was born in Beirut and grew up in Dubai and the United Kingdom. She came to San Diego after completing her B.A. in media communications with a minor degree in women’s studies from Webster University. She also holds a master’s degree in television, film, and new media studies from San Diego State University.
Since joining KPBS in 2014, Maya’s work has been recognized both regionally and nationally with first place awards for reporting and video editing from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, the Society of Professional Journalists, Radio and Television News Association, and the National Press Club.
In 2023, the San Diego Press club honored her investigative reporting on animal welfare issues with a first place award for her body of work. In 2024, Maya received her 8th and 9th Golden Mike awards, as well as a second Emmy for journalistic enterprise. She later received national recognition for her investigation into an unscrupulous dog breeder operating on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border when she won the Ann Cottrell Free award from the National Press Club.
Maya is an avid martial artist and holds a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
-
Deceitful marketing leads to a crisis of overfilled pig sanctuaries.
-
Poway Mayor Steve Vaus has a narrow lead over former State Sen. Joel Anderson in the race to replace Dianne Jacob on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors.
-
KPBS Midday EditionAfter 28 years, East County will see a change in leadership.
-
With classrooms closed this fall due to COVID-19, some parents are asking if traditional homeschooling might offer some lessons for the virtual learning environment.
-
The new wave of shutdowns leaves some businesses unable to move outside.
-
This year marks a century since the adoption of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Winning women the right to vote, however, was an effort launched decades before it was passed, with national and local campaigns securing small victories that led to final ratification in 1920.
-
California is joining with the federal government to open two new vaccination centers as test areas for new President Joseph Biden’s effort to create 100 mass vaccination sites nationwide in 100 days.
- The silent killer increases your risk of stroke and dementia. Here's how to control it
- Trump threatens 'Apocalypse Now'-style action against Chicago to boost deportations
- South Korea says it has reached a deal with the US for the release of workers in a Georgia plant
- HHS responds to report about autism and acetaminophen
- Postal traffic to U.S. drops over 80% after trade exemption rule ends, U.N. agency says
-
Brother Blaise of Oceanside's Prince of Peace Abbey will carry beekeeping to the end of his days.
-
KPBS Midday EditionA plant called kratom is banned in San Diego, and the DEA is considering banning it nationwide. Some San Diegans say it has medicinal benefits.
-
Spring rains in San Diego may have brought lush vegetation, but that could spell trouble in the upcoming fire season.
-
The adult gray whale is about 40 feet long and weighs up to 60,000 pounds. Its carcass is rotting at a popular surfing spot near San Clemente.
-
Reduce, reuse, recycle. That was the idea behind the big undertaking Monday in Hillcrest, where a house was loaded on to a truck and relocated to San Ysidro.
-
Chelsea's Law mandates life prison terms for those convicted of certain violent sex crimes against children, increases law enforcement oversight of paroled sex offenders and prohibits released sex offenders from visiting places where children congregate.
-
Experts at La Jolla convention ask when sea vegetables will be a staple of aquaculture
-
Jill Courtemanche is on track to make sure her headdresses are head-turners for Del Mar’s racing season.