
Sharon Gorevitz
Corporate Development ExecutiveSharon Gorevitz began at KPBS in 1985 as a volunteer reader for the Radio Reading Service and in 1995 joined KPBS as a corporate development executive. Sharon has over 35 years experience in advertising, sales, and marketing. She is responsible for building partnerships with businesses, as well as non-profit organizations and foundations to help them achieve their marketing goals through a targeted media plan consisting of radio, TV, web, and special events to reach the KPBS audience. She has also been involved in the San Diego community, both working on boards and volunteering at various business and arts organizations. In 1976, Sharon moved from the Boston area to San Diego. She enjoys spending time with family and friends. She also appreciates the visual arts, art shows, theatre, photography and travel.
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New books this week include Secret of Secrets — the sixth installment of The Da Vinci Code saga, plus a tech memoir from Tim Berners-Lee and a career-spanning anthology from Terry McMillan.
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It’s being billed as a Solutions Showdown. Voice of San Diego’s annual Politifest is slated for Saturday, Oct. 4 at the University of San Diego.
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City-specific Facebook groups are a growing source of local news for many people.
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What makes rents go down and neighborhood diversity go up? Corporate landlords. But they also make it harder to own for yourself.
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Sébastien Lecornu, 39, is a Macron loyalist who has served as defense minister since 2022. The National Assembly ousted former Prime Minister François Bayrou in a no-confidence vote on Monday.
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For the 2025 NPR Student Podcast Challenge, we've listened to nearly 2,000 entries from around the U.S., and narrowed them down to 11 middle school and 10 high school finalists.
- San Diego is building a lot of homes in its most walkable neighborhoods
- City Council clears way for tiered parking rates at San Diego Zoo
- Lakeside-area wildfire stopped, evacuations remain in place
- What kind of dairy does a body good? Science is updating the answer
- Supreme Court allows immigration agents to resume ‘roving patrols’ in LA, siding with Trump