
Terry Woods
Corporate Development Sales ManagerTerry Woods is the corporate development manager for the KPBS television, radio, digital, and podcast platforms. Terry has oversight for the corporate development team that provide and execute marketing campaigns for underwriters, which includes agency, direct, and national business. Terry’s background includes multi market management experience in television and radio broadcast, digital, social, over the top, and Hispanic media. She has worked for networks such as CBS and NBC, which included selling the Olympics and NFL teams including 49er and Broncos football. She has also worked with a number of startups along the way, taking their advanced media platforms to market. Her career took her to New York, San Francisco and Denver, beginning in Los Angeles following an education at UCLA. She is a native of San Diego. Terry has also run a small family owned business, while working with several organizations supporting the welfare of teens, elders, and animals throughout the years. She has always been a public media consumer and is very proud to be a part of the KPBS team.
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As President Trump bends the federal government to fit his agenda, he is also gilding the White House to suit his aesthetics. And there's one more thing he really wants: a ballroom.
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Todd Blanche's personal involvement in the case of Jeffrey Epstein is fueling questions about proper procedures at the Justice Department.
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The Trump administration proposes eliminating a 2009 finding that greenhouse gases endanger people. That would undermine the EPA's climate change regulations for power plants and cars.
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Earlier this year, Iran ordered Afghans living illegally in the country to leave. Since then, the government has labeled them Israeli spies, targeted their housing, employment and banking.
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Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks recorded an album as a duo before joining Fleetwood Mac. It wasn't a hit in 1973. But after much anticipation, it's due to get its first reissue in September.
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Dos agentes de la Oficina de Aduanas y Protección Fronteriza (CBP, por sus siglas en inglés) se declararon culpables de permitir que vehículos llenos de drogas ilegales ingresaran a Estados Unidos desde México, dijeron el lunes los fiscales federales.
- Government papers found in an Alaskan hotel reveal new details of Trump-Putin summit
- San Diego Unified responds to ICE arrest outside Linda Vista Elementary
- San Diego health providers to write prescriptions for museums, theater and dance
- San Diego’s congressional delegation weighs in on redistricting
- Brawley says goodbye to ‘El Tanke’, its historic water tower