
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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The Law & Order: SVU actor was 3 years old in 1967 when her movie star mom, Jayne Mansfield, died in a car crash. Hargitay's new documentary, My Mom Jayne, explores her mother's identity, and her own.
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Lawyers representing detainees at San Diego County’s Otay Mesa Detention Center say overcrowding is forcing their clients to sleep on the floors of their cells and damaging their health.
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San Diego's growing, but how? In Whose Backyard examines 100,000+ housing permits, revealing where new homes are built, their types, and the impact on San Diego communities and development.
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San Diego County’s Elder Justice Task Force is ramping up efforts to combat rising financial fraud targeting older adults.
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Earlier this month, three members of the Donnelly Community Services Center’s nonprofit board voted to fire founder and chief executive, Rosa Diaz. Diaz denied wrongdoing and said the board’s action amounted to a “hostile takeover.”
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Downtown, Bankers Hill, Hillcrest and North Park have seen the highest concentration of new housing in recent years, following a host of reforms aimed at building more homes in walkable neighborhoods.
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