
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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A literary center in Archer City, a tiny ranching town in Texas, keeps alive the legacy of famed Western author Larry McMurtry.
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Her colleagues made those remarks after the 2020 presidential election, when Pirro used her platform to amplify baseless claims of election fraud. She is now the U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C.
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The Trump administration is using decades-old laws, meant to prevent discrimination, to threaten school districts and states with cuts to vital federal funding.
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President Trump may have conceded it is easier to send troops into states where governors have asked for them, but Georgetown law professor Stephen Vladeck argues Trump could try to get around that.
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The streetcar's crumpled wreckage was still on the downtown road where it crashed Thursday. Officials declined to speculate on whether a faulty brake or a snapped cable may have caused the accident.
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The government called on the court to reverse an appeals court ruling that found most of President Donald Trump's tariffs are an illegal use of an emergency powers law.
- Experts concerned about white nationalist imagery in ICE recruitment materials
- New Terminal 1 at San Diego Airport opens to passengers
- Ramona cemetery district board member uncovers unusual compensation records
- Trump blames Tylenol for autism. Science doesn't back him up
- Animal shelter supervisor ‘out of the office’ after revelation of profane recording