
Thomas Fudge
Science and Technology ReporterA journalist with 30 years of experience, Tom covers science and technology stories for KPBS' platforms. He joined KPBS in 1998 to cover San Diego issues related to growth, transportation, and development. He previously served as host of These Days (now KPBS Midday Edition) and as a news editor. Tom began his broadcasting career in 1988 at WSUI Radio in Iowa City as a reporter and newscaster. He then spent five years at Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) where he worked as a reporter. Following his departure from MPR, Tom was a freelance journalist, working for Twin Cities Public Television, WCCO Radio, and a variety of regional and national newspapers and magazines. He has received recognition for his outstanding work in hosting and public affairs reporting from the Unity Awards, the Northwest Broadcast News Association, and the San Diego chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.
-
I own a book about media law that's about the same heft as my Oxford annotated bible. That occurred to me as I heard that the Westboro Baptist Church can continue to demonstrate at military funerals.
-
Last week I spoke of plans to attend Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion Show. I did. Here’s my review.
-
This week an NPR story held me hostage in my car. They’re called driveway moments though this one was in a parking garage.
-
I’ve had a relationship with a Prairie Home Companion show for so long it’s embarrassing. And on Saturday I'll go to see it again at the Civic Theatre in San Diego.
-
The San Ysidro Port of Entry is America's busiest border crossing but it also may be the most frustrating border crossing. That's why government leaders from the U.S. and Mexico showed up to break ground to expand the port.
-
Barack Obama has said his administration will no longer legally defend the Defense of Marriage Act. The move brought to mind Governor Schwarzenegger's refusal to defend Proposition 8.
-
Gov. Gavin Newsom threw his support behind San Diego's Measure D Thursday.
-
Construction began Thursday near Poway on the first leg of a 10,000-mile-long broadband network.
- 'Hell on Earth': Venezuelans deported to El Salvador mega-prison tell of brutal abuse
- Families, cosplay and dino domination: Kids take over Comic-Con 2025
- Comic-Con attendees share their survival snacks
- His name is Mohammad Al-Motawaq. He is 18 months old. And he is starving in Gaza
- 'Scotland is already great.' Protesters troll Trump on his golfing trip