
Travis Tamasese
Chief of StaffAs chief of staff, Travis Tamasese guides collaboration and coordination within cross-departmental projects at KPBS and builds relationships with community leaders and groups.
He has spent more than 10 years working in public education and served most recently as the deputy chief of staff and director of strategy and policy at San Jose State University. Prior to his time at SJSU, Travis served as the chief of staff in student affairs at Long Beach State University. He has led multiple functional areas and initiatives focused on expanding access to resources, internal and external communications, diversity, equity, and inclusion, budget allocation, and strategic planning.
He is currently completing his master’s degree in human rights practice at the University of Arizona.
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The film will be available to stream beginning Monday, Aug. 18, 2025 - Nov. 16, 2025 with the PBS app. Residents of Sunset Park, Brooklyn face rising rents, a legacy of environmental racism, and the loss of the industrial jobs that once sustained their community. When a global developer purchases a massive industrial complex on the waterfront and lays plans for an “innovation district,” a battle erupts over the future of the neighborhood and of New York City itself.
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Scientists have recorded a human embryo implanting in a womb in real time. The implications of how it happens could lead to more and better treatments for infertility.
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Trailer for Emergent City by directors Kelly Anderson and Jay Arthur Sterrenberg.
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La presidenta mexicana, Claudia Sheinbaum, afirmó el jueves que el dron estadounidense que sobrevoló la víspera algunas regiones del Estado de México lo realizó a petición de su gobierno como parte una investigación contra el crimen organizado.
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Los presidentes de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, y de Guatemala, Bernardo Arévalo, se reúnen por primera vez el viernes en el país centroamericano para abordar asuntos como seguridad, migración, energía y el Tren Maya.
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A TV version of The Rainmaker is out this week, which gave critic Linda Holmes as good a reason as any to rank the on-screen adaptations of John Grisham's legal novels.
- 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