San Diego, CA
Celebration of life for San Diego philanthropist
Good Morning, I’m Emilyn Mohebbi in for Debbie Cruz. It’s Tuesday, May 14th.
Local leaders pay their respects to one of San Diego’s leading philanthropists. More on that next. But first, let’s do the headlines.
San Diego’s next chief of police will officially take over June 7th.
Scott Wahl received final approval from the city council yesterday.
He was chosen by San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria to be promoted to the chief position after current chief David Neisleit announced his retirement.
Wahl has been with the department for decades and currently holds the position of Assistant Chief.
San Diego County leaders will spend this week talking about how to spend billions of taxpayer dollars.
This morning begins two days of budget presentations from departments like maintenance, roads, sanitation, flood control and fire protection.
County budgets for the next two fiscal years are expected to be in excess of 8-billion dollars.
These meetings will help determine how to share that money among the various agencies and departments.
Today’s meeting begins at 10 a-m.
Another session will be held Thursday and these meetings are open to the public.
A prominent figure in San Diego sports during the 2000s has died.
A-J Smith was 75.
His family says he spent the past several years in a battle with prostate cancer.
Smith was the San Diego Chargers general manager from 2003-to-2012 – a period that featured stars like LaDainian Tomlinson, Philip Rivers and Antonio Gates.
Smith’s teams won 98 games over 10 seasons… along with five A-F-C West division titles.
From KPBS, you’re listening to San Diego News Now.Stay with me for more of the local news you need.
A celebration of life was held for the late Joan Jacobs yesterday.Reporter Melissa Mae brings us the remembrances.
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MM: Joan Jacobs was a champion for the Rady Shell at Jacobs Park. Just a day after Mother’s Day the venue welcomed hundreds of community members to her celebration of life. Jacobs died on May 6th at the age of 91.
MM: San Diego Padres Executive Vice President Tom Seidler says the Padres are fortunate to partner with the Jacobs family.
TS “They just set a high bar for how to lead in San Diego and give back to the community and so we’ve been fortunate to try to follow their lead and help make San Diego the best version of itself.”
MM: Along with the Rady Shell, the Jacobs family has donated millions of dollars to the the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, the La Jolla Playhouse and San Diego Symphony… Who is dedicating their 2024-25 opening season of Jacobs Music Center to Joan Jacobs. Melissa Mae KPBS News.
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The Jacobs family are also major donors to us here at KPBS.
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If you’ve walked along the beach lately, you may have noticed clear, oval shapes dotting the shore.
Reporter Katie Anastas (a-NASS-tis) says they’re washing up all along the west coast.
The round, translucent shapes have rings and a thin sail running down the middle. While they might look like plastic, they’re actually a kind of zooplankton [ZOH-plankton] called velella velella, or by-the-wind sailors.
Anya Stajner [sch-TY-ner] studies zooplankton at U-C-S-D’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Because of that sail they often get blown ashore in times of high shoreward winds and currents.
Out on the ocean’s surface, velella have a bright blue ring around their edge. Their color fades away once they wash up on shore.
If you’re out there swimming or surfing you should keep your eye out. You can surf right alongside those little sailors.
Velella catch their prey with tiny tentacles dangling from their bodies. Their stings aren’t usually harmful to humans, but scientists recommend avoiding touching your eyes or mouth after handling them.
Katie Anastas, KPBS News.
In the meat industry, pink slime is known as pieces of cow steamed with ammonia and used as beef filler.
In media circles, pink slime is a term for websites that pose as unbiased local news providers but actually have a political agenda.
Investigative reporter Amita Sharma says two of these sites are in San Diego.
“I know you want to Hildy, but you can’t quit the newspaper business. Oh? Why not? I know you Hildy and I know what quitting would mean to you. And what would it mean? It would kill you.”
More than eight decades after that scene from the comedy His Girl Friday, the American public has largely quit newspapers. As a result, thousands of newsrooms have gone dark in the past two decades. Today, there are only about 1,200 daily newspapers left in the United States.
Experts say this is bad enough…making matters worse, there is now an equal number of so-called pink slime sites.
“A pink slime site is a news outlet that is presenting itself as a traditionally local-focused news publication, free of bias and free of political ties with human journalists on their team.”
But NewsGuard’s McKenzie Sadeghi says that’s not the full story.
“They also mix in some very partisan content that promotes certain candidates or ideologies that favor the goals of their political founders or backers.”
There are two such websites in San Diego County: San Diego City Wire and sister outlet East San Diego News. At first glance, they look like a traditional newspaper site…with sections for local government, politics, business and sports. But look closer and there are striking differences. There are no human bylines. And a lot of the articles are actually press releases or content generated by AI.
“They use software that analyzes large sets of data. For example, campaign finance records or unemployment data and turn it into a report, making it specific and tailored to that specific county
San Diego City Wire recently ran stories about the number of local FDA inspections and political committee contributions…Then there are other stories … that reveal a political agenda…like pieces referring to undocumented migrants as “illegal aliens” or disclosing how many teachers in a district pledged to teach critical race theory.
These are right-leaning news sites.”
The San Diego websites have no phone numbers for their leadership, only a single email address. Emails KPBS sent seeking interviews bounced back.
Longtime news analyst Ken Doctor, runs a Pulitzer-Prize winning digital news website called Lookout Santa Cruz. He says the ongoing decline of local newspapers has paved the way for pink slime.
“I fear we’re entering a Blade Runner era of the news business, given what artificial intelligence can do in the wrong hands. That is part of what is going to make this pink slime problem far worse very quickly.”
Especially in an election year.
“I fear we’re headed toward a dumpster fire.”
Tim Franklin is a dean at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. He says these are treacherous times.
We have a hyper-partisan environment that we’re all living in. We have hotly contested elections coming up. We have growing news deserts and frankly we need reliable, accurate information to make informed decisions as voters. Pink slime is only gonna muddy the situation.”
Franklin says the antidote to pink slime is a national media literacy campaign to help people distinguish between news AND information designed to mislead.
Amita Sharma, KPBS News.
Mexico’s presidential election is less than a month away and KPBS wants to include our audience in our coverage.
We will hold a virtual conversation later this month, answering your questions in English and Spanish.
To participate, go to KPBS-dot-org and look for the banner at the top of the homepage to click through and submit your question or topic.
Then be sure to join us on the evening of Wednesday, May 29th at 5-30 on YouTube or Facebook for the virtual event.
That’s it for the podcast today.
As always you can find more San Diego news online at KPBS dot org.
Tomorrow on the podcast a Mindfulness Expert will join me for a discussion on mental health as we mark Mental Health Awareness Month.
I’m Emilyn Mohebbi. Thanks for listening and have a great Tuesday.
San Diego, CA
5 things to know about Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei
San Diego, CA
Joan Endres – San Diego Union-Tribune
Joan Endres
OBITUARY
Born January 1939 in Cincinnati Ohio. Died February 14, 2026, in San Diego, California, with her sons at her side. Her beloved husband Dean passed away in 2010.
Joan was the only child of Thomas and Edna Palmer. In 1943, the family moved to San Diego, where Joan graduated from Helix High School in 1956.
In 1957 Joan married Dean Endres of San Diego, where they raised two sons. Joan followed her two great passions outside the home, the Arts, and Gardening. Both activities being a way to bring beauty to others and to the community.
Joan received a degree in Environmental Design from San Diego State University, and afterwords worked at UCSD, for the Campus Architect.
As an artist, Joan worked in various media, especially ceramics. She was active in many cultural and arts organizations, eventually becoming President of the Combined Organization for the Visual Arts (COVA). Later she turned to gardening, with the Water Conservation Garden at Cuyamaca Community College and the Master Gardener Association of San Diego County.
Joan is survived by her son Jeff and wife Katrin, grandson Jackson, and son Todd Endres, all of La Mesa, and sisters Alice Buck of Phoenix, Elaine Kennedy of San Diego, Nancy and husband Don Jones of Vista, Eva Budzinski of Cloudcroft, New Mexico, and their children and grandchildren.
There will be a Celebration of Life for Joan in the near future. Those who wish to attend should contact celebratejoanuvart@gmail.com to receive details when they are confirmed. In lieu of flowers, the family respectfully suggests a donation to the Water Conservation Garden or the Diego Visual Arts Network (SDVAN).
San Diego, CA
San Diego State moves back into NCAA Tournament field in latest ESPN Bracketology
The San Diego State Aztecs’ have moved off the bubble and back into the NCAA Tournament’s Field of 64 in the latest ESPN’s Bracketology projections.
The Aztecs must feel like a yo-yo, but now it’s in a good way. Bracket expert Joe Lunardi moved them from the bottom of the First Four Out — No. 72 — to holding the Mountain West’s automatic bid after an 89-72 home romp Wednesday night over Utah State, which had held the auto-bid in bracketology for a few weeks now.
Lunardi now has the Aztecs as the No. 11 seed in the West Region, with a projected first-round date against former MW rival BYU in Portland.
Lunardi wrote that SDSU’s auto-bid “shifts the entire bubble.”
Wednesday night’s victory not only pulled the Aztecs (19-8, 13-4) into a tie with Utah State (23-5, 13-4) atop the MW standings, but it was just their second Quad 1 victory in six such opportunities.
SDSU’s next two games are both Quad 1 chances, at New Mexico on Saturday and then at Boise State on Tuesday night.
The win lifted the Aztecs only one spot in the NCAA NET Rankings, to No. 43. Those rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee as the primary sorting tool for selection and seeding for March Madness.
SDSU’s resume for earning an at-large berth has been on shaky ground all season, and was seriously damaged last week when the Aztecs lost at home to Grand Canyon and were then routed at Colorado State, both Quad 2 games.
SDSU’s best bet to assure a trip to March Madness for the sixth straight season is to win the MW tournament in Las Vegas and claim the automatic bid. That requires winning three games in as many days, and perhaps a third showdown against the Aggies, who beat the Aztecs 71-66 in Logan on Jan. 31.
Lunardi now has Utah State projected as an at-large team, but still with the No. 7 seed in the East, facing No. 10 Texas A&M in a first-round game in St. Louis.
New Mexico (21-7, 12-5), lurking just a game behind SDSU and USU, has dropped from the Last Four In at No. 68 to the First Four Out at No. 70.
The Aztecs were the unanimous preseason pick to win the MW regular-season title in their final season in the league before moving into the Pac-12 along with Utah State, Boise State, Fresno State and Colorado State.
Saturday’s game at New Mexico is set to tip off at 11 a.m. PT and will air on CBS.
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