
Verónica Garza
Journalist at KNSD-TV (San Diego, CA)
Articles
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2 months ago |
uscannenbergmedia.com | Veronica Garza |Verónica Garza
To Gina Zapanta, her Latina identity is “just a bullet point.”Zapanta graduated from the University of Southern California in 2003 with a B.A. in Psychology and International Relations, and in 2007 with her J.D. from Loyola Law School. Since then, she’s established herself as a lawyer, business owner, philanthropist, mother of four, wife and more.
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2 months ago |
intersectmagazine.com | Veronica Garza |Verónica Garza
The only love I’ve ever known that isn’t familial is that of my friends. At the geriatric age of 21, I’ve yet to hold hands in a manner that isn’t platonic. I’ve never succumbed to the urge to text someone to say I wanted to see them again after a first date because I’ve never been on one to begin with.
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Jan 31, 2025 |
intersectmagazine.com | Veronica Garza |Verónica Garza
My nightly routine consists of three layers of blankets, an episode of “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” playing on my laptop, my phone, and my doom-scrolling rotation of TikTok, Twitter, and Instagram — in that order. But this is only after I finish — or attempt to finish — my schoolwork as a diligent journalism student. I’ve been studying media and the habits linked to it for five academic semesters now, but I’ve been chronically online for much longer.
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Sep 18, 2024 |
uscannenbergmedia.com | Veronica Garza |Verónica Garza
Big Companies You Know and Love:TargetTarget kicks off Latine Heritage Month by encouraging shoppers to browse Latino-owned brands and products in its stores. You can look for a “Latino Owned” icon in the product details to identify these brands. Shoppers can also look forward to graphic T-shirts celebrating Latine icons such as Juan Gabriel, Celia Cruz, Frida Kahlo, Shakira, Selena and more — a nod to their contributions to the arts and a notable move in their integration into American culture.
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Apr 11, 2024 |
nbcsandiego.com | Conan Nolan |Veronica Garza |Verónica Garza
California has not been tracking its spending on addressing the state’s homelessness crisis or the results of its programs, a state audit revealed this weekThe report, which took over a year to complete and was requested by a bipartisan group of lawmakers, sought to account for the $24 billion California has spent on its fight against homelessness.
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