Cover Stories
A new (old) breed of doctor is surfacing — one who makes house calls, believes pills are overprescribed, and cares to talk to their patients.
Some San Diegans who have made it onto reality TV shows speak of the experience appreciatively but don’t seem to want to further their TV careers.
My life has been tossed like a salad, mixed like a drink, and pushed off the cliffs into the ocean so many times I don't even remember.
San Diego's curios — each with their own separate stories.
A dope deal with a stranger goes — you guessed it — wrong!
San Diego realtors have made do during years of a depressed market. They are optimistic in 2013.
Wardrobe malfunctions of the very stareable.
The Twelve Tribes religious sect staffs their Yellow Delis with volunteers. Thus, they don’t pay workers’ compensation or minimum wage. Thus, they are in trouble with the IRS.
“I never thought I would actually meet someone I’d want to marry from one of these sites.”
An American couple moves to Tijuana to avoid the high cost of living in the U.S. They become food smugglers for Mexicans living in the U.S.
San Diegans have had varying degrees of success raising money for their business ventures through Kickstarter.
I didn’t know who this poor girl was to be so hated by Jimmy, but I felt sorry for her. I was the lucky girl who got to share a desk with him. “It’s YOU!” …
What could we do with our waterfront, if we really put our thinking caps on?
Danger and sometimes $100 an hour.
Few have captured Tijuana's cool new vivacity like filmmaker Aaron Soto.
When I was released from prison in June of 2008, I received $200 in cash. They call it “gate money.” It’s the standard issue for all parolees leaving California prisons, and it does not matter …