Louisa Elizabeth "Lulu" Miller is an American science journalist and author. With Latif Nasser, she co-hosts the WNYC program Radiolab, for which she shared in a Peabody Awards in 2010 as a staff producer. She co-founded the NPR show Invisibilia with Alix Spiegel.
After five years at Radiolab, Miller left to pursue writing via a fellowship at the University of Virginia (UVA), where she taught and wrote fiction, earning a Master of Fine Arts in 2013. Before moving to Virginia, she spent a summer bicycle across the United States, a trip that she documented and featured parts of on Radiolab.
After two years at UVA, Miller returned to radio as a Freelancer journalist for NPR's science desk. On a trip to the Third Coast International Audio Festival in Chicago, she met former This American Life producer Alix Spiegel, who asked Miller to produce a piece she was working on. The two began working on radio stories together and began to conceive a new long-form radio show that would become Invisibilia. Launched in January 2015, the show focused on "the unseen forces that control human behavior." Excerpts of Invisibilia were featured on All Things Considered, Morning Edition, Radiolab, and This American Life; it debuted at #1 on the iTunes podcast chart and held a consistent top-ten ranking in the months following its launch.
In 2020, she published Why Fish Don't Exist, a personal memoir incorporating the life and work of David Starr Jordan.
Following the retirement of Jad Abumrad in January 2022, Miller became a co-host of Radiolab alongside producer Latif Nasser.
|
|