huge impact on your day to day
life.
Lulu Miller: To understand how
those things shape our experience, we talk to scientists and
people with really unusual experiences, and weave it all together in a way that we think is
compelling, and sometimes just
funny. There’s a lot of lightness
in the shows even though we
sometimes talk about dark stuff.
Having come from two successful public radio programs,
what was the impetus to create a new one? How long did
it take to get from inception to
first episode?
Alix: Well, we met about two
years ago, and when we met,
it wasn’t as if we just sat down
and decided to create a show.
We met at this public radio conference called Third Coast, and
at the time I was interested in
learning new radio techniques
and Lulu knew how to do a
New Jersey Stage
whole bunch of fancy radio stuff
that I didn’t know how to do. So
there was this story that I really
wanted to do, and I asked her to
work on it with me, as a producer.
At the time she was finishing
up graduate school for creative
writing, but was thinking about
eventually getting back into radio, so she said yes. And once
we went to do the reporting it
was just incredibly easy and kind
of ridiculous fun, and basically
just grew from there. It was so
much fun that we just kept on
going and our editor/co-creator
at NPR - Anne Gudenkauf helped guide it until eventually
we just had a show. That was two
years ago, and it took a while to
get her to move to Washington,
but eventually she did. I would
say that though we’ve been
working on mostly part-time because we were both doing news,
it’s taken about 18 months or
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