Audrey Nowakowski
Lake Effect Host / ProducerAudrey is a host, producer and reporter for Lake Effect. She is involved with every aspect of the show — from conducting interviews, editing audio, posting web stories and mixing the show together. Audrey is also co-executive producer of Live at Lake Effect, a filmed music series from WUWM's Lake Effect.
Before becoming a full-time producer, Audrey interned for Lake Effect starting in 2014 and joined the team full-time in the spring of 2015.
Audrey is a graduate of Cardinal Stritch University where she majored in Communication Arts and minored in History and English.
Contact Audrey at: nowakows@uwm.edu
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Milwaukee will experience 90% coverage of the solar eclipse on April 8th. Here's what to expect and how to best enjoy it.
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The consequences of climate change and the loss of cultural traditions often go hand-in-hand in places like the Bolivian highlands. The film “Utama” captures this by following the daily lives of an elderly Quechua couple. Director Alejandro Loayza Grisi joins Lake Effect's Audrey Nowakowski to share more about the film.
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Fridays in March, the planetarium is trying something a little different. Choreographed laser shows are being projected onto the planetarium's dome to space-themed music.
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Lake Effect’s Audrey Nowakowski and Milwaukee musician Trapper Schoepp are excited to bring you "Live at Lake Effect" — a filmed music series featuring local and nationally touring musicians performing in the Lake Effect Surf Shop. This episode features The Lemon Twigs.
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The Milwaukee County executive is the county’s chief executive officer, with legislative power exercised by the county board of supervisors. This year's county executive race has two candidates: incumbent David Crowley and Ieshuh Griffin.
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Instead of grieving the winter activities he didn’t get to enjoy, Ben Binversie plans to send off this warm winter with a fashion show.
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Laura Gutiérrez went to the United Community Center (UCC) as a child. She would then return to the UCC to serve in a few different roles before officially becoming the organization's CEO in 2020.
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We share our plans for "Thin Ice," a new project on the impacts of climate change on Wisconsin winters.
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Despite the prevalence of heart disease in women, most don’t know how to recognize the symptoms, especially since they often present differently from men’s.
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The City of Milwaukee is installing traffic calming measures to encourage drivers to slow down, and initial data suggests that they're working.