ABOUT
Mia (미아) Warren (she/her) is an award-winning audio producer living in Brooklyn, NY. With more than a decade of experience, her work has been featured on Latino USA, PRI’s The World, and in Yes! Magazine.
Mia is the Managing Director of Feet in 2 Worlds (Fi2W), a news outlet and journalism training organization that offers fellowships and workshops to help immigrant journalists reach new audiences, improve their skills, and advance their careers.
Prior to Fi2W, Mia was a Senior Producer at Sony Podcasts, where she developed several original narrative podcast series. Mia was the co-creator and executive producer of Feeling My Flo, a podcast for tweens all about menstruation. As a producer at StoryCorps from 2015-2019, she created segments for their weekly broadcast on NPR's Morning Edition, contributed to their 2019 Peabody-nominated podcast season, and collaborated on Un(re)solved, StoryCorps' Emmy Award-winning civil rights series with Frontline.
From 2013-2014, Mia was a Fulbright Research Fellow to Peru, where she studied the history of the Japanese community in Lima.
Mia is the daughter of a Korean immigrant and grew up in Boulder, Colorado. She is a voracious reader of fiction, bread baker, cyclist, and public transit enthusiast.
Mia is the Managing Director of Feet in 2 Worlds (Fi2W), a news outlet and journalism training organization that offers fellowships and workshops to help immigrant journalists reach new audiences, improve their skills, and advance their careers.
Prior to Fi2W, Mia was a Senior Producer at Sony Podcasts, where she developed several original narrative podcast series. Mia was the co-creator and executive producer of Feeling My Flo, a podcast for tweens all about menstruation. As a producer at StoryCorps from 2015-2019, she created segments for their weekly broadcast on NPR's Morning Edition, contributed to their 2019 Peabody-nominated podcast season, and collaborated on Un(re)solved, StoryCorps' Emmy Award-winning civil rights series with Frontline.
From 2013-2014, Mia was a Fulbright Research Fellow to Peru, where she studied the history of the Japanese community in Lima.
Mia is the daughter of a Korean immigrant and grew up in Boulder, Colorado. She is a voracious reader of fiction, bread baker, cyclist, and public transit enthusiast.