Her work maintaining the IFLS Facebook page, as well as three others—"Earth Story", "Evolution", and "The Universe"—led to LabX Media Group hiring her as a Social Media Content Manager. In September 2012, several of Andrew's articles were included in that month's issue of The Scientist, a magazine that is owned by her employer, LabX Media Group. Her work with social media and popular science has been covered by Cosmopolitan, Mashable, ScienceWorld, and Scope.
"I fucking love science"
According to Andrew herself, she founded the Facebook page "I fucking love science" in March 2012, saying of the creation that "I was always finding bizarre facts and cool pictures and one day I decided to create somewhere to put them – it was never supposed to be more than me posting to a few dozen of my friends." After the first day of being on Facebook, the page had over 1,000 likes, and passed 1 million likes in September 2012. By January 2015, this had risen to 19.5 million likes. In August 2013, Andrew collaborated with Discovery Communications to create an online video series based on IFLS. The series was canceled that same year. The first weekly segment appeared at Discovery's online TestTube network. Episodes were also made available at the IFLS page on YouTube. Andrew has been invited to speak at engagements around the world including a series in Australia in August 2013 dedicated to IFLS, a science communication program at MIT Museum in September, a science-culture conference in Chile in October, and the World Congress of Science and Factual Producers in Montreal in December 2013. Andrew was also a speaker at the Scientista Foundation for its 5 April 2014 symposium at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She appeared at a science and skepticism conference in New York City later that month, hosted by the New England Skeptical Society. Television personality and comedian Craig Ferguson announced at the 2014 SXSW festival in Austin, Texas, US that he would be collaborating with the Science Channel and Andrew on the IFLS television program. Ferguson was meant to serve as the show's executive producer; however, production plans fell through. In 2015, Andrew was listed as one of Forbes' "30 to watch under 30" in their "media" category. In June 2015, Andrew was presented with the Stamford Raffles Award for distinguished contributions to zoology by amateur zoologists or for activities outside normal professional undertakings, by the Zoological Society of London.
Plagiarism and other criticism
Andrew has come under criticism for plagiarism and unlicensed use of intellectual property. On 23 April 2013, Scientific American blogger Alex Wild saw that Andrew had used one of his insect photographs without attribution or permission. He determined that 59 of the 100 most recent photographs used by Andrew were not credited to the original source. Wild noted that Andrew "is using to drive traffic on the IFLS page where it helps sell her own t-shirts." Ultimately, he accused Andrew of infringing the copyright of his photographs and artwork for her Facebook page without requesting permission from the copyright holders. Astrophysicist and science communicator Brian Koberlein previously stated that, due to its misleading, sensationalist, and click-bait articles, it is clear that IFLS is "just interested in pageviews" and is guilty of "the willful promotion of ignorance." Similarly, after complaining to Facebook about the uncredited use of his infographics on the IFLS page, Yemeni scientist Hashem Al-Ghaili claims to have been told by Facebook that IFLS was the subject of over 6,000 copyright complaints in 2013.
Personal life
Andrew lives and works in Midland, Ontario, Canada. On 13 September 2013, she married her fiancé Jake Rivett; she has stated that she will wait "a long time" to have children.