Avoid the complex question that you often hear
screamed at the president during national press
conferences. Those questions are asked that way
because the president is hard to get to and the reporters
try to push as much information at him as possible. You
do not have that problem. Good interviewers build each
new question on the subjects last answer. This will
produce a natural sounding flow, and if done skillfully
enough, will make the subject believe he is leading the
interview. Let the subject think that. But remember, you
have questions that need to be asked and if they relate
to an answer just given, you can segue into them in such
a way as to make them sound like simple follow-up
questions.
Finally, do not be afraid of asking the dumb
questions. Many times interviewees will try to make the
questions asked of them sound as if they are too dumb
to even address. What they might be doing is covering
up the fact that they do not know or want to give an
answer. Persist a bit (if military protocol allows) and see
if the person who would know the answer is available
for an interview. Many times an interview will lead to
other interviews with the result of some good follow-on
stories or sidebars. Keep an open mind!
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Communicating during an interview with the
camera operator can be disruptive. If you have a short
sign language worked out in advance with the
photographer, you can avoid the nerve wracking and
irritating distraction of talking about the interviewee as
if he were not there. For example, if you want an
over-the-shoulder shot as the subject is telling about the
flames from his plane searing his feet, stopping to tell
the camera operator about a neat facial expression will
probably ruin a nice sound bite. Some experienced news
teams communicate very well with just eye movement,
seat shifting, nose scratches, eyebrow movements, and
so forth.
MEAT PUPPETS
Many news directors are upset about talking heads
produced from an interview. The familiar cry is that the
audience will be bored with a talking head, and they
need a constant supply of pictures to keep their minds
from wandering. Perhaps when the writing is poor to
begin with, this might be true. The following thoughts
are submitted for the newsroom supervisor to ponder
about the usefulness of talking heads:
They can show a lot of personality about an
interviewee.
Perhaps how the speaker looks is more important
than what is being said. (Do we really care what
Miss America says about world peace?)
Some speakers are dramatic and very interesting
to watch.
The McNeil-Lehrer News Hour uses talking
heads with great success!
BODY LANGUAGE
Watch what you do with that microphone. If you
have to use a stick mike instead of a wireless or a clip-on,
do not position yourself so you look as if you are jabbing
the poor interviewee in the face (unless it is intended to
appear that way). Also remember that you are
communicating with your face just as much as you do
with your voice. In television, the visuals tell the story
with sound and words as supporting actors. If your facial
expressions show boredom, the resulting cut-aways
during the editing process could be comical or worthless
at best. If the interview is with the admirals wife talking
about the Navy Officers Wives Club 200th annual art
sale, a bored face showing upon the air could get your
neophyte reporter staring at mounds of dishes in the
galley for three months.
KEEPING IT STRAIGHT
If you are working under a nightly deadline, take
notes on possible sound bites for your story as you are
doing the interview. If you let the video camera be your
note pad, you will be in trouble when it is time to sit in
front of the editing machines and put the package
together. You will most probably have to listen to the
whole interview again and then take down notes of
where the possible sound bites are. Saving time is
paramount for most broadcast journalists. Besides,
people expect to be interviewed by someone who will
be interested enough to write something down on paper.
INTERVIEWING TIPS
As with any skill, interviewing needs practice. The
following drills have proven useful to a number of
journalists in the past and hopefully they will help your
staff as well.
l Practice the art of listening. Also, practice this
time-honored way of showing friendship by not
using any verbal sounds or obvious body
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