Interviewing Techniques

 

interviews

Some Do's and Don'ts

in Interviewing

Do your research! Know as much as possible about the person and the topic. Otherwise you may come off looking like a bit of an ill-informed dolt. Plus, you may later find that you missed asking the most important questions.

Don't rehearse or go through the questions and answers in advance. Although you may like to know how they are going to answer questions, if a person has just answered your question (off air), it is human nature not to repeat themselves to your face again (on air). The best and most spontaneous answers are generally the first answers.

Try to quickly put the person at ease. Since most people are nervous (and rather guarded) around cameras and microphones, you may want to ask some easy questions at the beginning — maybe even questions about their hobbies, work, or kids that you fully intend to cut out of the taped interview — just to get the conversation flowing. And it should be a conversation, not an interrogation.

If the interview is being done "live" in the studio, make sure that the person can't see themselves in a monitor. (For non-professionals this can be a major distraction.) And wherever the interview is being done, try to get the person's mind off of the people and equipment being used in the production process.

Listen to the person's answers! Many interviewers are so intent on the television process and formulating their next question that they don't really hear what the person is saying. This also means that you may have to at least temporarily abandon your list of questions and immediately pick up on something unexpected that was said.

Think in terms of soundbites. This means asking questions that will evoke personal emotions, and not just factual responses.

Conceal your agreement or disagreement with the source. If you don't you may skew the answers you are getting. Simply look intensely interested in what the person has to say (without nodding or frowning).

If you come across as disagreeing with an answer, the person may thereafter either steer clear of contentious answers or grow hostile. According to Public Radio's Diane Rehm, "You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar." Bullying sources or using coercion often backfires.

If you are taping the interview, let people know if their answers sound rehearsed.(This can be cut out later.)  Often, people who know they are going to be asked certain questions during a recorded interview will rehearse their answers. This comes across as stilted and insincere — not to mention rehearsed. Generally, people will take your advice and try to be more spontaneous.

Pre-production advice also carries into such things as clothes — calling attention to things that you know won't show up well on TV. (A male crew member may be willing to loan a male guest a more appropriate sports coat or a tie, for example; or a woman may be willing to take off highly distracting earrings or jewelry.)

Make sure that terms, abbreviations, or concepts that the audience may not be familiar with are explained. You may even have to briefly interrupt the person being interviewed to ask what a term they are using means. In doring an interview with a production person you might need to interject: "NLE, that's non-linear editing."

Ask the same question in different ways in recorded interviews, especially if it's a key question. This will give you different options during editing.

Try "nonquestion questions" during tragedies. If a person has just lost a loved one, for example, don't ask, "How do you feel right now?" (How do you think they feel?!) Instead you might say, "I can't imagine what you are going through right now." This not only shows empathy, but opens the door to a broader range of answers.

Use the source's own language in eliciting responses to questions they are trying to dodge. If they say, "I can't talk about that," try, "When can you talk about it?", or "Why can't you talk about it?"

Avoid two-part, or double-barreled questions. Not only is it hard to remember both questions, but they may just answer the question they are most comfortable with.

Whisper during small talk at crime scenes. By making jokes at crime scenes that people can hear — Ever watch the beginning of Law and Order? — you might poison key people against you, especially those who have suffered in the tragedy that you may later need to interview.



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