Interviewers Need to Get Out of the Way - Page 2
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snively
United States1159 Posts
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Mothra
United States1448 Posts
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wei2coolman
United States60033 Posts
5/5 would read again :D | ||
Mordanis
United States893 Posts
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[]Phase[]
Belgium927 Posts
As an example I will bring up Maurice de Wilde, a belgian reporter. As examples, to counter the OP, I will use the interview of Leon Degrelle. I will give a brief explanation of what goes on in this interview, because I am not sure there will be english translations available. A small fragment of the interview, for those who speak either French of Dutch : http://www.vrt.be/tijdslijn/de-nieuwe-orde In this example I'd like to illustrate how an overwhelming personality of the interviewee can make for a propaganda speech, but how the interviewer can possibly rectify this by 'fighting back' so to speak. The interviewer can also, by using albeit 'sneaky tricks', force the interviewee into a situation where he or she will say more than actually intended, and end up confessing their own guilt, albeit unwillingly. Degrelle was a collaborator in WWII, that had fled to spain. There had been interviews with Degrelle before, however they would often come over as some kind of propaganda speech : The interviewee would have such an overwhelming personality that his views would be imposed on the interview too much. Maurice however did not allow this, and made sure he got Degrelle to say what he wanted him to say by bringing evidence to the interview he had not mentioned before going into the interview. He brought papers proving Degrelle's wrongdoings. Once Degrelle was in the interview, all of the sudden confronted with said evidence, he had no way of getting out of it anymore. So, in conclusion : I do not agree that a strong personality is always bad for the interview as a whole. I believe the case I brought up suffices to show that different kinds of interviews exist, and that for each situation, we should pick the right kind of interview. We could say that there are 'soft interviews' and 'hard interviews', both having advantages and disadvantages. If we want, for example, extraction of information from a person that might not be so willing to share with us the truth, but only wishes to spread his or her own lies, then interviews of the second sort would do us much more good than the kind of interviews you have given as examples in the OP. Let me just say that the way Maurice did things are frowned upon today. Nonetheless, I believe my point still comes across. | ||
Incze
Romania2058 Posts
I liked the second one way more. She just let him talk and built on what he said previously. | ||
Roe
Canada6002 Posts
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