An interview will seem very sane to me, and I'll find out that the journalist was laughing out of the side of his mouth half of the time.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The reporter claimed he was going to write the article from my point of view. Instead, he made me sound like a little idiot. It made me never want to do another interview again.
A spontaneous interview feels differently than anything else you see on television.
You never really meet a human being until you live with them or know them for awhile, so this is my clown and they understand that and so these interviews don't bother them.
I remember interviewing someone I actually felt bad for, and therefore didn't want to take an ironic stance against him. It actually turned out to be a really funny piece.
Interviews make me so nervous - I can't get a sentence out of my mouth.
I think the long interview has an important life.
Reporters have to use their imagination, really put themselves in the shoes of the person they want to interview.
The thing I love about political interviews is, if you're really prepared, you can make great headway because these are the people for whom, theoretically at least, the buck stops.
It's probably odd for someone to read an interview where the interviewee is worried about exposure while they're talking in an interview.
I don't know if it was much of an interview. We just shot the breeze.