首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
A、He always sticks to his list of questions. B、He often finds interviewees talk about something that he’s not really thought abo
A、He always sticks to his list of questions. B、He often finds interviewees talk about something that he’s not really thought abo
admin
2011-02-11
33
问题
(I -- Interviewer; M -- Michael)
I: With all your experience of interviewing, Michael, how can you tell if somebody is going to make a good interviewer?
M: Oh, I say, what a question! I’ve never been asked that before. Um...I think that the prerequisite obviously is curiosity; I think that’s the, er, a natural one, not an assumed one. I think the people who have um done my job, and the graveyard of the BBC is littered with them, their tombstones are there, you know, who failed, have been because basically they’ve not been journalists. Um, my training was in journalism, I’ve been 26 years a journalist and, er, to be a journalist argues that you like meeting people to start with, and also you want to find out about them. So that’s the prerequisite. After that, I think there’s something else coming into it, into play, and I think again, most successful journalists have it. It’s a curious kind of affinity with people; it’s an ability to get on with people; it’s a kind of body warmth, if you like. If you knew the secret of it and could bottle it and sell it, you’d make a fortune.
I: When you’ve done an interview yourself, how do you feel whether it’s been a good interview or not good interview?
M: I can never really er tell on air. I have to watch it back, because television depends so much on your director getting the right shot, the right reaction -- you can’t; it’s amazing. Sometimes I think "Oh, that’s a boring interview" and just because of the way my director shot it, and shot reaction, he’s composed a picture that’s made it far more interesting than it actually was.
I: How do you bring out the best in people? Because you always seem to manage to, not only relax them, but somehow get right into the depths of them.
M: By research. By knowing when you go into a television studio, more about the guest in front of you than they’ve forgotten about themselves. And, I mean that’s pure research. I mean, you probably use, in a 20-minute interview, I probably use, oh, a 20th of the int...of the research material that I’ve absorbed, but that’s what you’ve got to have to do. I mean I once interviewed Robert Mitchum for 75-minutes and the longest reply I got from him was "yes". And that, that’s the only time I’ve used every ounce of research and every question that I’ve ever thought of, and a few that I hadn’t thought of as well. But that really is the answer -- it’s research. When people say to you, you know, "Oh you go out and wing it." I mean that’s nonsense. If anybody ever tries to tell you that as an interviewer just starting, that you wing it, there’s no such thing. It’s all preparation; it’s knowing exactly what you’re going to do at any given point and knowing what you want from the person.
I: And does that include sticking to written questions or do you deviate?
M: No, I mean what you do is you have an aide memoir, I have. My, my list of questions aren’t questions as such; they’re areas that I block out, and indeed, I can’t remember, I can’t recall, apart from the aforesaid Mr. Mitchum experience, when I’ve ever stuck to that at all. Because, quite often you’ll find that they spin off into areas that you’ve not really thought about and perhaps it’s worth pursuing sometimes. The job is very much like, actually, a traffic cop; you’re like you’re on point duty and you’re, you know when you’re directing the flow of traffic, well you’re directing the flow of conversation, that’s basically what you’re doing, when you’re doing a talk-show, in my view.
I: Have you got a last word of encouragement for any young people setting out on what they’d like to be a career as an interviewer?
M: I, I, envy them, I mean, I really do. I mean I’d go back and do it all again. I think it’s the most perfect job for any young person who’s got talent and ambition and energy. And the nice thing about it is that the proportion of talent is indeed only 5 per cent. The other 95 per cent is energy and no examinations to pass. I’d love to do it over again.
选项
A、He always sticks to his list of questions.
B、He often finds interviewees talk about something that he’s not really thought about.
C、He sometimes lets the interviewee direct the flow of conversation.
D、He doesn’t have a list of questions at all.
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/fCuYFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
1Owingtothewidespreadexpansionofcasinos,thecostofpathologicalandproblemgamblinghassoaredtonearlyhalfthe
ScientificandlearnedEnglishisnotmerelyinternationalinusinginternationalwords.Englishisfrequentlyusednationallyf
Everyoneknowsthathumanlanguagecanbeasuperbmeansofcommunication.Therefore,itcanbedamnably【M1】______
SomerecenthistorianshavearguedthatlifeintheBritishcoloniesinAmericafromapproximately1763to1789wasmarkedbyin
Modernlinguistics,asagainsttraditionalgrammar,is______.
A、multibillion-dollarbidB、athlete-orientedfocusC、plansforanOlympicparkD、diversityofculturalbackgroundBA数十亿美元的申办
Toseehowbigcarrierscouldcontroltheonlineworld,youmustunderstanditsstructures.EarthlinkgivesJenniferaccesstot
ThecentenaryofthebirthofWilliamFaulkner,oneofthegreatmodernnovelists,wascelebratedinSeptember,1997.Faulknerw
Inbusiness,manyplacesadoptacreditsystem,whichdatesbacktoancienttimes.Atpresent,purchasescanbemadebyusingc
IntheUnitedStates,charterschoolsprovidealternativesto"regular"publicschools.Unlikemostpublicschools,chartersdon
随机试题
市场约束是资本监管的三大支柱之一,其运作机制主要是依靠()的利益驱动。
如何维护汽车仪表?
根据《建设项目竣工环境保护验收技术规范—生态影响类》,生态影响调查的现场勘察时,对于建设项目涉及的范围较大、无法全部覆盖的,可根据()的原则,选择有代表性的区域与对象进行重点现场勘察。
节约用水、高效用水是缓解水资源供需矛盾的()。
球罐水压试验时,试验压力应为设计压力的( )。
采用长距离地下顶管技术施工时,通常在管道中设置中继环,其主要作用是()。
20世纪70年代起,()创造的香港口语演绎法,带动了中文歌潮流。
(15)设矩阵A=,若集合Ω={1,2},则线性方程组Ax=b有无穷多解的充分必要条件为
高级程序设计语言的特点是()。
Bynow,howtheimmunesystemisaffectedbystresshasbeenwell-documented.Inonestudy【C1】______newlywedcouples,forexampl
最新回复
(
0
)