I'm single but interviewing.
My stuff always starts with interviews. I start interviewing people, and then slowly but surely, a movie insinuates itself.
In the course of interviewing, I've discovered that if you don't give your guest something to react to, they don't react. They simply say what they've been saying every time they've been interviewed. The last thing you want is to have people say to you what they've said to someone else.
It must be hard interviewing actors.
Confidence has a lot to do with interviewing - that, and timing.
Interviewing is in some ways the art of memory.
There have been people who represent something very symbolic and I've been freaked out interviewing them.
I am certainly more interested in interviewing than being interviewed. Sometimes you find yourself attacked from the start.
I am really bad at actually interviewing people.
Interviewing people, I don't miss that at all. I do miss kibitzing with the audience because after every show I would spend half an hour to 40 minutes talking to people.
I like living with myself. I mean obviously, because here I am interviewing myself.
After spending the last 15 years guest hosting, I couldn't be happier to get the opportunity to host my own show! I'm looking forward to talking sports, connecting with listeners, and interviewing amazing guests every day, while being a part of the FOX Sports Radio family. It was worth the wait.
Enough people write about me every day without even interviewing me.
The mortician interviewing the corpses
One of the difficulties about interviewing people in Rwanda is that the country is trying to get on with ordinary life and some people just don't want to get involved in this.
Interviewing is not a democratic art.
One interview would lead us to another interview, which led us to another interview. We had the questions and the idea of chonicling this moment in time. But we didn't have a movie, per se. As we started interviewing people, it started to kind of define itself.
When you're interviewing someone, you're in control. When you're being interviewed, you think you're in control, but you're not.
I became the storyteller of South Side Chicago. I used an old Kiwi liquid shoe polish as a microphone. I'd go around the house interviewing everybody, telling stupid jokes, doing voices. I mimicked Sidney Poitier, Sammy Davis Jr. , people on 'Laugh-In,' Flip Wilson.
Interviewing people is pretty natural for me.