Interviewing people is hard.

It must be hard interviewing actors.

Interviewing is not a democratic art.

I love researching, I love interviewing.

Interviewing people is pretty natural for me.

I am really bad at actually interviewing people.

Confidence has a lot to do with interviewing - that, and timing.

I'd never be tied down for five years interviewing TV personalities.

When I'm interviewing somebody I don't work from prepared questions.

Enough people write about me every day without even interviewing me.

Which is worse - being a has-been or being the guy interviewing a has-been?

I try to see interviewing as performance art, and just take it as it comes.

If Barbara Walters was interviewing me, I'd figure her career was as dead as mine!

When I started my career, I can say my interviewing skills were not my strong suit.

I love interviewing people and getting them to talk about things they've never talk about.

I think interviews are good when you are an actual fan of the person you are interviewing.

My policy with interviewing is I'm not there to teach the people I'm across from a lesson.

Interviewing Hugh McIlvanney, I got to read lots of his stuff again. I'm a big fan of his writing.

I believe it's easier to be an actor. Somehow, interviewing seems to be intrusive on people's lives.

Interviewing politicians and movie stars, you know what you'll get. I like the people-stories better.

Managers get interviewed for jobs, but I think it should be the managers who are interviewing the chairman.

Most rock journalism is people who can't write, interviewing people who can't talk, for people who can't read.

I'm not a parenting expert by any means, but I've been interviewing and writing about kids for almost 20 years.

I have listened to tapes of myself interviewing people and mostly I try to be better at directing the conversation.

I am certainly more interested in interviewing than being interviewed. Sometimes you find yourself attacked from the start.

My stuff always starts with interviews. I start interviewing people, and then slowly but surely, a movie insinuates itself.

I want to be a late night host and the podcast is a way for me to do longer form interviews and to get better at interviewing.

When you're interviewing someone, you're in control. When you're being interviewed, you think you're in control, but you're not.

My kids are really dope. I was just at home in Chicago, and my daughter Brittany was interviewing me. It was like I was on 'Oprah.'

If there is one way that I would sum up what the 2016 election was on cable news, it was world-class journalists interviewing morons.

Because I come from the place of interviewing, I know how to answer a question giving you what you need to hear and not a minute more.

My interviewing style and my approach to things is that, yes, it's okay to be sincere; it's okay to be yourself; it's okay to be real.

I never dreamed when I was competing at The Championships that I would one day be interviewing the winners on Centre Court for the BBC.

When interviewing for any job, you of course want to dress appropriately for the position, but you also want to stay true to who you are.

I don't get nervous when I'm interviewing someone on film - it can be cut, and we can do it again. It is quite nerve-racking doing things live.

I was in sixth grade. I loved TV news. I acknowledge that I was also in awe of Barbara Walters interviewing Patrick Swayze and dancing with him.

Most of the people interviewing me are far more square than me. I think it's the ET thing. I'm sitting there, my hair is combed, and I'm in a suit.

When I'm interviewing someone, I want to make sure that he thought enough to take care of himself - to dress appropriately and to groom himself properly.

Whenever I think of how much pleasure I have interviewing scientists, I remember that they're having the real fun in actually being able to do the science.

In 2009, I served as AARP's Ambassador of Caregiving. With a producer and cameraman, I traveled the country for months, interviewing hundreds of caregivers.

I can't imagine not reporting. It's such a habit of mind for me, I do it even in my social life. If I'm nervous at a party, I just start interviewing people.

I thought I was going to do some cult, cool, late-night interviewing thing on BBC2. But everyone kept saying: 'No, Michael, you're teatime, you're not cool.'

The challenge of directing and interviewing helped me with confidence, and I learnt so much. If I hadn't had the brain hemorrhage, I might never have done it.

One minute I was completely unknown, barely able to feed my family, living on pennies. The next minute, Katie Couric was interviewing me on the breakfast show.

A reporter discovers, in the course of many years of interviewing celebrities, that most actors are more attractive behind a spotlight than over a spot of tea.

The idea of interviewing someone is that you are getting their first off-the-cuff impression or response. You don't want them to have the chance to really prepare.

Interviewing someone is a very proactive process and requires taking a lot of agency into your own hands to get past people's general normal self-preservation mode.

Interviewers, even the ones that support the person they're interviewing, have an obligation to probe further and push back when a candidate says something dangerous.

I've had some pretty rough interviews. And it's funny when people are interviewing you, and they sort of don't really understand what you do, and they kind of insult you.

When I was interviewing Hillary Clinton, I knew when I'd ask her something that she wasn't going to give me the complete truth because she would break eye contact with me.

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