tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90260347267016061472024-03-13T13:21:24.228-07:00Interviews with ExpertsJust hearing about something on the TV news or reading about it on the Internet isn't enough for me. I like to find a bona fide expert and ask him what's going on directly. This blog will chronicle those interviews and include some side information about the process as well.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger31125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-54900978184107133052013-08-23T13:15:00.000-07:002013-08-23T14:12:59.380-07:00The Real Faces of the Syrian Conflict<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
If you're a regular reader here, I'm sure you've heard me say it before. I'm not a big fan of rewriting or summarizing press releases to make a news story, even if the release is of a highly newsworthy event. I feel that it is incumbent upon the journalist to gather and add original content that enriches the story. <br />
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When I received an offer of support from the UN to publish around the milestone date that marks the passage of the one millionth child refugee crossing the border to escape from the Syrian conflict, I was eager to take on the task. I asked for access to a UN staffer who was local to the region and for the full story of at least one child or family who had been displaced by the conflict - one that would be exclusive to my article as opposed to those included in the media package made available to a broader selection of journalists and news agencies. The UNHCR was happy to provide those resources for which I asked. I also received an exclusive photograph of that child for use with the article.<br />
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<a href="http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-57599818/syria-war-has-created-1-million-child-refugees/" target="_blank">The Real Faces of the Syrian Conflict: Today Marks 1 Millionth Child Refugee</a><br />
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The interview, due to the time differences and the short deadline that I had to get the story published in time for the milestone (August 23rd), meant that I had to stay up all night, conduct a telephone interview with a subject who was 7 hours removed from me in Amman, Jordan, and spend the morning writing and editing the piece. <br />
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I hope you find it as moving as I did.<br />
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UPDATE: The article has just been moved to the front page feature position on Yahoo.com (in the photo scroll at the top of the page).<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-78402153209962854352013-07-09T15:17:00.003-07:002013-07-09T15:17:50.939-07:00Turn PR Releases into Original, Value-added Articles<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Recently, I was approached by the Communications rep. from National Geographic Society with an offer to use original photos from the July issue if I were interested in talking about the upcoming article "Last Song for Migrating Birds." I read the article and found it quite interesting, but I generally don't like to do straight PR pieces unless I have something original to add above and beyond the article itself or material from a press release. <br />
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I told National Geographic that I'd be interested but I'd like to include an original interview. They offered David Guttenfelder who took the very compelling photos for the article. As it turns out, Guttenfelder is also the chief photographer for the Asian region for the Associated Press and has made a career of conflict photography, among other assignments, covering wars in Iraq, Kosovo, and Afghanistan. <br />
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<li><strong>Read the full article at Yahoo! News: </strong><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/national-geographic-photos-document-massive-bird-slaughter-224500499.html" target="_blank"><strong>National Geographic Photos Document Massive Bird Slaughter</strong></a></li>
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I was curious how he might bring a unique photographic perspective to a story about birds and about his reaction to the avian casualties. An interview with that angle allowed me to add some quality original content to the discussion of the National Geographic article. It was also an angle that appealed to my editor at Y!CN who told me that it would be published at Yahoo! News ( <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/">http://news.yahoo.com</a> ). <br />
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That generally translates into many more readers - a win for me and for National Geographic from a publicity viewpoint.<br />
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I ended up with three of Guttenfelder's images embedded in my article along with a video of him talking about his experience on this assignment, along with 2500 words of introduction and original interview material derived from a phone conversation.<br />
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Many freelance writers receive information from Public Relations representatives on a regular basis. If you simply summarize it and publish as a fluffy PR piece, you'll likely find that there are dozens of similar articles from other writers who received the same source material when you did. To make you article stand out and stand above the rest, always try to make the extra effort to add something original and of value to your readers. If the article is one of many, then it is a commodity and it doesn't matter which one the reader finds. If you add extra value then even readers who read one of the plain PR pieces will still enjoy and learn something by reading your article.<br />
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PR reps generally understand a writer's desire to stand out with original material and are often willing to help by providing direct access to original sources for interviews. It's their job to field and evaluate such requests so don't be shy about asking. It helps if you have a commitment for publication at a prominent site, but if the PR person didn't feel you were worth their time, they wouldn't have sent you the press release material in the first place.<br />
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If the end result turns out good, then you might have expanded access in the future. As a result of this particular endeavor, for example, National Geographic offered to send me contact information for interviews for articles from upcoming issues on a monthly basis. This doesn't commit me to writing anything, but allows me to pick and choose interviewees based on what I find interesting and newsworthy. As an additional benefit, I can add topic experts to my database of references should I ever have need of them again in the future. Access to a conflict photographer in Asia might be quite useful. <br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-50947676415240057272013-02-16T07:09:00.000-08:002013-02-16T07:09:27.451-08:00A Good Lesson for High School Kids?<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Shortly before the <a href="http://expertinterviews.blogspot.com/2013/02/interview-wins-content-of-year-award.html" target="_blank">Content of the Year award</a> was announced by Yahoo! Contributor Network, I was contacted by a member of the editorial staff at <a href="http://www.pearson.com.br/" target="_blank">Pearson Publishing's Brazil office</a>. Pearson wanted get permission to use an excerpt from one of my articles in a high school English textbook. <br />
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It was the same article that I had been told was about to be announced as the Content of the Year winner. The Pearson editor told me that they had sent the request to Yahoo!'s permissions office, but had not received a reply. Because the article was licensed exclusively to Yahoo! Contributor Network, only Y!CN can grant reprint or usage rights such as those requested by Pearson. <br />
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I replied to the editor letting them know the situation and also forwarded the request to a contact at Y!CN to try to make sure it was seen by the right department. A few days later, the editor from Pearson Brazil let me know that they had received approval from Yahoo!'s legal department to use the excerpt from my article.<br />
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So as of the release date of the next edition of '<a href="http://www.pearson.com.br/produtos_detalhes.asp?id_p=0&livro_cod=9788588317376&pag_id=6&area_pai=21" target="_blank">Hyperlink</a>' in Brazil, my work will appear in an English text book written for native speakers of Brazilian Portuguese. Remembering my own foreign language classes, I can picture a room full of high school kids debating the greater meaning of the article in accented English. "What was the author's opinion of Jake Reilly's experiment?" the teacher may ask, hoping that the students can infer from the subtleties of my specific word choice and phrasing whether I was sympathetic to <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/90-days-without-cell-phone-email-social-media-015300257.html" target="_blank">Jake's self-imposed hardships</a>.<br />
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<strong>Interview Finds Continued Popularity Through Social Media</strong><br />
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This article remains one of my most viewed pieces at Yahoo! month after month, even a year after it was first published. It isn't a particularly popular search topic, and it isn't written with SEO in mind. The traffic it receives must, therefore, be based on the content and concept of the article itself. It appeals to the imagination and emotion of readers and makes them want to share it. <br />
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It was shared tens of thousands of times through Twitter, Facebook, email and other social media, and I'm assuming that the continued traffic comes through blog links and social media mentions. It can be found on search engines, highly placed, but only for very rare search terms that one might use if they had heard about the topic previously and were actually looking for the article.<br />
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At some point, it came to the attention of the editorial staff of a textbook company in Brazil who thought, for those same reasons that it would capture the imagination or at least hold the attention of high school students learning English. <br />
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<strong>Payment for Textbook Usage?</strong><br />
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For those who maybe curious, I am not getting paid by Pearson for the use of my material in their text. While I generally (always) insist on being paid for my work, I chalk this one up to good will, despite the fact that Pearson does sell its texts for profit. My work will be helping kids learn. It's my first appearance in a textbook or any printed book, to my knowledge. I'll use the credit in my writing bio. This particular article is already my highest paid writing effort to date, having earned me thousands of dollars in royalties (with more coming in each month) plus another thousand for winning Content of the Year at Y!CN. <br />
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<strong>Writing for Free?</strong><br />
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As a general rule, when asked to write something in return for the exposure and without other cash compensation, I decline and have even been known to ask the person who proposed it if they would like to wash my car in exchange for me touting their car washing skill to my friends. So far, none of the people asking me to work for free have been willing to work for free. Go figure.<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-3342799430047847332013-02-07T19:47:00.002-08:002013-02-07T19:51:12.331-08:00Interview Wins Content of the Year Award<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
The Yahoo! Contributor Network has announced today that one of my interviews was selected as the winner of one of five <a href="http://contributor.yahoo.com/blogpost/377/congratulations-2012s-content-year-winners-12008319.html" target="_blank">Content of the Year awarded for 2012</a>. The article in question, my interview with Jake Reilly, was published by Yahoo! News and was selected as a feature to appear on the front landing page at Yahoo.com. <br />
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One day Jake was visiting friends and looked up from his cell phone long enough to notice that all the friends were spending the entire visit texting people who weren't there. The sudden realization that he and his friends seemed more connected to their electronics and social media apps than they were to each other caused him to <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/90-days-without-cell-phone-email-social-media-015300257.html" target="_blank">swear off using his cell phone, email, and social media for 90 days</a> in favor of in-person conversations and good old-fashioned letter writing.<br />
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The experience, he says, changed his life and the way he views his friends. Without the crutch of IM and social media messaging, some 'friends' just faded out of his life, others became closer than ever. He even managed to recapture the heart of a former girlfriend. <br />
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When I initially heard of the story and decided to interview Jake about his experience, I expected it to be a quirky, almost glib article that was mildly interesting. Instead, as I talked to Jake and dug into his experience, the depth of the emotions he experienced during what he termed his 'Amish' experiment began to come through. I was moved, and I hope that I was able to convey some of that emotion to readers.<br />
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Ironically, when it was first published the article went viral with tens of thousands of social media shares and readers measured in the millions. Even before the $1000 bonus for the Content of the Year award from Y!CN, this article was my single highest paid article for any publishing platform. To date, this article has earned a little over $3,300 and it continues to earn royalties every month. That's for about six or seven hours of work. <br />
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Most articles don't earn nearly that much, but Y!CN articles which are chosen for features on Yahoo.com can earn thousands of dollars since payment is based on readership statistics. Articles must be entertaining and unique to get such prominent placement. Think about the kind of articles that you can't resist clicking to read more. That's what web publishers want, and most of them are willing to pay well for them. Sometimes, you guess wrong and end up with a dud. At other times, you might write something for the upfront fee with little expectation for future royalties and wind up amazed at its popularity. <br />
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What advice do I have for anyone who wants to be a successful web content writer? Write what you'd like to read, but can't find anywhere else. Write often. Be yourself. When you're finished with each article, ask yourself if you would have been disappointed if you had clicked an eye-catching headline to read that article. If the answer is yes, then no matter how many popular search terms or celebrity names you've included, it probably shouldn't be published. Don't use cheap tricks to attract readers who will only end up disappointed. Strive for quality. Learn from your successes and your mistakes. Listen to your editor(s).<br />
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More than any paycheck, I am rewarded by overhearing strangers or my son's friends talking about something they read online and realizing that I wrote it. That's happened to me several times, and it's as satisfying as having the referee raise your hand in the middle of the ring after a fight. Getting paid to do what I love to is great, but it's those little moments of vindication, the praise of a stranger, an editor's choice to feature something you've written, or an award like Y!CN's Content of the Year that are my most prized compensation.<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-7236416268986641282012-06-30T20:13:00.000-07:002013-02-01T05:38:37.058-08:00Publishing for Just One Reader<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Of all the interviews that I have published, I think I am most proud of this one: "<a href="http://news.yahoo.com/mom-seeks-kidney-lifesaving-hero-facebook-203200061.html" target="_blank">Mother Seeks Kidney, Lifesaving Hero Through Facebook</a>." It tells the story of one brave woman who is facing some some serious health issues. Even with dialysis treatments, the prognosis is bleak, and she expects she might have five years left, during which time she will become sicker and sicker.<br />
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The thing is, though, her condition can be not just more effectively treated, but virtually cured with a tested, approved, and proven medical technique. Despite this, 4500 people each year die while waiting their chance to undergo that "cure." Granted, the cure is ot permanent, but it does grant a reprieve of 10-30 years or so. That treatment is a kidney transplant. <br />
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Unfortunately, too few donors step forward to meet the needs of patients who have experienced kidney failure. The interview with Maria gives an emotional account of what it's like to sit on a transplant waiting list for years, knowing that it only takes one person, one hero, to step forward and offer to help. In Maria's case, she has turned to Facebook to try to locate a suitable donor.<br />
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This article hopes to reach that one single individual willing to give the gift of life for Maria. In order to reach that one reader, however, it's important to put the article in front of as many people as possible and get them to share it as broadly as they can to aid the search. Of course, all of them will also learn about the effects of kidney failure and dialysis, as well as the importance of organ donation.<br />
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Those who donate kidneys are thoroughly screened to make sure they are healthy and have no significant risk factors that would reduce the function of their remaining kidney should they donate one. So effective is this screening that kidney donors have identical life expectancies as those with two functioning kidneys. <br />
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To hear Maria's story in her own words and learn more about kidney donation, click the <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/mom-seeks-kidney-lifesaving-hero-facebook-203200061.html" target="_blank">interview link</a>. <br />
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<strong>Finding the Story</strong><br />
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As for the interview itself, I first learned of Maria and her situation when a former colleague of mine contacted me and mentioned that it might make a good story and, of course, help to publicize Maria's search for a donor. Personal contacts can be an important source of potential news stories and newsworthy interview subjects.<br />
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<strong>Editorial Requests</strong><br />
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I thought the emotion of the story made it very compelling, but my editor suggested that the Facebook search made it more unique and asked me to revise it to focus a bit more on that angle. Unusual and emotional stories are more likely to be prominently featured and reach a larger audience. Since that is the goal of the piece, I was happy to oblige. </div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-84506995737867850242012-05-31T20:18:00.000-07:002012-05-31T20:18:59.633-07:00Print Publisher Discusses E-books, Social Media<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: left; margin-right: 1em; text-align: left;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaa9mYvJ_mnzWgSp6WrhwpjmbU7gEfeLgG_DL52f9j1iRMt8sgmPLmqcTm-MHDylGZt7aoSlrbJIwaE_ydSz79UPdMGl8vsatZh3jM8r3kBsr0edQOGTdJ3Cozv7ly-QzdeLaSK_K5TMYt/s1600/102_4410.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaa9mYvJ_mnzWgSp6WrhwpjmbU7gEfeLgG_DL52f9j1iRMt8sgmPLmqcTm-MHDylGZt7aoSlrbJIwaE_ydSz79UPdMGl8vsatZh3jM8r3kBsr0edQOGTdJ3Cozv7ly-QzdeLaSK_K5TMYt/s400/102_4410.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Will print books go the way of the dinosaur?<br />
Photo by Brad Sylvester, copyright 2011. All rights reserved.</td></tr>
</tbody></table>
Working in the consumer electronics industry for a company concerned with music, I watched as digitally downloaded music became the standard, displacing Cds as the focus of music publishing. Now that I'm more involved with the written word, I see some interesting similarities and differences between the music industry's approach to advancing technology and the way that at least some print publishers are adapting to the growing popularity of digital content. <br />
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I recently spoke with Rob Tempio, Executive Editor, and Leslie Nangle, Associate Marketing Director, bot from Princeton University Press about the challenges and opportunities presented to their industry by digital content. I found the discussion quite interesting and if you are interested in online content creation, digital downloads, books, technology, or Princeton University, you might enjoy it as well.<br />
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Here is my <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/print-publishers-adapting-e-books-digital-downloads-210600250.html" target="_blank">interview with Tempio and Nangle of Princeton Universtiy Press as published at Yahoo! News</a>. </div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-71393233798510710772012-02-01T12:11:00.000-08:002016-01-24T16:40:26.717-08:00Anti-social media message goes viral<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
On Saturday, I conducted an interview with Jake Reilly, a young copywriting student from the Chicago Portfolio School. He had just finished a <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/90-days-without-cell-phone-email-social-media-015300257.html" target="_blank">self-imposed exile from all social media, email, cell phone, texting and television</a> which he referred to as "going Amish." He felt that these things were too much of a distraction from actual real-life personal interactions and that the superficial types of communication that can occur through texting, tweeting or Facebook messaging were crutches that interfered with real relationships.<br />
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I finished the article Sunday evening and it was posted first to the news page at Yahoo! (news.yahoo.com) as many of my interviews are. Later it was added to the text list of news articles on the front page at Yahoo.com. It was moderately popular there, and so it was elevated by Yahoo! to the featured article scroll at the top of the page, added to <i>Editor's Picks</i> and <i>Today on Yahoo!</i> The latter two appear at the bottom of every news page on Yahoo!<br />
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The short story is that the article was very visible on a very popular web property for a little more than 36 hours. For a while, it was the number one most popular article at Yahoo.com. What is interesting though, is that this article was also the most shared on Yahoo.com. In other words, this story about a young man who felt he was overdependent on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter, was shared more than 8000 times on Facebook, well over 1000 times on Twitter, and generated at least 32,000 page views coming directly in from links sent out on Twitter.<br />
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The article talking about one man's struggle with social media addiction went viral. In total it racked up more than one million readers in the first 24 hours that it was up. I don't yet have totals beyond that as my reporting is delayed. During the 36 hours that it was being heavily featured on Yahoo! it reached a peak of 750 visits per hour from Twitter alone (a small percentage of the overall traffic total). However, the day after it was removed from the Yahoo! front page, it was still drawing Twitter traffic and reached a new peak of more than 1000 visits per hour from Twitter links. The article has social media inertia. <br />
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As I conducted the interview, I found myself quite interested in what Jake had to say. Clearly, many people his age use social media, cell phones and texting in a much different way than people my age do, and people a generation older than I am use it differently still. The comments on the article also show that the readers view texting and social media differently as well. Older folks say things like "I never use that stuff, but I can barely get my grandchildren to look up from their cellphones. Congratulations to Jake for breaking free from it all." <br />
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Those Jake's age who are heavy users of Twitter and smart phones make comments like "I could never do that" or "I want to try that." Those his age who did not develop the texting habit, and many my age who use social media applications, but not heavily say things like "That's stupid. Anybody could go without. I do it all the time."<br />
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The range of the comments themselves help to underscore the point that I tried to make int he article. Technology isn't evil or something to be avoided, using 140 character texts as proxies for real human interaction is the problem. Real communication involves depth of feeling and emotion that simply can't be conveyed in a text message that takes 12 seconds to write. When the majority of our communication is filtered through this insufficient medium, we lose the very connection that defines real human interaction. For some, it's not a problem, but for a whole generation, it is becoming increasingly common. <br />
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Whatever one's perspective on the issue, the article struck a chord with a wide variety of readers. When all the updates are in, I expect something like two million readers will have read the article and roughly 1 in 40 of them will have shared it with their circle of virtual friends through social media, making this my most widely read news article to date. <br />
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It was not about a celebrity, or someone expounding on some popular news item, but simply a story about one young man who decided to step outside his comfort zone to reassert his humanity.<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-54864435124860971562011-11-28T16:13:00.000-08:002013-08-23T06:36:44.916-07:00TV Star Interviews<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Today, I conducted a brief interview with Steve Arnold, star of the Science Channel television show "Meteorite Me." The season premier of the third season of the show is tonight (November 28) at 10:00 p.m. and both Steve and his cohost Geoff are looking to remind old fans and alert potential new fans of that fact. <br />
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I had spoken with Steve last year, as well, and published several fairly popular articles about the show. Today's interview ended up being published on three Yahoo! web properties: <a href="http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/9190727/meteorite_men_star_discusses_season.html?cat=49" target="_blank">Associated Content</a>, <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/meteorite-men-star-discusses-season-three-premier-201500258.html" target="_blank">Yahoo! News</a>, and <a href="http://tv.yahoo.com/news/meteorite-men-star-discusses-season-three-premier-201500258.html" target="_blank">Yahoo! TV</a>. It'll be interesting to compare the popularity of the three separate web locations of the same article. <br />
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Celebrity interviews are examples of going straight to the source for information. From a journalism perspective it's the same as interviewing the victim of a crime or other person with first-hand knowledge of an event or topic. Celebrities with something to promote may be easier to get as interview subjects because they also benefit by granting the interview as long as they get their plug into the interview. When the topic of the interview and the event being plugged coincide, such as an article about the season premier of a television show, everybody wins. <br />
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Meanwhile, as per my last post, I'm still working on discussing the situation on the streets in Egypt with people who live there. I was surprised, although I shouldn't have been, that the first two people I contacted essentially refused to speak about it, saying they didn't know anything about it. I suspect that they simply didn't feel safe discussing their feelings about the current political situaion in Egypt.<br />
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Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-80957883680933489632011-10-11T13:34:00.000-07:002016-01-24T16:42:09.359-08:00Live, From the Revolution<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
There are people who are qualified experts on the political happenings of various places around the world, because the study of that place is central to their work. They can offer valid and valuable insight into the events, the causes, and key players in major events within their sphere of expertise. My discussion with David Patel of Cornell University who specializes in Middle East politics and political culture was invaluable in helping to sort out <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/q-egyptian-unrest-internal-politics-key-players-20110207-162700-821.html">the key players in the protests that resulted in the ouster of Hosni Mubarek</a> from Egypt, for example. <br />
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At the time, he told me, "A lot of people have incentive to make sure the military comes out, as a whole, in a strong position, economically, perhaps even more importantly than politically." That statement has proven to be quite accurate as the military is now running the country, most recently it appears with as firm an iron fist as Mubarek ever did.<br />
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Sometimes, however, the only expertise needed for an accurate assessment is having eyes and ears in the right place at the right time. How do average people living in Egypt see the new regime? How have things changed? Do they feel as if they've had the revolution stolen out from under them? These are questions that can only be answered by the people of Egypt.<br />
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Toward that end, I am working on contacting a number of ordinary people who are not only in Egypt right now as a new set of protests threatens the country's stability once again, but who were also present during the first set of protests in January and February of this year. </div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-13473526640117471322011-09-27T18:07:00.000-07:002011-10-09T09:10:19.867-07:00Banned Books Week Interview<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">In 2011, Banned Books Week runs from September 24th through October 1st this year. Contrary to popular opinion, book banning and censorship is alive and well in the United States. The only thing that's changed is the language used to describe it. These days, books are "challenged," meaning that some group feels they should be banned from schools or libraries. The challenged books then undergo a review process, but often end up being removed without anyone ever saying that the book was banned.<br />
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Another tactic is to just ban part of the book. This can happen when those buying schools books tell the publisher that they won't accept a textbook or literature anthology for use in the classroom unless certain specific changes are made. This can result in rampant and heavy-handed editing of classic works of literature or even changing history itself to make it more politically correct.<br />
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I spoke with Joan DelFattore, professor of English and legal studies at the University of Delaware to discuss textbook adoption and classroom censorship that is taking place in high schools at the state level and some of the issues that creates when the kids affected by it reach college.<br />
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Here are the links to the three part series of interviews as published at Yahoo! News:<br />
<ul style="text-align: left;"><li><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/textbook-adoption-face-banning-books-223600744.html">Textbook Adoption: The New Face of Book Banning</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/schools-national-curriculum-standards-222100273.html">Do Schools Need National Curriculum Standards?</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/school-board-qualified-rewrite-shakespeare-183000267.html">Is Your School Board Qualified to Rewrite Shakespeare?</a></li>
</ul>Read them to find out what's going on in the classroom and how three states can effectively dictate what gets included in textboks all across the country.</div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-55939128844682951502011-09-09T11:40:00.000-07:002011-09-09T11:40:21.555-07:002001 Anthrax Attacks Remembered<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>This weekend marks the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. It was just a week after that that letters containing deadly highly purified anthrax spores were sent out to several media outlets in New York City. Those letters were followed up with similar letters to Senators Leahy and Daschle in Washington, DC.<br />
<br />
The anthrax spores were so easily spread that postal workers employed in the post offices which handles the letters began contracting anthrax. One woman in Connecticut died after a letter she received from an unrelated source simply came into contact with one of the anthrax letters. In all 5 died, more than 30 were infected, and thousands were medicated as a precaution.<br />
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I recently spoke to one of the people responsible for sequencing the genome of the anthrax spores used in the attack to determine its origin for the FBI. I asked her to talk about the investigation and whether we are safer today because of new precautions put in place after those anthrax attacks in 2001. Read the interviews at the following links:<br />
<ul><li><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/safer-bioterror-2001-anthrax-attack-231000961.html">Are We Safer frm Bioterror attacks after the 2001 Anthrax Letter Attack?</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/investigator-discusses-2001-anthrax-attacks-231000805.html">Investigator Discusses 2001 Anthrax Attacks</a> </li>
</ul></div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-29233953677885016932011-08-05T10:57:00.000-07:002011-08-05T10:57:21.867-07:00View from the topThe subject of my latest series of interviews have climbed to the summit of Mount Everest,but that isn't his primary claim to fame. Scott Parazynski is best known as a veteran NASA astronaut who has travelled 23 million miles aboard five space shuttle missions. He has been on numerous spacewalks totalling 47 hours outside the spacecraft. He was also instrumental in the development of a heat tile repair system to prevent future accidents like the one that claimed Columbia and it's crew.<br />
<br />
It was a fun interview, and I was able to cover a lot of groun: from Mount Everest to Mars, so to speak. The first one covers what it's liek to look down from the top of Everest and to look down on the Earth from space. It really changes one's global perspective, Parazynski says. Read more about his <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/astronauts-perspective-earth-195500018.html">feelings about the fragility of Earth</a> at this link.<br />
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The second part of the interview dealt with the end of the Space Shuttle program. Parazynski disagrees with the decision to retire the space shuttles before a new crew launch vehicle is available. Read more about this and why he resolved to fly one more time to <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/astronaut-kept-space-shuttles-flying-222900985.html">honor the crew lost in the Columbia accident here</a>.<br />
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The third part of the interview is more or less a catch all for everything else that we discussed. What's next for the future of NASA? How does the human body change in the absence of gravity? What are the medical risks of space travel? What do Space Station resident do when a potentially harmful burst of solar flare radiation is heading their way? How does Russian Cosmonaut training differ from NASA astronaut training? If these questions intrigue you, or you're curious about what else I asked, read the third part of my <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/where-does-space-program-195000747.html">interview with astronaut Scott Parazynski here</a>.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-20555442465595558472011-08-01T12:10:00.000-07:002011-08-01T12:10:54.572-07:00MTV Anniversary InterviewsA fellow writer, <a href="http://contributor.yahoo.com/user/990034/kimberly_morgan.html">Kimberly Morgan</a>, managed two great interviews on the 30th anniversary of the first MTV broadcast. They used to play music videos and the initials used to stand for Music Television... Those were the good old days. For those like me who remember what MTV was supposed to be or those who don't remember, but are interested, thsese two interviews are highly recommended reading:<br />
<a href="http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/8263815/martha_quinn_voice_of_the_80s_reminisces.html">Martha Quinn, Voice of the 80's</a><br />
<a href="http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/8261179/nina_blackwood_still_rocking_reflecting.html">Nina Blackwood, Still Rocking</a><br />
Kim did agreat job securig these interviews in conjunction with the anniversay date. In interviews, like everything else, timing can be very important. Celebrity interviews are great, but when you can wrap them around a piece of timely news like the MTV anniversary, they can be more than just entertainment.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-42401830010082217532011-07-29T06:37:00.000-07:002011-07-30T10:48:32.410-07:00Debt ceiling crisis interviewMy latest published interview was with an economist who told me that the debt ceiling crisis was the result of "an accident of history." He also said he thoguht the Tea party had fallen under the spell of groupthink and was unable to see the consequences of their actions. Whatever happens, if the Tea party gets what it wants or if they block the debt ceiling increase, it looks like they will cause a double-dip recession, putting more people out of work in America.<br />
<br />
Here's the link to the <a href="http://old.news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110727/us_ac/8871371_qanda_how_we_got_to_an_impasse_in_the_debt_ceiling_negotiations">complete debt ceiling article</a>.<br />
Part 2 of the interview: "<a href="http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/8265643/qanda_how_a_government_debt_default.html">How a U.S. government debt default will affect the average American</a>."Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-88840285732971412272011-07-20T21:15:00.000-07:002011-07-20T21:15:18.525-07:00Finding Interview Candidates: Work for itI've talked about getting qualified experts to comment on current events and using your network of friends and acquaintances for find people with specific experiences or expertise for interviews. What do you do when you want to interview a specific prominent individual?<br />
<br />
The short answer is that you figure out who is the gatekeeper for access to that person and work through them. For a top executive, that's probably their executive assistant. Most of the executives I have known would be absolutely lost without their executive assistants telling them where to go and when. These people set appointments and make sure the boss gets there when they're supposed to be there. They screen phone calls and decide who gets through and who doesn't. They pass on requests for meetings -- or they don't. You want this person working with you, not against you.<br />
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FOr a celebrity, unless you have a personal contact that can faciliatate access for you, your best bet is usually to go through their publicist. It's the publicist's job to decide which publicity opportunities are a good idea for the celebrity's image and which will be effective promotion vehicles for the celebity's latest project. <br />
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As a professional writer or journalist, you have something of value to offer to the executive whow ants to get his company's message out, or to the celebrity who wants to promote their latest project. They may have a favorite charity that they really would like to promote. You need to remember that by interviewing them, you are providing a service to them as well. <br />
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You should make it clear to the gatekeeper that you are in a position to provide a service. Tell them where the interview will be published. Who is your target audience and why they would be interested in the celebrity's or executive's message. "My column (or beat) is targeted toward successful, young professionals and I thnk they'd be interested in hearing about your new technology," or "My primary audience is the parents who control what music and movies their teenage children watch." Ideally, you'd be able to match your target audience with their target market.<br />
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Do a little research before trying to schedule the interview and figure out what the potential interviewee wants to talk about. Do they have a new book or movie? Did their company just announce a new product line or a superlative quarterly report? Who do they want to hear about this new project? Do they <br />
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In other words, figure out what's in it for them and mention that thing as something you'd like to talk about in your article. That doesn't mean that this is the only thing you'll ask about in your interview, but make it clear that they will have the opportunity to get theri message out as well.<br />
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In this position you are the salesperson and the marketer. You are also the product. You need to figure out a message that will appeal to exactly two potential customers (the gatekeeper and the potential interviewee) and convince them that an interview with you is in their best interest. Even the best salesperson doesn't close every sale. Sometimes you'll get a resounding "No" or worse yet, your call won't be returned. <br />
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Every salesman will tell you, that out of every ten people there are three who would absolutely love to buy your product. To find those three, however, you have to ask all ten. So keep at it and don't be discouraged by rejection. Learn from your successes and your rejections. Refine your approach and go get the next one.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-8050280540900869962011-06-29T14:15:00.000-07:002011-06-29T14:15:05.035-07:00The importance of paying attention to relationshipsThe other day I conducted an interview with Chair of Cornell University's Department of History, Barry Strauss. We talked about a few subjects, mainly his assertion that the <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/q-does-troop-withdrawal-spell-defeat-afghanistan-191600187.html">withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan could result in the downfall of the American Empire</a>. I got a total of three articles from the interview, two Q&A format and one narrative (yet to be written) on the economic ascendency of China. <br />
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The second article, <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/american-power-depends-threat-military-intervention-says-expert-164200475.html">American Power Depends on the Threat of Military Intervention, Says Expert</a>, I was told, was pitched for the front page at Yahoo.com by my news editor. Alas, it seems to have faced too much competition for that spot, but it's still nice to know that my editor, at least thought it merited front page placement in conjunction with the President's speech on June 29th. <br />
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It was also nice to hear the following from Cornell's Press Relations Office after they were published:<br />
<div> </div><div>"Brad,</div><div><br />
</div><div>Both of these Q&As are great, you guys had one epic conversation! You always do a top-notch, professional job with our professors, thank you!</div><div><br />
</div><div>Cheers,</div><div>Syl</div><div id="yui_3_2_0_3_1309349049397386"><div id="yui_3_2_0_3_1309349049397385"><div id="yui_3_2_0_3_1309349049397384"><div>-- </div><div id="yui_3_2_0_3_1309349049397383"><div><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Calibri;"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px;">Press Relations Office</span></span></span></div><div id="yui_3_2_0_3_1309349049397382"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Calibri;"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px;"><span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1309380460_0">Cornell University"</span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Calibri;"><span class="yiv1992245058Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px;"><span class="yshortcuts"></span></span></span></span> </div></div></div></div></div>As I mentioned in an earlier post about <a href="http://expertinterviews.blogspot.com/2011/06/finding-interview-candidates-go-back-to.html">finding interview candidates</a>, Most universities and larger private companies have a press relations office or at least a person responsible for press and public relations. Establishing a dialogue with them can help open doors within the organization, and even help give you a priority pass to the source if something really big happens within the organization. <br />
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Let's say, for example, that I want to interview the new head coach or Heismann Trophy candidate quarterback at a prestigious football university leading up to some important bowl game. Although the sports perss relations may be run out of a different office entirely, it's usually a pretty good bet that the main press relations office can get me through with a good recommendation, if I've taken the time to communicate with them on other issues so that they know me and the quality of my work.<br />
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I'm not saying you can't challenge your interviewees, or even call bull#&$! on some of their statements if appropriate (in a professionally worded manner, of course). I'm just saying be fair, be honest, and be communicative. Send a link back to the press office after the article is published with a thank you note. Not only will it keep you top of mind, but who knows, they may link your article from their press page.<br />
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As a journalist, as in most professions, it, literally, pays to pay attention to personal relationships with everyone with whom you come into contact in the course of your work.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-68631815852461153592011-06-29T06:28:00.000-07:002011-06-29T06:28:06.003-07:00Enjoying the processI've already remarked about how much I enjoy conducting interviews. They offer me a unique learning experience that I've compared to a private one-on-one college class tailored specifically to me. I can ask anything and drill down on anything that interests me. I'm a curious person, so that is very satisfying.<br />
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I just spent an hour talking with the CEO of one of the country's largest fireworks companies for a couple of Fourth of July question and answer pieces requested by Y!CN. It occurred to me afterwards that the feeling I get after completeing an interview is very similar to, though at a somewhat lesser level than the rush I used to get just after finishing a kick-boxing match. Back in the day, I'd walk around with my feet several feet off the ground for days after a fight, while it was diminished if I didn't do well in the fight, it was still there. I actually get that same feeling after a good interview, although my feet may only be a few inches of the ground by comparison. <br />
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I feel good, fully energized, awake and... fully present, I guess. At any rate, I just wanted to take a minute to say how much I really love my work.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-23344693910351220922011-06-22T09:11:00.000-07:002011-06-22T09:38:52.799-07:00Natural disasters: Am I at risk?One of the ways we can find original angles for a news event is to think about what we ourselves would like to know about the event. When natural disasters strike, for example, everyone's first thoughts, of course, go toward the victims. What is the scale of the catastrophe and how can we help? As we read more and more about the devastation and see photos and video of the aftermath, no matter what the cause, we start to wonder if it could happen here? Am I at risk? That's only natural.<br />
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In the case of the devastating Japanese earthquake in March of 2011, there were actually two interconnected disasters, three if you count the resulting nuclear power plant radiation leaks. The earthquake itself triggered a massive tsunami that washed entire villages out to sea with just a few minutes warning.<br />
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The east coast of the United States has been spared from disasters like these although it does face hurricane risks each year. Have we just been lucky, or is the east coast relatively immune from these kinds of cataclysmic events? I spoke an expert in plate tectonics and geological science to find out.<br />
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Dr. James Tull, a professor of geological sciences at Florida State University, explains the risk and history of major earthquakes in areas of the United States away from the well-know west coast fault lines: <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110316/sc_ac/8071164_qa_earthquake_risk_in_the_eastern_united_states_1">Q&A: Earthquake risk in the eastern United States</a>.<br />
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Dr. Tull also discusses the risk of major tsunami damage in the United States, including the west coast:<br />
<a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110316/sc_ac/8071336_qa_could_a_catastrophic_tsunami_hit_the_united_states_1">Could a catastrophic tsunami hit the United States?</a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-78917472713509288892011-06-21T08:18:00.000-07:002011-06-23T09:00:15.185-07:00ROR: Maximizing your return on researchAs I've mentioned elsewhere, I have a number of "beats" or automatically recurring assignments at the Yahoo! Contributor Network. All the news beat articles that I submit end up published at Yahoo! News. One of the beats is an open topic Question and Answer format beat meant for original interviews. It is the one that pays the most upfront. It's a beat I proposed, and for which I negotiated the upfront rate.<br />
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Lately, I have been getting additional interview assignments outside of my regular beat for Y! News. These interview assignments tend to be more highly targeted. Sometimes they'll ask for an interview with someone who possesses a particular expertise and, at least once, they even asked for a specific individual by name. Obviously, these rely on my ability to get in touch with the specific individual requested in order for me to complete the assignments.<br />
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These assignments tell me in the details that I am the only one receiving the assignment so if I don't want to claim it or can't get the sprecific individual to agree to an interview, to email them back and let them know so they can plan accordingly. The first one of these I received, I refused as the offered upfront was less than my standing offer for my Q&A beat. When I pointed this out, they increased the offer and I accepted. <br />
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Once I have my interview material, there are often several different angles the article can take or it might be one longer article covering several topics that were discussed. Generally, I shoot an email back to the Y!CN contact who requested the interview and propose several different angles. For example, recently I was asked to interview someone who had direct involvment with the space shuttle. I managed to get George Whitesides who was the Chief of Staff for Administrator Bolden at NASA until around the middle of 2010. <br />
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After a great discussion, I had what seemed like four possible main thrusts for an article. Since the original assignment said that Y!CN had reason to believe that they might get featured placement on the front page of Yahoo.com for the assigned interview, I wanted to run the angles by my contact to see if one was preferred given their front page plans. My four proposed angles were:<br />
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<div style="margin-left: 0.5in;"><div class="yiv1876660987MsoNormal" style="background: white;"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">1)</span><span style="color: black; font-size: 7pt;"> </span><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110622/us_ac/8672121_qanda_former_nasa_chief_of_staff_on_governments_role_in_space_exploration_1"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">Q-and-A: Former <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1308666320_2">NASA Chief of Staff</span> Talks about Government’s Role in the Future of Space Travel</span><span style="color: black;"></span></a></div></div><div style="margin-left: 0.5in;"><div class="yiv1876660987MsoNormal" style="background: white;"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">2)</span><span style="color: black; font-size: 7pt;"> </span><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110622/us_ac/8670983_former_nasa_chief_why_its_time_to_retire_the_space_shuttles_1"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">Q-andA: <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1308666320_3">Virgin Galactic</span> Chief discusses the end of the <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1308666320_4">space shuttle</span> era</span><span style="color: black;"></span></a></div></div><div style="margin-left: 0.5in;"><div class="yiv1876660987MsoNormal" style="background: white;"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">3)</span><span style="color: black; font-size: 7pt;"> </span><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110622/us_ac/8671491_space_tourism_getting_closer_virgin_galactic_ceo_says_1"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">Q-and-A: Virgin Galactic Chief gives update on passenger flights</span><span style="color: black;"></span></a></div></div><div style="margin-bottom: 10pt; margin-left: 0.5in;"><div class="yiv1876660987MsoNormal" style="background: white;"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">4)</span><span style="color: black; font-size: 7pt;"> </span><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110622/us_ac/8671985_3_big_goals_for_nasa_to_inspire_america_again_from_former_nasa_chief"><span style="color: black; font-family: 'sans-serif';">Virgin Galactic Chief suggests top 3 big goals for NASA to inspire America again</span><span style="color: black;"></span></a></div></div>I though they might want option #2 and/or #4. My contact said he'd ask the Yahoo! front page people what they wanted, but he, personally thought they were all excellent.<br />
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So, without dragging out this story any longer, my Y!CN contact said that he didn't get a preference from Yahoo! so I should write up all four angles (without duplicating any of the actual interview material). That meant four separate upfront payments totalling $120 for this interview (plus the usual ongoing page view royalties). <br />
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This kind of multiple payout for these interviews has happened several times recently and it changes the financial equation and makes them much more worthwhile. While page view bonuses can exceed the upfront payment, sometimes by a wide margin, there is no guarantee of that, and sometimes they don't do well at all. I prefer to get a decent upfront so that if page views don't come in as expected, my time is still covered. <br />
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<strong>The Bottom Line</strong><br />
<br />
Whatever kinds of research you do, look for ways to use that research in multiple ways. Don't just respin it, nobody wants to read the same thing restated, but apply different aspects of what you learned to different angles. Getting multiple quality articles out of your research makes it economically feasible to spend more time doing higher quality research which, in turn, increases the quality of your articles and their usefulness to your readers.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-26813637688914974972011-06-16T08:18:00.000-07:002011-06-16T08:18:52.193-07:00Networking and contact listsAn interview with a newsmaker, subject matter expert, corporate executive or anyone else benefits a journalist in two ways. First you get the interview and can use it for one or more articles right away. Second, it provides you with a resource for future articles. If you keep good records, over time, you'll develop your own Rolodex of database of experts and newsmakers that you can contact to comment on relevant news stories. <br />
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For example, I interviewed the Polling Director at the University of New Hampshire for a story on <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20100901/tr_ac/6699854_new_hampshire_gop_infighting_could_benefit_democrats_in_november">GOP infighting in New Hampshire during the 2010 election season</a>. He, of course, is an expert on polling methodologies, politics (national and local), and political history. At the conclusion of the interview, I made sure I had all his preferred contact information and he invited me to call him for a comment anytime. So, every time there's a primary, debate, election, or other political development (a President receives a public approval polling bump after a notorious terrorist is killed, for example), I have a source who can provide an expert opinion and who is just a phone call away.<br />
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One advantage of using these types of contacts for comments is that your article will have 100% original and newsworthy content that isn't found anywhere else on the web or in print. Another is that you automatically have original and possibly local (if your source is local to your region) angles for almost any national news event once you have a good selection of sources in your file. This should translate into higher upfront payments (at places like Yahoo! Contributor Network), more opportunities, and more incoming links to your articles, from top bloggers and from other well-ranked news sites. <br />
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Ideally, you'll have multiple sources for each news category or topic. That offers you the ability to have different viewpoints on the same topic or lets you highlight the fact that multiple experts agree. Multiple original sources within an article give your article much stronger credibility and authority. <br />
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Once you've collected many sources, however, you may have trouble remember who is who and what they know. I use a Rolodex-like system of paper cards. OK, I admit that I'm old-fashioned. An electronic database would probably work as well, but I find the paper system faster as it doesn't require me to spend time opening the program or worrying about overtaxing my poor overworked laptop CPU. <br />
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<iframe frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" scrolling="no" src="http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?lt1=_blank&bc1=000000&IS2=1&bg1=FFFFFF&fc1=000000&lc1=0000FF&t=wwwsylvangard-20&o=1&p=8&l=as4&m=amazon&f=ifr&ref=ss_til&asins=B00006IBSC" style="height: 240px; width: 120px;"></iframe><br />
<br />
A database, however, offers you the ability to search multiple fields which is a major aid in finding topic matter experts. To mimic this in my Rolodex system, I file each contact on two or more cards. One is a standard contact card, filed alphabetically by the contact's name (or company, if that is more relevant). The other is like a library's subject matter files. I file it under the particular topic or topics of expertise for the contact. So a subject matter card might look like this:<br />
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<strong>Politics</strong> (national, NH, polls, history)<br />
<strong>Contact name</strong><br />
<strong>Official title</strong> (such as director of the University of New Hampshire's Survey Center and an associate professor of political science) <br />
<strong>Preferred method of contact</strong><br />
<strong>telephone number(s)</strong><br />
<strong>Preferred time to call </strong><br />
<strong>email address </strong><br />
<strong>Notes:</strong> political leanings (if any and if relevant), areas of particular interest, personality notes (likes to be addressed formally as Dr. so-and-so, for example), any other information that will make the interview smoother or more informative. (<em>Has a brother living in Cairo, Egypt who is a political activist there</em>, for example). Requests a link to articles post-publication.<br />
<strong>Author of:</strong> List Book Titles and Publication Dates<br />
<strong>List of previous contacts:</strong> This is a list of everytime I've contacted this individual which includes the date of the contact, method (telephone, email, etc), resulting article title(s).<br />
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This last bit lets me know whether I am bothering someone too much or under-utilizing a resource. It also allows me review what I've already discussed with this person so I can ask questions like: "In the September of 2010, you said that you thought any sitting president with a disapproval rating greater than 46% might be expected to face challengers in his own party's primary, citing the Kennedy candidacy of 1980, as an example. In your opinion why hasn't such opposition emerged this year?" It also reminds me whether the interview was amicable or hostile, so I know what to expect going in for any future calls. <br />
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So that card would be filed under "P" for politics, but would also be duplicated with the contact's name as the first entry and filed that was as well. With this system, I can quickly find a particular individual or I can pull out a list of political or other subject matter experts from which to choose. A database would have searchable fields for area(s) of expertise. Notes fields might be keyword searchable as well. Some might allow active links to the prior articles in which the source was used. <br />
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Whatever system you use, keep excellent records of your contacts and sources. They can be used over and over again. That said, you must be prudent in your use of a contact. Most will certainly not want to be contacted every day to respond to Rush Limbaugh's latest rant. Use them when appropriate, but don't wear out your welcome by calling them too often of for trivial or unrelated matters. What is too often? That will depend upon the individual and you'll have to get a feel for each person. <br />
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<strong>Establishing a Personal Connection</strong><br />
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Ideally, you want to develop a personal relationship with each contact so they feel comfortable talking with you. This will allow a more candid conversation during interviews and may result in them <em>actually contacting you</em> when they have something they consider newsworthy. You should definitely make clear to each contact that you would like them to contact you when they have news they think should be heard. There's nothing better than a good story showing up in your inbox unsolicited. If you have a good relationship with your sources you can occasionaly even just call and ask them "What's news?" in their area of expertise and get an impromtu interview and story idea, but don't overuse this technique or use it before you have a comfortable realtionship with the individual or you might scare them off.<br />
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<strong>The Ettiquette of Interviews</strong><br />
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Which brings us to the matter of etiquette. Very few people want to talk openly with, or be helpful to, someone they don't like. Always be polite and professional with your interview sources. Even if the interview is adversarial in nature (they are being misleading or uncooperative), be polite and professional, and act just as if they were cooperating (although, your questions should still dig into the matter and try to reveal the truth), your tone and behavior should not show anger or be insulting or accusatory in any way. <br />
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If they are saying something you suspect is false, then confusion while showing you have a knowledge of the topic and can't be (easily) fooled is appropriate: "I'm not sure I understand how you draw that conclusion... The budget, as written and as the President signed it, actually contains a net tax <strong>reduction</strong> averaging $1150 for each household with income under $250,000 annually, a number which includes 93% of American families, yet you say that he has increased taxes for the average American. How do you support that statement?" That's an appropriate and professional question that will be helpful to your readers, while "You're wrong, the President's budget decreases taxes...." or any accusatory words or tone is generally inappropriate (with a very few exceptions which I may discuss at a later date). It is an even worse sin, by the way, to accept and print as truth an interviewee's statement that you know to be false without challenging it or providing counter-evidence to the reader.<br />
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Aside from a solid command of the language, a good list of reliable sources is a journalist's most valuable tool. Cultivate your sources carefully and they will provide a bountiful yield.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-52979102707965628912011-06-15T10:18:00.000-07:002011-06-28T16:33:29.708-07:00Wrapping it up with a conclusionGenerally, when I write up Q-and-A interviews for Yahoo!, I start with an introduction and then leap into the interview itself, letting that stand for itself. With my latest, however, I tried a different approach and included a conclusion section where I offered my interpretation of the main points of the interview. I think I'll use this format more often. To me, it seems to put a bow on it, as it were, or finish the article more elegantly from a stylistic perspective. It also gives me a chance to either rebut, clarify or elaborate on anything the speaker may have said during the interview.<br />
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Here's the article, based upon an interview with Dr. Ronald Fischer of the Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, which was originally titled: <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110615/us_ac/8645153_study_autonomy_and_relationships__not_money__create_happiness">Study reveals keys to happiness</a> (which I still like better than the one that Yahoo! substituted, although they did ask permission first, so I no have right to complain...) I am curious, though, which title do you think is better and why?Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-67247971473517319092011-06-13T10:01:00.000-07:002011-06-13T10:03:14.340-07:00Finding interview candidates: It's who you knowAs an ordinary person, we come into contact with many, many people. Family, friends, co-workers, fellow students, business associates, store clerks, doctors, and the list goes on and on. Some of these contacts, like family, may be very close, but how much time to we take to learn about the others?<br />
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The more you know about your friends, colleagues, and the other people with whom you come into contact on a regular basis, the more likely you are to learn something interesting, something that mike make them a good resource for an interview, either now or at a future date. <br />
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For example, if you know that one of your co-workers has a private pilot's license to fly small aircraft and owns a share of a Cessna with a group of other people, you have a resource to discuss FAA flight regulation, the requirements for filing flight plans over major cities, the cost of airplane ownership, common maintenance issues, and so on. <br />
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Most often, we find out about people, their hobbies, interests, and past experiences by simply chatting with them. As good journalists, we should be adept at asking questions. That's not to say we should pry into the private lives of everyone we know, but when something comes up in conversation, draw them out a little. If you simply show you are interested, most people are willing to talk extensively, especially about things they enjoy or have experienced. <br />
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When I worked at Bose, for example, one of my colleagues mentioned that he worked for one of the primary space shuttle contractors and actually had a chance to sit in the pilot's seat during the course of his work. I found this interesting and we talked about it. Later on, as the space shuttle era is coming to a close, I sent him a message through Facebook (we have kept in very loose contact through that avenue since I left Bose a few years ago) and asked if I could interview him for a piece that was requested by Yahoo! News. The <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110126/sc_ac/7708982_space_shuttle_engineer_discusses_challenger_failure_return_to_space_1">result was this article</a>.<br />
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That lucky coincidence gave me a source with very specific information and a chance to talk with an old friend for a while. It's networking, but it's also paying attention to people and who they are.<br />
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I think most of us would be surprised by the collective histories of the people around us. I recall a high school history class assignment that opened my eyes to this subject: interview a grandparent about the Great Depression. My grandmother was born in 1911 to an ordinary New England family, had little more than a fifth grade education and worked during the depression years. She told me about the job she held, the internal politics of promotions, and provided a wealth of rich information that I never would have suspected she carried with her. <br />
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Most of our parents and grandparents, if they are still alive, have lived through important historical events that we never saw. They may have fought in World War II or Viet Nam and carry stories that would make excellent features around Memorial Day. They may have "<a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110125/sc_ac/7690796_challenger_disaster_created_flashbulb_memories_says_psychology_professor_1">flash bulb memories</a>" of important events that add historical perspective on anniversaries of those events. <br />
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Do you know people who have taken part in protests? You probably do without even knowing it. An interview about the effect the protest had on their life and on the issue they were challenging might add an interesting angle to a report on a current protest on a similar or even completely unrelated issue. <br />
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Do you know people whose parents or grandparents came from a country currently undergoing a dramatic transformation (like Egypt or Libya)? What is their perspective on the popular uprisings and the nature of the old regime? <br />
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Compelling interview candidates are all around us. We just have to notice them. We can do that by chatting and engaging people in conversation as a matter of habit. The next time you go to the doctor's office, ask her what she thinks of some new study that you read about. The next time you talk to your mechanic, get his opinion of these new hybrid cars- do they make his job more difficult? <br />
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On the anniversary of Pearl Harbor Day, call a local nursing home or assisted living center and ask if there are any residents who remember it who would be willing to share their story with a journalist for a news article.<br />
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Everyone you know is a wealth of information and experience that's been stored up, and the older they are, the more of these experiences they carry with them. Interview candidates with very specific skills and knowledge surround us every day of our lives. As with any journalistic endeavor, all you have to do is ask the right questions.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-76510778823020949102011-06-02T14:18:00.000-07:002011-06-02T14:18:45.905-07:00Finding interview candidates: Go back to school<span lang="EN"> College professors, by definition, are experts in the subjects they teach. They can speak knowledgeably about their subjects and current events that fall within their spheres of knowledge. A political science professor can talk about the history of partisanship and compare present levels to those at various points in history for example. An Egyptian studies professor who has lived and studied in Egypt can knowledgeably and credibly discuss public protests and the nature of the government hierarchy of Egypt. <br />
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College professors, furthermore, are used to talking and explaining, that’s what they do for a living, after all. It’s almost never difficult to get enough information from an interview with a college professor.<br />
By visiting a university’s website, you can find department heads and often direct contact information for each professor. However, by going to the college’s research or publication page, you’ll often find a media contact who can facilitate a contact between you and the person they consider best-equipped to answer your questions. Furthermore, by perusing the most recently published faculty papers, you can find topics that these professors are probably eager to discuss and have publicized.<br />
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So, let's look at an example. I'm just going to pick Wake Forest to see what we can find. If I look at their home page, I see a tab on the header labelled <a href="http://news.wfu.edu/">NEWS</a>. Clicking that, I am brought to a page that lists a variety of Wake Forest related news items. These include changes in Wake Forest staff, research published by Wake Forest students and faculty, and anything newsworthy about the school. That's helpful, BUT, in the upper right hand corner of that page, is what we're looking for. There's a box labelled "<a href="http://media.news.wfu.edu/">For the Media: sources, topics, research and more</a>." Bingo.<br />
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When I go to this page, I find a cornucopia of useful information. There's a section called <em>Story ideas of the week</em> which includes briefs on things like "Finding the good (or at least the best) in natural disasters" which includes events that journalists can cover directly, including sitting in on special lectures pertaining to newsworthy current events like tornado strikes and political analysis. More importantly, though, there's a section called <a href="http://media.news.wfu.edu/experts/page/2/"><em>Experts</em></a> which lists a sampling of Wake Forest faculty such as <a href="http://media.news.wfu.edu/experts/robin-simon/">sociology professor Robin Simon</a>, author of "The Joys of Parenthood Reconsidered" and lead researcher of a study showing that adults with children are not happier than adults without children. Her link includes her fields of study and areas of expertise, current research, recent publications, a brief bio, and some noteworthy quotes. Not to mention a photo for media use. In short, everything you need to help you decide if she's the right person for your interview on parenting and depression (hint, yes she is).<br />
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Aside from the lists of experts and story ideas, the media page also contains fact sheets, news archives, and this <a href="http://media.news.wfu.edu/media-team/">very helpful list of media relations contacts</a> (complete with email addresses and phone numbers) who can help you get an interview with any Wake Forest staff or faculty member, or visit to cover an event on site. If you have a Wake Forest or college sports beat or are just covering a college sports scandal story, you might find the <a href="http://wakeforestsports.cstv.com/ot/wake-media-relations.html">Wake Forest Athletics Media Relations page</a> of particular interest. Here, again you find a list of contacts with email address, phone number and area of responsibility of everyone from the Media Relations Directors for each different sport to student volunteer "Gameday Assistants" who can facilitate your coverage of a campus sports event.<br />
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Approaching it from the other end of the news spectrum, if I see a story like <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16514457/ns/health-cloning_and_stem_cells/t/report-amniotic-fluid-yields-stem-cells/">this one from MSNBC</a> which involves a study by a Wake Forest researcher. I can find the name of the researcher, Anthony Atala, and search for it on the Wake Forest site to come up with <a href="http://newscenter.blogs.wfu.edu/tag/anthony-atala/">this page</a> which includes everything he's ever done at Wake Forest including growing new body parts... There's also a telephone number <span style="background-color: yellow;">to </span>call to reach a media relations representative for an interview with Dr. Atala. Many universities will include the direct phone number and email of each individual professor if you prefer to use the direct route, although I recommend going through the media relations rep. if the schools website seems to be suggesting that route as Wake Forest's does. <br />
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By developing a relationship with the media relations reps, you can get prioritized access to almost anyone on the staff instead of having to start all over with each professor.<br />
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If you email for an interview request, be very clear about who you are and what you want. I always include MEDIA REQUEST in the subject line of any such email. Tell them the general topic of the interview or article, the specific person or the area of expertise to which you'd like access for an interview and don't forget to tell them when you need the interview completed. If you have a deadline you can give them that and say you'd like to have the interview completed by X time on X date so that you have time to write it up and submit it for X date deadline. I generally do not include links to my profile page or any sample articles in the initial request. If they ask, I send them sample articles written in a similar tone to the one I am planning. I don't want to send Dr. Atala a <a href="http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/844435/entomophagy_people_eating_insects_anyone.html?cat=22">light-hearted article sample on entomaphagy</a> when asking for an interview about regrowing kidneys from stem cells, for example. Keep it simple, professional, brief, and to the point.<br />
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Universities and colleges are excellent sources for interview candidates on an amazingly broad variety of topics. Need a legal opinion on the Casey Anthony case? Look up a law professor. Need some information about the failed clinical trial of an immortality pill? Call <a href="http://www.dental.washington.edu/aging/">someone from this list</a> of gerontology research scientists at the University of Washington's Institute on Aging. What does the latest poll mean for control of the House after the 2012 elections? Ask a poli-sci professor. By the way, if you ask a professor from your local university, that adds a nice localization angle for national issues if you are a local Examiner, or have a local Y! News beat.<br />
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Remember, unless you are a direct employee of a media outlet, you can not represent yourself as such. You can say that you are a freelance journalist (or writer) working on an article to be published at Yahoo! News (if you have such an assignment or a beat for that topic), but you can't say you're with or from Yahoo! News, or that you are working for Yahoo! News. If your article is for the Yahoo! Contributor Network instead of for a specific assignment you have from Yahoo! News, then say it's for the Yahoo! Contributor Network. The same applies to Examiner and most other similar outlets although you should check the specific rules for each one yourself rather than relying on my say so.<br />
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<em><strong>The Cutting Room Floor:</strong> I edited this from an earlier draft of the above post, but tacked it on here because it makes a useful point about the willingness of these people to participate in interviews...</em><br />
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<em>Conversely, when you see, in any other publication, TV program, or other outlet, a new study which interests you as a journalist, look for the lead researcher’s name and school affiliation, then go to the school’s website to find contact information for that person or the school’s media contact. If the study gives a contact person other than the lead researcher, it is best to follow that channel rather than try to bypass the suggested contact. By contacting people involved directly in the study, discovery or invention about which you wish to write, you automatically separate your article from that of other outlets. You’ll have material that is absolutely original in the form of unique quotes from the news maker. You’ll be able to ask them questions that lead them down the angle you wish to pursue, and you can discover, in the course of the conversation, ideas and angles that aren’t obvious from the previously published study summary. These are often the easiest interviews to get. These researchers want their work to be noticed. They want the media to publicize what they have done, and their institution wants the same thing. You will find willing partners in the media contacts at universities. If you go through them, you have the opportunity to develop on-going relationships that can facilitate contacts not just with this one interview subject, but with the entire staff of that college or university.</em></span>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-36403278176099375642011-06-02T06:40:00.000-07:002011-06-02T06:40:19.953-07:00Typical interview preparationWhen I was younger, I recall watching hurricane expert Dr. William Gray explain the dynamics of tropical cyclones on television, The Weather Channel, I think. Recently, Y!CN asked if I would interview him about this year's hurricane season forecast for publication on Yahoo! News. In this case, they named the individual they wanted interviewed, but did not have any contact information or ongoing communication with him. It would be left to me to establish that contact and get him to agree to the interview.<br />
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As usual, the first thing I did was start researching. I found that he typically issues four forecasts or updates each year. His next update was due in about ten days. If I did the interview right away, the information could become obsolete very quickly. I explained the situation to the folks at Y!CN who gave me the assignment. They agreed that it would be better to wait and get the updated info. I had just completed three Yahoo! News assignments about hurricanes, so I had gained some basic knowledge about <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110529/us_ac/8555559_the_formation_and_behavior_of_hurricanes">The Formation and Behavior of Hurricanes</a>, <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110529/us_ac/8556877_hurricane_and_tropical_storm_names">Hurricane Naming Conventions</a>, and <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110529/us_ac/8555723_expected_hurricane_damage_by_category_1">Hurricane Category Ratings</a>. Perhaps that helped the Y!CN team select me for this interview.<br />
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Meanwhile, I contacted Dr. Gray and asked whether he would consent to an interview based on his planned June 1st hurricane forecast update. He said that he would be discuss it, just shoot him a message on the morning of June 1st. I also did some more research in the interim. <br />
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Dr. Gray, it seems is well known for his views that global warming is a largely natural event with little influence from human activities. He is quite vocal on the topic. He and his hurricane forescasting colleague Dr. Phil Klotzbach have also just adopted a new forecasting method (used in conjunction with other methods). I checked out hurricane season forecasts from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, since I had recently seen a Facebook post on the upcoming hurricane season by NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco. I also read through 44 pages of Dr. Gray's last hurricane forecast to familiarize myself with the terminology, format and content of his reports. I made a little cheat sheet with annual averages hurricane stats, NOAA's predictions, Dr. Gray's last forecast, and left room for his new forecast numbers. I also wrote out a draft of the interview questions I intended to ask, based on all that I had learned.<br />
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When his report was released on the morning of June first, this advance preparation let me skip to the important parts of the report and understand it so that I could engage in a good discussion with Dr. Gray. I updated my interview questions and called Dr. Gray at the phone number he had provided to me the prior week. I was able to conduct the interview within about an hour of the public release of his updated 2011 hurricane forecast, not coincidentally released ont he first day of the 2011 hurricane season.<br />
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In the end, the Y!CN News team thought the article, at over 2500 words was too long. They suggested chopping it into two articles and offered a second assignment for the sub-topic of long-range hurricane activity cycles with a separate generous upfront payment. Furthermore, a tangential topic covered in the interview will likely turn into a beat article on environmental issues, since it was omitted from the other two articles.<br />
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The main interview about the <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110601/us_ac/8573011_qanda_forecaster_discusses_2011_hurricane_season_details_1">2011 hurricane forecast is here</a>. <br />
The follow-up article about <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20110601/us_ac/8574351_expert_sees_15_to_20_more_years_of_high_hurricane_activity_1">long-term hurricane activity cycles</a> is here.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9026034726701606147.post-70638535208841582202011-05-26T17:51:00.000-07:002011-05-26T19:13:58.396-07:00Opportunity knocksWell, today I was approached by one of the editors at Yahoo! Contributor Network and asked if I had interest in a project that may end up on the front page of Yahoo.com. Of course, I am. The assignments, however, require me to locate and interview certain people whom it may be hard to reach. The good news is that they have given me four assignments on the same topic for four separate interviews. I guess that means that all four have the potential to make the front page if I can manage to get in touch with the right interviewees.<br />
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For those not familiar with Y!CN, writers receive part of their compensation based on the number of page views that an article gets. High profile placement, such as the front page of Yahoo.com, can translate into many, many page views and many, many dollars. I know of two Y!CN writers who had featured articles earn several thousand dollars in a few days, for example. There may be others of whom I am unaware. <br />
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Generally, front page placement is kind of hit or miss. If the folks at Yahoo! see an article which catches their eye, they may feature it. Anyway, I consider this assignment a good opportunity to earn some good money while gaining some good exposure for my work. Additionally, coming through with good interviews on this type of request certainly doesn't hurt my future opportunities for similar assignments in the future.<br />
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Now, I just have to figure out who I can get for these interviews that will make them front page worthy. My first thought is to visit an area museum and have a chat with the museum director, both as a potential candidate and to network additional contacts in the field in question, but I need to think about it overnight and work out a plan of attack.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0