When I do interviews, I always go in with the attitude that something good can happen from it.
David Bowie was awesome the easiest, coolest interview I have ever done.
But even when I do give interviews, I always come across as such a completely different person. It seems like there's no controlling it anyway.
I think J.D. Salinger is correct in granting no interviews, and in making no speeches
I have made an art form of the interview. The French are the best interviewers, despite their addiction to the triad, like all Cartesians.
A regret I have was never being able to interview George Harrison. I just loved him but I never had a chance to interview him.
The hardest and worst interview that I have ever done was with Frank Zappa.
In 1991 I did an interview wherein I described myself as a 'teetotal Christian,' which was an exaggeration, although I do like tea and Christ.
That's the thing about interviews, at some point you're going to change your mind. But it's there forever and you can't escape it.
I stress out so much about the red carpet and interviews and pictures, and, you know, not getting my skirt tucked in my knickers.
The best interviews like the best biographies should sing the strangeness and variety of the human race.
And the Institute sent me a little film footage of Kinsey himself preparing to do an interview for television to talk about his work, so that was quite valuable for me.
Whomever you're going to interview, you have to be interested in what it is you want to know from them. You have to be interested in the subject.
Being intellectually hospitable is a virtue that I bring into the interview space.
The way I work, the interview never becomes larger than the person being interviewed.
My work caused me to interview hundreds of women about their lives and their problems.
When I interview people accused of capital offenses, I never even ask if they did it. I would consider that unprofessional.
If you do an interview in 1960, something it's bound to change by the year 2000. And if it doesn't, then there's something drastically wrong.
I'm just not political. I have opinions, but there's nothing about the process that has ever interested me. I'm 22, and this is the first interview I've ever done in my life.
As critical acclaim and response has built up, every interview I give is a chance to puncture the myth I've created about my work and refine it.
I apologize for my terrible interview skills.
Giving interviews is the most difficult thing about being a gymnast.
Everything has changed. An interview has become such a confrontational thing. It makes you very defensive.
The first interview I went on I got at age 5. It was a commercial for First Federal Bank.
All I do is give interviews and spend time being photographed.