My biggest problem in my life is I'm cheap and I didn't hire a publicist. In every awkward interview, normally actors get these things scripted.
I don't loathe interviews, I'm just one of those people who makes music because I find it difficult to talk.
The ordeal is part of the commitment" Esquire Interview 10/10
I remember Bob Dylan saying in an interview that at a certain point he'd had to learn to do consciously what he'd previously done unconsciously or automatically. That resonates.
It's weird, I actually like doing interviews now.
Don't underestimate the power of the nonverbal. You'd be amazed how many people come in for interviews with poor posture, weak handshakes, and blank stares.
I think there are just a million interviews in anthologies with famous musicians that are about the music, and they're really boring to read.
I'm one of those people who fiercely guards their privacy, so I hate doing interviews.
I've been doing interviews for years, and in all that time, I've virtually never read one and gone, 'Yep, factually and tonally that's exactly what happened.' Pretty much never.
We like so much to talk of ourselves that we are never weary of those private interviews with a lover during the course of whole years, and for the same reason the devout like to spend much time with their confessor; it is the pleasure of talking of themselves, even though it be to talk ill.
I'm scared of the interviews...I'm scared of having to get up onstage again. I'm scared of the critique. I'm scared right now of doing this again. But that's why I have to do it, I think.
I have to remember to not criticize other networks for other shows when I'm doing interviews because some day I'm going to be going to them, looking for a job, I'm assuming.
One interview would lead us to another interview, which led us to another interview. We had the questions and the idea of chonicling this moment in time. But we didn't have a movie, per se. As we started interviewing people, it started to kind of define itself.
The biggest benefit of doing an interview podcast is the relationships you build.
I was a very bad journalist. Awful. I would just invent everything. If I did an interview, I had a preconception of what that person should say and I would put my words in his mouth.
I like to isolate myself when I work because I end up losing my voice by doing interviews all day.
Actually, I don't get to do it (watch 5 or so news shows) every day, but I manage to do it at least 5 times a week. And the rest of the time I'm doing interviews. I do an amazing amount of interviews.
The music world taught me a lot.It taught me how much happiness it could take from you. J. Cole said it in that interview: People forget their happiness and what makes them happy. Like, what you really wanted to do it for.
The most interesting things you learn in an interviews come from the: 'interesting', 'tell me more'
Ever since I had that interview in which I said I was bisexual it seems twice as many people wave at me in the streets.
Fighting a cold, but I'm powering through. As they say, there's nothing better for a cold than doing interviews all day.
If I do an interview, then I take full responsibility. I figure I'm not going to talk to anyone that I think is unethical anyway.
It's me! It's me! It's always me! [Darren when asked who smelled so good at the MTV Live interview in New York]
The Weaver is a really godlike power. It's not even a blind idiot god, a sort of Lovecraft thing, it's just a purely capricious god. It's an intelligence you can't understand, so you can't trust it." -Amazon.com interview
Just doing any kind of work - even an interview for breakfast television - makes me feel happy.