Week 5 Lecture – Notes

The guest lecturer Ms. Louise Turley from ABC gave us a short intro on how to do interviews.

THE ART OF THE INTERVIEW

THE WHO

  • Do they have something to say?
  • Are they credible?
  • Can they deliver ‘on camera’?
  • Are they good ‘talent’
  • Who is my audience?

WHAT

  • What are you going to ask them?
  • Research – reading, speaking, observing
  • Write Questions – simple, as short as possible, open ended, check wording (bias)
  • Practice

QUESTIONS

Close-Ended

  • Do you get on well with your boss?
  • Who will you vote for this election?
  • What color shirt are you wearing
  • Is the highway going to effect your business

Open-Ended

  • Tell me about your relationship with you boss
  • What do you think about the two candidates in this election.
  • Why id you choose to wear that color shirt today?
  • How do you feel about the highway being built.

LEADING QUESTIONS

  • what problems do you have with your boss? (Implies problems)
  • Tell me about your relationship with your boss?
  • how did you smash your car? (Implies fault)
  • How did the car you were driving end up in the gully?

(Questions full of bias. )

WHERE

  • Location – Home, Work, Other? Why? Permission?
  • Things to think about

* Light – is there enough, do I need to light it, will it change (stable lighting is important)

* Sound – background noise, interruptions (no distraction.)

* Background – what does it say, will it change, artworks (background is not attracting attention.)

WHEN

  • When you are interviewing your subject remember:

* Brief the subject

– clothing, question & answers, repeat your question in their answers (a self-contained answer)

* Maintain eye contact

* Listen (use nod & facial expression not ‘uh-huh’s and ‘mmm’)

* Be flexible / adaptable (pick up off-script info and go on with it)

* Be respectful & show empathy

* Stay focused

* Be quiet. It’s not about YOU!

WHY

  • Ask yourself a few why’s…

* Why did I interview this person?

* Why was the interview good/

 


 

NARRATIVE
  • ‘a way of structuring meanings in the form of a story’
  • ‘a sense of a sequence of events in some kind of temporal order’
  • inference of causal connection between events

BUT ALSO

  • narrative refers to the way ‘in which particular generalized stories circulate widely within a culture and are seen as valid and predictable’ – also referred to as ideology by media and cultural analysis.

KEY ELEMENTS OF STORY

  • Controlling idea
  • Character
  • Conflict (competing goals)
  • Structure (progression)
  • Character change/growth

‘CONTROLLING IDEA’

What is a controlling idea?

Mckee – Values + Cause

PROTAGONIST & ANTAGONIST

  • important to confirm – whose story is it?

THE PROTAGONIST…

  • doesn’t lie
  • is the one whose life is made difficult
  • is the person whose head we are inside
  • is the person who changes the most
  • usually drives the action
  • whoever speaks in voiceover is the protagonist
  • is central to the story’s dramatic high/turning points
  • there can be more than one

ANTAGONISTS…

  • one protagonist, many antagonists
  • need not be the protagonist’s enemy, but always cause change or trouble for them
  • not necessarily less interesting than the protagonist

CONFLICT/DRAMA

Conflict = Drama

competing goals

External and Internal

Physical

Emotional

Intellectual

Spiritual

‘Robert Mckee’ on desire/conflict in story: from Adaptation (2002)

STRUCTURE & PROGRESSION

The three-act structure

Overview of the Hero’s Journey (Vogler)

 

THREE ACT NARRATIVE STRUCTURE

ACT I

Set Up – Normality

DIsturbance/CAtalyst/Inciting incident

First Turning/Plot Point

ACT II

Second Act Complications

Second Turning/Plot Point

ACT III

Climax

Resolution – New Normality

The amount of content that I got from this lecture was immense. When Louise said she wanted to be a film director but did not quite make it, my heart sank because that’s my dream too. For half of the time when she spoke, I found myself constantly going back to the concerns and doubts that her story had raised in me. Even thought I have strong faith in myself that I can make it, there’s still some doubts. 

This is the first time that I looked into the system of making interviews and learned the essential skills for pre-production, production and post-production. I found it a bit hard as it has to be a natural thing unlike a film as everything is staged. The hard bit is that sometimes it goes off-script and you just have to go with the flow of the conversation. I consider myself a very amateur interviewer and a gets quite nervous when being interviewed. So I’ve never done a single interview in my life though I’ve done quite a lot videos. But after the information that I got from the slides I felt like maybe I could just give it a go.

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