Wednesday, June 04, 2025

Simple Lives


If I could add them all up, the people I've interviewed in my career number in the many hundreds, maybe a thousand. I don’t know how many people's stories I've collected or how many quotes I've selected.

You'd think interviewing would all boil down to a formula, but it doesn't, at least not for me. Everyone is different; everyone's story is unique.

These days (circa 2012) I do a few interviews in person each week, a few others by phone, and a few others by email. I interview self-published authors for an ebook distributor, starting with a phone interview, followed by a Q&A in email.

That way there's no need to take notes or use a recorder, nor are there any worries about misquoting someone.

Still, even when the structure of an interview falls into a familiar pattern, because you are having a similar conversation to others about similar topics or ideas, the unique ways people see the world and tell their stories reshapes even familiar territory into new terrain.

That's one reason I like being a journalist. Being exposed to multiple perspectives on all kinds of things helps keep me from falling into a rut of unexamined thinking, or descending into the echo chamber of group-think.

At least I hope it does.

It might seem to some that the interviews I used to do of famous and prominent people for bigger publications like Rolling Stone or Salon about weighty topics were more important than my current short blog profiles of startups or ebook authors.

But I don't see it that way. A person's story is their story, whether they are powerful or unknown, whether the narrative seems complex or relatively simple.

And although everyone has a story, relatively few of them get told.

(This essay is from 13 years ago.)

HEADLINES:

MUSIC VIDEO:

Vince Gill sings 'What You Give Away' 

No comments: