Monthly Archives: February 2023

Sample Layout for Your Episodes–TITLE HERE

QC POD is about the people, products, and ideas that make the Queens College Community.

Jason Tougaw sits down with NPR Music critic Ann Powers.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/59zJJzaHottLqhlOIQWL3C?si=304e2c7658e54b6e

Ann Powers was a guest in The Knight News Visiting Journalists Series. Afterwards, she sat down with Jason Tougaw to talk music towns, the role of pleasure and love in music criticism, the racial politics of American music, her close encounters with Prince, Tori Amos, and Bono—and a whole lot more.

Ann Powers is NPR Music’s critic and correspondent. She writes for NPR’s music news blog, The Record, and she can be heard on NPR’s news magazines and music programsOne of the nation’s most notable music critics, Powers served as chief pop music critic at the Los Angeles Times from 2006 until she joined NPR in 2011. From 1997 to 2001 Powers was a pop critic at The New York Times and before that worked as a senior editor at the Village Voice. Powers’s books include Weird Like Us: My Bohemian America and Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black and White, Body and Soul in American Music.

Group Activity for Class Tuesday 2/14

You’ll do a group activity and presentation in class on Tuesday. See groups on the calendar.

Before Class

As a group, choose an episode of The Turnaround that we haven’t listened to together. See email addresses below to get in contact. Listen to the episode and take careful notes with time stamps.

  • Compare notes and prepare a presentation on what we might all learn from the interview.
  • Ask yourselves the following questions:
    • What new ideas does your chosen interviewer bring to the discussion?
    • What ideas resonate with other interviews we’ve listened to?
    • What does the guest have to say about preparation, research, writing questions, their aims, rapport with guests, storytelling, and audiences?
  • For your presentation, Introduce the episode and guest–and explain why you chose it
  • Choose a moment from the episode you want the rest of us to listen to.
  • Tell us why you chose that moment. What can we learn from it?
  • Talk about interview techniques you want to try with your own episodes.

 

Kate Chen <[email protected]>,
Angelina D’Orta <[email protected]>,
Kristina Dawoud <[email protected]>,
Shmyah Hoppie <[email protected]>,
Eduardo Ibanez <[email protected]>,
Grazelle Juanillio <[email protected]>,
Torri Little <[email protected]>,
“Carlos Montoya, Jr.” <[email protected]>,
Alessia Pisicchio <[email protected]>,
Edwin Ramirez <[email protected]>,
Tatjana Razai <[email protected]>,
Loida Rivera <[email protected]>,
Monica Sarduy <[email protected]>,
Holden Velasco <[email protected]>,
Arianna Arce <[email protected]>

Mock Interviews

“I want the interview to be a narrative and not a questionnaire. I always try to figure out where to start, what’s the right entry place for this interview.” — Terry Gross

“I’m looking for a narrative. What I’m making is narrative, and I’m looking for a narrative. . . . The structure of stories on our show is there’s plot and there are ideas. Those are the two elements you’re constantly monitoring to know whether or not you’ve got them. “ –Ira Glass

“The blueprint is the narrative of somebody’s life, but 9 out of 10, we get caught up in current issues. . . . I find a lot of my interviews of late shift from what’s your story to what are your views.” –Reggie Ossé

You’re going to practice interviewning a partner in class today, by pretending to be one of the interviewers we’ve listened to and then trading and pretending to be a guest . These are the steps to follow:

  • With your partner, decide on your roles. An an interviewer, who will you pretend to be? As an interviewee, who will you pretend to be? Note: The roles should fit together logically.

  • Once you made a a decision, conduct pre-interviews with each other. Informally, find out a little about the interviewee–and how they might sound recorded.

  • Then write 4-5 questions for your interviewee. Consider formatting. What size font? Should anything be bolded or in italics? In a color? Should anything have a note attached to it?

  • Then, do some of the vocal exercises we read about in the “Finding Your Voice” chapter of Glenn Weldon’s NPR Podcast Startup Guide–and that we practiced in class together.

  • Once you have your questions and you’re warmed up, decide who will interview who. Conduct the interview. When you finish, trade roles and conduct the second interview.

  • In both roles, practice using your voice. How do you want to sound? How can you experiment your voice to get that sound.

  • If you imagine turning your interview into an episode, what might the narrative be?

Some interview advice:

  • Show your curiosity; be aware of your own pleasure and amusement
  • Empathize: Imagine your interviewee’s experience
  • Listen
  • Ask follow-up questions; ask for examples
  • Get your interviewee to tell stories
  • Get your interviewee talking about ideas and their beliefs
  • Listen for magic moments–the ones that will move or startle audiences, get them thinking and feeling with you

For Class Thursday 2/9

You’ve now listened to six really different interviewers talk about their approaches: Jesse Thorn, Audie Cornish, Larry King, Reggie Ossé, Terry Gross, and Ira Glass. Some common questions come up:

What kinds of research do they do?

How scripted are their interviews?

How do they make interviewees comfortable?

What excites them?

What’s unique about their approaches?

With these questions in mind, prepare two things for class:

1. Compare three interviewers in relation to one of the questions above.

2. Think about what techniques described by  any of the interviewers you might emulate?

Hint: You’ll be conducting mock interviews in class.

Your Email Addresses

Kate Chen <[email protected]>,
Angelina D’Orta <[email protected]>,
Kristina Dawoud <[email protected]>,
Shmyah Hoppie <[email protected]>,
Eduardo Ibanez <[email protected]>,
Grazelle Juanillio <[email protected]>,
Torri Little <[email protected]>,
“Carlos Montoya, Jr.” <[email protected]>,
Alessia Pisicchio <[email protected]>,
Edwin Ramirez <[email protected]>,
Tatjana Razai <[email protected]>,
Loida Rivera <[email protected]>,
Monica Sarduy <[email protected]>,
Holden Velasco <[email protected]>,
Arianna Arce <[email protected]>

Voice Recording Experiment

Here’s how the experiment goes:

  • Using any device, record yourself three times saying, “This is 99% Invisible. I’m YOUR NAME” three different ways. Just read it differently or use your voice differently each time.
  • Listen back to what you recorded.
  • Then, watch the video on “Three Tips for Training Your Voice” (below). Do the exercises along with the video.
  • Then record yourself three times again, trying out different tones or energy levels. This time say, ““This is 99% Invisible. I’m Loida Rivera. Today we’re going to start back in the 1970s, at a Catholic School in South Los Angeles. It is picture day.”
  • Then listen back to what you recorded. See what differences you notice after the exercises.

For Tuesday’s Class

For Tuesday’s class you should do the folllowing:

  • Choose an interview technique or piece of advice to discuss from each of the episodes of The Turnaround we’re listening to, with Larry King and Audie Cornish. Make it interesting by choosing very different examples.
  • Choose a moment from the “Acing the Interview” chapter of Weldon’s NPR Podcast Startup Guide that resonates with your choices.
  • Be prepared to discuss your choices in relation to each other in class.
  • Watch the Audition tutorial and come to class with any and all questions about it.
  • Be sure to download Auditon, using the link to Adobe Creative Cloud listed under “Tools.”