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Originally posted by: oohhboy
You know that she will just dance circles around every one of those questions Ceric. Almost all of them can be resolved in a Yes/No or a one sentance reply. But that is based on the assumption that it isn't a live interview.
Billy wasted alot of questions, especially near the beginning. He did nail the Nintendo power question and he got an effective answer. He then got lead around for the next ten questions. The TGS follow up question was rubbish. The demand question brings nothing new to the table other than the fact that Kaplan thinks 7-8 Wiis is a "Stack". The last third of the interview breaks down completely and Kaplan eats him alive. His failure to maintain control become apparent with this...
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GI: So you’ve got things lined up after holidays…there’s not going to be a drought…
Kaplan: Noooooo….business ends December 31st, and we have nothing else going on. Yes, of course. We know that we don’t share a lot and it’s really frustrating. But yes we have a lot of great stuff coming.
It was a retarded question and Kaplan shows her displeasure. Billy should have known better than to bring a dick to a knife fight. Kaplan never says anything beyond the quater and Billy would have been better off spending more time grilling her about events so far and her own mistakes. Not asking about stuff that is above her pay grade. She is PR Billy, ask her about PR. Make her talk about herself, people love talking about themselfs.
Poor, poor Billy. Good entertainment never the less. Like a good snuff film, only now in a text format!
QFT.
Why isn't anyone else here appreciating the mastery of Perrin's conversation, and Billy's complete kerfluffle when confronted with it? It's like poetry in motion, ballet, opera... and experimental jazz!
And she's SO WILLING to talk about things, but, the interviewee has to be able to give and take at her level. They have to treat this as a hyper-realized conversation, not as a Q & A session. In Q & A PR immediately falls into predictable rote procedures that no one really wants, and the interviewer is at the whim of company policy. If they REALLY want to get the juicy journalism stuff, they gotta up their game, and be as charming, deft, and agile as Perrin, gaining subtle and indirect insights that aren't PR admissions but rather hints at secrets that couldn't be revealed otherwise.
Journalism is about more than asking all the required questions and accepting the answers. It's about the SKILL at which you winkle such answers out of your partner. Someone needs to get up there, and give Perrin a run for her money, because so far she's going quite unchallenged.