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If I may ask, why a Q&A? As the saying goes, that's stenography, not journalism.
Time constraints are a part of the business. In many cases you need to interview, transcribe and write quickly in journalism. You don't have two days to turn around a story; your publication will want your story as soon as possible unless it's a deep investigative story or an extended feature.Mainly due to time constraint. I work part time, and got 14 drafts that need to go out this week, my son is complaining about not having seen Lego Batman yet and the wife is starting a new job. Its an unusually crazy month.
I completely agree it's not a good strategy, so it might not end up that way. But the draft/transcript I started with made me think of things I've not thought of before, cause I've not been in such situation.
If it wasn't OK to use the answers to other people's questions, there are some reporters out there who would not have a career.
I guess when I said by "group setting", I meant round table setting.
Wouldn't the "rules" in that chaotic setting you described be different from a round table type where interviewee sits down with 3 or 4 invited journalists?
The article I'm planning to write is a Q & A type of all the questions + answers (all 8 of them) with a short intro.
In this particular style, would it be unethical to use other interviewer's question + answer verbatim, without crediting their names?
Sorry to sound like a broken record, but I might have incorrectly described by dilemma on my op.
If I may ask, why a Q&A? As the saying goes, that's stenography, not journalism.
It always drives me nuts when people sit there stone silent at a press conference or on a conference call. What the heck did you come there for if you're not going to ask anything?