Eddie_Vedder
Member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2007
- Messages
- 50
You could have avoided this whole problem by bringing a tape recorder and starting the interview by saying, "Let's get you on the record now."
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sartrean said:Everybody forking lies. Every public official, every coach, every player, every tom, deck or harry quoted for any feature about anything. Editors forking lie, reporters lie.
Get forking used to it. All we do is print all the garbage nobody friggin' cares about anyway. That's why they lie.
Freelance Hack said:Write,
Do you have the original comments on tape?
Also, make sure you record your interviews with this official from now on. The next time he accuses you of getting it wrong, plop out the recorder and play his comments back for him. This works well in public places.
Write-brained said:Freelance Hack said:Write,
Do you have the original comments on tape?
Also, make sure you record your interviews with this official from now on. The next time he accuses you of getting it wrong, plop out the recorder and play his comments back for him. This works well in public places.
No it wasn't on tape and I've found having it on tape isn't fool-proof either. One of my former papers required us to use tape recorders all the time. I caught a dude on tape but he later told my editors that he didn't know I was recording him (forking liar) so forking management got scared and refused run the story.
Moral: Get them on tape saying they know they're on tape.
Fortunately my current job goes to the mat for me. I still use a recorder on occassion but only when I think it's necessary ... this was a run of the mill interview that he fudged because he didn't think he'd get caught ... yet it probably would make sense to use a recorder with this guy next time, if only to make a point.