
Many of the questions reporters ask to professional athletes after a game are asked to get an answer that will make a headline.
Today's post-game interviews consist of a room full of reporters and camera men all asking different questions, one right after another, to an athlete or coach.
No conversations are held during interviews anymore because after one question is asked, the next topic is brought up by another reporter.
The lack of knowledge reporters gain from these types of interviews is small, so what happens is a quote can be taken out of context and sound negative when it was actually not.
"It's a headline-driven world, and what I said provided a headline," said Tennessee Titans quarterback Matt Hasselbeck. "That's why I'm guarded, cautious. I don't want to accidentally give bulletin-board material. If someone asks me about a player, I say, 'He's a great player.' If they ask me about a coach, I say, 'He's a great coach.'"
Other athletes have been saying the same things when it comes to interviews. They are going to be more boring and guarded with what they say in fear it will be turned around and used against them for a headline.
An article by Tim Keown of
ESPN The Magazine discusses the new type of interviewing.
"For better or worse, the post-interview age has created a generation of athletes who are overcovered but underreported," Keown said. "In the end, perhaps this much is true: If nobody asks any questions beyond the obvious, maybe nobody needs to ask anything at all. We see more and know less."
People are gaining more information from these types of interviews, but it sometimes can be inaccurate when taken out of context.
Photo- http://arkencounter.com/blog/2010/12/08/announcement-draws-international-attention/