Interview
in sentence
736 examples of Interview in a sentence
When asked in a TV interview, "How could she look so good?"
I think it was actually that moment that sent me on the journey to
interview
300 people of Muslim heritage from nearly 30 countries, from Afghanistan to Mali, to find out how they fought fundamentalism peacefully like my father did, and how they coped with the attendant risks.
Later on in our interview, Prosecutor Bashir tells me how worried she is about the possible outcome of government negotiations with the Taliban, the people who have been trying to kill her.
So maybe 10 years from now, if this project succeeds, you will be sitting in an
interview
having to fill out this crazy global knowledge.
Fourth, they are taught that a good patient
interview
and a thorough clinical exam provide most of the clues for diagnosis, saving costly technology for confirmation.
Tonya emailed me two months ago, and she said that she had been interviewed for a new position, and during the interview, they probed about her business acumen and her strategic insights into the industry, and she said that she was so happy to report that now she has a new position reporting directly to the chief information officer at her company.
Seventeen percent of women would not show up to a job
interview
on a day when they weren't feeling confident about the way that they look.
This mindset has found what I think is its purest expression in a 2009
interview
with the longtime CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt, who, when asked about all the different ways his company is causing invasions of privacy for hundreds of millions of people around the world, said this: He said, "If you're doing something that you don't want other people to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place."
This same division can be seen with the CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, who in an infamous
interview
in 2010 pronounced that privacy is no longer a "social norm."
Tonight, I'm going to try to make the case that inviting a loved one, a friend or even a stranger to record a meaningful
interview
with you just might turn out to be one of the most important moments in that person's life, and in yours.
Traditionally, broadcast documentary has been about recording interviews to create a work of art or entertainment or education that is seen or heard by a whole lot of people, but I wanted to try something where the
interview
itself was the purpose of this work, and see if we could give many, many, many people the chance to be listened to in this way.
At the end of the session, you walk away with a copy of the
interview
and another copy goes to the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress so that your great-great-great-grandkids can someday get to know your grandfather through his voice and story.
I want to play just one animated excerpt from an
interview
recorded at that original Grand Central Booth.
I've learned about the poetry and the wisdom and the grace that can be found in the words of people all around us when we simply take the time to listen, like this
interview
between a betting clerk in Brooklyn named Danny Perasa who brought his wife Annie to StoryCorps to talk about his love for her.
Like an
interview
with Oshea Israel and Mary Johnson.
In the interview, she talks with her daughter Lesley about joining a gang as a young man, and later in life transitioning into the woman she was always meant to be.
So here is my wish: that you will help us take everything we've learned through StoryCorps and bring it to the world so that anyone anywhere can easily record a meaningful
interview
with another human being which will then be archived for history.
The app is a digital facilitator that walks you through the StoryCorps
interview
process, helps you pick questions, and gives you all the tips you need to record a meaningful StoryCorps interview, and then with one tap upload it to our archive at the Library of Congress.
Imagine, for example, a national homework assignment where every high school student studying U.S. history across the country records an
interview
with an elder over Thanksgiving, so that in one single weekend an entire generation of American lives and experiences are captured.
Or imagine mothers on opposite sides of a conflict somewhere in the world sitting down not to talk about that conflict but to find out who they are as people, and in doing so, begin to build bonds of trust; or that someday it becomes a tradition all over the world that people are honored with a StoryCorps
interview
on their 75th birthday; or that people in your community go into retirement homes or hospitals or homeless shelters or even prisons armed with this app to honor the people least heard in our society and ask them who they are, what they've learned in life, and how they want to be remembered.
Ten years ago, I recorded a StoryCorps
interview
with my dad who was a psychiatrist, and became a well-known gay activist.
This is the picture of us at that
interview.
I listened to that
interview
for the first time at three in the morning on the day that he died.
I was remembering the over-the-top meals the Global Horizons survivors would make for me every time I showed up to
interview
them.
Oh, I'm sorry, but you got to get into the spirit of it if you're going to
interview
me.
He was given the Nobel Prize in 1945 in recognition, and in an
interview
shortly after, this is what he said: "The thoughtless person playing with penicillin treatment is morally responsible for the death of a man who succumbs to infection with a pencillin-resistant organism."
I remember watching, in 2003, an
interview
between Fox News host Tony Snow and then-US Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.
But then, I was 29 years old at this time, and some kid came around and said he was a stringer from Newsweek magazine and he wanted to
interview
me and ask what I was doing about my views.
And they said that if I attempted to
interview
McGowan, the visit would be terminated.
So Ella and another mother were asked to be part of an
interview
panel, to choose from amongst the existing professionals who would work with them.
Back
Next
Related words
About
Which
Would
Their
Recent
After
People
There
First
Movie
Could
Before
Where
Asked
Should
Years
During
Being
Director
Really