The Interview
Every famous person has a right to his or her privacy. Interviewers sometimes embarrass celebrities with very personal questions.
The most celebrities usually take themselves as the victims of interviews. That is why, they despise interviews as an unwarranted intrusion into their lives. Or they say that interview somehow diminishes them.
Nobel laureate V. S. Naipaul feels that some people are wounded by interviews and lose a part of themselves. They feel by its unwarranted intrusion into their private lives about their very personal matters. It hurts them and takes away a part of them.
Most often the celebrity is embarrassed beyond description. They shower a question attack on his personal, very own possessions. That is why it is termed as immoral and a crime by Rudyard Kipling. He calls it cowardly and vile. No respectable man would ask it, much less give it.
Another Nobel laureate Saul Bellow is so much perturbed by the intrusion of interview in his privacy that he terms it as thumbprints on his windpipe.
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What are some of the positive views on Interview?
Why do most celebrity writers despise being interviewed?
What is the belief in some primitive cultures about being photographed?
What do you understand by the expression “Thumbprints on his windpipes?”
Who in today’s world, our chief source of information about personalities?
Do you think Umberto Eco likes being interviewed? Give reasons for your opinion.
How does Eco find the time to write so much?
What was distinctive about Eco’s academic writing style?
Did Umberto Eco consider himself a novelist first or an academic scholar?
What is the reason for the huge success of the novel, ‘The Name of the Rose’?
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