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RADIO INTERVIEW 101 Controversy

New for 2014: When attempting to get interviews in any media, especially radio, it's important to be able to mold your information into something that stations are most likely to want. Too many guests make the mistake of thinking that because a topic like weightloss or childcare or mortgages is important to them (and all their friends and family,) that it will also be important to the listeners of a particular radio station. This is not the case.

You may have wondered why everything you hear on TV and radio seems to always be blown out of proportion. Well, if you haven't heard, controversy attracts listeners. Radio stations are not in the information business, which means that they don't care if they air anything that informs their listeners. They don't get paid for that. Radio instead wants just one thing... more listeners. That's how they get paid. They already have their current listeners... so giving your information to those current listeners is not going to bring the station any new listeners. Controversy, however, has been proven to attract new listeners, by way of word-of-mouth, newspaper and magazine reviews, and especially, tweeting/texting. So, your job must be to mold your current information into something which radio will feel is controversial to their current listeners. Every topic, no matter what it is, can be molded and/or angled to be controversial.

How do you do this, especially with dry fact-based topics? Well, it is a bit of an art. But the basic way is to write down all the conversations you've had in the past that resulted in your getting into an argument about your topic. If those conversations were enough to madden people you normally would speak nicely with, they should be good enough to madden some listeners.

Now, you might be thinking that "acting" like something is a controversy would not fit your personality or presentation style. True, it may not, at least the way that you are currently thinking. You may be envisioning a radio host getting into a shouting match with a listener, but it does not have to be this way. Your approach could just be, "Did you know that such-and-such does not really work that way at all???" And then you go on to give the real, shocking facts. This may seem a bit simple, but if you lace your interviews with many, many of these, you'll eventually be thought of as an interview guest with a ton of twists (with or without callers shouting)... and that's exactly what stations want. After all, no station wants to interview someone whose topic is "It's Going To Be A Sunny Day Today".

Any topic can be made controversial... and many times it's done by involving people-stories, whereby the people become characters in a shocking little play with a twist. Try it on a few friends who are not in your business. Then try it on some unsuspecting folks in a chatroom (again, one that is not involved in your business.) A final test might be to test it during a live speaking engagement. Then it's time to try it on your radio audience, and continue the fine-tuning process from that point onwards.

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