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I'm sorry, but I disagree and find you to be twisting and exaggerating a huge volume of work. There are miles and miles of treasure in his archive from people that never spoke for long unstructured amounts of time with anyone else.

Terry Gross has big flaws, the biggest of which is how she approaches her interviews much more from a political activist's lens, to the point of being absolutely obnoxious about certain topics or people. There are a wide array of issues I would never want to hear her interview someone about.



There are many treasures in Charlie Rose’s archives because of the guests. Again, his show was often worth watching despite him. I’m not just cherry-picking examples though. He did that crap constantly. Almost every interview of his I’ve ever seen was at least mildly frustrating, and often I want to throw my shoe at the screen and tell him to SHUT UP AND LET THE GUEST TALK. Try watching a few of them now, and paying attention to the times that Rose interrupts the guest, makes some sycophantic flattering comment, or repeats his point multiple times after being told it is wrong.

The nature of interview shows is that often topics are inherently political (e.g. interviewing a politician, a journalist, an economist, or a political biographer), but Terry Gross is one of the least political interviewers in the media (apart from maybe some late-night comedy hosts who do 5-minute bits), and frequently gets her guests to talk deeply about their lives and families and hobbies even when they originally came to discuss some political topic or shill their latest book or whatever.

She approaches her interviews with careful preparation every time (e.g. she actually reads the books), universal politeness, and close listening, and responds to what her guests are saying with interesting topical follow-up questions rather than sticking with a canned script.

You might be misinterpreting knowing something about the topic (as Rose typically does not) as “political activism”.


You’re getting downvotes for no good reason (disagreement is a bad reason).

I quite strongly agree with you btw. The fact that Charlie Rose is held up as some high standard of interviews should be an inditement of the entire profession in the US because he - compared to actual maters like David Frost, Louis Theroux, and so on - is quite poor.

It was his format that was great, not him.


He pioneered that format, pursued great guests, gave them the space to convey their thoughts in long form, structured the arc of the interviews to pull good stuff out of people over time, and worked relentlessly.

And unlike Gross, he kept his own politics closer to his chest, which, in combination with everything else, gave him access to everyone.

Who else is out there from a younger generation on the way up? Weirdly enough, like the other person said, the Hot Ones guy is the closest I can think of. Maybe someone from the podcast realm, but it's hard to think of someone with the range and intellect. I guess it will be a more fractious world.


That format is about 60 years old. It wasn’t new when Frost/Nixon was a thing.

I agree it would be nicer very to have more of that kind of content but it doesn’t make him very good at it - just one of the only ones doing it




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