If this story was taking place in 2019, Chuckles would definitely have had a podcast. And Kevin wouldn’t have been there just for an in-person one-off interview. All of us indoor campers would have been the studio audience for a live taping of said podcast. (Chuckles with Chuckles?). And based on what happened when I was 10, all of the podcast interview questions for Kevin Bacon would have come straight from a quick Google search.
6 Steps to Prepare for a Superb Guest Interview Role on a Podcast
The interview shows that really grab my attention and make me connect most to the interviewee are the ones were the person in the spotlight is being their true self, sharing stories from their lives and surprising the host/interviewer in the process. When the conversation is real, and the person is passionate about what they are sharing, the interview becomes a dialogue and helps us (the listener) connect with the human behind the microphone.
How Your Personal Strengths (AKA Superpowers) Support Success
Flash forward to the next class. All of the kids were abuzz, talking about the character they had created. Of the fifteen students, fourteen of them brought in drawings of the character. Each drawing showed what their personality was like and what superpowers they possessed. What about that fifteenth student? She sat quietly in the circle with a look of horror and embarrassment on her face. And she was clutching a shoe box.
How to Tell a Funny Story with Honesty and Ease
When I first started telling stories on stage, I thought that what I was doing was doing stand-up comedy. I would perform on comedy nights, with other comedians, and people would laugh at what I said. But my material had a different rhythm to it. I wasn’t out there just to get a laugh every few seconds, I was sharing things from my life that I could now look back on and laugh at (and with). And the payoff for the audience — who would still laugh, repeatedly, along the way — was a complete story, that they could connect to, relate to, and feel joy from.
Don't Network, Connect
Lately the most visited page on the Tell Me A Story website is… this one. The problem? I wrote the original blog post in the Spring of 2016 and so much has changed for me since then!
In the past three years, I went full time with Tell Me A Story and have been building it into a full service brand. I started a podcast. I joined several professional networking organizations. And I grew less and less nervous showing up to events because as I showed up as my true self.
No blazer.
No agenda.
Just presence and an open mind to meeting new people, learning new things and seeing what might come of it way down the line.