User Profile: Hillary Rosner

About

Name:Hillary Rosner
Member since:April 30, 2007
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Website:http://
Joined because:Jeff Howe asked me to.
Bio:Hillary Rosner is Assignment Zero's senior editor. She's a freelance journalist who writes for print and online publications. She's been a senior editor at the Village Voice (where she edited the tech coverage during the late '90s internet boom), a contributing editor at New York magazine, and science/technology editor at the pioneering online mag Feed. She currently writes about science and environmental issues for outlets as varied as the New York Times, Seed, Audubon, Town & Country, and Denver's 5280 magazine.

Recent Activities

TypeTitleAuthorRepliesLast Post
Blog entryWe Need Intros for the Q&AsHillary Rosner110 weeks 3 days ago
Blog entryTip: When Your Recording Is More "Am" Than "Pro"Hillary Rosner01 year 9 weeks ago
Topic DiscussionQuestions we should ask of every subjectAmanda Michel1910 weeks 5 days ago

Blog

We Need Intros for the Q&As

We're almost done! But we need one last thing from you: a short bio of the person you interviewed.

We just need a few sentences--a paragraph at most. Just so readers know who they're reading about and why they should care. Here's an example: http://zero.newassignment.net/filed/martin_wattenberg_interview

There's one catch: We need this ASAP. It's the last step of the process! As we move into the final stages of Assignment Zero (more on this shortly), we're going to be compiling all the interviews together in one spot, cleaned up and with these intros on top. So we're asking you to please, if at all possible, do this today (Monday, May 21) or tomorrow.

If you can't get it done in that time frame, please let us know so we can assign the task to someone else.

If you haven't already posted your Q&A, just post the whole thing at once (transcript with intro on top). If you've already posted your Q&A, please email your intro to David, dcohn1@gmail.com.

Thank you, as always....


Tip: When Your Recording Is More "Am" Than "Pro"

It's the reporter's nightmare: You conduct the world's best interview, with the subject of your dreams--only to find that your batteries died, you recorded nothing but static, or your recorder "disappeared" your file. And trust me, it's happened to every reporter you've ever read. So if you've had a technical difficulty while conducting your Assignment Zero interviews, you are probably not alone.

So let's all breathe a sigh of relief... and then make sure that technical difficulties don't stand in the way of all the great work you've done. One contributor had to resort to recording a cell phone conversation played over speakerphone. He did a killer interview, but could only make out about two out of every three words. What should you do if this happens to you?

First, try to salvage whatever you can. Transcribe what you've got. And reach deep into your memory bank (the one in your brain, not the digital kind) to try to recall the best points your subject made, the things he said that made you think, "This is going great!"

Second, get back in touch with the person you interviewed. Make a list of a few key questions you want to ask again, or topics you want to revisit, and ask them if you can go over a couple things with them for clarification. Don't be afraid to re-contact the person! In fact, you should probably check back in with them anyway, to check any facts you're unsure of, clarify any points they made that don't quite make sense to you.

Third, let us know if we can help! Don't sit home alone, panicked and hiding under the bed! If something went wrong and you need to fix it, let us know. We'll help you solve it.

Thank you for all you've done and are still doing!