Mpor: Is it more exposed, and my more exposed? i think actually the thing i'm interested in is whether that lack of constraints is exciting or terrifying, or both. People want to know you in a really different way. And also, there's like a craft that you have to learn. Like, i am learning a craft right now. I'm building on the stuff that i already knew, but i'm learning a craft. It's a completely different kind of interviewing because we are not only starting the clock in a particular place, but really o figure out where we're going at n p or. The first one, which you've heard, is about one woman's not
Lulu Garcia-Navarro is a former war correspondent and host of NPR’s Weekend Edition. Her new podcast, for the New York Times, is First Person.
“I would always say that if you go cover a story and you already know what people are going to say, and you already have it in your head what the outcome is, and there's no surprise there, then that's a story that you shouldn't be working on. You have to allow the opportunity for there to be a journey. And for there to be something at the end of it, that is gonna be like, Wow. I really never thought that. I didn't think that I was coming here to report on that, but I guess that's what I'm here to report on.”
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