Zeng said it was the P.R. guard who deprived Tang from a timely clarification on the issue.
In my experience, the celebrity client rarely reads the questions. It is the assistant or publicist who performs the mental acrobatic routine of shielding flying daggers. So they would prefer softball questions or questions couched in the idolizing language of fandom.
Most movie stars I've interviewed are very intelligent. Depending on their scheduling, which could be hectic on a campaign, they can be quick-witted and willing to communicate. It is the routine questions that would bore them (though they're good at not showing it). If you come up with unusual but relevant questions, they would light up. But those are often the questions that get nipped in the bud by the PR machine.
I don't have a problem with vetting, but it would be hard for me to stick to a script. If it's a natural dialogue, it would create its own flow and question ten may jump to question two as it happened with my conversation with British actor Colin Firth. Korean stars would not allow this, says Zeng, because the translator would not budge if you deviate from the prepared list.
Sure, reporters ask stupid questions, too. It is the job of their editors and readers to weed them out.
If you treat celebrity interviewees as fragile porcelain, they will lose their tenacity as normal human beings and become brittle.
Broadcaster
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