Advice for would-be media darlings - A hilarious YouTube series

edit

I ran across some truly hilarious examples of desperately awful speaking to the media on YouTube.  The series is a set of short clips, beginning with Media Coaching Example #1, in which a beauty contest competitor answers ... well, tries to answer...a question about poor educational standards in the United States.  It's deliciously ironic that although she is talking she makes no sense.  The advice?  Be prepared.  Media Coaching Example #2 shows how long, rambling explanations can lose one's audience. The advice?  Keep it simple.  The third example, Media Coaching Example #3 had to be developed by an engineer - it shows a highly technical person showing off his product by referring to impossibly arcane features of a bit of machinery.  The advice?  Avoid jargon!  Media Coaching Example #4 (this can't be real, can it?) features a newscaster who loses it when his TelePrompter gives trouble.  Suggestion here - stay cool!  The fifth suggestion, take your time, is illustrated by a serious-sounding gent trying to explain what a digital marketplace is.  And the last one, Media Coaching Example #6 shows an executive at a shipping company awkwardly defending the quality of his ships in light of a maritime misadventure. 

It was particularly interesting to see the actual poor practices the author advises against illustrated.  A good takeaway for any of us who have to do public speaking!

Share this article: Digg this post on digg.com  Bookmark to del.icio.us  Search Technorati for links to this post  Stumble This

  • Posted: Monday, February 07, 2011
  • Permalink

Next entry: Expanding role for Finance Chiefs - utterly predictable Previous entry: Loved Scott Anthony’s Analysis of On the Brink Disrupters

 John Caddell  on  February 08, 2011

Rita, thanks for posting this. I believe the newscaster in Example #4 is a younger Bill O’Reilly, isn’t it? He hasn’t gotten any more likable with age, I must say.

regards, John

 John Caddell  on  February 08, 2011

And #2 is Biz Stone, co-founder of Twitter.

Page 1 of 1 pages

Post a comment

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

Trackbacks

Trackback to this entry!

Want to trackback to this entry? Use this URL: