In this interview, the hosts on 'This Morning' interview David Cassidy and it doesn't turn out too well. David Cassidy takes things maybe a little too personally and gets rather defensive. His use of non-fluency features, such as hesitations and false starts, show that he is perhaps un-certain with what they are asking him. His paralinguistic features, such as, pulling a disgusted face and putting his hands up to sort of say 'who cares?', show that he really want happy with the hosts, creating a sense of awkwardness.
Tuesday, 6 October 2015
Awkward Interviews
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M29C4dCWyCw
In this interview, the hosts on 'This Morning' interview David Cassidy and it doesn't turn out too well. David Cassidy takes things maybe a little too personally and gets rather defensive. His use of non-fluency features, such as hesitations and false starts, show that he is perhaps un-certain with what they are asking him. His paralinguistic features, such as, pulling a disgusted face and putting his hands up to sort of say 'who cares?', show that he really want happy with the hosts, creating a sense of awkwardness.
In this interview, the hosts on 'This Morning' interview David Cassidy and it doesn't turn out too well. David Cassidy takes things maybe a little too personally and gets rather defensive. His use of non-fluency features, such as hesitations and false starts, show that he is perhaps un-certain with what they are asking him. His paralinguistic features, such as, pulling a disgusted face and putting his hands up to sort of say 'who cares?', show that he really want happy with the hosts, creating a sense of awkwardness.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment