Interviewed Jenna O.
Q: How many times did you make it to Sundance?
A: I went 8 times, and really wanted to go more, but with work it was difficult.
Q: Did you enjoy it enough to attend again?
A: Yes, for sure. But next time I think I will plan enough in advance so I can not work during the festival, and be able to attend every day.
Q: What was the best thing about being in Sundance?
A: I really enjoyed the diversity of people who attend. In Ut we pretty much just see the same type of people everyday. Not growing up in Ut makes me miss things you don't find here, especially people. Sometimes it seems like everyone in Ut is cut from the same cookie cutter.
Q: What cookie cutter would that be?
A: Well the religion and the culture derived from that religion tend to turn out unvaried regularity of people, whereas outside of Ut people are a lot more variable.
Q: Did you notice any tension between locals and festival attendees from out of state?
A: Not really, everyone seemed to be having a lot of fun. I've heard that some locals won't attend since the festival supports actions that are not within the confines of their religion, but I didn't really see that there, or maybe the locals who do attend are more open minded.
Q: What was the best event that you attended?
A: I really enjoyed the Nas concert at the Sugar bar. There was an amazing crowd who were really into the music, and Nas did several songs and seemed to really enjoy himself.
Q: What were the good things you saw?
A: I think the awesome snow we had really added to the atmosphere of the festival, and everyone really seemed to dig the amount of snow.
Q: And the worst parts?
A: Parking was really difficult. Like every parking lot was full, even the really expensive ones that were $20-30. And the food and drinks at the clubs were pretty expensive too.
Q: How do you feel Sundance meshes with local Ut Culture?
A: I think it goes along really well. At least with the new Ut culture. 10 yrs ago, Ut was very different, but it has kind of mellowed out and become more accepting of diversity since then.
Nicely done! These comments contributed so nicely to the group presentation, confirming what some suspected. I'd love to see more interviews!!
ReplyDeleteI also want to add a few notes about Ethnography and your particular prose contribution. I suppose I'll ask in the form of a question: How does your ethos as a reliable researcher emerge from the introduction that reads, "Did a really interesting interview with a good friend of mine the other day regarding Sundance and what makes it so special"? Can you imagine what I'm asking about, here? Read on. How might you revise so as to appear slightly more objective? Or, how might you tailor your prose to appear reliable even given your bias (the fact that your interview subject is a friend, you share original biases, etc.)?
ReplyDeleteWhat you get from your subject is helpful. Can you see how more interviews might have helped? How?
Please write a thoughtful entry on these questions. Thanks!
Bit of an old entry, I know, but I wanted to say that I really liked the interview style in writing. They're so easy to skim! And there's an ethos built right into it. I mean, it's transcript, after all. It's cool to see the full thing here.
ReplyDelete