Reporters often ask questions that delve into the who, what, when, where, why, and how of a story. Common questions include: Who is involved? What happened? When did it occur? Where did it take place? Why is this significant? How did it happen? They may also inquire about the impacts, reactions, and future implications of the events being reported. Additionally, questions about sources, credibility, and background information are common to ensure comprehensive coverage.
Reporters do not always ask the same six questions. The questions asked by reporters are determined by the type of information they are trying to retrieve. However, most good reporters will attempt to find out the who, what, when, where, why, and how of a situation or story they are covering.
Because they ask questions of what the public wants to know and most of the time the public have dumb questions.
The 20 questions game is that one person will ask the question and the other person will answer. The person who started the game will ask all 20 questions before the other person starts their 20 questions.
The kinds of questions usually asked are the "What", "Why" & "How" type questions if you are covering a race. If you're in an interview with a driver, team owner, or someone in the industry, ask questions concerning their career, how they got started, what happened in an event or occurrence at a certain point in their career, and some of what their favorite moments may've been.
Who? Why? What? Where? When? How? are the classic questions posed by "news" reporters.
First, this is a challenge for any reporter-- knowing the right questions to ask. I cannot give you examples of six questions without knowing what news story you are asking about. But it's always wise to focus on the Five Ws and one H: who, what, where, when, why... and how. If you base your questions on trying to find out who did the thing, what it was they did, where they did it, when they did it, why they did it, and how they did it, you should have the basis of a good news story.
Use common sense.
On Chegg, you can ask up to 20 questions per month with a Chegg Study subscription.
He passively ignored the questions of probing reporters.
Ramayana or the Journey of Rama played a significant role in developing a society which can live a life bountiful of blessing. Which part of the epic supports this claim?
probably like 20 at the most.
Start with questions like, "WHat's your favorite color" or "what's your favorite food," then spring random quetions to make them laugh. Then ask the questions that you really want answers to.