This is not the book I expected it to be, but that doesn't mean it's any less worthwhile.
I entered into this book thinking that Sam was the interviewer and this would be about the questioning of certain interviews, but instead Sam is a producer, and that in itself is a fascinating thing given the role of a producer in relation to interviews is an undervalued and underappreciated one.
While there are countless books on interviews - many are great, many are not - Scoops does something unique, in that Sam outlines the process it takes to secure major exclusive interviews, and to work with subjects and their media/legal/PR team to get the right interview. Sometimes this goes wrong - after all, some subjects think they're stepping into one kind of interview, only to find it's something else entirely - but sometimes it goes right.
Sam's role as a producer is to set these things up in place, support the interviewer, and then in some cases, support the subject. She talks about that continued connection with her subjects long after the interview, almost like a therapist or a counsellor.
And this is maybe the aspect I appreciated the most about Scoops, Sam outlines the supportive role and interviewer can be in the process, while also outlining the critical and excoriating role they can be too. But that supporting aspect is, to an outsider, an unexpected one. After all, the time spent with a subject can be fleeting. But the reality is that as a producer or interviewer, you're facilitating the path of someone's personal experiences to a wider public. You then become intrinsically tied to those subjects and their history, depending on the weight of the interview.
Sam actively changed lives here, and Scoops outlines in clinical detail how she managed to achieve that.
So, while this isn't the book I expected it to be, it's still a mighty fine read.