vox pop
English
editEtymology
editClipping of vox populi, from Latin.
Pronunciation
editNoun
edit- (journalism) A short, informal, non-prearranged interview with a member of the public, especially to canvas opinion.
- Synonyms: vox, man on the street
- The reporter got some vox pops in the city square to see what people thought of the country's new flag.
- 2017 April 29, Catherine Bennett, “Want to know what people really think? Don’t do a vox pop”, in The Guardian[1]:
- While the BBC guidelines relating to balance are […] so diligently applied that the opinion of 100 so-called experts must always be weighed […] , vox pops remain a chance for journalists to run more or less free.
- 2018, Gary Hudson, Sarah Rowlands, The Broadcast Journalism Handbook[2], Routledge, →ISBN:
- Vox pops – a series of comments from a variety of people – are a great way to include a sample of public opinion in your programmes and to add colour to reports that would otherwise suffer from a lack of lively soundbites.
Translations
editshort informal interview
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