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243 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
243 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3773
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Title: HPR3773: My Public Speaking Rules
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3773/hpr3773.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:13:02
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3773 for Wednesday the 18th of January 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, My Public Speaking Rules.
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It is hosted by Mike Ray and is about 18 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is.
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Some tips on public speaking for technical talks or lectures.
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Hello and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Mike Ray.
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Hacker Public Radio is a crowdsourced podcast where you out there and me provide
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the soundbites, the recordings which are played published every weekday, Monday to Friday.
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So if you want to make a contribution, go to HackerPublicRadio.org to find out why.
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It's gone 9 o'clock on Christmas Day.
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It's been a noisy day.
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Unlike yesterday when I recorded the talk about me, but a mine-off phenomenon.
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I'm not one third drunk after a few bottles of beer, but it's been a noisy day.
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My sister has now gone to work, so I'm alone in this big old farmhouse now.
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And my niece has been here today for Christmas dinner, I've gone home with our letlands.
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It's been noisy chaos, but I like to hear the squeals and delights of the letlands.
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As they do things like trying to run over Uncle Michael's feet with their radio control cars, etc.
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Very good fun.
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Anyway, today I thought I would give you my view on the rules of public speaking.
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Now public speaking for many people is a traumatic thing, whether it be recording a podcast like this
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or giving a technical talk to a room full of people.
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Perhaps that a Linux Fest or Linux conference of some kind.
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Any other kind of conference or just giving a talk to a room full of people.
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Perhaps a Linux user group or a classroom.
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Or the other variety of public speaking.
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Perhaps being the best man at somebody's wedding.
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Or after dinner speaking, etc.
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I highlighted in there two different kinds of public speaking really.
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One is technical talks and lectures.
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The other is the kind of casual or not casual.
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But the other kind is what I touched on being a best man or after dinner speaking.
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I've never seen myself as a raconter after dinner speaker.
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But I have been best man at several weddings.
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That demands a speech, of course, traditionally in UK anyway.
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The rules I'm going to outline here don't really cover that kind of public speaking.
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It's more the technical talk or lecture type of speaking that I'm talking about.
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So what are my rules of public speaking?
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Oh, I should tell you about my own experience of public speaking.
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I've been doing it for a long, long time.
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Since probably way back in the early 80s, I was fully sighted at that point.
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I'm now totally blind as a lot of people will remember.
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It's never really held any terror for me, especially now that I can't see.
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Because I can't see what people are thinking.
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I can't see a sea of eyes in front of me, which is what a lot of people find.
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It's a terror of public speaking.
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And I've given public talks at all kinds of different levels.
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In the early days, amateur radio clubs and conferences on such diverse subjects as forward scatter,
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forward meteor scatter propagation, a rural propagation,
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the construction of very large EHT extra-high tension power supplies
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and valve amplifiers for VHF for doing things like forward scatter meteor,
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reflection propagation and aurora and earth moon earth, etc.
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In the days when it was a big boys thing, we needed an aerial, the size of a barn door
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and an amplifier to match.
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You can do it with a one-yarge and a few watts, thanks to SDR.
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Then I was sort of graduated up to talks about similar sorts of subjects at radio rallies and radio conferences.
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And then later at Linux user groups, classrooms,
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all kinds of environments about things to do with Linux and computing.
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And programming in particular.
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So rules.
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Rule number one, and we're going to focus on that kind of public speaking,
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not only talking as best man or after dinner speaking, racon terror, etc.
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I think I might have already said that.
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Rule number one, do not ever begin your talk with an apology for being a bad speaker.
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This is an absolutely very, very strict rule.
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And then why do I say that?
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Well, if the first thing you do is you stand at the front and you say,
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I'm not very good at this, well effectively, you might say,
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I'm accustomed as I am to public speaking or something along those lines.
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If you do that, you immediately plant in the minds of the people in front of you
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that you're not very good at what you're doing.
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And that they can have to sit through listening to a bumbling idiot talking about something
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that he might not know very much about.
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Because if you apologize for not being very good at public speaking,
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you also immediately plant in their mind the fact that you might not be very good
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or particularly strong authority on the subject you're about to talk about.
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Rule number two, this is a three-part rule.
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And this was first given to me many years ago by a member of a radio club
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who was a retired lecturer from the London School of Economics.
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And he said that any lecture or technical talk,
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or any kind of talk we are in parting information,
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should be divided into three parts.
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And in very brief summary, these three parts are,
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tell them what it is you're going to tell them,
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tell them, and then summarize what it is you just told them.
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So let's go over those three parts in a bit more detail.
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At the beginning, you explain what it is you're going to talk about,
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give them some outline of the subject matter, but very brief outline.
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Part two is the actual meat of the target,
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which is where you give the talk,
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and part of the technical knowledge,
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and part three, as a kind of reinforcement practice,
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you summarize what it is you just told them,
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and maybe go back over a few bullet points of what it is you just talked about.
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And here is rule number three.
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Always remember that the people out there in the audience wanted to be there.
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If you're at some kind of conference or something,
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chances are they had alternative venues, alternative streams, talks,
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etc., they could have gone to,
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but they specifically wanted to hear you talk.
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So there is going to be little or no hostility in the room.
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Well, there might be one or two very board partners,
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but in the main, everybody that is there wanted to be there,
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wanted to listen to what it is you have to say.
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There will be a lot of empathy out there in the room.
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We're not all narcissists like Donald Trump.
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Sometimes we do have actually have empathy and want people to do well,
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and they will be invested in you.
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So don't assume that there is any hostility,
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because there is probably not, well, almost definitely not.
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Rule number four is don't rush.
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If you're nervous, the tendency is to hurry and to rush along
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and get towards the end as quickly as you possibly can.
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Don't do that.
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The main reason I say that is because if you become gabbled or garbled,
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then the effectiveness of imparting what it is you want to say is diminished.
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And also, it's a perilous feedback loop,
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because the faster you go or the faster you try to go,
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the more flustered you might become and the more flustered you become,
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the more gabbled the message.
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So try not to rush, pace yourself.
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If you've been given a particular time slot in which to impart the information
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you want to put across, then try to fill that slot,
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but don't rush because you may find that you end
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a long way before the end.
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Obviously it's always a good idea to leave time before the end for any questions.
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If that's the kind of venue you're at, but strictly do not rush
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and do not become chaotic.
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Real number five, do not be afraid of silence.
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Don't be scared to leave pauses, not too long perhaps,
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but pauses will provide you with a way of catching your breath,
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consolidating your thoughts, organising your notes,
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making a mental note of where you are in your talk,
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whether you may be 30% of the way through, 60% of the way through,
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whether you've forgotten anything, but very importantly,
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don't be afraid of silence.
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Real number six, don't be afraid of the kind of thing
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you might call verbal ticks like ums and ahs.
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Keep them to a minimum if you possibly can.
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Silence is better than filling gaps while you gather your thoughts
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with verbal ticks, etc.
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So don't be scared of those kind of verbal ticks,
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but try to keep them to an absolute minimum if you can.
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Silence is better than unnecessary noise.
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Real number seven is a dynamic rule really.
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It depends largely on a quite complex number of factors.
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What kind of talk it is, what kind of venue,
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what kind of audience, the mode in the room,
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which you will probably be able to gauge.
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The seriousness of the subject, but the rule is,
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keep humour to a minimum.
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Now obviously this does not apply to the kind of public speaking
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I was talking about, which falls under the category of after dinner speaking,
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racon tour, a best man speech, a wedding,
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that's, you know, being a best man is all about humour,
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it's all about saying embarrassing things about the bridegroom, etc.
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And I'm aware at this point that I'm talking to the world possibly,
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but certainly in the UK, in the Western English-speaking world,
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I guess, probably the same on the other side of the pond.
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Being a best man is all about embarrassing the bridegroom,
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coming up with a few jokes maybe.
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And then there's a formalised structure to it, you know,
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thanking the bridegroom, etc.
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But in technical talks, serious talks and lectures,
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keep the humour to an absolute minimum.
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Don't let it pervade the whole thing,
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because it will detract from the main function,
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the main focus of the talk, which is the imparting of technical information.
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My final rule, which is not really a rule,
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it's just a statement, you don't need to pick out one particular audience member
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to whom, to speak individually, shall we say.
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You might find it as effective for you,
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and if you have a partner in the audience,
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unless he or she is sitting in the front row,
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in which case it's probably very ineffective,
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not very good to focus on somebody that's in the front row,
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probably just as well, talking to the back wall.
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So pick out, if you want to, pick out something
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or somebody right at the back and speak to them,
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but you don't have to do that.
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If you let your eyes wander around the room,
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well, you can, I can't.
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But in that way, if you look at everybody
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and you take in everybody individually,
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one at a time, as you wander around the room,
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then you can gauge the mood, engage the hell there
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or receiving a talk, but don't let that body
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you stay focused on doing what you came to do.
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Don't allow any visual feedback from the audience
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to upset you in your stride.
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Just carry on at the sensible pace
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that you have adopted.
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So there we go.
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I'm trying to think of as anything else I should add.
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But as I said, I think at the beginning,
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public speaking, to a lot of people,
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is a very traumatic thing.
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In fact, I think it's a sort of a list of the most traumatic things.
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So full-surrest, getting married,
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getting divorced, moving house, public speaking.
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I think all of those things would be in, what's that?
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Five, top five, most stressful things that can happen to it.
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Most people would list as the top five,
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most stressful things that can possibly do.
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But public speaking, you get used to it.
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And now, making a particular focus on podcasting,
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don't be nervous about doing your first one.
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And Hacker Public Radio is a good place to do that,
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because it is a casual thing.
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The people at Hacker Public Radio and the audience don't mind
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if your podcast does not have the kind of BBC professional polish.
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Reminds, certainly, don't.
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If you are imparting interesting information,
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they will listen.
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Your audio might be a bit rough,
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as long as you can be heard.
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And you may be inexperienced, but just do it.
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So there we go, rules of public speaking,
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as I see them.
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I have been Mike Ray.
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You have been HPR.
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Thank you.
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And good night.
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I'm not going to go and get another bottle of beer.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released
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under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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