Which Interviews Include The Quote From Bill Gates Verbatim?

2025-08-24 23:24:27 211

3 Answers

Gavin
Gavin
2025-08-27 13:38:40
I love the little thrill of tracking down a verbatim quote, so here’s a compact checklist I use when someone asks which interviews include a Bill Gates line exactly as written. First: paste the exact sentence into Google with quotation marks and add keywords like "transcript", "interview", or a news outlet name. Second: check 'GatesNotes' and 'TED' for official transcripts, then search YouTube transcripts (open the video, view transcript, and search inside). Third: narrow by site with operators, for example site:bbc.co.uk "your quote here". Fourth: use archive tools — the Wayback Machine can reveal removed pages, and Google Books or newspaper archives can catch print interviews.

Watch out for paraphrases and famous misattributions; sometimes a line circulates widely but the original interview used slightly different wording. If you want concrete results, give me the exact phrasing and I’ll look for interviews that reproduce it verbatim and point to the source audio/transcript I find.
Arthur
Arthur
2025-08-30 00:48:31
I’ve spent late nights assembling quotes for a piece, so I speak from the kind of frustration that turns into strategy. If you’re asking which interviews include a particular Bill Gates quote verbatim, the quickest path is to supply the exact phrasing, because small differences (a comma, a contraction) can break a search. Without that, here’s the approach I use professionally.

Start with direct transcript repositories. 'TED' maintains clean transcripts for talks, and longform interviewers like 'The New York Times', 'The Guardian', and 'The Washington Post' often publish full Q&A transcriptions. Public radio outlets — 'NPR' and the 'BBC' — often post verbatim transcripts for interviews, and podcast hosts sometimes upload full transcripts to show notes. Use advanced Google operators: put the quote in double quotes, then add filetype:pdf OR filetype:txt OR site:youtube.com OR site:gatesnotes.com to widen or narrow your sweep. For academic or archival digs, LexisNexis and ProQuest are lifesavers for print interviews that aren’t freely indexed.

One practical tip I learned the hard way: always cross-check the medium. A TV segment’s description or a writer’s paraphrase is not the same as the spoken words. Pull the original audio or video when possible and compare with the printed transcript. If you want, drop the exact line here and I’ll do a targeted search and tell you where it turns up verbatim in interviews I can access.
Uriel
Uriel
2025-08-30 09:18:21
I get a kick out of detective-work around quotes, especially when they come from someone as widely quoted as Bill Gates. If you give me the exact line you’re chasing, I can hunt down interviews that include it verbatim — but in the meantime here’s how I’d track it myself and the places that tend to carry exact transcripts.

First, use exact-match searches with quotation marks in Google or DuckDuckGo: type the full quote in quotes plus keywords like "interview", "transcript", or the outlet name (for example: "\"your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning\" interview"). Add site:bbc.co.uk or site:npr.org to narrow to trusted transcripts. YouTube is surprisingly useful: open the video, click the three dots, choose "Open transcript" and search the phrase. If it’s an older interview, check 'GatesNotes' (his blog), 'TED' transcript pages, and archives of big outlets like 'The New York Times', 'BBC', and 'NPR'.

Second, beware of paraphrases and misattributions. A famous line often attributed to Gates—"we always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years..."—is sometimes credited to Roy Amara instead, so it’s smart to verify audio/video or an official transcript. Tools that helped me: Google Books for printed sources, the Wayback Machine for removed pages, and fact-checking sites like Snopes to see how a quote migrated. If you want, paste the exact quote here and I’ll try to find the interviews that include it word-for-word.
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