Clawfu-skills remote-interview
Capture professional-quality remote interviews using double-ender technique and dedicated recording platforms for podcasts, media, and content production. Use when: Setting up remote podcast interviews with guests; Recording media interviews across distances; Creating customer interview content; Producing expert interviews for thought leadership; Conducting research interviews with high audio quality
git clone https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/audio/remote-interview" ~/.claude/skills/guia-matthieu-clawfu-skills-remote-interview && rm -rf "$T"
skills/audio/remote-interview/SKILL.mdRemote Interview Recording
Capture professional-quality remote interviews using double-ender technique and dedicated recording platforms for podcasts, media, and content production.
When to Use This Skill
- Setting up remote podcast interviews with guests
- Recording media interviews across distances
- Creating customer interview content
- Producing expert interviews for thought leadership
- Conducting research interviews with high audio quality
- Planning equipment recommendations for interview guests
Methodology Foundation
Source: NPR Engineering Standards + Remote Recording Best Practices
Core Principle: "Local recording is key." The gold standard for remote interviews is the "double-ender" technique—both participants record locally on their own devices, then tracks are combined in post-production. This eliminates internet compression, lag, and connection issues that plague Zoom-style recordings.
Why This Matters: Internet-based audio suffers from compression artifacts, dropouts, and quality degradation. By recording locally at each location, you capture broadcast-quality audio regardless of connection quality. Platforms like Riverside, Zencastr, and SquadCast automate this process while maintaining professional standards.
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
What This Skill Does
- Selects optimal recording approach - Platform vs. manual double-ender
- Prepares guest technical setup - Equipment, environment, troubleshooting
- Manages recording workflow - Pre-checks, backup systems, session flow
- Ensures quality capture - Audio levels, monitoring, issue prevention
- Handles post-production sync - Aligning tracks, editing, export
How to Use
Plan Remote Interview Setup
Help me set up remote interview recording. Interview type: [podcast/media/research] Guest technical level: [savvy/average/low] Quality requirements: [broadcast/professional/good enough] Budget: [range]
Prepare Guest Instructions
Create guest preparation guide for remote interview. Platform: [Riverside/Zencastr/SquadCast/manual] Recording date: [date/time] Expected duration: [minutes] Guest equipment: [known setup or unknown]
Troubleshoot Recording Issues
Help diagnose/fix this remote recording issue: Problem: [describe issue] Platform: [which platform] Guest setup: [what we know]
Instructions
When setting up remote interviews, follow this methodology:
Step 1: Choose Recording Approach
Select the right method based on needs and constraints.
## Recording Approach Decision ### Option 1: Dedicated Platform (Recommended) Best for: Regular podcasters, non-technical guests, convenience **Platform Comparison (2026)**: | Feature | Riverside | Zencastr | SquadCast | |---------|-----------|----------|-----------| | Video Quality | 4K | 4K (paid) | 1080p | | Audio Format | Lossless WAV | High-quality | High-quality | | Local Recording | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | | Max Participants | 8 | 12 | 10 | | Livestreaming | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | | AI Editing | ✅ | ✅ (ZenAI) | Via Descript | | Hosting | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | | Free Tier | 2 hrs/mo | Trial only | 1 hr/mo | | Best For | Quality-first | All-in-one | Descript users | **Recommendation by use case**: - Podcast + Livestream → Riverside - Podcast + Distribution → Zencastr - Already use Descript → SquadCast - Budget-conscious → Zencastr trial or Riverside free ### Option 2: Manual Double-Ender Best for: Maximum quality, technical guests, existing equipment **Setup**: - Host: Records on DAW (Logic, Audition, Audacity) - Guest: Records on Voice Memos, Audacity, or phone app - Sync: Manual alignment using clap or verbal cue - Communication: Zoom/Meet for video only (audio muted) **When to use**: - Guest has professional setup already - Maximum control over quality needed - Platform doesn't support your use case - Free/budget priority ### Option 3: Backup Recording (Zoom) Best for: Casual interviews, fallback capture **Limitations**: - Compressed audio (not broadcast quality) - Single-track or limited multitrack - Connection-dependent quality **When acceptable**: - Informal interviews - Backup alongside primary recording - Guest absolutely cannot use dedicated platform
Step 2: Equipment Hierarchy
Recommend appropriate equipment for guest's situation.
## Equipment Recommendations ### Tier 1: Professional (Best Quality) - **Microphone**: XLR mic (Shure SM7B, RE20, AT4040) - **Interface**: Focusrite Scarlett, Apollo, RodeCaster - **Headphones**: Closed-back monitoring (Sony MDR-7506) - **Environment**: Treated room or vocal booth - **Result**: Broadcast quality, professional sound ### Tier 2: Prosumer (Excellent Quality) - **Microphone**: USB mic (Rode NT-USB, Blue Yeti, AT2020 USB) - **Headphones**: Any closed-back or good earbuds - **Environment**: Quiet room, soft furnishings - **Result**: Professional enough for most podcasts ### Tier 3: Minimum Viable (Good Quality) - **Microphone**: Lavalier/clip-on mic ($25-50) - **Headphones**: AirPods or standard earbuds - **Environment**: Quietest room available - **Result**: Clearly better than laptop mic ### Tier 4: Emergency (Acceptable) - **Microphone**: Smartphone (Voice Memos, close to mouth) - **Headphones**: Wired earbuds with inline mic - **Environment**: Closet full of clothes (seriously) - **Result**: Salvageable, may need heavy processing ### Tier 5: Avoid - **Laptop mic**: Distant, echoey, picks up typing/fans - **AirPods mic**: Inconsistent, compression artifacts - **Speakerphone**: Echo, room noise, unusable ### Equipment Quick Guide for Guests "For the best audio quality, here's the hierarchy: 1. Best: USB microphone (Rode, Blue Yeti, AT2020) 2. Great: Wired headset/earbuds with mic 3. Good: AirPods/wireless earbuds 4. Last resort: Phone close to face Please avoid using your laptop's built-in microphone if possible."
Step 3: Environment Preparation
Guide guests to optimize their recording space.
## Environment Checklist ### For Guests (Send Before Interview) **Room Selection**: □ Choose smallest room with soft furnishings □ Bedroom or closet > living room or kitchen □ Avoid rooms with hard surfaces (tile, glass, concrete) □ No background noise sources (AC, appliances, traffic) **Sound Treatment**: □ Close all windows and doors □ Add soft materials (blankets, pillows) if room echoes □ Position away from walls (not in corner) □ Test for echo: clap hands, listen for reverb **Technical Setup**: □ Use wired internet if possible (Ethernet > WiFi) □ Close all other applications □ Disable notifications (phone on silent, computer DND) □ Charge devices or plug in □ Restart computer before session **During Recording**: □ Keep phone on airplane mode □ Don't touch desk/table (transmitted as rumble) □ Mute when not speaking (if platform supports) □ Keep water nearby but pour quietly ### Common Issues to Prevent | Problem | Cause | Prevention | |---------|-------|------------| | Echo | Hard surfaces | Add soft materials | | Background noise | AC, fans, traffic | Turn off, close windows | | Rumble | Desk vibration | Mic on boom arm or separate stand | | Plosives | "P" and "B" sounds | Pop filter or angle mic | | Mouth noise | Dry mouth | Water, green apple before | | Interruptions | Family, pets | Lock door, schedule quiet time |
Step 4: Pre-Session Checklist
Steps before hitting record.
## Pre-Recording Checklist ### 30 Minutes Before **Host**: □ Test platform is working □ Create/test room link □ Check your audio levels □ Prepare backup recording (Zoom, phone) □ Review questions and flow □ Set up notes/questions visible **Guest Communication**: □ Send join link with instructions □ Remind: "Please use Chrome browser" □ Remind: "Use headphones if possible" □ Remind: "Choose quiet location" □ Share expected duration ### 10 Minutes Before **Tech Check with Guest**: □ Test audio—ask them to speak, check waveform □ Test video (if applicable) □ Confirm they hear you clearly □ Check for background noise □ Verify recording is actually capturing ### Start of Session **Sync Protocol** (for double-ender): 1. Both start recording 2. Host: "3, 2, 1, clap" (or snap) 3. Both clap simultaneously 4. This creates sync point for post-production **Level Check**: □ Ask guest to speak at normal volume □ Verify levels not peaking (aim for -12 to -6 dB) □ Adjust if needed **Backup Confirmation**: □ Verify primary recording running □ Start backup recording (Zoom, phone) □ Announce: "Recording has started"
Step 5: During Recording
Manage the session for optimal capture.
## Recording Session Management ### Monitor Throughout **Watch For**: - Audio levels (not too hot, not too quiet) - Connection warnings from platform - Background noise appearing - Guest technical issues **If Issues Occur**: - Brief technical problems: Continue, can edit later - Major issues: Pause, troubleshoot, resume - Unrecoverable: Stop, reschedule affected portion ### Interviewer Best Practices **For Clean Edit**: - Don't talk over guest (wait for them to finish) - Use non-verbal acknowledgment (nod, smile) instead of "mm-hmm" - If you must react verbally, do it after they complete thought - Re-ask questions cleanly if needed for edit **For Backup Safety**: - At natural breaks: "Let's pause for a moment" - Check platform shows recording active - Confirm backup still running ### Common Mid-Session Fixes | Issue | Quick Fix | |-------|-----------| | Echo appearing | Guest: mute when not speaking | | Noise introduced | Identify source, eliminate or pause | | Connection dropping | Both continue recording, sync later | | Levels changed | Stop, reset levels, note timestamp |
Step 6: Post-Recording Workflow
Handle files after session ends.
## Post-Recording Process ### Immediately After **Platform Recording**: 1. Confirm recording saved/processing 2. Download all tracks (WAV preferred) 3. Verify files play correctly 4. Back up to cloud storage **Manual Double-Ender**: 1. Collect guest's recording (file share) 2. Import both tracks to DAW 3. Find sync point (clap) 4. Align tracks precisely ### File Management **Naming Convention**:
[Date][Guest][Topic]_[Track].wav
Examples: 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Host.wav 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Guest.wav 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Backup.wav
**Storage Structure**:
interviews/ ├── raw/ │ ├── 2026-01-26_JohnSmith/ │ │ ├── host.wav │ │ ├── guest.wav │ │ └── backup.wav ├── edited/ │ └── 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_final.wav └── published/ └── episode-45_john-smith.mp3
### Quality Check □ All tracks recorded completely □ Audio is clear, no major issues □ Sync point exists (clap/verbal) □ No missing sections □ Backup is usable if needed
Examples
Example 1: Podcast Guest Setup
Context: Regular podcast needs to onboard non-technical guest.
Input:
Set up remote interview recording. Guest is a marketing executive, not technical. We need professional quality for weekly podcast. Using Riverside.
Output:
Guest Onboarding: Riverside Setup
Pre-Interview Email (Send 3 Days Before)
Subject: Quick setup for our interview on [Date]
Hi [Guest],
Looking forward to our conversation on [topic]! Here's everything you need for a smooth recording.
Recording Link: [Riverside room link]
When: [Date, Time, Timezone]
Duration: Approximately [X] minutes
Simple Setup for Best Audio:
- Browser: Please use Chrome (works best with our platform)
- Headphones: Any earbuds work—this prevents echo
- Location: Quiet room with soft furnishings (bedroom works great)
- Internet: Wired connection if available, strong WiFi otherwise
5 Minutes Before:
- Click the link, allow camera/microphone permissions
- I'll be there to do a quick tech check
No software to install—it all works in your browser.
Let me know if you have any questions!
Day-Of Checklist (Host)
30 min before: □ Open Riverside, test your setup □ Verify recording settings (WAV, separate tracks) □ Prepare Zoom backup link (just in case) □ Review questions
When guest joins: □ Greet, make them comfortable □ "Can you say a few sentences? I'm checking audio levels" □ Verify waveform shows good signal □ "Great, your audio sounds perfect"
Before starting: □ "I'm starting the recording now" □ Click Record □ Brief pause, then begin
If Issues Arise
Guest audio is echoey: "Could you try using headphones? Even phone earbuds work great."
Connection seems unstable: "Let's try turning off your video—often helps with connection." "Do you have a phone you could use as a backup?"
Platform isn't working: "Let me send you a Zoom link as backup while we troubleshoot."
Example 2: High-Stakes Media Interview
Context: Important media interview requiring broadcast quality.
Input:
Recording interview with major tech CEO for industry publication. Must be absolute best quality. CEO has staff who can help with setup. What's the ideal approach?
Output:
Premium Interview Setup: Tech CEO
Recommended Approach: Assisted Double-Ender
Given the importance and available support, use a hybrid approach:
- Platform: Riverside (for convenience + automatic local recording)
- Backup: CEO records locally on professional equipment
- Result: Dual-redundant broadcast-quality capture
Executive Brief (Send to CEO's Team)
Subject: Technical Setup for [Publication] Interview
Recording Date: [Date/Time]
Our platform will handle most of the technical work, but for the absolute best quality, here's the ideal setup:
Equipment (if available):
- USB microphone (Rode NT-USB, Blue Yeti, or similar)
- Wired earbuds or headphones
- Quiet, private room
If professional AV support is available:
- XLR microphone into USB interface
- Record local backup via voice recorder or DAW
- Ensure 48kHz/24-bit settings
Minimum acceptable:
- AirPods or headset with microphone
- Chrome browser
- Quiet location
We will send:
- Riverside link (no install needed)
- Brief tech check 5 minutes before
Host Preparation
Primary Recording: Riverside
- Room created with guest name
- Settings: 4K video (if video), Lossless audio, Separate tracks
- Downloaded permission: Enabled
Secondary Recording: Local DAW
- Audio interface active
- Recording armed
- Sync clap planned
Tertiary Backup: Zoom
- Meeting created (not shared unless needed)
- Cloud recording enabled
- Last-resort option
Quality Assurance Protocol
Before Recording: □ Confirm guest's audio is clean (no echo, background) □ Verify Riverside shows strong signal □ Confirm CEO's team is recording backup locally □ State sync phrase: "Recording starting. Three, two, one, sync." □ Both clap simultaneously
During Recording: □ Monitor Riverside waveform □ Watch for connection warnings □ If any issue: "Let's pause briefly to ensure we're capturing this properly"
After Recording: □ Confirm Riverside saved all tracks □ Request CEO team's local file via secure transfer □ Compare both for best quality □ Archive all versions
Deliverable Quality
- Minimum: 48kHz/16-bit WAV
- Preferred: 48kHz/24-bit WAV
- Usable backup: 44.1kHz/16-bit or high-quality MP3
Example 3: Budget Remote Recording
Context: New podcaster with limited budget needs to interview remote guests.
Input:
I'm starting a podcast and need to record remote interviews. Don't want to spend much money. What's my best option?
Output:
Budget Remote Recording Setup
Free/Low-Cost Approach
Best free option: Riverside Free Tier
- 2 hours/month recording
- Watermark on video (audio clean)
- Local recording for quality
- Separate tracks
Alternative: Zencastr Free Trial
- 14-day full access
- Good for getting started
Zero-cost manual method:
- Communication: Zoom free (audio muted, video only)
- Your recording: Audacity (free) or Voice Memos
- Guest recording: Voice Memos (iPhone) or Easy Voice Recorder (Android)
- Sync: Clap at start, align in post
Equipment on a Budget
For you ($50-100):
- Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB ($79) - excellent value
- Or: Fifine K669 USB mic ($30) - good enough to start
For guests (free):
- Their phone's Voice Memos app
- Wired earbuds (prevents echo)
- Quiet room
Budget Workflow
Before Interview:
- Set up Riverside free room
- Email guest link + instructions
- Prepare backup plan (both record on phones)
Guest Instructions Email:
For best audio: 1. Use Chrome browser 2. Wear any headphones/earbuds 3. Find quiet spot 4. Click this link: [Riverside link] No downloads needed! I'll be there 5 min early to check sound.
During Interview:
- Start Riverside recording
- Start local backup (Voice Memos on phone)
- Have guest record on their end (as backup)
- Do quick clap for sync
After:
- Download Riverside tracks (separate)
- Edit in Audacity (free)
- If Riverside had issues, use backup recordings
Upgrade Path
As podcast grows:
- Month 1-3: Free tier, learn process
- Month 4+: Riverside paid ($24/mo) for unlimited
- Month 6+: Better equipment as revenue allows
Total starting cost: $30-80 (mic only)
Checklists & Templates
Guest Preparation Email Template
Subject: Recording Setup for [Show Name] - [Date] Hi [Name], Excited for our conversation on [topic]! **Quick Setup** (5 minutes): 🎧 **Headphones**: Please use any earbuds or headphones (prevents echo) 🔇 **Quiet Space**: Find a room away from noise, soft furnishings help 💻 **Browser**: Use Chrome for best compatibility **Join Link**: [Your platform link] **When**: [Date, Time, Timezone] **I'll be there 5 minutes early** to do a quick sound check. Reply to confirm, or let me know if you have questions! [Your name]
Pre-Recording Checklist
## 30 Minutes Before □ Platform tested and working □ Room link created/verified □ Your audio setup tested □ Backup recording ready (Zoom/phone) □ Questions/notes prepared □ Water within reach ## When Guest Joins □ Audio check: "Can you speak for a few seconds?" □ Video check (if applicable) □ Confirm headphone use □ Listen for background noise □ Check levels on platform ## Before "Record" □ State: "I'm starting the recording now" □ Click record □ Sync clap: "3, 2, 1, [clap]" □ Brief pause □ Begin interview ## After Recording □ Confirm file saved □ Download all tracks □ Thank guest for time □ Send follow-up email
Technical Troubleshooting Quick Reference
## Common Issues & Solutions ### Audio Problems | Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix | |---------|--------------|-----| | Echo | No headphones | Guest: use any earbuds | | Robotic audio | Bad connection | Turn off video, switch to phone | | Quiet audio | Low mic gain | Platform: adjust input level | | Distorted audio | Too loud | Move back from mic | | Background noise | Environment | Mute between speaking | ### Connection Problems | Symptom | Fix | |---------|-----| | "Connection unstable" | Turn off video | | Freezing video | Lower quality settings | | Keeps disconnecting | Switch to mobile hotspot | | Won't connect at all | Try incognito window | ### Platform Problems | Issue | Solution | |-------|----------| | Mic not detected | Check browser permissions | | Recording not starting | Refresh, try again | | Platform down | Switch to Zoom backup | | Files won't download | Wait, try different browser |
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring audio production workflows
- Providing technical guidance
- Creating quality checklists
- Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
- Replace audio engineering expertise
- Make subjective creative decisions
- Access or edit audio files directly
- Guarantee commercial success
References
- Riverside. "14 Tips for Recording Interviews Professionally"
- NPR Training. "Audio Recording Standards"
- Buzzsprout. "How to Record Remote Podcast Interviews"
- Transom. "Recording Phone Calls and Skype"
- Podcasters' Guide to Audio Engineering
Related Skills
- podcast-production - Full production workflow
- podcast-interview - Interview technique
- audio-editing - Post-production processing
- voice-design - When AI voice is needed instead
Skill Metadata (Internal Use)
name: remote-interview category: audio subcategory: recording version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: NPR Engineering, Remote Recording Best Practices source_work: Double-Ender Technique difficulty: beginner estimated_value: Professional interview quality without studio tags: [remote-recording, podcast, interview, double-ender, riverside] created: 2026-01-26 updated: 2026-01-26