Rule of thirds
These images were taken on different days. When I took them, I set my white balance to fluorescent lighting, I set the shutter speed to 1/25 and the aperture to the lowest setting because I was capturing images inside and they were the best settings. When I was taking these pictures I used the rule of three, where if you picture 3 vertical lines on the image, you see that he appears on the outer lines which makes it look better than if he was in the middle also I have tried to not have negative head space which I think that I got a way with. The shot on the right is a medium shot and then the shot on the left is a close up shot to add different angles and you switch when a question is either asked, or answered. I have made sure that he isn't looking directly at the camera or else it makes it quite awkward.
180 degree rule
https://www.bing.com/images/search?view=detailV2&ccid=m5d%2bQips&id=A1FD87150D1651DB1C2445A168435018E01C2D21&thid=OIP.m5d-QipsYnR9_oneBIYeKgHaE1&mediaurl=http%3a%2f%2ftitussaltmedia.co.uk%2fblogs%2fshawjemma1193%2ffiles%2f2014%2f12%2f1801.jpg&exph=244&expw=374&q=180+rule&simid=607986609473063123&selectedIndex=17&ajaxhist=0
When you shoot an interview you would have an imaginary line where the people on film would be, the cameras would sit on one side of the line so that the interview makes sense to a viewer and the use of different cameras mean u can have either one of the people in shot or one of the two people when asking or answering a question.