When the press reporters invite someone for an interview, they will fix the whole process in digital files via electronical equipment. The following editing and commenting are control by the press. The press may infringe upon the interviewee or even the public welfare. In order to clarify the truth, the interviewee asks the media to hand over the interviewed audiovisual digital files. Can the interviewee claim their rights in this way? Can the invited news media keep it for themselves and insist not to give the interviewee a chance to clarify? This article analyzes this issue by reviewing the relevant jurisprudent cases in the United States.