HA - this was a trap!
Welcome to your overdue Comic-Con panel.
Now I know what you're thinking: "Did someone actually write out interview questions for me about a show I was on in 1998? I only just remembered it existed. How do you expect me to elaborate on what happened during it?"
And whoa - ha-ha, who's asking the questions here? LOL - okay, I've got two ways of pitching this to you:
Option 1: Pretend it's for charity.
I might be a tiny, homeless orphan. Or like a really, really sad puppy who's never had a home that wasn't a thin, cardboard box. You know that box isn't going to be warm enough for winter, and we're talking the tiniest kind of orphan out there. Could you honestly refuse my final request (pretend i'm also dying) to answer a few dozen questions that have plagued me since I first watched this show?
And I don't know - maybe you can spin it as a business expense. Get that tax write-off for your time. It's a win-win, is what I'm saying.
Option 2: We'll do this Batman-villian style.
Pretend you were minding your business, and some un-orphaned, non-sad-puppy burst from the shadows and dragged you onto a gameshow about this show. (Did you see that episode? "Q & A"? It was from the 2004 Batman series. It was fine - not great, and I didn't actually watch it, but it's what popped into my mind for this. Here's a link to the IMDb page for reference. Don't look at it now, though. Do the interview.)
Anyway, the only way to escape is to answer my annoying questions. It's not as much of a win-win scenario as Option 1, but it's a much more accurate picture of who you'd be talking to: the target demographic for this show back when it was originally on FoxKids (I was eight! :D), and who's had it lurking in her head for the past couple of decades since then.