I totally overdid the application process... I applied to >50 programs (too much), received around 60-70% invitations to interview, and interviewed at around 20 programs. I don't know if it's me, but I definitely had interviewers ask me questions that aren't usual... I had a few pimpers (maybe 5?)... With questions such as "what receptors does [specific pressor] affect?" And a few people who asked pointed questions about family and religion (illegal). I talked to one of them post-interview and he told me he didn't care what the answer was, but how I reacted to the question. Anesthesiologists are often put into difficult situations in practice, and I believe these interwers were testing how calm I was in a high stress environment. At the middle of the interview season, I dropped all the facade out of fatigue. No more always saying positive things, not asking certain questions, not being myself. I just had fun with them, was very honest, and asked anything I wanted. Granted, I'm usually a positive person who really does care about medicine + patients, but it's my perception that the honest approach worked much better than the pretend-I'm-perfect-and-everything-is-awesome approach... The interviewers appreciated my honesty (some said so), and I received positive feedback in the immediate and late post interview periods. So, that's my tip... be yourself, be honest... It'll be easier to find the right place for you that way. In fact, my top choice (where I matched) happened to be where I misbehaved the most on interview day.