- Fri Jan 29, 2021 7:08 pm
#83647
Jay,
A full understanding of this stimulus requires realizing that the editor and sales director are talking about different issues.
The editor is trying to criticize a proposal put forth by advertisers. That proposal is to put favorable mention of products into articles. Imagine I'm reading a magazine. My expectation is that, when I see a big, full-page, glossy photo of a new car with a little text at the bottom that says "Visit your Chevy dealer today for the best deals of 2021!", I'm looking at an advertisement. On the other hand, when I see a page full of text, with a title at the top that says "Is Indonesia at a crossroads? A neoliberal analysis", I'm going to be reading an article. The author of the article may be trying to sell me on a point about Indonesia, but I don't expect him to be trying to sell me a car!
But the editor is saying that advertisers are precisely trying to get favorable product mentions added to the articles. So when I read that article about Indonesia, I might see an offhand remark that "Indonesian investment is especially promising for Chevy, which is considering exporting its stylish, fuel-efficient new 2021 lineup to the island nation". That would be inserting favorable product mentions into the articles.
The sales director is saying that readers can distinguish articles and advertisements, and that whatever happens in the advertisements won't affect readers' opinion of the magazine. But remember, the proposal is not to do something with advertisements, but to do something to the articles. The sales director's dismissal of the criticism isn't addressing the actual proposal, which is a proposal to mess with articles, not advertisements.
I think that my explanation eliminates any problems that could exist selecting answer choice (D). The sales director is defending a non-existent proposal to mess with advertisements, when the proposal is actually one that messes with articles.
Robert Carroll