- Mon Jul 08, 2019 6:20 pm
#66305
You've got a point there, jacoba1119, and if we were trying to prove that the author would definitely agree with this answer, we would have some difficulty doing so. But that's not the task presented by this question! Instead, we have to select the answer that is the one that the author would be most likely to agree with from among the five choices given. There is at least some evidence that the author might agree with answer D, while there is no evidence that the author would agree with any of the other answers. Thus, from among these answers, D is the only one that we can say he would be likely to agree with.
Also, consider that if the author thought there was something else at play here, other than repeated exposure, that allowed viewers to accept the conventions of the movie musical, wouldn't he have mentioned and focused on that, rather than on acquiring familiarity and eventual acceptance?
You don't have to love an answer, or be able to prove it, in order for it to be the best of the bunch! Don't get caught up trying to discredit answers or argue against them, but instead focus on seeing why one answer is better than the others (or, as I so often find myself doing, focus on why the other four answers are worse.)
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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