James Finch wrote:Hi Bigfoot,
Answer choice (D) is correct because it essentially restates the final sentence, which states that "newspaper and magazine reviews fail to provide much insight" according to film historians.
While this might seem too basic to be the correct answer, this is a fairly common tactic used by LSAT test makers to increase the difficulty of a question, especially when the correct answer immediately follows an attractive wrong answer, like we have here with (C).
Hope this clears things up!
Hi, James, very helpful suggestion about the difference between one indicates sth. and one depends on sth. However, I still get confused about why C is not the correct answer.
Here's my reasoning:
In stimulus, the author says that "they( Box office figures) do not show what audiences found funny."
This means that Box office figures are not sufficient condition for audiences found funny, which means it is possible that Box office figures high whereas audiences not found the movies funny. (BOX OFFICE FIGURES HIGH
SLASH AUDIENCE FOUND FUNNY)
In answer choice C, it says that the box office figures' success does not depend on its viewers finding it funny. By this, the answer choice points out that viewers found funny is not a necessary condition for box office figures high, which means that even if box office figures high, that does not need audience found the movies funny. (BOX OFFICE FIGURES HIGH
SLASH AUDIENCE FOUND FUNNY)
What's wrong with C?
Thank you in advance!