- Thu Jun 10, 2021 12:35 pm
#87764
BMM,
I think you're neglecting another aspect of the "most supportive" language in the question - that means this is a Strengthen question, so the answer does not have to prove anything. The answer simply has to make it more likely that the conclusion is true. So objections that an increase in average viewing time won't ensure more revenue for advertisers aren't relevant - we're not trying to prove anything, but merely make it more likely that advertisers will profit.
With that in mind, it seems plausible to me that the more people watch TV, the more valuable advertising becomes. If no one watches television, we'd have minimal value for TV advertising. It seems a reasonable commonsense assumption that, overall, more time is better. That doesn't have to be true - there could be such a thing as too much TV time, where people get sick of ads and actually buy the advertised products less because they see the ads too often. But we're not trying to establish a specific curve for the relationship between viewing time and advertising profits - all we need is the looser "generally, the more time people view TV, the more bang a TV advertiser gets for their buck".
I don't see how answer choice (A) helps the argument. Note that if the increased advertising was always good for advertisers, why not do it even if production and distribution costs are rising? In other words, you claim that, with increased costs, advertisers would want to spend more on advertising to cover those costs. But if the advertising is profitable anyway (so that, by doing more, you can cover costs), what do increased costs have to do with that? If the costs didn't increase, advertisers would still want to do something beneficial for profits. And if advertising is beneficial, then they'd do it regardless, and the production costs have nothing to do with that.
Robert Carroll