You might be working a little too hard to put every aspect of this stimulus into conditional diagrams, ahhe223. For example, the first sentence sets up a formal logic claim rather than a purely conditional one ("most" tells us that), and then the rest of the stimulus ignores documentaries and only tells us some things about dramas. For that reason, we should focus on the conditional rules about dramas, which are:
1. Premise: Drama
Evidence
2. Conclusion: Drama
Regard as Accurate
Now we can see more clearly that the missing link is that if there is no evidence, you should not regard them as accurate!
Look for the heart of the conditional claims when you know conditionality is present. Not every statement or claim in the stimulus is conditional, and they don't all need to be broken into diagrams in order to find that key bit of info that you need to answer the question. Cut out the extraneous stuff and get to the core of what they are saying. Some stimuli with conditional reasoning may have several sentences of non-conditional facts, and just one conditional claim buried in it! When you find that claim, it's special and deserves attention, and shouldn't get unnecessarily tangled up with all the non-conditional stuff. Just diagram the bits that need it, analyze those, and build your prephrases around them, and you'll be less likely to get lost in the weeds.
Good luck, keep at it!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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