Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Movies and the media help each other: studios use stars and gossip to create buzz, and newspapers, TV, and radio repeat that buzz because it attracts audiences. Over time this became a large, connected industry that always looks for things to promote. The problem is that studios increasingly pick subjects and actors to generate publicity and profit, not to make emotionally engaging films. Because publicity can bring people into theaters quickly, movies that truly move viewers are becoming rarer even though studios are making more money.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the main focus of each paragraph in sequence (origin → present state → problem analysis → predicted consequence) and choose the option that lists that order.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.Which one of the following most accurately describes the organization of the passage?
Correct Answer
B
The passage proceeds in a clear sequence. Paragraph 1 describes the origins: "In the United States, the star system of the mid-1920s—in which actors were placed under exclusive contract to particular Hollywood film studios—was a consequence of studios' discovery that the public was interested in actors' private lives, and that information about actors could be used to promote their films." Paragraph 2 describes the present state: "Today this arrangement has mushroomed into an intricately interdependent mass-media entertainment industry...A vast portion of the mass media—television and radio interviews, magazine articles, even product advertisements—now does most of the work for Hollywood studios attempting to promote their movies." Paragraph 3 analyzes a problem created by that state: "The problem with this industry is that it has begun to affect the creation of films as well as their promotion...The new danger is that, increasingly, profit comes only from exciting an audience's curiosity about a movie instead of satisfying its desire to have an engaging experience watching the film." The passage ends by predicting a likely consequence of this problem: "it appears that films whose appeal is due not merely to their publicity value but to their ability to affect audiences emotionally will become increasingly rare in the U.S. film industry." This progression—origins, present state, problem analysis, likely consequence—matches choice B.
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