Logic Breakdown

Passage Summary: Even if most people want to watch action movies, TV stations shouldn't just show action movies all day because they have a duty to serve everyone's different interests, including those who like opera.

Conclusion: The media should provide a variety of programming, including less popular genres like opera, rather than just what the majority prefers.

Reasoning: Because the public interest is diverse and the media is obligated to serve all parts of that interest, catering only to the majority's preference for action shows fails that obligation.

Analysis: We are looking for a logical bridge that connects the duty to serve 'all' interests with the specific example of action shows versus opera. Since the author establishes that a 'constant stream' of one genre fails the public interest, the conclusion must advocate for diversity in programming. Look for an answer that suggests the media must balance majority tastes with minority interests.

Passage Stimulus

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6.

Which one of the following most logically completes the argument?

Correct Answer
A
A states the needed takeaway: broadcasters don’t meet their obligations if they rely only on popularity to schedule programming. That precisely matches the argument’s move from “serve all interests” and “constant action isn’t in the public interest” to “don’t use popularity alone.”
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