For Q5 I think "mainstream" is meant to be considered "watched by most". So a reason to show political talk shows that are bland etc (the overall conclusion) you must assume that this is what most tv watchers want to watch.
Remember G3-->Q5, but Q is clearly in 4, so that negates the necessary condition, triggering a negation of the sufficient condition. In other words, G cannot be in 3. That leaves only J and H for slot 3. Hence, answer D
You can find JY doing LR in PT69 S1+S4, and PT71 S1+S3. And Jon also had an epic timed LR section video, which took him only 19 minutes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4vY0KpviJw&index=6&list=LLaknkMoRl59wmjfBX67-nFg
@MrSamIam The reason LSAC cited was that people were sharing them. And I'm sure that's true. But of course, restricting purchasing has very little to do with restricting sharing. I'm sure the test writers could have told the Board of Trustees (pictured ...
Yes the assumption unstated is that "as a family" is less pervasive. But ac-A comes in and contradicts this assumption and weakens (perhaps destroys) the argument. Good analysis :-)
PT 9 S3 Game 3 - The School dance game. The sort of game that I would have lost my shit on had it been on the real deal, but taking the time to split the game boards and make all necessary inferences makes the questions a breeze