ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
SAT Reading 1.1 Passage Comparison 210 Views
Share It!
Description:
SAT Reading Passage Comparison Drill 1, Problem
Transcript
- 00:03
All we are saying... is give Shmoop a chance...
- 00:10
If need some time to check out these passages,
- 00:12
press pause and do your thing.
- 00:19
The main purpose of Passage 1 is to...what?
- 00:25
And here are the potential answers...
Full Transcript
- 00:30
One thing that's important to note about Passage 1 is that its author is neutral on
- 00:35
the subject. Maybe he or she hates those evil rockers.
- 00:38
Or maybe the he or she has a Judas Priest tattoo on his or her...wherever.
- 00:44
The truth is that we don't know how the author feels...
- 00:48
...since the article only reports on people who thought lots of rock was bad, and doesn't
- 00:52
express any kind of bias one way or the other. So... we can easily eliminate choice (A),
- 00:57
which claims that the author is out to get Prince and other controversial musicians.
- 01:01
Sorry, but that just isn't the case.
- 01:06
(B) tries to make us think that the author is out to protect all those innocent rock
- 01:11
stars out there who were getting picked on by the big bad censor police.
- 01:16
Another swing and a miss. The passage only mentions Al Gore's wife,
- 01:21
Tipper, and doesn't say anything about his career. Poor Al, he never quite makes the
- 01:25
cut.
- 01:26
And neither does choice (C). Nowhere in the passage does it say anything
- 01:30
about where this anti-smut group got together.
- 01:33
We imagine it was somewhere very wholesome—like... a house made of oatmeal.
- 01:38
OK, that's probably a stretch. Whatever. (E) is not the correct answer.
- 01:44
Since the word "palatable" means "inoffensive"—literally, something you could put on your palate, or in your mouth—
- 01:54
...making something "less palatable" describes the efforts of a group that tried to convince
- 01:59
America that rock music was offensive.
- 02:02
Choice D is our boy.
Related Videos
How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...
Contemplating one's life is key to fulfilled happiness. Thoreau's theme revolves around the simple life well lived. He clearly never tried virtual...
Thoreau was all about simplicity; anything that took away from his vision was the enemy. Mechanical aids were one of them. Guess he had to train a...
Thoreau uses "front" to mean "face". He wants to face The Facts of Life without shying away from our natural tendencies, roots, and the simply way...
What does "frittered away" mean in this context? Wasted. Wasted by the way. Thoreau claims we fritter away our lives praying to modern complex dist...