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Jack O’Connell, the Popular Yesteryear Actor Known for his Comic Role GMAT Critical Reasoning

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Sayantani Barman

Experta en el extranjero | Updated On - Feb 18, 2023

Question: Jack O’Connell, the popular yesteryear actor known for his comic role in the series on television, said in a public interview that he has been approached by the Republicans to run for the Mayor’s office. O’Connell, careful in not showing much enthusiasm, said that he would contest only if he feels confident that his impression as a comedian will not adversely affect the public’s confidence in his abilities as a Mayor.

Which one of the following statements can be properly inferred from the passage?

A) Only candidates with no background as comedians can be good Mayors.
B) A candidate whom the public consider competent will go on to become a successful Mayor.
C) Actors known for their comic roles have little future in politics.
D) If O’Connell believes that public has confidence in his abilities as a Mayor, he will contest the election.
E) If O’Connell becomes the Mayor, he believed that public has confidence in his abilities as a Mayor.

Answer: E
Explanation:
In the critical reasoning part of the GMAT, you will be tested on your ability to analyze and think critically. To answer clearly, a person needs to have a lot of brain power.
To make a choice, each option needs to be carefully examined. Only one of the five choices given will be right. To make the best choice, the candidate must think about many things.
Given that, Jack O'Connell, a famous actor from yesteryear who is best known for his comedic role in the television series. Recently stated in a public interview that the Republican Party has approached him about running for the office of Mayor. Jack O'Connell is best known for his comedic role i. Stated that he would only run for mayor if he was certain that his reputation as a comedian would not negatively affect the public's confidence in his capabilities as a mayor. He added that this was the only condition under which he would run.
A conclusion we come to relying on the passage's text is known as an inference.
The inference we make based on the evidence must be accurate.
The conclusion must follow the evidence in a clear and logical manner.
This quiz gauges your understanding of what an inference is (and, I suspect, whether you are not rattled by the question).

Let’s check the given choices -

A: Incorrect
It is an incorrect choice. This response is far too forceful, which is a feature of incorrect responses to inference questions.
Option A's truth, let alone whether it must be true, is unknown to us.
It is not appropriate to generalize from one person's concern about his unique history to make such a broad remark.

B: Incorrect
It is the wrong choice. Whether or not this assertion is accurate is unknown.
Irrelevant. The prompt makes no mention of successful mayors or electable candidates. This choice is eliminated.

C: Incorrect
It is an incorrect answer. Far too powerful. Similar to (A), but (C) extends to politics in general, making it worse. Take out C.

D: Incorrect
It is an incorrect answer. The phrase "he would contest only if he feels confident that his impression as a comedian will not adversely damage the public's faith in his ability as Mayor" is repeated in Option D, which does not clarify the difference between IF and ONLY IF.

E: Correct
It is the correct choice. It takes some effort on our part to draw the connection in (E).
We're not sure if the general people had faith in his abilities.
But we can be certain that he fled because he thought his TV performance had not diminished the public's faith in him.
Near enough And much more accurate than any other.
E is the response.

“Jack O’Connell, the popular yesteryear actor known for his comic role” – is a GMAT Critical question. To answer the question, a candidate can either find a piece of evidence that would weaken the argument or have logical flaws in the argument. GMAT critical reasoning tests the logical and analytical skills of the candidates. This topic requires candidates to find the argument's strengths and weaknesses or the logical flaw in the argument. The GMAT CR section contains 10 -13 GMAT critical reasoning questions out of 36 GMAT verbal questions.

Suggested GMAT Critical Reasoning Samples:

*The article might have information for the previous academic years, please refer the official website of the exam.

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