Here, you're looking for the two words that make sense. The first word, whatever it may be, should have similar connotations to what the critic described it as.
(A) positive . . negative
(B) negative . . negative
(C) negative . . positive
(D) negative . . positive
(E) positive . . negative
So the answer is B. Put it in the sentence, and both words make sense in context as well, so this shows the answer to be true.
The BEST answer is C, serious.
The producers of the radio program show bias by omission which entails leaving out one side of a story or event and ignoring the facts that may prove or disprove the different angles. This is often evident when news outlets only report one set of events, but not the others. It is also closely related to bias by spin which entails one interpretation of an event.
Answer:
The best way to do it is to tell the person that you see where they are coming from.
Explanation:
If you start with "youre wrong" then the other person will block you out and not even listen to what you have to say. if you start with "I get what you're saying, I just think that..." then the person will listen because they don't feel the need to be defensive. This could go for anything, like an argument over pineapple being on pizza to fixing your marriage