ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


SAT Reading Videos 212 videos

SAT Reading 1.1 Long Passages
380 Views

SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 1

SAT Reading 1.1 Passage Comparison
210 Views

SAT Reading Passage Comparison Drill 1, Problem

SAT Reading 1.1 Sentence Completion
839 Views

SAT Reading Section: Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 1

See All

SAT Reading 1.10 Long Passages 172 Views


Share It!


Description:

SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 10

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Shmoop. It was the best of questions; it was the worst of questions...

00:09

No worries if you need to skim the passage again... that's what pause buttons are for.

00:23

According to the passage, all of the following statements about "Smells Like Teen Spirit"

00:28

are true EXCEPT...what?

00:31

Here are the potential answers...

00:34

Answering this question takes a little fact-checking—you

00:38

know, that thing you do to be super-extra sure about your answer.

00:41

The second-to-last paragraph lets us know just how important "Smells Like Teen Spirit"

00:46

became to a whole bunch of young people...

00:48

So (A) is a definite no.

00:50

Come on, we'd have to be living under a rock to not know that the song made Cobain

00:54

wildly popular.

00:56

(B) is wrong for sure. The fourth paragraph makes a solid case for

00:59

Nirvana moving purposely into the mainstream, making (C) wrong as well.

01:04

Sadly, choice (E) is true, as the article points out in the fifth paragraph... so this

01:08

one can't be it either.

01:10

Looks like (D) is the right answer. If we zero in on line 15, we see that bands in the

01:16

early days of the Seattle scene saw being "authentic" as the opposite of "getting

01:21

popular."

01:23

Hipsters everywhere still agree.

Related Videos

SAT Reading 1.1 Long Passages
380 Views

SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 1

How Does Thoreau Feel about Commerce?
41 Views

How does Thoreau feel about commerce? He writes, "We don't ride upon the railroad; it rides upon us." He wants and end to the war fighting for the...

SAT Reading: Classifying the Relationship Between Two Passages
179 Views

How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...

SAT Reading: Citing Evidence to Identify a Theme in Walden
35 Views

Contemplating one's life is key to fulfilled happiness. Thoreau's theme revolves around the simple life well lived. He clearly never tried virtual...

SAT Reading: Why Does Thoreau Use the Phrase "Mechanical Aids" in this Passage?
58 Views

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...