tive; he must cover everything that is offered for public scrutiny in the principal playhouse of the city where he works. The column space that seemed, yesterday, so pitifully inadequate to contain his comments on Long Day's Journey Into Night is roughly the same as that which yawns today for his verdict on the latest scrap of milk-fed Kitsch that has chanced to find for itself a numbskull backer with a hundred thousand dollars to lose.
The speaker indicates that the dramatic critic is ______.
A.inclined to be objective
B.conditioned by certain requirements of his column
C.happy to oblige the backers of plays
D.suspicious of criticism directed against him