In which quotation does Kirsch explain a specific example that supports his argument about the difference between novels and television?

A. "Indeed, one criticism that could be leveled against quality cable TV is that it is not nearly as formally adventurous as Dickens himself. Its visual idiom ters be conventional even when its subject matter is ostentatiously provocative." (paragraph 4)

B. "Televised evil, for instance, almost always takes melodramatic form: Our anti-heroes are mobsters, meth dealers or terrorists." (paragraph 5)

C. "But this has nothing to do with the way we encounter evil in real life, which is why a character like Gilbert Osmond. in "The Portrait of a Lady" is more chi in his bullying egotism than Tony Soprano with all his stranglings and shootings." (paragraph 5)

D. "Spectacle and melodrama remain at the heart of TV, as they do with all arts that must reach a large audience in order to be economically viable" (paragraph 6)​