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Another possibility is that Rater C is so selective about the shows they rate, that they only rate those that we all agree are the "best." This is not so much a response bias as a sampling bias (see tomorrow's blogpost.) Again, how much does it really help if Rater C looks for highly rated shows, listens to those shows, and then rates them highly? Or if they choose to rate only those shows they view as worthy of a '5'?
Again, the beauty of the entropy measure is that one does not need to speculate why someone's ratings follow a given pattern.
But let's come at it from a different perspective. Let's assume that Rater C will submit a show rating for the first night of Dick's 2024. Let's further assume that we agree to bet $100 today, almost a full week before the show happens, on what Rater C will submit. My $100 says that C will submit a '5', and your $100 says it will not be a '5'. Would you take that bet?
I suspect that most folks would not take that bet because, regardless of what happens Dick's 2024 N1, Rater C is gonna come in with a '5'. The measure of entropy, the expected average value of information, is zero because they are perfectly predictable.