I have to tell you—I’ve never won anything in my life. I’ve lost every contest I’ve ever entered. I mean, there was the time I won the school raffle, but that doesn’t count because the prize was so small—only a new book bag. That book bag fell apart right after I used it, so it’s obviously not a good prize. And you can’t count the time I won that quiz on the radio because in that case, there wasn’t even a prize! Just bragging rights! I was the only person listening who knew that Carmelo Anthony owns a camel. And I am not counting the time I won the school spelling bee because I nearly lost it—it was so close, I was two points behind my competitor. So you should believe me when I say I’ve never won a contest, ever, and it’s about time I start.
Which detail from the passage provides the best evidence that the narrator is unreliable?
A
“You should believe me when I say...”
B
“That book bag fell apart right after I used it...”
C
“I was the only person listening who knew that Carmelo Anthony owns a camel.”
D
“I mean, there was the time I won the school raffle, but that doesn’t count.”