And your argument is that you never draw the line, there are no theories only interpretations. Apples don't fall, there is no gravity. That's just an interpretation. Empirical evidence can never exist for gravity. Another interpretation is that apples move randomly, we just happen to be in a place where they happened to fall. Another interpretation is that they keep falling in your perspective because you subconsciously expect them to, but you could also expect them to float and then they would float. And so on.
Imo today we can fairly confidently say that if gravity is theory and not interpretation, then so is quantum nonlocality.
Imo a better theory would be truly symmetric where branching doesn't only happen in one direction and then remains permanent. But we already went over the circular dimensions idea.It is actually time symmetric since the Schrodinger equation is linear and can evolve in either direction, and the sole premise of the interpretation is that a closed system evolves according to the Schrodinger equation. Still, entropy still defines the arrow of time, as it does in any interpretation. I think one of its major issues was that it does not derive the Born rule.