Quantcast
Channel: Rex Parker Does the NYT Crossword Puzzle
Viewing all 4443 articles
Browse latest View live

Peg solitaire puzzle brand / SUN 3-27-16 / Longtime soap actress Hall / Latin word in back of dollar bill / Composer of Windows 95 start-up sound / 1914 battle site / One-named hitmaker of 1950s-60s

$
0
0
Constructor:Patrick Blindauer

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME:"Pitch Imperfect"— famous advertising slogans, but with one word anagrammed into another word, creating wackiness and "?" clues and all that...

Theme answers:
  • DON'T SQUEEZE THE RICH MAN ("Charmin")
  • WE LOVE TO SEE YOU SLIME ("Smile") (what slogan is this??? oh ... looks like it was a McDonald's slogan for a few years in the early '00s)
  • THIS DUB'S FOR YOU ("Bud's") (Budweiser)
  • OBEY YOUR T-SHIRT ("Thirst") (is this Gatorade? Gah, YAH, Sprite! My bad...)
  • THE FABRIC OF OUR VEILS ("Lives") (Cotton)
  • YOU DESERVE A BAKER TODAY ("Break") (... another McDonald's!?!?! That seems ... like a foul)

Word of the Day:HI-Q(6D: Peg solitaire puzzle brand) —
Peg solitaire (or Solo Noble) is a board game for one player involving movement of pegs on a board with holes. Some sets use marbles in a board with indentations. The game is known simply as Solitaire in the United Kingdom where the card games are called Patience. It is also referred to as Brainvita (especially in India). // The first evidence of the game can be traced back to the court of Louis XIV, and the specific date of 1687, with an engraving made that year by Claude Auguste Berey of Anne de Rohan-Chabot, Princess of Soubise, with the puzzle by her side. The August, 1687 edition of the French literary magazine Mercure galant contains a description of the board, rules and sample problems. This is the first known reference to the game in print. // The standard game fills the entire board with pegs except for the central hole. The objective is, making valid moves, to empty the entire board except for a solitary peg in the central hole. (wikipedia)
• • •

Hey, it's my old pal, PB2 (PB1 = Patrick Berry). I didn't not understand this theme for the longest time. In fact, it wasn't until I was completely finished that I got the whole advertising slogan angle. I was too focused on random anagrams to notice much of anything else. I kept trying to find some kind of pattern, some rationale, and kept coming up empty. The advertising angle ties things together somewhat, but only very, very loosely. There's just not much (if any) logic to the anagramming. Sometimes it's the product name, sometimes it's not, sometimes the anagram's at the end of the phrase, sometimes it's not ... I don't know. And there are only six theme answers? With that few answers, I'd expect a much zippier and more colorful and cleaner grid than this one. With the exception of UNFRIENDED (79D: Cut ties with, in a way) and ROOMBA (76D: iRobot vacuum), this puzzle felt quite staid and dated. There were several patches of short fill that were very, very rough (ERES EVRY SEI RIEN—three languages in four adjacent answers?!; ISS SHH DEI OSHEA; TRURO DREI ESAU; etc.). It all felt somewhat old, somewhat uninspired, and the theme just didn't hang together neatly, or feel very special.


There must be a million advertising slogans, but it's actually probably very hard to find one where you can anagram a single word and make a wacky phrase out of it, so perhaps the theme is tighter, or at least harder to pull off, than I imagined at first. That said, the slogan seems to be "PLEASE Don't squeeze the Charmin," so some fudging has been allowed. That's fine. Was SMELT IN YOUR MOUTH, NOT IN YOUR HAND too long? Oh, yeah, way too long. GOOD TO THE LAST PROD? A LITTLE BAD'LL DO YA? LET YOUR FRINGES DO THE WALKING? THINK MALLS? I dunno. It's kind of fun to come up with these, but the concept still seems slightly weak. There's some hardcore old school proper noun crosswordese here, like TRURO and LEMA (both of which I learned from crosswords, both of which I've seen only in crosswords, only one of which I remembered today). ENDO ORDO AERO ... and then JEOPARDOUS, which is a word no one has ever used ever. I just kept waiting for this one to perk up, but it never did.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Hand-blown wine bottle that's also title of 1968 Beatles song / MON 3-28-16 / Pear-shaped string instrument / Opposite of bench player / Did stylized ballroom dance / Early caucusgoer

$
0
0
Constructor:Gary Cee

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:APPEALING (35A: Winsome ... or like the ends of 17-, 24-, 51- and 58-Across, to a punster?) — last words in theme answers are all foods that you "peel":

Theme answers:
  • ADAM'S APPLE (17A: Bump on the neck)
  • HOT POTATO (24A: Issue that's too dangerous to touch)
  • TOP BANANA (51A: Grand pooh-bah)
  • GLASS ONION (58A: Hand-blown wine bottle that's also the title of a 1968 Beatles song)
Word of the Day:GLASS ONION
Glass onions were large hand blownglassbottles used aboard sailing ships to hold wine or brandy. For increased stability on rough seas, the bottles were fashioned with a wide-bottom shape to prevent toppling, thus making the bottles look somewhat onion-shaped. (wikipedia)


• • •

Well, I learned what a GLASS ONION is, so the puzzle wasn't a total loss. As for what a "punster" would do—look, if that "punster" were any good, he/she wouldn't be making this truly awful and tired pun. I get that that is the *point* of many puns—they make you groan. And I also get that, as an avowed pun-disliker, this puzzle isn't really *for* me. And yet this pun is so cheesy and third-grade that I feel like, even from a pun-lover's perspective, this has got to be disappointing. It is somewhat interesting that all the peeled foods appear at the end of non-food phrases. And I appreciate how clean the grid is, overall. And I don't even mind that the puzzle skews pretty old (CLASSIC rock, including the Beatles'"GLASS ONION," and SHEMP and ARP and STAN Lee and really nothing recent). Puzzles are allowed to do that from time to time. But yikes, that pun.


I think the clue on HOP UP is odd. I can't really use it in a sentence to replace [Increase the energy of]. "Let's HOP UP this party?" You can get "hopped up" on, let's say, goofballs. But "HOP UP" is more of an invitation to get on a stool or someone's lap or a horse or something somewhat elevated that you sit on. Any other usage feels a little awkward. I think I wanted PEP UP at first. Otherwise, there were very few hiccups or missteps in this one. Tore straight through it with little hesitation. Maybe I waited to figure out what letter shape the [Letter-shaped girder] was going to be. In fact, I'm sure I did. But nothing else was even slightly vague or unclear. Straightforward, familiar words, terms, places, etc. That is, a Monday.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Op-ed columnist Timothy / TUE 3-29-16 / Supporting stalks / Ancestor of harmonica / Obsolescent designation in music business / Early filmmaker Fritz / Sch overlooking Harlem

$
0
0
Constructor:Peter A. Collins

Relative difficulty:Medium


THEME:DOGLEGS (38A: Some links holes ... with a hint to the circled letters) — golf theme with dog breeds spelled out in the shape of "doglegs" on a golf course (SETTER, POODLE, BEAGLE, COLLIE). Some other golf answers, including:
  • LADIES' TEES (?!) (17A: What red markers may indicate on 59-Acrosses)
  • GOLF COURSE (59A: 18 holes, often)
  And possibly these are supposed to be themed as well (?)
  • ON A PAR (20A: Even (with))
  • CARDED (55A: Scored, as on a 59-Across)
Word of the Day:Timothy EGAN(2D: Op-ed columnist Timothy) —
Timothy Egan (born November 8, 1954 in Seattle, Washington) is an American author and journalist. For The Worst Hard Time, a 2006 book about people who lived through The Great Depression's Dust Bowl, he won the National Book Award for Nonfiction[3][4] and the Washington State Book Award in history/biography. // In 2001, The New York Times won a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for a series to which Egan contributed, "How Race is Lived in America". He currently lives in Seattle and contributes opinion columns as the paper's Pacific Northwest correspondent. (wikipedia)
• • •

I don't play golf and had no idea LADIES' TEES even existed. Also never heard CARDED used to mean "scored." Like, ever. I do know what DOGLEGS are (because of crosswords, weirdly), but MAN, this puzzle left me cold, for several reasons. The first: too Inside Golf. I don't care. I just don't care. LADIES' TEES? I'm guessing they are closer to the pin? Because ladies ... can't hit the ball as far as the men? Or maybe I'm reading the answer all wrong and LADIES' TEES really refers to women's t-shirts. I'm going to choose to believe that when LADIES' TEES are on sale at the department store, "red markers" are used to point this out. Putting dog breeds into little dogleg shapes is pretty corny *and* it puts a lot of pressure on the grid, making it hard to fill cleanly. Hence the Avalanche of painful fill, including every crosswordesey name in the book. Seriously. All of them: ELIE and ESAI and TESSA and ISAK *and* (seriously, we're still going...) ESME and AMOS. And dear lord, JA RULE? Still, we're putting him in puzzles? I'm normally very much pro-hip-hop, but JA RULE has become crutch fill for people who wouldn't know hip-hop from IHOP. It's been a decade+ since he's done anything musically significant. He shouldn't be anywhere near a Tuesday puzzle.


ONE LOOK is basically a giant partial (25D: It just took this before "I fell so hard in love with you," in a 1960s hit). Not great. Also, isn't the lyric "and I fell so hard, hard, HAAAAAARD ..." or is that just the Linda Ronstadt version? (or maybe she's just extending the syllable?)


STIPES and INGLE are words I would go to only in desperation, especially in an early-week puzzle. Weird to think you can get away with ON A PAR as a themer, when a. you don't even clue it via golf (the way you do w/ the symmetrical CARDED) and b. the idiom isn't very golf-y at all. Would you say ON A PAR in relation to golf? I know "PAR" is a golf term, obviously, but is ON A PAR? And I'm supposed to believe in plural POOHS? Again, in an early-week puzzle, I refuse to believe. SCOUNDREL is a nice word, and I like the clue on STEVENS (21A: Cat in a record store). Otherwise,

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

College in Down Under slang / WED 3-30-16 / Flopper in basketball / Part of insects body that holds legs / Calvin Hobbes conveyance / Arcade game played on incline / Trumpet guitar effect

$
0
0
Constructor:Andrew Reynolds

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:CLIMATE CHANGE (34A: Environmentalist's concern ... or a hint to the circled letters) — contiguous circled letters are, in four different answers, a jumble (or "change") of the letters in "CLIMATE"

Theme answers:
  • CHEMICAL TESTING (17A: Some lab work)
  • MEAL TICKET (2A: Source of income)
  • DIRECT MAIL (49A: Like some ad campaigns)
  • SATELLITE CAMPUS (56A: School branch)
Word of the Day:ERIC the Red(5D: ___ the Red) —
Erik Thorvaldsson (Old Norse: Eiríkr Þorvaldsson; 950 – c. 1003), known as Erik the Red (Old Norse: Eiríkr hinn rauði), is remembered in medieval and Icelandic saga sources as having founded the first Norsesettlement in Greenland. The Icelandic tradition indicates that he was born in the Jæren district of Rogaland, Norway, as the son of Þorvald Ásvaldsson, he therefore also appears, patronymically, as Erik Thorvaldsson (Eiríkr Þorvaldsson). The appellation "the Red" most likely refers to his hair color and the color of his beard. Leif Erikson, the famous Icelandic explorer, was Erik's son. (wikipedia)
• • •

This is a tried and true, red white and blue theme type. Some revealer phrase with CHANGE or CRAZY or DANCE or some other word signifying "mix the letters up," and then a bunch of phrases that feature the letters in the other revealer word all jumbled up and strung across two words in a bunch of theme answers. For example, here's a CHANGE OF HEART puzzle from three years ago. Anyway, you get the picture. You can probably imagine a lot of phrases around which one could, theoretically, build this type of theme. This one is solid, for sure, with very decent theme answers. But it was a bit of a letdown to solve because you get the gist of it right away—I actually got the revealer before I got any of the themers, but even if I'd uncovered CHEMICAL TESTING first, I would've known *right away* what the revealer was. This happened to me today with a different puzzle in a different paper, where, one answer in, I not only knew the revealer would be BREAK BREAD, but I could easily go down and fill in the other "broken" breads, just by inference, with no crosses or anything (PITA, RYE...). Conceptually solid, this one is—a serviceable example of a well-worn concept. But the AHA came early, not late, and it came as an "Oh, you again," not a "Whoa, who are you!?"


Longer Downs in the NW and SE corners are nice, actually. I do want to say something about some subpar short fill here, not because it's particularly bad today (it isn't; not particularly). I want to be clear that when I grouse about stuff like ASSN, CUL, AAH, OTIC, -IER, SSE, LOC, ATO, TOBE, etc., first, it's not that any one of those is a dealbreaker (though honestly -IER is close). It's that when they pile up, they become irksome. And second, they become more irksome the easier the grid is to fill. If the puzzle is not terribly theme-dense, then these kinds of one-star answers should be at a bare minimum. In a theme-dense puzzle (esp. a very good one), I can put up with more. In a sparkly themeless, I can put up with more. But in a fairly ordinary themed puzzle, I expect the constructor to polish The Hell out of the grid. Just so we're clear.


I did my first ever Twitter poll tonight. Just a one-hour poll asking readers which is the better cross: TEAM / -IER (which is actually in this grid) or TRAM / IRR. The results aren't as surprising as my mild change of heart (!) about the vast superiority of TRAM / IRR. Hang on, let me check the final results now ... Well, with 7 minutes left, and 58 votes in, TRAM / IRR. is still crushing, with 74% of the vote. But puzzle whiz Jeffrey Harris claimed that IRR. was a "crossword invention," like SOR. for "sorority." I find IRR. a perfectly normal abbr., having seen it on clothing tags in outlet stores when I was growing up. Or So I Thought. Trying to find visual evidence on line is proving well nigh impossible. I still believe that abbr. is legit, but Jeffrey, as usual, appears to be something other than wrong. So while I'm still #teamtram (as opposed to #teamteam), I'm less indignant than I was at the choice that was made in this grid.


Lastly, it's worth noting, in case you didn't catch it up top, that ERIC the Red appears to be an ERIK, in actuality. Is this a fudgeable spelling? Strikes me as at least mildly IRR.


Lastly lastly, if you mentally reparse NORSEMEN, you might get a phrase that makes you giggle like the 8th grader that you are I am.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg heroine / THU 3-31-16 / 1890s vice president Stevenson / Bit of Blues Brothers attire / Jazzman Baker / Spaniard granted right to conquer Florida by Charles V

$
0
0
Constructor:Ellen Leuschner and Jeff Chen

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:[Double __?]— all theme clues follow that model (familiar two-word phrases beginning "Double..."), and answers are familiar "___ AND ___" phrases where both blanks are filled with words that mean roughly the same thing as the ___ in the clue. Thus:

Theme answers:
  • 17A: Double solitaire? (ONE AND ONLY)
  • 21A: Double space? (NULL AND VOID) — not sure how "space" = "null," but ... moving on 
  • 33A: Double take? (SNATCH AND GRAB)
  • 50A: Double life? (VIM AND VIGOR)
  • 55A: Double back? (AID AND ABET) 
Word of the Day:DEER Valley(15A: ___ Valley (Utah ski resort)) —
Deer Valley is an alpine ski resort in the Wasatch Range, located 36 miles (58 km) east of Salt Lake City, in Park City, Utah, United States. The resort, known for its upscale amenities, is consistently ranked among the top ski resorts in North America. // Deer Valley was a venue site during 2002 Winter Olympics, hosting the freestylemoguls, aerial, and alpineslalom events. It also regularly hosts competitions for the International Ski Federation. (wikipedia)
• • •

Wow, that is a lot of wordplay for not very much excitement at all. Still kind of hung up on how NULL = "space," but I'm sure I'll get over it. Easy and dull, with some decent longer answers here and there, but also with some dreadful fill right where you'd expect it (i.e. in the thematically tight spaces—see DELA next to BRYN adjacent to IS SO, for example). The only thing I'm going to remember about this puzzle is Holy Crap there's *another* ADLAI Stevenson. I kept wanting and not wanting ADLAI because it fit and it's the epitome of crosswordesey names so likelihood of its being in this puzzle seemed high, but the date ... the date ... ADLAI ran against Ike so No Way he was Veep in the late 19th century!? But then the answer *was* ADLAI, so I looked it up and whaddyaknow? ADLAI I (now that would be some terrible fill) was Grover Cleveland's running mate the second time around (Cleveland won popular vote three times in a row, but got beat by Benjamin Harrison in the middle there). The two-time loser to Dwight ADLAI (ADLAI II, which would be really Amazingly bad fill!) was the grandson of ADLAI I. I had no idea. None zero none. History!


OVOIDAL is a painful word. Sounds like part of a disease name. The clue on EVA (4D: "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" heroine) is 19 kinds of preposterous. Forget that it's a gratuitous opera clue (the snootiest, most elitist and exclusionary kind of crossword clue), it expects me to have heard of it, and to know who composed it, when it's from, etc. I know none of these things. Buncha German words ... heroine. EV_? No idea. Luckily, the puzzle was so easy that this absurd clue didn't matter. Something about [On-schedule] cluing TIMELY feels off. Word means "appropriately timed," or "relevant to the times," which is not something you'd say about a train or bus. Those things run "on time." Also, what does "stink eye" mean. I think of LEER as an action that's sexual and somewhat lurid, whereas "stink eye" ... I don't know. Sounds like a face you'd make at someone you don't like. "Stink eye" cuts out all implications of lasciviousness, which seems wrong. I think my favorite answer was DRAWS STARES, just because it seems unusual and original. The rest was mediocre and over quickly.

Goodbye, March.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Capital of Roman province of Africa / FRI 4-1-16 / Actress Issa of Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl / Like blackjack hands with ace counted as 11 / Sister brand of Scope / Agrostologists study / His .366 lifetime batting average is best ever / Comedian who married Joyce Matthews / Gloaming to sonneteer / Darkness fall L Sprague de Camp novel

$
0
0
Constructor:Peter Gordon

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME: April Fool's messageDUE TO BUDGET CUTS / THE NEW YORK TIMES / CROSSWORD PUZZLE / WILL END TOMORROW

Word of the Day:ANOSMIA(52A: Inability to sense smells) —
Anosmia (/ænˈɒzmiə/) is the inability to perceive odor or a lack of functioning olfaction—the loss of the sense of smell. Anosmia may be temporary, but some anosmia (including traumatic anosmia) can be permanent. Anosmia is due to a number of factors, including an inflammation of the nasal mucosa, blockage of nasal passages or a destruction of one temporal lobe. Inflammation is due to chronic mucosa changes in the paranasal sinus lining and the middle and superior turbinates. Since anosmia causes inflammatory changes in the nasal passageways, it is treated by simply reducing the presence of inflammation. It can be caused by chronic meningitis and neurosyphilis that would increase intracranial pressure over a long period of time, and in some cases by ciliopathy including ciliopathy due to primary ciliary dyskinesia (Kartagener syndrome, Afzelius' syndrome or Siewert's syndrome). Many patients may experience unilateral anosmia, often as a result of minor head trauma. This type of anosmia is normally only detected if both of the nostrils are tested separately. Using this method of testing each nostril separately will often show a reduced or even completely absent sense of smell in either one nostril or both, something which is often not revealed if both nostrils are simultaneously tested. // A related term, hyposmia, refers to a decreased ability to smell, while hyperosmia refers to an increased ability to smell. Some people may be anosmic for one particular odor. This is known as "specific anosmia". The absence of the sense of smell from birth is called congenital anosmia. (wikipedia)
• • •

The funniest thing about this puzzle is that the crossword is probably the ONLY part of the NYT that is reliably profitable. The very, very last thing you'd cut is the crossword. If you ended the crossword, the paper would take a massive financial hit. You think I'm kidding? I'm not. Not by a long shot. End the crossword puzzle? It's The Only Part Of The Paper They Sell Separately Because They Can. Dead-tree subscriptions would Plummet without the crossword. Budget Cuts!?!? LOL times one million. "Alas! We just can't spare that $300 to pay the crossword constructor!" I love that this puzzle was made by a man whose own puzzle (Fireball Crosswords—subscribe here) pays $301, a fee that is a straight-up middle finger to the NYT and its a. cheapness and b. claim to pay the most in the business (a claim made most recently here). So the April Fool isn't you, solver. It's the typical constructor who accepts being paid primarily in "prestige" and "cachet" while the NYT profits like mad. It's also the NYT for running a puzzle that is essentially making fun of the its own stinginess toward crossword constructors. Rest easy, solvers. THE NEW YORK TIMES / CROSSWORD PUZZLE / WILL END when hell freezes over, or Manhattan floats out to sea, whichever comes first.


Solving this puzzle was a weird experience. Since the theme is a made-up quotation, you have to work at it through the crosses, and it took a while for the thing to fill itself in. Puzzle wasn't hard, but it played a little choppy, as it's mostly short answers, and I had to run a lot of them before the quotation elements became clear. My first move was a straight diagonal across the grid, from NW to SE:


You can see that I inferred the word "YOU" on the second theme-answer line there. That ended up being wrong. But the rest of this is right, and I was able to slide across the bottom (via OCEANARIA (62A: Large marine fish tanks), a word I learned just this week while I was making one of my own puzzles...) and then fill in the missing parts of the grid from there. This is about the point when I was able to start making inferences about theme words. I was wrong about "YOU" there, but I was right about TOMORROW, and once I ditched that errant "U" on the second theme line and replaced it with the "R" from 36D: Overhaul (REDO), I saw immediately that the third theme line was CROSSWORD PUZZLE. Here's where the first big breakthrough came:


And onward from there. The non-theme stuff was smooth, but the theme is the only important element of this puzzle, and on April Fools Day, I guess that's OK.


Peter Gordon has a Kickstarter going for Fireball Newsflash Puzzles, puzzles that he writes to be as jam-packed with current events as possible. Great for those who keep up with the news and want ultra-fresh, high-quality puzzles. Get in on it here.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Port in Lower Saxony / SAT 4-2-16 / Bastille prisoner 1784-89 / Service branch disbanded in 1978 briefly / Mattie Silver's love in fiction

$
0
0
Constructor:Doug Peterson and Brad Wilber

Relative difficulty:Easy (I think, but I did it in the Marriott bar, semi-out-loud, and my friend Erin kept giving away answers so maybe it's harder, I don't know)


THEME:NONE 

Word of the Day:GEWGAW(1D: Showy trinket) —

googaw

geegaw

andgewgawandgoogaw (ˈgigɔandˈgugɔ)
n. a gadget; a bauble.What do you do withthesegewgaws?Hangthem on a tree? (some online dictionary I have now lost)
• • •

Hello from the Starbucks in Stamford, CT. I have one hour to get this thing posted, so ... here we go. I'm here with my wife and my friends Lena and Brayden. We all sort of did this last night to various levels of completion. I enjoyed it, but I don't remember it the way I remember a puzzle I solve under normal conditions (i.e. alone), because people were arguing and joking about only certain clues / answers, so those are the ones I'm going to talk about. I tried to put in BAUBLE at 1D: Showy trinket, but my friend Erin bluntly just said "It's not BAUBLE," so I said GOOGAW, and she said "Yes," but we clearly had different ideas of how you spell that word, because mine went into the grid with two Os. I was happy to confirm that this spelling exists, even if it is a kind of tertiary variant (now know as "tertvar"). People were also dwelling a lot on GAP-TOOTHED, which was more obvious to others than it was to me, despite my knowing precisely who Michael Strahan is, in both his football and morning TV contexts.


I am torn between loving and side-eyeing BUSHSR. I think I love it. It is roughly colloquially equivalent to "41." I once referred to Obama as "44" and got blank stares from my D.C.-area-living companion. "I'm mad about OMEGAS," says Lena. Awkwardly phrased. "Foreign writing!?""I think the whole thing is awkward." I actually had No Idea what a non-capital Omega looked like. I know the upside-down horseshoe. I think DEARTH VADER would be a good theme answer. Not sure for what theme. I guess nothing really excited me about this, but it was easy and kind of fun to solve. Téa LEONI is almost a random pope, LEO the NI ... nth? Many of the ladies at the bar last night know her as the person who married their imaginary boyfriend, David Duchovny. We are now having a spirited HOORAHS v. HOORAYS discussion (I definitely went with the latter first). Somehow the discussion of EMIRITI has led to me wondering if nuns go to school and if so are they ALUMNUNS. My wife is pretty sure nuns do, in fact, go to school. I think TROOPSHIP is the feeling of amity among people in a troop. Also, I just typoed TROOPSHIT, so there's probably a theme in there somewhere. Now we are all trying to say TROOPSHIP three times fast and failing. Mostly laughing. I looked over my friend Elizabeth's shoulder as she was solving last night, and at 35D: Where Arithmancy is an elective she had the last four letters in place but opted not for FINE ARTS. That is a first-rate wrong answer.


I think we're done here. Oh, we're SOREAT SOREAT, which, I mean, look at it. It doesn't want to be an answer. It's sad at how it looks. Like a dog w/ a cone around its neck. So-Ree-At. Frown face. Here's what Lena likes: the clue on TANLINES (21D: Wristwatches may make them) and she just likes PYLONS as a word.  "It's not fair to just like the word PYLONS. It's just a personal issue that I have." I actually understand this.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Lake Oahe locale / SUN 4-3-16 / Carson who won 2001 TS Eliot prize for poetry / Mayan food staple / Olympic sprinting champion Devers / Politico with autobiography American Son / 2009 Grammy nominee with lyric But this ain't seaworld this is real as it gets / 2003 #1 hit for Outkast / Fifth century pope great / Post-menorah-lighting treats

$
0
0
Constructor:Natan Last

Relative difficulty:Challenging


THEME:"Jumping To Conclusions"— the theme is really IN ONE EAR AND / OUT THE OTHER (23A: With 113-Across, heard but disregarded ... or a hint to interpreting the Across answers with circled letters). There are six theme answers, three sets of two. Each set of two has one clued answer coming into a space containing the letter string "EAR" but then coming out of the  "EAR" in the *other* answer. So

Theme answers:

FIRST PAIR
  • 31A: Common query from one about to leave the house ("WHERE ARE MY KEYS!?")
  • 46A: Indignant replay when someone withholds information ("I HAVE A RIGHT TO KNOW!")
SECOND PAIR
  • 55A: "Come on ... be daring" ("TAKE A RISK")
  • 77A: "Oh, boo-hoo!" ("CRY ME A RIVER")
THIRD PAIR
  • 86A: "Would you consider this suggestion?" ("CAN I MAKE A REQUEST?")
  • 100A: Comment to the not-yet-convinced (YOU'LL COME AROUND)

Word of the Day:TERZA rima(109A: ___ rima (meter of Dante's "Divine Comedy")) —
Terza rima (Italian pronunciation: [ˈtɛrtsa ˈriːma]) is a rhymingversestanza form that consists of an interlockingthree-line rhyme scheme. It was first used by the ItalianpoetDante Alighieri. // The literal translation of terza rima from Italian is 'third rhyme'. Terza rima is a three-line stanza using chain rhyme in the pattern A-B-A, B-C-B, C-D-C, D-E-D. There is no limit to the number of lines, but poems or sections of poems written in terza rima end with either a single line or couplet repeating the rhyme of the middle line of the final tercet. The two possible endings for the example above are d-e-d, e or d-e-d, e-e. (wikipedia)
• • •

Way too tired to do this puzzle justice. I solved six tournament puzzles today, and ate and drank and talked a lot, and watched a very touching tribute to the late, great Merl Reagle, put together by "Wordplay" director Patrick Creadon. So, I'm a bit exhausted. There were four of us sitting here in my hotel room trying to solve this, and it was clear we were all pretty bleary-eyed. I was the only one with the stamina to finish, and the only one who really got the theme, and that took me a while. The EAR thing came quickly. Put the EAR in the circles. Great. Done. But then what? I got the Downs to work, but the Acrosses were nonsense. Not sure why the OUT THE OTHER part didn't register more quickly. Probably the gin. Anyway, once I was done, I really appreciated the theme. i found the cluing generally to be very tough and occasionally ... off. [Slip (through)] for SEEP? I refuse to see those as equivalent. I also totally misread 40A: Show wear and figured it was clothes you wear if you are in a show, like gowns or boas. But "Show" is a verb, so ... FRAY. That "F" cross also didn't click for me. [Awesome] = FEARED. Yes. I suppose. I mean, yes. Possibly. But there is no necessary connection between awe and fear. The fill swung between great and less so. OBELI and COR and [Laugh half] HAR = not great. A Lake Oahe (where the what the???) to clue ratty old S. DAK? Grumble grumble. And then the near-dupes. CATE crossing CATO. CIMINO *and* CAMINO in the same grid!? I don't know. They *are* totally different words. So OK. Odd, but OK. To sum up: theme was ingenious, the rest felt a bit rough, and also a bit amped up, difficulty-wise.


I think I'm going to go to bed. I gotta get up to solve the last puzzle at 9am. I was in 30-somethingth place but then made an error on Puzzle 5 in precisely the area I knew I should've rechecked but I got greedy for time and just turned it in quickly. Rookie mistake. Wah WAH. I'm still in the 50s somewhere, which is OK. I keep falling, though, as (apparently) people are successfully contesting some error they did (or didn't) make. Lots of great things happened at the tournament today. I'll write more about them when it's all over. For now, to bed.

Oh, one last thing: BCS is really really not good (93A: Some Johnny Hart panels). First of all, a "panel" is not a "[comic title]." Not ever. But even if you were to read "panels" as "sets of panels making up a completed strip," it's still bad. You just can't pluralize a comics title that way. Not comfortably. GARFIELDS? PEANUTSES? CALVINS & HOBBESESESES? I live in Broome County (B.C.!), whence Johnny Hart (born in Endicott, NY!), and there are "B.C." characters on our buses and in other places. I don't know how this is relevant, but I feel that it is. BCS as a plural = just BS. Except as the bygone college football championship dealie—the Bowl Championship Series. That would be legit. Bygone, but legit.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

All students at Eton / MON 3-4-16 / Actress Uta / Billiards variant / Went in haste / Billionaire Aristotle

$
0
0
Before we begin, I just want to say that this puzzle was very disappointing, even for a Monday. The lineup of the corners was all wrong, and the clues were predictable.  Indeed, as I puzzle over my morning coffee and newspaper, I have to think about the fact that I am feeling very grouchy at the moment, and....APRIL FOOLS IT'S AN ANNABEL MONDAY!!!!! (@Rex, ISWEAR I am laughing with you and not at you! alsopleasedon'tfiremethanks)

Constructor: David Kwong

Relative difficulty: Medium



THEME: BACK COUNTRY — Circled letters in theme answers spell out the names of countries, backwards.


Theme answers:

  • 17A: Actor who portrayed Newman on "Seinfeld" (WAYNE KNIGHT - Kenya)
  • 22A: Obvious indication (CLEAR SIGN - Israel)
  • 34A: It may keep cafeteria food warm (HEAT LAMP - Malta)
  • 43A: Billiards variant (NINEBALL - Benin)
  • 54A: Ushers' offerings (PLAYBILLS - Libya)
  • 61A: Rural area...or what could be found in each set of circled letters? (BACKCOUNTRY)


Word of the Day: NINE-BALL (CLUE) —
Nine-ball (sometimes written 9-ball) is a contemporary form of pool (pocket billiards), with historical beginnings rooted in the United States and traceable to the 1920s.[1] The game may be played in social and recreational settings by any number of players (generally one-on-one) and subject to whatever rules are agreed upon beforehand, or in league and tournament settings in which the number of players and the rules are set by the sponsors. During much of its history, nine-ball has been known as a "money game" in both professional and recreational settings, but has since become established as a legitimate alternative to eight ballstraight pool and other major competition games.
In recent decades, nine-ball has become the dominant tournament game in professional pool, in the World Pool-Billiard AssociationWomen's Professional Billiard Association and United States Professional Poolplayers Association. Matches proceed quickly, suitable for the time constraints of television coverage, and the fast-paced games tend to keep the audience engaged.
(Wikipedia)

• • •
I CAN'T BELIEVE REX IS AT A CROSSWORD COMPETITION!!! HOW COOL IS THAT??? VERY.  Or is it a crossword convention? I have no idea but I hope he is having fun.

Alright, yes, I cheated. I'm a Cheaty McCheaterpants. But I couldn't find my mistake anywhere! I was absolutely positive that the Italian word for new is NUEVA, not NUOVA...note to self: put "learn at least a little more about Italian" on my TODO list! Also, BAD ODE ROW makes me want to write a poorly-constructed poem about a crew team, and GOP ADMITS HIM is a decent little sentence fragment. Apart from that, the fill was pretty meh. Or maybe I'm just bitter because it had a lot of celebrities I'd never heard of. (Aristotle ONASSIS has a pretty cool life, though. You learn something new every day.)

I was actually a huge fan of the theme!!! First of all, I understood it from getting 61A right rather than the other way around, which is always good for a Monday theme I think because it makes it more fun to go back and think about what might fit into the theme clues. Second of all, I love the BACKCOUNTRY. My high school used to go on these trips where it would just be us, the wilderness, ginormous bulging backpacks that felt heavier than we were, and a tarp to sleep under. I think we pretty much survived on bagels and oatmeal. Ahhh, those were the days.

Bullets:
  • REF (39A: Red or yellow card issuer) — So, did you know that in rugby, the sport where the ball is basically just there so you have an excuse to beat each other up, you're supposed to be suuuuper respectful to the ref? You have to call them "sir" or "ma'am" and only ever gently suggest things to them. I am saying this because we had our first rugby game of the season today and it was super cool - literally, we played in the snow. Oh well. As one of my friends said, at least we didn't have to ice our rugby-induced injuries after the game, since they were getting plenty of ice on them during the game. 
  • ORBE (32D: "Kill ____ killed) — If you like games at all, and haven't played "Undertale," I highly recommend it.


  • SURF (27A: Explore, as the Internet)— My sister learned to surf one time. A couple of her teeth got knocked out, but she still loves it. Takes after her sister.
  • WAYNE KNIGHT (17A: Actor who portrayed Newman on "Seinfeld") — You think the current co-owner of a dog named Little Jerry Seinfeld was gonna let this one slip by her?
Signed, Annabel Thompson, tired college student.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Pagoda placement consideration / TUE 4-5-16 / Fluffy trio / Climate features of equatorial countries / Speckled steed / Anaheim nine on scoreboard / Savior in popular parlance

$
0
0
Constructor:Dan Schoenholz

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME:PAIR OF JOKERS (54A: Cards #53 and #54 in a deck ... or a hint to the answers to 19-, 26-, 35- and 47-Across)— familiar phrases made up of two comic actors:

Theme answers:
  • SHORT WINTERS (19A: Climate features of equatorial countries) [Martin Short, Jonathan Winters]
  • WHITE HOPE (26A: Savior, in popular parlance) [Betty White, Bob Hope]
  • CRYSTAL BALL (35A: Prognostication tool) [Billy Crystal, Lucille Ball]
  • ROCK CANDY (47A: Clumps of sugar on a stick) [Chris Rock, John Candy]
Word of the Day:PEABO Bryson(29D: Two-time Grammy winner Bryson) —
Peabo Bryson (born Robert Peapo Bryson, April 13, 1951, given name changed from "Peapo" to Peabo c. 1965) is an AmericanR&B and soul singer-songwriter, born in Greenville, South Carolina. He is well known for singingsoft-rockballads (often as a duo with female singers) and has contribution to at least 3 Disney animated feature soundtracks. (wikipedia)
• • •

I've definitely seen Rock, Candy, Short, etc. used in themes for their highly repurposable last names, but never quite like this, I don't think. Didn't care too much for this theme at first—couple of themers felt a little wobbly, especially SHORT WINTERS—but then I hit the revealer and thought, "OK, that works pretty well." I don't know any game wherein a PAIR OF JOKERS is a meaningful unit, but decks certainly have two of them, so it's numerically accurate, if nothing else. My Only real problem with the theme is the answer WHITE HOPE, a phrase I have never seen in non-racial contexts. In fact, I've never heard it without "great" in front of it. "Great WHITE HOPE" was the phrase used by noted novelist, sportswriter and racist Jack London to express his deeply held wish that a white champion (namely Jim Jeffries) would rise up and win back the heavyweight title from Jack Johnson, the black champion. "Jim Jeffries must now emerge from his Alfalfa farm and remove that golden smile from Jack Johnson's face. Jeff, it's up to you. The White Man must be rescued" (quote taken from this NPR story from a few years back). It is true that my Webster's 3rd Int'l has as one of WHITE HOPE's definitions: "one of which much is expected, esp. one undertaking a difficult task." But it's not the first definition. Definition 1: "slang: a white contender for a pugilistic championship held by a colored person" ("colored"??? how old is this thing? Oh, 1961 ... OK then). Too racially loaded, this phrase. Just google it. It's racial. I mean, when Larry Bird comes up on the first page of hits, come on. Also, it is patently absurd to say that WHITE HOPE means [Savior, in popular parlance] unless you radically revise the meaning of the word "popular." I'd've tried to make a different pairing work. There are a gajillion comic actor names out there. WHITE SALES works. FRY COOK, also good. The WHITE HART was the personal badge of Richard II. So there are options. But you might have to rework your themers quite a bit to maintain symmetry.


Loved the "?" clues on both RAGE (55D: Road hazard?) andENVY (58D: Go green?) at the bottom of the grid. Don't really get why you go with DOGS IT (4D: Doesn't give ones full effort) over DOG-SIT (an always current activity), but there's no harm no foul there. I still don't think DARE ME is a thing people actually say, though the title of this Megan Abbott novel suggests otherwise:


I spent the past weekend at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament in Stamford, CT. I have much to say about it, but I don't have the time / energy to cover it all now. Look for my write-up Wednesday, possibly Thursday. In the meantime, here's my wife's write-up. Also, here's a GIF of Will Shortz looking at me with what I choose to believe is deep admiration:

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Classical promenades / WED 4-6-16 / Creamer of LPGA / Old TV title role for Raymond Burr / Spring's counterpart tidewise / Conical topper / Yenta's gift / Right on to hipster

$
0
0
Constructor:Timothy Polin

Relative difficulty:Challenging (for a *Wed*, for me, though I *was* watching baseball while solving, so *maybe* that threw me off ... maybe)


THEME: What Is It?— that was the clue for all three themers, with each clue punctuated differently:

Theme answers:
  • 17A: What is "It"? (STEPHEN KING BOOK)
  • 31A: With 43-Across, "What is it?" ("DO YOU NEED / SOMETHING?") 
  • 59A: What is it? (PERSONAL PRONOUN)
Word of the Day:PAULA Creamer(15A: Creamer of the L.P.G.A.) —
Paula Caroline Creamer (born August 5, 1986) is an American professional golfer on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour. As a professional, she has won 12 tournaments, including 10 LPGA Tour events. Creamer has been as high as number 2 in the Women's World Golf Rankings. She was the 2010 U.S. Women's Open champion.
• • •

It (...) is a pretty cute theme, but yoiks it was hard for a Wednesday. Just getting that first theme answer was a bear. Didn't anyone else write in BEAT at 1D: Outduel, e.g. (BEST)? Man, that was a lethal error—that error-square is the *first square* in the theme answer (that answer was hard to parse anyway, but with an error in the first square ... yeesh). I ended up coming at the first themer from the back end, and so ATEP-----INGBOOK made about as much sense then as it does now when you look at it. Then there's the golf PAULA. No idea. None. I know many PAULAs, many Wednesday-level PAULAs (Deen, Poundstone, Abdul) ... this isn't one. I see she's won a major, so her general crossworthiness isn't in question. Her Wednesdayness ... sort of is. I had her as CARLI for a bit because of the whole S*I*NK IN vs. SANK IN trickery in the clue at 9D: Hit home (can't tell whether "Hit" is present or past tense at first glance). Had AH, YES for OH, YES, because why not? (5A: "Absolutely!"). But all this was just tough, not bad. OPEN LINE ... I don't think I know what this means. [5D: Metaphor for easy access]??? Is this a phone-line clue? From pre-call-waiting days? I had OPEN LANE. I am much, much more familiar with the "easy access" (to more freeway, to cash registers...) that those provide.


Why are DENS"Men's"? (29D: Men's studies?). Is this a Brady Bunch thing? Mike certainly had a weird patriarchal den there where he did his drafting and gave fatherly advice. But I didn't realize the gendered association was so hard and fast. Anyway, it looks like virtually all my trouble was up top, but it was a Lot of trouble. I definitely struggled with APART as well, because of its ambiguous clue (51D: Split up) (clue phrase functions adjectivally, despite looking like a verb). Quite a workout, with a clever theme. Fill wasn't great, but (aside from STOAS) (66A: Classical promenades) it wasn't bad at all. Maybe a little old-timey with its crosswordese (good ol'ESAU and ECRU and SRI  and TKO), but it all felt pretty benign.

["Marcia, what are you doing in my den?"]

Was gonna write about ACPT last night but left my computer charger at school and computer died and wife's computer somehow wouldn't let me be Rex Parker. Just .... spun whenever I tried to make any blog changes, so I am having to do this write-up fairly quickly in the morning. Tonight, I'll do a short ACPT recap *and* blog the Thursday. Or so I hope.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS Happy Birthday to my little sister, the original pain in my ass. Actually, 90% of whatever sense of humor I have comes from countless hours of childhood banter / fighting / silliness / watching the brothel-in-a-morgue movie "Night Shift" together. Good times.

["Nice frame..."]

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

1909 Matisse masterpiece / THU 4-7-16 / Big-picture approach to patient care / Onetime debater with Joe Biden / Golden galloper / Big name in foam-based weaponry / Quaker state city subject to lake effect snow

$
0
0
Constructor:John Lieb

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:"SAY HELLO TO MY / LITTLE FRIEND" (27A: With 48-Across, memorable Al Pacino movie line ... or a hint for this puzzle's theme) — "PAL" is squeezed into 6 boxes around the grid, thus "PAL" is a "little" friend that you encounter (or say "hello" to) 6 times.

Theme answers:
  • SARAH PALIN / PALATIAL
  • OPALS / PALOMINO
  • SEPAL / PALLS
  • NEPAL / PALED
  • DE PALMA / RAP ALBUM
  • APPALACHIA / FACEPALM 
Word of the Day:ILENE Graff(22A: Actress Graff) —
Ilene Susan Graff (born February 28, 1949) is an American actress and singer. [...] Graff's television work includes Barnaby Jones, Laverne & Shirley, Mork & Mindy, Three's Company, Lewis & Clark, and St. Elsewhere. From 1985 until 1990, she played what is possibly her best known role, Marsha Owens, the wife of Bob Uecker's character, George, in the sitcom Mr. Belvedere. (wikipedia)
• • •

There's a very good idea at the heart of this puzzle. I really like the revealer. It really elevates what could otherwise have been a pretty ordinary rebus puzzle. Convenient that the (very famous) quotation broke into symmetrical parts! My only problem with the theme was that I got the entire revealer the instant I looked at the clue. Way way way Way too easy. You can't just hand me 24 squares on a Thursday. And by "me" I mean "surely a ton of people." I was lucky that by the time I got down to the revealer, I had already discovered a "PAL" square in the NW, so the quotation provided a nice little aha. But after that it was just a PAL hunt. Tougher clue on revealer would've made this theme even nicer, but it's pretty good as is. My only real hang-up came right off the bat, when I put PAUL RYAN right into the grid at 1A: Onetime debater with Joe Biden. That happened, right? Anyway, it's a nice little trap, but emphasis on "little." Got out easily, and never stumbled again except a little bit while getting into and out of the BEER TENT (64A: Oktoberfest venue). The BEER TENT is used to it, I'm sure.


The fill, though, hoo boy. That's another story. Yesterday's puzzle had a smattering of charming, old-school crosswordese. This one has more than a smattering of far less charming stuff. ALAEEIEIO are only fun if you run them together, making a kind of extended nonsense sound. On their own, not great. ABAS makes me want to say "À BAS, À BAS!" You know, 'cause "À BAS" means "down with"? ERIEPA remains my least favorite (and by far the most ubiquitous) "city+state code" answer. I remember the first time I saw it I thought it was one word. "Where the hell is AIR'-EE-EPP'-PA," I wondered. Then there's the highly awkward "city comma cross-referenced state" thing going on with LEHI (where?) UTAH (oh, there). An the less said ANENT ILENE, the better. And that's just the clearly suboptimal stuff. Your LAIC and LO-RES and ARA and ordinary filler like that, I can let slide. It's too bad that this thing is fleshed out so weakly. There are some winners here and there (most notably FACE PALM, PALATIAL, and PLAYBOY). But otherwise, a rough ride.


I'll put together a little ACPT recap by week's end. For now, here's one of my proudest moments of the tournament: seeing my two Binghamton University students there, geeking out as spectators (and future competitors), and then seeing them again in this picture at the NYT's "Wordplay" blog.


And one more moment—rolling around on the Marriott ballroom floor with my friend Jen's service dog, Emmy. (It's OK—Emmy was officially off duty):

 
 

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS [Brady bunch, in headlines] is a nice clue for PATS. (For the sports-challenged, PATS are the New England Patriots, and "Brady" is Tom Brady, their quarterback.)

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

1977 horror film set in Newfoundland / FRI 4-8-16 / Grammy-nominated rock band for Epic / Oriental blossom / Restaurant critic who lent his name to brand at supermarket / Club that even god can't hit according to Lee Trevino / Ontario town across from Buffalo

$
0
0
Constructor:Patrick Berry

Relative difficulty:Medium


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:Howard ASHMAN(39A: "Beauty and the Beast" lyricist Howard) —
Howard Elliott Ashman (May 17, 1950 – March 14, 1991) was an American playwright and lyricist. He collaborated with Alan Menken on several works and is most widely known for several animated feature films for Disney, for which Ashman wrote the lyrics and Menken composed the music. Ashman and Menkin began their collaboration with the musical God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater (1979), for which Ashman directed and wrote both book and lyrics. Their next musical, Little Shop of Horrors (1982) for which Ashman again directed and wrote both book and lyrics, became a long-running success and led to a 1986 feature film. The partnership's first Disney film was The Little Mermaid (1989), followed by Beauty and the Beast (1991). After his death, some of Ashman's songs were included in another Disney film, Aladdin (1992). (wikipedia)
• • •

Accidentally fell asleep last night very early, so now I'm up very early, solving and writing. I was excited to see Patrick Berry's name. I always am. He was the Big Name in attendance at last weekend's American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, and he is probably the biggest name in crossword puzzles that I had never even laid eyes on (he doesn't usually come to tournaments). I have now laid eyes on him. I did not, however, meet him. I was weirdly too ... I don't know. I'm not good at introducing myself to people, especially famous people whose work I like. The very thought of it fills me with NAUSEA. I mostly just leave them alone and continue to like their work in silence, from afar. Some people's instinct when they see famous people they admire is "ooh, let's go say hi." Mine is "errr, uhh, let's leave." Mostly I was afraid of gushing stupidly. Anyway, despite having corresponded very briefly a couple of times with him, I couldn't really get myself to go over and say hi. Stupid, as he is by all accounts a nice guy. (Note: I was going to put "famous" in quotation marks, because, I mean ... it's the world of crosswords, so come on ... but I didn't, because here, in this world, where you are reading me, he is legit famous. I know you guys understand).


I thought this was gonna play easy. I sat down with the full intent to speed-solve, just to see what I could do. I normally take a more leisurely approach to themelesses, but the ACPT has me FIREd UP a bit, still. Things were going pretty well there for a bit. BON AMI (1D: "Hasn't scratched yet!" product) was a gimme, so I was able to get most of that corner quickly, off those crosses. But coming out of that corner was less easy. Just looking at the grid would've indicated that that was going to be the case. Moving from NW to center is like moving from the kiddie pool into the deep end—or even more unpredictable waters. The SPANISH MAIN, perhaps (18D: Setting of many pirate stories). I managed to throw DUNCAN HINES across (29A: Restaurant critic who lent his name to a brand at the supermarket), and I got the front ends of the others, but somewhere in there everything ground to a halt. I swung up into the NE and dealt with business up there (LAPDOG and the mysterious "K" in KETCH (23A: Fore-and-aft-rigged vessel) being my only real problems), and then I swung down into the SW and cleaned up down there (with an educated guess on the back end of FORT ERIE). But still I was jammed in the middle. It looked like a lot of prepositional phrases were all converging, and I just couldn't work out how they made sense:


Looked like TURNS IN- was running through TALK IN- and GOES ON- ... but only one of those parsings was actually right. You can see in the above picture how, as much as my '90s music knowledge helped me with FAITH NO MORE (easy), my '90s music knowledge utterly failed me with Howard ASHMAN (hard), of whom I had never heard (possibly because Disney musicals are not my thing, but also possibly because ASHMAN died horribly young (41), of AIDS, the year "Beauty and the Beast" came out (1991)). After getting horribly frustrated, so frustrated I stopped speed-solving and instead took a picture of the grid, I got TURN SIGNALS. And ON HAND, and then the center fell. I figured bing bang boom, I'm done. But no. The SE ended up being the hardest damn part of the grid, all isolated down there. I wrote in DIRE (!?) at 40A: Macabre (DARK), and, well, just one *&%^-up like that is enough to kill you in a very toughly-clued little corner like that. And I *had* TRIBUNE. Still, no help. Unpaid interest? for HOBBY? Brtual (good, but brutal). [Rolled item], all I could think of was PIN (rolling .... pin? I had -I-, and that was the best I could do). Wanted WIRE UP for FIRE UP (53A: Electrify). I have no idea what SHIRR means, even after reading the clue repeatedly (45D: Gather together for stitching) (?). Thank god for ARCANA, which began to even things out. But ouch. Very very uneven solve. Easy-ish for 3/4, and then rough. So, Medium.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS here's a nice slide show of some puzzle people from the recent ACPT. You can see what Patrick Berry looks like! Also, what I look like.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Medieval steel helmets with visors / SAT 4-9-16 / Mongolian for hero / Steven who co-created Sherlock / Wilber who founded fast food chain / Member of comicdom's SHIELD / 250-year span in Japan's history / California city for which element #116 was named / Ragg Sweeney Todd's assistant / Focus of some high profile 1970s lawsuits

$
0
0
Constructor:David Phillips

Relative difficulty:Medium-Challenging


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:PIETISM(46A: Old Lutheran movement) —
Pietism (/ˈptɪsm/, from the word piety) was an influential movement within Lutheranism that combined the 17th century Lutheran principles with the Reformed emphasis on individual piety and living a vigorous Christian life. //  It began in the late 17th century, reached its zenith in the mid-18th century, and declined through the 19th century, and had almost vanished in America by the end of the 20th century. While declining as an identifiable Lutheran group, some of its theological tenets influenced Protestantism generally, inspiring the Anglican priest John Wesley to begin the Methodist movement and Alexander Mack to begin the Brethren movement among Anabaptists. // Though Pietism shares an emphasis on personal behavior with the Puritan movement, and the two are often confused, there are important differences, particularly in the concept of the role of religion in government. (wikipedia)
• • •

A largely unpleasant affair for me, first because it was riddled with obscure proper nouns (MOFFAT?) and esoterica (BASINETS? PIETISM?), and second because it seems to believe "THE BIG BANG THEORY" is so good a marquee answer that the grid deserves to be widened to 16 just to accommodate it. The fake nerdism of that show is unbearable to me. Unwatchable. Barf. But that's just a matter of taste, I realize. The bigger issue is just the overall feel of the grid, which felt either esoteric or just dull to me. Pseudo-current stuff like BROMANCE already feels dated to me, and certainly isn't enough to overcome all the NEB BATOR CCC NYAH SCARERS and blahness of the rest of the grid.


The SW corner may as well have been an entirely different puzzle. That thing is guarded on either end by what for me were no-hope answers. I still don't really know what an AIR CARRIER is or how it's a [Sky line]. [Looks it up] Well, look at that: it appears to be just another word for an airline. Huh. I was thinking something like "aircraft carrier," but ... in the sky? Dunno. AIR CARRIER seems like an awfully wordlisty answer. An answer only a computer could love. Who *chooses* to put that in their grid? Wow. OK. Real gatekeepers of the SW corner, though, were OSBORN (30A: "The Paper Chase" novelist) and TOBIAS (28D: ___ Ragg, Sweeney Todd's assistant) (who and who?) up top, and BASINETS and PIETISM (ditto) down below. For a time, I just had BLTS and AGT in there. I basically just pieced that corner together brick by brick, slowly and painfully. BATOR was the answer which, when it finally dropped, pushed things from stuck to finish.
 

But man, it was a slog, allayed only infrequently by moments of pleasure (I like SHELL GAME well enough, and NO HARM DONE is nice). I read Batman for years and never heard of THE SIREN (?) (38D: Alter ego of "Batman" villainess Lorelei Circe). And MOFFAT at 1-Across??? I don't / can't / won't understand where the pleasure in this thing was supposed to lie. LIVERMORE!? (13D: California city for which element #116 was named) I'm *from* California and that answer left me [shrug]. "Oh, element #116, you don't say ..." [nods knowingly] [remembers he only knows like ten elements by number] [continues to nod knowingly]. That clue was, uh, not helpful. Seriously, whom did that clue help. Does that clue Want us to look at the periodic table? I fail to understand. Not for the first time.


How did I get into the grid? I know you're dying to know. Well, thusly:

[EAR—>OCALA—>GLEECLUB]

Good day.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Sant' Gria brand / SUN 4-10-16 / Jerusalem's province to Romans / Rich kid in Nancy / Grocery chain since 1926 / 1993 standoff site / Cowpoke's friend

$
0
0
Constructor:Randolph Ross

Relative difficulty:Easy (unless you are younger than, say, 35, in which case the fill will make your eyes bleed with its staleness ... yes, I stand by that metaphor)


THEME:"Something in the Water"— bodies of water with various apt water crafts sitting on top of (or beneath!) them:

Theme answers:
  • UBOAT under the ATLANTIC OCEAN
  • RAFT on the COLORADO RIVER
  • GONDOLA on the GRAND CANAL
  • OIL TANKER on the ARABIAN SEA
  • TRAWLER on the CHESAPEAKE BAY
  • FERRY in NEW YORK HARBOR 
Word of the Day:ATMAN(51D: Hindu soul) —
n. the spiritual life principle of the universe, especially when regarded as inherent in the real self of the individual.
a person's soul. (google)
• • •

I enjoyed the theme. It's cool and original. But fill this rough / dated / Maleskan simply shouldn't be allowed to dominate a NYT crossword in the 21st century. I guess if I were feeling generous, I'd just call the fill "CLASSIC," but I'm not. This was painful to fill in. Frequently, literally, painful. This is a throwback to when crosswords were an exclusive, exclusionary test of all the dumb short and / or arcane words you needed to know to participate. Frame of reference, solidly 40-50 years ago. Please don't ever complain to me again about "popular culture" (boo hoo!) if you somehow think this puzzle, with its ROLLOs and ERNIEs and alt-spellings and OLEOS and prefixes galore is somehow OK. A single NAS does not a modern crossword puzzle make. If this reminds you of the good old days when you learned to do crosswords during the last regime (or even earlier regimes), I get it, we all have pangs of nostalgia from time to time. But Holy GNEISS, ATMAN, there has to be a way to balance and broaden a modern crossword's frame of reference. I had a conversation with some very smart novice solvers in their early twenties recently, and was brought up short by how much the NYT crossword's cultural center of gravity is beyond them. They are getting to be good solvers, and of course there is no reason at all that everything (or even most things) in a puzzle should be thrown softly into a millennial's strike zone. But now, when I do a puzzle like this, I realize how much the NYT appears not to care (at times) about solvers who are not already in The Club. I mean, son of a LEVERET, this was off-putting at every turn. Which is sad, because again, the theme concept is adorable.

[For some reason, today's theme reminded me of this song ... something about sailing away to China / in a little row boat to find ... ya]

WTF is YAGO??? I try to google [define "sant' gria"] and it's just stupid automated crossword clue sites and then YAGO's own ... site? Is "sant' gria" a thing that is different from "sangria"? Anyway, this is one of the stupidest, most "hell no"-ish things I've ever seen in crosswords. In Shortz era, it appeared once in 2013, but before that, it was 2003, and then 1997. And, in modern era, that's it. YAGO is terrible fill that is also an absurdity. NO WAY, as they say. AGE ONE is also a NO WAY, as all AGE-whatevers are (green paint, made up). SERIO- and SINO- are sequential Across answers? This is head-hangingly sad. That spelling of JUDAEA, same. NAH and NAE in the same grid? Again, as always, no one of these is unforgivable, but en masse, all this junk is suffocating. GRIDIRONS doesn't even get the football clue that it should have, probably because only unwashed heathens care about "sports." I don't know. This puzzle needs to rethink its priorities. Remember that people who aren't Exactly like you actually solve your crossword, constructors. Open it up. Broaden its focus. Let the air in. Please. Saloons and HICS!? Gah. Strive to go beyond the cliché! Also, kill ALER. Kill NLER. And their plurals. Trust me on this. It was bad to begin with, but with all the interleague play now (I mean, the Tigers opened in Miami? Miami!?!? Ugh), the terms mean even less than they did before.

A brief recap of last weekend's ACPT (contains one tiny possible spoiler for one of the puzzles, if you are planning to solve them at home and haven't done so; but it really is tiny):

Well, now that it's no longer timely, let me tell you what ACPT weekend was like. This was my first time back in Stamford since my very first tournament, in 2007, and it was very good to be back. The tournament feels more like Home in Stamford than it does in Brooklyn—people aren't being pulled off into the various distractions of the big city. And yet Stamford in no way sucks as a host city. I was pleasantly surprised at how many varied and excellent places there were to eat and drink within walking distance of the hotel. The tournament experience has definitely been improved by the move back to Stamford. It was also improved by a general feeling of happiness and gratitude that pervaded the whole tournament, largely because so many of us were missing the presence of our friend, Merl Reagle. Merl's partner Marie was there to present the first ever MEmorRiaL award for Lifetime Achievement in Crossword Construction (it went to the legendary Maura Jacobson, longtime crossword maker for New York Magazine, and longtime ACPT puzzle contributor). Patrick Creadon (director of "Wordplay") put together a tribute to Merl on Saturday night, made up of footage and outtakes from "Wordplay" interspersed with Patrick's own reminiscences of both Merl and of Patrick's father, who also died last year. It was all terribly beautiful and crushing. I had to go stand by myself off to the side toward the back, because I kind of couldn't deal. Having Merl's voice fill that ballroom again was both haunting and inspiring. Patrick did a phenomenal job. The spirit of Merl made the whole weekend feel very warm.


The other great thing about the tournament was the finale. Back in 2007, when I arrived at the Stamford Marriott knowing virtually no one, my blog was only a few months old. It was beginning to get a sizable readership, but still, to most of the people there, "Rex Parker" was nobody. I was nobody. And not being an extroverted person, I was a bit lost. I remember walking in and seeing Merl ("... from the movie!" I remember thinking), and then seeing fellow blogger Amy Reynaldo (not here this year, much to my sadness and chagrin) and ace constructor Byron Walden, and meeting them in person for the first time. But beyond them, I didn't feel connected to many people at all, and I was sort of a wallflower. But there was this one guy I met fairly early whom I liked a lot. He was soooo nice, and he talked to me and filled me in on what the tournament was like and generally made me feel very much at ease. Like I belonged. His name was Howard Barkin. Since then, I have watched Howard compete year after year as one of the very top solvers in the country. Occasionally he'd make it onto the finals stage, but he never won. The times I remember seeing him on that stage (once? twice? I forget), he seemed to really struggle. Everyone loves Howard, and everyone roots for Howard, but it seemed that, especially with the impossibly fast (and, to be clear, equally beloved) Dan Feyer still living and breathing, Howard was destined to get close, but never win. And then this happened:

[Jump to the 1:45 mark or so if you are impatient...]

People leapt from their seats in joy and disbelief. You can actually see this happen with the lady in the lower right corner. I was in the back of the hall, lying on the ground, playing with my friend Jen's service dog, Emmy, not really focused on the boards, when I started to hear murmuring. Then I looked up to see Howard call "done" and I threw my hands in the air as if I just didn't care. I walked toward the front of the hall shouting in happy disbelief, "No way! ... No Way! ... " I high-fived people I don't even know. I hugged Anne Ellison (another perennial Top Solver). I generally lost my mind, as did so many others in the room. What you have to understand is that no one was rooting against Dan (who before this year had won the tourney six consecutive times). The vibe just isn't like that at ACPT. Everyone knows everyone, more or less, among the top solvers and longtime attendees, and it's all impossibly friendly and collegial. So the joy was all *for* Howard, who has been chasing this title for the better part of a decade, and, again—and I can't stress this enough—is The nicest guy.

 [Sam Ezersky wins Juniors, freaks out]

I saw Patrick Berry but was afraid I would do some kind of fanboy swoon / faceplant if I tried to talk to him, so I just avoided. But I saw lots of old friends and met lots of readers and just had a blast. Best tournament ever, no joke, and that's *despite* shooting myself (and my dreams of another regional trophy) in the foot on Puzzle 5, when I ... well, I don't want to give puzzle details away, since some people will be solving the tourney puzzles at home. Let's just say I zigged when I should've zagged. Or, rather, I zigged too soon. I zigged at the wrong place. The zig part still made the right answer, but unfortunately CROITIA is not a country, so the resulting cross was a big fail. One error, and it cost me probably 20+ places in the standings, and it's quite possible I'd've caught it if I had eaten the minute and just Checked My Puzzle (which is what you're supposed to do). But no, rookie mistake—when I finished, I had only 4 seconds before the next minute elapsed, so I just handed it in. Never ever do this. Otherwise, I was happy with my performance, considering I hadn't trained at all. At the moment, it looks like I finished in 58th, tied with fellow former Michigan student Derek Allen (easily recognizable by his UM baseball cap) and just 5 measly points ahead of Washington Post crossword constructor (the man who succeeded Merl in that position), Evan Birnholz. Better luck next year, Evan.


Thanks to Will and Patrick Creadon and Chief Scoring Official (or some such big-shot title) Mike Nothnagel for running a great show, and thanks to everyone who came up to me and said mostly nice things (especially Kelly Kroehle and Daveon Coleman, brand-new puzzle friends whose ears I talked off, and vice VERSA).

[Over 570 solvers "compete" in this thing (I say "compete" because most of us are not "competitive" except with ourselves); if you're lucky, you get to sit next to funny and charming people like Marian and Trey (foreground)]

Crossword tournaments are where you belong. If you are reading this, you definitely belong. Go to Indie 500 in DC (June 4, 2016), or to Lollapuzzoola in NYC (August 13, 2016), or to ACPT next year (March 24-26, 2017). You will not regret it. I have never met anyone who regretted it.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Athenian colonnade / MON 4-11-16 / Unfiltered unpasteurized brew / Poetic paeans / Hairy Halloween rentals / Double-decker checker

$
0
0
Constructor:Ron Toth and Zhouqin Burnikel

Relative difficulty:Slightly easier than usual for a Monday

THEME:POCKETS(53A: Keeps for oneself ... or features of the answers to all the starred CLUEs)— things that have ... them.

Theme answers:
  • CARGO / PANTS (1A: *With 9-Across, loose-fitting bottoms)
  • BOWLING LANE (24A: *Where you can hear a pin drop) (the "lane"??? ... I'd've thought the pocket was in the PINS ... which are in the lane ... which are in the alley ... which is on a street in a town on earth, presumably; the answer just seems odd / off / imprecise; that is, it's odd to say that pockets are a "feature of" bowling *lanes* ...) 
  • POOL TABLE (31D: *Where you might be behind the eight ball)
  • PITA BREAD (34D: *Falafel holder)
Word of the Day:Pocket (in bowling)

Pocket:
The 1-3 for right-handers and 1-2 for lefties. (The Bowler's Bowling Dictionary) (For Bowlers Who Bowl) (I made that last part up) (but not the first part)
• • •

Well, the theme is straight-up dull, but I really dig the shape of this grid, and the interesting long non-themers that result from it. WORLD CUP and ENCHILADAS and SOUR GRAPES and APE SUITS really steal the show here. The theme is not really NYT-worthy, and would never have made the grade without this cool-looking grid. It's just ... things with POCKETS. Random things. I got a little thrown off, because I assume SKI BAGS (whatever those are?) have POCKETS, but it's not a themer. I also got a little thrown off by the shorter fill, which is pretty rough for a 77-worder. If I were making this, the answers I would have RUED are: STOA, RHOMB (ugh), KEMO, CRU, ALLS, THUR, ATAB, CANTI, and ESTE. I'm not that thrilled with NUDIE either, since it's ultra-dated, but it's at least racy, so I probably wouldn't actually regret putting it in a grid.


A couple of weird coincidences are adding a small amount of delight to this solve, namely the crossing of the wine word CRU with the answer SOUR GRAPES, as well as the proximity of BRA to the CUP in WORLD CUP. BRAs don't have POCKETS. Well, some probably do. I always liked, in old movies, when women would just put things into / pull things out of their BRAs (usually money). It's a makeshift pocket. Of sorts. Wait, I'm just now seeing the answer REAL ALE and wondering WTF? That is, uh, something I've never seen before. And I drink. I drink ale. I like to think it's real. Wow. On a Monday, that answer? Well, it clearly didn't matter what day of the week it appeared on, as I never even saw it. Odd. My only hold-up in this puzzle came right off the bat, when, faced with SL- at 17A: Incline, I confidently wrote in SLANT. Nope. SLOPE. Otherwise, no problem.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Narnia nabob / TUE 4-12-16 / ed Euridice Gluck opera / Complete outfit for newborn / Dorkmeister

$
0
0
Constructor:Alan Derkazarian

Relative difficulty:Mediumish, maybe a tad tougher


THEME:HAM ON RYE(57A: Common deli order ... or a literal occurrence five times in this puzzle)— "HAM" sits directly on top of "RYE" five times in the grid

Word of the Day:ORFEO ed Euridice" (Gluck opera)(58D) —
Orfeo ed Euridice (French version: Orphée et Eurydice; English: Orpheus and Eurydice) is an opera composed by Christoph Willibald Gluck based on the myth of Orpheus, set to a libretto by Ranieri de' Calzabigi. It belongs to the genre of the azione teatrale, meaning an opera on a mythological subject with choruses and dancing.[1] The piece was first performed at the Burgtheater in Vienna on 5 October 1762 in the presence of Empress Maria Theresa. Orfeo ed Euridice is the first of Gluck's "reform" operas, in which he attempted to replace the abstruse plots and overly complex music of opera seria with a "noble simplicity" in both the music and the drama. (wikipedia)
• • •

Short write-up today. Busy. This one played like a very rough themeless until I got to the end and hit the revealer and realized why (in part) the whole grid was so rough. Well not all the grid. Those hyper-isolated corners in the NE and SW are both pretty clean (though I don't generally enjoy corners that you can only enter through one tiny crack). But sadly the awkward and stale tone for this one was set Right off the bat with the execrable (and, if you built your grid right, totally avoidable) 'OME (4D: Kipling's "Follow Me ___"). That's the kind of a thing (an elided word in a partial title of an old poem) that should be behind glass that you break only in case of emergencies. You never break that glass on Tuesdays. Not in 2016. Just because you've seen it in a puzzle doesn't mean it's good for your easy Tuesday. Or any day, really. Puzzle already skews passé (partials Latin suffixes and an overall stuffy vocab vibe). Early on, when you see your theme is forcing you into a -ME situation, your first reaction should be Move Some Black Squares Around so you are no longer in that situation. It's not rocket science. It's Tuesday.


This type of puzzle isn't really fun from the solver's perspective, because it's not clear what the theme is, or that there even is a theme. . . and then you get to the revealer and rather than "aha" there's just "...oh." And maybe you hunt down the five sandwiches, maybe you don't. At that point it doesn't matter. I do like that the revealer is part of two sandwiches, with both the HAM and RYE parts getting the appropriate treatment. I also liked running into Jon CRYER (19A: Jon of "Two and a Half Men") since he is the guy who turned so many into criers just over a week ago at ACPT. One of the puzzles featured an especially brutal crossing that involved his name, specifically it's central letter. The cross was, weirdly and improbably, an acceptable answer for the clue whether you put an "I" or a "Y" there. So you had to be certain of how Jon spelled his name. Many were not. I once saw Jon CRYER doing a private little dance to Culture CLUB's "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me," when he thought no one was looking, in the foyer of Kate Mantilini (a Beverly Hills restaurant) (Marvin Hamlish and Mike Myers were also there that evening, all of them in separate parties; Myers had on a Maple Leafs jacket) (you can see this all made an impression on me) (it was roughly 1994 at the time) (I've probably told that story before. Don't care). Good day.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Green person for short / WED 4-13-16 / Dogie-bagging rope / Oil dispenser on Food Network show / Comic srip featuring Satchel Pooch Bucky Katt / Knights villainous group in Force Awakens

$
0
0
Constructor:Tony Orbach

Relative difficulty:Challenging (for a Wed.)


THEME:ET SEQ (45D: Bibliographical abbr.)—this isn't the theme, but it's close. The "ET" sound follows ... a familiar phrase, to make a new, wacky phrase, clued wackily ("?"-style):

Theme answers:
  • TELEVISION CRUET (17A: Oil dispenser on a Food Network show?)
  • MOUNTAIN DUET (28A: Genre for "Dueling Banjos"?)
  • VANITY FERRET (46A: Weasellike animal kept as a fashion accessory?)
  • MAGAZINE RACQUET (60A: Equipment endorsed by Inside Tennis?)
Word of the Day:"GET FUZZY"(39D: Comic strip featuring Satchel Pooch and Bucky Katt) —
Get Fuzzy is an American comic strip written and drawn by Darby Conley. The strip features the adventures of Boston advertising executive Rob Wilco and his two anthropomorphic pets, a dog named Satchel Pooch and a cat called Bucky Katt. Get Fuzzy has been published by United Feature Syndicate since September 6, 1999. It appears in over 700 newspapers worldwide. (wikipedia)
• • •

Yikes. Outside my wheelhouse, For Sure. I've never heard of Kate WALSH (never watched one second of "Grey's Anatomy") (3D: Actress Kate of "Grey's Anatomy") and, despite teaching a course on Comics, I've never heard of "GET FUZZY." Like, ever. Well, maybe that's not true—I was able to put it together from "GET F----," so it must've been in there somewhere, but that strip is not in our paper and even looking at it now it is Not familiar. Also, I saw "The Force Awakens," but it did not register that there were "Knights of REN" or that they were a villainous group" in that movie. Kylo-REN ... I remember. But somehow I just thought of that REN as a patronymic or suffix or something. A whole group? Again, yikes. So many proper nouns, so many of them beyond me. I know the phrase "lay into." I do not know the phrase "LACE INTO" (9D: Give an earful). Since SEED (12D: Sow) and CDS (22A: Ones put on the rack?) were both clued tough, I had a very hard time picking up CRUET, and even when I did, I could not see the theme / wordplay. Only after getting MOUNTAIN DUET did I notice what was going on (and thus understand that "television crew" was the base phrase in that first themer). Theme feels really loose, and without a good revealer ... I don't know. Loose. That's all I got. Not tight. Seems like you could do this theme all day long (DEER TICKET, BE A PALLET, etc.), though the actual themers all involve respellings of the original (base phrase) words as well as the added -ET, so maybe the theme's tighter than I imagine. But then again, you've got a problem with DUET—it's an outlier because the "-ET" actually gets the stress (i.e it's not DOO-et, it's doo-ET), where the other -ETs are unstressed. So maybe, once again, the theme is too loose.

[duet]

Only one of the themers (VANITY FERRET) really made me te(e)hee. There is some lively fill here and there. SCHERZO, for instance—that's lively, I hear (23A: Lively movement). Not sure how I feel about ENVIRO crossing ETHNO. Those are two prefixes. I see ENVIRO is trying to pass as a stand-alone word, but I believe that about as much as I believe ARISTO is a stand-alone word, i.e. not much. The clue on WANDS is so hard! (68A: They may be waved at concerts). I assume these are the metal detector WANDS they might "wave" over you as you enter to make sure you're not packing? I can't imagine what other WANDS could be at issue. Well, whether it's security WANDS or some other WANDS I don't understand: hard [UPDATE: so ... everyone says it's conductors that wave WANDS. I'm sure this is right, but I am also sure this is wrong. Conductors. Wave. Batons. They aren't. Bleeping. Magicians. Thank you.]. [And now younger people are insisting it's these WANDS ...


... and professional conductors are telling me WANDS is b.s. as a substitute for "baton" so ... I remain #teamsecuritywand. You can vote for whatever you want. Takeaway here: this clue is terrible.] [Final update, I swear: Amy Reynaldo tells me the WANDS clue was not Tony's—he had a Harry Potter clue. Constructor, exonerated.]

ERUCT is giving me minor indigestion. Or maybe that's the coffee milkshake I had for dessert. Either way, I think I'll just sleep on this one and hope for something sweeter and more soothing come Thursday.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Ziegfeld Follies costumer / THU 4-14-16 / He gave Odysseus bag of winds / One-named singer born Christa Paffgen / Site where cuneiform tablets were discovered / Societal instability resulting from breakdown in societal values / Gesture made with thumb nose / TRUS 2016 political slogan / Radio listener grp

$
0
0
Constructor:Jason Flinn

Relative difficulty:Medium (leaning toward Medium-Challenging)


THEME: WATER SLIDES (37A: Summer amusements ... or a literal description of three answers in this puzzle)— circled squares "slide" down on a diagonal, completing their Across answers while also spelling out forms of running "water":

Theme answers:
  • CHICKEN RUN
  • LAMESTREAM
  • DONNYBROOK 
Word of the Day:MR. YUK(53D: Iconic green poison symbol) —
Mr. Yuk is a trademarked graphic image, created by the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, and widely employed in the United States in labeling of substances that are poisonous if ingested. (wikipedia)


• • •

Pretty ambivalent about this one. It has some very nice moments, like the vibrant and contemporary LAMESTREAM and the colloquial WANNA BET!? But it's really proper noun heavy, in this trivial way that I find grating (clues on ERIC and ADA were especially ugh) (8D: ___ Blair, George Orwell's real name + 46A: ___ Clare, ward in Dickens's "Bleak House"). The puzzle tries to get clever, or innovative, I think, in the south, but it came off like a wreck for me, largely because MR. YUK is new to me. Unless he appeared in a crossword years back and I've forgotten him, this is the first I'm seeing him. He is "iconic" in that he is literally an icon, i.e. a visual symbol. But between him and SNOOK (?) and BOY-O, all spiced with some nicely aged OMOO ... I dunno. Felt a mess. Also, there's some unfortunate arcana in this thing. I've read the Aeneid (not to be confused with the ENNEAD) a million times, so AEOLUS is like an old friend, but I feel like he's not the greatest crossword answer. The bigger problem, though was the AMARNA / ANOMIE crossing, which I think is gonna Natick some people. I blanked hard on AMARNA. I wanted AMEN (AMON?) RA, then SMYRNA ... man, AMARNA. Rough. Thank god I'd heard of the concept of ANOMIE ... but I don't think everyone has. In fact, just now, reader Ben V. wrote me that he was put off by "5D-9D, 20A, 43A, 46A, 66A, 67A, but really just sadangry about getting naticked at 2D/23A." So my intuition about that crossing seems like it might not be too far off.


I like that all the sliding waters are actually moving waters, i.e. no non-moving forms of water, i.e. OCEAN, LAKE ... but I don't know what a "RUN" is, honestly. I've never used that word to describe a brook, stream, small river, rill, creek, etc. I see that Google has this def. as its 11th def. of "run (n.)." I wish RIVER or RILL or CREEK had made it in, as RUN seems small and cheap. I also wish CHICKEN RUN had gotten a movie clue. Cluing overall felt fussy and tough and odd. Many wrong answers at first: XED for DID (35D: Checked off the bucket list, say). WAR for VIE (59D: Battle). Two different answers were plurals that didn't end in "S," so those were tough (4D: Transient things => EPHEMERA; 31D: Lashes => CILIA). I've seen that damned [Take the wrong way?] clue so many times now that it feels less clever, more plagiarized. Usually, it's STEAL. Here, BOOST (another word that required crosses to see). So the theme is nice-ish, but the overall VIBE was kinda crummy.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Bygone sportscaster Hodges / FRI 4-15-16 / Styles lead character in Boyz N Hood / Plant seen on Sistine Chapel ceiling / Color whose name is French for mole / Gotham building-climbing tool / California's so-called island city / Yankee opposer

$
0
0
Constructor:David Steinberg

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:RUSS Hodges(10D: Bygone sportscaster Hodges) —
Russell Pleasant Hodges (June 18, 1910 – April 19, 1971) was an American broadcaster who did play-by-play for several baseball teams, most notably the New York and San Francisco Giants. (wikipedia)
• • •

The bro-tone of this grid put me off. First, I *guarantee* you the constructor's original clue for 1-Across involved tits. FALSIES (despite the attempt at a rescue clue) is leering and creepy, especially over GUY CODE (which really should be BRO CODE, 'cause that's the phrase). Horribly apt that I SAID NO stands between the bros and the FALSIES. All of that taking place next door to BAR TABS makes the whole NW corner seem like a very gross night at the club. The "modern" stuff in the grid feels dated already. See BELIEBER and CHILLAX, in particular. I like DUBSTEP best of all among the modern answers here. Feels freshest. Mostly, the grid shape doesn't allow for anything very splashy or spectacular or even innovative. No answers longer than 8? Hard to have any fun that way. I have a feeling the difficulty level here might be all over the map for different solvers of different ages. Who knows? I know I came in in the low 6s without really trying, so I think that's Easy. Easy or Easy-Medium. Faster than Thursday, actually.


Perspective here is super man/boy-oriented. Like ... DARLA and RUTH are the only female elements in the whole puzzle, and hilariously both of those are clued via male names. Pretty badly gender-imbalanced, this puzzle. We get LAYETTE for the second time this week, so that's ... improbable. I cannot relate to a puzzle that doesn't clue CHANDLER via Raymond. Nor can I relate to a puzzle that thinks repeat / echo clues are so awesome, they should appear not one not two but three times (keeping watch on (28-/23-Down), treat for dog (38-/39-Down), angel hair topper (46-Across/52-Down). If you are at all good at solving, you don't read the clues in order, so the whole sequential/identical clue conceit has always baffled me. It usually means compromising the precision of one or the other or both of the clues. SOEVER is not a thing. In no way SOEVER is SOEVER a thing (7D: In any way). Nor is BASSSSSSSAAAAX or however that's spelled (26D: Big wind). That looks nuts. 90% of you put BASSOON in there first because you are decent human beings who think decent normal thoughts. I had RAMP for RAIL (41D: Skate park fixture), but that and the BASSOON mistake were the only real missteps I had. Oh, one last thing: you do not clue specific human beings as "Bygone" (10D: Bygone sportscaster Hodges => RUSS). No, you don't. A. it feels dehumanizing and wrong, and B. a cursory check of the cruciverb database turns up zero, nil, none, nada, no instances of "Bygone" being used as a clue word when the answer was a specific human being. Oh, sorry—looks like poor Jack PAAR got clued that way once ([Bygone TV host]), though not by NYT. Despots and blades and car makes and map initials are "Bygone." People are afforded less objectifying clue words.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Viewing all 4443 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>