Constructor: Kameron Austin Collins
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
THEME: none
Word of the Day: NARUTO (26A: Popular Japanese manga seen on the Cartoon Network) —
I liked this quite a bit, though its isolated center and its (over-) reliance on proper nouns meant that I had to fight pretty hard to take it down. I don't mind a fight. I kind of mind SPITAL (wtf?) (15D: Old-fashioned shelter along a highway) and RIS, but the rest of the grid is so bouncy that I don't mind that much. Cluing also seemed tougher than normal. [Pickup line?] for RAMS took me forever. I had no, and I mean No, idea "Bonanza" had anything to do with TAHOE (29A: "Bonanza" setting). I had it somewhere in the more traditional Old West states (your Arizonas or New Mexicos or Oklahomas or Texaseses). Completely forgot the word KARST, which I've still only ever encountered in crosswords, and then only rarely (51D: Land formation known for its caves). Had [Reed section?] as SEN. because of Harry Reid (D-NV), which, now that I write his name out, makes no sense. The stickler in me wanted KESHA's name to have the "$" sign in it instead of the "S," but then I remembered that she dropped it and is now just KESHA (9D: Gaga contemporary). No-dollars KESHA. Speaking of, I wonder if people who don't know her had trouble with 5A: Athletic short? (FIVE K). FIVEK looks nuts in the grid, and that K in KESHA is utterly uninferable.
This could've proved a very challenging puzzle, but the proper nouns also helped quite a bit, when they were on my side. MARTIN AMIS (16A: British author of the so-called "London Trilogy") and ARCADE FIRE (13A: Indie rock band whose "The Suburbs" was the Grammys' 2010 Album of the Year) were gimmes, as was TYLER PERRY (57A: Writer, director and co-star of the Madea films), an answer I like a lot, mostly because I was the first person to put it in a NYT grid (last June). Most embarrassing ignorance of the day was JACOB ZUMA (30D: South African leader beginning in 2009). It rings a bell, now that I see it (seems like the kind of name a constructor would be dying to use), but honestly, I drew a total blank. Also unknown to me: CAPE CORAL, ANABIOSIS, and DAKAR RALLY (41A: Exotic annual off-road race). The DAKAR part was right in the heart of that isolated middle, so one of my crucial routes into that area was just blocked. Blank. REE Drummond? Another unknown. "NARUTO" I knew (I own vol. 1), but couldn't quite remember. I had the NA- and -TO parts, but that middle was eluding me. Once I figured out that the "language" in 30A: Language originally known as Mocha (JAVASCRIPT) was a programming language, I knocked that answer out, and the center got a Lot easier. Never heard a [Tough problem] called a STINKER.
So I got my money's worth today—genuine workout for a Friday (8+ minutes), with a surprising, fresh, diverse grid to boot. I was just talking with my wife earlier today about how, ideally, the crossword reflects the breadth of human knowledge and experience, not just the knowledge and experience of an insular cultural elite. And then, bam, "NARUTO" shows up and makes my point—not familiar territory for most inveterate solvers, but massively popular nonetheless, and therefore very much worthy of grid inclusion. In all things, balance. As I said, this grid was perhaps a little too name-heavy, but at least those names came from All Over Hell And Gone, and therefore provided solvers of all backgrounds with different access points.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
THEME: none
Word of the Day: NARUTO (26A: Popular Japanese manga seen on the Cartoon Network) —
Naruto (ナルト?) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Masashi Kishimoto. It tells the story of Naruto Uzumaki, an adolescent ninja who constantly searches for recognition and dreams to become theHokage, the ninja in his village who is acknowledged as the leader and the strongest of all. The series is based on a one-shot manga by Kishimoto that was published in the August 1997 issue of Akamaru Jump. […] Naruto is one of the best-selling manga series in history, having sold more than 130 million copies in Japan alone. It has also become one of North American publisher Viz Media's best-selling manga series. Their English adaptation of the series has appeared in the USA Today Booklist several times and volume 7 won the Quill Award in 2006. Reviewers of the series have praised the balance between fighting and comedy scenes, as well as the characters' personalities, but have criticized it for using standard shōnen manga plot elements. (wikipedia)
• • •
I liked this quite a bit, though its isolated center and its (over-) reliance on proper nouns meant that I had to fight pretty hard to take it down. I don't mind a fight. I kind of mind SPITAL (wtf?) (15D: Old-fashioned shelter along a highway) and RIS, but the rest of the grid is so bouncy that I don't mind that much. Cluing also seemed tougher than normal. [Pickup line?] for RAMS took me forever. I had no, and I mean No, idea "Bonanza" had anything to do with TAHOE (29A: "Bonanza" setting). I had it somewhere in the more traditional Old West states (your Arizonas or New Mexicos or Oklahomas or Texaseses). Completely forgot the word KARST, which I've still only ever encountered in crosswords, and then only rarely (51D: Land formation known for its caves). Had [Reed section?] as SEN. because of Harry Reid (D-NV), which, now that I write his name out, makes no sense. The stickler in me wanted KESHA's name to have the "$" sign in it instead of the "S," but then I remembered that she dropped it and is now just KESHA (9D: Gaga contemporary). No-dollars KESHA. Speaking of, I wonder if people who don't know her had trouble with 5A: Athletic short? (FIVE K). FIVEK looks nuts in the grid, and that K in KESHA is utterly uninferable.
This could've proved a very challenging puzzle, but the proper nouns also helped quite a bit, when they were on my side. MARTIN AMIS (16A: British author of the so-called "London Trilogy") and ARCADE FIRE (13A: Indie rock band whose "The Suburbs" was the Grammys' 2010 Album of the Year) were gimmes, as was TYLER PERRY (57A: Writer, director and co-star of the Madea films), an answer I like a lot, mostly because I was the first person to put it in a NYT grid (last June). Most embarrassing ignorance of the day was JACOB ZUMA (30D: South African leader beginning in 2009). It rings a bell, now that I see it (seems like the kind of name a constructor would be dying to use), but honestly, I drew a total blank. Also unknown to me: CAPE CORAL, ANABIOSIS, and DAKAR RALLY (41A: Exotic annual off-road race). The DAKAR part was right in the heart of that isolated middle, so one of my crucial routes into that area was just blocked. Blank. REE Drummond? Another unknown. "NARUTO" I knew (I own vol. 1), but couldn't quite remember. I had the NA- and -TO parts, but that middle was eluding me. Once I figured out that the "language" in 30A: Language originally known as Mocha (JAVASCRIPT) was a programming language, I knocked that answer out, and the center got a Lot easier. Never heard a [Tough problem] called a STINKER.
So I got my money's worth today—genuine workout for a Friday (8+ minutes), with a surprising, fresh, diverse grid to boot. I was just talking with my wife earlier today about how, ideally, the crossword reflects the breadth of human knowledge and experience, not just the knowledge and experience of an insular cultural elite. And then, bam, "NARUTO" shows up and makes my point—not familiar territory for most inveterate solvers, but massively popular nonetheless, and therefore very much worthy of grid inclusion. In all things, balance. As I said, this grid was perhaps a little too name-heavy, but at least those names came from All Over Hell And Gone, and therefore provided solvers of all backgrounds with different access points.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld