Thursday, February 14, 2013

AV Club 7:07 
NYT 4:49 
Fireball I forget how long 
LAT 4:59 (Jeffrey, ACPT style) 
CS 6:41 (Sam) 
BEQ 11:40 (Matt) 

Happy Valentine’s Day to all of you—particularly the sweethearts who write puzzle reviews here!

News flash: Michael “Rex Parker” Sharp has put together a Red Cross fundraiser of a puzzle book. You can download the book’s PDF at American Red Crosswords for free, and then click the Red Cross button on the website to donate to Sandy disaster relief. (Suggested donation is $20, but you can set your own amount.) The puzzles were donated by all sorts of fabulous constructors and Patrick Blindauer deftly edited them.

Jules Markey’s New York Times crossword

NYT crossword answers, 2 14 13, #0214

So I was working my way down through the puzzle, and finally reached the theme-revealer: 61a. [Welcoming symbol … or what each part of the answers to the six starred clues can do?]. I knew it started with OPEN and what else could it be but OPEN ARMS? That even works perfectly with the first theme answer—firearms, sidearms. But actually, I looked at the final starred answer first, and “back arms” and “stage arms” were clearly not what was intended. OPEN DOOR! There you go.

  • 16a. [*Comfy place], FIRESIDE. Fire door, side door.
  • 20a. [*Alternative to a Crock-Pot], DUTCH OVEN. Dutch door, what is that? And oven door.
  • 27a. [*Metaphor for a sharp mind], STEEL TRAP. Steel door, trapdoor.
  • 36a. [*Gathering spot for the upwardly mobile?], ELEVATOR CAR. Elevator door, car door. The clue feels perhaps too playful for something as prosaic as an elevator car.
  • 45a. [*Campaign from town to town], BARNSTORM. Barn door, storm door.
  • 55a. [*Where a cast may be found], BACKSTAGE. Back door, stage door.

I liked seeing the algebraic SOLVE FOR, the Jewish SHABBAT, and Richard ROEPER (who is reviewing movies on Roger Ebert’s site while Roger recovers from a hip fracture that makes it hard to get to screenings) in the grid. There were a number of compromises, though, which are not easy to avoid with seven theme answers occupying 63(ish) squares and a word count that’s on the low(ish) side at 74. The answers that made my face crinkle in dismay were 19a: ECASH, 30a: DEFAT (a real word, yes, but it just has an icky feel to it), 65a: ALAI, 29d: AFTRA (a real union, but I don’t hang out with a lot of broadcast workers), and 48d: RELOAN (I prefer to keep “loan” in the noun lockbox and let “lend” carry the verb weight, and the RE- tacked on feels off). There were a number of other words-I-mainly-encounter-in-crosswords, including EELED, ARB, BEL canto, and SLUE.

Random remarks:

  • 18a. [Rick who sang “Together Forever”], ASTLEY. Huh! I’m surprised that it’s this song and not his other famous one. For a video of “Together Forever,” click here.
  • 67a. [Big do], FRO. I don’t usually watch Jeopardy! these days, but the Teen Tournament’s been going on and one of the finalists has a commanding ‘fro. Click here to read the gripping tale (illustrated with lots of screen-caps from the TV) of Leonard Cooper’s finals performance. If you liked Joon Pahk, you’ll love Leonard.
  • 8d. [Four-time Pro Bowler Ahmad], AHMAD. “What? Ahmad Rashad is a professional bowler, too?” Er, no. He’s a former football player who was selected to play in the Pro Bowl.
  • 37d. [Limerick scheme], AABBA. You know what? CONTEST! CROSSWORDESE LIMERICK CONTEST. RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW. The funniest limerick (as judged by me, with an assist from Evad if he’s not too busy) featuring crosswordese wins a copy of Ben Tausig’s book, Crosswords from the Underground. I’ve had the book for nearly a year and always intended to give it away as a contest prize, and this AABBA finally lit a fire under me. (So at least it’s good for that.) The deadline is midnight Thursday; leave your limerick in the comments on this post.

x.xx stars for the puzzle. (My unspoken rating for yesterday’s was 0.15 stars off from the average. I think the Thursday puzzle will end up averaging a good half a star more than my x.xx.) Sometimes I just want the fill to be able to breathe more easily, and sometimes I grow so tired of words that, near as I can tell, do much of their living inside the boxes of a crossword.

Peter Gordon’s Fireball crossword, “Themeless 59”

Fireball 2 14 13

How long did this puzzle take me? Maybe it was 5:30ish and maybe it was and maybe it was less. I thought I wrote it down. No matter—I really liked so much of this puzzle. To wit:

  • 1a. [Island whose capital is Gustavia, familiarly], ST. BARTS. Gustavia didn’t ring much of a bell, but how many St. ***** islands are there?
  • 18a. [What lending money to a friend is said to cause], AMNESIA. Yes! Never lend money to a friend or relative unless you are prepared to have amnesia yourself. Forgetting is better than resenting.
  • 26a. [Police officer, to a Brit], PEELER. Live and learn. Are Irish cops called potato peelers?
  • 30a. [Fastens or fascinates], RIVETS. Great sound echo in the clue.
  • 33a. [“A revolution is not a bed of roses” speaker], FIDEL CASTRO. Happy Valentine’s Day! Roses and aged revolutionaries with woolly beards, a match made in heaven.
  • 42a. [1970 hit for the Who], SEE ME, FEEL ME. “Smell you later.”
  • 49a. MVP of Super Bowl VIII], Larry CSONKA. Who doesn’t love a name that starts with CS?
  • 4d. Black Flag alternative?], ANTEATER. Yes. If you have ants in your kitchen, don’t mess with poisonous chemicals. Just bring in an anteater. Have any of you tried this approach? How did it work for you?
  • 9d. Alternate nickname to “The Franchise”], TOM TERRIFIC. Terrific-looking answer, though the clue told me nothing and I had to Google to know that this was about Tom Seaver.
  • 12d. Add HE’S A REBEL to the playlist begun in 42a. Interesting trivia clue: [#1 hit between “Monster Mash” and “Big Girls Don’t Cry”].
  • 33d. Duck call?], FORE. To tell people to duck on the golf course because your aim stinks.

Lots of juicy fill and good Gordon clues with none of those juvenile “heh, heh” clues we sometimes see that I often find offputting. (HPV and WART are straight-up medical info, no sniggering.) 4.5 stars.

Updated Thursday morning:

Patrick Jordan’s CrosSynergy/Washington Post crossword, “Punch Lines”- Sam Donaldson’s review

CS solution, February 14

The four longest entries in today’s Scrabbly puzzle are common two-word terms ending with a word that can also precede “punch:”

  • 20-Across: Something [Yielding results] is BEARING FRUIT, and a thoughtful party guest might be bearing fruit punch upon arrival.
  • 31-Across: The [Wyoming tourism spot] is JACKSON HOLE, home to the famous office staple, the Jackson hole punch.
  • 41-Across: I didn’t know that WELSH RABBIT is a [Cheese-and-toast dish]. In these parts, I suppose, we’d call it a grilled cheese sandwich. That one slowed me down, like a rabbit punch to the back of the head
  • 53-Across: An ALL-DAY SUCKER is a [Supersized sweet treat], and an all-day sucker punch would be especially painful.

It’s a bit weird that two of the punches are blows to the body, but I can’t think of a fourth meaning of “punch” that’s still a noun like the others. Perhaps that’s a microscopic nit to pick.

As mentioned above, there’s a lot of rare letters in this grid. Three Zs, three Ws, two Xs, two Js, a Q and a V. Unsurprisingly, the grid contains all 26 letters, but happily, this extra touch doesn’t interfere with the fill. EASY JOB feels a wee bit arbitrary, but everything else is quite solid. (Yeah, HTS is ugly, but I can overlook it because [Short elevations?] is such a great clue.)

Favorite entry = BAD BOY, the [Guy who flouts social conventions]. I suppose [Sam Donaldson, e.g.] might not be the most helpful clue. Favorite clue = [Faucet flow, to a toddler] for WAWA. 

Brendan Quigley’s website puzzle, “Love Sets” — Matt’s review,

I was half-expecting a Venereal Disease theme from Brendan today, but he’s an old romantic at heart it turns out. For the second puzzle in a row Brendan presents a fairly simply idea that’s only simple in retrospect: just a rebus with EROS as the keyword, but it took me until a minute after completing the grid to figure that out.

Things started off in extremely Scrabbly fashion as you can see from the grid at right. The first theme entry I got was Z(EROS)UMGAMES, clued incorrectly as [They don’t have winners]. (The whole point of zero-sum games is that they do have winners and losers; Brendan was probably thinking of “new games” which really don’t have winners).

I left that one alone since I figured HETS at 6-d [Straights] was some Brit-slang for heterosexuals, though you can see in retrospect that it was HET(EROS).

Next up was [Classic schoolyard song] for RING AROUND TH(E ROS)Y, which I also messed up because I had RAND instead of the correct RYAN for [Paul with a noteworthy budget]. This did not help me to uncover the EROS theme, especially since with GAMES and ROSES (?!) at the end of the first two themers I thought we had a Valentine’s Day gifts theme going on.

Finally grokked the deal when H(ERO SANDWICH) for [Submarine] fell in the bottom theme entry, crossing K(EROS)ENE. Then I went back up and put the Greek god of love into the top two themers and was done.

Not sure if my two stumbling blocks (HETS/HETEROS and RAND/RYAN) were put there on purpose by the constructor but intentional or not they made a straightforward idea tricky. It’s almost cliche to point out great fill in a BEQ puzzle, but here’s a top 5 list: RAUL JULIA, E(ERO SAARINEN), NEWS HAWK, SNAZZIER and WICCA.

4.40 stars. This guy is on a roll lately.

Dave Eckert’s Los Angeles Times crossword – CSI: Jeffrey

Happy Valentine’s Day! And, 2d.[Casanova] – LOVER, what could be more romantic than a puzzle about stout?

Theme answers:

20a. [Stout] – TEAPOT ADJECTIVE
37a. [Stout] – WOLFE CREATOR REX
52a. [Stout] – GUINNESS PRODUCT

Enough about that. Let’s focus on the real scandal exposed in today’s puzzle. Yes, it is time for CSI: Crossword Scene Investigation.

6d. [Milkshake choice] – STRAWBERRY.

A 10-letter fill, nothing unusual about that, right? We’ve seen it lot of times in the New York Times, right? Wrong! According to www.xwordinfo.com, STRAWBERRY has NEVER appeared in the Shortz-era. Over 95,000 different words and not one appearance by STRAWBERRY.  Hmm. This needs further investigation.

Perhaps it is just an odd anomaly. Let’s check out BLUEBERRY. Same thing! No Shortz-era appearances.

Is it a New York Times restriction? No, both STRAWBERRY and BLUEBERRY have appeared in the pre-Shortz era. In fact STRAWBERRY was seen on November 16, 1993, just five days before Will debuted! This cannot be a coincidence.

The explanation finally came to me.  You have to look outside the box, where you can find Berry 170 times.  Clearly Will Shortz made a deal with the devil to become editor. A demon that insisted no other berries appear. A devil known as the diabolical Patrick BERRY.

Case closed.

See you next week for another CSI, this one involving Doug Peterson, a teenager and …?

Musical selection:

11d. [Ring insert] – SOLITAIRE

Ben Tausig’s AV Club crossword, “Dirty Mild”

AV Club crossword answers, 2 14 13 “Dirty Mild”

(Are you reading about these nifty puzzles but not subscribing to them for $15 a year? I encourage you to sign up here.)

Well, I finished the puzzle with the four longest answers being kinda racy, but the software told me I was not done. So I pondered the title, “Dirty Mild,” and made my dirty mind more mild. The letters I’ve circled had been part of naughty words, but the clues for the Down crossings work for both the dirty and mild options. (And the theme answers themselves are also bi, in terms of having two possible answers that fit the clue.) If you’ve got a dirty mind, you let that lead you straight to the crossings that put the F-bomb in your grid. For shame! The switch works out elegantly for three answers and kinda clunkily on the other:

  • 18a. [Go, in a way], TAKE A SHOT. Crossing 12d: [Formal] can be a PROM … or PRIM.
  • 28a. [Dramatic transformation, of a sort], SET CHANGE. Crossing 30d: [Line in a grid system] can be X-AXIS or … bloody hell, I tried for SEA CHANGE (which is perfect for the clue!), but A-AXIS didn’t work. I ended up running the alphabet, hitting every key from a through T before the solution was accepted. SET CHANGE is so much less familiar than SEA CHANGE, and I have no idea what a T-AXIS is. Or is it TAXIS?
  • 48a. [What someone impatient for booty might try for], QUICK BUCK. Yes, booty as in pirate’s booty. 50d: [Arrived by air] really wanted to be FLEW IN, but BLEW IN works in a slangy way.
  • 61a. [Bed phenomena that are not necessarily the color their name suggests], BLUE BELLS. 52d: [__ time] can be TEA TIME or TEE TIME. How, I ask, are BLUE BELLS a bed phenomenon? Urban Dictionary has it as the result of finding out Taco Bell is closed, and BLUEBELLS are flowers. Oh! Flowerbeds in Texas, burgeoning with bluebells!

Ben labeled this one as having 4-star difficulty (on a 5-star scale). I dunno, I think this one’s a 5, don’t you? Or did you breeze through the puzzle because you refused to put in any naughty answers?

Fill highlights include SCROUNGES and SQUALID, KINKOS, IN TURMOIL, LOONY BIN (horrible, non-PC term, but the one my grandpa used after his psych hospital visit so I have a certain nostalgia for it), and the STATE BAR. My favorite clues were:

  • 6a. [“OMG he is like thirty years older than her”], EWW.
  • 17a. [Big name in grocery store impulse purchases], LINDT. Husband bought chocolate for Valentine’s Day and will hand it over tonight. I will surprise him with three small pieces of presumably stinky cheeses and smoked salmon (the latter being a treat for the kid, too).
  • 19d. [Where Richard III was recently found in a parking lot: Abbr.], ENG.
  • 28d. [Silverman of “Let My People Vote”], SARAH. Speaking of people with filthy vocabularies…
  • 29d. [Introduction in the end?], ENEMA. Just saw a thing about a couple who share an addiction to coffee enemas. It’s not clear to me whether they’re absorbing the caffeine or not.

4.5 stars from me. If that *AXIS/SETCHANGE thing would have worked better, this would have crept closer to a 5-star rating. Still a creative, entertaining, and challenging theme.

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31 Responses to Thursday, February 14, 2013

  1. janie says:

    these days (for almost a year now), that [Broadcast workers’ union] is SAG-AFTRA:

    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/sag-aftra-merger-passes-sag-306398

    (saith this proud member…)

    loved those valentine’s day ROSES, btw!

    ;-)

  2. Dan Katz says:

    When Amy says dance, I will plie / So I comment here per her decree, eh? / Too contrived? Could be worse / Please excuse my stiff verse / It was forced to be AABBA

  3. Bruce says:

    Really didn’t like AFTRA since when I think of “Broadcast workers”, I don’t think of performing talent (do they actually work? heehee), I think of the technical workers behind the broadcast, and unfortunately their union is also five letters IATSE.

    Crosswordese, huh…
    There once was a dog named Asta
    who never could master canasta.
    He’d hold cards in his paws
    to cheers and applause,
    but only on top of Mt. Shasta

  4. Jeffrey says:

    Crosswordese is so very hated
    Its usage can seem very dated
    But these words have a place
    They fill valuable space
    In fact they are quite underrated.

  5. John E says:

    There once was a gal named Aimee
    And a pal so we’re told named Estee
    They’d eat edam and oleo
    With a mote of fresh taro
    And study the erne and nene

  6. David says:

    I wrote this last year, but since it has some African-themed crosswordese, this seems like a fitting place to repost it. Keep in mind that, despite initial appearances, there are not any grammatical errors.

    A butcher who worked on 5th Ave.
    called a Boer and told him “I have.
    idea for a feast
    where we serve wildebeest,
    provided your livestock can calve.”

  7. Anoa Bob says:

    There once was a man from Sinaloa,
    who dreamed he was eating a jerboa.

    He awoke while in some REM,
    fondly stroked his diadem,

    And said “At least it wasn’t an anoa”.

  8. Anoa Bob says:

    There once was a man from Sinaloa,
    Who dreamed he was eating a jerboa.

    He awoke during some REM,
    Fondly stroked his diadem,

    And said “At least it wasn’t an anoa”.

  9. Evad says:

    Glad to help, and I’m not at all above receiving bribes in return for favorable votes.

  10. HH says:

    A limerick contest? Are references to Nantucket okay?

    • Amy Reynaldo says:

      Yes, provided there is crosswordese involved.

      • Zulema says:

        HH means the unprintable ones.
        What a wealth of talent here! I am not a poet, but I’ll just mention a clue and entry I found hard to “swallow” –54A “Weak____” = TEA (pun intended).

  11. janie says:

    a LEI-wearing SALT known as SMEE
    could KEBAB wheels of BRIE on his SNEE.
    still, he couldn’t touch UTA,
    who carved OGEEs from GOUDA —
    but only while sailing ALEE.

    i know. pretty cheesy……

    ;-)

  12. dook says:

    A Dutch door is a split door so that you can open the top half with the bottom closed.

  13. Susan Hornstein says:

    From puzzles I cannot be weaned,
    Towards crosswords and KenKen I’ve leaned.
    My peeps always burble,
    “She’s SO cruciverbal!”
    But Amy’s the real crossword fiend.

  14. JanglerNPL says:

    A prudish young solver from Crete
    Had a puzzle he left incomplete.
    He said “Don’t blame me,
    I had A _ S E,
    And the clue there was ‘Place for a seat’!”

  15. Gareth says:

    Certainly no holding back quantity wise in today’s NYT! I very proudly dropped siskEl where ROEPER was supposed to go. I also clung stubbornly to SABBATH. I’m pretty sure I’m not the only one in either case…

  16. Doug P says:

    My LA Times puzzle rating: “Satisfactory.”

  17. Dystopic says:

    “Grid system”, i.e. a city street grid, hence TAXIS. Plus the play on “dramatic”. I think that combo worked great!

  18. Susan Hornstein says:

    This time with the crosswordese:

    At Uri I sat in my aerie
    Thanking God I don’t have beri beri.
    Then I watched Ulee’s Gold,
    Scored by Eno, I’m told,
    But I bet Mauna Kea’s less scary.

  19. Jim Hilger says:

    I’ve heard tell of EZRA and ALOE,
    Best friends with ANTI and EERO.
    But sure pop my TETE
    When grids need APET.
    Not partial to ASTA in my AHSO.

  20. Noam D. Elkies says:

    Well you *could* plot a function of “t” (reasonably common for “time”), or even of “a”, and then your graph will have t-axis or an a-axis. But yes, TAXIS in a city grid are better.

    NDE

    • janie says:

      >But yes, TAXIS in a city grid are better.

      except wouldn’t that be a TAXI line? a line of TAXIS, yes — but (and i may be in the minority here), that’s not how i read [Line in a grid system].

      also, can anyone shed light on why DOM is [Sub’s partner]? DOMinant/SUBordinant? but then shouldn’t it be [Sub.’s partner]? and why do i feel i’m complicating things?……

      tia!

      ;-)

      • Evad says:

        Not that I know a lot about these things (ahem), but I believe SUB and DOM though derived as abbreviations, are now “words” in their own right.

        The Urban Dictionary serves up this usage example:

        I’m really more of a sub, myself, but I could learn some dom skills.

  21. AaronB says:

    On an ARETE ‘oer-looking Lake ERIE,
    EERO built a tough ERNE an AERIE.
    She quaffed GROG from an EWER,
    Used a SMEE as a skewer,
    And the ESNE’s all found her quite scary.

  22. AaronB says:

    Noobies must their crosswordese mast-a
    to get through the puzzles much fast-a.
    So study word lists,
    look to blogs for assists,
    or your solving will be a dis-ASTA.

  23. mike h says:

    I intended to rate the Tausig puzzle 5 stars. I’m writing on a small tablet and my effort at activating the stars menu with my thick thumbs was interpreted as a 3 star rating. Of course you can’t vote twice. This is very frustrating as the puzzle in no way rates a 3, yet there it is. A 3 does a number on the overall rating with the small sample size. Sorry Mr. Tausig.

Comments are closed.