Wednesday, August 24, 2016

CS 7:51 (Ade) 

 


LAT 4:22 (Gareth) 

 


NYT  3:46 (Jenni) 

 


WSJ untimed (Jim) 

 

Today’s AV Club puzzle from G. Paolo Pasco has a meta solution. Submissions are due by the end of Sunday, August 28 – we’ll have a write-up once that’s closed.


Matthew Sewell’s New York Times crossword—Jenni’s write-up

Good evening! And a very good evening it is, too. This is a solid Wednesday puzzle – not very hard, with an entertaining theme and some nice fill. I approve. Although I think Ade should have done this one…

We have a revealer at 36a [Field of DraftKings and FanDuel … or 18-, 23-, 52- and 58-Across?] and the answer is FANTASY SPORTS. DraftKings and FanDuel are websites devoted to fantasy leagues (which started as Rotisserie Baseball, invented by writer, editor and crossword fan Daniel Okrent.) The sites have been in some legal hot water over accusations that they provide illegal gambling. I’m shocked. Shocked, I say. Gambling on sports? Shocked*. *I’m not shocked.

No legal complications for today’s puzzle, however. We are looking for fantasy sports, as in fictional, made-up, athletic activities.

  • 18  [Activity for Hobbes] = CALVINBALL. Ah, Calvin and Hobbes, when comics were great.

    Screen Shot 2016-08-23 at 10.09.11 PM

    8/23 NYT puzzle, solution grid

  • 23 [Activity for Anakin Skywalker] = POD RACING. That’s how you learn to bulls-eye womp rats, and other necessary skills. Or at least how you learn to pilot like nobody’s business.
  • 52 [Activity for Harry Potter] = QUIDDITCH. This one has moved from fantasy to reality. There are now actual teams and leagues. Life imitating art, or something.
  • 58 [Activity for Tigger and Eeyore] = POOH STICKS. This one sent me to Wikipedia, where I learned that there are actual Pooh Stick competitions, as well, although in this case that’s not life imitating art quite as much since apparently A.A. Milne invented the game for his son, the real Christopher Robin, and then imported it into “The House at Pooh Corner,” whence it was exported to competition on the Thames.

The theme wasn’t particularly challenging, which is OK on a Wednesday. It’s consistent and solid and it did make me think. That’s a win.

A few other things:

  • Interesting long fill: SOUNDTRACKS at 3d and CONTRETEMPS at 27d. I wouldn’t buy the SOUNDTRACK of a CONTRETEMPS.
  • Food! BAKLAVA, ONIONS, OSSO buco, KFC WINGs. Matthew could have clued 5a, RAMPS, as food instead of [Skatepark features.]
  • Tech! WEBCAM at 10d. VLOG makes an appearance at 14a. Unfortunately, it crosses TV TAPE at 1d, which is not a thing.
  • Real-life sports! Al ROSEN. SCRUBS clued as [Benchwarmers.] [Nothing, in soccer] for NIL. The NBA. And the Yankees, as NYY. I’ll take it.

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: see above re: POOH STICKS.

I leave you, of course, with this.

Calvinball

“Other kids’ games are such a bore!
They gotta have rules and they gotta keep score!
Calvinball is better by far!
It’s never the same! It’s always bizarre!
You never need a team or a referee!
You know that it’s great, ’cause it’s named after me!”

Lynn Lempel’s CrosSynergy/Washington Post Crossword, “Way to Go!” —Ade’s write-up

CrosSynergy/Washington Post crossword solution, 08.24.16: "Way to Go!"

CrosSynergy/Washington Post crossword solution, 08.24.16: “Way to Go!”

Good morning, everyone! I’m looking at the calendar now and, in one week, it will pretty much be September. Do the days and months always go by this fast? (Cyber Cynic somewhere: “Yes. Yes it does!”). Anyways, we have a fun puzzle today, created by Ms. Lynn Lempel. In it, the four theme entries are all common phrases, but its clues put a different context on each, actually referencing the “modes of transportation” that reside inside of the phrase.

  • TENNIS COACH (17A: [Transport to Wimbledon?])
  • MOVIE TRAILER (27A: [Transport to the theater?])
  • TRIAL BALLOON (48A: [Transport to the courthouse?])
  • BRIDAL TRAIN (64A: [Transport to the wedding?])

Not sure if this has happened to you while solving, but I had the most interesting pattern to start out my solve: started at the very top of the grid with AWARE (1A: [Cognizant]) and cut across until I filled in ANKHS (71A: [Symbols often seen with Egyptian gods]). So, in order, went from AWARE to WEEPS (2D: [Lets the tears flow]) to SWORE (23A: [Declared under oath]) to ROD (24D: [Cone’s eye partner]) to DIOR (35A: [Christian fashion line]) to ERROL (29D: [Film swashbuckler Flynn]) to OOHS (45A: [Cries of wonder]) to SON (46D: [Junior, to Senior]) to V-NECK (53A: [Collar alternative]) to KNISH (55D: [Filled-dough snack from Eastern Europe]) to ANKHS. I paused for a second to see that pattern that I just (unintentionally) created and thought it was cool. Thought seeing the clue to EMAIL LIST was funny, since I almost never utilize it and always make it harder for myself when sending group emails (34D: [Message-sending convenience]). It’s not even 11 AM, and I’m already needing to take another quick nap before heading off to Queens later on today for work. Yes, I’m loving my bed a little too much today. But, hey, we’ve all had those mornings!

“Sports will make you smarter” moment of the day: AGNEW (3D: [Humphrey’s successor as vice president]) – Former National Football League defensive lineman Ray AGNEW was the 10th overall selection of the 1990 NFL Draft by the New England Patriots, coming out of North Carolina State University. Agnew spent 11 seasons in the NFL with the Patriots, New York Giants and St. Louis Rams, winning a Super Bowl as a member of the Rams in the 1999 season.

Thank you for your time, and I’ll see you tomorrow!

Take care!

Ade/AOK

Matt Skoczen’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Say What?” — Jim’s review

GREEK letters replace their homophonic counterparts in various phrases. 36a clues us in with [Classic statement of confusion, and a hint about this puzzle] which leads to the beautiful grid-spanner IT’S ALL GREEK TO ME.

WSJ - Wed, 8.24.16 - "Say What?" by Matt Skoczen

WSJ – Wed, 8.24.16 – “Say What?” by Matt Skoczen

  • 17a [Classic sound of relief?] HEAVY PSI. Heavy sigh.
  • 25a [Classic residence?] RHO HOUSE. Row house. In England, they’re called “terraces” or “terraced houses.”
  • 52a [Classic state?] NU JERSEY. New Jersey.
  • 64a [Classic frozen treat?] ESKIMO PI. Eskimo Pie.

Unfortunately for me, I’m just not feeling the connection between the clues and the answers. I can’t see how an ESKIMO PI is a classic frozen treat. To me, an ESKIMO PI would be a [Number used in measuring the area of your igloo?]. I’ve no idea how you would clue the others.

Large 6×4 areas in the NE and SW corners are filled well with interesting choices. I especially like CAP GUN [Noisy toy] which, for some reason, I wanted to fill as CAT GUT. See also SNAP UP, PURINA, and PICARD in the SW.

THERESA May..or she may not

Brand new British PM THERESA May makes an appearance at 22d. ED ASNER gets the full name treatment with the interesting clue [Actor who won both Comedy and Drama Emmys for the same role], which I’m guessing is Lou Grant. (Yup, that’s right.) And Biblical behemoth GOLIATH makes his presence felt at 28a.

Overall, good puzzle with good fill though the theme left me a little flat.

Gail Grabowski & Bruce Venzke’s LA Times crossword – Gareth’s write-up

LA Times 160824

LA Times
160824

This is an offbeat theme idea. Four two-part theme answers begin with synonyms for “tweak” (v.). They have “WITH” inserted in their middles so that the first part becomes used as “tweak” (v.) and the second forms an adverbial phrase with “WITH” modifying the verbified beginning. Clear?

But… to avoid Tarzan language, all the ends have S’s. That’d be fine, except for the base phrases: FIDDLECASES (a tad arbitrary, all instruments have their own cases…), MESSJACKETS, MONKEYSUITS, and TINKERBELLS. TINKERBELLS. As a more experienced blogger said, “Like the Highlander THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE. We don’t have two Tinkerbells.” I think that’s what called a dealbreaker.

Best fill: THEWHO and KIDULT. The price of the latter was GIRO and LRON and SSNS in a quiet corner; not sure that was actually worth it…

Gareth
out

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18 Responses to Wednesday, August 24, 2016

  1. jim hale says:

    Way too much esoteric uninteresting trivia in the NYT puzzle for me.

    • Gareth says:

      Where? I couldn’t find any and I looked twice. A disinterest in the world around you is troubling…

    • Gareth says:

      CALVINBALL speaks to me. Being a solitary child, and 13-22 years older than my four siblings, I invented a lot of my own sports…

      • Papa John says:

        For the rest of us, CALVINBALL is uninteresting.

        • Amy Reynaldo says:

          Something that became popular via newspapers 30 years ago is too newfangled for you, isn’t it? :-)

          • Papa John says:

            I didn’t even think of it in those terms. I would think you know me well enough to know better, in fact. I’m usually arguing in favor of those “oldies” clues/fills that so many on this blog seem to despise. I simply lost interest in most comics way more than thirty years ago. While I may not object to dated references, that doesn’t mean I’m nostalgic for them or have a disinterest for the world around me. While I may not agree with Jim’s “esoteric” assessment of the trivial fill, like him, I found it to be uninteresting.

  2. ArtLvr says:

    I’d say the same, but it did have a neat CONTRETEMPS!

  3. Tracy B says:

    I loved today’s NYT — well-conceived, well-executed. Sometimes I slog through a puzzle, but I found myself slowing down and appreciating this concept. Enjoyable.

  4. Dook says:

    TV tape is not only “not a thing”, but it doesn’t even accurately described what one inserts in a VCR, which would be a video tape. A TV is a television and this would be rather difficult to insert into a VCR. I also take some exception to “enter on” as the start of an adventure. Is this really a phrase? Seems amorphous and not specific to an adventure.

    • Gary R says:

      I agree on TV TAPE – have never run into that in the wild.

      ENTER ON (or ENTER upON) is phrasing I have heard before – though I have the sense that it’s rather old-fashioned.

  5. Tony says:

    Give NYT a 5 star rating simply for the inclusion of CALVINBALL, where you make the game up as you go along and rules cannot be used twice (except for the rule that rules cannot be used twice)!

    Thanks to UComics, I can read Calvin and Hobbes every day!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  6. dave glasser says:

    Today’s NYT was enjoyable enough that I’m going to start referring to videotapes as TV tapes just to retroactively make it better.

  7. Jeffrey K says:

    You can find Tinker Bell in Disneyland and in Walt Disney World. That makes two Tinker Bells.

    • Norm says:

      No no no. She magically transports between the two as needed! And Eurodisney as well I expect.

      • pannonica says:

        This smells vaguely quantum.

        • Papa John says:

          It’s even spookier than that when you consider Tinker Bell doesn’t actually exist, in a quantum state or at any Disney theme park. Images of her, however, probably exist in the thousands in the Disney archives. It all depends on what “is”, is.

  8. Joan Macon says:

    Once again we have yesterday’s grid for the LAT, with today’s comments. On a happier note, I once played Poohsticks with my husband on the bridge in the Hundred Acre Wood in England. A happy memory!

Comments are closed.