Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Jonesin' 4:31 (Derek) 

 


LAT untimed (Derek) 

 


NYT 3:15 (Amy) 

 


WSJ 5:08 (Laura) 

 


Xword Nation untimed (janie) 

 

Announcement: There’s a new weekly themeless crossword, coming out each Monday, in the New Yorker! It’s available online for free, and the rotating corps of five constructors includes Anna Shechtman (who has the debut puzzle today), Patrick Berry, Kameron Austin Collins, Liz Gorski, and Natan Last. Check it out!


Elizabeth C. Gorski’s Crsswrd Nation puzzle (Week 361), “It’s a Bit Cuckoo in Here”—Janie’s take

Crossword Nation 5/1 (No. 361)

No argument. It is “a bit cuckoo in here,” since today’s puzzle is apparently a shout-out to that three-lettered cuckoo of crosswordese, the ANI. Embedded in each of the five themers, and bridging two elements within each, is the A-N-I sequence. No circles, I’m happy to say (and I didn’t even see it until now…), but we do get a reveal at 32D. [Cuckoo … and a hint to the bird that’s hiding in five horizontal answers]. With very straight-forward cluing, our theme set today is made up of:

  • 16A. [1960s convention that opened during Pope John XXIII’s pontificate] VATICAN II. Here one of the Roman numerals doubles as the letter “I.” This is the only theme entry where that is so. Gettable from the crosses, but are most of the newer/younger solvers familiar with this event?
  • 22A. [Emmy/Grammy/Tony-winning actress who is running for governor of New York] CYNTHIA NIXON. Dang. Just an Oscar shy of an EGOT. The woman is a gifted actor who works a lot, so the possibility of her eventually achieving this seems more likely to me than her winning the primary. But… one never know…
  • 37A. [Hit Leo Sayer song of the 1980s] “MORE THAN I CAN SAY. Written by members of Buddy Holly’s band, The Crickets. Who knew?
  • 49A. [Measure of wealth among demographic groups] MEDIAN INCOME. Hmm. A tad dry, that one.
  • 61A. [Is inspired] HAS AN IDEA. Fulfills the requirements for the theme set, but feels a tad “roll-your-own” to me…

When Liz sent me this puzzle, she did say that for various reasons, this one might seem a bit “wobbly,” and while it doesn’t make me happy to say so, I have to agree. It happens. Even to the best of constructors. And I do put Liz right up there. I fear the problem starts with the IDEA itself, that of embedding this particular series of letters in a theme set. I’m someone who actively likes embedded-word puzzles—particularly when I can suss out the word-in-question with only a hint from a well-honed title (like today’s). And I especially like them for newer solvers. Typically, Liz’s embedded-word puzzles yield charming theme-set results. To my eye, however, there’s little sparkle to be found within this one, so the entries present as more functional than fun. As a result, the solve itself is not particularly entertaining. Or wasn’t for me. As always (and it’s important to say this, too), in this subjective territory, your mileage may vary.

What did I take pleasure in? Well, I like those two long, strong downs: HURRICANE and CENTIPEDE, and some of the mid-range sixes, like ACTS UP, ROTARY, ELAPSE and HORACE. One of the reasons HORACE appealed was because of the reminder we get in the clue—that he was the [Poet who coined “carpe diem”]. Now the Roman HORACE was born loooooong after the Trojan War was fought with Greece, but (conjuring up Homer) we get a little more “classic” fill/cluing with combos like EPICS [Grand stories] and HELEN [Beauty of Troy]. The Iliad and The Odyssey, anyone? Another clue that spoke to me, this one far more contemporary (but a corollary of HORACE, in its way): [“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone ELSE’S life.” (Steve Jobs)]. Wise words indeed from the man whose company brought us the iPOD.

And because my time is limited and I’ve made my salient points, I’m going to draw this post to an end. Oh! But not before sharing this very exciting development for lovers of challenging themeless puzzles. Starting Monday April 30th, The New Yorker will be publishing a weekly puzzle—online only—by a superb rotation of constructors: Anna Schechtman, Natan Last, Kameron Austin Collins, Patrick Berry and… Liz Gorski. For themeless-lovers, it doesn’t get much better than that. Check it out! Check it out! If you’re not a subscriber, do confirm whether or not you have access—please (I think you do, but it’d be great to know for sure). Thx for stopping by today. “Tomorrow is another day” and next week will bring us another puzzle. Hope the week ahead will be a good one. Meanwhile, like you, I’ll keep solving. ;-)

Zhouqin Burnikel’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Loved Ones” — Laura’s review

WSJ - 5.1.18 - Burnikel - Solution

WSJ – 5.1.18 – Burnikel – Solution

My loved ones, have you got yourself some Women of Letters yet? Crosswords by 18 women constructors for the low, low price of donating $10 or more to a woman-centric charity. On the “masthead” for the project, my name is above Ms. Burnikel’s, because we’re in alphabetical order, and believe you me, when I first started making puzzles, I never imagined that someday my name and her name would be on the same project. In my personal pantheon of admired constructors, she has an honored place. On to the puzzle:

  • [16a: *Pistols and swords]: SIDE ARMS
  • [22a: *Not easily acquired]: HARD EARNED
  • [36a: *Disturbed the peace, in a way]: MADE A RACKET
  • [47a: *Place for a stud]: PIERCED EAR
  • [58aR: Cherish, and what the asterisked answers do literally]: HOLD DEAR

Perfect early-week theme, lovely in execution. Fill is a MIXED BAG: OHO! AS IT IS, I MEANT IT. Can anyone remember who sang [8d: “Never ___ Give You Up”]: GONNA? He was certainly no [9d: Postgame sulker]: LOSER. Interesting choice to clue ERNEST as [44d: Physicist Rutherford] rather than [Novelist Hemingway] or [Explorer Shackleton] or [Wilde’s ___ Worthing] or [Character who addresses Vern]. G’DAY all.

Jacob Stulberg’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s write-up

NY Times crossword solution, 5 1 18, no 0501

Solid Tuesday offering this week. The revealer is 64a. [Obstacle … or any one of four black squares in this puzzle?], ROADBLOCK, and the theme lies in the circled words, each of which spells out a kind of road that’s split by a black square, a roadblock of sorts. AVENUE is split between SLAVE and NUEVO LEON. LANE’s roadblock appears between SHANGRI-LA and NETS. AIMLESS/TREETOP hides the STREET, and a DRIVE is in PAID/RIVERBANK.

What else? Let’s take a look.

  • 3d. [Early means of providing light for a photograph], FLASH LAMP. I tried FLASHBULB first, which is “early” in that the technology was definitely around 50 years ago. Raise your hand if you had an Instamatic camera back in the day that had a disposable flashcube that illuminated four shots before becoming trash.
  • 9d. [One of two to four in a standard orchestra], OBOE. This feels like a fresh OBOE clue! Nobody look it up and tell me it’s been used plenty before now.
  • 57d. [Stanley who wrote “The Magic Kingdom”], ELKIN / 61a. [Kovalchuk of the N.H.L.], ILYA. I’m more familiar with ILYA’s name than ELKIN’s, and it’s a good thing one of the two was familiar because that can be a troublesome crossing.
  • CEVICHE is my favorite entry here (though I can’t eat it), and T-BAR, OREL, and AS AM I are tied for dullest.

Four stars from me.

Matt Jones’s Jonesin’ Crossword, “Slippery as a Kneel” – Derek’s write-up

Let’s add some N sounds! To be specific, let’s add N sounds that have a silent K in front of them!

  • 20A [“The Sound of Music” character behaving badly?] KNAVE MARIA
  • 38A [Why yarn is the wrong material to make an abacus?] KNIT DOESN’T ADD UP
  • 60A [Be cranially self-aware?] KNOW MY HEAD

I feel like I am missing one, but there are three theme entries. Maybe because two are only 10 letters, but then I am thinking this is NOT the easiest theme to execute and there are three very good ones in here. Is there a convention for how many squares in the grid should be theme related? Even if this was themeless, there is still a lot of fun in this grid. 4.3 stars today.

Some notes:

  • 1A [Pen name?] BIC – This didn’t fool me! We crossworders tend to obsess over writing instruments; it is only logical that people that care as much about language care about how it is actually written. I am a fan of ANYTHING Pentel, pen or pencil.
  • 14A [“Pioneer Woman” cookbook writer Drummond] REE – I tried RAE. I must have had rap duo Rae Sremmurd on the brain!
  • 27A [Number that’s neither prime nor composite] ONE – There was a LearnedLeague One-Day this past weekend for Pen and Paper Math again, and composited numbers played into one of the questions. These are some of my favorite quizzes there, even if I do terribly! (I didn’t submit an entry this weekend, so don’t look for my score if you’re a LLama!)
  • 63A [10-time Gold Glove winner Roberto] ALOMAR – He is becoming crossword famous! His father and brother also played, but he is the only Hall of Famer. So far.
  • 67A [First of the Medicis to rule Florence] COSIMO – I have not watched The Borgias yet, but I think their story mirrors the Medicis. I am not that familiar with families that produced Popes in the middle ages. Or whenever they were Popes! (The Medicis did have a Pope in their family, didn’t they?)
  • 10D [“Für Elise” key] A MINOR – Does anyone, other than a musician, know this off he bat? I played the piano when I was younger, and this was a guess. I usually fill in ?M??OR, which messes me up when the answer is ?SHARP!
  • 13D [Barry once played by the late Harry Anderson] DAVE – This is a reference to the 90s show Dave’s World, which I just had to look up because I didn’t remember. Again, Matt will have a pop culture ref that will strain your brain!

Have a good week all!

Victor Barocas’s LA Times crossword – Derek’s write-up

My timer didn’t work properly, and I was interrupted two or three times while I was solving this one. I think I paused the timer and forgot to restart it, so I guess the timer is NOT the problem! Total time was somewhere in the 4-5 minute range, I think.

The theme on this one was not evident until the end, but it was fun to try and figure it out! They progress until the common thread is explained at 58A and 60A:

  • 18A [Tuna eater’s tool, maybe] CAN OPENER
  • 24A [Eyebrow-plucking tool] TWEEZERS
  • 36A [Shape of rotini pasta] CORKSCREW
  • 41A [Cocktail frank stabber] TOOTHPICK
  • 48A [Loser to rock, beater of paper] SCISSORS
  • 58A & 60A [Contraption that usually includes the answers to the starred clues] SWISS ARMY KNIFE

I kinda thought we were dealing with kitchen implements as I worked through the grid, but this was a nice “a-ha!” moment at the end when you realize these are all found in one of those fancy pocket knives. I had one of these as a kid; I don’t much have use for one now. At least I think I don’t! Perhaps I will put this one on my wish list! A solid 4.3 stars today.

Some notables:

  • 6A [Socially awkward sort] DORK – I put in NERD. I am both.
  • 16A & 11D [2016 almost-Oscar-winning movie] LA LA LAND – Famous for the Best Picture snafu! I have not watched this movie in its entirety. My son loved it; it didn’t grab me. It is on HBO, so I can finish it whenever, but I am not in a hurry!
  • 47A [2100, to Augustus] MMC – This is how Roman numeral clues should be done! No complicated math!
  • 63A [“The World According to __”] GARP – Other than maybe Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH, this is one of the first books I read that was made into a movie that I saw. The book is ALWAYS better.
  • 4D [“Game of Thrones” network] HBO – In addition to La La Land, this network also started season two of Westworld, which I don’t plan on getting too behind on! I may have to resort to the podcasts that help explain this series, much like GoT.

IT’S FINALLY WARM TODAY!!

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14 Responses to Tuesday, May 1, 2018

  1. Penguins says:

    The New Yorker was no pushover for sure. Good puzzle.

    What happened to pannonica?

    Great video, Laura.

  2. Lise says:

    Great Tuesday NYT! Hands up for having owned an Instamatic with flashcubes, Amy. Also hands up for having trouble with the ILYA/ELKIN crossing. I’m pretty good with authors, generally, but didn’t know this one and the only NHL names I remember are the usual Orr, Gretsky, and Howe.

    Is CEVICHE really safe to eat? It doesn’t seem as though it would be. But I have friends who have eaten it and lived to tell the tale.

    • PJ Ward says:

      I think ceviche gets the usual raw and undercooked caveats. Pregnant women, young children, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems should not consume raw and undercooked meats.

      I’ve been eating very rare beef and raw oysters for 50+ years and sashimi (a lot) and ceviche for about 30 years. Oysters got me once. I’ve probably had some mild intestinal distress but nothing that has deterred me from eating these dishes.

  3. David L says:

    I’m a little surprised at the complaints here and at the other blog about the ILYA/ELKIN crossing. I agree ELKIN is a bit obscure, but I had I_YA for the hockey player’s name and plunked in L without a thought. Not because I’ve heard of the guy — I don’t follow hockey at all — but because ILYA is a pretty common Russian name. (As in ILYA Kuriakin of Man from UNCLE fame, for those of a certain age).

    • Richard says:

      Same here, ILYA went in when I got the Russian hint. My favorite was always Ilya Ilf, the early Soviet satirist, who also has a pretty good name for puzzles.

      • Lise says:

        Was he the Ilf of Ilf and Petrov, who wrote The Twelve Chairs? That was the funniest Russian novel ever.

    • Art Shapiro says:

      Although I was a fan of the Man from UNCLE, search engines indicate that the character’s name had two Ls: ILLYA. I thought this was a very unfair crossing, as is generally the case when names cross.

  4. Ktd says:

    Count me also as really enjoying Anna Shechtman’s New Yorker puzzle. I solved it online and had no trouble accessing it, but I did get a pop up notification about having some number of free articles left this month—so perhaps it will require a subscription eventually?

  5. Noam D. Elkies says:

    This route(*) to 9D:OBOE does seem to be new, at least to the NYTimes. It works for any of the other three standard woodwinds, though their names are longer (FLUTE, CLARINET, BASSOON); I also considered HORN and, more speculatively, BASS.

    NDE

    P.S. (*) or street, or lane, or . . .

  6. Norm says:

    The New Yorker was interesting, but had a few too many esoteric literary clues for my taste. If I wanted to battle Dorothy Parker, I’d build a time machine. Solvable but, sheesh, I felt like I was taking a final exam in “who said what about whom?” Oh, and I hate the app.

  7. scrivener says:

    My Instamatic had a flip-flash, one of those cool ten-bulb numbers that gave five flashes before you had to flip the thing over, reinsert it, and get the next five.

  8. Thanks, Janie, for linking to the new crossword from The New Yorker. As a TNY reader since my college days at Barnard, I was over the moon when the editors asked me to join their team of constructors. I couldn’t say “yes” fast enough. It’s a thrill to work with Anna, Natan, Kameron and Patrick, whose work I’ve admired over the years. I hope you’ll all join in the cruciverbal fun at The New Yorker!

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