AV Club 4:14
NYT 4:11
LAT 5:23 (Gareth)
BEQ 8:08 (Matt)
CS 5:16 (Dave)
Jeff Chen’s New York Times crossword
This puzzle’s got left/right symmetry to accommodate the 11/13/15/13 theme. Nifty theme! The circled letters are pronounced the same as words:
- 19a. [What the circled letter in this answer represents, homophonically], SEA OF CORTEZ. The “C” of Cortez.
- 22a. [What the circled letter in this answer represents, homophonically], EYE OF THE TIGER. Obligatory link to ’80s Survivor music video here.
- 42a. [What the circled letter in this answer represents, homophonically], BEE IN ONE’S BONNET. I started with YOUR bonnet instead of ONE’S because of They Might Be Giants’ “Birdhouse in Your Soul” (music video #2!). I didn’t get out to the TMBG show in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park last Saturday, but there was a Lollapuzzoola contingent who went together.
- 47a. [What the circled letters in this answer represent, homophonically], SEE YOU IN COURT. A two-fer.
Highlights in the fill include PATSY CLINE (“Crazy,” video #3), Seals & CROFTS (video #4, “Summer Breeze”), ACAI BERRY, TORTES to MUNCH on, REHNQUIST.
I could see solvers struggling in the bottom middle, where Bobby MCGEE, ELGIN Baylor, and Taylor DAYNE cross UCLA, IGGY, and NEIN. And where SEQ ([Et ___ (footnote abbr.)]) crosses OEO ([Antipoverty agcy. created under L.B.J.]).
45a. [Relief might follow it] clues BAS. Anyone else have *AS and ponder whether GAS worked with the clue?
Four stars.
Sam Donaldson’s AV Club crossword, “Battery Change”
This is the first (I think) of the American Values Club crosswords by a guest constructor. Sam’s theme has a battery of questions:
- 20a. [Toss-up question?], HEADS OR TAILS? When the coin is tossed up.
- 23a, 53a. [With 53-Across, loaded question?], HAVEN’T YOU / HAD ENOUGH? Question to a person who’s loaded (on liquor, not with money).
- 38a. [Burning question?], WHERE’S THE FIRE?
- 56a. [Leading question?], WHO’S IN CHARGE? Was this theme inspired by AL HAIG (22d. [Ron Reagan cabinet member with “control” issues])?
You will have noted that “leading question” and the other clue phrases are all standard phrases that include the word “question.”
What else I liked:
- 1a. [It might inhibit concealment], GUN LAW. Well, not so much anymore.
- 42a. [Short reply to “Hey baby, what’s your sign?”], LEO. It’s true.
- 8d. [Get too old for foster care, perhaps], AGE OUT. There is an 18-year-old living at my sister’s house since he aged out, essentially. He wasn’t in foster care, but when he turned 18 his guardian no longer had a legal obligation.
- 30d. [73, usually], ONE OVER PAR.
- 44d. [Social networking “I can’t believe it”], SMH. “Shaking my head.”
- 46d. [Shit in front of the kids?], “OH, CRUD.”
- 50d. [Screech Powers, famously], DWEEB. Who doesn’t love a Saved by the Bell reference?
Four stars.
Tony Orbach’s CrosSynergy crossword, “Rhyming Services” – Dave Sullivan’s review
First Tony Orbach puzzle I’ve reviewed since catching up with him at the recent Lollapuzzola – a very nice man and clever constructor as well. What more could you ask from someone? Anyway, today he offers us four rhyming theme phrases which end with a type of “service” (after yesterday’s “Service Station” puzzle, I’m wondering if this is “service” week at CS?):
- [Person who watches your kittens?] is a LITTER SITTER – we’re heading to Boston for an overnight tonight and are in need of one of these…anyone available on short notice?
- [Person who keeps an eye on your notebook?] clues a BINDER MINDER – Anyone under the age of 30 who owns a laptop is probably thinking why is a notebook called a binder. Le sigh.
- [Person who looks after your pager?] is a BEEPER KEEPER – again, this skews a bit old as I imagine beepers have gone the way of binders.
- A [Person who takes care of your body work?] is a FENDER TENDER – too bad there wasn’t enough room for the triple play of “fender bender tender.”
I enjoyed finding all these synonyms for someone who looks after things, but then thought it was a bit simple to complete the phrases given that the first word had to rhyme with it. I was a bit surprised to see that CD-ROMs are considered “antiquated”–after seeing binders and beepers not clued this way, this made me feel old in an ODDER way. My FAVE entry was the colorful PUFFIN, many of which I have been lucky to see when traveling north into New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Less happy about the variant of FEZES, and was afraid Tony added that to complete a pangram, but see that other letters are missing from the alphabet, so I wonder why it was necessary.
Neville Fogarty’s Los Angeles Times crossword
A beautiful little visual theme Neville had for us today, yes? The revealer is SPINCYCLE. Each answer contains the letters of SPIN, encircled (probably, not all formats have the circles), between two words in the middle of the entry. As one proceeds down, starting with PINS, the first letter moves to the end of the sequence: PINS to INSP to NSPI to SPIN – rendering a “spin” cycle. All the answers are lively phrases from popular culture; although the first isn’t actually clued as the classic 1978 film. The theme answers in full are as follows:
- 18a, [Poof], UPINSMOKE
- 23a, [“Danger, Will Robinson!” sci-fi series], LOSTINSPACE
- 37a, [“Lincoln” director], STEVENSPIELBERG. Was only dimly aware that he directed it, but then I had little interest in the film.
- 53a, [Gilbert and Sullivan work subtitled “The Lass That Loved a Sailor”], HMSPINAFORE
- 59a, [Washing machine phase graphically shown in this puzzle’s circles], SPINCYCLE
Quite a dense theme so the rest of the puzzle is suitably understated. There’s the almost obligatory pair of interesting long downs in ISITSAFE and ELDORADO; thereafter, Neville has focused on giving us good, clean grid. A few crossword-y, but legitimately famous names, like ERBE, UMA and CATE but really this as clean as a puzzle like this could be! I’ve never encountered APBIO before: it seems to be a fresh answer! I assume it’s applied biology, but what it’s applied to I’m not sure. If it gives people a reasonable grasp of their own biochemistry I’m all for it! I saw a White-breasted Cormorant (sometimes called a SHAG outside of South Africa, despite not having a [Layered haircut]).
4 Stars.
Gareth
Brendan Quigley’s website crossword, “Drug Music” — Matt’s review
Hard to believe Brendan hasn’t done this theme before, considering that it combines two of the three title elements of this book. BEQ inserts recreational drugs into song titles with wacky consequences:
18-a [Really like heroin?] = LOVE SMACK, playing off the B-52’s’s “Love Shack”. You have to be insane to try heroin, for the record. And is there a stranger-looking possessive than “B-52’s’s”? But it’s correct.
24-a [With 40-Across, “That downer sure has feminine qualities”?] = LUDE LOOKS LIKE A LADY. From Aerosmith’s “Dude (Looks Like a Lady)”.
37-a [With 43-Across, stuff you’re about to snort off astronaut Collins?] = COKE ON EILEEN. From Dexy’s Midnight Runners’ 1980s standard “Come On, Eileen”.
51-a [Stoned student’s bribe?] = POT FOR TEACHER, riffing off Van Halen’s “Hot for Teacher”.
62-a [Smuggles heroin?] = RUNS HORSE. A bit odd two have two H references. Also, I don’t know what song this pun plays off; enlighten me in comments, will you?
BEQ-worthy fill:
HOLE PUNCH, RC COLA, PEACHES, AWARENESS and SEE YA. Also dig the 5×5 NW and SE corners. Best clue: [One unlikely to have a cow] for HINDU.
4.00 stars.
Hey all!
Starting today xwordinfo.com will be featuring “Constructor’s Notes” as well as occasionally “Will Shortz’s Notes”. Jim Horne and I hope these features give you some insight into the human side of puzzle construction. Enjoy!
http://www.xwordinfo.com/Crossword?date=8/15/2013
Jeff
Interesting site– I hadn’t looked at it before.
Thought today’s NYT was a thoroughly enjoyable puzzle – I usually don’t get too excited over themes, but this one was inventive (at least for me). The SEQ/OEO crossing got me though (I admit – had to Google it).
No, but at 34a [Joe] I had –UD and first filled it BUD instead of MUD.
Me too.
I thought Acai Berries were “trendy” about four years ago?
Beautiful, elegant puzzle Jeff! So simple! A real WITOT! Even if I thought I was going to have a space invader theme with that diagram! Now, on to Neville’s puzzle!
Speaking of Neville’s puzzle, the AP in APBIO stands for advanced placement.
Gareth, you know me too well. The original clue I submitted for UP IN SMOKE was totally a movie reference.
Loved today’s NYT. Did anyone else notice the mini Katy Perry theme? There’s the title of her new single at 52D, and a lyric from the chorus at 22A.
Thank you, Jeff Chen, for a great puzzle, and thank you, too, for continuing the greatness of XWordInfo. I enjoyed reading the extra notes on today’s puzzle, and I’m looking forward to the future ones.
What, no PEEINACUP?
You won this Comments section, Mr. Walden!
(pulling my hair out for not thinking of it)
Hilarious!
Too bad PEEINTHEPOOL is 12 letters.
omg. the hilarious “pee in the pool” scene in the decidedly *not* hilarious take this waltz…
;-)
Runs horse is a play on Run’s House by Run-D.M.C.
AP Bio stands for an Advanced Placement Biology class.
Found the both the NYT and LAT to be enjoyable solving. Thanks Jeff and Neville!