Friday, October 11, 2019

CHE untimed (pannonica) 

 


LAT 4:24 (Jenni) 

 


NYT 9:47 (Jim P) 

 


The New Yorker 6:23 (Rachel) 

 


Inkubator untimed (Rebecca) 

 


Universal untimed (Rebecca) 

 


Good news! The second volume of Queer Qrosswords, the brainchild of Nate Cardin, is now available! Simply make a donation of $10 or more to the LGBTQ+ org of your choice and forward your emailed receipt to QQ. The set of 32 puzzles can be sent in .pdf or .puz format, whichever suits you. The first volume of Queer Qrosswords was terrific, with themes, fill, and clues that make puzzledom feel like home for queer solvers and their allies.

Andy Kravis’s New York Times crossword — Jim P’s review

Jim P here sitting in for Amy.

Our own, and I guess the NYT’s own, Andy Kravis brings us today’s zippy grid. There’s plenty of fun fill in here as well as a few things that were challenging (in a good way).

NY Times crossword solution, 10 11 19, no. 1011

My favorites: MR. PIBB, COOTIE (though it’s almost never seen in the wild in the singular), MOO-COW, “I’M GAME,” GUIDE DOG, EMMYLOU, EMILY POST, IT GIRLS and BIG GUY, “WHO ASKED YOU?,” TAINTED LOVE, EROTIC ART, “TOO SOON?”, ROLEPLAY, BRAHMA, AS USUAL, and ECSTASY. HAND DYE, ENDS WELL, and RUSH IN fall in the more pedestrian camp.

I could do without ICAHN [Billionaire who lent his name to a stadium on New York’s Randalls Island] as that’s not a name I would ever know or need to know. But the other new-to-me terms (WHISKEY RING and MULETA) are fair game, and I’m happy to learn them. However, apparently another meaning of MULETA is crutch, and when I do an image search, I mostly see pairs of crutches. Is this meaning lesser known? If not, I would prefer that definition to avoid issues surrounding bullfighting.

Clues of note:

  • 36a [What often follows thunder and lightning]. Tricksy. I just grokked this, because I realized a BOLT doesn’t follow lightning; it is lightning. The clue is asking for the word that follows “thunder” or “lightning.”
  • 38a [“The ___ of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice”: M.L.K.]. ARC. If only we could find some way of compressing that ARC and getting some justice in a more timely fashion.
  • 41a [Not be oneself, but rather be one’s elf?]. ROLEPLAY. Cute, but how many of us have elves we can be?
  • 54a [Like apartment buildings with fireplaces and hardwood floors, typically]. PRE-WAR. This was tough because I don’t follow the logic associating the PRE-WAR period with those amenities. Is it a New York thing?
  • 10d [Lab assistant, maybe?]. GUIDE DOG. Lest you think that the lab has its own GUIDE DOG, the clue is suggesting that the GUIDE DOG is an assistant that happens to be a lab. I had to think that one through.
  • 31d [___ Reese, soldier in “The Terminator”]. KYLE. Ha! I love this clue. KYLE Reese was the guy sent back in time from the future by his commander, John Connor, to rescue Connor’s mother, Sarah Connor, from the Terminator. Of course, Reese falls in love with Sarah and together they manage to conceive John while still on the run. I assume you all know this by now.
  • 36d [Member of a holy trinity]. Tricksy. I put down FATHER at first. But the correct answer is BRAHMA. Along with Vishnu and Shiva, they comprise the Hindu Trimurti. As I learned in a world religions class in high school, these are the gods of Creation, Preservation, and Destruction.
  • 48d [Things in airport windows, for short]. ETAS. Still not getting this one. ETAS are normally displayed on TV screens or monitors which I can’t see defining as “windows.”
  • 51d [Queen of she-baa?]. EWE. Ha! This one’s so off the wall, one can only laugh.

Solidly fun grid. Four stars.

Whoa! I didn’t know Soft Cell’s TAINTED LOVE was a cover! Here’s the excellent original 1964 song by Gloria Jones.

Juliana Tringali Golden’s Inkubator crossword, “Make M(ist)akes”—Rebecca’s review

THEME: Theme answers add IST to make some of my absolute all-time favorite crossword puzzle answers

Inkubator, October 11, 2019, Juliana Tringali Golden, “Make M(ist)akes”, solution grid

THEME ANSWERS:

  • 21A [Protestant who knows how to keep a beat?] RHYTHM METHODIST
  • 28A [Playthings that prescribe strict gender roles?] SEXIST TOYS
  • 45A [Leftie who believes in frozen treats for all?] ICE CREAM SOCIALIST
  • 60A [Kit carried by a dominatrix?] SADIST SACK
  • 70A [Expert who is just a bit much?] EXTRA SPECIALIST

This puzzle is so good I’m not even sure where to start. The theme answers are so perfect. I solved ICE CREAM SOCIALIST first and thought that it couldn’t get better – until I got to every other answer. SADIST SACK! RHYTHM METHODIST! Are you kidding me? So. Effing. Good. These answers are what you get when you are not limited by a patriarchal and puritanical sense of what is allowed in a puzzle. Answers based on sex toys, sadism, and the rhythm method are all to uncommon – and this puzzle proves that embracing all parts of the human experience can open up opportunities for such great word play and themes.

I also happen to love 17×17 puzzles – sometimes I find 21xs to be tedious, and 15xs can go by to fast – but a 17x, so beautifully created like this puzzle – absolute perfection.

Outside of the theme, another Inkubator puzzle that shows how a focus on women can really go a long way in making a grid sparkle. I especially enjoyed seeing DYNAMITE clued for the phenomenal Maria Bamford’s Lady DYNAMITE – particularly on World Mental Health Day.

I don’t think I stopped smiling once while solving. And found myself saying “OMG YES!!” MORESO than I usual do. Even the recent ELLEN drama couldn’t make me love this puzzle less.

Some SELENA for you before I go.

4 Stars

Patrick Berry’s New Yorker Crossword – Rachel’s writeup

What a gorgeous puzzle! The stacks are so good! The clues are tight and clever! The fill is so clean! Patrick Berry is a master craftsman who, despite having mastered the craft, continues to refine his puzzlemaking, and we get the benefit of solving excellent themelesses AND imagining Patrick Berry getting down to Rihanna’s 2010 hit RUDE BOY.

The New Yorker Crossword solution • Patrick Berry • October 11, 2019

Let’s examine these elements individually, starting with those stacks. The NW has HAVE QUALMS over OVER AND OUT over MERIT BADGE. While HAVE QUALMS is slightly less sparkly for its somewhat inelegant verb-noun-phrase-ness, it is certainly a standalone phrase, and the Q makes it pop. OVER AND OUT is also just so fun– I almost wish the SE stack had ended on it, but it’s pretty fabulous where it is. The SE stack was also clean and crunchy (OUIJA BOARD/DR DOLITTLE/EYEGLASSES), with the J of OUIJA BOARD mirroring the high scrabble value of the aforementioned Q.

The clues, while trivia-heavy as is typical of New Yorker puzzles, also featured some delightful wordplay:

  • Kitty addition for ANTE (I was trying to figure out a four-letter word for cat condo)
  • Way to receive letters from beyond the grave? for OUIJA BOARD
  • See-through items? for EYEGLASSES
  • Pitcher of Fits? for HONDA

There were only a few entries I disliked: GANTRIES, SEARLE, and AMIS. I had never heard of a singular gantry, so plural GANTRIES was just not happening for me. This made the NE a challenge, as I had also never heard of Martin AMIS or his book. I assumed there must have been a member of Pink Floyd named Martin who had written Money… my bad.

Finally, never having actually read TESS of the D’Urbervilles, I was deeply confused by the clue about TESS of the… Durbeyfields? This clue sort of epitomizes the New Yorker puzzle for me. TESS of the D’Urbervilles is some quintessential crosswordese, but Patrick Berry took that clue and made it more literary, requiring either knowledge of the book itself or some solid inference from the sound of the name. I love that so much. Many stars from me.

David Alfred Bywaters’s Universal crossword, “T-V Series”—Rebecca’s review

THEME: Letter swap theme today with a T in each theme answers swapped to a V.

Universal crossword solution · David Alfred Bywaters · “T-V Series” · Fri., 10.11.19

THEME ANSWERS:

  • 17A [The very best in miserable accommodations?] GRAND HOVEL
  • 24A [Dance party headwear?] RAVE CAP
  • 38A [Nun who’s a breadwinner?] CONVENT PROVIDER
  • 47A [Unpleasant celebrity?] FOUL VIP
  • 60A [Place to buy part of a three-piece suit?] VEST MARKET

This is one of those puzzles that I enjoyed more while reviewing than I did while solving. The theme definitely works – and letter swaps always make for some wacky answers which are really fun here. I wasn’t sure why this group of answers was selected, as it does seem like there are many words where you can swap a T for a V and get another word, but overall a fun puzzle with enough consistency to hold the theme together.

I also liked the layout of this puzzle a lot. I felt I could really dig into each section, while still feeling like there was a really nice flow to it.

As far as fill goes, it felt almost clinical in way – like an exercise in crossword words. There wasn’t much in the fill that wowed me in terms of newness or excitement, but every answer was very legitimate with no unfair or ungettable answers. Was nice to see NRA clued for the New Deal org. rather than the terrorist one.

3.25 Stars

Robert H Wolfe’s Chronicle of Higher Education crossword, “The Buzz of Current Events” — pannonica’s write-up

CHE • “The Buzz of Curret Events” • 10/11/19 • Wolfe • solution • 20191011

I have so many questions.

It’s a quote theme. Hop in.

  • 17a/23a [ … Mom-to-daughter request] CAN I BORROW | TODAY’S NEWSPAPER?
  • 29a/40a [ … daughter’s eco-conscious response] WHY NOT USE MY IPAD | AND SAVE THE TREES?
  • 49a/61a [ … consequences (Flora 1, Fauna 0)] THE FLY NEVER KNEW | WHAT HIT HIM

So.

I, ah … that is … er, let’s see …

All right, let’s start with the easiest part. Question: Why mother-daughter? Answer: Simply to provide a generational basis for the joke. That it’s mother-daughter rather than father-son, mother-son, father-daughter (let alone non-binary or agender) is probably just in the service of rebalancing the scales, as so much that we see is still tipped in favor of the masculine.

From here on it’s a bit trickier.

But first! A word against our sponsors. In general I’m not a fan of branded-items in crosswords, and perhaps even more so when it comes to the proliferation of iThings. Sure, they’re a great convenience for constructors so I can’t begrudge them overmuch, but I draw a deeper line when it comes to theme material.

Let’s skip to the end. “Flora 1, Fauna 0” …

—Sorry, interrupting again. I know it’s just a joke, but I’m going to analyze this relatively seriously.—

Obviously the joke is that our little dipteran menace met his (gender rebalance again?) demise at the flat end of a tablet, as a ‘dead-tree’ newspaper was either not available or withheld. Beyond that, are we supposed to presume that the life of a tiny housefly is in any way equivalent (a one-to-one ratio) to however much wood, water, et cetera was required to produce the newspaper?

Further, using a newspaper to swat a fly isn’t going to do too much damage to the improvised weapon: maybe some creasing, at most a small tear, and a tiny stain very unlikely. The mother’s asking the daughter if she can borrow the newspaper—not go out and buy one—suggesting that it’s already present. Trees saved: 0.

Now, what about that iPad? It by contrast could very likely be damaged by the action of a swift whacking. And I daresay it takes more money, energy, and materials to manufacture a microtechnological device than a newspaper.

So, yeah, this whole thing didn’t work for me.

Looking at the rest of the puzzle now.

  • 11d [Yellow cousin of the scarlet pimpernel] OXLIP. I never bothered to investigate what a pimpernel was! A flower! But I did know that namesake hero was created by the Baroness ORCZY. (Did not know that her full name was Baroness Emma Magdolna Rozália Mária Jozefa Borbála ‘Emmuska’ Orczy de Orci!)
  • Speaking of French historical fiction, a couple decades after the Reign of Terror, we have the events of 13d [“Les Misérables” escape route] SEWER.
  • 24d [Naval petty officer: Abbr.] YEO. >shudder<
  • 33d [Fields persona, in many movies] SOT. That’s WC Fields,  William Claude Dukenfield. 61d [Lavs] WCS.
  • 46d [Ritual movements associated with Muslim prayers] RAKAT. Esoteric for a Western audience, but it’s always good to learn new information.
  • 51d [Submit a paperless return] E-FILE. Exxxx entries are at least as ubiquitous as ixxxx ones, but ‘e[lectronic]-‘ constructions, annoying as they can be, are generic rather than branded.
  • 19a [Fluoresce or phosphoresce] GLOW. I like those -esce words. I prefer opalesce (October!) to coalesce (coal, yuck!).
  • 20a is aptly [Value of 20 fins] ONE C. Fins are five-spots and a c-spot is a hundred. ($)
  • 37a [Nursery container] followed by 38a [Nursery container] for the rhyming POT and TOT. That’s hot.

In sum, underwhelmed by the theme and while there was a lot of good stuff in the ballast fill, there was also (not mentioned) a fair amount of short, drossy entries (like YEO). So, so-so.

Jeffrey Wechsler’s LA Times crossword – Jenni’s writeup

Sorry this is so late! Quickly:

The revealer tells us: 63a [Assistance, with “a” … and literal assistance in solving the four longest answers] and it’s LEG UP. Each theme answer has GEL going down, which is LEG  going, well, up.

Los Angeles Times, Jeffrey Wechsler, October 11, 2019, solution grid

  • 15a [Vermont alma mater of Alan Arkin and Peter Dinklage] is BENNINGTON COLLEGE.
  • 29a [Coin of the realm] is LEGAL TENDER.
  • 39a [“MythBusters” target] is URBAN LEGEND.
  • 55a [’50s-’70s carrier with a Pittsburgh hub] was ALLEGHENY AIRLINES.

A fun theme overall, although I would have preferred it without the circles that identified each GE pair.

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: that Alan Arkin and Peter Dinklage went to BENNINGTON, and that SEHR means “very” in German.

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17 Responses to Friday, October 11, 2019

  1. Martin says:

    CHE: Cute quip but the premise makes no sense. Borrowing a dead-tree edition doesn’t harm any more trees. This actually slowed my solve. I guess I’m too logical.

    • pannonica says:

      Do we concur?

      • Lise says:

        Two hands up for all of your points, very logically expressed.

        Thank you also for including “Baroness Emma Magdolna Rozália Mária Jozefa Borbála ‘Emmuska’ Orczy de Orci”. That is right up there in loveliness with “Pippilotta Delicatessa Windowshade Mackrelmint Ephraim’s Daughter Longstocking” or the even more wonderful “Pippilotta Viktualia Rullgardina Krusmynta Efraimsdotter LÃ¥ngstrump” in Swedish.

        Those are all going on my ever-lengthening Thanksgiving thankfulness list.

        • pannonica says:

          The original Pannonica was, like Orczy, British of Hungarian descent. Her full name is Baroness Kathleen Annie Pannonica de Koenigswarter (née Rothschild).

          • Lise says:

            Fabulous! I googled her – what a fascinating life. Also, it would be cool to be named after a butterfly (or moth).

      • Martin says:

        You seem surprised.

  2. J says:

    NYT: Carl Icahn is semi-relevant to the past few years because he was buddy buddy with Trump and I think was considered for Treasury Secretary? I remember his name being in the news for awhile in regards to the election. The cluing had nothing to do with that, I just thought I’d mentioned he’s not totally irrelevant.

  3. Noam D. Elkies says:

    Funny that ICAHN is also in today’s CHE (whose review has yet to appear here). [EDIT I see that it did appear as I was typing this, touching on some of the same topics.]
    “not a name I would ever know or need to know” — fair, but applies equally to any number of other proper names that litter the puzzles these days . . . that endless parade of people so famous that I have no idea who they are and no other reason to care. Yet Another Wretched Name = YAWN :-(

    Amusing moment in the CHE: 32D = UTE?? but it can’t be UTERI with that clue — and then a few minutes later WOMBS appears at 56D. (Why UTENN? Apparently the Volunteer is that school’s athletic identity . . . Ah well. With the theme forcing U?E?N there wasn’t much choice there.) 46D:RAKAT, now that‘s interesting to learn about; fortunately it could hardly have been RSKAT which would also fit the 48A clue (favorable vote = YE?). As for the punchline of sorts in 49A/61A: would the fly “know what hit him” otherwise? Does a fly ever “know” anything? Do we care that the fly is “him” and not “her”, and that the dramatis personae are specifically a mom and a daughter? So many questions . . .

    NDE

  4. Roscoe says:

    The CHE theme feels like something out of MAD Magazine’s “The Lighter Side of…”.

  5. Kelly Clark says:

    Today’s CHE crossword cracked me up!

  6. Gene says:

    PREWAR – definitely New York, also, I guess you need to be of a certain age ?

  7. Seth says:

    Inkubator: how is XONE a low point on a graph?

    • Juliana says:

      Theoretically one is a low value and x is a point on the graph. Not perfect, I know, as the y-coordinate isn’t included.

      • Seth says:

        I was really really hoping there was a better explanation, because that one makes absolutely no sense. Fun puzzle as always though.

  8. David Glasser says:

    NYT: Was I the only one who, with a bunch of crossings, wrote in BRAHMS and figured, well, they’re usually called The Three B’s but I guess that’s a kind of holy Trinity?

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