Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Jonesin' 3:48 (Derek) 

 


LAT 3:41 (Derek) 

 


NYT 3:14 (Amy) 

 


Universal tk (Jim Q) 

 


WSJ tk (Rebecca) 

 


Xword Nation untimed (Ade) 

 


Elizabeth C. Gorski’s Crsswrd Nation puzzle (Week 473), “Parlor Trick”—Ade’s take

Crossword Nation puzzle solution, Week 473: “Parlor Trick”

Good day, everybody! First of all, hope you’re well. Second of all, hope you’re all staying cool! It’s a scorcher out there in a number of parts of the country!

Today’s grid features five theme entries that start with a word or words which can also come before the word “parlor.” Unfortunately, there’s no phrase with “pizza,” meaning that it was a missed opportunity to put “PIZZA RAT,” the unofficial mascot of the New York City Transit Authority subway system, in a crossword. (Link provided, in case seeing a rat hustling for some scraps does not make you squeamish.)

  • BETTING THE FARM (16A: [Risking everything])
  • ICE CREAM MAN (23A: [Van Halen song with the lyric “all my flavors are guaranteed to satisfy”])
  • TATTOO ART (38A: [Butterfly on a shoulder, at times])
  • BEAUTY SLEEP (55A: [Retirement plan for an attractive person?])
  • MASSAGE ONE’S EGO (63A: [Engage in false flattery, maybe])

It has officially touched 90 degrees here in New York, and combining that with the humidity definitely makes conditions SEVERE when walking around the city that has started its second phase of reopening (30A: [Like extreme weather]). If one allows his or her mind to stretch a little bit, there’s a little bit of an ode to the armed forces, with the USAF (41D: [“Wild Blue Yonder” mil. group]) and the beginning of the entry ARMY ANTS (40D: [Six-legged marchers]). Actually, the former (USAF) reminded me of the couple of times that I was in San Diego to broadcast a 2007 football bowl game involving the Naval Academy and a 2010 game involving the Air Force and how much fun it was hearing the fight songs for both schools, including “Wild Blue Yonder,” in a city where the presence of the country’s armed forced is huge. There were a number of seven-letter entries in the grid that had some stick, and my personal favorite of that lot was DERIDED (11D: [Jeered at]). One of those other entries, SHE BEAR, then reminded me that UCLA, whose sports teams are nicknamed “Bruins,” does have a female mascot live at basketball games (46D: [Female bruin]). Meet Joe and Josephine (Josie) Bruin. Yes, this is a thing…

“Sports will make you smarter” moment of the day: RICO (19A: [Puerto ___]) – Though the clue references one Latin American island, today’s subject comes from a different island in the Caribbean Sea. Longtime Major League Baseball player Rico Carty was one of the first stars in MLB who hailed from the Dominican Republic. Carty played from 1963 to 1979, and in his official rookie season in 1964, he batted .330 for the Milwaukee Braves and finished second in the National League batting title race to another Caribbean baseball legend, Roberto Clemente. Carty won the league batting title in 1970 (for the sam franchise, but now playing in Atlanta instead of Milwaukee) with a .366 average, and although he did not appear on the All-Star Game ballot, Carty made the 1970 All-Star Game as a write-in candidate and actually started the game in the outfield. Carty ended his career with a .299 batting average, 204 home runs and 890 runs batted in.

Thank you so much for the time, everybody! Have a wonderful and safe rest of your day and, as always, keep solving!

Take care!

Ade/AOK

Jeff Chen’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s write-up

NY Times crossword solution, 6 23 20, no. 0623

Today’s theme is a visual one rather than wordplay. The theme revealer is STRAIGHT EDGES, clued as [Rulers, e.g. … or what the letters in 3-, 7-, 27- and 34-Down all have]. You could trace a straight line down the left side of those four entries and have that line be part of every letter. KEEBLER ELF, “FEEL FREE,” DR PEPPER, and “REBEL, REBEL” could be joined by phrases with the letters H, M, and N, which also start with a straight-up-and-down stroke. They’re lively entries unto themselves.

New to me, I think: 54a. [Sticker on green products], ECOLABEL. Really?

Fave fill: RICE CAKE, LEAPFROG, DOGPILE.

Fill that might be a tad out of place in a Tuesday puzzle: ERSE, SOUSE, STILES. If only historian and two-time Pulitzer-winning author T.J. Stiles (whom I went to college with) were deemed famous enough for a Tuesday puzzle! T.J. has written three well-received biographies, on Jesse James (whose gang tried to rob the bank in Northfield, Minnesota, where the aforementioned college is located), Cornelius Vanderbilt, and George Custer of “Last Stand” renown.

A couple more things:

  • 19a. [Puffed snack food], RICE CAKE / 23a. [Workers in puffy white hats], CHEFS. Puffs … anyone else have a sudden craving for Cheetos? I prefer the crunchy ones, but those Simply Cheetos puffs with fewer artificial ingredients sure do hit the spot.
  • 60a. [Spike of interest in movies?], LEE. Great clue. We just watched Spike’s BlacKkKlansman last week and it was excellent. It also launched a trivia question: What other parent/child pairs are there who have been directed by the same filmmaker but in separate movies? BlacK‘s star, John David Washington, is the son of Denzel, who’s starred in at least four different Spike Lee joints. My friends’ answers to this trivia question included a lot of examples where the director was in the same family as their cast members, or where a director directed himself and his offspring or parent, but these both feel like cheats to me.

3.5 stars from me.

Matt Jones’s Jonesin’ Crossword, “Times Squared” – Derek’s write-up

Jonesin’ 06/23/2020

Nice little theme today. Did this make you think of your times tables?

  • 17A [Credit for a newspaper story on a Magritte work?] PIPE BYLINE 
  • 63A [Off-road cycling lane?] BIKE BYPATH 
  • 11D [Oates’s attempt to go solo?] HALL BYPASS 
  • 27D [Stretchy thing from the past?] LONG BYGONE 

It looks like we have four common words that all start with BY- and we clue it in a punny was like we were multiplying. Maybe a slight bit quirky, but easily solvable. My time here was well under 4 minutes, so not a difficult puzzle, although solving in Black Ink is quicker than in Across Lite. I prefer Across Lite, though, because the letters are bigger and I am getting old! Can you enlarge the grid in Black Ink? If so, please let me know! 4.3 stars this week.

A few more things:

  • 15A [Patty and Selma’s brother-in-law] HOMER – I hear these two used to be chainsmokers, but now that is frowned upon on TV, so they don’t anymore.  I don’t really watch The Simpsons much, mainly because it clashes with Sunday Night Football!
  • 21A [Robotic “Doctor Who” nemesis] DALEK – Nerd alert!
  • 40A [One of the Rat Pack] SAMMY – I finally saw both versions of Oceans Eleven. The older one was fair at best; the newer one much better.
  • 64A [Drummer Krupa] GENE – This might be the OPCRotW. I thought he was in some rock band, but he was a pioneering drummer from the big band era. Read about him here.
  • 10D [2011 Oscar winner for Best Picture] THE ARTIST – Another movie to watch! In my case, again!
  • 32D [New Orleans sandwich, informally] PO’BOY – This is making me hungry …
  • 53D [Visible gas] VAPOR – Man, if only the coronavirus was VISIBLE. This world would be very different. But then if we could see all the floaties in the air, we would probably be disgusted beyond belief!

I will stop here! Almost to 1,000! This is #994.

Warren Houck’s LA Times crossword – Derek’s write-up

LAT 06/23/2020

This is another byline in the LAT I am not as familiar with as some others. Nice puzzle, though! The “ayes” (I’s!) have it!

  • 13A [*Many an Iraqi Muslim] SHIITE
  • 18A [*From the 50th state] HAWAIIAN
  • 23A [*City buried by Vesuvius’ eruption] POMPEII
  • 40A [*Rolling to the terminal] TAXIING
  • 55A [*Berra’s “No one goes there anymore. It’s too crowded,” e.g.] YOGIISM 
  • 60A [*Asian mushroom] SHIITAKE
  • 68A [“Yes, captain” … and a phonetic hint to the answers to starred clues] AYE-AYE!

Look at all those theme answers! I think I like 55A the best! What other double I words are there, other than the Nintendo WII? I can’t think of anymore off the top of my head, but this puzzle has most of them! A solid 4.7 stars for a stellar job!

More stuff:

  • 17A [Great new talent] PHENOM – I heard this term in connection with a young cricket player years ago, and I remember thinking “Wow. It’s the same all over the world!”
  • 9D [Table showing teams’ won-lost records] STANDINGS – Lots of sports references in this puzzle … and ironically I haven’t seen many STANDINGS change in the leagues that would have normally been playing by now!
  • 11D [Onion bagel alternative] BIALY – Is this a NY thing, because I don’t usually see these here in Indiana. Unless I am looking in the wrong place!
  • 24D [City about 65 miles west of Daytona Beach] OCALA – Let’s all go to Florida! Ok, maybe not …
  • 49D [Polynesian Disney princess] MOANA – Another movie to watch!
  • 33D [Sports page datum] STATISTIC – I said there were a lot of sports references in this puzzle! But that is fine with me, a professed sports fan.
  • 56D [Overcast colors, in London] GREYS – This could have been clued in another, shall we say, less-sensitive way, but I think the British spelling partially helps here!

Have a safe and healthy week!

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11 Responses to Tuesday, June 23, 2020

  1. Huda says:

    NYT: I still remember my first year as grad student/immigrant, talking to my mentor about a stubborn research problem. He said: “Can we leapfrog it?”. I sat there silently. He said: “Yeah, it will require some real thinking”. And all I was thinking was : “What’s leapfrog? And what does it have to do with this?”
    Sometimes I wonder how many times I came across like a total idiot, thanks to idioms…

  2. e.a. says:

    or julia stiles…

  3. Ty Kaplan says:

    I loved today’s puzzle and yesterday’s. I just started a YouTube series of real time crossword solves and reviews. I’d love to get feedback from this community!

    Here’s today’s: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOiszYV4jkg

  4. Paul H says:

    Amy, I enjoyed the NYT write up this morning, especially because I spent my college years in Northfield as well, but on the other side of town.

  5. John N says:

    Re: stiles. As a Brit, I always welcome any clues that fall in to the category of easy for me, more obscure for Americans, as they are far outnumbered by US specific clues which require me to dredge my memory from when I lived there. And of course, stiles are a great technology – good to see them get their due!

  6. JohnH says:

    For a long time the WSJ fill was so familiar that it felt downright formulaic, like a week of past puzzles chopped up, tossed in the air, and reassembled. (That although DIG SITE for “dig” feels redundant and not idiomatic.) But then it didn’t help that it ended with, for me, needless obscurity. This puzzle would have gained from some work.

    I at first had ATM rather than STP for “Petty cash supplier” and kept staring wondering what that was about. Eventually I looked it up. (Never heard of him.) And I never came up with a guess for JESS crossing JENGA. There were too many plausible letters. Ugh.

    Routine theme. Tempting also to object that while, true, all four are lights or sources of light, it’s pretty capacious a thought, and one might want to write “starlight” and “lamplight” but not “beamlight” or “flamelight.”

  7. Billy Boy says:

    NYT 19A and 23A?

    Funny, all I can see in my future is a bag with Chester on it, so yeah, also me

  8. Christopher Smith says:

    Don’t see a posting for yesterday’s LA Times but there was an email in The Guardian today chortling that ARSENAL was clued as “Premier League powerhouse.” It’s great that these puzzles are branching out into soccer but the editors need to keep their knowledge up to date.

  9. marciem says:

    Jonesin’… I was hoping for some help with 52 Across: one of 30, for short = Nov.

    If this is a reference to “30 days hath November …etc”, I’m not seeing how it works.

Comments are closed.