Wednesday, November 16, 2022

LAT 4:44 (Gareth) 

 


The New Yorker 4:43 (Amy) 

 


NYT 4:56* (Amy) 

 


WSJ untimed (Jim P) 

 


Universal untimed (pannonica) 

 


USA Today 6:29 (Emily) 

 


AVCX tk (Rebecca) 

 


Kate Chin Park & Will Nediger’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Coarse Catalog”—Jim P’s review

Theme: ROUGH / AROUND THE / EDGES (31a, [With 38- and 49-Across, unrefined, and a hint to what can precede this puzzle’s border words]). Each of the ten words along the edge of the puzzle can be preceded by “rough” to make a stand-alone phrase. Those 10 words in clockwise order are: PATCH, COPY, SEAS, STUFF, WEATHER, RIDER, IDEA, SPOT, NECKS, PASSAGE.

Wall St Journal crossword solution · “Coarse Catalog” · Kate Chin Park & Will Nediger · Wed., 11.16.22

Nice. I would not have expected you could find 10 words to follow the word “rough,” let alone make them fit symmetrically, so I’m impressed. I enjoyed the title as well.

“Edge” themes like this, usually have 12 words, but in this case two of the words are seven letters long resulting in a couple corners on the larger side. Throw in the three-part revealer and you have a hard-to-fill grid with a lot of constraints.

But the fill isn’t so rough as that. We have nice entries like PEA SOUP, NAUSEAM, and EURASIA. I did not know THE FLEA [Erotic poem by John Donne] but was intrigued to learn how to use an insect to try to convince someone to sleep with you. I did raise an eyebrow at AUSSI [Too, in Toulouse], but I think that was it.

Clue of note: 14a. [Cold burst]. ACHOO. This feels like it needs a question mark.

Impressive grid, especially given the amount of theme material. Four stars.

John Hawksley’s New York Times crossword–Amy’s recap

NY Times crossword solution, 11 16 22, no. 1116

The asterisk on my solving time is because I used the NYT’s web solver and the cursor kept not doing what I expected, so I ended up typing things in the wrong squares. It slows ya down, I say!

Theme is uncommon words clued by what they mean, with a mention of what they don’t mean:

  • 17a. [Obsession with being published … NOT a flurry of transcription errors], TYPOMANIA. I have never heard of this word.
  • 24a. [Lover of teddy bears … NOT a devotee of polar regions], ARCTOPHILE. The brown bear is Ursus arctos. Teddy bears?? Again, not a word I knew existed.
  • 35a. [Fear of everything … NOT a fear of trousers], PANTOPHOBIA. Hey! I’ve seen this word before. It bears noting that those long lists of phobia names you might encounter online often include a lot of words you’ll never have cause to use. As Wikipedia notes, “Many -phobia lists circulate on the Internet, with words collected from indiscriminate sources, often copying each other. … Such practice is known as content spamming and is used to attract search engines..”
  • 50a. [Chews … NOT elaborates condescendingly to a female], MANDUCATES. Sounds like man + (e)ducates. I’m gonna call BS on this word, as it’s in dictionaries but I have never seen it before. And I used to be a dental editor! Tooth, mouth, and jaw words are right in my wheelhouse.
  • 59a. [Science of measurement … NOT the study of urban areas], METROLOGY. As in the study of metering things. So that’s two of five themers I’d ever encountered before.

I’d like this theme a lot more if the words were all actually useful ones to know. Who’s gonna use a word other than chews or masticates, when people will understand what you’re saying with those but look at you blankly if you use manducates? I’d love to hear your suggestions of more familiar words that sound like they mean something entirely different.

Fave fill: PAWNSHOP, CHALAMET, ABU DHABI. Didn’t know the term SIT SKI, though I have seen that adaptive sports equipment (a single ski with a seat attached to it, enabling paraplegics and others to hit the slopes). My cousin’s son, who has cerebral palsy, has competed in sled hockey. I love that there’s so many more adaptive sports on offer these days! Unfave fill: Feel like it’s been a while since ENIAC and OSS reared their old heads.

3.25 stars from me.

Erik Agard’s New Yorker crossword–Amy’s recap

New Yorker crossword solution, 11/16/22 – Agard

Lots to like in this 70-worder. Fave fill: CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR, MORTAL ENEMIES, the ECLAIR/CREPES snack, NOT FOR NOTHING, “I HATE EVERYTHING,” DOVETAILS, PROBLEMATIC FAVE, BLUSTERY (the gales of November came early), and a Jeopardy! SIGNALING DEVICE (do other game shows use this term?).

Did not know: 35a. [Protagonist of Octavia E. Butler’s Parable series], LAUREN OLAMINA. I don’t know that my local library carried her books during my sci-fi years in the late 1970s to early 1980s, when her books were pretty new. And I haven’t read a sci-fi novel in quite a few years now. I hear great things about Butler’s work, though! And N.K. Jemisin more recently. Also didn’t know poet ANNE Spencer who crosses LAUREN here, but LAUREL/ALNE sure looked unlikely. Every other LAUREN OLAMINA crossing was even more straightforward.

Lots of fresh and interesting clues throughout (but not super-tricky, this being an easier Wednesday puzzle that isn’t looking to stymie). And yes, I see FELT and FEELS, but don’t consider it a dupe since FELT is clued as the fabric whose etymology is unrelated to the verb.

Four stars from me.

Bart Gold’s Universal crossword, “Mixtape” — pannonica’s write-up

Universal • 11/16/22 • Wed • “Mixtape” • Gold • solution • 20221116

Don’t know if it was because I was distracted, but it took me a few beats to understand the theme. I’ve made it easier by circling the relevant squares in the grid.

  • 17a. [*Line 1 on this puzzle’s mixtape label: “Say So” / “Fever” (Hint: Note the word scrambled in each starred clue’s answer)] DOJA CAT PEGGY LEE.  So I was looking for one of those four words to be scrambled. I believe that if the hint had been phrased “note the scrambled word hidden in each …” the recognition would have been easier.
  • 28a. [*Line 2: “Hey Ya” / “Last Kiss”] OUTKAST PEARL JAM.
  • 45a. [*Line 3: “Royals” / “Hit Me With Your Best Shot”] LORDE PAT BENETAR.
  • 56a. [*Line 4: “Heat of the Moment” / “West End Girls”] ASIA PET SHOP BOYS.

In each instance, the mixed TAPE (a different permutation each time) straddles the two artists’ names.

You know what, it’s already the afternoon and I have a headache, so I’m going to bow out of the write-up prematurely. This is a good theme with a solid title, but to reiterate, it could have been better served by a slightly different revealer hint.

Chandi Deitmer’s LA Times crossword – Gareth’s summary

LA Times
221116

Chandi Deitmer’s puzzle theme riffs on [Annual Discovery Channel programming event that could feature the shows in the answers to the starred clues?], SHARKWEEK. Is this still actually a big deal? I’m so far removed from television these days I couldn’t honestly tell you. Thee puzzle has three answers whose first parts fit the blank “___ SHARK” for well-known types of shark. If it was just that, it’d be a fairly loosely defined theme, but all the answers are also TV shows, so it’s kind of two themes in one? Any good shows that begin with CARPET, WHALE or GOBLIN?

  • [*Netflix documentary series about a controversial zookeeper], TIGERKING
  • [*Showtime medical drama starring Edie Falco], NURSEJACKIE
  • [*USA series about corporate crime], WHITECOLLAR
  • [Annual Discovery Channel programming event that could feature the shows in the answers to the starred clues?], SHARKWEEK

Fast five:

  • [Structure made of snow or blankets], FORT. I like the evocative non-martial clue for this one.
  • [Husky hello], ARF. Feel like ARF is more the sound of, as Eddie Izzard calls them, small yapper-type dogs rather than huskies.
  • [Orange skin that doesn’t peel?], FAKETAN. That clue went a long way for its “orange skin” misdirect!
  • [Boston-based sportswear giant], REEBOK. Always thought they were UK?
  • [Key part of a block party?], LEGOSET. People have lego parties? Sounds exorbitant!

Gareth

Ada Nicolle’s USA Today Crossword, “Updates” — Emily’s write-up

Super smooth solve for me and almost my fastest time yet!

Completed USA Today crossword for Wednesday November 16, 2022

USA Today, November 16 2022, “Updates” by Ada Nicolle

Theme: the word “date” is spelled in reverse in each themer in the downs, so they all go “up” (sneaky title hint!)

Themers:

  • 3d. [Fond French phrase], JETADORE
  • 7d. [Person who might buy gifts off of someone’s wishlist without taking credit for it], SECRETADMIRER
  • 17d. [Info for a delivery driver], STREETADDRESS
  • 35d. [File information such as author and size], METADATA

JETADORE might have been easier for solvers who knew even a little French but with themers in the downs, I had several crossings by the time I go to it. SECRETADMIRER had solid cluing though I thought of “Santa” and “shopper” first. STREETADDRESS is necessary for getting what you ordered and great had a clue! METADATA is crucial for many aspects of life but usually unknown or in unconsidered by most and any errors in it or if it’s lacking/missing cause issues (and the main part of my librarian job!). A fun bonus—the first and forth (two outer) themers while the second and third (two inner) have the same pattern for the theme. Impressive!

Also, h/t to Sally for her explanation of the theme, as I wasn’t seeing it today.

Favorite fill: METADATA, SKIN, MURMURS, and WHET

Stumpers: WHOSWE (cluing didn’t quite get me there so needed a couple crossings), JETADORE (needed crossings but they were almost all fair), and AUNTS (read the clue three times then it clicked)

Love Ada’s puzzles and hope to see more here!

4.75 stars

~Emily

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11 Responses to Wednesday, November 16, 2022

  1. Martin says:

    Puzzles posted at my site should be back to normal. Pacific Gas and Electricity replaced a pole, which had me down all day. It was a long, cold day.

    • sanfranman59 says:

      Thank you, Martin, for being so steadfast in your devotion to our hobby. I’m glad to hear that you’ve got your power back and are warm again.

  2. dkbvt says:

    Funny- my 7-year-old daughter has the NYT 19-A nickname, and is very happy with it. I never really thought of it as gendered, just another word for tyke or something.

    • huda says:

      I think there’s a tendency to associate “O” endings with male, maybe because of romance languages using O vs A to indicate gender. But then we use “kiddo” in a non-gendered way. I think BUCKO sounds like a cool girl!

      • pannonica says:

        Free associating a little here, but a kid is a young goat, either male or female, while a buck is a male deer. And there’s also the common phrase young buck(s) to refer to men.

  3. Dallas says:

    Arctophile is a fun one… the word “arctic” literally comes from the word for bear. I’ve seen it explained as “under the northern constellation the bear” and also “the place with bears”. Then Antarctic is the opposite of the place with bears :-)

  4. Guilherme says:

    Is it just me or NYT Wednesdays have been considerably easier than Tuesdays lately?

    • JohnH says:

      For me, what with the theme entries being unfamiliar to me and the etymology not compelling either suggested meaning, it was at least a Thursday. That and unfamiliar BUCKO and CHALAMET, the latter slowing my getting one of the themers, where I first guessed an OMNI- prefix for all.

      I love vocabulary building and tough words, and this is a fine construction, but somehow the words didn’t resonate with me. As Amy said, this once I’ll never use any of them.

    • sanfranman59 says:

      Not so for me (at least based on my solve times). I found this one to be considerably more difficult than yesterday’s puzzle (7:22 solve time vs 4:08). That 4:08 is one of my better Tuesday solve times in the 13+ years I’ve been recording my times.

  5. JohnH says:

    Mixed feelings about TNY. Good for him in showing that he could tone down his customary obscurity a bit for a Wednesday. I didn’t know the sci-fi clue or Spencer either, so the middle was my last to fall, but it was guessible, as Amy said. For me it also required learning a new word, POUF, which looked rather weird, but then anyone who’d name something “poof” would be crazier.

    I also got stuck for a long time on EE.UU. Eventually I just confirmed the fill by searching for the clue, an unfamiliar shorthand. (“Part of” was suitably deceptive as well.)

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