Sunday, March 24, 2019

LAT 6:08(Jenni) 

 


NYT 16:41 w/1 error (Jim P) 

 


WaPo 14:11 (Jim Q) 

 


Universal 4:04 (Jim Q) 

 


Universal (Sunday) 20:01 (Vic) 

 


Trenton Charlson’s New York Times crossword, “Code Switching” — Jim P’s review

Jim P. here again subbing for Amy.

That old favorite, the NATO PHONETIC ALPHABET, makes its appearance once again for our enjoyment. The theme takes well-known phrases that include a word that is a homophone for a letter (like “sea” or “why”), and replaces that word with the corresponding word in the PHONETIC ALPHABET. Got it? Check it out.

NYT – Sun. 3.24.19 – “Code Switching” by Trenton Charlson

  • 22a [*Ballroom dancing event for Beantown residents?BOSTON TANGO PARTY. Boston Tea Party. “Tea” sounds like the letter T, and T is of course TANGO.
  • 33a [*Annoying member of a New York baseball team?] YANKEE BOTHER. Why bother?
  • 47a [*Wager in which the winner gets the loser’s pants and jersey?UNIFORM BET. “You bet!”
  • 67a [*Duo ruling a kingdom on Take Your Daughter to Work Day?THE PRINCESS AND THE PAPA. The Princess and the Pea.
  • 85a [*Exclamation after a performance of “Every Breath You Take”?] “BRAVO STING!” Bee sting.
  • 100a [*Amusement park named after a “Peanuts” boy?] CHARLIE WORLD. Sea World.

I found this to be an enjoyable theme and it definitely helped me towards the bottom once I had grokked it. None of these caused me to burst out laughing, to be sure, but I felt they worked well enough, with YANKEE BOTHER being the most awkward of the lot.

Entries like HORAEALIENEE, and TILTS AT may be necessary evils at times, but there are a lot of goodies here. I’m liking LOTHARIO, SERRANO, and I’m eyeing that JAKARTA/JUJITSU crossing at the J. Good stuff. SISYPHUS and PROSPERO make a good symmetrical pairing, though I don’t know much about GALATEA [Pygmalion’s beloved]. The E there was my one error; I wanted an I, because I thought the crossing [They might hold derbies] was trying to spell “hatteries”, if that’s even a word. (Huh! Whaddya know. It is!) But HAT TREES makes a better answer to that tricksy clue.

Speaking of clues, I liked these:

  • 19a [One who didn’t even show?]. ALSO-RAN.
  • 77a [Like chewing gum in Singapore or wearing blue jeans in North Korea (seriously!)]. OUTLAWED. And in America, Lise just informed us yesterday in the comments that lemonade stands are no longer OUTLAWED in Texas. Who knew?! I’m sure there are other crazy local laws. Do you know of any where you live?
  • 119a [Tireless racer]. SLED. Cute.
  • 34d [Falls for someone who’s already married?]. NIAGARA. Ha! I see what you did there.

Overall, a solid Sunday outing that doesn’t get bogged down. 3.9 stars.

Evan Birnholz’s Washington Post crossword, “Life Cycle” – Jim Q’s writeup

No sense in waiting five more years for the 2024 cicada season when the puzzle is ripe now*!  *Seems like one type of cicada is due to arrive in 2021, but I’m not going down the research rabbit hole…

THEME: Cicadas!  (CICADA is featured in a circle pattern six times throughout the puzzle.)

THEME ANSWERS:

  • 3D [Cycle for a species of this puzzle’s featured creature]

    WaPo crossword solution * 3 24 19 * “Life Cycle” * Birnholz

    SEVENTEEN YEARS. One year shy of voting age. Damned cicadas are never gonna get equal representation.

  • 55D [Sphecius speciosus wasps, to this puzzle’s featured creature] NATURAL ENEMIES. I’m more entertained by the term Sphecius speciosus than the answer itself! My friend is looking for baby name suggestions. Think I just found a winner.
  • 69A [Phrase about spreading sickness (and, more literally, this puzzle’s circled squares)] THERE’S A BUG GOING AROUND. What a great grid-spanner for this puzzle.

Dated, but funny.

 

Seems light on theme? I assure you it’s not! It’s a very tricky feat to pull off the words-in-a-circle theme. It puts a helluva lot of restriction on the grid- and… AND… there’s an extra layer of elegance as the word CICADA rotates one letter counter-clockwise in each progression. Also, the two long down theme answers cross the central entry- so there’s another level of construction challenge.

I’m willing to make a bet (albeit a small one- five bucks perhaps?) that Evan initially wanted to use different types of bugs rather than sticking solely to the cicada, but hit some walls. While it would’ve been fun uncovering some other critters, you can’t complain about the help you get with the fill once you grok the idea!

FUN STUFF:

  • 12D [Gnaw-ty creature?] RODENT. (Insert rim-shot here.)
  • 66D [Covered in filth] GUNKY. I had FUNKY. But alas, FOETHE had nothing to do with inspiring “Faustian bargain.”
  • 9A [Pizza chain that’s an anagram of 16 Down] SBARRO / ARBORS. Nice cross reference!
  • 20A [Term for the comparison between the large number of replies to the much smaller number of likes and retweets a tweet gets, on Twitter] RATIO. The ratio for the number of letters in the clue to the number of letters in the answer is 109:5. Hilarious. Gordon-esque style clue.
  • 43A [Rear end in a British auto?] ARSE. Heh heh.

VIDEO GAME CLUE OF THE WEEK:

  • 103A [Medium for many 1990s PC games] CD-ROM.

Here’s to hoping everyone at the ACPT is raising a glass right now! (and I’m not talking about the one on NPR)

4 Stars from me.

Doug Peterson’s Universal crossword, “Upwardly Mobile” – Jim Q’s writeup

A reminder that’s it’s time for me to start going to the gym to shed the winter coat I’ve built up.

THEME: The word GYM is ascending in four of the down answers.

THEME ANSWERS:

  • Universal crossword solution * 3 24 19 * “Upwardly Mobile” * Peterson

    3D [2014 One Direction song] STEAL MY GIRL. Unfamiliar with the song, but sounds like a boy band title if there ever was one.

  • 36D [Weapon in old gangster films] TOMMY GUN.
  • 20D [Debbie Downer’s partner?] GLOOMY GUS.
  • 9D [“The Queen of Christian Pop”] AMY GRANT.
  • 25D [Facility for indoor scaling, and what you’ll find in 3-, 9-, 20- and 36-Down] CLIMBING GYM.

Simple, consistent theme with mostly crisp fill. Learned BALMORAL along the way and briefly wondered what BOLOGNA on top of CRONUTS would taste like. I’m guessing that’s not gonna take off as the next big thing in food truck treats (unless, perhaps, they’re HONEYED).

Thought the revealer would be CLIMBING WALL and briefly scanned the themers to see if any famous walls were ascending before changing course.

Thanks for this one!

3.8 stars.

 

Christopher Adams and George Barany’s Universal Crossword, “End of the Line”—Judge Vic’s write-up

Christopher Adams and George Barany’s Universal Crossword 3/24/19 solution

Prof George joins Christopher Adams for “End of the Line,” a puzzle during which 20 minutes seemed like an eternity to me. And now I am struggling with the theme. That’s a euphemism for not finding it at all.

23a *Country club? (note each starred answer’s last word) GENERAL ASSEMBLY–(I know, the answers are not starred, the clues are; but Universal’s puzzles are squeezed for space, and wording it this way saves space.) So …, 23a being a starred answer for present purposes, I am noting ASSEMBLY. I’m not fond of the clue-answer relationship here, especially the ?. The incongruity involved with club and a nation’s governing body doesn’t make me smile. So, I’m searching for another meaning of club and thinking that a general might be involved. (What was that club that Gen. Patton toted around with him called, a swagger stick?)
37a *National contest whose 2018 winning word was “koinonia” SPELLING BEE–Duly noted, the last word is BEE.
51a *Ithaca-based Ivy League team CORNELL BIG RED–Last word is RED.
78a *Fairy tale opener ONCE UPON A TIME–TIME.
94a *Rescue squad SEARCH PARTY–PARTY.
113a *Digress GO OFF ON A TANGENT–TANGENT.
3d *1605 conspiracy with an explosive name GUN POWDER PLOT–PLOT.
13d *California nickname, with “The” GOLDEN STATE–STATE.
55d *Nuisance PAIN IN THE NECK–NECK.
64d *Ancient drama group GREEK CHORUS–CHORUS.

I’ve noted the last word in each answer to the starred clues. Now, what do I have? BEE RED TIME PARTY TANGENT PLOT STATE NECK CHORUS.

End of the line? Country club? General assembly? You know what? I’m gonna sleep on this. Good night.

Awake now, hours later, next morning, I’ve decided there is no help to be found in the clue/answer combo at 23a. There is no general. There is no club. That leaves me with a title: “End of the Line.” A couple puzzles back, end was specifically used to refer to the last word of starred answers, the one farthest right. So, … THE LINE ASSEMBLY? THE LINE BEE? Aha! I see it, in reverse, sorta, kinda. We need to move key words to the oxymoronic front end of LINE, that is to the left! ASSEMBLY LINE, BEE LINE, RED LINE, TIME LINE, etc.

I will leave it to you, Gentle Solver, to decide whether the title is apt. Would the title “Front Line?” have worked?

First, let’s deal with PWNING. I’d never seen or heard of this word before, but hey! Pwn is in the book, so to speak. So, to George and Chris, I tip my hat for this first-timer.

Other fill of note includes CHOREO, PANORAMA, SEE ALSO, EAT IT UP, J-DATE, U.S. BANK, TEASPOON, PALE ALES, DRUM UP, ALLOW IN, IGNOMINY. Some of this grid’s fill I really like. Some, not so much.

And there are 34 three-letter words, including ING, ORS, RPG, MGM,  KOS, LTR, and AFB. Not including EFTS, ATVS, SOYSA FIT or EGG PAN, which I don’t think I’ve ever heard said or read, though it was in puzzles in 2014 and 2017–geez, it gets 300,000 Google hits.

Twenty minutes is reasonably fast for me, so I did not have a hard time with this puzzle, but wound up a bit ambivalent. What do you think?

2.5 stars.

Jason Mueller’s LA Times crossword, “Pollination” – Jenni’s write-up

I thought I had this theme all figured out and was rolling my eyes at it just a bit, and then I found the revealer for the extra dimension. No more eye rolls.

Each theme answer (helpfully asterisked) is a phrase or name that contains a flower.

  • 23a [*Henry James heroine] is DAISY MILLER.
  • 29a [*Hip-hop artist with the 2014 #1 hit “Fancy”] is IGGY AZALEA.
  • 42a [*Youngest NBA player to win the MVP] is DERRICK ROSE.
  • 67a [*Bashful one] is a SHRINKING VIOLET.
  • 93a [*”Under the Net” novelist] is IRIS MURDOCH.
  • 109a [*Looney Tunes girlfriend] is PETUNIA PIG.
  • 117a [*Add unneeded ornamentation] is GILD THE LILY.

The revealer is at 114a [Creature found atop the apt part of each answer to a starred clue]: BEE. Sure enough, there’s a BEE above the flower of each theme answer. Very nice!

That’s a lot of theme material, even for a Sunday-sized grid which means we end up with some icky and tired fill: ESTHINSCESEKEAERE, EISLGE. I suspect all the proper names in the themers may be off-putting to some solvers. I knew almost all of them and the rest were inferable from crossings and from the theme. I’ve never heard of DERRICK ROSE but I knew it had to be a flower. I enjoyed the puzzle overall and really liked the theme.

A few other things:

  • 1a [“Behind the __ I’ll convey myself”: Polonius] was a gimme for me (English majors FTW). ARRAS was an Elizabethan word for curtain.
  • If you only knew about EMTs from crosswords, you might not realize that they do a lot of things besides CPR.
  • 22d [Reason to shake] had me wondering about various causes of chills or tremors. Nope. It’s DEAL – the “shake” is a handshake.
  • 37a [“Cold one over here, please”] is BEER ME. Chortle.
  • I could not figure out what AS IP meant at 72d. I filled it in from crossings. The clue is [Take __ of: taste] which means it’s A SIP. Aha. Not my favorite kind of entry.

What I didn’t know before I did this puzzle: I’ve never heard of the band EMF.

Crossword Coincidences department: this is the second time in as many days that I’ve run into SET PIECES in a grid, clued each time as [Key movie scenes] or something very similar.

I leave you with one of my favorite movie musical numbers, referenced in 43d:

This entry was posted in Daily Puzzles and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

9 Responses to Sunday, March 24, 2019

  1. Greg says:

    The Times puzzle was clever and entertaining. But isn’t “whiskey“ the NATO term for “W,” not “world”? Or did I miss something?

  2. pannonica says:

    WaPo: “I’m willing to make a bet … that Evan initially wanted to use different types of bugs rather than sticking solely to the cicada …”

    A bit of elegance is that CICADA (two consecutive palindromes) can be read either clockwise or counterclockwise around the loops.

    “12D [Gnaw-ty creature?] RODENT. (Insert rim-shot here.)”


    ©Nwsquirrelguy on Imgur

    “Seems like one type of cicada is due to arrive in 2021, but I’m not going down the research rabbit hole …”

    Best not to brood on it overmuch.

  3. John says:

    I still don’t understand “falls for someone who’s already married” = NIAGARA. I mean I get that it’s a pun on “falls”, but what does marriage have to do with it?

Comments are closed.