Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Jonesin' 6:22 (Erin) 

 


LAT tk (Jenni) 

 


NYT unsolved (Amy) 

 


The New Yorker untimed (pannonica) 

 


Universal untimed (Matt F) 

 


USA Today tk (Sophia) 

 


Xword Nation untimed (Ade) 

 


WSJ untimed (Jim) 

 


Matt Jones’s Jonesin’ Crossword, “Count the Rings” — while you’re over there. – Erin’s write-up

Jonesin' solution 8/6/24

Jonesin’ solution 8/6/24

Hello lovelies! We have a timely Jonesin’ puzzle this week celebrating the Olympic Games in Paris. The circled letters in each theme entry spell the numbers one through five in French.

  • 17a. [King,Waters, or Johnson, e.g.] BLUESMAN (UN)
  • 24a. [1990s burgers considered one of the most expensive product flops ever] ARCH DELUXES (DEUX)
  • 36a. [Bar offer] NEXT ROUND IS ON ME (TROIS)
  • 47a. [The fruit it bears is olive-sized and orange-colored] KUMQUAT TREE (QUATRE)
  • 59a. [Skincare brand and subsidiary of Estée Lauder] CLINIQUE (CINQ)

Other things:

  • 10d. [Edible kelp in Japanese and Korean cuisine] KONBU. Konbu, or kombu, or dasima, is edible if cooked a ton. It is generally used to flavor other foods, especially as part of a base broth.
  • 49d. [Knees-to-chest diving positions] TUCKS. Timely clue in this Olympic-themed grid.
  • 50d. [Former spicy chip brand] PAQUI. The super spicy chips included Carolina Reaper, Scorpion, and Sichuan pepper powders and challenged adults to eat one chip, then eat or drink nothing after for up to an hour. The chips were discontinued after a teenager with cardiomyopathy passed away after taking the challenge.

Until next week!

Elizabeth C. Gorski’s Crsswrd Nation puzzle (Week 689), Edgy and Veggie”—Ade’s take

Crossword Nation puzzle solution, Week 689: “Edgy and Veggie”

Hello there, everyone! I hope all of you are doing well today and that you’re all in the Olympic spirit! Well, I’m sure all the triathletes who had to swim in the Seine the other day are hoping that the Olympic spirit doesn’t come with an illness!

Clearly, our constructor didn’t listen to her elders when they told her to not play with her veggies, as today’s puzzle clearly is a case of that. In this case, however, the names of veggies are used as substitutes for words in common phrases to create puns!

      • SWISS ARMY CHIVES (17A: [Veggie-inspired multi-purpose baked potato garnishes?])
      • PEAS AND QUIET (27A: [Motto of a library that specializes in veggie research?])
      • YOU’VE GOT KALE (45A: [Plant-based remake of a Hanks/Ryan rom-com?])
      • GOURD OF TRUSTEES (59A: [Policy-making overseers at a squash club?])

It’s definitely fair season across the country, so PAVILIONS was nice and timely even though, as I’m thinking about it now, I don’t think I’m going to make it to any fair at any point this summer (11D: [World’s fair structures]). Oh, the days of the TV/VCR, when owning that seemed like you were living large, especially in college (41D: [’90s den combo (before TiVo)]). Definitely still own a whole lot of old VHS tapes that are at the family house, and I’m sure most of them have old sports games and episodes of The Simpsons and In Living Color

“Sports will make you smarter” moment of the day: ORSER (1D: [1987 world figure skating champ Orser]) – Time to talk Winter Olympics for a little bit! Not only was Orser the 1987 world champion, but he also finished as a two-time silver medalist in the Winter Olympics. In both 1984 and 1988, Orser finished second behind Americans, Scott Hamilton in 1984 in Sarajevo and Brian Boitano (anyone else remember the “Battle of the Brians”?) in 1988 in Calgary. But there was much more Olympic glory to come for Orser, as he coached Olympic champions in three successive Winter Olympics: Yuna Kim in 2010 and Yuzuru Hanyu in 2014 and 2018.

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

Mike Shenk’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Readout”—Jim’s review

Sometimes I’m able to make a guess at what the theme revealer will be. Today’s guess: OPEN BOOK. Bzzt! Close, but wrong. The revealer is BOOKENDS (62a, [Volume supporters, and a hint to the circled letters]). Said circled letters are at the ends of familiar phrases and spell out a synonym of “book.”

Wall St Journal crossword solution · “Readout” · Mike Shenk · Tue., 8.6.24

  • 17a. House sharing a wall with a neighboring house] TOWNHOME. Tome.
  • 26a. Hospital room] DISPENSARY. Diary.
  • 39a. Setting for zero-G experiments] SPACE LABORATORY. Story.
  • 51a. Volume] NOISE LEVEL. Novel.

No complaints about the theme although SPACE LABORATORY is a mouthful that no one would ever use.

Liked NEWTONIAN, LOVE SONGS, and ONCE MORE and loved DUMB IDEA. The short and mid-range fill flowed smoothly enough as well, although that CAHN/ECO/A CUP section might be troublesome for some solvers.

Clue of note: 16a. [Resting place of King Arthur]. AVALON. This is probably the most commonly-used cluing angle for this name, others being the Toyota sedan and singer Frankie. But I’m partial to the only city on L.A.’s Catalina Island, but I suspect that may not be widely known outside the Southern California area.

3.5 stars.

Dani Raymon’s New York Times crossword–answer grid

NY Times crossword solution, 8/6/24 – no. 0806

Theme is phrases starting with “AS.”

I’m too wiped out from a medical procedure today to review the puzzle, but perhaps someone else in Team Fiend will pop in with some feedback.

Brooke Husic’s New Yorker crossword — pannonica’s write-up

New Yorker • 8/6/24 • Tue • Husic • solution • 20240806

Hard to tell where this one falls on the challenging scale, because I was eating breakfast during my solve. My uncalibrated sense is that was a little more difficult than recent Tuesdays.

  • 14a [Large, edible Amazonian seeds] BRAZIL NUTS. I’m so primed to say açaí when registering edible and Amazonian.
  • 16a [ __ saltado (Peruvian stir-fry)] LOMO. My first try was LIMA.
  • 21a [Country that’s home to the Nubian pyramids] SUDAN, not EGYPT.
  • 22a [Marsh bird with “Virginia” and “king” species] RAIL. I know them as shore birds, but Wikipedia says marshes are their ideal habitat.
  • 26a [Angora’s cry] BLEAT. The goat kind.
  • 28a [Cheese known as queso de bola in the Philippines] EDAM. This is specifically mentioned on the Wikipedia page.
  • 31a [Classification for a person whose volatility evokes Animal or Cookie Monster] CHAOS MUPPET. I’ve heard of chaos agents, but this is new to me. I like it.
  • 35a [2022 Noah Kahan song whose title refers to the bleak transitional period between fall and winter] STICK SEASON. Also new to me. Listened, didn’t grab me. So here’s this instead, which I find marginally more palatable:
    54a
  • 54a [Intimate eye contact] SOUL GAZING. Also new to me. Meh.
  • 56a [Sequence that provides coded instructions for making a protein] GENE. Straight definition.
  • 57a [Nickname for a raccoon] TRASH PANDA. Not new to me, maybe a little cute, but passive-aggressively disparaging nonetheless.
  • 59a [Frequent sound at the Spanish festival La Tomatina] SPLAT. This is the one where the whole town becomes a tomato food fight.
  • 3d [Club promoter, at times] CADDIE. Nice.
  • Bunch of unusual shortish names in the grid: sculptor Sarah SZE (4d), drag performer GIA Gunn (37a), supermodel ADUT Akech (53a), actress Naomi ACKIE (32d).
  • 10d [A great one might be described as “no-skip”] ALBUM. Zero filler.
  • 11d [Initial sketch, perhaps] COLD OPEN. Deft misdirection.
  • 46d [Oklahoma City that’s home to the Greenwood Rising history center] TULSA. Greenwood was dubbed the ‘Black Wall Street’ and was the site of a 1921 massacre.
  • 47d [Number associated with good luck, in Chinese culture] EIGHT. Thinking of the author Jennifer 8 Lee.

A strong, well-connected grid. Midlength stacks in the northwest/southeast, big triple-stack across the center, transected by a vertical grid-spanning entry, BUSINESS AS USUAL (7d).

Drew Schmenner’s Universal Crossword, “You’re So Handy!” — Matt F’s Review

Universal Solution 08.06.2024

Time to get to work! Let’s see if we can put together the pieces of this puzzle based on the revealer:

  • 56A: [Mechanic, e.g. … and when parsed differently, a description of [the theme]] = REPAIR PERSON

Each theme answer is an example of a RE-pair person, meaning their name contains a pair of RE’s.

  • 20A: [Redheaded country music icon] = REBA MCENTIRE
  • 31A: [Nine Inch Nails’ lead singer] = TRENT REZNOR
  • 48A: [He danced with Ginger Rogers] = FRED ASTAIRE

This is a nice theme set. While solving I wondered what these names had to do with being “handy” (because of the title), and did not see the RE-RE pattern until the end. The names came easily, although I could see a potential hiccup in deciding between “I” or “Y” at the BRIAR/MCENTIRE intersection. The symmetrical placement of SWAT AT / TEAR AT made those partials stand out in a less-than-ideal way, and the isolated corners choked off the solving flow, but I really don’t have much to complain about overall. Drew did a nice job keeping the fill clean and gettable. It helped that these 3 people are very famous in the entertainment industry. Astaire is cemented in Hollywood history, McEntire was famous enough to star in her own sitcom in the early aughts, and Reznor is still producing music – most recently helping score the 2024 movie, Challengers. My favorite clue was 3D – [“Party at my CRIB” (pun on a onesie)].

Thank you for the puzzle, Drew! And thank you, David Steinberg, for the editorial touch.

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28 Responses to Tuesday, August 6, 2024

  1. ranman says:

    NYT—-feels like a puzzle I did in 1972…..oh but I was only 11 back then and not a “puzzler”….mebbe my mom did it and sent it down from heaven….? I was probably at the kitchen table and she was solving in pencil…..And on Wed not Tuesday but it’s really foggy….sorry.

  2. huda says:

    NYT: Hope you get some rest and feel better, Amy!

  3. Kell says:

    Specifically, NYT is “as + pronoun” phrases for every pronoun. Still not extremely interesting, but a bit tighter than it first appears.

    • Dallas says:

      I liked it! I especially like AS I LIVE AND BREATHE, a phrase I like to use from time to time…

  4. David L says:

    TNY was tougher for me than yesterday’s — DNF, in fact. I had CHAOSPUPPET, which gave me DPED at 29D, which didn’t mean anything to me, but as a non-social media user I figured it was one of many abbreviations I’m not familiar with.

    And I couldn’t complete the SW corner. No idea about ACKIE and ADUT. I should have been able to come up with FATES but my brain wouldn’t let go of ‘muses’ and ‘graces.’ And then I couldn’t see ATMFEE.

    The puzzle seemed choppy to me but maybe that’s just grumpiness on my part.

    • Gary R says:

      SW corner was the last part in for me. For some reason, it took me forever to come up with CITADEL. ACKIE and ADUT were unknown to me, but the crosses seemed reasonable.

      I liked a lot of the long fill, though CHAOS MUPPET was new to me and doesn’t do much for me. TRASH PANDA always makes me smile.

      • David L says:

        Yeah, the crosses were reasonable. But my brain was not firing on all cylinders this morning…

    • marciem says:

      The center crossings at Ackie, chaosmuppet and stickseason held me up the worst. We just had Camino de Santiago the other day, so the Camino in SW was a gimme.

      I was happy to see Hawaii represented with something other than Oahu or a kealoa :) . As a side note, yesterday’s TNY included a’a the lava, and last night on Jeopardy! it was one of the answers…’Basaltic lava consisting of one letter, repeated twice”. Guess who buzzed in first? ME! :D

    • JohnH says:

      I don’t know how to describe the difficulty of this one. It started downright easy in the NW, and the long central down entry seemed obvious. That gives lots of letters and easy access to the left-side start of the SE. But then the dread names kicked in, along with phrases new to me, and I was in deep trouble.

      Like Marci, I had the most difficulty in the center. The crosses sure didn’t seem reasonable to me. But guessing, rather like making up phrases out of nothing, eventually got me at least closer. Still, names like ADUT, ACKIE, and GIA were nowhere close to “what else could it be?” territory. More like implausible if you don’t already know them.

  5. Eric H says:

    NYT: I thought it was OK, if not exciting.

    By my count, the theme answers occupy 55 squares, which seems pretty high. I especially like the way AS I LIVE AND BREATHE spills through the grid without another theme answer interfering (though it is a pretty fusty statement; I can’t imagine even my own grandmother, who was born in the early 1900s, using it).

    I was somewhat surprised that this is Daniel Raymon’s 34th NYT puzzle, as I didn’t recognize his name. But it looks like most of his puzzles are in the part of the archives I have gotten to yet.

  6. marciem says:

    WSJ; Jim… very nice song “Avalon” by Roxy music, ok it’s 40+ years old , but music lasts longer than cars . Also another “Avalon”, by Al Jolsen and covered many times. Nat King Cole did a good version. Probably older than Frankie :D . Both songs referring to that lovely city on Catalina Island.

    • marciem says:

      oops, ok, on looking it up apparently Roxy Music was singing about Avalon/King Arthur. I always thought of Santa Catalina Island when I heard it….

    • PJ says:

      Here’s another from the 1920s – Avalon Blues by Mississippi John Hurt.
      I find it impossible to have ill feelings after listening to MJH.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lew1rkX6m8

      • marciem says:

        Love it! Reminds me of the great Robert Johnson.

      • pannonica says:

        Mississippi John Hurt has such a gentle manner. Those 1928 recordings are stellar.

      • Eric H says:

        Thanks for sharing that.

        I don’t know Mississippi John Hurt’s music, though I know the name. But pannonica’s “gentle” is the perfect word to describe that song, especially in comparison to someone like Robert Johnson, Howlin’ Wolf or Blind Willie Johnson (all of whom I enjoy).

  7. Eric H says:

    New Yorker: I wasn’t familiar with CHAOS MUPPET (despite being married to one) or STICK SEASON (despite having lived in Vermont as a grade-schooler), so the middle was a bit troublesome. It didn’t help that the end of BUSINESS AS USUAL made me try to force BUSINESS caSUAL in there, even though it didn’t make much sense with the clue.

    On the other hand, the biggest freaking TRASH PANDA I have ever seen tromped across my backyard the other evening, so that was a gimme.

    Overall, it seemed about as difficult as yesterday’s New Yorker. The fill is fine, but the clueing isn’t as amusing as I would prefer. On the other hand, the clueing wasn’t overly direct.

    • marciem says:

      “I wasn’t familiar with CHAOS MUPPET (despite being married to one)”… and from the little I know you, I’m guessing you’re an ‘order muppet’… opposites do attract :) . (I never heard of chaos and order muppets before this puzzle but apparently they’re a thing.)

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