Friday, August 9, 2024

LAT untimed (pannonica) 

 


NYT 5:30 (Amy) 

 


Universal 3:03 (Amy) 

 


USA Today tk (Darby) 

 


Hemant Mehta’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s recap

NY Times crossword solution, 8/8/24 – no. 0808

I hadn’t realized that the puzzle contained a narrative until I saw Hemant’s post on Bluesky (which is a kinder, gentler Twitter sans Nazis). He wrote, “Show off your 1-Across until you’re 27-Down and then you’ll 17-Across. And never 30-Down. (It’s impolite.)”

A little on the hard size compared to Shortz-edited Fridays, on the easy size compared to Fagliano Fridays.

Fave fill: INDIE BANDS, GO OUT ON TOP, KEEPS TIME (though the [Taps one’s foot, maybe] clue butts heads with FOOTLONGS), HOT MICS, “I MISSED YOU,” ALMOST DONE, BREATH MINTS (the clue, [Apt anagram of TINS BEAR THEM, minus an E], had me thinking of sardines), “LET ME EXPLAIN,” KINK-SHAME.

Three things:

  • 38a. [City once home to Black Wall Street], TULSA. If you haven’t heard about the racist massacre and conflagration that destroyed Black wealth there, read up.
  • With A-PLUSES atop B-TEAMS, I really wanted 30a to be C-SECTIONS.
  • 2d. [Wedding planning website, with “the”], KNOT. Hey! My son and daughter-in-law had a page on The Knot. The Internet makes wedding things so much simpler. Remember waiting for a little slip of paper in with the invitation or asking someone, “Where are they registered?” And then you had to go to the store like a sucker to access the registry and buy gifts, wrap them, and take them to the wedding? Now you just check out the registry online and click through to ship a gift. I digress!

Back to the Olympics. Four stars from me.

Ed Sessa’s Los Angeles Times crossword — pannonica’s write-up

LAT • 8/9/24 • Fri • Sessa • solution • 20240809

Took a minute to suss out the theme. What’s happened is that phrases beginning with voiceless postalveolar fricatives [ ʃ ] have been changed to voiceless alveolar fricatives [ s ].

  • 17a. [Principle behind “speak softly and carry a big stick”?] SUBTLE DIPLOMACY (shuttle diplomacy).
  • 31a. [Grumbler left holding the bag?] SOUR CADDIES (shower caddies).
  • 40a. [Some Lakota winter supplies?] SIOUX STORES (shoe stores).
  • 56a. [Item in a moth-infested closet?] SUIT FULL OF HOLES (shoot full of holes).

Sure, that’s fine.

  • 3d [Spice blends] RUBS. Not necessarily? I mean, you can have a monospice rub, right? But ultimately the clue is fine.
  • 27d [Not perfect] HUMAN. Riffing on “to err is humna”. [sic]
  • 33d [R&B’s Hill] DRU, as ZZ certainly wasn’t going in there.
  • 35d [Mini mover] GAS. The Cooper automobile. I first tried VAN here.
  • 48d [Min. fraction] PSEC, a picosecond, one-trillionth of a second.
  • 22a [Perambulates] WALKS.
  • 39a [Extinct New Zealand bird] MOA, Dinornis novaezealandiae. Like ‘dinosaur’ the dino- prefix means ‘terrible’ (= inspiring dread or awe), so it’s ‘terrible bird from New Zealand’.
  • 62a [“The Jellicle Ball” musical] CATS. There’s a new musical currently showing called “Cats: The Jellicle Ball“.

{curtain}

Elly Zupko’s Universal crossword, “Right Between the Eyes”—Amy’s recap

Universal crossword solution, 8/9/24 – “Right Between the Eyes”

Amy filling in for Jim.

I solved this easy crossword in sequential Acrosses, so I don’t know how the theme works. The five themers with circled I’s are all Downs. Ah!

  • 4d. [Ibuprofen alternative / One with ambitions? (Hint: Note letters 4 and 6)] clues the Down entry ASPIRIN as well as ASPIRANT, which is formed by turning to the right between the pair of I’s.
  • 9d. [Complete / Restricted? (… letters 2 and 4)], FINISH and FINITE to the right.
  • 26d. [Boundary / Favored one leg? (… letters 2 and 4)], LIMIT and LIMPED.
  • 40d. [California’s ___ Valley / Goofy? (… letters 2 and 4)], SILICON and SILLY.
  • 41d. [Yellow character in “Despicable Me” / Opposite of plus? (… letters 2 and 4)], MINION and MINUS.

Okay, that’s cool. I think this might be a debut publication, or at least the first of this constructor’s puzzle’s we’ve blogged here. More complex than the typical first-timer’s theme.

Fave fill: INSPO (short for inspiration), SAMSONITE, PHILLY, MARIPOSAS, LONESOME, FAST LANE. Not keen on NAST and E-CASH, but overall the fill is impressively smooth considering that the theme locks down ten entries.

3.75 stars from me.

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31 Responses to Friday, August 9, 2024

  1. PJ says:

    LAT – I enjoyed the theme. I guess there are many theme entries possible.

    Zealously wants to take care of your chiropteran pet (11 letters)

    • Eric H says:

      Your suggested answer is funnier than the ones in the puzzle, though I did like SOUR CADDIES.

    • marciem says:

      LOL… took me a while but I got it, I think I got it!! :) . Will await answer later in the day.

    • Mr. [very] Grumpy says:

      I thought this puzzle was SHIT full of holes. Ugh.

    • Kate says:

      Though it’s fairly common knowledge, especially among crossword solvers, I thought it was funny for the LA Times to accept Edy’s as an answer when the brand is Dreyer’s here in California and other Western states.

  2. Dallas says:

    NYT didn’t feel like it was going to be fast; I was very slow going in the NW and even a bit through the NE, but once I got to the bottom half, it fell in pretty quickly, and ended up with a pretty fast time. A pretty Good Friday overall :-)

    • JohnH says:

      I found it hard for a Friday (again), but it did fall in close to the usual time. I had the most trouble breaking out of the SE and a few letters in the SW at all. I ended up with an avoidable mistake. The start of “bomb” could have been A, H, or N, and I picked the last, making a long down idiom new to me “kinks-naming,” but I know that’s a bit implausible.

      • Eric H says:

        Scratch N-BOMB off your list. It’s been in one NYT puzzle going back to 1943 and really seems to be a reach.

        • Gary R says:

          All of these _-BOMB terms seem a bit archaic at this point – I’m thinking they mostly disappeared in common usage by the time I finished elementary school.

          My first guess was “A,” but when BARREL RACE made that unlikely, I certainly considered “N.”

    • Gary R says:

      I enjoyed the puzzle. Probably a pretty typical Friday solve time for me. Some good fill, but not a lot of fun cluing (the clue for BREATH MINTS was nice).

      Not a fan of the clue/answer for GLASS TUMBLER. First, does anyone say “GLASS” TUMBLER? It’s just a tumbler. Second, I’m not aware of a tumbler being a particularly likely cocktail vessel. When I think of “tumbler,” I think of water.

      • Eric H says:

        My husband has a thick glass drinking vessel that I would call a tumbler from which he drinks his rum and Coke. Even empty, that glass probably weighs close to a pound.

        I found the clueing was overall fun, even though there’s no single outstanding clue.

      • Dallas says:

        I had MARTINI GLASS for that one at first, and then got TUMBLER at the bottom… ROCKS TUMBLER didn’t work. I also feel like “tumbler glass” (which is repetitive) sounds more natural to me than “glass tumbler”… oh well.

  3. Martin says:

    Happy 32nd birthday to Joel Fagliano.

  4. Eric H says:

    WSJ: Today’s meta seems pretty simple. Give it a try!

    But it’s entirely possible that I missed it completely.

  5. e.a. says:

    universal – one of the coolest puzzles i’ve solved all year, really impressive construction!

  6. Zev Farkas says:

    Universal

    Thanks for explaining the theme. (The “right” turns depend on how you look at it, but I don’t think I would have gotten the trick without your help.) Nice puzzle – must have taken a lot of work.

  7. Smoothdean says:

    USATODAY I got a different theme for Road Trip. I don’t feel Way, Place, Pass = Road. My take: RoadWay, RoadMine, BackRoad.

  8. Vanessa says:

    This was amazing, thanks

Comments are closed.