Big feller? / THU 10-17-24 / Punny summary of the battle between editor and writer / Gru's twin brother in the "Despicable Me" series / Tall and pointy, as ears / 1930s vice president John ___ Garner / Consonants articulated with the tongue against the upper teeth / Thomas Lincoln, familiarly / Hebrew name meaning "my God" / First city in Europe with paved streets (1339) / Do some grapplin' / Drug also called "rocket fuel" or "ozone," for short

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Constructor: August Lee-Kovach

Relative difficulty: On the easy side for a Thursday


THEME: ALTERCATION (56A: Punny summary of the battle between editor and writer seen in 17-, 24-, 35- and 46-Across) — ordinary phrases clued as if they related to a fight about ALTERing a piece of writing (if you're wondering how "-CATION" is "punny," You Are Not Alone)

Theme answers:
  • PERIOD DRAMA (17A: Much ado about some punctuation?)
  • RUN ON FUMES (24A: Anger over a grammatically incorrect sentence?)
  • TENSE EXCHANGE (35A: Harsh words regarding the past and the present?)
  • TITLE FIGHT (46A: Brawl over what to call a piece of writing?)
Word of the Day: Thomas "TAD" Lincoln (6D: Thomas Lincoln, familiarly) —
Thomas
 "TadLincoln (April 4, 1853 – July 15, 1871) was the fourth and youngest son of the 16th President of the United States Abraham Lincoln and his wife Mary Todd Lincoln. // Thomas Lincoln was born on April 4, 1853, the fourth son of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd. His three elder brothers were Robert (1843–1926), Edward (1846–1850), and William (1850–1862). Named after his paternal grandfather Thomas Lincoln, he was soon nicknamed "Tad" by his father, for his small body and large head, and because as an infant he wiggled like a tadpole. Tad's first name has occasionally been erroneously recorded as Thaddeus. // Tad was born with a form of cleft lip and palate, which caused him speech problems throughout his life. He had a lisp and delivered his words rapidly and unintelligibly. Often only those close to Lincoln were able to understand him. For example, he called his father's bodyguard, William H. Crook, "Took," and his father "Papa Day" instead of "Papa Dear." [...] On Saturday morning, July 15, 1871, Lincoln died at the age of 18 at the Clifton House hotel in Chicago. The cause of death has been variously referred to as tuberculosis, a pleuristic attack, pneumonia, or congestive heart failure. In an obituary, John Hay affectionately referred to him as "Little Tad." (wikipedia)
 • • •

[My question, exactly]

Gonna be quick about it this morning because I'm kinda angry about this puzzle's revealer, and, you know ... don't write angry. Is that common advice? It certainly should be. Definitely don't post angry, don't tweet angry, don't reply angry. So I'm gonna try to put my objection to this puzzle plainly and then just move on. See, it's one thing for me to finish a puzzle and have no idea what the theme is. That happens from time to time. Usually, I just have to look around the grid and think about it a little, and then I see it. Once in a very blue moon, I honestly don't get it, and usually I'll just tell you so. Sometimes I'll look elsewhere on the internet to see if someone else knows. But today is a special kind of frustration Perfect Storm because I finished the puzzle and thought "... I don't get it. I mean, I see the ALTER part ... and the answers are about ALTERing manuscripts, so ... that makes sense, but ... what the hell am I supposed to do with -CATION?" I sat there and looked at the letters in "CATION." I said it out loud, trying to hear what the pun was. I said the whole word, ALTERCATION, trying desperately to hear something "punny" that I was missing. In the end I went searching for answers online. And ... it seems that the CATION does nothing. I had already discovered the "punny" part in "ALTER," and then kept looking for punniness even though there was none left to find. Fruitless searching for promised punniness—I can't think of a worse way to spend my (crossword) time, especially when it's my responsibility to know this stuff, and I'm on the clock (i.e. my window for writing this blog in the morning is pretty tight). If we're dealing with drama about periods, fumes about run-ons, exchanges about tenses, and fights about titles, then why aren't we dealing with ... something, Anything, about ALTER(ing)? Or why aren't we altering ... something. We could be altering something. I really thought we were altering something... something that sounds like "CATION." The problem is, nothing sounds like CATION. Sigh.


Also, what is this Wednesday-type theme doing in my Thursday puzzle? I expect real trickery on Thursday, not just half-assed "pun" themes (CATION being the half of the ass that's not pulling its weight). You can tell the puzzle knows the theme is not tricky enough because it tries to lard the puzzle with difficulty via the cluing, which means that the theme feels pretty remedial and the solve ends up being a bit of a slog. Not Thursday-hard, just ... plodding. The fill is also less than great in many places: RDA EARLAP NANCE ADSALE INRE DRU AMI IFS OTOH ... I've seen worse, but I've seen better. The NE corner has a certain elegance and class with a BECOMING FLORENCE alongside FINESSE, and the opposite corner is at least interesting. TO DIE FOR is a fun phrase (as well as a great movie) and BATLIKE is weirdly entertaining. But between the inadequate revealer and the early-week theme type, I was a little disappointed today. 

[38D: Tall and pointy, as ears]

My big holdups today were actually quite small, in that they involved just two squares in the NE and just one in the center of the grid—dead center, in fact. I had a hell of a time parsing TENSE EXCHANGE because I had 32D: Big feller? not as AXE (you might "fell," or cut down, a tree with an AXE) but as APE (!?), which left me trying to make something out of -EEP CHANGE. In the NE, I had the Hebrew name as ARI (16A: Hebrew name meaning "my God" (ELI)). Not an exciting or interesting error, but it slowed me down a bit. Otherwise, as I say, there was nothing like the typical trickery of a Thursday puzzle on display here today, so I anticipate that people will have better-than-average solving times across the board.


Notes:
  • 15A: One who might make a comeback? (ALUM) — an ALUM might "come back" ... to their alma mater ... for a class reunion. Pretty sure that's the intended context.
  • 21A: Only city that entirely surrounds a country (ROME) — funny that that "country" is the only country with "city" in its name: VATICAN CITY. 0.19 square miles!
  • 30A: Hunting cap feature (EARLAP) — I remember the first time I saw this word (in a crossword, of course) and thought "where ... where's the 'F'? What did they do with the 'F'?"
  • 5D: What Alexander Graham Bell suggested as the standard telephone-answering greeting ("AHOY") — most of what I know about American history, I learned from "The Simpsons"; please enjoy this video montage of Mr. Burns answering the phone:



  • 12D: First city in Europe with paved streets (1339) (FLORENCE) — FLORENCE and ROME, lah-di-dah! My daughter, a theater production manager, has a new gig coordinating the building and installation of theaters on board cruise ships, and those ships are being put together somewhere just outside ... Venice. Most of her work is actually done remotely (meetings meetings meetings), so she's in the States for now, but come January ... Italy. Not a bad perk.
  • 24D: Half-baked? (RARE) — think steak. 
  • 14A: Hercule's creator (AGATHA) — think Christie
  • 27D: Consonants articulated with the tongue against the upper teeth (DENTALS) — technical linguistics terminology! I don't mind it! Has FRICATIVE ever been in the grid? No!? And not FRICATIVES either? What's the hold-up!?
See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Read more...

Dystopian horror film of 2013, with "The" / WED 10-16-24 / First British P.M. appointed by Queen Elizabeth II / Three tickets / Founder of the Pacific Fur Company, 1810 / Object of finger-pointing on "Fantasy Island" / U.S. immigration policy, familiarly / Onetime Houston athlete whose helmet featured a derrick

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Constructor: Hanh Huynh

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: BEGINNER SPANISH (39A: Introductory foreign language class suggested by this puzzle's theme) — what look like regular two-word clues are really two separate clues; the first word of the clue (i.e. the "BEGINNER") must be answered in SPANISH, the second in English, and together they form an unrelated compound English word:

Theme answers:
  • TRESPASSES (17A: Three tickets) (Spanish word meaning "three" (tres) + English word meaning "tickets" (passes))
  • CONTENDER (26A: With money) (con + tender)
  • MASSACRED (51A: More revered) (mas + sacred)
  • LOCOMOTIVE (60A: Crazy reason) (loco + motive)
Word of the Day: DACA (10A: U.S. immigration policy, familiarly) —

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) is a United States immigration policy. It allows some individuals who, on June 15, 2012, were physically present in the United States with no lawful immigration status after having entered the country as children at least five years earlier, to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and to be eligible for an employment authorization document (work permit).

On November 9, 2023, an appeal was brought before the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit to determine whether a September 2023 federal district court order that would terminate the codified form of DACA, based on its being a violation of federal law, will be upheld and implemented. Oral argument in the case was heard on October 10, 2024. (wikipedia)

• • •

This is a great theme. Consistent, tight, clever. I balked, though, at the phrasing on the revealer. My ear / brain / heart wants BEGINNERS or BEGINNER'S or BEGINNERS' ... it wants the "S." It's weird how much the lack of this single letter bugs me ... I'm not mad at the puzzle; I can see that the "S"-less version exists online in many places. But my brain just keeps rejecting it, adding the "S," the way so many books and other resources do. Actually, it's a bit of a free-for-all out there, spellingwise. I can find all four versions (the puzzle's + the 3 "S" versions) without looking very hard at all, but the apostrophe-S or the S-apostrophe appear to be the most common. But then only BEGINNER SPANISH is 15, which is the width of a conventional American crossword puzzle grid, so here we are. I'm seeing some BEGINNING SPANISH out there too. What a world—five different forms of "begin" seem to be at least reasonably acceptable. But only one fit. My main point here is that I would have loved for the revealer to be tighter, indisputable, more on-the-nose. Conceptually, it works fine. It just clanks in my ear hole, despite its apparent validity. 


A heavy dose of pop culture and a few tricky clues put this one in fairly normal Wednesday difficulty territory. You've got the ROSS / JOEY conundrum right out of the gate (1A: Friend on "Friends") (recalling the MONICA / PHOEBE / RACHEL conundrum of a little while back ... which also appeared right out of the gate, in the NW corner, if I remember correctly). You've got the ordinary English word JET clued as a martial arts movie star, just as you've got the ordinary English word PURGE clued as a dystopian horror film of 2013 (15A: Dystopian horror film of 2013, with "The"), and the ordinary word EDEN clued as a bygone prime minister (43A: First British P.M. appointed by Queen Elizabeth II). Namification!—it means gimmes for some and bafflement for others. I know Dolly PARTON, obviously, everyone does, but that album title did nothing for me (18D: Singer with the 2008 album "Backwoods Barbie"), so I needed like half the crosses before I went "d'oh! it's just Dolly." The clue on SHADY was hard because of crisis-level ambiguity (38D: Suspect). Between the verb and the noun and the adjective meaning of "Suspect," that clue could've been annnything. So I got slowed down there. See also the clue on SHOPS, which sounds backwards (53D: Looks to sell). After all, if you "shop," you are (presumably) looking to buy. But here you have to see SHOPS as something an agent does for your book or screenplay or record—shop it around to potentially interested buyers (publishers, producers, record labels). 


I initially misspelled LOCAMOTIVE (thusly) and so had some trouble with DRONE (54D: It might go way over your head). I had -ANE and so wanted the answer to be PLANE. But the PLANE was already going over Tattoo's head on Fantasy Island (67A: Object of finger-pointing on "Fantasy Island"), so I bypassed PLANE and went for CRANE (?) (works for either the bird or the construction equipment!) before finally realizing my spelling error. I had ANYHOW before ANYHOO because the clue didn't seem to contain a clear indication of slanginess (42D: "Alrighty, then. As I was saying..."), but I guess "Alrighty" is the slang, so ... that's fair. So there was some stuckness, some of it caused by the puzzle, some of it self-inflicted, but in the end—a fairly typical Wednesday workout.

[shouldn't the answer really be DE PLANE?]

Notes:
  • 41D: "The Office" role (PAM) — another sitcom role? You already got JOEY, maybe move to a different field of interest besides "nostalgic binge-watching" (I say this as someone who has watched every episode of both shows)
  • 10A: U.S. immigration policy familiarly (DACA) — I knew about the policy but never thought about what the letters stood for. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. "Daca" in Spanish means "give it here!" or "give it to me!"
  • 33A: Onetime Houston athlete whose helmet featured a derrick (OILER) — Look, I'm no fan of the "In my day..." people, but in my day, Houston's team had way better uniforms and helmets. Love that powder blue...
["The NFL in the Year 2000" LOL, nice predictions, 1979!]

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Read more...

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP