
THEME: "Help Wanted" (JOBS: common phrases with "-ing" words, where sense of the phrase is re-imagined by cluing "-ing" word in its verbal rather than adjectival sense, i.e. 23A: Job for a ballrooom dance instructor? (Leading ladies) - "Leading" goes from being the adjective in a common phrase to being the JOB that the imagined ballroom instructor does... Too much explanation? [late addendum: just noticed that I have an error in my puzzle (twice in two days!): 22A: Start of a hole should be TEE SHOT, not THE SHOT (?!), and thus 14D: Antipoverty agcy. should be O.E.O., not O.H.O., which is more exclamation than acronym]
Decided not to time myself this morning, and instead worked on the puzzle intermittently, between sports highlights, while lying on the couch. Birthday concert last night was amazing, especially the performance of "Night of the Flying Horses" by Osvaldo Golijov, which begins as solo voice and then the orchestra comes in and then the voice stops and it's just orchestra for the second half (whole piece is just 8 minutes long). I don't normally like voice in my orchestral music - not a big, or small, opera fan - but the woman seemed to be in genuine pain and I was feeling her for some reason. The music was tense, with individual instruments (especially winds) playing bent, off-pitch notes, or notes that bent from on- to- off-pitch and back. Then there was this swelling of the orchestra and then crazy driving strings playing a bass line that gave the whole thing a passionate yet Hitchcockian feel. You can see why I blog puzzles instead of criticizing classical music. Anyway, it was a revelation - the most moving piece of music I've heard live since - well, since I heard Kelly Clarkson sing "Behind These Hazel Eyes" at the Binghamton Arena as I shrieked like a little girl (like all the little girls who comprised the vast majority of the audience).
20A: Protracted prayer (novena)
Had to look this up to make sure it was right. NOVENA is feminine Latin for "ninth" and refers to the nine days Jesus's disciples and the Virgin Mary spent in constant prayer between Jesus's death and the descent of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. I know (or only have time to find out) what Wikipedia tells me. About.com tells me that novenas "are great to pray." Isn't that a bit like defining something by exclaiming that it's "super!"?
21A: Relative of a rhododendron (azalea)
I just this second noticed that I have an "s" entered where the "z" should be (looks like I misspelled 8D: "The Compleat Angler" author Walton (Izaak) because I didn't bother to check the cross. So I was going to complain about how I'd never heard of an "asalea," but instead I will tell you that I am very familiar with azaleas because a. we had them in our back yard when I was growing up, and b. my sister and I once served many drinks to my father's colleagues during a Radiology Department pig roast of some sort in our back yard.
29A: "Nonsense!" (pah)
Are you sure he's not saying "Bah!" 'cause I think he's saying "Bah!"
34A (THEME): Job for a lingerie salesclerk? (packing slips)
Had "showing slips" for a good long time, mainly because the image is more pleasing to me. I actually had "...FITS" at the end of this answer for a while because I reasonably thought that 30D: In a tizzy (all upset) was AFLUTTER (the L, U, and E all fit), which gave me the "F." I couldn't figure out why a sales clerk would be THROWING FITS, however, so I hunkered down and waited out the correct answer, which eventually showed itself.
41A: jimjams (dts)
I love the DT's, as a concept, and am surprised both that I didn't know this apparent synonym, and that such a stupid-sounding word could denote something as horrible as the DT's. Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis produced many hit singles for the likes of Janet Jackson, New Edition, and Usher, among others.
50A: Vegetable with sushi (udo)
Aralia cordata is the scientific name of this member of the ginseng family. Served raw in salads or lightly cooked in soups and other dishes (Answers.com).
72A: "Family _____" (Feud)
74A: Decorate, as a 54-Down (ice)
54D: See 74-Across (cupcake)
These two answers intersect, at their middle letters, at the dead center of the puzzle, which is a very, very nice touch. Presentation means a lot!
112A: Least bit (rap)
OK, I guess "I don't give a rap" is a phrase wherein this definition would hold true, but ... there are so many good, music-related ways to clue this! Like "What most adult suburbanites should never, ever try to do, even, perhaps especially, in jest."
126A (THEME): Job for a business tycoon? (running boards)
I had CUTTING BOARDS at first, which is a vastly superior answer. My model of a "business tycoon" = Mr. Burns.
4D: Was up (led)
Is this a baseball clue, as in the phrase "Magglio Ordoñez LED OFF the first inning with a home run?" Enlighten me. And speaking of Ordoñez, I've held off this long, but I must now mention that the Detroit Tigers became champions of the American League last night thanks to a walk-off, three-run homerun by Mr. Ordoñez, so good for them. And me. Bring on the Metinals!
37D: Kids' jumping game (potsy)
There is only one Potsy and he looks like this:
92D: Disgraces (attaints)
This is just for Andrew, who loves (part of) this word.
108D: With 86-Down, popular serial comic strip beginning in 1940 (Brenda Starr)
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
When Oakland was up 3-0 in the fourth, they led the Tigers, but then they blew their lead.
ReplyDeleteThey sure did.
ReplyDeleteThank you for finding some pedagogical use-value in the Tigers' victory.
Honestly, when I first read your comment, I thought "... well, clearly I saw the game last night, so why is she telling me this?" But yes, LED = WAS UP = transparent (now).
I haven't been following baseball much this year, so I actually had to do some research to concoct that sentence...
ReplyDelete