THEME: none
I have it on good authority that Bob Klahn is "pretty much the hardest there is," and after last night's 15-round bout with the Saturday puzzle, I'm inclined to agree. I won the bout, in a split decision, but it was something of a Pyrrhic victory. I'm bruised and bloodied, and partially BOWed. It's especially humbling to look at a completed grid that has just slapped you around for something close to an hour and realize "wait a minute ... this doesn't look that hard. What the hell just happened?" I respect a puzzle that can beat me up with minimal esoterica. There are about three answers here that I think are a bit out-there, but that's not very many for a Saturday.
Blogger is fritzing like crazy again - I'm currently composing this entry using two browsers simultaneously. I feel, therefore, that today, I will be brief, if only to keep from smashing my computer (luckily, all humanity besides myself is currently out of the house, so if I do lose it - no witnesses but the animals).
15A: "The Green Hornet" trumpeter (Hirt)
37A: Saxophonist great, familiarly (Trane)
This is what I'd call a near-gimme, as the first thing I thought was TRANE ... but then I reflected on my appalling ignorance of jazz and hesitated a bit. Finally, as I had almost nothing entered on the entire grid, I put in TRANE, just to feel a sense of accomplishment. Luckily, I was right. I don't have any Coltrane handy, so I'm going to put on Dexter Gordon. . . there we go. Haven't blogged to jazz saxophone before. It's kind of nice. I don't feel nearly as murderous as I have lately.
26A: Lots (a good many)
Straightforward. Eventually I had AGOOD-, so how hard could it be to fill out? Very, when the only phrase your head can possibly imagine going there is AGOODDEAL. Not sure which sounds more priggish and old-fashioned - think I'd call it a tie - but -MANY is at least as common, if not more so, than -DEAL. So I ended up playing my own private, sad (though mercifully Mandel-free) version of Deal or No Deal? The only thing keeping me from writing in DEAL was 27D: Kind of bean: I had a 4-ltr word ending -UNG, and -DEAL would have given me DUNG, which is not a bean I'd eat. I knew it had to be MUNG, and yet ... A GOOD M-, A GOOD M-, A GOOD M-; I said it aloud and still couldn't find the right phrase. So implausible, and yet true.
18A: Roosevelt Island locale (Antarctica)
I had only one thought upon solving this: "Mae West was imprisoned in ANTARCTICA!?!?!" (see 53A here)
19A: Boxer on the cover of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Liston)
47A: Hybrid women's clothing (skorts)
First thing I thought of was PANTSUIT, for some reason. Then I thought SKORT, but not imagining a plural, I abandoned it for a while. There were two others that I knew and abandoned (34A: Light housecoats (dusters) and 34D: Toaster setting? (dais)) - and somehow all of these answers connect, in my mind, to my friend Shaun (female). How? Well Shaun owned at least one SKORT. I know that I learned the word in the 90's sometime because I probably commented, "What the hell are you wearing? I can see up your skirt, but this time it's just no fun." OK, fine, but where do DUSTERS and DAIS come in? Well, they don't, exactly, but the reason I would not enter either one was because of the evilest clue/answer in the puzzle (for me, a non-card-player): 36A: Third highest trump in card games (basta).
28A: Musical notation pioneer (Guido)
25D: English composer of the opera "The Perfect Fool" (Gustav Holst)
47D: GE Building muralist (Sert)
12D: One making excuses (Alibi Ike)
Rookie pitcher Francis "Ike" Farrell comes seemingly out of nowhere to help the Cubs go for the pennant. His idiosyncratic ways, which include excuses and alibis for everything, drive his manager and fiancee crazy in this baseball farce.And thus the United States survived the Great Depression with a smile. I do think that ALIBI IKE needs to be remade as a modern kid ("this century's Dennis the Menace") who weasels his way out of blame for the increasingly criminal things he does. "That hobo was dead when I got here, ma. Honest!"
52A: Park Avenue retailer? (auto dealer)
50D: Grand finale? (dee)
54A: Not the biggest thoroughfare in town (stop street)
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Oh I am so flattered -- it can't be a bad thing to be associated with the little monkey poet, and I still have my lovely copy of Pope's Iliad. Not that I would have known Basta.
ReplyDeleteAnd yet, I am also disturbed.
Rex sez: "I can see up your skirt, but this time it's just no fun."
So in contrast to all the many other "fun" times? Who am I, Britney Spears?
Lastly, the Buicks should put you in mind of my husband and his family, and their bizarre Buick devotion.
Ladies love big, old American cars. Isn't that how your husband, uh, landed you in the first place.
ReplyDeleteI have zero interest in looking up Britney Spears's skirt. Or skort. Truthfully, I remember your skort well; the part about looking up the skort was embellishment. Why can't you just play along!?
RP
If I looked up her skirt, and I did, then so should you. Make sure your stomach is neither empty nor full.
ReplyDeleteWait, who are we talking about? This Comment section has taken an odd turn...
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle (1202) just ran in yesterday's daily paper here, and it was a bear for me. I found your blog when I, like you, googled on BASTA. Enjoyed your comments-- they all felt familiar. Your comment about Shaun and her skorts WAS the kind of thing that piques one's interest. You did such a good job of including images (album cover, Buick, movie poster, etc.), a photo of 18th-c. literature scholar Shaun might have been in order.
ReplyDeleteThis one was a killer, harder than Friday's. I agree, "stopstreet" was the kind of answer that makes you want to wring the puzzle-maker's neck. What is it, some local New York-ese, or technical jargon only used by bureaucrats?
ReplyDeleteThanks for explaining "autodealer." I got the answer, but was mystified by its connection to the clue. Hmm, maybe because I'm not in the class that buys Park Avenues, and where I live, Vancouver, B.C., the rich never, ever, buy top-of-the-line American cars, only European or Japanese. (The über-rich go for Bentleys). So although I've heard of the Park Avenue, it's right off my radar.
And "Antarctica" was just cruel, given all the other Roosevelt Islands.
The only thing I missed was the intersection of "inner ears" and "toaster setting." Two puns crossing! My head aches.
Yes, Saturday is (almost) always harder than Friday. They get harder from Monday to Saturday, with Sunday's being about Th's level of difficulty, just much bigger.
ReplyDeleteRP
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