THEME: A Night At The Opera (or, none)
I tend not to solve puzzles on the applet on Thursday and Friday nights. In general, I don't function well, mentally, after 10pm, so the whole release-time of the puzzles is a drag (I like to be in bed at 10pm - I would be So Thrilled if the Times could push back the release time even one hour, hint hint, wink wink, elbow elbow, nudge nudge). And since Friday and Saturday puzzles can be terrors,
This puzzle looks daunting, with its 3 stacks of 3 fifteen-letter answers, and then another 15-letter answer cutting straight down through the grid - so much white space to fill in. But these types of puzzles don't give me nearly as much trouble as the ones with all the nooks and crannies that are hard to work your way into; plus, you can often get a 15-letter answer off of just 3 or 4 consecutive letters, which tends to open the whole grid right up. These kinds of puzzle seem like they are much harder on an a constructing scale than a solving one.
7D: Where "Otello" premiered (Milan)
24A: Verdi's "Un _____ in Maschera" (ballo)
57A: Longtime La Scala conductor (Arturo Toscanini)
49D: Cabriole performer's wear (tutu)
OPERA! OK, that last one is ballet, but still, it's in the musical performance realm. Some interesting things about this set of clues/answers: I was very proud of getting BALLO (not knowing Italian and never having heard of the Verdi work in question) with just one or two letters. The word, which means "dance" or "ball," is memorable to me because I publicly destroyed the Spanish version of the word ("baile") in a crime fiction course I was teaching once by repeatedly pronouncing the word like the English "bale" (it's properly pronounced something like "bye'-yay"). There was a chapter in Dorothy Hughes's Ride the Pink Horse that was titled "Baile," I believe - the whole novel was set in a U.S. border town - and after I had mauled the word a few times, a student politely if vaguely contemptuously corrected me. Memo to would-be teachers and other people who get caught out publicly in a massive error - admit your mistake good-naturedly and then move on. Do not engage in self-flagellation, do not get defensive or flustered. Laugh at your mistake and then plow forward as if your manifest ignorance were in fact no big deal. I've drifted away from the puzzle.
- CAST-IRON IRON TAU
- CAST-IRON RAIN-OUT
- CAST-IRON RIO TUNA
- IN A CAST-IRON ROUT
- I OUTRAN CAST-IRON
- CAST-IRON I.O.U. RANT
- CAST-IRON OAT RUIN
- AIN'T OUR CAST IRON?
- CAST-IRON U.N. RATIO
3D: "Do the Right Thing" pizzeria (Sal's)
18A: Old roadside name (Esso)
Ridiculous Fill
OK, my first thought is that architecturally insane puzzles like this are Bound to have some ridiculous fill - how else are you gonna coordinate this many abutting (and intersecting!) 15-letter answers? So, I'm not faulting the puzzle - just pointing out the groaners that went into its making. It was worth it.
- 10D: Hot (ired) - this word is not a word until you add an "F" to its front end
- 31D: Transfuse (endue) - where you don't want to step at the dog park
- 2D: Cramped urban accommodations, for short (SRO's) - SRO is perfectly good, even Pantheonic, fill but this clue is misdirective in a very forced way. TTH! (Trying Too Hard) [I take it all back - I misunderstood meaning of SRO, thinking it short for "Standing Room Only" (theater sign), when here it refers to "Single-Room Occupancies," which are indeed "Cramped urban accommodations"]
- 22D: Falling-out (set-to) - ordinary fill, but the clue suggests not speaking to one another, while the answer suggests a rumble à la Jets and Sharks, as in "I SET my knife TO his throat, Maria!"
26D: Actor who roared to fame? (Lahr)
What's (not so) hilarious about this is that the last time he showed up in a puzzle, I wrote about how I can never remember his name, how I know it ends in -HR but I always want BEHR or BAHR, etc. And yet I still haven't learned my lesson, clearly, as I blanked on his name again. There is a movie that this used to happen with ALL the time when I was in grad school.
35D: Village, in Würzburg (dorf)
36D: Tennis star _____ (Anke)
37D: It flows in Flanders (Yser)
Behold, Western Europe in the far eastern portion of the puzzle! There is something to love in each of these answers. Dorf. Dorf! I got this only because of Düsseldorf, which I assume is a "village" in Germany or its environs. The only Dorf I know (you can see where this is going, right? ...) is a golf instructor.
Don't know what part of my brain ANKE Huber was hiding in - I initially spelled her ANKA, but that's pretty damned close for a first guess with no crosses. I'm not sure "star" adequately describes Ms. Huber, though her mom might disagree. When I read the clue [It flows in Flanders], I wanted to shout, "The blood of a true Christian!?"
Final Thoughts
You gotta love the NYT puzzle - where else is Verdi gonna rub elbows with "F Troop" (39A: "F Troop" role (Sergeant O'Rourke))? 21A: Physics units (dynes) might be a little tricky / arcane, but its pretty crossword-common and, as I've said before, I got an A+ in Physics in college, so the vocabulary has stuck around a bit, if the actual concepts / definitions / real knowledge hasn't. See also 34D: Kidney secretion (renin), which is from some long, lost bio class. With HONORS (30D: It's good to graduate with them) is an abominable Joe Pesci vehicle (redundant?) that I was stupid enough to watch on a mid-90s plane trip. Andrew can tell you how great its Madonna theme song was, though, I'm sure.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
One of my college roommates was a science geek who loved a grievous "joke" in which the punchline involved a pun on the dyne-centimeter unit. I think the centimeter was dying.
ReplyDeleteFlirting With Disaster is remarkably forgettable as a title. I, too, think of it as "that movie with Ben Stiller where the couple went to visit some relatives or something, what was it called?"
I didn't see the SROS clue as misdirective. Why, there's an SRO a few blocks from here, and the building does look rather cramped. Not to mention urban!
P.S. There's an applet option exactly for this—before you start, click the "check my answers" button instead of the "play against the clock" one. It won't record a finishing time in the "fastest" list.
I thought SRO stood for Standing Room Only - what does it stand for here???!
ReplyDeleteHA ha, "Single Room Occupancy!" Well, that's new to me (clearly). Here I was imagining that the "cramped" part of the clue referred to people crammed into see, say, "Les Miz." I was going to dispute that all theaters (where you might see an "SRO" sign) are not "urban." Wow. Live and learn.
I posted this under the last puzzle, but it makes sense to leave it under the right day. I promise, I won't post again tomorrow:
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone understand the theme clues from today's NY Sun puzzle? It's twenty numbers ("#1", "#2", etc), each of which somehow corresponds to a word... but I'll be damned if I can figure out the trick. Anyone see it?
I had your problem. Once I finished the puzzle, I went to Orange's site, where she advised that you might want to click on the "Notepad" feature (in Across Lite) - if you do that, you will see the explanation.
ReplyDeleteHope you didn't writhe around for an HOUR as I did - actually finished the puzzle, with 20 completely unclued entries - without ever knowing the "theme."
RP
There's actually an SRO building in my neighborhood. It has the most wonderful name: Hotel Chateau. Completely apt, given the unscreened windows with curtains flapping out. Because I'll bet most French chateaux also do not have window screens!
ReplyDeleteI only knew the expression "in the catbird seat" from Red Barber's (Sp ?) radio announcing of baseball games back in the day -- well before your time. But I learned on the Internet that Barber claimed he learned it from a poker player who trounced him good. A search on the term plus poker yielded this defintion: Catbird Seat - A position in high-low poker that assures a player at least half the pot.
ReplyDeleteOK but what about BIAS 24D
ReplyDeletehow is bias a kind of crime?
I can't believe that didn't make your bogus list.
Laura
nina is hirshfield's daughter...he usually hide her name somewhere in his drawings...
ReplyDeleteI thought the clue for "dogleg" (sharp turn)was bogus. By this definition, just about *any* turn might be called sharp.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that a turn is sharp only if it is less than 90 degrees. But dogleg turns -- whether on golf courses or real dogs -- are about 140 degrees.
If giving directions for a true dogleg turn, you'd say "bear right", not "sharp right".
I thought BIAS was pretty odd, too. Also, and maybe I'm just missing it because it's late, but what is 55D Like a line, briefly (ONED)? I'm sure I'm missing a space or something, but I'm not getting it.
ReplyDeleteAh, the parsing problem! I had that happen to me today (2/24/07). Anyway, ONED = ONE-D, as in One-Dimensional, [Like a line, briefly].
ReplyDeleteRP