Showing posts with label Amy Reynaldo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Reynaldo. Show all posts

Agave fiber / SAT 7-7-12 / 1982 Donald Fagen hit subtitled "What a Beautiful World" / insect pupa sold as turtle food

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Constructor: Tim Croce

Relative difficulty: Definitely Saturdayish for me but that young punk Caleb Madison slayed it so maybe Fridayish for others, but I could totally see it flirting with impossibility for others. IN SUM, medium-challenging.



THEME: None

Word of the Day: WUSHU (Chinese martial arts, collectively) —

Per Wikipedia, but not the entry on wushu, "Chinese martial arts, also referred to by the Mandarin Chinese term wushu and popularly as kung fu or gung fu, are a number of fighting styles that have developed over the centuries in China." Remember, karate and judo are Japanese, not Chinese, and they're the ones with senseis and dojos. Kung fu gives you Keith Carradine, implausibly.

Hello! It is I, Amy Reynaldo, formerly known as Orange, longtime crossword blogger. Rex and I used to talk about writing each other's posts and mimicking one another's style, but it just seemed too much like we would be savagely parodying each other rather than demonstrating our mastery of writing in another's voice. (Wait. Is there a difference?) Anyway, I have taken Jeffrey's instructions to heart. I was going to refuse to use the word "wacky" but did you see what happened? Croce done gone and put it in his puzzle! [Like the Three Stooges], they're WACKY all right, but I bet a lot of pencil-and-paper solvers will declare them WACKO today.

Two consecutive Saturday NYTs by the same constructor is a little weird to see, right? I really did not find the wavelength in this puzzle. All sorts of things just looking foreign to me. Like 23d, [1982 Donald Fagen hit subtitled "What a Beautiful World"]. I.G.Y.?? What the...? I was a big consumer of pop and rock in 1982 and this thing, I've never heard of it. Ever. Just sort of an alienating experience. We've been talking a lot the last few days at Diary of a Crossword Fiend about (pop) culture and individual wheelhouses, and this puzzle mostly eluded me.







Mind you, there was a gimme that let me break into the grid. That was 16a: [Title bandit in a Verdi work], ERNANI. And I know this exclusively from crosswords, so it's less fun to fill it in. There may be those among you who think it is fun to have squares you can fill in right away because you've done so damn many crosswords already but that's just sick. And not the sort of "sick" the kids talk about these days, meaning "totally, like, rad and phat." I mean the sick sick.

Before I go all ranty, let me outline what I liked just fine in the Bullets:
  • 1a. [If ya get what I mean...], WINK, WINK, nudge, nudge. Didn't quite read the clue and had trouble finding the answer, but when the crossings put it together for me, I liked seeing it.
  • 27a. AS GOOD AS GOLD ... but not as good as platinum.
  • 42a. [1980s gangster sobriquet], THE TEFLON DON. Not, as it appears in the grid, The Tef London. Love the word "sobriquet." As in "Kingsford is a charcoal sobriquet."
  • 56a. OLD NORSE! I'm fond of English words with Old Norse roots. Here's a list of them. The sleuth went berserk and ransacked his client's house. Awkward!
  • 61a. Cute clue. [Complement from the chef?] is a SIDE DISH. Whereas a compliment from the chef is "Hey, baby, you're looking fi-i-ine tonight."
  • 30d. WUSHU! [Chinese martial arts, collectively] is what that means. Good, because I've been wondering every time I drive past that Chicago Wushu joint. See? Crosswords really are educational. Don't call them up and ask if they can deliver the wushu pork.
  • 57d. DUD is [One not going out with a bang?], as in a firecracker that refuses to blow up. Really, isn't that a gift? Those yahoos in San Diego who ruined the fireworks show this week by igniting three barges' worth of pyrotechnics in a matter of seconds could have used a few DUDs to interrupt their big "oops."
There were, alas, more entries in the debit column.

I've never said "IT'S A NO-GO" (17a). STERE (41a) and TESLAS (43d) deliver one more Unit I've Never Used in Real Life than I like to see in a single puzzle (or maybe two more). ISTLE (2d: [Agave fiber]) is hardcore crosswordese. Burn that stuff in your ingle, yo. (Ingle is an archaic word meaning "fireplace." No habla ingles.) ISTLE makes APSES (49d) look fresh as a daisy. KNOWS ONE'S ONIONS (8d) is one of those phrases I've never heard anyone say and never read in a book. ENA (13a: [Disney doe]), meh. I wish S.DAK. (26d) would go away; we all just use "S.D." or "SD," let's be real. This LENS HOOD (37d: [Preventer of photographic glare])? Never heard of this thing and I can't say it sounds particularly exciting. Who is this Len fellow, anyway? He looks like a dork.

Signed, Amy Reynaldo, All-Powerful Creator and Goddess of CrossWorld

Read more...

1980s street artist Keith - SUNDAY, Jul. 5 2009 — Mustachioed TV muckraker / Perennial N.L. leader of old / 1977 thriller co-starring Bo Derek

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Constructors: Tony Orbach and Amy Reynaldo

Relative difficulty: Easy

THEME: M? No, P! — familiar phrases have their "M"s turned to "P"s, creating wacky phrases, which are then clued "?"-style


Word of the Day: ETIOLATE (90D: Bleach) v.tr.

  1. Botany. To cause (a plant) to develop without chlorophyll by preventing exposure to sunlight.
    1. To cause to appear pale and sickly: a face that was etiolated from years in prison.
    2. To make weak by stunting the growth or development of.
v.intr. Botany.

To become blanched or whitened, as when grown without sunlight.

[French étioler, from Norman French étieuler, to grow into haulm, from éteule, stalk, from Old French esteule, from Vulgar Latin *stupula, from Latin stipula.] (answers.com)

First, congratulations to my fellow crossword blogger Amy Reynaldo on her first NYT puzzle by-line. [sound of clapping] She has clearly embedded her first name at the top of the puzzle, a little three-letter right angle created by AMPS UP (7A: Escalates) over CYRANO (21A: Hero known for his nose).

A simple theme (change-a-letter) that yields some nice results. Switch-a-letters are interesting in that, in general, they are dependent on the involved letters relating in some interesting way to one another, through some clever phrase word play like today's title letter string, MNOP, or an answer somewhere in the puzzle that tips the theme (I've seen "SPIN" used to indicate that "SP" goes "IN" to ordinary phrases to create wacky phrases, for instance). My favorite among today's phrases were STUD PUFFIN and THE POD SQUAD. Some nice non-theme fill here too. I especially like the inclusion of both GOUACHE (13A: Watercolor technique) and GOULASH (76A: This-and-that preparation ... went looking for OLIO or GALLIMAUFRY or similar word here at first). Overall I found the puzzle very easy — my fastest Sunday time in a dog's age (is that an expression or am I just inventing L'il Abnerisms now?). From a difficulty standpoint, the puzzle was basically a ton of very gettable words and ... ETIOLATE, which is a word I want to mean "lessen" or "fade away" or "thin out" or something like that ... there must be a like-sounding word that means something akin to what my brain wants. ATTENUATE? Nah, that doesn't feel right. Anyway, aside from some names I had to fish for, everything else in the grid was very familiar.

Theme answers:

  • 23A: Give Axl and Pete a break? (spell the Roses) — clearly, it is the year of Pete Rose in NYT puzzle world. This phrase threw me at first because I kept thinking the base phrase was SPILL THE BEANS.
  • 33A: Tripping over a threshold, perhaps? (portal danger)
  • 45A: Pea farmers? ("The Pod Squad")
  • 51A: Summer apartment with no air-conditioning? (boiling pad)
  • 69A: Floral Technicolor dreamcoat? (Full Petal Jacket)
  • 91A: Strutting bird on an ice floe? (stud puffin)
  • 94A: Residents at a Manhattan A.S.P.C.A.? (New York pets)
  • 105A: Move a movie camera around a community? (pan about town)
  • 122A: Explanation for an interception? (pass confusion)

Lots of old-timey women's names in the puzzle today. DOREEN (92D: One of the original Mouseketeers) seemed only vaguely familiar, and I didn't know LAVERNE at all (though getting it from crosses was simple) (125A: One of the Andrews Sisters). Joining those ladies in the mid-20th century are LOLA (41D: "Damn Yankees" vamp), ERIN (73D: A Walton), ENID (57A: English author Blyton), and MYRA (8D: Hess who was a dame). Even the ladies from comics go way back: ISIS (101A: DC Comics superheroine) goes back to 1976 and LOIS (70D: Lane in Metropolis) to 1938. Men's names were, in general, slightly more modern. SAKS is pretty old-timey (61D: "The Odd Couple" director), but Philip Seymour (not Dustin) Hoffman won the Oscar for "CAPOTE" (brilliant) just a few years ago (82D: 2005 Hoffman title role), and MILO Ventimiglia currently stars on "Heroes" and is responsible for a comic I read that appears to have died or gone on hiatus but was pretty good while it lasted — "Rest." Also, before he was famous, he made a guest appearance on "Sabrina: The Teenage Witch," Season 1. I learned this from first-hand experience, thanks to my daughter's current DVD-renting proclivities.

My only area of struggle in this puzzle (and it was brief) was in the SE, where RHONE for RHINE (111D: River straddled by Basel, Switzerland) and DREGS for DROSS (110D: Chaff) gave me PASSCENFUSOON on my first pass at 122A. Also stumbled very briefly near the middle of the grid, where I initially stuck SÉNATS (!?) where JUNTAS belonged (71D: Postrevolutionary councils). Else, aces. Not to be confused with ACERS (7D: Deliverers of the unreturnable), a variation of which has been in about half the damned puzzles I solved this weekend.

Bullets:

  • 1A: Wind source (gas bag) — that's a great 1A.
  • 13D: Mustachioed TV muckraker (Geraldo) — See 1A. (Love the word "mustachioed" btw)
  • 72D: Language akin to Yupik (Aleut) — also the name of the people who speak it. Alaska and Hawaii have been good to crosswords.
  • 84A: Fourier series function (sine) — thankfully, no real math knowledge was required to get this.
  • 115A: Interlaken's river (Aare) — crosswordesey flower that helped me sort out the whole PASSCENFUSOON mess.
  • 3D: Extended operatic solo (scena) — forgot this word. Like ARIOSO, it's an opera term that's useful to know for crosswords.
  • 16D: Perennial N.L. leader of old (Aaron) — yuck. Leader of What? I need a stat. He's not a team, so he's not literally leading the N.L. Home run leader? R.B.I. leader. You can't use "leader" this ridiculously generic way in baseball. Is it that he was captain of his team? If so, that's still pretty weak.
  • 24D: 1980s street artist Keith (Haring) — if you don't know his name, you've probably at least seen his very recognizable and iconic work.
  • 34D: Dobbin's nibble (oat) — Dobbin is a special hobbit-sized horse. Not true, but should be.
  • 48D: "Superman II" villainess (Ursa) — when you're sick and tired of constellation clues, you can always turn to "Superman II."
  • 60D: 1977 thriller co-starring Bo Derek ("Orca") — this clue makes me laugh. I never saw this movie, but I'm guessing hilariously bad.


[How high was Dino De Laurentiis in the 70s?]
  • 68D: Co-founder of the Nonaligned Movement (Nehru) — identical clue used for TITO a while back.
  • 118D: Cuzco inhabitant (Inca) — "Cuzco" sounds like liquor. Or a Mexican "Costco."
Time for the Crossword Tweets of the Week (culled from Twitter):
  • kanedaniel Dear New York Times crossword, I hate you SO much right now.
  • timinhouston At brunch. 2 couples @ bar (jointly) working on crossword puzls. The salvation of printed newspapers?
  • accordingtonina Me: Who's Foghat? Mom: He was doing a crossword too so half way thru flight we exchanged. Me: What? Mom: Yea, he's so cool.
  • Liz_Whittemore I thought the guy was drunk. I was mistaken. He was just doing xword puzzles while driving. My mistake. Carry on sir.
  • arjunbasu He says, I'd like to eat you. She says, You smell like lobster but in a bad way. And so they go back to doing their crossword puzzles alone.
  • BillyDoc Soon I found myself hunched over a crossword with her. Our faces were inches apart. It was magical.
  • BenJimenez This crossword must be broken. I'm not getting most of the clues
  • illogicalvulcan Once again baffled by the Times crossword due to the fact that my program doesn't print circles. Also, I cannot spell.
  • jkru finishing a crossword in a bed that is not inflatable = WIN.
  • aiela The Scrabble documentary is nearly as good as the Crossword one but not as good as the Donkey Kong one because nothing is.
  • rndrum 5 adults vs. 1 TV Guide crossword puzzle book. This might go better with booze...
  • JenniferGarza I did the crossword puzzle in back of the Frosted Mini Wheats box in less than 2 minutes! hehe It was SO easy! http://twitpic.com/98n3m
  • kenjamin23 Is paying 80 cents a day just to do the Crossword puzzle. lmao
  • carolermp Coffee and crossword time then off later to nursing home to see elderly gentleman and make his day.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter]

Read more...

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP