Friday, June 30, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/30/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Damon Gulczynski
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 44:22

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

FOMO - "Feeling that everyone's having fun without you, in modern lingo"

Trivia I didn't know:

ANNASUI - "Designer behind the Dolly Girl perfume"
OLDNAVY - "H&M competitor" (Never heard of H&M)
HANOI - "Tower of _____ (classic math puzzle)" (Have no clue what this is)
SEACALF - "Harbor seal"
DEI - "___ gratia"
NADIA - "Tennis's Petrova"
ILO - "1969 Peace Prize agcy."
TUMMIES - "Food processors, informally"
ESME - "Titular Salinger girl"
NYSE - "Where Molson Coors is TAP"

Junk Answers:

NON - "Only word spoken in Mel Brook's 'Silent Movie'"

Clever clues:

HAYMAKER - "Strong connection?"
FLUSH - "One may be straight"
MENDS - "Tapes, maybe"
CSPAN - "House shower"
BIKINIS - "Providers of limited coverage?"
FRO - "Back again"
SLIVER - "Dieter's piece of cake?"
ZOOKEEPER - "One involved in monkey business?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

ANNASUI - (See above)
TUMMIES - (See above)

Thursday, June 29, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/29/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Rich Proulx
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 14:26

Puzzle uniqueness:

Puns using names of countries. (Example: KENYAGIVEMEAHAND)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

LEEDS - "'Traffic Crossing _____ Bridge' (Pioneering 1888 moving picture)" (WTF!?!)
ALEX - "Three-time N.H.L. M.V.P. Ovechkin"
AEGIS - "Shield of Athena"
ALMAY - "Cosmetics brand owned by Revlon"
GIGI - "Supermodel Hadid" 

Junk Answers:

EXEC - "Suit"
ITE - "Resident's suffix"
IRR - "Sale tag abbr."
SSA - "It has its benefits: Abbr."
IMO - "'I think,' in texts"
EPS - "Short albums, for short"

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/28/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: David Kwong
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: DNF

Puzzle uniqueness:

Trick puzzle, this time a quote running through the puzzle. I absolutely hate those. Here is the punny quote: "How I wish Natalie Portman dated Jacques Cousteau so I could call them Portmanteau."

Words I hadn't known until now:

DUOMO - "Cathedral of Florence"

Trivia I didn't know:

ALDO - "Gucci of fashion"
ALAIN - "De Botton who wrote 'The Architecture of Happiness'"
DEWAR - "_____ flask (thermos)"
IVAN - "Nobelist Pavlov"

Junk Answers:

ASTI - "Piedmont wine center"
LYS - "River of France and Belgium"
ARP - "Dadaist Jean"
SSN - "Target of ID theft: Abbr."
GPA - "Bluto's was 0.0 in 'Animal House'"
UNE - "Article in Le Monde"
MTGS - "Boardroom events: Abbr."
IQS - "Mensa members' assets"
SCHED - "Amtrak posting: Abbr."

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

Duomo - (See above)

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/27/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: John Guzzetta
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:15

Puzzle uniqueness:

GODOWNSWINGING answer refers to three other multi-word answers with a synonym for "swing" as a baseball term within the phrase.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:
 0

Junk Answers:

CPAS - "I.R.S. experts"
ETAL - "And others, for short"
EMO - "Broody rock genre"
RBIS - "Hitters' stats"
WBA - "Org. for which Mike Tyson twice held the heavyweight title"
NOLE - "Florida State athlete, slangily"
AMICI - "_____ curiae (friends of the court)"
GYRE - "Circular or spiral motion"

Clever clues:  0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

AMICI - (See above)

Monday, June 26, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/26/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Brian Greer
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 5:41

Puzzle uniqueness:

Tribute to the 20th anniversary of Harry Potter books.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

GHIJK - "Alphabet chunk after D-E-F" (Answer needed to get "JK" for J.K. Rowling)
AHOT - "'Cat on ___ Tin Roof'"
IER - "Comparative suffix"
IDNO - "Nine-digit fig. on a Social Security card" (Sorry, that would be SSN)
ETH - "Biblical verb ending"
COED - "Like volleyball that's played jointly by men and women"
EFFS - "Letters before gees"

Clever clues:

ALASKAN - "Person in a detached state?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Sunday, June 25, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/25/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Jacob Stulberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 52:19

Puzzle uniqueness: "Cropped"

A rebus puzzle: Putting two or more letters in a single square. The clue is the answer VEGETABLESHORTENING. Six vegetables in which their letters are in squares by two thus shortening the number of squares used for the vegetables. (Example: COSMOKRAMER, where OK and RA are in two adjoining squares instead of the normal four.

Words I hadn't known until now:

SYMPTOMATOLOGY - "MCAT subject"
ISOPRENE - "Petroleum byproduct used to make synthetic rubber"

Trivia I didn't know:

ILYA - "Three-time N.H.L. All-Star Kovalchuk"
NALA - "Lion in 'The Lion King'"
HAAS - "Tennis great Tommy"
TREKKIE - "Many a character on 'The Big Bang Theory'" (Never seen the show)
LOON - "Minnesota's state bird"
OSAKA - "Where Sanyo and Panasonic are headquartered"
RENE - "Former Haitian president Preval"
BRANDON - "Brenda's twin on 'Beverly Hills 90210'" (Never seen the show)
ACHT - "German digit"
CRETE - "Island south of the Cyclades"
ELK - "Animal on Michigan's flag"

Junk Answers:

SRS - "Yearbook sect."
PCS - "Some notebooks, in brief"
TSA - "Gatekeeping org.?"
STS - "GPS display: Abbr."
ALC - "Vodka or gin: Abbr."
BIO - "Science class, informally"
ACHT - (See above)

Clever clues:

TERM - "Life is bad one"
IDO - "Personal commitment?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

SYMPTOMATOLOGY - (See above)
ISOPRENE - (See above)

Saturday, June 24, 2017

"Fargo" blew it

I just have to say that I hated the ending of Fargo. Totally disappointing.

(Spoiler alert)

I absolutely abhor iffy endings where the audience member has to provide their own ending. It reminds me of the Choose Your Own Adventure books.

I watch a TV show or movie to appreciate the creator's take on a particular subject. Hopefully, he has a great story to tell. I want to see what he has to say about the ending. I will then assess whether I agree with it or not. For example, I disagreed with the ending of La La Land. It's a great movie, and I don't back off my appreciation of the film just because I disagree with the creator's concept of how it should end.

In the case of Fargo, either ending would have worked for me. It would be his take on how the story ends. Since he chose not to, I can't say whether or not I would have agreed or not. It would depend on how he handled either ending. We'll never know.

What I don't like is the creator "telling" me it's for me to decide how the story ends. I compare this to going to a singer's concert, and the singer having the audience participate in a song. I paid for the singer, not to listen to the audience. Yeesh!

Ken Levine is right on about this.

I know it’s currently chic to embrace ambiguity and complexity and existentialism – hour dramas are so DEEP with so many LAYERS.  “Oh, the real world is messy. There are no neat conclusions.” But fuck that. Someone gives you ten hours; give them a fucking ending. The open-ended finale is not even original or fresh. THE SOPRANOS did it so much better.  And at least they were groundbreaking.   Plus, it was the end of the series.  David Chase did not ask the audience to continue taking the ride with him.   I wonder how many FARGO viewers feel like me.  
Count me in, Ken!

NYT Crossword 06/24/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Stu Ockman
Editor: Will Smith

Solving time: 26:31

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

ODILE - "Von Rothbart's daughter, in ballet"
ESALEN - "New Age retreat in Big Sur"
ODELAY - "Beck album with the alternative hit 'Where It's At'"
LAALAA - "One of the Teletubbies"

Trivia I didn't know:

PSY - "One-named singer with the 2013 top 5 hit 'Gentleman'"
FORTY - "Card count in ombre" (What the heck is "ombre"?)
ATOY - "'Love is not ____' ('Tears on My Pillow' lyric)"
OVETT - "Running gold medalist Steve"
ERNEST - "Cline who wrote the 2011 best seller 'Ready Player One'" (Great book, just didn't remember the author)

Junk Answers:

IBAR - "Flanged support"
MEGA - "Big intro?"
STER - "End with speed"
OKS - "Sanctions"
ATOY - (See above)
LALA - "Karaoke stand-in?"

Clever clues:

ALAN - "Bean in a pod?"
MOWEER - "Diamond cutter?"
CAD - "Dreadful date, maybe"
DYES - "Producers of highlights"
DEMOLITIONDERBY - "Activity requiring a crash course?"
TAPDANCERS - "Company with striking footwear"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

ODILE - (See above)
ESALEN - (See above)
ODELAY - (See above)
DIADEMS - "Jeweled headware"
CORSELET - "Combination undergarment"
LAALAA - (See above)

Friday, June 23, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/23/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalists: James Mulhern and Ashton Anderson
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 30:16

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

PEPITA - "Edible seed of a pumpkin or squash"

Trivia I didn't know:

APO - "Part of an embassy address, for short"
ANTIPOPE - "Benedict X,  but not IX or XI"
THEROOTS - "'Tonight Show' house band"
EWELAMB - "Baby animal in a parable in II Samuel"
CAAN - "Co-star of Ferrell in 2003's 'Elf'"
ATTILA - "Verdi opera in the fifth century"

Junk Answers:

APO - (See above)
GRE - "Kaplan book subj."
ALA - "Like"

Clever clues:

AMMO - "They may make the rounds"
CANADA - "'O' follower"
STEVE - "Jobs in tech"
COVE - "Arm that's tucked away"
SHOE - "One going everywhere on foot?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

PEPITA - (See above)
EWELAMB - (See above)
SKYATLAS - "Book of celestial maps"

Thursday, June 22, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/22/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Ruth Bloomfield Margolin
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 16:50

Puzzle uniqueness:

Verb modified by a body part in this format: _____ (Body part) to (body part) (Example: SMILE EAR TO EAR)

Words I hadn't known until now:

EILAT- "Israeli resort city"
TIDAL - "Like some colossal bores" (Never heard of a tidal bore)

Trivia I didn't know:

SHOGI - "Japanese chess"
OBADIAH - "Book of the Bible after Amos"
OWEN - "John Irving's 'A Prayer for ____ Meany'"

Junk Answers:

NAE - "Typical Scottish Brexit vote"
SYD - "Children's author Hoff"

Clever clues:

HAZES- "Initiates badly?"
SIGH - "Heaved 'ho'?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

OUTDOORSY - "Fond of hiking, camping, etc."
EILAT - (See Above)
OBADIAH - (See above)

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/21/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Bruce Haight
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 10:08

Puzzle uniqueness:

BUTTERFLY is the center answer which has to be appended to the four corner answers "to make sense." (Example: SOCIAL)

Words I hadn't known until now:

IBOS - "Some native Nigerians"

Trivia I didn't know:

GREG - "Eldest of the Brady Boys" (Never seen it)

Junk Answers:

ITGUY - "PC problem solver"
CDS - "Wares on a band's merch table"
IBOS - (See above)
MBAS - "Degrees for C.F.O.s"
UHS - "Sounds of hesitation"
SIMI - "____ Valley (Reagan Library locale)
CDT - "OK summer hrs."

Clever clues:

TOYS - "Pole workers' creations"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

IHAVEIT - "'Here's the solution!'" (I think "I've got it" is more common)
ATONEGO - "In a single attempt"
ENDWAYS - "Lengthwise"

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/20/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Jason Flinn
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 11:00

Puzzle uniqueness:

Taking a two-word phrase with airlines as the second word, then having the last answer be AIRLINETERMINALS. (Example: MANCHESTERUNITED)

Words I hadn't known until now:

CUESTA - "Hill that's steep on one side and gentle on the other"

Trivia I didn't know:

DEBI - "Actress Mazar of 'Entourage'"
MONICA - "One of the friends on 'Friends'" (Never watched the show)

Junk Answers: Lots. Here are a few.

INA - "___ moment (shortly)"
IROC - "Classic Camaro"
SSN - "Phishing target: Abbr."
TWPS - "County divs."
TRA - "___-la"
SYS - "___ admin (IT pro)"

Clever clues:  0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

CUESTA - (See above)
TEMAS - "Melodic subjects in music"

Monday, June 19, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/19/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Susan Gelfand
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:08

Puzzle uniqueness:

Singers' last names form two-word phrases (Example: ROTTENAPPLE - Johnny and Fiona)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

ETE - "French summer"
RTE - "GPS option: Abbr."
AYLA - "Heroine of Jean Auel's 'The Clan of the Cave Bear'"
INS - "Opposite of outs"

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Sunday, June 18, 2017

NYT Crossword 0618/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Sam Trabuco
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 35:26

Puzzle uniqueness: "Silent Treatment"

Phrases which have a word with a silent letter, "funny" clues to phrase as if letter wasn't there. (Example: GIVESADAMN - "Donates shelter to some beavers?")

Words I hadn't known until now:

LOQUAT - "Asian plumlike fruit"

Trivia I didn't know:

ANTI - "Rihanna's 2016 ____ World Tour"
ALGREN - "Nelson who wrote 'The Man With the Golden Arm'"
ADU - "Freddy once hailed as 'the next Pele'"
SEGAR - "Popeye creator E. C. _____" (I just can't seem to remember his name...every time)
ARIE - "Singer India.____" (Another one I can never remember)
TYGA - "Popular rapper with a feline-sounding name"
IVANIV - ""'The Terrible' czar" (Never can remember the number)

Junk Answers:

IMOK - ""'Don't worry about me'"
TGEL - "Neutrogena dandruff shampoo"
IDNO - "Social Security fig."
DTS - "Sot's woes"
YSL - "Big fashion inits."
ARG - "S. Amer. land"
UNODOS - "Start of a Spanish count" (Really?)
BLEH - "'Ugh!'"
GOTAC - "Did so-so at school"
EMAILME - "Shoot over your response"
ECASH - "Digital currency"

Clever clues:

DOWN - "Up (for), paradoxically"
NEST - "Flight destination?"
NOONE - "Who has ever won a debate over the internet?"
GOBALD - "Clear one's head?"
AIDE - "One might represent a representative"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

LOQUAT - (See above)
AQUACAR - "Amphibious auto"
GUINEAN - "Native of Conakry"

Saturday, June 17, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/17/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Ryan McCarty
Editor: Will Smith

Solving time: DNF (Too many answers I'd never heard of crossing each other)

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

TILERS- "Ones putting down quadrels" (I've never heard of "quadrels")
SEMIBREVE - "Whole note, to a Brit"
OTARU - "Port on Ishikari Bay" (I had "Osaka" for the longest time, really hung me up)
SCHUYLERSISTERS - "Sibling trio in 'Hamilton'" (Haven't seen it yet)
QUINTE - "Fifth of eight parrying positions in fencing"
PASTIS - "French anise-flavored liqueur"
SUM - "Kakuro calculation" (I've never heard of "Kakuro")
TETRAHEDRA - "Some pyramids, though not the ones at Giza"

Trivia I didn't know:

ANTOINE - "Fats Domino's real first name"
IRAN - "Shiraz setting"
EDERLE - "Channel swimmer Gertrude"
HOMO - "____ floresiensis (extinct 'hobbit')"
DANES - "Builders of the original Legoland"
SILVERARROW - "Early Mercedes-Benz racing car"

Junk Answers:

DRS - "Practice composition: Abbr.?"
IQS - "They're high at M.I.T. and Stanford"
ENE - "Memphis-to-Nashville dir."

Clever clues:

PESTLE - "Meal maker?"
DRS - (See above)

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Friday, June 16, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/16/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Zhouqin Burnikel
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 27:53

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

OPI - "Popular nail polish brand"

Trivia I didn't know:

MRRED - "Old baseball mascot with a 'C' on his cap"
OPI - (See above)
PHI - "21st in a series of 24" (I defy anyone to rattle off the Greek alphabet in numerical order!)
MALLORCA - "Neighbor de Ibiza"
DONAHUE - "Onetime host with 11 daytime Emmys" (I know him, just not the Emmy part)
SOREL - "French philosopher who wrote 'Reflections on Violence'"
DRPEPPER - "'Always one of a kind' sloganeer"
SASHIMI - "Dish often garnished with white radish"
CHINET - "Big name in disposable tableware" (Couldn't pull it)

Junk Answers:

BATTED - "Went for a run" (Not the answer, but the clue - really weak, IMO)
CTR - "Part of many arena names: Abbr."
OPI - (See above)
SCI - "Discovery magazine subj."
LGA - "Big Apple airport code"

Clever clues:

BOOTCAMP - "Drill setting"
CIA - "Spooky group?"
FIRST - "Who's there" (A reference to the "Who's on first" routine by Abbot and Costello)

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Thursday, June 15, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/15/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Richard F. Mausser
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 11:15 (New record for a Thursday)

Puzzle uniqueness:

Tribute to 50th anniversary of THEDIRTYDOZEN movie release by having twelve one-word answers which require the word "dirty" to complete the phrase. (Example: HARRY - as in "Dirty Harry")

Words I hadn't known until now:

SZELL - "Former Cleveland Orchestra conductor George"

Trivia I didn't know:

SZELL - (See above)

Junk Answers:

RIRE - "To laugh, in Lyon"
STRO - "Minute Maid Park player, for short"
OPP - "Versus: Abbr."
HEHE - "Giggle" (Usually "Heehee")
RRS - "B&O and others,: Abbr."

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

SZELL - (See above)
RIRE - (See above)

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/14/07 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Andrew Zhou
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 14:47

Puzzle uniqueness:

BYGEORGE answer relates to answers of works whose originators' first names are George.

Words I hadn't known until now:

Chabad - "Jewish organization known for its outreach work."

Trivia I didn't know:

TAU - "Symbol for torque"
DECISIONPOINTS - "2010 Bush autobiography"
UTNE - "Magazine founder Eric"

Junk Answers:

SHA - "Syllable in oldies song"
NES - "Early platform for The Legend of Zelda, for short"
MRS - "Wifey, with 'the'"
YOO - "'___-hoo!'"

Clever clues:

SEANCE - "Raising of spirts?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

UPCAST - "Looking skyward"
BOOYA - "Celebratory cry"

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

"It Comes At Night" weighs in on our humanity

This film was not anything that I expected. I was looking for another undead movie with a family being threatened in their out-of-the-way home.

For what it is I give it a pass, though not a rave. There were some fun, tense moments, I have to admit. It's basically a survivalist movie. A family is trying to escape the awful disease that is obliterating mankind by living out in the wilderness. Another family intrudes, thus setting up the conflict.

It is an interesting take on exactly how much humanity one is willing to sacrifice to insure the safety of the family.

The only actor I knew about was Joel Edgerton, but the rest of the cast performed very ably.

I didn't like the way the film ended, but that's just a personal choice. I'm sure there are others who will appreciate it. I prefer a more definitive conclusion.

NYT Crossword 06/13/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Lynn Lempel
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:08

Puzzle uniqueness:

Taking a phrase beginning with a single letter sound and converting the single letter to multiple letters with the same sound. (Example: GEESTRINGS)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

GENOA - "Kind of salami"

Junk Answers:

AMTS - "Rx dosages, e.g.: Abbr."
JRS - "Many SAT takers"
DES - "___ Plaines, Ill."
SSS - "Worrisome org. for a daft dodger"

Clever clues:

EGO - "Maniacal leader?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Monday, June 12, 2017

NYT Crossword 0612/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Dan Margolis
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:35

Puzzle uniqueness:

Famous men's names whose last names are women's first names.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

HAVEI - "'_____ got a deal for you!'"
MESO - "Prefix with -zoic"
OLEOLE - "World Cup chant"
AMAJ - "Key of Beethoven's Symphony No. 7: Abbr."

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

AMATOL - "Powerful explosive"
JOLTIN - "Baseball's ______ Joe DiMaggio"

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Adam West, "Batman" and my disillusionment

I was sorry to hear of Adam West's passing yesterday. I have to admit that his Batman series was a major disappointment to me.

As I mentioned yesterday on my writing about Wonder Woman, I was a major DC Comics fan back then. I was into the serious "action" of the stories. So when I heard that there would be a TV series of the Batman, I practically salivated at the thought. This was my moment!

I vividly remembered sitting down on the couch in front of the television eagerly awaiting the first episode of Batman to start. I can't tell you how disappointed I was when I saw this inane, campy episode. Biff? Pow? Holy major disappointment!

I ended up watching a lot of the episodes because members of my family liked it, but I never really appreciated the campiness of it all. I silently steamed at the thought of what could have been.

What really chapped my ass was that it became a cultural hit. Why did it chap my ass? Because I was also into the secret agent genre, and one of my favorite shows on at the time was The Man From U.N.C.L.E. The first season of U.N.C.L.E. was a pretty straightforward TV version of the initial James Bond movies. However, once the campiness of Batman became vogue, the U.N.C.L.E. series drifted toward the same campiness. Boy, was I pissed!

Ah, well. Eventually over the decades there were serious takes on the superhero genre, and I've really appreciated them. I'm still not that much into "Camp."

NYT Crossword 06/11/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Charles M. Deber
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 35:29

Puzzle uniqueness: "Think Twice"

Various answers referred to obtain other answers in which each referred word has two meanings. It's as horrible as it's described.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

GRENADA - "Caribbean land whose capital is St. George's"
CARIOU - "Len of stage and screen"

Junk Answers: Tons, here are a few

REARER - "Silver, for example, in the opening to TV's 'The Lone Ranger'"
DRI - "Wash'n ___ (towelette brand)"
SUDSES - "Lathers (up)"
FLEETED - "Passed quickly"
HEB - "Lang. herd in Haifa"

Clever clues:

The puzzle was so bad I don't want to take the time to find any.

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

See "Junk Answers."

Saturday, June 10, 2017

"Wonder Woman" rocks!

I saw Wonder Woman twice this past week. It's terrific!

I've been a fan of the superhero film universe from day one. As a kid, I was a huge DC Comics fan. I even had a Superman comic book subscription. At the time, I really wasn't all that interested in the Marvel Comics universe. I felt the heroes had too much angst for me, but I eventually came around. I've commented to my family that if I were in my teenage years now, I would be in superhero heaven what with their being all over cinema and television.

Obviously, I still have feelings for superheroes. Glad I never lost them!

I've been aware that there has been a problem with women superheroes having their own movies. Interesting women characters have been around such as Agent Carter, Black Widow, etc., but had not yet had a cinematic showcase for any of them. I'm sure this move to put Wonder Woman in the forefront was a risk to the studio heads, but common sense prevailed and now we have an excellent film.

One can look at this as just a fine superhero movie, or go beyond and enjoy it as a woman empowerment  message. It works either way. I am very pleased that this is such a huge success. Everyone knows that had this film failed it would be a long time before another woman superhero would take the main stage.

As has been pointed out elsewhere, men directors can make a superhero movie that bombs and go on to make more, but sure as shootin' if this one had failed, director Patty Jenkins would never have had the opportunity to direct a big budget superhero film again. This is a very sad state of affairs, and I hope it will not be the case in the future.

This movie is great from the start. Gal Gadot hits a home run in her portrayal of Wonder Woman. From her scenes in her home world of Themyscira, land of the Amazons, to her fish out of water innocence and awe when she final leaves the island, she nails it. Chris Pine is also nifty as her "sidekick." He strikes just the right tone. The supporting characters are great in my opinion, though they might have had a bit more character development, but that's a very minor quibble.

My favorite scene is a rousing, kick ass defining moment for Wonder Woman that will definitely pump you up. Its a terrific scene. The irony is that the studio heads tried to not have the scene shot, but bless Jenkins' heart, she persevered and it was allowed in. Amazing to think that this excellent scene might not have made it in the finished product.

To me, the weakest part of the film is the climax. It's a trope in the superhero universe that the climax has to be a CGI-heavy clash of the titans. It was unwarranted in this movie. There was so much more to this film than just superhero vs. bad guy. The climax wasn't bad, per se, just a bit unnecessary.

One way I know how much I love a film is that I will smile through practically the entire movie. That was how I watched Wonder Woman. Smiling merrily away. I even got emotional during some of the scenes. I enjoyed it just as much the second time I saw it.

I know I get an extra amount of delight about the movie because I'm such a superhero fan, but I willing to bet that the majority of folks who see it will get a big bang out of it!

NYT Crossword 06/10/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Mark Diehl
Editor: Will Smith

Solving time: 41:10

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

ACHENE - "Seed of a strawberry or sunflower"
JUNKART - "Refuse work?" (Never heard of this!)

Trivia I didn't know:

APOLLOVI - "Launch of April 1968" (I knew Apollo, not the number)
IBIS - "National bird of Trinidad and Tobago"
ALE - "Half of a black and tan" (Is this a potent potable?)
OGEEARCH - "Gothic architectural feature" (Not heard of this phrase before)
HOWE - "Victor at Brandywine"
SAGET - "Bob who narrated 'How I Met Your Mother'" (Never seen the series)
ZENMONK - "Koan contemplator" (What the heck's a "Koan"?)

Junk Answers:

SANKA - "Fitting coffee order on a submarine?" (Not a junk answer, but a junk clue, IMO)
SECS - "Stopwatch tics: Abbr."
CGI - "Staple of modern sci-fi movies, for short"

Clever clues:

MENACHEM - "Begin at the beginning?"
ITEM - "Two stars, perhaps" (A couple)
DOGKENNELS - "Greyhound destinations?"
EGOIST - "Number one advocate?"
NINTHTEE - "Spot almost halfway through a course"
DIETED - "Passed the dessert?"
ZIT - "Bad spot"
EVE - "Forerunner in a race?"
MILITARYPENSION - "Income for general expenses?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

ACHENE - (See above)
OGEEARCH - (See above)
EPOCHAL - "Momentous"

Friday, June 09, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/09/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Steve Overton
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 33:15

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

LUZON - "Where Manila is"
SHAGUAR - "Austin Powers's car with a portmanteau name" (Not an Austin Powers fan)

Junk Answers:

UNODOS - "With 9-Down (TRES), Spanish leaders?"
DAT - "'Who ___'"
AKC - "Lab grp."

Clever clues:

DASHCAM - "Road movie producer?"
ENTEKEY - "It'll give you a break"(This is a bit weird)
CARAT - "Unit of brilliance?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Thursday, June 08, 2017

NYT Crossword 0608/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: David Steinberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: DNF

Puzzle uniqueness:

Second Thursday in a row a DNF. I've said in the past that I hate trick crosswords. I just want to solve basic words and clues. This one is a bit complicated to explain so I won't. Suffice it to say that by not being able to figure out the gimmick, there were two squares that I couldn't grok.

Words I hadn't known until now:

ADELIE - "Penguin species" (In a Thursday puzzle!)
SATORI - "Zen enlightenment"
QRBOXES - "Scannable black-and-white boxes"

Trivia I didn't know:

EVAN - "Actor Peters of 'American Horror Story'"
OBOE - "Letter before Peter in the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet" (I was in the Navy and it was "Oscar," then "Papa.")
ENOCH - "Methuselah's father"
SLOAN - "Penn : Wharton :: M.I.T. : _____"

Junk Answers:

AGTS - "Hollywood V.I.P.s: Abbr."
TIC - "Little jerk"
PAWAT - "Handle roughly"
ATMS - "Security cam sites"
ESTD - "Abbr. before a year"

Clever clues:

TOYOTA - "Sequoia, e.g."
CAPITALQ - "MapQuest feature"
ETCHER - "Impressionist artist?"
FAST - "Word before food, paradoxically?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

ADELIA - (See above)

Wednesday, June 07, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/07/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Timothy Polin
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 8:23

Puzzle uniqueness:

Five phrases in which the last word is a synonym for "hit." (Example: GARTERBELT)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

BLIETZKRIEGBOP - "Classic 1976 Ramones song that begins 'Hey! Ho! Let's Go!'"
HANSEN - "Liane ______, longtime NPR host"
EINK - "Text-displaying technology on Kindles"

Junk Answers:

UCSF - "Bay Area campus, in brief"
ROTO - "____-tiller"
MEH - "'I've seen better'"
PJS - "Comfy sleeper"

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

STATER - "Garden ______ (New Hampshire resident)

Tuesday, June 06, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/06/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalists: Lisa Loeb and Doug Peterson
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:37

Puzzle uniqueness:

Another 75th celebration with a celeb co-constructing, though I don't know her that well. First word in four phrases are #1 song hits with a couple of other song/singer references thrown in.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

GAIL - "Olympic track gold medalist Devers"

Junk Answers:

ENE - "Dallas-to-N.Y.C. direction"
END - "Em chasers"
AGIN - "Feudin' with"
SIDEA - "Hit home?"
SHES - "Females"
MTA - "N.Y.C. subway overseer"

Clever clues:

EIDER - "Duck for cover?"
DOZE - "Go out for a while?"
JODIE - "Foster child in 'Freaky Friday'"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words: 0

Monday, June 05, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/05/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Paul Coultzer
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:31

Puzzle uniqueness:

Circled O's underneath car answers representing tires.
Odd abutments of down answers EFFIGY, NOOSE and TROPE.

Words I hadn't known until now:

CANIO - "Tragic clown in 'Pagliacci'" (Odd answer for a Monday puzzle)

Trivia I didn't know:

CANIO - (See above)
AIDA - "Elton John/Tim Rice Broadway musical"

Junk Answers:

ESS - "Letter after 'ar'"
CII - "102, in ancient Rome"
EEC - "Common Market letters"
UPI - "Longtime news inits."
ELO - ""'Xanadu' band, for short"
TSK - "'Shame on you!"

Clever clues: 0

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

CANIO - (See above)

Sunday, June 04, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/04/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Tom McCoy
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 32:01

Puzzle uniqueness: "Advice To Writers"

Advice in which the advice itself is an example of the advice (Example: POOFREADCARFULLY)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

SBARRO - "Restaurant chain with a flag in its logo"

Junk Answers:

RDS - "They go from town to town, abbr."
ETH- "Old English letter"
MMV - "2005, to Cato"
NORI - "'Me, neither,' formally"
MTS- "Much of W.Va."
ANA - ""Santa ___, Calif."
DEM - "Bill Clinton or Barack Obama, informally"
OER - "Atop, poetically"
STA - "RR stop"
ONCD - "Like some audiobooks"
TIL - "Up to"
MHOS - "Conductance quantities"

Clever clues:

TETRA - "Bi- and bi-?"
PIERCEDEARS - "Ring bearers, maybe"
HOLEINONE - "Stroke of luck?"
MUSICIAN - "Person of note?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

SBARRO - (See above)
OVERGO - "Exceed"

Saturday, June 03, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/03/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Roland Huget
Editor: Will Smith

Solving time: 29:29

Puzzle uniqueness:

Lots of white space, basically four mini-puzzles with limited entry. NE - easy for me; SE - a bit harder but not too bad; SW - that took some time but TIMRICE and RUST were the big help; NW - the toughest by far, almost took me as much time as the other three combined, but WAY and TYPE gave me a foothold.

Words I hadn't known until now:

FASCIAS - "Horizontal pieces covering joint, in architecture"
ARCADIA - "Ancient Greek land that fought Sparta" (Never knew there was such a country)
PRIE - "____-dieu"
ARECIBO - "Puerto Rican home to the Western Hemisphere's largest radio telescope"
FARPOST- "Shooter's target in soccer" (I've gotten into soccer lately, but not heard this term)
RAMADAS - "Open-sided shelters"
AREAWAY - "Passage between buildings" (New one to me)

Trivia I didn't know:

PIRATES - "Team that last won the World Series in 1979" (Not much of a sports trivia guy)
TAPIOCA - "Thickening agent in cookery" (Who'd a thunk it?)
BIZET - "'L'Artesienne' suite composer, 1872"
LASALLE - "Mississippi River explorer" (Had it after a couple of squares)
THISTLE - "Heraldic emblem of Scotland"
RODRIGO - "Phillipine strongman ______ Duterte"

Junk Answers:

SERT - "Spanish Muralist Jose Maria ____"
PRIE - (See above)

Clever clues:

ALFREDO - "Saucy name?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

FASCIAS - (See above)
ARACHNE - "Weaver of Greek mythology"
BIZ - "Infrequent ending for URLs"
BEZEL - "Part of a watch that holds the face's glass cover"
PRIE - (See above)
ARECIBO - (See above)
IDEATE - "Brainstorm"

Friday, June 02, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/02/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: John Guzzetta and Michael Hawkins
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 39:20 (I was watching the NBA Finals at the same time)

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

MAIA - "Eldest of the Pleiades"
ALEPHNULL - "Smallest infinite cardinal number" (Huh?)
CYCAD - "Palmlike tropical plant" (WTF?)
VOLUNTOLD- "Assigned, as to do charity work, in modern lingo" (C'mon, man!)
INSATIATE - "Constantly wanting more" (Was not aware of this version of "insatiable")

Trivia I didn't know:

MECCA - "Churchill Downs, to horse racing fans"
MOBIL - "Company once named Socony-Vacuum"

Junk Answers:

LTD - "Abbr. for Lucasfilm"
TLC - "Close attention, in brief"
AVE - "Uber app abbr."
BBS - "Stingers from a gun"
SEC - "Heartbeat"
LES - "Relative of 'die'" ("Die" = German for "the," "les" = French for "the")
VPS - "Some execs"
LETAT - "Unleash upon"
CUL - "___-de-sac"
SIDEA - "Queen's 'We Are the Champions,' vis-à-vis 'We Will Rock You'"

Clever clues:

LAMB - "One devoted to Mary?"
STOIC - "Not the moveable type"
BABES - "Ones up in arms"
STARE - "Vacancy sign?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

MAIA - (See above)
ALEPHNULL - (See above)
CYCAD - (See above)
VOLUNTOLD - (See above)

Thursday, June 01, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/01/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Derek Bowman and Sarah Keller
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: DNF

Puzzle uniqueness:

Center square is rebus with the word SUN. Diagonal black squares radiating away to simulate sun rays. THEWORLD in circular circled squares in each corner of the puzzle simulating orbiting.

I had LURID for EERIE and couldn't figure out LIESUNDER. Didn't see my mistake BPLUSUS for BPLUSES.

Words I hadn't known until now:

ETRURIA - "Ancient region of central Italy"
FALUN - "_____ Gong (Chinese spiritual practice)"
RITTS - "Fashion photographer Herb"
DIECI - "Cinque + cinque"

Trivia I didn't know:

ORAN - "Part of the scape route in 'Casablanca'" (And I've seen the movie a bazillion times!)
AHL - "Org. with the Calder Cup"
OLE - "___ Buttermilk Sky" (Thought it was "old," which led me to "lurid")

Junk Answers:

ASASON - "How one may be loved"
SADLOTS - "Pitiful sorts"
ALT - "Lead-in to right or rock"
ESE - "Minneapolis-to-Milwaukee dir."
HORSY - "Equine" (Really?)
SATAT - "Occupied, as a table"
AHL - (See above)

Clever clues:

FDA - "Letters of approval"
STEAD - "Home addition"
RERUN - "Seldom reviewed TV show"
TERMITE - "One eating you out of house and home?"
SCALDED - "Left a burning impression?"
HEALS - "Makes sound"
STIFF - "Leave nothing behind?"

Obscure (i.e., really reaching) words:

ETRURIA - (See above)
FALUN - (See above)
ADORERS - "The Magi, e.g."
LITHEST - "Most svelte"
DIECI - (See above)