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)

Wednesday, May 31, 2017

NYT Crossword 06/07/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Jacob Stulberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 21:44

Puzzle uniqueness:

DONTTAKETHEBAIT - Is on one side of puzzle going down, right side 14 "I''s going down with a "J" at the bottom representing a line and hook. Fish are mixed in the across answers throughout the middle.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

BASS - "The Mikado in 'The Mikado,' e.g."
LABRADOR - "Neighbor of Quebec"
PARMA - "Italian city known for its prosciutto and cheese"

Junk Answers:

MOOING - "Farmyard noise"
TOI - "You, to Yvette"
TSO - "Name on Chinese restaurant menus"

Clever clues:

TRALALA - "Refrain from singing?"

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

DISCI - "Things hurled at the Olympics" (Really, have you ever heard anyone use this word?)

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/30/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Neville Fogarty
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 8:21

Puzzle uniqueness:

GREYMATTER - Grey squares inside long answers in which the grey squares denote first names ending with "Grey." (Example: LIPZZANER - Zane within to represent Zane Grey)

Words I hadn't known until now:

GORETEX - "Waterproof fabric"

Trivia I didn't know:

IVAN - "Boxer Drago of 'Rocky IV'"

Junk Answers:

AANDE - "'Storage Wars' network"
ATAB - "Open ____ (start at the bar, maybe)"

Clever clues:

ATMS - "20 dispensers"

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

Monday, May 29, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/29/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Jeff Chen and Seth Geltman
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 8:41

Puzzle uniqueness:

PRIMETIME - Four answers in which the second words are various time frames in descending order (Age, year, day and hour).

Words I hadn't known until now:

BEDHEAD - "Tousled look of the recently woken" (Huh?)

Trivia I didn't know:

BARAK - "Former Israeli P.M. Ehud"

Junk Answers:

HED - "If only ___ listened"
AVG - "Dow Jones stat."
SPEX - "X-ray ___ (Gag gift)"
DITS - "Counterparts of dahs in Morse code"
PRE - "___-K (early schooling)"
PCS - "Mac alternatives"

Clever clues: 0

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

SPEX - (See above)
BEDHEAD - (See above)

Sunday, May 28, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/28/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Andrew Zhou
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 27:13

Puzzle uniqueness: "Bad Taste"

ARECIPRFORDISASTER gotten to via "Stir," Mix," Beat," Pour," "Cut" and Serve" downbeat phrases. (Example: BEATADEADHORSE)

Words I hadn't known until now:

BONOBO - "Chimpanzee variety"

Trivia I didn't know:

COSECANT - "Reciprocal in trigonometry"
ALTA - "Resort in the Wasatch Mountains"
URBANII - "Pope who initiated the First Crusade"

Junk Answers:

CTS - "Numbers after a decimal point: Abbr."
XTRA -  'More, in ads"
WOP -  "Doo-___"
SIMS - "Family in a computer game"
DIDO -  'Character with the aria 'When I am laid in earth'"
ISAW  - "'Vidi'"
PSAS - "Ad Council output, for short"
DLIST - "Like minor celebrities"
RAES - "Pulitzer winner Armantrout and others"

Clever clues:

VANE - "Pointer for a weather person?"
SIR - "One who's been tapped on the shoulder"
UMPED - "Made some calls"

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

Saturday, May 27, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/27/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Damon Gulczynski
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 33:47

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

COLPORTEUR - "Peddler of religious literature" (WTF?!?)

Trivia I didn't know:

ALDA - "'The Aviator' actor, 2004"
LEON - "Province of NW Spain"
COPA - "'At the ____' (subtitle of a 1978 hit)"
AZTEC - "Language related to Hopi"
HAVISHAM - "Dickens character 'with a dead lull about her'"
FLORIDATECH - "University in Melbourne"
BOER - "Great Trek figure of the 1830s"
ABBOTT - "Jim ______, one-handed Yankee who pitched a no-hitter in 1993"
EGAN - "Pulitzer-winning novelist Jennifer"
HANNAH - "'Girls' girl played by Lena Dunham"

Junk Answers:

DUH - "'Well, yeah!'"
ATNO - "Md or Rn fig."
RKO - "Company behind Hitchcock's 'Notorius'"
IATE - "'____ it up and spit it out' ('My Way' lyric)"
SEPT - "9/"

Clever clues:

CHARY - "Word that's its own synonym when its first two letters are replaced with 'w'"
BOAT - "One making bank-to-bank transfers?"

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

COLPORTEUR - (See above)
ANTENATAL - "During pregnancy" ("Prenatal" is more common by a lot)

Friday, May 26, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/26/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Robyn Weintraub
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 19:09

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

DEO - "To God, in a hymn"
LEDA - "Mother of Helen of Troy"
TANEY - "Chief justice in the Dred Scott verdict"
CONAN - "Talk show hosted by a Harvard grad"
LATKE - "Hanukkah serving"
ELGIN - "The _____ Marbles (British Museum holding)"

Junk Answers:

MFA - "Writer's degree"
ONT - "Neighbor of N.Y."
SRTA - ""Dora the Explorer, for one: Abbr."
STD - "Part of E.S.T.: Abbr."
ACS - "They're often installed in the spring, for short"
JCT - "Highway sign abbr."
STA - "Victoria, e.g.: Abbr."
ENGS - "Some Caltech alums: Abbr."

Clever clues:

CABS - "They're hailed on Broadway"
OVERSLEPT - "Stayed out when you shouldn't have?"
SMITE - "Bible belt?"
MONIES - "They're tender"(Friday)

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

Thursday, May 25, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/25/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Erik Agard
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 14:04

Puzzle uniqueness:

ILLGOFIRST: Second word of phrase puts "I" within word in the front of the word to make a silly phrase (Example: FRENCHIGUANA)

Words I hadn't known until now:

FANART - "Some derivative drawings"

Trivia I didn't know:

EURO - "Symbol gotten by typing Ctrl+Alt+E, in Microsoft Word"
MCA - "___ Nashville (major country label)"

Junk Answers:

SPF - "Letters on a bottle at the beach"
MDI - "Year that Michelangelo started 'David'"
FWD - "Start of many a chain mail"
ENDO - "Prefix meaning 'internal'"
RCA - "Record label for Usher, Pitbull and Pink"
MLB - "Org. with Card Games"
PAS - "Faux ___"

Clever clues: 0

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

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

"Alien: Covenant" good, but not great

I saw Alien: Covenant yesterday. I liked it, but not as much as I'd hoped.

I'm an Alien franchise fan, and Aliens is one of my all-time favorite action pictures. I've stated in the past that I really love action films, especially the rock 'em sock 'em kind.

While there is fun action in this film, director Ridley Scott and four writers (two "story by" and two "screenplay by") are more into philosophical issues than I care to delve into.

Aliens, for me, was a perfect action film. Some minor themes such as motherhood were touched upon, but they didn't intrude on the great action.

Here, we have two androids (Scott really seems to like androids) discussing moral issues and themes that just didn't interest me. I'm sure there are those fans who want to get into creationism, master/slave ideas, but not me.

I also have problems with a couple of decisions the crew in the film made, though they had to be made to further the plot. I won't get into specifics to preserve this opinion piece as spoiler free.

This film is supposed to occur 10 years after Prometheus and a few years before Alien, but for the life of me I can't figure out how this is going to lead into the first film of the franchise. Scott has expressed interest in making two more Alien movies, so we'll see where it goes.

The bottom line is the action sequences are really excellent, and that's why I do like this film more than not. I will be seeing it again (several times, I think). I get the feeling that this film will grow on me in the coming years.

NYT Crossword 05/24/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Michael Hawkins
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 10:30

Puzzle uniqueness:

Plumber-related phrases

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

ABE - "Homer's father"

Junk Answers:

TSA - "Body-scanning group"
OER - "Poetic contraction"
ENG - "Lang. course"
AHS - "Sounds made during medical checkups"

Clever clues: 0

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

AGASP - "Audibly appalled"

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/23/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Zhouqin Burnikel
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 12:58

Puzzle uniqueness:

PAIRS - Four Across/Down words that are identical and in the plural form constitute pairs (Example: TONG: Interconnecting both across and down = A pair of tongs)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

TONGAN - "Friendly Islands native"

Junk Answers:

NONPC - "Potentially offensive"
EOE - "Fair-hiring letters"
EME - "Suffix with morph-"
AIWA - "Onetime giant in consumer electronics"
KAL - "Penn of 'Harold & Kumar' films"
NEUT - "Neither fem. nor masc."
RWY - "Train system: Abbr."
OHOK - "'Well, alright then'"
MAA - "Nanny goat's cry"
TOI - "You, in tours"

Clever clues:

ADORE - "Dig deeply"
MAT - "Silent 'Welcome' giver"

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

IMINAWE - ""Wow, unbelievable!"
SATINON - "Audited, as a class"
IDOIDO - "Enthusiastic assent"
IBEENHAD - "Informal cry from someone who is duped"

Monday, May 22, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/22/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Gary Kennedy
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:17

Puzzle uniqueness:

SWISS, ARMY and KNIFE incorporated in puzzle, along with four uses for the knife. (CANOPENER, CORKSCREW, Etc.)

Words I hadn't known until now:

WOTAN - "King of the gods in Wagner's 'Ring' cycle"

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

TRA - "'___-la-la'"
STE - "Sault ___ Marie, Mich."
SST - "Concorde, for short"

Clever clues: 0

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

WOTAN - (See above)

Sunday, May 21, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/21/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Randolph Ross
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 47:16

Puzzle uniqueness: "Misquoting Scripture"

Making puns out of famous scripture lines (Example: "ANAYEFORANAYE"

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

STE - "___-Foy, Que."
HOAD - "Two-time Wimbledon winner Lew"
NYACK - "New York town on the Hudson"
ASE - "'Peer Gynt' character"
THETA - "Symbol in trigonometry"
VOGEL - "Political writer Kenneth"
NIN - "'Children of the Albatross' author"
YVETTE - "Mrs. Michael Jordan"

Junk Answers: Many...here are a few

STK - "Purchase via Charles Schwab: Abbr."
TRA - "Part of a chorus line?"
LII - "Number of weeks per annum?"
NFLER - "Buc or Bronco"
LDL - "Blood work report abbr."
ILIE -"Would ____?"
ADDA - "Start of many recipe steps"
ESL - "Night school subj." (English as a Second Language)
FGS - "OT enders, sometimes"

Clever clues:

ADSALE - "Commercial success?"
ERODING - "Losing ground?"
AVIATOR - "Skilled banker?"

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

SAFARIED - "Went on an African hunting expedition"
KEYOFE - "Setting for spring in Vivaldi's 'The Four Seasons'"
SOFTA - "Vowel sound in 'hard' and 'start'"
NYACK - (See above)
UNU - "Burma's first P.M."

Saturday, May 20, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/20/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Paolo Pasco and David Steinberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 31:45

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

DAB - "Celebratory move popularized by Cam Newton"
SAZERAC - "New Orleans cocktail"
CAD - "Player, perhaps"
FACESWAP - "Snapchat feature that alters one's features"

Trivia I didn't know:

RYE - "Marble ___"
AZIZ - "Actor Ansari"
BAHIA - "Brazil's fourth-largest state by population"
SULU - "The Philippines' ___ Archipelago"
ALICEWALKER - "'Meridian' and 'The Temple of My Familiar' novelist"
SOREL - "Political cartoonist Edward"
STOWE - "Ski town near Mount Mansfield"
RATBERT - "Gullible rodent in a Scott Adams comic"

Junk Answers:

VJS - "Onetime MTV figures"
ERG - "Bit of work"
ILS - "French pronoun"

Clever clues:

ZONEDEFENSE - "Regional coverage plan?"
CSHARP - "Optometrist's favorite musical note?"
COOP - "Place to pick up chicks"
DUSTMOP - "Bunny picker-upper?"
IVORIES - "They can't stay quiet when tickled"
JOYRIDE - "Driving the wrong way?"
AIRACES - "Some shooting stars"

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

Bahia - (See above)

Friday, May 19, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/19/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Matthew Sewell
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 16:12

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now:

SAMOSA - "Savory Indian appetizer"
NOL - "___ pros. (lawsuit abbr.)"
ALCAZAR - "Moorish castle"

Trivia I didn't know:

 NELLIE - "Bratty girl on 'Little House on the Prairie'"

Junk Answers:

ARR - "Sheet music abbr."
ETO - "Large W.W. II area: Abbr."
IMO - "Qualifier in 46-Across" (TEXTS)
STS - "Some patrons: Abbr."
WAC - "W.W. II service member"
DMVS - "Photo ID issuers"

Clever clues:

AGENT - "86 or 99"
TEENY - "Size zero, say"
AVON - "What makes consumers blush?"
KISSCAM - "What motivates people to get to first base during a game?"
USURPED - "Wrongly assumed"
ENGAGEMENTPARTY - "Its honorees plan to become one"

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

Thursday, May 18, 2017

The Beatles: All the time

Today, SiriusXM debuted an all Beatles channel at 6:09 PDT. I don't subscribe to Sirius; however, the company is allowing free listening until May 30.

Upon learning about the freebie, I immediately downloaded the Sirius app on my smartphone. For the next two hours, I listened to the channel. Nice treat! They intersperse Beatles music with anecdotal blurbs from The Beatles themselves and various celebrities. They will be playing covers as well. During the two hours I listened, they only played one, that being You've Got To Hide Your Love Away by Oasis.

In 1964, I was living in El Paso, Texas, and I still vividly remember seeing The Beatles' debut on The Ed Sullivan Show. I was 13 at the time, and I really wasn't into that particular pop music scene. My father had raised me on the classics in addition to forties and fifties Sinatra-type pop music.

First off, I sneered at the name. I distinctly recall saying, "Next there will be a group called The Trashmen." Turns out I was right, though they had been around since 1962.

I was particularly astounded by the screaming girls in the audience. I had never seen anything like that before. It hadn't occurred to me yet that people can have such extremely emotional responses to a celebrity.

Of course, not being into rock music at that moment, I didn't really have a positive response to the debut. Thought it was an oddity. The music was rather grating to that 13-year-old.

My conversion to rock and roll occurred later that year after I had moved to Los Angeles, California. The San Fernando Valley, specifically. I was with my best friend motoring our way to the beach when suddenly, on the radio, the song that converted me started playing. You won't believe this, but it was The Swim by Bobby Freeman.

"Come on, everybody...come on in...Bobby's gonna to show you how to do the swim!"



I was thunderstruck! That was a GREAT song in my mind. From that point on, I was a convert.

And that led me to the appreciation of The Beatles. I've been a Beatles fan ever since. What I appreciated about them was that whenever a new song came out, I was ok with it at that time, but a few months would go by, I would hear it again and suddenly realize how great the song actually was. They were constantly ahead of me. Amazing.

So, for now, I'll listen to Sirius' Beatles channel until the end of the month, then decide whether to subscribe.

A postscript: My love for rock/pop music died with the advent of Disco. Oh, I've kept my eye on the pop music scene for the last forty years, but never to the extent and passion I had during the late 60s and early 70s.

NYT Crossword 05/18/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Jacob Stulberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 32:28

Puzzle uniqueness:

Four squares that has "chicken" and "road" as a rebus (Multiple letters in one square). Ugh!

Words I hadn't known until now:

SEPTA - "BART : San Francisco :: _____ : Philadelphia"
ESL - "Subj. for a diplomat, maybe"
LINE - "'y = 2x,' e.g." (I don't even know WTF this means)

Trivia I didn't know:

ONES - "'Madness in great ____ must not unwatch'd go': 'Hamlet'"
NASSAU - "Island capital named for a European royal house"
ESTATE - "Subject of Chekov's 'The Cherry Orchard'"
DOR - "'Le Coq ___'"
URANIA - "Muse invoked in 'Paradise Lost'"

Junk Answers:

EST - "It's often rough: Abbr."
SNL - "Show with a record 200+ Emmy noms"
MSGS - "What blinks on a telephone may signify: Abbr,"
ESL - (See above)

Clever clues:

BALE - "Assemble in a field, say"
RENT - "Studio figure"
WHY - "Question raised by four squares in this puzzle?" (SEE "Puzzle uniqueness")
UNTUNED - "A bit sharp, maybe"
BAREXAM - "Legal hurdle?"

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

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/17/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Paul Hunsberger
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:21 (Personal best for a Wed. puzzle)

Puzzle uniqueness:

Two-word answers in which the second word can hook up with the first word of the next answer. (Example: COURT(CASE, CLOSED)CIRCUIT)

Words I hadn't known until now:

EHOW - "Website for D.I.Y.ers"

Trivia I didn't know:

MIXALOT - :'Baby Got Back' Grammy winner Sir _______"

Junk Answers:

SSN - "Fig. on an W-9"
CFL - "Grid org. with a 110-yard field"
MOS - "Crooks' patterns, to cops"

Clever clues: 0

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

ECRUS - "Hosiery shades" (Plural, really?)
MIMEO - "Obsolete repro machine"
INPEN - "How confident solvers may solve" ("In ink" is the common usage)
SADIES - "Ncknames for 41-acrosses (SARAH)"
ECOTAX - "Levy on polluters, e.g."

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/16/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Bruce Haight
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 14:36

Puzzle uniqueness:

State names plus one letter to scramble into two-word answers.

Words I hadn't known until now:

CAPSID - "Outer protein shell of a virus"

Trivia I didn't know:

AMIS - "Martin who wrote 'London Fields'"
ALEC - "Evelyn Waugh's writer brother"
THEO - "'Divergent' actor James"
NAN - "A Bobbsey twin"

Junk Answers:

ORS - "Option words"
BAS - "___ -relief"
SSN - "Phishing target: Abbr."
ARG - "S. Amer. home of the tango"
PAS - "Ballet step"
ITT - "Big inits. in the aerospace industry"

Clever clues: 0

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

CAPSID - (See above)
SENTUP - "Parodied"
SCHUSS - "Straight downhill run on skis"

Monday, May 15, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/15/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Peter Gordon
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:12

Puzzle uniqueness:

Synonyms for "child" embedded across two-word answers with the hint INNERCHILD one of the answers as a clue, (Example: CAMINOREAL = MINOR)

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

BENES - "Elaine's last name on 'Seinfeld'"
BEENE - "Designer Geoffrey"

Junk Answers:

AHME - "Sigher's words"
NOV - "Election mo."
IST - "'Was ___ das?' (German question)"
NCO - "Cpl., e.g."
NEA  - "Schoolteacher's org."
YSL - "French designer's monogram"

Clever clues:

OARED - "Got into a row?"

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

Sunday, May 14, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/14/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Will Nediger
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 50:44

Puzzle uniqueness: "Places, Everyone!"

Circled answers have to include a first word geographically depending on the location of the answer within the puzzle. (Examples: (Top BANANAS; Left BEHIND; etc.)

Words I hadn't known until now:

SAUK - "Fox neighbor" (Apparently, these are Indian tribes)
CHASSE - "Gliding step, in ballet"

Trivia I didn't know:

SKA - "Prince Buster's genre" (Never heard of him)
GIL - "___ Gunderson, sad sack on 'The Simpsons'"
ODAY - "Singer/reality TV personality Aubrey" (I HATE reality TV!)
ALDA - "Vinick's portrayer on 'The West Wing'"
EDINA - "Suburb of Minneapolis"
ALIBABA - "Fictional woodcutter"
DRAKE - "Rapper with the 4x platinum album 'Views"
TRISTE - "Sibelius's 'Valse ______'"
ANDREI - "Russian film director Tarkovsky"

Junk Answers:

NEER - "Contraction lacking just a 'v'"
ITIS- "Sinus suffix"
ONEL - "First-year law student"
CDV - "405, to Flavius"

Clever clues:

NEEDLE - "You might find one under a Christmas tree"
BALDSPOT - "It lacks locks"
FENCE - "Theft preventer ... or theft encourager"
GASMAIN - "Line to a pilot?"

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

PLANER - "Power machine in woodworking"
OLMECS - "Colossal head sculptors"
SPITED - "Treated with malice"
PUPATE - "Transform, as larvae"
ASHINE - "Glowing"
PRIDING - "Indulging (oneself) in self-satisfaction"

Saturday, May 13, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/13/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Jeff Chen
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 35:30

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

OPIUMDENS - "Places frequented by Dorian Gray" (Never read it)
IBELIEVEICANFLY - "Grammy-winning R. Kelly hit of 1996"
SRI - "___ Yantra (sacred Hindu diagram formed by nine interlocking triangles)" (Puh-leeze!)
ANNEHECHE - "'Wag the Dog' co-star, 1997"
RABIN - "1994 Peace Prize sharer"
BOOBOISIE - "Ignorant middle class, per H.L. Mencken"
RENI - "Baroque artist Guido"
SELMA - "'The Simpsons' aunt" (Never really followed the show)

Junk Answers:

NOOB - "Pro's opposite, in slang"
TRI - "Ironman race, briefly"
INESSE - "Existing"
ISTO - "What ':' can mean"
ING - "Fortune Global 500 bank"
ALA - "After"
TMI - "'Eww, stop!'"

Clever clues:

SCREW - "A thread winds around it"
SPY - "Nonnative plant?"
CINDERELLATEAMS - "They're often upsetting"
SNAP - "Take a shot" (As in snap a pic)
USEDCARS - "They're old and tired"
OSHA - "Plant watcher, for short"

Friday, May 12, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/12/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Bill Clinton and Victor Fleming
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 13:33

Puzzle uniqueness:

Another 75th anniversary puzzle having a famous person co-construct the puzzle; this time the former president. This played very easy for me. Lots of answers in my wheelhouse. Three horizontal answers were a line from Don't Stop by Fleewood Mac, a "fight" song for the Clinton campaign. (DONTSTOP; THINKINGABOUT; TOMORROW)

Words I hadn't known until now:

TERR - "Apt. amenity, perhaps"
BOHEME - "Unconventional sort, en francais" (I've heard of "La Boheme," so that helped)
CANTABS - "Residents of Cambridge, England" (This corner added to my solving time)

Trivia I didn't know:

SHEP - "Record producer Pettibone"
SEOUL - "Capital on the Han River" (Didn't know it was on a river)

Junk Answers:

HUR - "Ben-___"
COS - "I.R.S. Form 1120 filers: Abbr."
TERR - (See above)
AER - "What the Irish breathe" ("Aer Lingus" got me this one)
DRAWEE - "Bank from which a check is paid" (Rarely used word)

Clever clues:

ANEMIA - "Heavy metal shortage?
USMINT - "A real moneymaker"
MRI - "Inside look?"
ADULTS - "They're never minor"

Thursday, May 11, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/11/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Timothy Polin
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 19:32

Puzzle uniqueness:

Three answers that are phonetic commands to another three answers. Example: VEGETABLEGARDEN; HOMEY

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

NAOMI - "Biblical wife of Elimelech" (WHO????)
SONYA  "Raskolnikov's lover in 'Crime and Punishment'"

Junk Answers:

ICK - "That tastes awful!"

Clever clues:

SCAM - "Rook or gull"
AXEL - "Spin out on the ice?"
PAR - "Something to shoot for"
CAMEO - "It might be just a line or two"
ROSS - "Sewer of note"
ALPHA - "Leading man?"
ESTATETAX - "Dead reckoning?"

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/10/17 (Wedsneday)

Cruciverbalist: Ned White
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 10:50

Puzzle uniqueness:

BADMINTONNET down the center with "birdie" answers left and right (back and forth) down the puzzle, four answers on top and bottom referencing the game of badminton.

Words I hadn't known until now:

NISI - "Unless, in law"
RISD - "Providence art inst."

Trivia I didn't know:

TIMEINC - "Publisher of People"
UVA - "Sch. founded by Thomas Jefferson"

Junk Answers:

PES - "Foot, in anatomy"
UVA - (See above)
RISD - (See above)
CTA - "'L' train overseer"
ONA - "Lead-in to lark or dare"
OSE - "Suffix for sugars"
LBO - "Certain Wall St. takeover" (This was an unknown to me just a couple of days ago)
REN - "'Footloose' hero ___ McCormack"
ODED - "Took too much, briefly"

Clever clues: 0

Tuesday, May 09, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/09/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Peter A. Collins
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 12:05

Puzzle uniqueness:

Six three-word rhyming phrases with "a" in the middle (Sneak a peak, etc.).

Words I hadn't known until now:

HARRIS - "______ tweed"

Trivia I didn't know:

OCALA - "City between Gainesville and Orlando"
TESH - "Radio host John" (Didn't know he had a radio show)
AEROS - "Nestle bars filled with tiny bubbles" (Huh?)
ETA - "Letter between zeta and theta" (Have no idea the progression of the Greek alphabet)

Junk Answers:

ISU - ""Terra Haute sch."
NHS - "Org. for top-notch H.S. students"
SSTAR - "Relatively cool red giant"
SYST - "The second "S" of MS-DOS: Abbr." (Microsoft - Disk Operating System)

Clever clues: 0

Monday, May 08, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/08/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Zhouqin Burnikel
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:45

Puzzle uniqueness:

Five two-word answers in which the first words are the homophones of "L," "G," "B," "T," and "Q"

Words I hadn't known until now:

BEEBALM - "Flower that attracts pollinating insects"

Trivia I didn't know:

MALIK - "Pop singer Zayn formerly of One Direction"

Junk Answers:

INST - "Caltech, e.g.: Abbr."
QTS - "There are four in a gallon: Abbr."
BYS - "Fly-___ (Blue Angel maneuvers"
HST - "President before DDE"
GOL - "Futbol score"

Clever clues: 0

Sunday, May 07, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/07/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Natan Last, Finn Vigeland and the J.A.S.A. Crossword Class
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 24:06

Puzzle uniqueness: "Duality Quality"

Two words in each theme answer that are spelled the same except for the first letter and each word is pronounced differently like the them title. (J.A.S.A. is the Jewish Association Serving the Aging)

Words I hadn't known until now:

LBOS - "Some Wall St. deals" (Leverage Buy Outs)
MOOC - "Acronym for a class taught over the Internet" (Massive Open Online Courses)
GHEE - "Butter in South Asian cuisines"

Trivia I didn't know:

BORN - "Lady Gaga's '____ This Way'"
LUX - "'___ et veritas'"
ANSEL - "Actor Elgort of 'The Fault in Our Stars'"
OTRO - "'Al ____ Lado del Rio' (2004 Oscar-winning song)"
ODES - "____ of Solomon"
ALIX - "'The Adventures of ___' (European comics series)"
IBIS - "Animal avatar of Thoth"
XIAN - "Chinese city known for its terra-cotta warriors"

Junk clues:

LBOS - (See Above)
MOOC - (See above)

Clever clues: 0

Saturday, May 06, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/06/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Joe Dipietro
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 42:56

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Almost gave up on this one. About half way through, I hit a wall and just couldn't get a firm grip. Fortunately everything started falling in place one little piece at a time, and I finished it.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know:

BUSONI - "'Doktor Faust' composer" (I've never heard of the guy)
IRA - "'___ Sleeps Over' (classic children's book)" (Never heard of it)
BIGS - "With 51-Across (THE), two steps away from AA, informally"
ENDO - "Prefix with -genous" ("Endogenous"? What the heck is that?)
KAY - "Eloise creator Thompson"
ALBERTA - "1988 Olympics locale"
LILKIM - "Rapper with the debut album 'Hard Core'"
GAZASTRIP - "Intifada locale"
RCADOME - "Former home of the Colts"

Junk clues:

EDT - "Setting for Red Sox games: Abbr."
BEL - "Acoustics unit"
ENDO - (See above)
EROO - "Old switch ending"

Clever clues:

ACNE - "Breakout of a sort"
LAP - "It disappears after rising"
DOE - "John in a suit?"
SOLI - "They're not complex numbers"
CRANKCALLER - "One asking for Ahmed Adoudi, say" (If you don't get it, try saying it out loud)
PART - "It may just be a bit"
SCAMARTIST - "One who's gotten good marks?"
OREGANO - "Herb of PBS's 'Ciao Italia'"
DOT - "Feature of only two letters"
LIRA - "Italian bread that's become toast?"
INN - "Overnight letter?"
MAS - "What's more in Madrid?"
SON - "Start of a sequel sometimes"
BEERKEG - "Center of a blowout, maybe"
OARS - "Sticks in the water?"
SEXT - "Suggestive transmission"
PETTAXI - "Urban lab transporter, maybe"

Friday, May 05, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/05/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Patrick Berry
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 27:00

Puzzle uniqueness: 0

Patrick Berry is always a thorn in my side. I find it difficult to solve his puzzles. This is one that I solved. Feels great!

Words I hadn't known until now:

DORAG - "Crown cover"
PITAS - "Scoopers for taramasalata" (Have no idea what "taramasalata" is)
UGG - "___ boots" (Sorta know 'Ugg," but didn't know they were boots, per se)

Trivia I didn't know:

OSOLEMIO - "Song whose opening lyric translates to 'What a beautiful thing is a sunny day'"
URAL - "River bisecting Orsk"
POUNDSTERLING - "World's oldest currency still in use"
NATURE - "'She understands her business better than we do,' per Montaigne"
RESIN - "Substance used in Egyptian mummification"
PINES - "Seven ___ (Civil War battle site)"
ALI - "Who said 'I'm so mean I make medicine sick'"

Junk clues:

SGT - "Squad cmdr."

Clever clues:

TIRES - "Golf cart foursome"
HOUSETRAINING - "Instructions on where to go?"
HEELS - "Grate catches?"
LIB - "End of a cause?"
ICECAP - "Pole topper"
OVERALLS - "Agricultural outfit"
SOUNDBITE - "Conversation piece?"
MARS - "Opportunity's on it"
DEMOTAPES - "Things mailed without a label?"
MEASURING - "Ruler's role"
ECOLI - "Things that take guts?"
BANGBANG - "Reports of gunfire?"

Thursday, May 04, 2017

"No, Elvis is not dead...he just went home"

Saw Men in Black yesterday at the theater. What a pleasant way to spend the afternoon. Another movie that still holds up after twenty years. The exception, of course, are the pop culture references. I do believe that decades down the road those jokes just won't fly. I'm talking about Anthony Robbins, Dennis Rodman, Al Roker, etc. But that's a minor quibble. Though the Elvis quote in the title of this post will certainly stand the test of time!

The many different aliens are still well appreciated. We can thank Rick Baker for that. He's definitely a grand master when it comes to makeup.

I had forgotten the Vincent D'Onofrio played the Bug Man. He was terrific! And, of course, an unknown Tony Shalhoub was also great as the alien who got his head blown off only to be grown back. I love K's departing line, "...or I'll shoot something that won't grow back!" Funny stuff!

Spoiler alert! If you haven't seen the movie and are intending to, don't read any further.

For the past few months for some reason, I've been contemplating the vast expanse of the universe. It is mind bogging just how big it is. Then there's the thought that if there is an end to the universe, what's on the other side of the ending? On the other hand, how can it be infinite?  What about multiverses?

The point of my thoughts is the ending of MiB shows that all the galaxies in our universe are just part of a marble in another universe. Director Barry Sonnenberg has a nice ending camera pull-away from a medium shot of our intrepid heroes, whizzing through our galaxies, to outside the marble being shot by an alien three-fingered hand, then finally deposited into a bag of marbles (Other universes!). Nicely done!

NYT Crossword 05/04/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Loren Muse Smith and Tracy Gray
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 20:02

Puzzle uniqueness:

Four black squares utilized as the word "ICE" to connect words on either side of the squares.

Words I hadn't known until now:

HOLLA - "Shouted casual greeting"
ESSA - "She, in Italian"
CATARACT - "Waterfall"
AIWA - "Audio equipment brand"

Trivia I didn't know:

NEGEV - "Beersheba's region"
OREO - "Jell-O pudding flavor"
LENA - "Russian river to the Arctic Ocean"
LILABNER - "Comics character who was perpetually 19" (Didn't know that was his actual age!)
JOAN - "'Mad Men' femme fatal" (Never seen the show)

Junk Answers:

HOLLA - (See above)
SNO - "___-Caps (Nestle brand)"
YSHAPE - "What a dowsing rod or a slingshot has"

Clever clues: 0

Wednesday, May 03, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/03/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Alan Arbesfeld
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:40

Puzzle uniqueness:

A pun quote. I'm not a fan quotes in crosswords.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

AOUT - "Month after juillet"
CSA - "Stars and Bars org."
ELIHU - "Yale of Yale University"
RLS - "'Kidnapped' monogram"
EQUI - "Prefix with angular or lateral"
XSOUT - "Crosses off"
SPH - "Three-dimensional fig."
MRT - "Mohawk sporter on 'The A Team'"

Clever clues: 0

Tuesday, May 02, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/02/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: David J. Kahn
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 10:13

Puzzle uniqueness:

Six two-word answers in which the first word is the one-word title of a Best Musical award.

Words I hadn't known until now:

LAPROBES - "Blankets for open-air travelers"

Trivia I didn't know:

HAMILTONBERMUDA - "Capital city with only about 1,000 residents (2016)"
NALDI - "Nita of silent films" (This is really reaching)
BIGME - "1996 Foo Fighters hit"

Junk Answers:

ATA - "___ crossroads"
EPI - "Prefix with center"
TRA - "___-la-la"abbr."
SSR - "70-Across, e.g., formerly" (ESTONIA)
ECO - "Prefix with tourism"

Clever clues:

OHM - "Law man"
EGO - "Massage target?"
LEI - "Ring on a string"
TBAR - "Means of avoiding an uphill climb"

Monday, May 01, 2017

NYT Crossword 05/01/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Ed Sessa
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 6:47

Puzzle uniqueness:

Four answers dealing with Marie Antoinette

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

ACUP - "Bra size smaller than a 'B'"
RES - "Hi-___ monitor"
LIS - "Fleur-de-___"
ONEK - ""Short race spec" (Really?)

Clever clues: 0

Sunday, April 30, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/30/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Alan Arbesfeld
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 42:34

Theme Title: New England Chatter

Take "ar" sounding words and make them "ah" sounding. ("Spark" into "Spock")

Words I didn't know:

RACEME - "Flower arrangement"
EUTERPE - "Sister of Erato"
MOHEL - "Bris official"
KEL - "Kenan's former Nickelodeon pal"
THEA - "Mother of Helios" (I thought it was "Rhea")

Trivia I didn’t know:

ULM - "Where Einstein was born"
ADIA - "1998 Sarah McLachlan hit"
COOLIO - "'Gangsta Paradise' rapper"
MAU - "Egyptian ___ (spotted cat breed)"
UTAH - "Where I-15 meets I-70"
NEPAL - "Where 'ho' and 'hoina' mean 'yes' and 'no'"
SUMO - "Activity in a dohyo"

Junk answers:

INE - "Serpent's tail?"
STR - "Narrow passage"
NIK - "Suffix with beat"
NOU - ""___-turn"
CCL - "A quarter of M"
STAC - "Quick and detached, musically" Abbr."

Clever clues:

HALOES - "Head bands?"
TABS - "Things hat allow for jumping ahead in line?"

Saturday, April 29, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/29/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Martin Ashwood-Smith
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 23:08

Puzzle uniqueness: N/A

Words I hadn't known until now:

TIRANA - "Capital for King Zog" (Assume it's a monetary thing for some country)
EAUDEVIE - "Clear brandy"

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

EHS - "Comments that lead people to repeat themselves"
ITSA - "____ joke"
BELG - "Like M. Poirot"
SDS - "New Left org."

Clever clues:

ASH -  "Result of a firing"
BBC - "English channel"
THEATEAM - "Hannibal's men"
CORE - "Middle Earth?"
ACNE - "Certain eruption"
EMOTED - "Made a big scene?"

Friday, April 28, 2017

"Mrs. Robinson, you're trying to seduce me."

I went to the theater and saw The Graduate Wednesday. Excellent film. Still holds up for me 50 years later.

The one exception could be that Benjamin's going after Elaine might be construed as stalking in this day and age.

One of the best times in film going is entering a theater and not having a clue as to what the movie is about, and then experiencing the unexpected greatness of it. Such is the case for me and The Graduate. I was 17 the year the movie came out. I received a screening invitation to this film starring someone named Dustin Hoffman. I remember thinking, "What a strange name...Dustin." On top of that, the title of the film didn't float my boat either. I had heard of Anne Bancroft. As I had nothing else to do, I attended the screening.

What a great surprise! It was an outstanding experience seeing this great film for the first time, not knowing anything about it as the plot unfolded. I mean, was Mrs. Robinson really trying to seduce him? I had no idea at that moment, just like our protagonist.

As I was watching the movie two days ago, it hit on me that the first time I saw it, Mrs. Robinson was 20-25 years older than me, and I, like many other young men, were lusting after this sexually experienced woman who could teach us the mysterious ways of sex. Now I'm 20-25 years older than the character. She looks way younger than me! I feel weird (and old!) about that. Time does fly...

I can now appreciate much more the character of Mrs. Robinson, and how she gave up her dreams and "settled" for the comfort and security of wealth and prestige.

I hadn't realized that Richard Dreyfuss had a small role in the film. He pokes his head out, looks through an open door and says something like, "Should I call the police? I'll call the police!"

If you haven't seen the film in a long time, I recommend that you check it out again. One thing I like to do is head over to the Internet Movie Database and check out the trivia page of a movie I'm about to see. It gives you a heads up on things to look for. The trivia link is about half-way down the page of the film's information, underneath the cast list.

I hope you enjoy seeing it again as much as I did!

Next week at the theater...Men in Black! I can hardly wait!

NYT Crossword 04/28/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: David Steinberg
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 27:51

Puzzle uniqueness: N/A

Words I hadn't known until now:

TIC - "Part of XXX" (Don't have a clue what that means)
SUTRA - "Hindu aphorisms" (Didn't know "sutra" meant this)
FENDI - "Prada competitor"
CAIMAN - "Relative of an alligator"

Trivia I didn't know:

ZAK - "Drummer Starkey"
SEXYANDIKNOWIT - "2012 #1 hit by LMFAO" (I am horrible at current or recent pop culture)
AMARYLLIS - "Producer of red-and-white blooms"
SARTRE - "'The Flies' playwright"

Junk Answers:

BRR - "Sound that might be made while rubbing the arms"
ENTR - "Intermission starter?"
SSN - "Application fig."

Clever clues:

LET - "Court ruling"
PALATE - Oenophile's pride"
CODER - "Bug exterminator?"
HULL - "Bottom of the sea?"

Thursday, April 27, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/27/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Todd Gross
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 24:11

Puzzle uniqueness:

Treats center squares as Sudoku puzzle. I hate Sudoku! Nuff sed...

Words I hadn't known until now:

DIANE - "Steak _____" (Didn't know this type of steak)

Trivia I didn't know:

FANTASIA - "First commercial film with stereophonic sound, 1940"
RIC - "Wrestler Flair"

Junk Answers:

ATYA - "'Right back ____'"
PSSST - "'Hey, buddy!'" (Just how many S's are acceptable? one, two, three, more?)
COPA - "Legendary N.Y.C. club, with 'the'" (Only because it's the 3rd straight day with a friggin' NY clue)
EDU - "Lead-in to -tainment"
REQ - "Necessary: Abbr."
LDS - "Church inits."
EMS - "CPR offerer"

Clever clues:

ORCHARD - "Orange place"
MARSH - "Reed section?"
HAIRCUTS - "Tops off?"

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/26/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Trenton Charlson
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 11:04

Puzzle uniqueness:

"XX" anwers with "DOSEQUIS" being the hint (Dos Equis is a Spanish beer meaning two X's)

Words I hadn't known until now:

AGGRO - "Hostility, in British slang"
AMARNA - "Cuneiform discovery site"
NOHO - "Manhattan neighborhood next to the East Village" (Another New York answer? WTF?)

Trivia I didn't know:

FRESNO - "California city, whose name is Spanish for 'ash tree'"

Junk Answers:

AGGRO - (See above)
ORU - "Sch. in Tulsa"

Clever clues:

YESSIR - "General reply?"

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/25/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Gary J. Whitehead
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 17:03 (Way over my normal time due to two answers I did not know and a typo)

Puzzle uniqueness:

Six long, two-word answers in which the final answer (HOME) can be put in front of each of the words: HOMEBODY. GAMEBOY, COMPUTERPORT, ICELAND, MOVIETHEATER, FRONTPAGE.

Words I hadn't known until now:

CBGBS - "Legendary music club in Lower Manhattan, informally" (This is so bogus)
IBIZA - "Resort island near Majorca"

Trivia I didn't know:

SIENA - "Tuscan city"
ICELAND - "NATO's smallest member, populationwise" (Though makes sense)

Junk Answers: Many...the price you pay for so many theme answers (6)

CBGBS - Still bogus
MENT - "Suffix with refresh or replace
SEZ - "Utters, informally"
ZZZ - "Snoring sound" (Gee, how many Z's can be accepted?)
LII - "52, in old Rome"
REORG - "Corporate shuffle, for short"

Clever clues: 0

Monday, April 24, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/24/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Gary Cee
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 7:30 (Usually in 6-7 min. range, but a section held me up for some reason)

Puzzle uniqueness:

Four long answers form a meal (salad, burger, potatoes, and pie) with the last of two words.

Words I hadn't known until now: 0

Trivia I didn't know: 0

Junk Answers:

ALP - "Swiss peak" (Rarely used in the singular)
TWOAM - "Time in Manhattan when it's midnight in Montana"
MED - "Club ___"

Clever clues: 0

Sunday, April 23, 2017

"Bosch" drops at Amazon

I binged on Bosch this weekend. Great series. The third season dropped on Friday at Amazon.

I've read all the books (written by Michael Connelly), and I think they are great as well. The TV series takes two or three of the books and creates a hard-nosed, gritty 10-episode season out of them.

It did take me a while in season one to accept Titus Welliver as our hero Hieronymus Bosch, L.A. detective, but now I think he's great. The rest of the cast is solid as well.

I love that they go to various locations in Los Angeles for scenes. I lived in L.A. for over two decades back in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and it's nice (and nostalgic) to see some of the old stomping grounds.

All in all, a fine series to get yourself into, if you're into police procedurals that is.

NYT Crossword 04/23/17 (Sunday)

Cruciverbalist: Olivia Mitra Framke
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 37:26

Theme Title: A Century Of Song

A tribute to Ella Fitzgerald (One of my favorite singers!) born on April 25, 1817.

Words I hadn’t known until now:

ACETAL -  "Perfumer's liquid"
MOTETS - "Sacred choral works"
SATAY - "Skewered Asian dish"
CHAR - "Arctic food fish"

Trivia I didn’t know:

AMALFI - "______ Coast, scenic area near Capri"
SHEREE - "'Dallas' actress ______ J. Wilson" (If the clue was "North," I would've nailed it)
CABERNET - "Popular pairing with steak au poivre" (Not a gourmet)
ETSEQ - "And the following: Abbr."
SIC - "'___ parvis magna' ('Greatness from small beginnings"' Lat.)"
SPITZ - "Dog whose tail curls over the back"
ORSER - "Skating champ Brian"
RIEN - "Edith Piaf's 'Non, Je Ne Regrette ____'"
SIA - "One-named signer with the 2016 #1 hit 'Cheap Thrills'"
GOSPELS -  "Biblical quartet" (There are four of them?)
NENA - "Singer with the 1984 hit '99 Luftballoons'"
ZTILES -  "Tough draws in the game Bananagrams" (Never played the game)

Junk answers:

FFF - "Extremely loud in music"
ISH - "Suffix with sleep or hawk"
SRS - "H.S. big shots"
BFFS - "Close buds"

Clever clues:

HEIR - "One in line?"
OTOOLE - "Good name for an Irish carpenter?"

Saturday, April 22, 2017

From sesquipedalian to hootamaganzy

Before the ubiquity of computers, I bet 90% of households had a dictionary. I may be optimistic on the percentage, but a goodly number of families had them. Think about the times you looked up a word. You grabbed the dictionary, found the definition and moved on. I know in my case, I never thought about all the work that went in to the precise wording of the definition, or how many people pored over the word before finally signing off on it.

Well, I just finished a new book that explores lexicography. "Word By Word" by Kory Stamper, a lexicographer at Merriam-Webster in Massachusetts, allows us to enter the world of definitions and the lexicographers who attend to such matters.

Along the way she discusses various interesting words and how the were finally defined, such as "irregardless" (she's a bit begrudging about that one),  "posh" (No, it's not Port Out., Starboard Home), "it's" vs. "its," etc.

One of the issues she brings up is the use of "however" at the beginning of a sentence. Apparently, in some circles, that's a Bozo no-no. I never knew that it was a problem. I've been starting sentences with "however" my entire life!

Here's a little tidbit:  The word "pumpernickel" comes from an earlier word meaning "fart goblin." How about that!

Another subject she addresses is that we all have favorite words. One of hers is in the title of this post, "hootamaganzy." It means "A hooded merganser." "Sesquipedalian" has been a favorite of mine my whole life. It means, "Having many syllables" (There's something meta about that) or "Given to or characterized by the use of long words." Ms. Stamper even mentions the word in her book! Somehow my life is complete. What's one of your favorite words?

One thing I learned that I will never forget is when the word is broken up with the dots, it's not the separating of the word by syllable, but the points where a word can be broken with a hyphen at the end of a line. I really had never thought about it.  The dashes you see in the word elsewhere are the syllable breaks.

The folks at Merriam-Webster will respond to the public's questions regarding words. They will answer if it's within their purview, and let you know if it's not.

I found the book to be very entertaining and full of interesting details about the world of lexicography. This is a must read for logophiles of all ages.

NYT Crossword 04/22/17 (Saturday)

Cruciverbalist: Adam Fromm
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 20:58

Puzzle uniqueness:

A themeless. Looked tough at the start, but after I got a few short answers, three of the four fifteen-letter answers were in my wheelhouse, which broke it open.

Words I hadn't known until now:

AXILLA - "Armpit, to a doctor"
PAPIER - "Le Monde material" (As I've said before, Spanish is more my thing than Fr. or It.)
ATALANTA - "Only woman aboard the Argo, it's said"

Trivia I didn't know:

HEBRIDES - "Skye, the Small Isles, etc.

Junk Answers:

AWS - "Sounds of pity"
ECCLES - "Book after Proverbs: Abbr."
TRAD - "Like many folk songs: Abbr."

Clever clues:

TAN - "Change one's tone?"
RODEO - "What may involve the calf muscles?"

Friday, April 21, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/21/17 (Friday)

Cruciverbalist: Damon Gulczynski
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 27:47

Puzzle uniqueness:

A themeless. I will make the comment that the Friday and Saturday puzzles are really something. A lot of them (for me) look impossible to solve at first blush. I go around slowly picking at the short answers trying to get a foothold. Then one answer here, another there, and it slowly starts to come together. When I finally solve it, it feels like I've climbed Mt. Everest! Really cool!

Words I hadn't known until now:

HAG - "Beldam" (I know the word, it's the clue I didn't know)
CREMA - "Thin layer of foam at the top of an espresso"
TOTUP - "Add, British-style"
AFROPOP - "Genre for Miriam Makeba and Ladysmith Black Mambazo"
ANNEE - "Year abroad"
ASIAGO - "Pungent cheese"
LINTEL - "Doorframe part"

Trivia I didn't know:

APSES - "Areas where clerics are seated"
OFT - "'Our remedies ___ in ourselves do lie': Shak."
HELLOKITTY - "Toon who wears a red hair bow"
EMU - "Producer of a deep drumming call"
ETHAN - "'_____ Brand' (Nathaniel Hawthorne tale)"

Junk Answers:

No real horrible ones

Clever clues:

PIECHARTS - "Business circles?"
LIDS - "They're open in the morning"
GRAMMARNAZI - "Type for who this clue will be annoying?"
USER - "One who might need an ID"
TOTALBASES - "A batter receives four for a grand slam" (So wanted this to be "runs batted in")

Thursday, April 20, 2017

"As if..."

I love movies. Always have. I remember being enthralled with them as a kid. I can watch the old films any time.

I'm lucky in that Fathom Events and Turner Classic Movies (TCM) have teamed up to screen classic films in theaters. They come in six-film cycles.

Which brings me to my attending a screening of Clueless yesterday. Of course, being retired and all, this wasn't exactly my kind of film. However, I do believe that I should attend the screenings as much as possible in order to try to keep the program viable. Hopefully, there is enough of a turnout that TPTB will keep continuing the program.

I have to at admit this film won me over. It's a very cute high school movie with a winning cast. I'm somewhat jaded when it comes to comedies, but I have to admit there were some very funny lines.

The plot is based on Jane Austen's book, Emma, if any one cares. I've never read an Austen book. Apparently, it sticks pretty close to the novel's plot.

I was perusing the trivia page for the movie on IMDb and learned something interesting. This movie is considered one of the "1,001 Movies You Must See Before You Die," which is edited by Steven Schneider. Hmmm...not sure about that.

When I was checking out the bios of the actors, I was dismayed to find out about the tragic death of Brittany Murphy, who played Tai, in 2009. Very disturbing, I hope the truth will out.

All-in-all, I think this is worth one's time to see.

NYT Crossword 04/20/17 (Thursday)

Cruciverbalist: Jeffrey Wechsler
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 17:59

Puzzle uniqueness:

Trick Thursday: Takes one syllable words in phrases, treats them as two syllable words and has a screwy clue with a question mark. The last one is a bit shaky as it's a plural.

FORHEAVENSSAKE - "Why Japanese tipplers anticipate the afterlife?"
WHACKAMOLE - "Pound on some Mexican food?"
LAMEEXCUSE - "'I didn't know you disliked shiny fabrics,' e.g.,?"
RUNFORTHEROSES - "Quick trip to pick up white zinfandel and blush?"

Words I hadn't known until now:

YESHIVAS - "Places to study the Talmud"
TOPE - "Emulate a 2-Down (WINO)"

Trivia I didn't know:

ARS -  "___ longa, vita brevis"
FATAL - "'Travel is _____ to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness': Twain

Junk Answers:

ARS -  (See above)
RECTO - "Page 1, 3 or 5, usually"

Clever clues: 0

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/19/17 (Wednesday)

Cruciverbalist: Emanuel Ax and Brad Wilbur
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 11:00

Puzzle uniqueness:

The Times crossword is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, and they are having celebrities collaborate with constructors. Emanuel Ax is a classical pianist so, of course, there is a musical theme to it. The center black squares form a musical note, plus the 52-Down answer NOTE can follow the ends of the long answers:

MONSTERMASH
SAWEDINHALF
WHISKEYSOUR
RUNNERSHIGH

Words I hadn't known until now:

MANGIA - "Trattoria order?" (Don't have a clue what this means)
QUAKERGUN - "Log painted deceptively to look like a cannon" (Never heard of it!)

Trivia I didn't know:

EREI - "'Fly ___ spurn thee ..." : Shelley
KERRI - "Olympic gymnast Strug"
SITKA - "Early capital of Alaska"
PLAYAREA - "What the keys are to a pianist" (Another answer with a musical bent)
RONS - "Hamilton biographer Chernow and others"
BARR - "Mystery writer Nevada ____" (Come on!)
LOKI - "Shape-shifter of Norse mythology" (Didn't know it, but easily deduced)
NORMARAE - "Best Picture loser to 'Kramer vs. Kramer'" (Didn't know it right off)
MALAWI - "Nyasaland, today"

Junk Answers:

ENE - "Suffix with acetyl"
PREV - "Earlier: Abbr."
SRS - "Some SAT takers: Abbr."
UVRAY - "Tanning element, informally" (Singular?? Normal speech it's UV rays)
NCAR - "Nascar Hall of Fame locale: Abbr."
ASTI - "Italian wine town"

Clever clues:

KOI - "Gold in a pond?"

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

NYT Crossword World Overview

Since I'm posting recaps of my solving the New York Times crossword puzzles, I thought I'd give an overview of the how the puzzle works.

The puzzles are posted each day online at 10pm Eastern (7pm Pacific), the day before the puzzle dates. On Saturday and Sunday the puzzles are posted at 6pm for the Sunday and Monday puzzles.

The Monday through Saturday puzzles are usually 15x15 grids. They get progressively harder each day. I've found that Monday and Tuesday are about the same (and very easy), along with Wednesday and Thursday being equally difficult. The Thursday puzzle (and on occasion Wednesday and Sunday) will have some kind of trick to it. It might be a rebus puzzle for example. A rebus is two or more letters in the same square. Another example is using a black square to represent the word "black." I'm not really a fan of trick puzzles, and if I don't get the trick quickly, I bail on the puzzle.

The Friday and Saturday puzzles are generally the toughest of the week. Many times the Monday through Thursday puzzles will have themes. Basically, they have three or more answers that are common in some way. The Friday and Saturday puzzles rarely have themes (called "Themeless"). Solving veterans prefer there not being themes within those puzzles.

Sunday's puzzle is usually a 21x21 grid. It always has a theme, and a title of the puzzle is included to give a hint to the theme. As I understand it, the Sunday puzzle difficulty is about the same as a Wednesday.

I consider myself decent solver. I am by no means an expert. For example, I can solve the Monday puzzles between six and seven minutes on average. Sometimes I dip below six minutes, but not often. There are those out there who can solve it in two minutes. I kid you not. I solve on an iPad, so I don't know if my time would improve if I solved on paper.

My patience on solving runs about 50 minutes. If I haven't finished by then, I will usually give up and get the answers. Sometimes it takes just one cheat, and I can blast through the rest of the puzzle. I will be honest, and when I can't solve the puzzle I will put a big, fat DNF (Did Not Finish) next to the solving time.

If you're interested, there are two sites I frequent for comments on the daily puzzles. The first is xwordinfo. They have an in with the NYT, because they publish the answers along with the grid and a detailed breakdown of the puzzle as soon as the puzzle is posted online. They have a huge database of all the words used in the puzzles dating back decades. Worth a look.

The other site I frequent is Rex Parker Does the NYT Puzzle. He solves the puzzle, then posts it. If he solves it near posting, he posts his results and comments at midnight Eastern. If he solves it in the morning, well, it will be early but no set time. He can be very critical of the puzzles.

You need a subscription to access the puzzles. It's $6.95 a month or $39.95 annually.

I live on the fringe of the crossword puzzle world, so if anyone reads this and finds fault with something I've written, please, be sure to let me know so I can fix it.

NYT Crossword 04/18/17 (Tuesday)

Cruciverbalist: Bruce Haight
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 9:51

Puzzle uniqueness:

The entire puzzle consisted of  seven letters - A, E, I, L, R, S, T. In  addition, there were four anagrams of the letters within the puzzle. Again, for the trivia minded, I'll let them figure it out.

Words I hadn't known until now:

ASSAI - "Very, in music" (Really?)

Trivia I didn't know:

ARIA - "Mozart's 'Se vuol ballare,' for one" (Though with four letters easily deduced)
ALTAIR - "Brightest 1-Down (STAR) in Aquila" (Knew the star, didn't know it was there!)
STEER - "Animals rounded up in a roundup" (Never knew this was plural! Silly me!)
ELEA - "Zeno's home" (Huh?!?)
REES - "Roger who played a part on 'Cheers'" (This seems a bit too obscure, IMO)

Junk Answers:

LAT - "One of  a pair of map coordinates: Abbr." (Please!)
ELLS - "The black square chunk in front of 55-, 60, and 63-Across, and others" (Whew!)
STER - "Suffix with prank or poll" (Really?)
SSTS - "Concord, for short" (This answer and its singular need to be retired!)
TAS - "See 6-Down," which is "Things graded by 7-Down (TESTS)"
IRAS - "Nest egg for the golden years" (Only because "IRA" was in yesterday's puzzle)

Clever clues:

None that floated my boat...

Monday, April 17, 2017

"The Fate of the Furious" a Fun Film

Went to see The Fate of the Furious today. I really enjoyed it. It's quite a ride. I've mentioned before that I'm an action/adventure movie guy, and this certainly fills the bill.

Of course, as in all the other Furious films, the laws of physics (and gravity, if that's not a redundancy) are thrown out the window.

Charlize Theron plays the big bad; however, she really didn't get to do all that much. Most of her screen time is in an airplane with an earpiece on barking out orders. One gets the impression she showed up for a week or two, shot all her scenes, collected her millions and went home. I also think that her master plan is a bit muddied.   

There are a few plot holes as well, but with all the action, those can be forgiven. The one beef I have are the fight scenes. They are well choreographed, but for me, the camera is way too close to the action, and the quick (I mean, superfast) edits are disconcerting. I have to admit that this seems to be the modus operandi for most action sequences in Hollywood, and it has been for a while now.

The opening action set piece located in Cuba was exciting. Also, according to the IMDb trivia page (take that for what you will), the producers reportedly set off the biggest explosion ever to occur in Iceland for the film.

A final note: This movie had the greatest weekend opening worldwide ever ($532 million), squeaking by previous champ Stars Wars: The Force Awakens by about $3 million.

I know that if the reader liked the previous Furious movies, you will enjoy this one as well. I recommend it to be seen in the IMAX format, if possible. One thing I love is when the IMAX intro (the countdown) is themed with the movie. I remember the fuse burning through the numbers counted down in the last Mission: Impossible movie as the MI theme music pounded. Quite thrilling...if you're an action fan, that is! 😉

NYT Crossword 04/17/17 (Monday)

Cruciverbalist: Peter Gordon
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 5:53

Words I hadn't known until now:

APBIO - "H.S. class for a future doctor, maybe" (This seems a bit shaky as an answer.)
LULULEMON - "Big name in athletic wear" (Not a shoe person)
PUPUPLATTER - "Assortment of appetizers at a Polynesian or Chinese restaurant"
BABA - "____ ghanouj" (Still don't know what it is, I'll look it up later)

Trivia I didn't know:

EDD -  "TV announcer Hall whose credits include 'The Tonight Show'""

Junk Answers:

WDS - "Dict. Entries"
APBIO - (See above)
ETDS - "Flight deck guesses about takeoff, for short"

Clever clues:

IRA - "Good name for a tax advisor?"

Sunday, April 16, 2017

NYT Crossword 04/16/17 (Sunday)


Cruciverbalist: Timothy Polin
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 31:56

Theme Title: Saddle Up!
Circled squares within answer are names of horses ridden by famous characters (on top of circled
squares). For those of a trivial bent, I’ll just name the rider answers:
ZORRO
CISCOKID
LONERANGER
ROYROGERS
SCOUT
DALEEVANS

Words I hadn’t known until now:
FRETSAW – “Woodworking tool” (I know a few saws…this is not one of them.)
LOCOMOTED – “Moved, jocularly” (This is a new one for me. Will start using it!)

Trivia I didn’t know:
THEHUMANTORNADO – “1976 blaxploitation film that was a sequel to ‘Dolemite’”
RIODIABLO – “Made-for-TV western co-starring Travis Tritt”
HUTU – “Native Rwandan”
ANNO – “365 giorni” (More of a Spanish guy)
EDNA - “’Hairspray’ matriarch”
ALOIS – “Arnold Schwarzenegger’s middle name”
DOLCE – “Sweetly, on a score”
STU – “’Rugrats’ father” (Never seen the series)

Junk answers:
PAH – “’Poppycock!’” (Really?)
ALA – “___ King”
AXHEAD – “Something getting stuck in a trunk?”
OMS – “Meditation syllables”

Clever clues:
EGGO – “They might pop up in the morning”
BSIDES – “Cuts on the back?”
PEALS – “Wedding rings?”
PATOIS – “Vernacular” (Not clever, just love the answer, not used enough)
LONGI – “Repeated part of a five-mile hike?” (A clue trick used occasionally by TPTB)

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Movies, Movies, Movies!


I gotta say that my favorite movie this year is Get Out. Excellent film. Really, nothing has come close to it. It has a great, original perspective on racism. Jordan Peele, the director, has done well with his first effort. I recommend it highly.
Last year, my favorite film was Hell or High Water, with Arrival a very close second. I did see Moonlight and La La Land, but while they were both very good, they were not my cup of tea.
I’m sure other great films will be coming down the pike, but I really hope that Get Out gets some Academy Nomination love, especially the screenplay. Very well crafted.

I admit that as I’ve gotten older, I have gravitated strongly toward action/adventure films. For whatever reason, films strong on character and/or character development, or explore the human condition don’t really appeal to me anymore. I will go see those kinds of films that get great reviews or are very popular (hence, Moonlight and La La Land), but that’s about it for those genres.

I’m into the good ol’ fashioned shoot ‘em ups and chase movies. Some of the movies I’ve seen this year include XXX: Return of Xander Cage, Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, John Wick 2, The Wall, Logan, Kong: Skull Island and Life. Of those, I give the nod to Logan with John Wick 2 a close second. Uh, I just noticed, when did the colon become de rigueur in movie titles?

I’ve retired recently, thus I’ve had the opportunity to see lots of films, which is one of my passions. I’m within walking distance of two theaters, which is very nice. Another advantage is that the theaters have discount matinees on particular days. One theater I can see a current movie for $5, and the other has a $4 admission fee for seniors (with a free card).

If the reader is a movie buff you might check out your local theater for classic movies. Where I live, one screens great films on Sundays and Wednesdays. So far, I’ve had the opportunity to see North by Northwest and Clue this year. In the coming weeks, there will be screenings of Clueless, The Graduate and Casablanca to name a few.

NYT Crossword 04/15/17 (Saturday)


Cruciverbalist: Peter Wentz
Editor: Will Shortz

Solving time: 29:15

Words I hadn’t known until now: 0

Trivia I didn’t know:
  • JAGR – “Hockey legend Jaromir”
  • STPETER – “Metaphorical rock of Matthew 16:18
  • ATEMPO – “Getting back to speed, musically”
  • GRE – “Inits. on a master’s application”
  • IAN - “Swimmer Thorpe with five Olympic gold medals”
  • ESAISON – “1988 N.F.L. M.V.P. from the Cincinnati Bengals
  • FAT – “Epithet for Louis VI, with ‘the’”

Junk answers:
  • THORO – “Sweeping, for short”
  • ATAD – “Slightly”
  • YAYME – ”Man, I did good!”

Clever clues:
  • THEJONESES – “Object of envious comparison”
  • SPUD – “Chips, initially”
  • PONYTAIL – “Women’s World Cup sight”
  • DOTEDU – “School closing?”