Showing posts with label byron walden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label byron walden. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2009

Friday, January 9, 2009

Title: Weekend Warrior
Author: Byron Walden
Theme: None

I broke this puzzle open in the southwest, worked my way east, and then stared at a half-completed puzzle for what seemed like ages. I just couldn't break into the top half at all, even after getting DUCAT and CECI. Finally, CHAKRA popped into my head, but it was like pulling teeth to finally nail it all down. No need to break these out into categories... it was all tough and all pretty cool.


  • 1a: Trapper Keeper maker (MEAD). This was not helpful at all, as I had no idea what a Trapper Keeper was. Funny thing, last night watching TV I saw an ad for Trapper Keepers. Weird.

  • 5a: Adventuresome preteen originally voiced by Tim Matheson (JONNY QUEST). Took too long to figure this one out. And I didn't realize, or remember, that there was no H in JONNY.


  • 15a: "Quantum of Solace" Bond girl actress Kurylenko (OLGA). Haven't seen it yet. It's on my list. But I'll tell you what I have seen lately that's worth going to. "Slumdog Millionaire". Check it out if you get the chance.

  • 16a: Crank call? (ARE YOU NUTS).

  • 17a: His ravens represent thought and memory (ODIN). I never realized Odin had ravens. Apparently, they're named Hugin and Munin. I should read more about Norse mythology.

  • 18a: Sam Rayburn sobriquet (MR DEMOCRAT). I suppose I'm supposed to know this, but I didn't.

  • 19a: Word often said with grace and love (NOTE). Grace notes are musical embellishments. You know what love notes are.

  • 20a: Respond to soft soap, maybe (MELT). Soft soap is flattery intended to gain favor.

  • 22a: Model T time (BRASS ERA). The age of early automobiles.

  • 24a: Yogi's energy center (CHAKRA).

  • 25a: Get some duck down? (EAT). This one's pushing it a bit.

  • 26a: Chillingworth's wife (PRYNNE). From "The Scarlet Letter".

  • 29a: Dig a lot (ADORE).

  • 31a: Coin for Shylock (DUCAT).

  • 33a: President of Bolivia since 2006 (MORALES). How cool would an Esai clue have been? I readily admit I don't keep up on my foreign dignitaries.

  • 36a: Risk territory (SIBERIA). My first instinct was YAKUTSK or IRKUTSK, both of which fit and, coincidentally, both of which border SIBERIA in the game. My next thought was SILESIA, but that was Diplomacy, not Risk.

  • 40a: Neige color (BLANC). Neige is snow, in French.

  • 42a: Difficult burden (CROSS). One's cross to bear.


  • 43a: Run through (STAB). I got this right away, but it doesn't feel exact to me. Stabbing doesn't imply (to me) that the weapon comes through the other side. One stabs with a knife, but runs through with a sword or spear. It all reminds me of Aragorn fighting orcs in "The Lord of the Rings".

  • 52a: It often makes a big splash (LOG FLUME). Nice one.

  • 54a: Former princesa, maybe (REINA). Spanish for queen.

  • 56a: Advance man? (SEER). Groan.

  • 57a: Prego ad slogan (IT'S IN THERE). I remember these ads, but I couldn't have told you they were for Prego.

  • 60a: Pop band? (THE STOOGES). Iggy Pop, that is. This one I knew.



  • 62a: Roshis (ZEN MASTERS).

  • 63a: "The ___ Wife" (1980 Reginald Hill mystery) (SPY'S).

  • 1d: Romantic reflection (MOONBEAM).

  • 2d: 1967 John Wayne film (EL DORADO). I went with "True Grit" at first, which didn't help me any in this section. "True Grit" was 1969.

  • 3d: Incendiary (AGITATOR).

  • 4d: Many residents of the Faeroe Islands (DANES).

  • 5d: Transmission blocker (JAMMER).


  • 6d: Rotating model (ORRERY). This is a model of the sun and planets.

  • 7d: Harpooner on the Nautilus (NEDLAND). No clue.

  • 8d: Duma nix (NYET). My lone start in the northeast section.

  • 9d: Shul day (YOM).

  • 10d: "___ the Maven" (William Safire anthology) (QUOTH).

  • 11d: It begins "We the peoples" (U.N. CHARTER).

  • 12d: With 41-Down, Illinois setting of the Ronald Reagan Museum (EUREKA / COLLEGE). This didn't even sound familiar to me.

  • 13d: Some people find them hard to take (STAIRS). Tough clue.

  • 14d: Sandal style (T-STRAP).

  • 23d: Period (SPELL). Another really tough clue. Took me quite a spell to figure it out.


  • 24d: This, in Magritte's "The Treachery of Images" (CECI).

  • 30d: Yeshiva study (RABBINISM).

  • 35d: Show with an inaccurate title for Western U.S. viewers (SNL). I'm assuming this is because it runs on tape delay in the west, rather than running live at 8:30pm.

  • 37d: 1954 Robert Taylor thriller (ROGUE COP). If you say so.

  • 38d: Distance-preserving transformation, as the rotation of a plane (ISOMETRY).

  • 43d: Binaca blast (SPRITZ). Did you know Binaca was flammable? Spritz some through a lighter sometime; it's pretty impressive!

  • 44d: Become incisive? (TEETHE). Ouch.


  • 51d: Pole star? (SANTA). STRIPPER didn't fit.

  • 53d: Initial hurdles for those who want to join the Supremes? (LSATS). Groan.

  • 55d: Boilermaker part (SHOT). Booze tag!


This was one of the tougher WWs in a while, which is to be expected when you see Byron Walden's name at the top. Usually, I'm more on his wavelength. There were several clues in this puzzle where that was the case, but overall it was a struggle to finish. And yet, there's nowhere in the puzzle that I can point to that I would consider unfair. That's what makes this a great Weekend Warrior.

Thanks for listening.

- Pete M.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Friday, September 5, 2008

Title: Weekend Warrior
Author: Byron Walden
Theme: None. Or, torture the solver.

Sunny Spots:

  • 1a: Locale of a rank with medallions (CAB STAND). Very tricky clue. But nice.

  • 28a: Drunk tank settings (LOCAL JAILS).

  • 59a: Enter tentatively (PENCIL IN). Excellent. I never realized how close this was to PENICILLIN.

  • 13d: Yards of ale, e.g. (TALL ONES). Which goes well with 10d: Knocks back (CHUGS), and less pleasantly with 47d: Foul-tasting (SKUNKY).

  • 14d: Hung cover? (SHE BANGS). Ah yes, the notorious William Hung from "Americal Idol" season three.



  • 37d: Queen, e.g. (GLAM BAND).


Sundries:

  • 9a: Big N' Tasty forerunners (MCDLTS). I've been caught by this one before, I'm pretty sure, as I had vague sense of deja vu while entering my guess of McBLT, which actually made some sense to me. I don't remember this sandwich at all. I was in Montreal in the early 80s, so maybe it didn't reach there.

  • 15a: Inland Sea arm (OSAKA BAY).

  • 16a: Yello song heard in the closing credits of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (OH YEAH). You know the song. Hear it here.

  • 17a: In a sauce of tomatoes, mushrooms, shredded meat, truffles, and grated cheese (MILANESE).

  • 18a: Grab someone else's head? (RUSTLE). Cute. Reference to head of cattle.

  • 23a: ___ button (malfunctioning missile destroyer) (EGADS). This is nothing I've ever heard of, but it sort of makes sense. When is this term used? I've read and seen enough thrillers that I would have thought I'd have come across this before.

  • 26a: Disease for which riluzole received FDA approval in 1995 (ALS). Lou Gehrig's disease. Very nasty (the disease, not the clue).

  • 27a: Long, on Lanai (LOA). I've seen this one before.

  • 32a: World headquarters of DHL (BONN).

  • 33a: Wheel (TRUNDLE).

  • 34a: Certain blood type, briefly (A-NEG).

  • 35a: Coffin nails (CIGS). You gotta love nicknames that remind you of the fact that you're killing yourself by smoking.

  • 41a: "No prob" (THAT'S OK).


  • 44a: Brad Pitt title role (JESSE JAMES). I like Brad Pitt, but have never seen this film. Anyone out there have an opinion on it?

  • 48a: Personal abbr. (SWM). There are a lot of abbreviations that could go here, so it wasn't that helpful.

  • 50a: Carroll creature (SNARK).

  • 51a: ___ Energy (Red Bull rival) (TAB).

  • 52a: Rival of Nancy and Tonya (OKSANA Baiul).

  • 57a: Gold medalist at the Atlanta Olympics (AGASSI).

  • 62a: Northern region of Vietnam (TONKIN).

  • 63a: Pipe to a waterwheel (PENSTOCK). This word is vaguely familiar. I could have sworn I've seen it in a puzzle, but the Cruciverb database says no, unless it's too recent to have been added yet.

  • 65a: TV host whose first name is spelled by the first and last letters of his surname (TREADWAY). Ty has been in a couple of puzzles of late, so this came readily to mind this time around.

  • 2d: Parmesan alternative (ASIAGO). Went with ROMANO at first, then realized it had to be wrong when I read the clue to 56-across.


  • 3d: Rodin sculpture subject (BALZAC). If you got the BAL and didn't immediately enter BALLET, then you did better than I did.

  • 4d: ___ punk (Mighty Mighty Bosstones genre) (SKA).

  • 8d: Used madder or woad, say (DYED). I knew woad was used as a blue dye. Don't know about madder.

  • 9d: Subject for Scottish philosopher David Hume (MORAL SENSE).

  • 11d: Opposite of eu- (DYS-).

  • 12d: Not even considering (LET ALONE).

  • 21d: Glockenspiel players (MALLETS).


  • 24d: Fairlady, for one (DATSUN). Didn't know this at all. Guessed it after several crossings.

  • 29d: "I didn't mean it" (JUST JOKING).

  • 30d: Israel's "Hatikvah" and others (ANTHEMS).

  • 32d: Southeastern European (BALKAN).

  • 35d: System for Chico and Stanislaus (CAL STATE). I don't mind tough clues, but I like to be able to make sense of them after they fall. I don't know who these people are, nor in what sense "system" is being used here. Maybe I'm just slow.

  • 36d: Old cold block mover (ICE WAGON). I knew it was ICE-something. WAGON is as good as anything, though my first guess was TONGS.

  • 45d: Family that includes okra (MALLOW).

  • 46d: Symphony on Norman Bates's phonograph in "Psycho" (EROICA). Let's face it, not that many symphonys have names.

  • 49d: Soldering flux material (ROSIN).

  • 53d: Physical need?: Abbr. (APPT). Great, tricky clue.


Suns of Bitches:

  • 19a: Gordimer's predecessor as Literature Nobelist (PAZ).

  • 20a: Stuff, e.g. (LADMAG). Huh? This is not a term I've ever heard anywhere. And, unfortunately for me, LADING fit the clue perfectly.

  • 38a: "The Feast of St. Nicholas" painter (STEEN).


  • 56a: Romano who voiced Linguini in "Ratatouille" (LOU). Are you kidding me? This guy is a member of the Pixar art department with a couple of voice-overs to his credit. I'm sorry, that doesn't make him crossword-worthy in my book. This clue did, however, make me realize that 2-down wasn't ROMANO.



Wow, this was a Byron Walden through and through. Usually, I'm on the right wavelength and don't struggle too terribly. Not today. This puzzle chewed me up and spit me onto the sidewalk. So many traps and potential missteps, and I fell into most of them. And just downright tough fill, to go along with typically deceptive cluing. Now, this was a Weekend Warrior, which is supposed to be hard, so I'll just say it succeeded with flying colors and tip my hat.

Thanks for listening.

- Pete M.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Friday, May 1, 2008

Title: Weekend Warrior
Author: Byron Walden
Theme: None

When I open up a Weekend Warrior and see that it's by Byron Walden, I just know I'm in for a treat -- a tough, clever puzzle with lots of juicy fill and more than a few smiles. And this puzzle certainly fills the bill. Byron has a well-deserved reputation for constructing very difficult puzzles (ask anyone who was at ACPT 2006 -- I swear people are still grumbling), but I generally don't find him as difficult as some. Perhaps because of our similar ages and math/computer backgrounds, I tend to run on a similar wavelength. This doesn't mean I find his puzzles easy. Believe me, I don't. But they don't chew me up and spit me out like some others (I'll forego names for now... they'll show up here soon enough).

But, you know what? I don't think I realized until I prepared to blog this puzzle what really makes Byron's puzzles amazing. It's that every entry is notable! There are virtually no ho-hum clue/answer pairs, and because of that any that do occur become notable due to their rarity. This means more work for me, but I'm not complaining. Just noting that you can expect a longer-than-usual entry here.

So, with plenty to talk about, let's get to it.

Sunny Spots:

Many things to love here. Topical, in-the-language phrases; cool and/or misleading clues; evocative images. Here are some of the highlights for me:
  • 15a Bass relative (CELLO). Love the musical clues. Nice fish misdirection as well.

  • 16a Friendly reassurance to a timid child. I had YOU'LL BE OK to start, but I like the answer, I WON'T BITE, even better.


  • 18a: Treatment for gray hair (BLUE RINSE). Great, topical phrase.

  • 22a: Benefits by knowing (HAS AN IN WITH).

  • 28a: Inclinations (BENTS). I have a bent toward liking this clue. Not at all obvious, but so fitting once it appears.

  • 37a: Slinky motion (PROWL). I was trying to picture how a Slinky moves and trying to come up with a verb to describe it. Nice misdirection here.

  • 44a: Berkeley, for example (STATE SCHOOL). I love this. "State school" tends to evoke a school of lesser reknown, and yet here we have one of the more prestigious universities in America which happens to also be a state school of California.

  • 56a: What players should do (GET TESTED). Wow! A day after unhooking bras and already we need to get tested? Another edgy clue from the Sun that wouldn't see the light of day in the New York Times. "Player" here referring to people who "play the field".

  • 57a: Equivocate (HEDGE). As a noun, hedge is pretty boring; as a verb, sparkling.


  • 4d: Tina in "Napolean Dynamite", e.g. (LLAMA). If you haven't seen this movie, you need to. It's way off-beat, and funnier each time you watch it. Vote for Pedro!

  • 14d: Woods game. I know we were supposed to think of Tiger Woods and golf (which I did); then I tried to picture games played in the woods (hide-and-go-seek, perhaps?). Turns out the answer is much more "gamey": DEER MEAT. Of course, I've never actually heard anyone refer to deer meat as "deer meat" -- it's always "venison".

  • 28d: Fleck with a pick (BELA). A gimme for me. I've seen Bela Fleck live, and even though I'm not a huge banjo music fan, it's worth the price of admission just to watch Victor Wooten, who is one of the best bassists on the planet! If you follow no other link, do yourself a favor and check out this solo of The Beatle's "Norwegian Wood". And if you like that, here's one more for your listening pleasure.

  • 31d: Bar code? (LAW). "Bar" as in lawyers. Nice.


  • 32d: 80's TV character with the given names Jefferson Davis (BOSS HOGG). I wasn't a huge Dukes of Hazzard fan, but kudos to the implicit Zs.


  • 33d: St. Lawrence River racer (ICE CANOE).

Sundries:

  • 1a: Floor covering? (SPILL). What a great way to spice up an otherwise bland fill entry.

  • 6a: Staunch (ROCK SOLID). Self-descriptive. A rock solid clue/answer pair.

  • 17a: One who is often praised (ALLAH). Hopefully, having ALLAH in a crossword is not like having Muhammad in a comic.


  • 19a: Cameron Diaz's film debut (THE MASK).

  • 21a: Product introduced in 1912 by Lionel (SLOT CAR). Lionel is well-known for producing toy trains, so this is not so much of a reach.

  • 24a: A musing sound (HMM). This is about as pedestrian as this puzzle gets. And I still like it.

  • 25a: Defib pro (EMT). An immediate gimme. You gotta have a couple of these to get the puzzle going.

  • 27a: German admiral who lost WWI's Battle of the Falkland Islands (SPEE). I couldn't have answered this question in a trivia contest, but once I had SP_ _, I knew the answer was SPEE. Must be harbored in the deep recesses of my brain, but I'm not sure whether it's from crosswords or some other source.

  • 32a: Phoenician double-deckers (BIREMES). I knew "triremes" from the original Sid Meier's Civilization game, so "biremes" wasn't too much of a stretch.

  • 35a: In contact with (AGAINST). Perfectly reasonable clue that is nowhere near how one would expect "against" to be clued.

  • 36a: Animal named by the Nahuati (OCELOT). Appearing in the second puzzle in a row. See yesterday's blog for the cute picture.


  • 38a: Zaxxon company (SEGA). I used to work in a video arcade/pizza parlor in the late 1970s/early 1980s, so I remember Zaxxon, which reduced this clue to "name a video game company in 4-letters". Piece of cake.

  • Double "Sarkozy" Alert!! French president Nicolas Sarkozy gets a double dose in this puzzle. Sarkozy married his girlfriend, singer Carla Bruni, in February in the ELYSEE (42d: Where Sarkozy can get cozy) Palace in Paris. Now he is Carla's MARI (39a: Nicolas Sarkozy, to Carla Bruni), which is "husband" in French.

  • There is also the combination of 40a: Exit line (BYE) and 11d: Exit lines? (OBIT). See how a simple connection elevates the ordinary into something noteworthy.


  • 43a: Fair type: Abbr. (SCI). We all remember Science Fairs, don't we? I had no idea where this clue was going until I had the crossings. Then it made me smile.

  • 48a: Wheel runner (HAMSTER). I couldn't for the life of me parse this to figure out what they were looking for. And yet, once you have the answer, it's so obvious.

  • 50a: Hot and cold (STREAKY). Shades of gambling here. Like it.

  • 51a: Pool variety (ONE POCKET). I started confidently with EIGHT BALL here, as it's the only one I could think of that fit the spaces. And I've played one-pocket, too. Very strategic game, and a lot of fun if you like pool.

  • 53a: Nay sayers (ANTIS).

  • 54a: Fizzle (GO NOWHERE). I really wanted "PETER OUT", but it didn't fit.

  • 1d: Criticize severely (SCATHE). I'm not used to seeing this a verb, but I like it. Next puzzle I don't like is going to get scathed.

  • 3d: Superlatively phat (ILLEST). Yo yo yo! A little gansta argot to keep the puzzizzle phresh.

  • And the 5d: Winner of dual Worst Actress Razzies for "I Know Who Killed Me" goes to... [drum roll please]... Lindsay LOHAN, who won Worst Actress, Worst Supporting Actress (twice, once for each of two characters), and Worst Screen Couple (for the same two characters). Her mother must be so proud.

  • 6d: Some sweaters (RIB KNITS).


  • 7d: Temple player (OWL). What a terrifying mascot. If you're a mouse.

  • 8d: Dionne Warwick to Whitney Houston (COUSIN).

  • 9d: Short-changed oneself, maybe? (KNELT). I can't decide if this one's super clever or a total stretch, and I'm frankly leaning toward the latter. When you kneel down, are you "changing" yourself to be shorter? I suppose. Kinda sorta.

  • 10d: Detroit brewmeister Bernhard (STROH). I don't drink Stroh's, as my tastes lean more toward the darker ales, porters, and stouts. But any beer clue is okay by me.

  • 12d: Axle insert (LINCH PIN). I wouldn't have known to spell this with an "I", but there you go.

  • 13d: "Things are looking bad" (IT'S A MESS). Another nice phrase.


  • 20d: Ring thing, sometimes (SIGNET). This is one of those clues that could mean almost anything. There are so many different meanings for "ring". Do people still wear signets on rings, or is that a thing of the past?

  • Speaking of the past, 23d: Auxiliary of the past refers to an past-tense auxiliary verb. Namely WAS.

  • 27d; Pollute (SOIL). Another answer that's more often clued as a noun than a verb. But pretty straightforward, none-the-less.

  • 29d; Further Seems Forever genre (EMO). If it's a genre in 3-letters, it's probably either SKA or EMO.

  • 30d; Solipsistic sort (EGOIST). I wanted this to end in -ER, but of course it's not that predictable.

  • 34d: Division subdivision (REGIMENT). Part of the U.S. Army troop hierarchy.


  • 35d: Ran in (ARRESTED). Book 'em, Danno!

  • 37d: Lady Vols coach Summit who is the winningest NCAA basketball coach ever (PAT). You've heard of John Wooden; you've heard of Bobby Knight; you've heard of John Thompson, Rick Pitino, and Mike Krzyzewski. Women play basketball, too! Get to know Pat Summit.

  • 49d/39d: Volatile place to move oil (SPOT MARKET).

  • 40d: Took a punt, say (BOATED). Nice football misdirection here.

  • 44d: Author buried on the Phillips Academy campus in 1896 (STOWE). Interesting trivia. Makes me wonder whether Byron perhaps attended Phillips Academy. Wouldn't surprise me.

  • 45d: PC fixers (TECHS). I really wanted PR MEN here, thinking it was referring to spinning things to be "politically correct".

  • 55a/46d: Black box location (CRASH SCENE). A little morbid, perhaps. But okay.

  • 47d: Syllogistic segue (HENCE). "Syllogistic" means "logical". Nice clue.


  • 41d: Teamwork? (YOKING). As in a team of oxen. Gettable, but I have to say I'm not crazy about this one -- seems just a little too forced.

  • 52d: "___ thy fair light had fled": Shelley (ERE). I didn't know this, but what else could it be?


Suns of Bitches:

The beauty of the difficult clues is that they are all "gettable" from context and from the crossings. That's the mark of a quality puzzle. Here are the few nasty spots for me:

  • 26a "Christ Stopped at Eboli" actor ___ Maria Volonte (GIAN). Not a name I knew, but it felt plausible enough after it fit. Nice to see Christ and Allah to sharing space.

  • 30a: "___ to Abelard" (Pope poem) (ELOISA). This was nowhere near my wheelhouse; I got it purely from the crossings. On Monday, we had ELOISE, now ELOISA. Here's an excerpt from the poem:
    Alas, how chang'd! what sudden horrors rise!A naked lover bound and bleeding lies!Where, where was Eloise? her voice, her hand,Her poniard, had oppos'd the dire command.Barbarian, stay! that bloody stroke restrain;The crime was common, common be the pain.I can no more; by shame, by rage suppress'd,Let tears, and burning blushes speak the rest.
    Pretty brutal!

  • 2d: The Bronx's ___ Bay Park (PELHAM). This may be a gimme for New Yorkers, but I had no clue. Luckily, it's a common enough place name, and the crossings were not ambiguous.

All in all, a very pleasant puzzling experience. Hope you all enjoyed it as much as I did.

Thanks for listening.

- Pete M.