Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (2024)

Posted on June 14, 2024 by Amy Reynaldo

LAT2:36 (Stella)


Newsday33:46 (pannonica)


NYT6:07 (Amy)


Universaltk (Matthew)



WSJuntimed (pannonica)

Ryan Judge’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s recap

NY Times crossword solution, 6/15/24 – no. 0615

Saturdayish difficulty level, check.

Fave fill: SMOOCH (and yes, I tried to think of a unit of volume bigger than a peck here), CHILDHOOD MEMORY, DOG LEASH, SNAKEBITE, ALFREDO to go with assorted PESTOS, SIN-EATER, AHI TUNA, ANDROIDS, NAME-DROPPED.

Oh, hey, this puzzle has diagonal symmetry along the NW-to-SE axis. 15-Across is a 15 that’s mirrored by 1d “AM I MAKING THAT UP?”, which doesn’t feel entirely idiomatic to me.

Three things:

  • Never heard of: 25a. [Rafael ___, All-Star third baseman for the Red Sox], DEVERS. He’s a current player who recently hit home runs in six games in a row, so it would be churlish to complain that retired track & field star Gail Devers should have been in the clue.
  • 7d. [Like a celebrity friend, often], NAME-DROPPED. Last night, I saw David Kwong’s show, The Enigmatist, at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater. Magic, history, cryptography, and puzzles including a crossword constructed onstage. Delightful! If you’re in the Chicago area and can get tickets before the show closes at the end of the month, you should go. The Thursday evening show included a Q&A afterwards with WTTW (Chicago’s PBS affiliate) host Geoffrey Baer, whose TV specials are always informative and fun. And I think Baer, an NYT crossword fan, might read Diary of a Crossword Fiend? He called it “the nice one.”
  • I also didn’t know this one: 26d. [Places for rook piercings], EARS. Here are some details for you.

3.5 stars from me.

Mark MacLachlan’s Wall Street Journal crossword, “Career Options” — pannonica’s write-up

Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (2)

WSJ • 6/15/24 • Sat • “Career Options” • MacLachlan • solution • 20240615

Alternative, witty ways—which are themselves familiar phrases ending with ‘job’—of describing professions:

  • 23a. [Snow job?] SKI LIFT OPERATOR.
  • 32a. [Plum job?] FRUIT PICKER.
  • 41a. [Union job?] WEDDING OFFICIANT.
  • 63a. [Rush job?] DEFENSIVE END.
  • 70a. [Print job?] CALLIGRAPHER.
  • 89a. [Inside job?] INTERIOR DESIGNER.
  • 97a. [Paint job?] ILLUSTRATOR.
  • 112a. [Dream job?] PSYCHOTHERAPIST.

  • 68a [Printer speed meas.] PPM, pages per minute. (It’s also the initialism for parts per million in solutions.) 15a [Hammermill packages] REAMS.
  • 72d [Drops out?] RAIN. Out as in outside, I assume. 78d [It’s blowing in the wind] AIR—this seems like it might be a philosophical question. Or maybe just semantic.
  • 73d [Atlas topper] NOSECONE, 74d [Atlas page feature] INSET.
  • 7a [Texas blue topaz, e.g.] STATE GEM, which in-grid looks to me A LOT (57a) likestratagem.
  • Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (3)

    Sanjay Acharya / Wikimedia Commons/ CC BY-SA 4.0

    35a [Garden frother] SPITBUG. Have never heard this. Wikipedia informs me that they are the nymphs of froghoppers and are often calledspittlebugs, which maaaybe I’ve heard by that name?

  • 52a [Have a bad look?] LEER. 25a [Have a long look] STARE.
  • 76a [Movie you can’t skip] A MUST. Just read this interesting Slate article about films that can only be experienced live: “If You Don’t See These Movies Now, You Never Will
  • 78a [Nervous conductors?] AXONS. There was a healthy dose of question-mark clues in this crossword. This one ends up looking as if it’s describing a profession.

Rich Norris’s Los Angeles Times crossword — Stella’s write-up

Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (4)

Los Angeles Times 6/15/24 by Rich Norris

Boy, was I NOT expecting this solve time with this byline. Too easy! Notables:

  • 1A [Hustle] is in fact a tough clue forMAKE TRACKS, but the first three Down entries were too quick to fall for this to trip me up for long.
  • 16A [Rock, paper, or scissors] isNOUN. I’ve now seen this clue trope forNOUN(S) enough times that I’m ready for a moratorium.
  • 18A [Defense mechanism] is a fun clue forFORTthat I totally missed while solving because the 7-letter Downs crossing it were so easy to get.
  • 20A [Online service since April 1, 2004] isGMAIL, which prompted the oxymoronic reaction in me of “wow, 20 years?” and “but I feel like it’s been aroundforever!”
  • 34A It’s been a while since I’ve seenSPYS in a puzzle (reprints of older ones excepted), but there wasn’t an excessive number of such dated-feeling references in this puzzle so I didn’t mind this one very much.
  • 50A [Barrel racing events], although nice and evocative, is way too straightforward a clue forRODEOS on Saturday! Save it for a Tuesday IMO.
  • 62A [Convenience one can bank on, familiarly] isATM MACHINE, and I feel like there was a missed opportunity to make fun of the redundancy in the phrase.
  • 7D [Highway through Whitehorse] isALCAN, or the Alaska Highway (it’s short for “Alaska” and “Canada”). This is another entry I don’t see much any more, but unlikeSPYS it doesn’t feel dated, since folks are presumably still driving theALCAN. (Google AI says 300K per year, but Google AI also says to put glue in your pizza sauce, so I’d take that number with a large grain of salt.)
  • 39A [Gas use exhortation?] was my favorite clue in the puzzle. Rather than referring to usingless gas as the surface reading might imply, it’s about addingmore to get some speed:FLOOR IT.
  • 52A [Rajas topping] isCREMA, which is nice and evocative and making me hungry for some tacos.
  • 55A [First country to legalize same-sex marriage: Abbr.] isNETH (short for the Netherlands). I learned this fact fromDrag Race Holland, naturally.

Kate Chin Park’s Newsday crossword, Saturday Stumper — pannonica’s write-up

Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (5)

Newsday • 6/15/24 • Saturday Stumper • Park • solution • 20240615

This one was a beast. So many difficult clues.

  • 1a [Outpay, but not outearn] PIG LATIN. The upper left section was the last part of the grid that I completed, and this was one of the final entries I got. >pout<
  • 9a [Row houses] FRATS, as in fraternity row, not literally rowhouses.
  • 14a [Campus coveralls?] FREE RIDES. Full scholarships.
  • 17a [Insincerity indication] FALSE NOTE. For a time I was desperately considering something-NOSE, thinking about Pinocchio.
  • 18a [Under no longer] AWAKE. As from general anesthesia.
  • 25a [Upper-class performers?] ALTOS. Even with the question mark, this clue feels kind of loose.
  • 29a [Subdued] BEAT.
  • 31a [Intangibles like goodwill] ASSETS. Or perhaps this clue.
  • 35a [Cap wearer’s sassy slogan] BAD HAIR, DON’T CARE. I was expecting the answer to be what the slogan on said cap would be, but this seems more like a timely or explanatory quip from said wearer. Clue is fine, but it’s—again—tricky.
  • 40a [Orange’s origin] ASIA. But I was primed to thinking about naranja from Spanish, after the similar 38a [Algebra’s origin] ARABIC. Investigating further, the etymology goes like this: “Middle English, from Anglo-French orrange, araunge, from Old Occitan auranja, from Arabic nāranj, from Persian nārang, from Sanskrit nāraṅga orange tree” (m-w)
  • 43a [Puzz to crack] CRYPT. Oh COME ON. No, no, no.
  • 48a [Impeding passage?] ONE LANE. I understand that one-lane roads (or bridges) can lead to vehicles waiting their turns, but the clue seems a bit beyond the bend.
  • 57a [Be a bumbler?] DRONE. This is the sense of the verb that the bumble in bumblebee comes from.
  • 58a [Waiting periods] DOT DOT DOT. Fiendish.
  • 1d [Malfunction message] PFFT. Li’l bit tenuous.
  • 6d [Spearing participants] TINES. This is an example of a certain kind of Stumper clue, where a weird word choice renders the clue nearly indecipherable. ‘Participants’, while accurate, is just not what one would normally say or write.
  • 9d [Ultimately plain?] FLATTEST. Themost unvarnished, or perhaps the most like a geographical plain.
  • 26d [“Fly guy” with a daughter named Shanda] LEAR. Just now realizing this is about Learjet. Are we supposed to see through the “fly guy” pun? Are we supposed to know his daughter’s name? Is there some other significance to her name?
  • 32d [Less than satisfying, to some] EASY. Okay fine, but let us not go too far in the other direction.
  • 36d [Showtimes] AIR DATES, not CURTAINS.
  • 43d [It’s in the definitions of “stalemate” and “sour grapes”] CANNOT. Wow, just, I mean, W O W. Talk about idiosyncratic.
  • 45d [Mes despues de Navidad] ENERO. aka, the only Spanish month truly useful in crosswords, aside from MAYO which is typically clued some other way.
  • 47d [Storms with precipitation] RAIDS. Like … a hail of bullets?
  • 50d [Fashionably tea-length] MIDI. Suitable for 1920’s-style high tea occasions.
  • 52d [Lay back] -ETTE, not EASE (I wasn’t convinced that was correct, but for a long time couldn’t think of anything better).
  • 55d [No longer available, as ISBNs] OOP, out of print books.

This entry was posted in Daily Puzzles and tagged Kate Chin Park, Mark MacLachlan, Rich Norris, Ryan Judge. Bookmark the permalink.

Saturday, June 15, 2024 | (2024)

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