Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Tuesday, May 30, 2017, Neville Fogarty

5:51

Here is an example of a theme that almost makes it. At first I thought it fell completely flat, when I had misremembered that [MEREDITH] and [ZANE] spelled their last names with an A, not an E. But no, all four examples spell their last name as in GREYMATTER.

Only, did we really need a revealer at all? Wouldn't it have been neater and more satisfying to have a fifth example of a Grey, say Lady Jane, or Jennifer, or Joel? Then, the revealer would simply have been that their first names were in grey squares. I grant you that the three I just suggested don't necessarily lend themselves to being hid in longer answers, but that's not exactly my problem. It's the sort of thing a critic can blithely suggest without concern as to whether it's even possible.

And why GREYMATTER? The "matter" is strangely vague here.

Finally, LIPIZZANER and MILKOFMAGNESIA don't hide the names across split words, while REARLIT (in a workman like manner) and HAMMEREDITHOME (in a brilliant fashion) do.

Otherwise, there are some good things here. I like MARLA standing next to ISLAM. I like to think she might wish to oppose her erstwhile husband in these matters, but I actually have no idea what her politics are. Darn, apparently she's probably conservative.

There aren't a ton of long non-theme answers here, but I enjoyed TMOBILE, despite the brand name, because of the justaposition of the TM__ at the start. BASETEN is also welcome. I'm impressed by the very center of the puzzle, where three theme answers are separated by only one row each. There is no "glue" there, except ADLAI, that old standby.

1A: Peruvian of long ago (INCA) - C-. There haven't been many standouts at 1A recently, have there?
Fave: KAHN (13D: Madeline of "Blazing Saddles") - she was always outstanding, even in a dud of a movie like "Clue".
Least fave: ATAB (59D: Open ____ (start at the bar, maybe)). Yuck.

- Colum

2 comments:

  1. 5:58
    Nice review. I am amused by your musing on the critic's license.

    I don't think I have ever seen LIPIZZANER spelled. I've only heard it, which made ZONK slightly tougher. And wow, what an odd throwback. It seems that the Doonesbury nickname would have been more current, and perhaps better known. Still, what else could it have been but another Z?

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  2. 10:22
    I've never heard of LIPIZZANER, nor have I seen it spelled, but the crosses were just fine. Nothing that really shines in this puzzle, even BASETEN. ORAL is always about an exam, isn't it? Funny that REARLIT and FLAME cross; brings back some memories of others trying that old trick.

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