google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner

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Jun 5, 2009

Interview with Gareth Bain

Most of our TMS (the old Daily and the current LAT) crossword constructors seem to be Americans based in America. Daniel A Finan is in Denmark though, doing his Ph. D there.

Gareth Bain is a South African. He is 22 years old, still a college student. He started constructing American style crosswords only a year ago, and his puzzles have been published by LAT, Universal and USA Today.

Today is our second Gareth Bain work since the switch. I enjoyed very much his last NIXON grid, where ON is nixed in every theme entry. I expect we will see more of his puzzles in the future.

Can you tell us more about this puzzle? How did the theme idea come to you and what kind of problems did you encounter while working on the grid?

Well it started with the helper phrase ETTU, and just looking at it in a different way. I like the idea of using "crossword-ese" to make puzzles. Having said that it's more correctly parsed as add TU and not ET, but adding TU is a lot trickier. There were a lot of nice entries so I went for 6 entries and interlocking them, and with a bit of fiddling and a lot of cursing whilst filling things in... this is what I got. The top-left and especially the bottom-right were the worst. Even after 2! spoiler (I mean helper, this is the LAT...) squares that bottom-right is still quite horrid. So maybe it would've been better to have gone with 4 sparkly theme entries and even sparklier long fill? I don't know...

What is a perfect puzzle to you? What kind of theme fascinates you? Or do you actually prefer themeless?

Something I haven't seen before, those really amazing out-of the ordinary themes... like Wednesday's NYT (I'm writing on Wednesday so it's fresh in my minds. I also really admire those solidly built Monday puzzles with neat, if not ground-breaking themes, but with a fill so polished you can see your face in it. And no, that last sentence, makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, but you get the drift... Themelesses are a taste I'm gradually acquiring, NY Times Saturdays are still liable not to get completed if the Americana level goes too high. (Miss the Sun themelesses, was a bit more in-tune with them.)

What is your background? What prompted you to work on your first puzzle?

I started solving the local (South African) "You" Magazine puzzle (by Phanie Alberts) with my grandfather at about 9 or 10. If you want a crash-course in crossword-ese that's the puzzle for you! I think I'll answer part of Q4 now... This is probably the most popular South African puzzle. It's what's known (I think) as a clue-in-squares type. There's no theme, plenty of unches (across squares with no down answer intersecting and vice versa), lots of 2-letter words, and more crossword-ese than you can shake a stick at. On the plus side, there are usually some pretty gorgeous long entries spanning the top and left-hand sides of the grid...

Still, it was enough to get me hooked on crosswords. I actually started trying to imitate that at around 13 - I can't remember an exact motive though behind it to be honest though - and have been annoying various family members with puzzles since then... I discovered American puzzles about 2 years ago, though the "premium" puzzles (LAT, NYT, Newsday etc.) about a year after that, when someone sent me a link to cruciverb.com (actually the second person to do so...) Each was a quantum leap for me in terms of quality; naturally I tried to imitate what I saw, but especially when it came to those "premium" puzzles, it's been a very steep learning curve. The best example is that until then I had no qualms about throwing in terrible words wherever and even letting them cross. Getting CC helped a lot, before then was using pencil and paper and excel (you only have to rub a hole through the page so many times before realizing the major drawbacks of making crosswords on graph paper...) I still like to do things mostly manually; filling in the grid with the press of button seems to take all the fun out of it, and I'm not sure if it doesn't take some of the individuality out of a crossword, but maybe that's just me. Having said that I'm leaning on the suggest button more and more, it's such a temptation, lol.

While I'm here, I hope you don't mind me saying thank you to 2 crossword angels who gave me a lot of feedback and advice (that I mostly ignored, because I'm an independent cuss), and also Rich Norris. It's said before, but it needs to be said again, he really goes the extra mile with novice constructors, both in terms of constructive feedback as to why a crossword is undesirable, and also by sometimes taking such a puzzle and telling you precisely what you need to change to make acceptable and/or a better puzzle, which has happened in 3 of 4 puzzles so far...

How are American crosswords different from those in South African?

I answered a lot of that already, but to add to it, straight puzzles aren't all that common. Mostly, what you see in newspapers are British cryptics and some local cryptic authors too... There's also no (to my knowledge, anyway) free-lance, edited crosswords, which is one reason I'm here...

Who are you favorite constructors and why?

In one year I've been exposed to a huge number of talented constructors, it's nigh impossible to single anyone out. I've got 3 but it could've easily been 30 and if you'd asked me this next week it might easily have been a different 3.

Gail Grabowski: As I said I really admire clean, "crossword-ese-free" early-week puzzles and she is the queen of those. Her themes are also simple, but often surprisingly imaginative.

Bob Klahn: I think it's last Friday's CrossSynergy puzzle that's still in my head, but his clues are just so evocative and so mellifluous (I love that word, even if I can't spell it) and so delightfully twisty and very much unique. How amazing is it to write clues in a way that's all your own (there are a few others that do it, but not so many...). The most amazing thing is how the clues are hard until you get them, and then they're easy, which to me is a mark of genius...

Joon Pahk: I haven't solved one of his puzzles and not been both surprised and impressed by it. The Sun puzzle where lead turns into gold is still etched in my memory. Which is incredible, considering the number of crosswords between it and the present...


Note from C.C.:

1) The helper squares in Gareth's answer #1 refer to the two black squares directly above and below ADJ (13D) and BEL (60D). See today's grid.

2)
In his "What is your background" answers, Gareth mentioned CC and "unches". CC refers to Crossword Compiler, the crossword constructing software. "Unches" means "unchecked fills", like the edge letters N, S, W, E in this Joe Krozel compass puzzle.


Friday June 5, 2009 Gareth Bain

Theme: ET TU (59D: Famous last words (and homophonically, a hint to this puzzle's theme))

19A: Genetic coding for an official legislative trip?: JUNKET DNA (Junk DNA)

23A: NASA scrapheap?: ROCKET PILE (Rock Pile)

51A: Long-eared dog's performance?: BASSET SOLO (Bass Solo)

52A: Young hen's bar bill?: PULLET TAB (Pull Tab)

2D: Horn section?: CORNET ROW (Cornrow)

34D: Dance after getting a shock from an outlet?: SOCKET HOP (Sock Hop)

"ET TU, Brute?" are Julius Caesar's famous last words. I got the answer immediately. Then I got PULLET TAB in a hurry and realized that ET is added into the theme answer. But I simply could not parse ET TU. Forward to 1:24, you will hear ET TU is pronounced like "Add TU", homophonically. I was confused.

I've never heard of Junk DNA, but JUNKET came easily. Is Jack Abramoff sentenced yet? I think I would have taken his Scotland golf JUNKET too. I actually did not know what a pullet is. Only knew the French "poulet". Not familiar with the Sock Hop dance either.

Very choppy solving today. Quite a few tricky clues. I really liked the overlapping and the interlocking of the theme answers.

The helper squares Gareth Bain mentioned in his interview refer to two black squares directly above and below ADJ (13D) and BEL (60D).

Across:

1A: Bank holding: Abbr.: ACCT

5A: Village Voice awards: OBIES. Yep, OBIES are given by Village Voice.

10A: Place to wear a coat: LAB. Nice clue. I did not get it immediately. I need a science or chemist word for hint.

13A: Parting of the Pacific?: ALOHA. Another great clue. I was misguided into really "parting" the Pacific like Moses did with the Red Sea.

14A: They help form joints: ULNAE. More used to the "Arm bones" clue.

15A: Loved, with "up": ATE

16A: Florida home of Golf's WGC-CA Championship: DORAL. Played on its Blue Monster Course. Used to be the spot for DORAL Open.

17A: Jazz great Art: TATUM. I forgot. Googled this guy before. His left eye was blind.

18A: Columnist Hentoff: NAT

21A: It's shaken out: SALT. My favorite clue. I suppose PEPPER can be clued the same.

22A: __ Spielgel: German magazine: DER. German for "The Mirror". A weekly magazine. Similar to our Time or Newsweek.

28A: Organic compound: ENOL

29A: Mo. in which the Civil War began: APR. April 12, to be exact.

31A: Hercules' neighbor: LYRA. See this diagram. I did not know Hercules is a constellation. I kept thinking of the young boy Hylas, who found the treasure chamber with Hercules in "Jason and the Argonauts".

33A: Inventor friend of Henry Ford: EDISON. Easy guess. I don't know those two were friends.

37A: Ruth's mother-in-law: NAOMI

39A: H.S. VIPs.: SRS. Never attended a school here. Don't know why SRS are VIPS. You'd think the principals are.

46A: Cry near the ears?: CAW. Why? I wanted COO.

47A: Blacksmith's item: SHOE. For horse? I don't know.

49A: "Eight Days __": A WEEK. Beatles' song.

55A: Pic source: NEG. And PAN (30D: Shoot with a moving camera).

57A: Large group: ARMY. Like Arnie's ARMY, fans of the golf legend Arnie Palmer.

61A: Mauna __: KEA. Wrote down LOA immediately. Mauna KEA is "white mountain". Mauna LOA is "long mountain". LOA=long. Both are volcanos.

62A: Larry Flynt concern, briefly: PORNO. I forgot who Larry Flynt is. Did know his "Hustler" though.

65A: Funny pair?: ENS. Two letter N's in Funny.

66A: Give the boot: EVICT

67A: Fairy tale threat: TROLL. Do you collect TROLL dolls?

68A: Sound of support: RAH. Wanted OLE.

69A: Places for guards: GATES. This is so unfair. We see Mac and iPod so often in the grid, yet Bill GATES has never been given an opportunity to shine.

70A: Org. with carriers: USPS. Mail carriers.

Down:

1D: Audibly: ALOUD

3D: Yoga energy point: CHAKRA. No idea. It's also spelled CAKRA. Sanskrit for "wheel"/"circle". Humans have seven CHAKRA points. I guess I know why #7 is.

4D: Ghost story, e.g.: TALE

5D: Great area?: OUTDOORS. Stumped. Is this about the movie "The Great OUTDOORS"?

6D: Man with many voices: BLANC (Mel).

7D: Pipe opening: INTAKE. Silly. But I really did not know this.

8D: Evian, par exemple: EAU. Evian is part of Danone, which has many joint ventures in China.

10D: Island on the Kalohi Channel: LANAI. Well, I know LANAI the Dole "Pineapple Island". Have never heard of Kalohi Channel. Please come to Comments section if you found a good map.

11D: In any way: AT ALL

12D: Davis of "The Little Foxes": BETTE. Ignorant of the movie.

13D: Dict. designation: ADJ. Adjective. Got the answer from Across fills.

20D: Priam's kingdom: TROY. Priam is the father of Paris/Hector/Cassandra.

21D: Took off: SPLIT

24D: 67.5 degrees: ENE. Mine was NNE.

27D: Happy-go-lucky: BLITHE. This word always brings to mind Blythe Danner, mother of Gwyneth Paltrow.

29D: "Wheel of Fortune" buy: AN I. I like this clue better than the black ANI bird.

32D: Discipline: ART. Don't get this one.

35D: Words with whim: ON A. On a whim.

36D: Out-of-the-box: NEW

38D: Hip-hopper Elliott: MISSY. Ha ha, a rare gimme for me. She is quite slim now.

40D: Leek cousins: SHALLOTS. Oil/Vinegar/SHALLOT/mustard, classic vinaigrette recipe.

43D: Angry: HOT. Mine was MAD.

45D: Missing at roll call, maybe: AWOL

48D: Lively wit: ESPRIT. Wrote down BON MOT.

50D: Partner of breaks: ENTERS. "Partner" in the clue always suggests an "and". Breaks and ENTERS.

51D: One of a nursery rhyme trio: BAKER. Butcher and the candlestick maker.

52D: Spartacus' stage: ARENA. Oh, the gladiator. I confused Spartacus with Spartan.

53D: Shatter: SMASH

54D: Wee bit: OUNCE

56D: Certain Scots: GAELS. Are CELTS "Certain Scots" too?

60D: Sound measure: BEL. I forgot. Saw this clue before. It's equal to 10 decibels. SONE is "Loudness measures".

62D: Hanging aid: PEG. I was in a totally different direction, thinking of the hanging of Saddam.

63D: Oft-donated cells: OVA. Oh, I thought only sperms are "Oft-donated".

Answer grid.

C.C.