December 20, 2021

"I worried that giving my time over so fully to crosswords would somehow prove symptomatic of relapse."

"But I uncrossed the wires—puzzles ≠ disembodiment ≠ anorexia ≠ relapse—and took the job. Four days a week, I rode the Metro-North train from the city to Pleasantville, New York, to join [NYT crossword editor Will] Shortz at his home office.... Shortz is known for editing up to ninety per cent of the clues in a crossword submission, tailoring its references to suit a desired level of difficulty and an imagined audience—one that could be as broad or as narrow as Shortz wanted it to be.... We had markedly different frames of reference—he was a sixty-two-year-old who had grown up on a horse farm in Indiana, and I was a twenty-three-year-old who grew up in Tribeca—and the collision of our backgrounds made for good conversation and better crosswords. One of my proudest moments was getting him to rewrite the clue for bro (traditionally, 'Sister’s sib' or 'Sibling for sis') as 'Preppy, party-loving, egotistical male, in modern lingo.' But, when I constructed a puzzle that prominently featured the term male gaze in the grid, he insisted that the phrase wouldn’t be in the average Times solver’s lexicon; it wasn’t 'puzzle-worthy.' (Although I lost that battle in 2014, the term appeared three years later, under his editorship.)"

9 comments:

rhhardin said...

You've got to love the male gaze. I remember a video camera being given to Natives in Africa to see what would happen. Academic studies, is what.

N!ai The First Tribal Cinema
Bayly Spawforth-Jones Can Tribal Cinema Stabilize San Culture?
Marie Desséchée The Male Gaze in Tribal Cinema

(a satire in Raritan long ago)

I remembered the native informant and the angry feminist. The white guy contributes a weak academic article, probably the one of value.

Assistant Village Idiot said...

A 23 y/o tossing off "Tribeca" as if everyone would automatically know where that is says it all. I suppose if something is called the New Yorker I should expect a certain insularity. Yet that publication has also always aspired to be for the elite classes nationwide, hasn't it? Or are they laughing into their sleeves as they pretend this, knowing that they feed off those who wish they were that elegant and from NYC.

Owen said...

Trying to decode the clues to your postings today. At 6:10 AM, we meet Elizabeth Holmes, defendant in a huge fraud case, and study her studied demeanor and dress. At 8:33, through her obit speaks Ms. Babitz, an unusual Hollywood denizen who made a study of unusual Hollywood denizens. At 11:55 a transmasculine woman talks about her new package. And at 4:37 a woman with eating disorders regales us with insider stories about the craft of crossword puzzles.

All women. All...different. All...damaged?

What's the theme, then?

Ann Althouse said...

I had the tag wrong — "female appetite disorders" for "female appetite diseases." Click on it now to see the old posts. There are lots.

Scot said...

Ms. Shechtman offers a good gynocentric history of crossword puzzles & a little bit about her disorder. For me, she does not make the connection between the two. W.C. Minor was a major contributor to the EOD for 30 years when he was in the loony bin. Likewise, I don't see a connection.

I am very grateful for the word "Natick". I have been trying to recall it for years. Now is safely stored in Google's cloud.

I found a Natick in the WS Journal puzzle of December 18, 2021.
103D "So Sick" Singer (NEYO)
113A She plays Chani in "Dune" (ZENDAYA)
The pop culture clues+answers are extremely frustrating to those of us who know many words.

On a puzzle page, I once found this: 14, 23, 28, 33, 43, 51, 59 What is the next number in the sequence? Is also a gross abuse of the audience!!!

Mikey NTH said...

Does everyone who writes for New York media have a mental disorder?

Peter said...

Clues for “bro” would be so much more fun as a Cryptic.
(Ditto “Male gaze” and pretty much any other)

Kevin said...

Does everyone who writes for New York media have a mental disorder?

The overwhelming urge to make the story about themselves seems to be a prerequisite for getting the job.

J Scott said...

Considering the need for brevity in a crossword, "'Preppy, party-loving, egotistical male, in modern lingo.'" for bro seems unnecessarily wordy.