It's always nice to finish a puzzle the day after I was totally crushed by one. I went into panic mode when I saw Byron Walden's name, but I just took a deep breath and jumped in.
The man is a genius. He always manages to stack long answers that aren't just long...they're @&$*#%' incredible fill.
Three stacks of 10-letter horizontal entries in the northeast:
5A: Small wonders (gifted kids)
16A: Dirt (inside info)
18A: Alley oops (gutter ball).
Three more in the southwest:
52A: It can keep ballfields dry (alcohol ban)
55A: Lots to offer (real estate)
57A: Bank holdings? (telephones)
We also get three vertical stacks of 8-letter answers, in the northwest and southeast. My favorite in each corner:
2D: Title city in a 1983 George Strait hit (Amarillo). I was never a huge country music fan, but I always liked George Strait. You Look So Good in Love was my favorite of his songs.
36D: Starchy bite (Tater Tot). I was baffled until I got a few of the crosses, then it became obvious.
I had never heard of 5D: Check for credibility, in modern lingo (giggle test). For the most part, I don't use modern lingo.
32A: Be profligate, in a way (sow one's wild oats). That's better than good.
There is a plethora of words ending in O. In addition to inside info, we have 15A: Novel that ends "By noon, the island had gone down in the horizon; and all before us was the wide Pacific (Omoo), 31A: Writer who was a source for Verdi's "Rigoletto" (Hugo), 40A: 1961 film also known as "The Job" (Il Posto), and 48A: Predecessor of the boliviano (peso). Also bro (26D: Good bud), Sho (33D: "Weeds" channel, briefly) and OOO (34D: Line struck through by a winner) -- tied for the most clever clue, IMOO.
The co-winner was 27D: Result of too many rusty nails on the road? (DUI).
The connected clues took me some time to decipher...44A and 31D (U.S. route and hwy, respectively).
Well, I don't want to be up late (44D: Burning the midnight oil), so I'll call it a night. See you tomorrow.
Linda G
Thank you! Very helpful.
ReplyDeletejust now getting around to weekend puzzles.
ReplyDeletei really liked this one, but was sorely disappointed that "check for credibility, in modern lingo" was not JIGGLE TEST.