"867-5309/Jenny" got air time when I was back in high school. I even I tried calling the number once. I waited until our land line was free, ...
read more"867-5309/Jenny" got air time when I was back in high school. I even I tried calling the number once. I waited until our land line was free, picked up our rotary dial phone, and plugged away at it. I had to restart a few times because the darn dial kept slipping halfway around, as it always did, so when I got the "your call must include an area code" automated message and my mom picked up the other line to scream at me to stop using the phone for nonsense, I figured I'd have better luck waiting for Jenny to call me.
That song debuted in 1981? Forty years ago? Yikes! I'm curious to see how many Gen Y and Millennial solvers (besides Adam!) will be baffled today.
Audacious to tackle seven(!) themers, along with JENNY, even with that extra column. Neat observation that none of the numbers repeat, which would have make this theme a no-go, due to the rule of no duplications within a grid. Some top-notch craftsmanship to put together something that knitted together so well. The NE corner is particularly challenging, with two stacked themers having to flow into the central FIVE GUYS. Brilliant to work in INNUENDO, such a great word filled with … well, innuendo.
I also appreciated Chris and Adam's care in making proper names unambiguous. If you didn't know Bud SELIG, Ted CHIANG, or the ENIAC, it'd be an uphill battle to argue that any of those letters was a trap. Perhaps if you're vegetarian, FIVE ?UYS might seem better as FIVE MUYS, a Spanish chain? And maybe you could argue that baby animals are MUTE, but I would say "huh?" or maybe HUNH (probably not) to you.
Some puzzles are geared toward the young and hip, so one could argue that there should be some for the rotary dial crowd. I'd prefer to have puzzles that aren't so divisive, with some people overjoyed and some people feeling shunned. Hard to please everyone, though.