The Times Crossword Friday Masterclass: Episode 39

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  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 114

  • @ninj1an
    @ninj1an Год назад +43

    5:00 "So far, we haven't uncovered the reason that this was difficult" -Quotes taken moments before disaster

  • @MultiNacnud
    @MultiNacnud Год назад +55

    Congrats. I thought a fishgig was a Marrillion concert.

  • @richardlyons7582
    @richardlyons7582 Год назад +24

    My Friday fix is here, thank you Simon.

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 Год назад +16

    27a was an absolute beast, since fishing pole is basically a rod, not a harpoon. No shame in struggling with that, but kudos for working out the wordplay and having the courage to go with it. A very mixed puzzle, on the whole, with a few real gimmes, and some absolute stinkers.
    And how very British of you to enumerate what you will or won't forgive yourself for 😄

    • @markgillespie3971
      @markgillespie3971 Год назад +3

      I assume it's the spear/pole you see certain tribesmen use to 'harpoon' fish in the sea? I was suprised he was struggling to make the link.

  • @PamelaSim-gz1px
    @PamelaSim-gz1px Год назад +2

    As someone still very much learning how to "crack the cryptic" I find these programmes invaluable! Thank you

  • @lairdriin8513
    @lairdriin8513 Год назад +8

    Fascinating solve!
    *Spoilers below*
    ***
    I was so proud of myself for figuring out Aperitif before Simon did - I've only ever gotten 2 other clues on my own during these videos, and I am in general very very bad at and new to cryptic crosswords! But these videos are GREAT and helping me learn how to do them. So I say, keep it up!

  • @stevewood8
    @stevewood8 Год назад +3

    At 47:22, for the second week running, Simon's brain came up with the answer out of the blue but was ignored. Poor brain, he's trying to help. I do enjoy this weekly treat - please keep them coming. Now I need to go and listen to Year of the Cat, after the Peter Lorre reference...

  • @davidrattner9
    @davidrattner9 Год назад +6

    Hour plus cryptic video!! Much appreciated Simon for continous dedication to these every Friday!

  • @onion013
    @onion013 Год назад +13

    These videos are so useful! Here's to the RUclips algorithm hopefully realising that :)

  • @d4r4butler74
    @d4r4butler74 Год назад +1

    Love the Crosswords!! I really look forwards to them every week.

  • @Emmibean77
    @Emmibean77 Год назад +4

    That was brutal! Well done, Simon. These videos have quickly become a staple of my week, and I look forward to watching every Friday

  • @Prazzie
    @Prazzie Год назад

    I know the Friday crosswords are supposed to be challenging, but this one was diabolical. Thank you very much for filming and uploading these, this series has become my favourite content on your channel. It is both informative and entertaining.

  • @Goryus
    @Goryus Год назад +19

    The "Ye" in "Ye Old Coffee Shoppe" is not an old form of "You." It is an old form of "The" with a representation for the old Thorn character, which we no longer have but made a Th sound.

    • @longwaytotipperary
      @longwaytotipperary Год назад +1

      I didn’t realize that until it was covered in one of Rob’s Words videos! 😁

    • @mikechappell5849
      @mikechappell5849 Год назад +7

      there are two 'ye's. One as you say is just an old way of writing 'the', but the other IS an old form of you.

    • @Anne_Mahoney
      @Anne_Mahoney Год назад +2

      Thank you for tidying that up: I *cringed* when Simon said "I've just used the old form of you." We used to have you for subjects, ye for objects, plural, and thou for subjects, thee for objects, singular -- "thou art a quick solver; we watch thee every week. you, O Simon and Mark, are quick solvers; we watch ye every week." Then somebody got the clever idea of importing "use plural for respect" from French and other languages, so one could say "thou art clever" to a friend, "you are clever" to a superior. We're used to it now but imagine how *barbaric*, how *wrong* that must have sounded in the 1300s! And then this perversion of the egalitarian spirit of the language elbowed singular "thou" right out of use! Dreadful! 😼

  • @timsullivan4566
    @timsullivan4566 Год назад +6

    I can't quite articulate just how delighted I am when greeted by this notification - thanks so much, Simon!

  • @YasminChopin
    @YasminChopin Год назад +4

    I love these cryptic crossword classes, Simon. I've always been inept and totally afraid of cryptic crosswords but after watching your Friday videos I'm keen to maybe give them a go.

  • @Anne_Mahoney
    @Anne_Mahoney Год назад +2

    Uey is also used in New England -- the usual phrase is "hang a uey." I don't think I've ever seen it in writing, though. I do love watching these videos -- keep them coming, and to blazes with the algorithm! 😺💙

  • @toerag572
    @toerag572 Год назад +23

    Collins Dictionary defines FISHGIG as "a pole with barbed prongs for impaling fish".

    • @altreusplays
      @altreusplays Год назад +1

      Impressed that he worked it out from the wordplay, despite not knowing it. I was curious and looked up the letter pattern and it was the only possible answer!

    • @jackk5024
      @jackk5024 Год назад +1

      I’m curious as to the validity and standards of different dictionaries. I know the collins has a lot of weird and obscure words but Simon always uses the chambers and makes it seem like the times crossword standard

    • @tillydavvers
      @tillydavvers Год назад

      ​@jackk5024 I think different crosswords use different dictionaries as the standard. I think it's the listener that allows really obscure words and special vocabularies, but the Times is based on chambers, I think?

  • @louisesuth8141
    @louisesuth8141 Год назад +3

    I find it quite extraordinary to watch SImon get the hardest clues (13 a, 27 a, 16 d), and yet i saw 2 down straight away!

  • @yachtbubble7063
    @yachtbubble7063 Год назад +1

    Yes, Simon, it was indeed useful - extremely so. I am newish to CCs and am learning so much from your videos. And I didn’t get fishgig … it was daft of the Times to use such an odd word.

  • @richardlyons7582
    @richardlyons7582 Год назад +14

    Simon Peter Lorre (1904-1964) was a Hungarian-American actor known for his distinctive voice and memorable performances in a variety of films. Born as László Löwenstein in Rózsahegy, Hungary (now Ružomberok, Slovakia), Lorre began his acting career on the stage in Vienna before gaining international fame in the 1930s. One of his great films "The Maltese Falcon" with Humphrey Bogart.

    • @azrobbins01
      @azrobbins01 Год назад +2

      Also, Ren (of Ren and Stimpy) was inspired by Peter Lorre.

    • @SolarEquinox
      @SolarEquinox Год назад +2

      he's also iconic as Ugarte in Casablanca

    • @richardlyons7582
      @richardlyons7582 Год назад

      Casablanca one of the greats😊

  • @longwaytotipperary
    @longwaytotipperary Год назад +5

    Always look forward to this!

  • @jeffdyke1718
    @jeffdyke1718 Год назад

    I love these Friday masterclasses, they have helped me so much. I only attempt the Crusader in the Express but finished in record time today thanks to your hints. Perhaps I should move on to something tougher.

  • @philipbrooks402
    @philipbrooks402 Год назад +1

    Thanks Simon once again for a pleasant hour of gentle, intellectual stimulation. I would be here next year trying to solve Ueys and Fishgig.

  • @emilywilliams3237
    @emilywilliams3237 Год назад +6

    Yes, I love these. Yes, they are helping me appreciate and (partially, slightly possibly) understand cryptic crosswords better. Thanks for doing them, Simon! (I agree, fishgig is preposterous.)

  • @pstalcup117
    @pstalcup117 Год назад +21

    Peter Lorre is an actor that you will recognize his face if not his name!
    He was in Casablanca as the thief who stole the letter of transits

    • @Landis963
      @Landis963 Год назад +5

      And in _The Maltese Falcon_ as Joel Cairo.

    • @Stu_1977_SEmelb
      @Stu_1977_SEmelb Год назад

      I haven't had this much fun solving cryptic crosswords... since I was a child!

  • @Cthulhus_Mum
    @Cthulhus_Mum Месяц назад

    I had nothing on the opera one until you gave the anagram fodder - turns out my parents mentioning weird operas when I was a kid sometimes stuck with me (even though most of the ones I actually *saw* were G&S) - had to google I Puritani to be sure, but yeah.
    Thanks for always showing where stuff comes from! I had no chance, even though I’d heard of it, until that 🤣

  • @onijester56
    @onijester56 Год назад +2

    A harpoon is a spear-like weapon usually used in fishing. Spears are a long pole with a damaging/sharpened tip on the end.

  • @arthurcharest9061
    @arthurcharest9061 Год назад +1

    Thanks Simon, I was able to get two of them today!

  • @johnmerriam8661
    @johnmerriam8661 Год назад +27

    "On a morning from a Bogart movie.
    In a country where they turned back time.
    You go strolling through the crowd like Peter Lorre
    Contemplating a crime."
    Al Stewart - Year of the Cat

  • @kempisthomasa7311
    @kempisthomasa7311 Год назад +10

    My favorite line from Me and My Girl:
    -Aperitif?
    -No fanks, I’ve still got me own

  • @johnciolfi5085
    @johnciolfi5085 Год назад +5

    I did find the clue (and the Chambers definition) for Ueys interesting, because that’s also been an American term (pull a Uey or do a Uie) for decades now. Maybe it originated in Australia, I’m not sure, but it’s definitely used with some regularity in the States as well.

    • @ConManAU
      @ConManAU Год назад +2

      In Australia you would more likely "chuck" a uey. Interesting to know it's made its way over to the States too!

    • @Stu_1977_SEmelb
      @Stu_1977_SEmelb Год назад

      @@ConManAU Hah! Exactly what I was about to say!! 😆 The two main things Aussies will chuck: ueys and sickies. 😄

  • @mjkluck
    @mjkluck Год назад +1

    These solves are great.

  • @DarklordZagarna
    @DarklordZagarna Год назад +1

    I don't know any of Peter Lorre's films, but I know OF him from the absolutely picture-perfect opening lyric in Al Stewart's "Year of the Cat", which I think Simon might enjoy if he's not heard it before:
    On a morning from a Bogart movie
    In a country where they turn back time
    You go strolling through the crowd like
    Peter Lorre contemplating a crime
    She comes out of the sun in her silk dress running
    Like a watercolor in the rain
    Don't bother asking for explanations
    She'll just tell you that she came
    In the Year of the Cat

  • @deniseiln
    @deniseiln Год назад +6

    One of the words in the definition for "harpoon" is "spear" - if the definition for "spear" includes "pole"... well, it's a bit buried, but that would justify it.

    • @Antagony1960
      @Antagony1960 Год назад +1

      For ‘spear’ Chambers gives, “a long weapon made of *a pole* with a pointed head;” Also, under ‘gig’, sans ‘fish’, it gives, “a pronged spear for fishing, a fishgig”! So I think ‘pole’ is just about justified. But it's still a ridiculously vague definition for such an obscure word.

  • @MarcMcMillin
    @MarcMcMillin Год назад

    enjoying this at my leisure on my day off!

  • @vinyl1Earthlink
    @vinyl1Earthlink Год назад +3

    Based on the comments in TftT, you must be the only solver who saw uey right off the rip, but then you rejected it - so close! I constructed it from the cryptic as my LOI, and still didn't recognize it as a word. At least you have heard of the Red Arrows, and put it in right away - I had to imagine it was the UK equivalent of the Blue Angels. According to the Wiki, we got there first!

  • @azrobbins01
    @azrobbins01 Год назад +3

    The only place I have heard Fizzgig before is that it was the name of a girl's pet animal in the Dark Crystal movie. That was the first movie I ever saw in the theater back in the early eighties.

  • @B1GB1RDB4G3L
    @B1GB1RDB4G3L Год назад +1

    YAY I love the FRIDAY CROSSWORD VIDEOS!

  • @bloodspatteredguitar
    @bloodspatteredguitar Год назад +3

    For the "after contraction" indicator I read it as referring to pregnancy, so the idea that the answer is embedded in the following phrase still works that way!

  • @bobblebardsley
    @bobblebardsley Год назад +9

    The whole time Simon was thinking about 27A I was just thinking of Fizzgog, the man who drives the boat on Rosie & Jim 😅

  • @SwimCycleRunCoach
    @SwimCycleRunCoach Год назад

    well done getting fishgig - bloody hard to get when it's a harpoon.

  • @LogiBizzle
    @LogiBizzle Год назад

    Me: "Wow, I managed to get aperitif before Simon! I'm so smart."
    Simon: "Oh of course it's aperitif, what an easy clue; how silly of me to not get it sooner."
    😂😂😂
    Seriously though, the fact I could parse it at all is a testament to how useful these crossword vids are, please keep them coming!

  • @bryanroland9402
    @bryanroland9402 Год назад +2

    "fishgig" was ridiculously hard. Such a recondite word ought to have a clearer definition and maybe wordplay that one could be more confident about having understood. The words "fish" and "gig" suggest all kinds of synonyms and combinations. "Bass performance" springs to mind. Love the Friday crossword videos!

  • @thescrewfly
    @thescrewfly Год назад

    I suspect the 'Pole' in 27a was the verb 'to pole' which was in Simon's dictionary as 'strike with a pole' which sounds much closer in meaning if it's the verb 'to harpoon'.

  • @Sebablolsssssssss
    @Sebablolsssssssss Год назад

    Love these!

  • @grenvillephillips6998
    @grenvillephillips6998 Год назад

    Made a great start but then got skewered by that last one.

  • @gordonglenn2089
    @gordonglenn2089 Год назад

    Wonderful puzzle, and not actually that difficult for the most part, imo. I would never have come up with the opera name or U-turns, of course. Though, being from this side of the pond, Peter Lorre jumped into my head immediately.

  • @tonyroberts3926
    @tonyroberts3926 Год назад

    In your part of Surrey I suppose you could afford a second R
    Where I live we could only stretch to one R in our caraway seed that we had with a glass of puddle water

  • @deniseiln
    @deniseiln Год назад +5

    And I have just been earwormed...
    o/`
    On a morning from a Bogart movie
    In a country where they turn back time
    You go strolling through the crowd like Peter Lorre
    Contemplating a crime
    o/`
    Al Stewart, Year of the Cat

  • @Raven-Creations
    @Raven-Creations Год назад

    Peter Lorre was the round faced, bug-eyed actor in Casablanca and the Maltese Falcon. He often played weaselly characters, a bit like the Steve Buscemi of his day.
    This was quite a mixture. Some clues were fairly simple, but others were really tough. How many people know the word fishgig? Pole wasn't really a full definition. I found a definition that said it was a pole with a barb or hook on the end, but that makes it more than just a pole. Note that of the definitions for fizgig, only the harpoon definition could be spelled fishgig. I Puritani isn't exactly a popular opera, and the wordplay didn't exactly give it away. I'm surprised you didn't get aperitif sooner, especially once you had all the crossing letters.
    Some of the wordplay for the relatively easy clues was quite complex, so it was only really useful for confirming the answer. Aperitif was like that - you're unlikely to be able to use the wordplay to get the answer.

  • @missioncardiac7599
    @missioncardiac7599 Год назад

    A brutal one. Please keep them coming.
    Can someone parse the I PURITANI clue for me? I think Simon skipped that bit.

    • @richardclegg8027
      @richardclegg8027 Год назад +1

      He did but much before he solved it. It is an anagram of P (piano) TURN A (start of act) and III.
      Curious indicates the anagram.

  • @timsullivan4566
    @timsullivan4566 Год назад +1

    Of course I've heard of Peter Lorre and Errol Flynn...
    ...but Simon, who the heck is Lawrence Olivier? 😉

  • @23myiah
    @23myiah Год назад +2

    I googled fishgig and it came up straight away as a pole.

  • @maxstunner100
    @maxstunner100 Год назад +1

    I thought the aussy reversing clue might have used “Ute” - the Australian word for pick up truck.

  • @KalikiDoom
    @KalikiDoom Год назад

    Harpoon Pole - Fishgig (it's in a newer dictionary version) - That's EVIL!

  • @kevinmartin7760
    @kevinmartin7760 Год назад +2

    I know lawyers *write* briefs, I did not know they also actually *were* briefs!

    • @rockhopper_penguin
      @rockhopper_penguin Год назад

      They might even wear briefs!

    • @DarklordZagarna
      @DarklordZagarna Год назад

      I was wondering if "lawyer" in this clue might be in its verb form, i.e. "to lawyer" meaning "to write a brief about." I guess it's a Britishism instead, but I think the clue still technically works even for American English.

  • @vanessaosborne3175
    @vanessaosborne3175 Год назад +1

    Gran danced with Errol Flynn when was in the local rep. He still has a debt at Montague Jefferys

  • @watchmakerful
    @watchmakerful Год назад +9

    Why is that "Pole" capitalized? "Pole" with a capital letter does not mean "pole", it means "Polish".

    • @Math.Bandit
      @Math.Bandit Год назад +4

      Its capitalized for the surface reading, the punctuation isn't considered part of the clue.

  • @denhal1
    @denhal1 Год назад

    fishgig
    [ fish-gig ]
    noun
    a spearlike implement with barbed prongs for spearing fish in the water.

  • @nfc153
    @nfc153 Год назад

    Well I got the anagram fodder for 25A fairly quickly but 8D would have taken time and 13A was beyond me.
    Still, small steps. Really enjoying this series.

  • @WimmekeVL
    @WimmekeVL Год назад

    Capturing something with the help of a pole. FISHING ?

  • @martinopanevino5705
    @martinopanevino5705 Год назад +1

    Oh bobbins!

  • @oliverb4020
    @oliverb4020 Год назад

    A fishgig is a harpoon is a spear, which is a pole. I assume this kind of tiered definition is allowed.

  • @henrymarkson3758
    @henrymarkson3758 Год назад +1

    I used the word unscrambler to solve 'fishgig'. Not ashamed

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 Год назад +1

    I have a feeling that opera was mentioned on Counterpoint this week. Could that be why it's near the front of your memory?

    • @archivist17
      @archivist17 Год назад

      @@dogbreaththe3rd851 Dedicated. But I would never have the courage to enter. Congratulations on getting as far as you did!

  • @andrewgrant6516
    @andrewgrant6516 Год назад

    There was a standing joke in the 40s that if you wanted to scare a spook on Halloween you would wear a Peter Lorre mask.

  • @stuartsotheran6279
    @stuartsotheran6279 Год назад

    An hour well spent, as usual, but I don't get TWANG (24d) at all

  • @joeg451
    @joeg451 Год назад +1

    the "Ye" in something like "Ye olde butcher shoppe" isn't synonymous with "You"; it's "The".

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 Год назад

    Ye as in 'ye olde...' is actually the, spelled with a thorn to start. But the main point was correct.

    • @archivist17
      @archivist17 Год назад

      @@dogbreaththe3rd851 Yes, that's the sense of it, but his example was just a bit erroneous.

  • @mikebrockmann7354
    @mikebrockmann7354 Год назад +1

    Fishgig: "Rather good" is "is hg" (high grade)?

  • @markcroxteth2108
    @markcroxteth2108 Год назад

    great

  • @brycecrux2730
    @brycecrux2730 Год назад +2

    back to "normal"... I got a total of none of these

  • @michaelpdawson
    @michaelpdawson Год назад

    Is there some British usage in which "brief" means lawyer? To me, a lawyer *files* briefs, but isn't a brief himself.

  • @williambarnes3868
    @williambarnes3868 Год назад

    The pole is the POLE STAR or possibly a Harpoon.

  • @WimmekeVL
    @WimmekeVL Год назад

    Fig is a little illustration, and it has captured a shin ? Is that a good pole ?

  • @waynethomas7406
    @waynethomas7406 Год назад

    I'd recommend callas and di Stefano for the opera

  • @Maenamburi1
    @Maenamburi1 Год назад +1

    There's a joke, a bit off colour, about the FT and crosswords.

  • @gordonglenn2089
    @gordonglenn2089 Год назад

    I was howling after Simone said fishgig (or was it fizgig that he said the first time?) and then never tried to "fig-ure" out why it could work. A (fishing) rod is a (fishing) pole is a stick is a harpoon...

  • @MrPartylala
    @MrPartylala Год назад

    😍

  • @vinyl1Earthlink
    @vinyl1Earthlink Год назад

    You are still a bit confused about you/ye. The full declension of the second person pronoun in English was thou/thee/thine/thee in the singular, and ye/eow/eower/eow in the plural. The 'ye' you see in Ye Olde Shoppe is an 18th century ligature, pronounced 'the'.

  • @tillydavvers
    @tillydavvers Год назад

    R/unexpectedmontypython

  • @azrobbins01
    @azrobbins01 Год назад +1

    Love these!