CROSSWORD SOLVER PUZZLE: [ BACK IN]
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BEQ: How'd you get into puzzles?
Joon: My wife's aunt gave us the "Wordplay" DVD for christmas 2007. We watched it and I thought, "I bet I could do that." Turns out I could, and since then, I've done practically nothing but. I'm not sure I have any particular inspirations—plenty of constructors whose work I admire, of course, but nobody who really made me think, "I want to make puzzles!" Mostly I'm glad this is my hobby and not my profession. It's fun, but it seems like a tough way to make a living.
BEQ: You've told me once that you like to really shine with your cluing. Extrapolate, please.
Joon: To me, a puzzle with a totally tame theme and so-so fill can still be really fun to solve if the clues really shine, so I like to polish them up to that level, if I can. Occasionally it takes a while to really come up with a good one, but it's usually worth it. Probably my favorite clue i've ever come up with was {Raising support?} for PUSH-UP BRA. As Patrick Berry noted, amazing things can happen if you play around with the apparent part of speech.
BEQ: You used to play a lot of bridge, and now you're established in the crossword world. Can you check something for me, are you really 75 years old?
Joon: Found me out, did you? Well, no matter. I can still fool everybody else. Asians can age remarkably gracefully. (Well, unless they're over 7'5".)
BEQ: One time when I was over at your house, I saw your son Sam "speed solve" a jigsaw puzzle. I was thinking, he's just like his dad. Has he picked up any more puzzles since then?
Joon: The jigsaws seem to have been a phase. Now he's really into math. Do other 3-year-olds like solving worksheets of arithmetic problems, 2nd-grade style?
[His sister] Sarah, meanwhile, is now approaching the age Sam was when he got really into puzzles. We'll see if she takes to them the same way.
BEQ: I hear you wrote some on-line word game.
Joon: My friends and I used to play a simple game we called "Dictionary." One person thinks of a word, and everybody else tries to guess it. The guessers can only guess lowercase dictionary words, and the teller says whether the word is before or after the guess alphabetically. It's a decent game for long car rides, if you have nerdy friends. Once when I was bored, I decided to try playing this game on my Facebook wall, and it got kind of out of control. There were like 50 comments in 10 minutes. That's when I realized that a computer could easily do the part where it tells you before or after. I'm a pretty handy programmer, so I taught myself CGI [Common gateway interface] and coded it up. Every day there are two words you can play: one chosen by me, and one chosen by my college roommate, Mike.
BEQ: I'm thinking of a word right now. Any idea what it is?
Joon: Lecithin?