![]() The New Yorker’s puzzle has been getting rave reviews from the crossworld, er, crossword community. At The Wall Street Journal, for example, a team looking to increase subscribers’ active days found that playing a puzzle had a more dramatic impact on reader retention than other actions the team had been promoting to new subscribers, such as subscribing to an email newsletter or downloading the Journal’s app. Encouraging readers to develop a crossword habit may help. Publishers have found that the number of active days a reader has on their site is a telling metric for determining whether or not they’ll continue a subscription. And, given that 80 percent of The New Yorker’s revenue is reader-generated, that’s exactly what the publication is hoping readers will do.įebruary 14, 2020But can crossword puzzles really affect a news organization’s bottom line? There’s evidence to suggest the answer is yes. ![]() Unlike The New York Times, which offers a standalone subscription to its crossword and other games, the only way to gain unfettered access to the New Yorker’s puzzles is to subscribe to everything. The “Subscribe” page highlights the crossword, noting that every option includes access to “, including the online archive and crossword puzzles.” ![]() Readers who have not subscribed can view the home page, Goings On About Town listings, and a limited number of articles (including puzzles) per month a digital-only subscription costs $100/year. The crossword puzzles, like the magazine’s longform journalism, fiction, and other work, live behind a metered paywall online. And, just last month, The New Yorker began investing some ink in the endeavor by announcing they’ll print a full-page puzzle in every issue of the print magazine. (Here’s one entitled “ Crossword Puzzles with a Side of Millennial Socialism” and another with tips on how to solve those tricky British-style cryptic crosswords.) The team is growing, and now includes fact-checkers and a dedicated copy editor. at the end of 2019 and has rolled out a number of digital goodies for solvers since, including the social distancing-compliant Partner Mode, a newsletter, special holiday puzzles, a way to play on the New Yorker Today app, and behind-the-scenes videos. The magazine launched its first-ever Puzzles & Games Dept. What these have in common? CROSSWORD CLUES.Ĭlues, to be specific, in The New Yorker’s thrice-weekly crossword puzzle. One with four legs and many hands? CARD TABLE. wide x 0.75 in.The act of throwing money around to resolve an issue? COIN TOSS. Matt Gaffney's puzzles have appeared in Billboard, the Chicago Tribune, the Daily Beast, Dell Champion Crossword Puzzles, Games Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, New York Magazine, the New York Times, Newsday, the Onion, Slate, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Washingtonian Magazine, and Wine Spectator. ![]() 9 every one of these large print puzzles- 125 crosswords in all- takes two pages, so they're easy to see and to fill out. Not anymore, because in Large Print Crosswords No. That can be frustrating and cause even the most determined puzzlers to put down the crossword. As always, this ninth entry in the Large Print puzzle series features crosswords with big easy-to-read clues and numbers, so solvers exercise their brains without straining their eyes! In this latest installment, top creator Matt Gaffney crafts dozens of entertaining challenges for anyone whose mind is sharp, but whose eyesight isn't.Ĭrosswords can keep the mind active, but if your sight has weakened through the years, or if you're vision impaired, you might have difficulty reading both the words of the clues and the numbers in the boxes.
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