2.05 Mix Tape Puzzle
Contents
- 1 Order
- 2 Status
- 3 Location Status
- 4 GC Point of Contact
- 5 Location Notes
- 6 Type
- 7 Plot Setup
- 8 Props
- 9 Plot Point to Convey
- 10 Short Description
- 11 Detailed Description
- 12 Puzzle Answer
- 13 Puzzle Solution
- 14 Budget
- 15 Credits
- 16 Manager
- 17 Hints
- 18 Response to Correct Answer
- 19 To Do
- 20 Other Notes
Order
2.04
Status
::POLISH-READY::
Location Status
Foo
GC Point of Contact
Bar
Location Notes
A used record store on the Peninsula.
Type
Mandatory Puzzle
Plot Setup
Machine is still not fixed; Doctor When needs Chronos' password to her supercomputer. He doesn't know it, but she gave him this mix tape long ago and hinted that she had hidden her most important secrets in it - which could very well be her password.
Props
Mixtape with insert.
Plot Point to Convey
Chronos loves When - plus, the machine is fixed now.
Short Description
Teams get a mixtape with 18 songs, each with the word "time" in the title, plus an insert with (out-of-order) artists and years and a poem from Catherine.
Detailed Description
Teams receive a mixtape created by Catherine Chronos when she was in high school and given to Wesley shortly before they graduated. They're told that Catherine had said it contained one of her biggest secrets, and Dr. When thinks that's probably the password to her computer. Enclosed with the mixtape is a poem that Catherine had written to young Wesley. All of the songs turn out to be time-related, and the puzzle solution implies that Catherine had a crush on Wesley.
Puzzle Answer
ILOVEWESLEY ("IHEARTWESLEY" is also acceptable.)
Puzzle Solution
- “Name all the tunes”. The solver should notice that the song titles fit the blanks on the page, one blank per word, although the provided artists and years mostly don't match.
- “Use what they share” – every song has the word “time” in the title. The solver needs to get the aha that the position of the word "time" needs to be used as a letter-index into the provided artist.
Order on Tape | Song | Listed Artist | Listed Year | "Time" Index | Index Letter |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | A Minute Of Your Time | Rocky Horror Picture Show, The | 1975 | 5 | Y |
2 | Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is | Tyrone Davis | 1970 | 6 | E |
3 | Hot Fun In The Summertime | “Andy” Andrew Williams | 1963 | 5 | A |
4 | As Time Goes By | Armstrong, Louis | 1964 | 2 | R |
5 | Turn Back The Hands Of Time | Floyd, Pink | 1973 | 6 | P |
6 | Time After Time | Lauper, Cyndi | 1964 | 1,3 | LU |
7 | Old Time Rock And Roll | B. Seger | 1979 | 2 | S |
8 | The Times They Are A-Changin’ | Captain & Tennile | 1979 | 2 | A |
9 | It’s Been A Long, Long Time | Dylan, Robert | 1964 | 6 | R |
10 | The Time Warp | Stone, Sly & The Family | 1969 | 2 | T |
11 | It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year | Rolling Stones, The | 1964 | 5 | I |
12 | Feels Like The First Time | James "Jimmy" Durante | 1965 | 5 | S |
13 | Do That To Me One More Time | Stewart, Al | 1978 | 7 | T |
14 | Time | Simon, Carly | 1974 | 1 | S |
15 | All Time High | Theme from Octopussy | 1983 | 2 | H |
16 | Haven’t Got Time For The Pain | Chicago | 1970 | 3 | I |
17 | Time Passages | Foreigner | 1977 | 1 | F |
18 | Time Is On My Side | Tom Jones | 1968 | 1 | T |
This gets "my code's formula" : YEAR PLUS ARTIST SHIFT. (Note that, for “Time After Time”, you index twice.)
- “I’ve shifted the artists, you’ll note – absolutely”. Keeping the same ARTIST order ("leave them as listed..."), find the correct song for the listed artist and add the (absolute value of the) number of rows between the listed artist and the actual song recorded by that artist.
- Example for the above step: in the first row, the artist listed is "Rocky Horror Picture Show, The". The actual song from that artist is The Time Warp, in row 10. That's a shift of 9 rows, so you take the listed year, 1975, and add the absolute value (9) of the shift, to get 1984.
- “’What will this give me?’ you ask? Keys for you!” (Note the hint for ASCII in “ask-keys”.) Take the last two digits of the “year + shift” column and read them as ASCII.
Order on Tape | Listed Song | Listed Artist | Correct Song | Listed Year | Shift | F+ABS(G) | ASCII(G - 1900) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | A Minute Of Your Time | Rocky Horror Picture Show, The | The Time Warp | 1975 | 9 | 1984 | T |
2 | Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is | Tyrone Davis | Turn Back The Hands Of Time | 1970 | 3 | 1973 | I |
3 | Hot Fun In The Summertime | “Andy” Andrew Williams | It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year | 1963 | 8 | 1971 | G |
4 | As Time Goes By | Armstrong, Louis | It's Been A Long, Long Time | 1964 | 5 | 1969 | E |
5 | Turn Back The Hands Of Time | Floyd, Pink | Time | 1973 | 9 | 1982 | R |
6 | Time After Time | Lauper, Cyndi | Lauper, Cyndi | 1984 | 0 | 1984 | T |
7 | Old Time Rock And Roll | B. Seger | Old Time Rock And Roll | 1979 | 0 | 1979 | O |
8 | The Times They Are A-Changin' | Captain & Tennile | Do That To Me One More Time | 1979 | 5 | 1984 | T |
9 | It's Been A Long, Long Time | Dylan, Robert | The Times They Are A-Changin' | 1964 | -1 | 1965 | A |
10 | The Time Warp | Stone, Sly & The Family | Hot Fun In The Summertime | 1969 | -7 | 1976 | L |
11 | It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year | Rolling Stones, The | Time Is On My Side | 1964 | 7 | 1971 | G |
12 | Feels Like The First Time | James "Jimmy" Durante | As Time Goes By | 1965 | -8 | 1973 | I |
13 | Do That To Me One More Time | Stewart, Al | Time Passages | 1978 | 4 | 1982 | R |
14 | Time | Simon, Carly | Haven't Got Time For The Pain | 1974 | 2 | 1976 | L |
15 | All Time High | Theme from Octopussy | All Time High | 1983 | 0 | 1983 | S |
16 | Haven't Got Time For The Pain | Chicago | Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is | 1970 | -14 | 1984 | T |
17 | Time Passages | Foreigner | Feels Like The First Time | 1977 | -5 | 1982 | R |
18 | Time Is On My Side | Tom Jones | A Minute Of Your Time | 1968 | -17 | 1985 | U |
The text says "TIGERTOTALGIRLSTRU".
- “Keys for you! To four “timeless” chart-toppers since ‘82. Four clues and four songs– now here’s the last part: Just start what I finish, or end what I start.” There are four “words” from the previous step – TIGER, TOTAL,GIRLS, TRU. Each is the first or last word of a “chart-topper” – a Billboard #1 single in the US – between 1982 and the date of the poem (5/20/86). The songs are:
- TIGER: “Eye of the Tiger”
- TOTAL: “Total Eclipse of the Heart”
- GIRLS: “West End Girls”
- TRU: “Truly”
- “Just start what I finish, or end what I start.” If the clue was the first word (or syllable for TRULY) of the title of the “chart-topper”, take the last word (or syllable for TRULY) of the title, and vice-versa. This gives the words EYE-HEART-WEST-LY.
- “You’ve syllables four – now say them out loud!” Saying these words out loud gives “I heart Wesley”. Either “I heart Wesley” or “I love Wesley” is acceptable as an answer.
Budget
Tapes and inserts, plus some tape players for teams that don't bring them. Estimate: $100.
Credits
Design: Erik Stuart
Manager
Erik
Hints
General hints:
- Catherine’s poem gives a “roadmap” of how to solve the puzzle. (She wanted Wesley to solve it, after all!)
- To identify the songs, teams can use their own knowledge or a service like Shazam, or can do an internet search for lyrics.
- Many teams may be tempted to re-write the artist/year column to match the order of the titles (or vice-versa). This will not help until they reach the "SHIFT" step, at which point they need to leave the artists where they are and figure out how many rows away the right song for that artist is.
- Time After Time indexes into “Lauper, Cyndi” twice, producing an L and a U.
- It’s possible to skip the first hidden message and simply add the shifts to the song years and read it as ASCII. This is fine.
- It’s important that the “shift” that you add to the year be positive/absolute values (note the “absolutely” hint in the poem).
- The “ask? Keys…” hint may be missed by some teams, and, if so, the relevant step may be hard to get. Consider hinting to teams stuck here that Catherine might have put a clue as to the encoding mechanism in the poem, and that they should consider reading it out loud, slowly. If they still don’t get it, I advise pointing out the ask-keys hint.
- Going by instinct, teams may get the wrong “chart-topper” songs. Common wrong guesses might be “True Blue” and “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun”. However, the solutions are unique – there’s only one #1 single in the correct time period (1982 - 5/20/86) using each of the four clue words.
- Some teams may not see the poem as a roadmap – in particular, they may look for hints throughout the poem at any point in their solve process. This may lead to various wrong turns, such as seeing the “four timeless chart-toppers” reference as an instruction to pick the correct four songs from the mixtape – perhaps the ones that were #1 singles. Encourage them to use the poem “in order”.
Response to Correct Answer
DR. WHEN: "Great Scott! Why didn't she tell me back then? Things would have been so much...better. I just typed it in and it works!" [Proceed to Quantum Time Vibrations event or Art History event, depending on each team's timing.]
To Do
Puzzle ready for production.