Jumbled marriage proposal a hit with girlfriend, creators
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 13/04/2018 (2968 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
EVANSTON, Ill. — When Aly Jiwani began to consider taking the next step with his anagram-loving girlfriend, Paula Acuña, he had a vision for the perfect puzzle proposal.
“One of our earliest memories is to use our Chicago Tribune app on her iPad and zoom into the Jumble page,” Jiwani, 30, said. “Then, we use a piece of scratch paper on the side to solve the Jumble.”
Jumble is a cartoon/word-game combination in which you unscramble four words, and once you unscramble those words, there are circled letters within the words, and those letters are used to solve a mystery answer that is based on the cartoon, according to David Hoyt, the Jumble’s wordsmith.
Jiwani said Acuña loves word puzzles, everything from the New York Times crossword to a book of NPR Sunday puzzles he gave her.
“It’s a thing,” Jiwani said. “I enjoy doing the puzzles with her. She’s way sharper at puzzles than I am.”
Jiwani sought out the Tribune about six months ago to make his proposal plans come to life.
“I began doing research in terms of the differences between the Chicago Tribune (newspaper) and the… Tribune Content Agency (the separate business unit that syndicates articles and features),” he said. “I had a friend at the Tribune, and she connected me to the agency. It took me two or three emails, but after following up, I was put in touch with David directly.”
Jiwani, who was introduced to the Jumble by Acuña, said he “was pretty starstruck” when Hoyt reached out in January via email and then a phone call.
“Once he and I got on the phone,” Hoyt said, “I told him what his options were.”
Collectively, Jiwani and Hoyt started coming up with ideas on what the answer to the clue would be. After an initial failed pitch that “wasn’t punny enough,” Jiwani came up with the answer: “Has a nice ring to it.”
Once that was decided, Jiwani was tasked with coming up with a setting for the cartoon.
“I started thinking about something that’s personal to us,” Jiwani said. “We like to sail on Lake Michigan, so I pitched that to Jeff (Knurek), the one who does the drawings. I came up with us being on a sailboat, with our dog Benji as well, with me going down on one knee with the ring in hand.”
Knurek, the Jumble cartoonist, did his best to include all of Jiwani’s ideas in the image.
“I did my best to bring them into the Jumble world, but still maintain their features, so people can look at the cartoon and say, ‘Oh yeah, that’s them,’” Knurek said.
The last element was the dialogue in the cartoon, which Hoyt said was crucial.
“We had to make sure that the dialogue all made sense,” he said. “In this case, because it has to do with what’s being said, it was important that the dialogue all match. It has to play for everybody and be completely understandable. And that’s the trick.”
Jiwani came up with the wording for the dialogue, which read: “Would you like to be my first mate for life?”
“The first mate is a boating term,” he said, “which is used for the person second in command. Paula will immediately get it. It’ll be nice and personal for us.”
At the last minute, Jiwani said, the Jumble creators threw in a bonus: “David told me they added ‘Paula’ to the dialogue! It’s truly personal now.”
Hoyt and Knurek said they’ve been approached many times to do birthday, proposal and anniversary Jumbles, but that there was something special about Jiwani’s story.
“It’s a great story,” Hoyt said, “and a part of what makes it so great is Aly’s efforts. He’s a little sweetheart, and it was very delightful to work with him.”
Jiwani said he was “really grateful of the Tribune staff, David and Jeff especially” because they were “genuinely excited” with him.
“They didn’t look at it as a chore or a special request,” he said. “They’re super into it.”
Acuña’s parents, who are retired and living in Phoenix, Ariz., were also ecstatic about Jiwani’s plan for a Jumble proposal — so much so that her father subscribed to the Chicago Tribune print newspaper for one year so he could see the Jumble when it was in the paper April 8.
“As I talked to my future in-laws about what I was planning, her father drove around Phoenix looking for a newsstand that sells the Chicago Tribune,” Jiwani said. “He calls me back and says he couldn’t find anyone that could guarantee the Tribune on April 8, so he said, ‘I just signed up for a one-year subscription.’”
The personalized Jumble ran in approximately 600 papers. Jiwani said Hoyt and Knurek typically run the puzzles with the longer clues in the Sunday paper.
With all the excitement, and even after all of Hoyt and Knurek’s efforts, Jiwani said the Jumble duo just “kept making it better” for him.
“The icing on top? David said, ‘It’s a Sunday night. Why don’t we all meet for dinner after?’” Jiwani said.
He made reservations for the night of the proposal, and told Acuña they were going to meet somebody special.
“I had no idea who I was meeting at dinner,” Acuña said. “David was the first one who greeted me, and then I put it together. He greeted me with a big hug.”
Acuña was surprised by the whole proposal, too, and says it was a “very happy day.”
“It worked out well that I was focused on the words of the puzzle, and I didn’t look at the comic until I had all the words,” she said.
“I looked at the puzzle and saw my name and that it was a proposal. I was trembling as I was writing in the answer.”
At dinner, Acuña got to hear all the details about how the Jumble proposal came together.
“It was a huge production, and everything he went through to get it done, like adding my name in there, makes it so special. Now he’s getting all the points for most creative. It was perfect.”
— Chicago Tribune