Older brother of Malcolm on Malcom in Middle / FRI 11-16-18 / Von Trapp father in Sound of Music / Rexha pop singer with 2017 #2 hit Meant to Be / Jellylike organism once classified as fungus / Young prey for bobcat

Friday, November 16, 2018

Constructor: Kyle Dolan

Relative difficulty: Easy (4:34, and I was only half-awake)



THEME: none

Word of the Day: Elizabeth ARDEN (40A: Who said "There's only one Elizabeth like me, and that's the queen") —
Florence Nightingale Graham (December 31, 1878 – October 18, 1966), who went by the business name Elizabeth Arden, was a Canadian American businesswoman who founded what is now Elizabeth Arden, Inc., and built a cosmetics empire in the United States. By 1929 she owned 150 upscale salons across the United States and Europe. Her 1000 products were found in the luxury market in 22 countries. She was the sole owner, and at the peak of her career, she was one of the wealthiest women in the world. (wikipedia)
• • •

Always dicey embarking on a Friday puzzle just after rolling out of bed in the morning, but after an initial misstep (LEVER for SNOOP at 1D: Pry), I was off and running, and very little of substance ever stood in my way. HEIDI was an extreme gimme (2D: Heitkamp of North Dakota politics) and then ODE got me out of that 1D mistake and whoosh, goodbye. Made it all the way to the very last section (SE) before I encountered the only truly terrifying square in the puzzle: the crossing of BEBE (56D: ___ Rexha, pop singer with the 2017 #2 hit "Meant to Be") (who?) and ADELAIDE. Now, I know ADELAIDE very well. Or, rather, I know of its existence. I've never been there, or anywhere in Australia, despite having been to New Zealand four times (my wife grew up in Dunedin, NZ) (Note to wife: honey, next time, we really got get across the pond or whatever you people call that water between NZ and AUS). Anyway, I know ADELAIDE exists, but that vowel at AD-LAIDE ... oh, no, I was not at all confident about that. And BABE Rexha seemed very, very plausible. But in the end ADELAIDE just looked / felt right, and it seemed much more likely that you'd go to a marginal proper noun for BEBE than for BABE, so I guessed "E," which was right. Still, if I'd been the constructor, I think I would've done anything to avoid that cross (or I would've clued BEBE in a much more gettable manner).

[this whole album is phenomenal just fyi]

Five things:
  • 10D: Big name in men's deodorant (AXE) — well of course, but "name" had me wanting an actual person's name, so even at A-E I was like "... ACE? Is that a guy's name?"
  • 40A: Who said "There's only one Elizabeth like me, and that's the queen" (ARDEN) — Wow, turns out I didn't really know who she was. I'm a fan of old movies and I appear to have slightly confused Elizabeth with Eve:
  • 37D: Spiced holiday drink (WASSAIL) — I thought that was just something you said for a toast, like SKOAL! or SALUT! or whatever. Interesting.
  • 13D: Jellylike organism once classified as a fungus (SLIME MOLD) — I'll just take your word for it that this is a thing. I think I remember it from my D&D Monster's Manual ... or maybe I'm confusing it with Gelatinous Cube ...
  • 43D: Period of great climate change (EOCENE) — another semi-treacherous moment, as I had ITALIA at first for 58A: Neighbor of Suisse (ITALIE), and therefore sincerely thought the "period of great climate change" might be ICE AGE
[Agreed]

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

70 comments:

Harryp 6:17 AM  

Some good guesses made this one easier than yesterday's. I originally had Snocone for 16Down, and 39Down DEA was up in the air till 37Across WHITE BLOOD CELLS made this one a fast Friday finish. Way to go Kyle Dolan!

Hungry Mother 6:30 AM  

Easy once I traded SLIMyMOLD for SLIMEMOLD.

Jon Alexander 6:32 AM  

Flew through this one....anytime I complete a Friday sub 10 is quick for me and this one came in at 7 min. I too had the E/A debate at the same spots as @Rex, but I was much more convinced of the Es looking right off the bat, crosses be damned. Pretty solid, low on bad fill.

Lewis 6:44 AM  

Surely, with all the people who solve the NYT puzzle, there was someone out there, who, with four letters filled in, confusedly or indignantly thought, "Huh? When did Bass Ale become a spiced holiday drink???"

Loren Muse Smith 6:54 AM  

Rex – you nailed it on the ADELAIDE/BEBE cross. I had “Bibe” for a bit.

@Lewis - good one!

5D – break during a cricket match, TEA. Really? Oh my gosh, that’s so civilized. (Can you imagine if that were the break during a professional hockey game?) Speaking of civilized British people, anyone else here obsessed with The Great British Baking Show? I have a little crush on Paul. His eyes twinkle even if he’s being tough on a contestant.

Three-letter entry for a break during an NCAA basketball game: ADS.
Ninety-eight-letter entry for a break during an NCAA basketball game: FIVE MINUTES OF INSURANCE COMMERCIALS THAT HAVE YOU WONDERING IF THIS REST IS HELPING THE TEAM WITHOUT A DEEP BENCH

Loved the clue for SHOUTING. I typed an email once to a colleague who was at a concert, telling him I had entered some data for him. Told him I was using all caps so he could hear me over the music.

12D – bite sized breakfast treat. Well. Ok. When my kids were little, I could dispatch an Eggo in pretty much one bite. ‘Tweren’t pretty, but I was usually standing over the sink, so no one could see.

Off the final _ _ LD, I first had “The Donald” for that jelly-like fungus.

Seriously, I think the real star today is SLIME MOLD. Where do you even begin with a gem like that? Either one on its own is bad enough, but they team up to make things worse. Stink bug and wart hog come to mind. Tiger shark. Dung beetle.

QuasiMojo 7:17 AM  

I love these themeless Fridays but they sure are easy lately. A couch, OTOH, can indeed be a difficult conundrum to tackle, for a mover, especially if you live at the top of a fifth-floor walkup, or the sofa is one of these odd-shaped sectionals fashionable at the moment that don’t fit in elevators or around corners or through narrow hallways and older doorways, or it’s made of mahogany like a super-heavy settee I once owned that took three muscle bound behemoths to wrestle out of my house.

I knew this guy who used AXE deodorant. We could smell him coming a block away.

@LMS, how about Horny Toad?

kitshef 7:20 AM  

Yeesh. No challenge at all. Would have been on the easy side for a Tuesday.

Pity the cluing was so brainless. The fill was full of niceties like SLIME MOLD, DRACHMA, EOCNE and WHITE BLOOD CELLS.

Hey! For a change I know a recent singer (BEBE) that Rex doesn't.

OffTheGrid 7:21 AM  

Green OILPAINT

Reading across/down:
SHOUTING GATOR (FSU fan)

START TWEET

EXTOLS SNOCAPS (don't care for them, myself)

CELEB BEBE

Down/Across:

IDIG GEORG (Herr Von Trapp fan)

Anonymous 7:35 AM  

I had SECTS in lieu of CLANS, so my Aussie city was Canberra, clever me.

Do we hold on too long to wrong entries because we admire our own mistaken cleverness?

And, LMS, my wife and I cracked up re your all caps text to your concert-going friend.

amyyanni 7:42 AM  

....Theresa May meet up with some rather stiff British incivility yesterday....
Love Eve Arden! She's in one of my favorite Gene Kelly movies: "Cover Girl."
And, the puzzle was solid.

Preferred Customer 8:05 AM  

Are Sno Caps an east coast thing? I don't remember seeing them in movie theaters when movie candy still interested me.

💻

Z 8:34 AM  

When SLIME MOLD and SNO CAPS (aka nonpareils for those of us who occasionally visit family owned candy stores) are your best answers you might have a sparkle issue. WHITE BLOOD CELLS with that clue is about as exciting as visiting your phlebotomist. There is a fair amount to arch one’s eyebrows at including two proper name crossings in the south (besides BEBE/ADELAIDE we also have LARSON/ITALIE/IOS/REESE), but very little to love. This is an okay puzzle, but nothing really there to make a solver say, “cool.”

albatross shell 8:39 AM  

Another wonderful Adelaide song is by John Cale from his Vintage Violence LP. It will make you want to go back there without having been there in the first place. I would also recommend the entire Paris 1919 LP.

Stanley Hudson 8:45 AM  

Absurdly easy for a Friday.

TJS 9:04 AM  

No resistance from this one. Where are the Fridays of yesteryear ? The archives, I guess.

GILL I. 9:14 AM  

This was Friday? Wow. It was over before I could change into my week-end PJ's.
The first time I tried baba ghanouj was in San Francisco. My next door Lebanese friend introduced it to me. He was the most gorgeous man (think Omar Sharif) I had ever laid eyes on. Not only did I drool over this baba, his ghanouj was to die for. Alas, he told me that had he not been gay, he would probably date me. I said NO BIGGIE but it made my PITAS go south.
Like @Rex, I so look forward to a yummy Friday. This was so easy and so, well, boring, that I found little to enjoy...other than my sweet baba. WHITE BLOOD CELLS went in off the H in THREE STAR and the C in FAT CATS. I like those entries because they relate to food. The closest I came to a Michelin Star was eating at my favorite Chez Panisse in Berkeley. I think Alice Waters lost her one STAR but she still makes the best cassoulet in the world. I've tried to get a reservation at the THREE STAR French Laundry in Yountville, but you have to be a FAT CAT with mucho dinero and know lots of CELEBs before they let you in.
Let's see...what else did I like. SLIME MOLD does have a bit of a je ne sais quoi ring to it but it sits on top of ugly RADII.
TWEET ADELAIDE.

Dan M 9:16 AM  

Liked this one and blew through it (well, 10 minutes on a Friday qualifies as very fast for me). Felt awful for the poor OWLET, which deserved better.

Favorite answer by a mile was SLIME MOLD. Since Rex (and maybe some others) aren’t familiar with this weird organism, I extremely highly recommend the documentary “The Creeping Garden”... it’s about slime mold, and features a wonderful sci-fi-horror-movie soundtrack by Jim O’Rourke of Sonic Youth fame. I know, sounds a little off, but google the trailer. Super fascinating and with a great spooky vibe you don’t often find in a niche nature documentary!

Pam 9:17 AM  

Rex, you missed a great opportunity to showcase the stunning beauty of SLIMEMOLD. They are single cell organisms that come together to reproduce or when food is scarce. You’ll see them on rotting logs, in the lawn or in soil. They contribute to decomposition, feeding on bacteria, yeast and fungi. They can look like fan coral, pretzels, and dog vomit and often present in brilliant yellows and reds. Who says they don’t sparkle!

RooMonster 9:27 AM  

Hey All !
SHOUTING NO BIGGIE at the solve. Agree with the easy-with-tough-spots solve. Did have my famous one-letter DNF, at ITALIa/EOCaNE, because what do I know of ITALIE? Also two writeovers, nfl-DEA, a wicked misdirection, reseT-START.

Restaurants only go up to THREE STARs? Hmm. Laughed when I got ___PAINT. GEORG without the final E always looks wrong. FAT CATS fun to get. I DIG it. KNEADED all the crosses for TATI.

So a nice FriPuz. CREDIT where CREDIT is due.

TROOP SNOOP
RooMonster
DarrinV

Nancy 9:30 AM  

Agree it was too easy for a Friday. Though I slowed myself down in the South by having ITALIA before ITALIE and AGREE before ALIGN (50D). But what kind of Friday clues are 19A and 26A, for example? C'mon. Why didn't Will toughen them up.

How can DONUT HOLE possibly be a "bite-size breakfast treat"????? It's a hole. Not only is it not a treat; it's not an anything! (DONUT HOLE can't be the name of a brand, can it? Better go back and read Rex.)

20A is wrong. His name's not GEORG, it's "Captain." Even Maria doesn't call him GEORG. Not even after they're married, if memory serves. Or maybe memory doesn't serve? Help me out, "Sound of Music" fans.

For those of you who didn't get your challenge fix today, I adored the Patrick Berry puzzle that @Mathgent sent me from the WSJ. Its title is LIVE SHOW, it's extremely hard, and it's a masterpiece of construction. It's puzzle-making at its most intricate and at its best.

Hartley70 9:31 AM  

This was one of my fastest Fridays ever. A pool playing husband and a son just back from an island off ADELAIDE gave me an early boost.

I could picture those tiny candies long before I could type SNOCAPS because I was always a Raisinets type of girl. I use the past tense because who goes to the movies anymore? And I speak as a former big screen junkie. Now I watch new releases at home and live without my Raisinets or the popcorn covered in yummy, yellow SLIMEMOLD. I suppose that’s progress when your shoes don’t stick to the floor as you leave your seat.

I bet HEIDI wasn’t a household name when this puzzle was submitted. Now you’d have to live in a cave not to know her name. BEBE was a different story with THREE letters, “Huh?”. I was shocked that Elizabeth wasn’t Taylor. No one else had the chops for that quote IMHO.

It might have played fast but I still had fun this morning.

Blue Stater 9:38 AM  

A trickless Friday! Yay!!

Thomaso808 10:04 AM  

I always check the link on a @LMS post. Never disappointed. Thanks, Loren!

Lots of gimmes today. SNOOP to SHOUTING to PITAS. MAIDS to DONUTHOLE. THREESTAR to REESE.

CDilly52 10:45 AM  

Agree with you completely today...especially about “The. . . Baking Show” and Paul Hollywood! Total Fangirl. I enjoy your comments; you make me laugh every day. Thanks.

TubaDon 10:47 AM  

I've been in a Sound of Music cast, and don't remember anyone calling the Captain "Georg". Knew how to spell Adelaide because I grew Adelaide Festival tomatoes this year. All in all, a fast solve, even with an included nap, and only one small hitch...temporarily fell for the intended trap of NFL for Raider's org.

Maruchka 10:50 AM  

@Lewis - Funny! I used to make WASSAIL for the holiday party. Delicious and deadly. One can substitute Bass for brandy. Or just throw it all in. Hic.

Anonymous 10:50 AM  

@Pam,
Rex doesn't want info, he wants praise. He can't fix a leaky faucet, change a tire, or name three pieces of flora on his block. He's a man child-hence the D&D reference. Rex has his lanes, narrow and getting more narrow by the week if his twitter feed is any guide .

@Z, sort of. But of course nonpareils have multicolored candy bits atop the chocolate. Snowcaps are all white. You understand, I'm sure, know, like snow. Fun fact even if you don't skulk around family owned candy stores, nonpareils are called hundreds and thousands in England.

Which brings me to the one and only @LMS. Cricket is English. So is the tradition of taking tea. Using British obfuscates the origin, and with it I believe, the reason for the sophistication and civility. It is an English sensibility seen nowhere else, adopted however by the world over.

pearlquartz 10:54 AM  

BEBE Rexha does seem like a bit of an obscure choice– I'm generally pretty on top of pop culture, and I only know her name because of the online drama she started with the top 4 contestants of RuPaul's Drag Race this year.

Like a lot of other solvers, this was a quick Friday for me! ... except for the ITALIE/EOCENE cross that I had to go back and fix (I knew "eocane" didn't sound right but it's still early for me, so "italia" stayed until the end).

CDilly52 10:57 AM  

A few stumbles, but overall shaved 12 minutes off my normal Friday, for me a big deal since I tend to the very slow side of solving. Like OFL, I slammed in lever for SNOOP and thought “oh, the cleverness of me” to catch the cleverness Mr. Dolan....alas, not so much. Also had ITALIa for a hot minute. ADELAIDE was a gimme although every time I hear that name I think instead of “ever-lovin’ Adelaide...” from Guys and Dolls (Sinatra fan in the extreme). Mostly easy, kind of knotty in spots, little drek and some tougher names. Would never have gotten ARDEN if it weren’t for Eve. Fun Friday.

Carola 11:02 AM  

Agree on easy - with one small Medium patch in the CELEB - BEBE area.
I liked the Greek letter BETA next to DRACHMA.
@Dan M, thank you for the recommendation of The Creeping Garden; I'll watch it.

pearlquartz 11:03 AM  

@Anonymous & @Z– As someone who spends way too much time eating & thinking about candy, nonpareils can be any color (plain white was the original), and the term can refer to either the chocolate candy coated in tiny round sprinkles, or to just the sprinkles themselves! Or at least that's how it is in the US... :)

Maruchka 11:10 AM  

@Gill - sWEET! And then there's 'ADELAIDE, ADELAIDE, my everlovin' ADELAIDE ..' ah, when musicals had crunch. Speaking of - back in the day, did you ever eat at Bay Wolf in Oakland? As good as (or better) than the Chez.

imsdave 11:16 AM  

The day before Veteran's Day, I watched "Where Eagles Dare", "The Great Escape", and "Bridge on the River Kwai" on TMC with my wife joining me for the last. I told her I had one more WWII movie for her, but she headed off to the den to read. As soon as the french horns started up (I was blasting the TV) for "The Sound of Music" she rushed back into the room and we watched yet another three hour movie. Long story short, the Baroness calls the captain Georg. And I had TRIBE for TROOP.

Z 11:16 AM  

@Anon10:50 - Well, actually, SNO CAPS is a brand name and nonpareils are more commonly covered in white sugar pellets. So the item at a movie theater is just a branded, over-priced version. Here’s a nice Merrimam-Webster definition. Also, “hundreds and thousands” in England are nonpareils, but are not the same thing as Americans’ nonpareils. It’s as if they speak a whole different language over there. Also, LOL at “English sophistication and civility.” I hardly know where to begin, but Shooting an Elephant seems as good a place as any.

Mr. Benson 11:21 AM  

I had essentially the same thought as Rex about WASSAIL. But I had the W___A__, and it just kind of came to me: "WASSAIL, that's some kind of Christmas-related thing, is it not? Let's see if it works."

Anonymous 11:22 AM  

@z,Thanks for the gratuitous link.
The English are responsible for the modern world like or not.

Z 11:28 AM  

@pearlquartz - The US being a big place I can’t argue with you. In my experience nonpareils are only the chocolate (preferably dark chocolate) nonpareils, with the other version called “sprinkles.” Merriam-Webster seems to agree with me while Wikipedia seems to agree with you. I usually get mine at The Peanut Store in Holland, MI (Tulips? No, this multi-generational family business on 8th Street is the best reason to visit Holland). Now I’m going to have to visit the candy store in Black Mountain and see what they have. This is a language issue that demands extensive research.

QuasiMojo 11:32 AM  

@Nancy, et al, it is the beautiful Baroness who calls von Trapp “Georg,” many times in the movie, at least.

Z 11:34 AM  

@Anon11:22 - Yep. Responsible and should be tried and convicted for what they’ve done. (@everyone else - Hyperbole. Mythic Nationalism is an uglu look no matter the nation - How about a little cynical realism?)


I’m over my daily limit. Until tomorrow.

jb129 12:07 PM  

I like this a lot. Flew through it until I didn't know BEBE. Loved Elizabeth Arden tho!

Masked and Anonymous 12:16 PM  

8 MAIDS a-milkin. day-um. Can never get those Christmas gifts straight. Went with GEESE, at first.

Easy-ish. The ish part: ITALIE/IOS/EOCENE & ADELAIDE/BEBE. All-together, certainly a fun solvequest, tho.

Best fill: DONUTHOLE and SNOCAPS, with yer SLIMEMOLD oozin into the 13-D crack between em.
@Muse darlin: yep. M&A lucked out, not thinkin to go with thedonaLD for 13-D. Plus, fortunately my first instinct of SNOTTYMCBONESPURS just wouldn't fit. Saved precious nanoseconds.

Also liked NOBIGGIE and DRACHMA and WHITEBLOODCELLS. And WASSAIL.

Also admired the black squares in the NE/SW corners. Like little loose slimemold spores.

staff weeject pick: SES. French plural of inconvenience [FPIOC].

Thanx for the FRI-endly puz, Mr. Dolan.

Masked & Anonymo3Us



**gruntz**

Rainbow 12:27 PM  

58A Clue is Suisse-French, so answer is French, ITALIE. Italia is Italian.

How does one not know what a donut hole is?

Omar was gorgeous?

Hide-a-bed couches are indeed a challenge. They're heavy and the bed always unfolds at the worst moment.

Brigitta 1:02 PM  

Yes,in the film the Baroness calls Captain von Trapp Georg (rhymes with Bee-Org).

chefwen 1:04 PM  

Must agree with the easy rating, we’ll most likely pay the price with Saturday’s puzzle.

Made the same ITALIa and ADaLAIDE mistake, easy fix when EOCaNE looked all wrong and who would name their kid after a movie pig?
Wanted piano for the challenging moving item, well that sure didn’t work.

Glad I did this last night, SLIME MOLD would not pass my breakfast test.

Teedmn 1:14 PM  

This was going quite fast until I hit the SE. Then I could hear in my head that disheartening sound the old video games made when you finally lost. Gotta hit the START button again.

I sort of did myself in with EO_agE. I finally realized no one's last name was going to be LARSOg, which ended up being the straw that broke the log jam I was in.

So it's all over but the SHOUTING. Nice one, Kyle Dolan.

GILL I. 2:51 PM  

@Maruchka...YESSSSS. The Chez of Oakland. I almost cried when Bay Wolf closed. Did you ever eat their Duck Liver Flan? I remember when SFO and environs decided to go all PC and save the ducks and subsequently banning pate. My husband and I drove to OBW just to have a slice of heaven before they stopped serving it....
@Rainbow...Are you doubting that Omar Sharif was perhaps the most gorgeous man God created? His eyes....my lord, black pools of drool from moi. Even in old age he was a looker. ;-).....
Can I have seconds?

Z 3:52 PM  

For @Gill I. Now that's some sophistication and civility I can support.

Ronghoti 4:54 PM  

Just saw the newest British TV version. His name is mentioned. Don’t remember him being addressed by name, though.

GILL I. 5:01 PM  

@Z...Excuse me while I wipe the drool......

Monty Boy 5:10 PM  

Okay, I'll be the first to disagree with the easy rating. Too much PPP for me. I did learn some new stuff. Selenic means lunar? I'll have to look up the source. After I got the half-dozen Googles, it went pretty smoothly, but a rough start. We talk about "wheel house" and this one isn't in mine.

However the blog is worth it when @loren makes me do a spit-take with her first entry for SLIMEMOLD. She's my MUSE

Anonymous 6:18 PM  

@Z Peanut Candy Store forever!! -- ChrisP in AA MI

Liz Smith 6:27 PM  

Omar Sharif dated Barbra Streisand. They had the distinction of the greatest beautiful to ugly differential couple of all time but were surpassed by the unlikely union of Paulina Porizkova and Ric Ocasek.

jberg 6:42 PM  

Like everyone else, I thought this was easy for a Friday -- until I got to that Santorini neighbor crossing Malcolm's older brother. I did know that the former was a Greek island, but No Idea about the latter. Plus Brie LARSON might well have been a Danish LARSeN. I finally figured that there is an Ionian Sea, so first I tried IOn, then realize that most of those Greek islands end in OS (Lesbos, Samos, Ithaca), and REESE sounded like it could be a piece of a name, although more likely the last piece.

But by now my brain was so muddled that I couldn't see anything in the SE. My faux capital was "Victoria" before ADELAIDE (I think Victoria may actually be the state Melbourne is the capital of?), giving me tIP for LP, and nothing else at all. At that point I left to drive 75 minutes to a funeral, followed by a lunch and reception, got back home, did a few other things, and finally picked up the paper again and saw that if 'tribes" was CLANS (which they are not!) instead of C_V__, then 55A could be CELEB instead of "Russian hackers," and everything fell into place. Had I only known the literal meaning of Torah, it all would have happened earlier.

@Roo, Michelin, which started the whole business I think, gives only 3 stars. The parvenus usually go up to 5. But to get even one star from Michelin is a major achievement; most places get none. A three-star restaurant is one that "vaux le voyage" (or maybe that's vaut), which is to say, if you have to travel all day to get there for dinner, it will be worth the trip.

In theory, a COUCH can be a problem to move -- but only if it was put together from smaller pieces inside the room. Otherwise, what went in can always come out -- and movers are really good at seeing a cumbersome piece of furniture and figuring out how to twist it through a doorway. They also know how to tie up sofa beds so that they do not suddenly spring open.

@Thomaso808 thanks for pointing out Loren's dung beetle link; I hadn't noticed that there was a link there.

Peter P 7:43 PM  

Way too easy. Should have been record time for me, but I had to hunt down my ITALIa error. SMH. I knew the answer was supposed to be in French, but I had forgotten about the clue when I got to ITAL-- down there in the SW corner, and just filled the rest of the letters in without re-reading the clue. Otherwise, this one finished actually faster than this week's Tuesday time, and just a bit over my average Tuesday time. It helped that WHITEBLOODCELLS came almost immediately to me.

I also had the wrong Brie for awhile: I put Alison in there thinking I wasn't aware of any Best Actress award she's one, but maybe there was some obscure one. I just couldn't think of any other Bries. And then... oh, Brie Larson... she sounds familiar.

Costanza 7:45 PM  

Georg is pronounced Gay-Org. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

Nancy 9:57 PM  

@Z (3:52) -- And to think I almost missed this. Wow! I'm drooling too, @GILL. Funny, because he's never before turned me on. I've always found him rather wooden and not particularly charming. But this photo -- woof!

GILL I. 10:58 PM  

Ah, @Nancy...but when he's in Dr. Zhivago and in bed with glorious Julie Christie and Lara says "good bye" and he looks at her with eyes that melt your heart, you'd never think of him as wooden.
Find me the Dr.....Please!

Clark 12:29 AM  

@Nancy --

Donut holes are the best. If you make donuts from scratch, you cut out the holes and deep fry them. I would rather eat donut holes than donuts. Covered with powdered sugar, or cinnamon, or glazed. Yum.

Greg 4:08 PM  

My first DNF of the year. Never having heard of TRACEEELLISROSS (I'm not a TV watcher, or much of a consumer of pop culture, a big handicap for many NYT puzzles) was simply too much to overcome. Finally Googled the clue in frustration. Once I had her name in, NW fell with no other problems.

I think that SEI in this case refers to the number six in Italian. So one side of a "die" (dice) is the number six. clue could have been worded better, imo.

thefogman 10:05 AM  

I found this one to be really easy for a Friday. Nothing terribly wrong with it, but it just didn't thrill me. THREESTARs out of five. Next!

Burma Shave 10:30 AM  

BRIEF SNOOP

The MAIDS say the FATCAT KNEADED some jiggy,
ADELAIDE even SES that IT_IS NOBIGGIE.

--- HEIDI LARSON

spacecraft 11:01 AM  

Will must've reached into the Tuesday pile by mistake for this creampuff. It's not much of a challenge, for example, if the central gridspanner is a gimme. There were a couple things I didn't know, like that BEBE chick, but the crosses were fair, so NOBIGGIE.

Smooth sailing, mostly REAL WORDS: remember those? Plus a smashing, fresh DOD in Brie LARSON. It's a birdie; might've been eagle earlier in the week.

Diana, LIW 11:06 AM  

OK @Foggy, I'll give you the "easy for a Friday" label. But I almost had a dnf with ITALIE, LARSON, REESE, and ION. Great guess on that corner made me a winner. (smiling)

Diana, Lady-in-Waiting fo Crosswords

BS2 11:21 AM  

AOK TWEET

GEORG EXTOLS the NEWMEDIA, if IT_IS at least THREESTAR rated,
“IDIG when IT_IS SEEDIER, or ELSE once the aftermath ABATED.”

--- REESE ARDEN

rondo 11:49 AM  

Woulda been a lot easier if I’d have filled in ADELAIDE into 60a where it belonged instead of 64a where it created a mess.

Kinda Christmas-y with 8 MAIDS and some WASSAIL. TRALALA.

IDIG an occasional game of NINEBALL. Guess I shouldn’t use J&J talc though.

Yeah BEBE Rexha.

Sorta easy, NOBIGGIE.

Anonymous 2:39 PM  

... aftermath ABATED.
Har.

rainforest 2:58 PM  

Pretty good puzzle, if easy for a Friday with the only stiffness in the SW corner. For a moment I couldn't decide if Malcolm's brother was REEdE or REESE. Otherwise, easy, and I liked it.
Some tangential comments:

A COUCH might be tough for movers, but the absolute challenge is a piano. That is at least 3-man territory if stairs are involved. One I observed was a hide-a-bed which had to go up a switchback staircase into a narrow hallway. Had to remove the bed machinery it was so effing heavy. I'd never be a mover.

Funny about DONUT HOLEs. The hole is in the centre of the donut. Then that centre piece is called a DONUT HOLE. Weird.

ITALIE was trickie.

strayling 6:34 PM  

That was a yummy SLIME MOLD clue.

leftcoastTAM 7:16 PM  

Late, but not never.

Thought I had this one until reaching the middle South: EOCENE, COUCH, CELEB, BEBE cluster-@#$%.

No THREE STAR rating here.

Jim B 7:25 AM  

Re @OffTheGrid 7:21

The University of Florida is the Gators; FSU is the Seminoles.

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