Frothy drink often served with boba / MON 5-25-26 / 1980s hit with the lyric "Me mind on fire, me soul on fire" / Dried poblanos used in mole sauce / California national park known for its dryness / Variety of chili that can reach a Scoville score of 1+ million / Locale for a plastic flamingo / Fruit that makes your lips pucker / Piece of armadillo armor
Monday, May 25, 2026
Constructor: Anthony Grubb
Relative difficulty: Very easy (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- LOVE SCENE (17A: Steamy segment in a movie)
- GHOST PEPPER (30A: Variety of chili that can reach a Scoville score of 1+ million)
- DEATH VALLEY (48A: California national park known for its dryness)
"Hot Hot Hot" is a song written and first recorded by Montserratian musician Arrow, featured on his 1982 studio album Hot Hot Hot. The song was a commercially successful dance floor single, with cover versions subsequently released by artists in several countries, including in 1987 by American singer Buster Poindexter.
The song was Arrow's first chart hit, peaking at No. 59 on the UK Singles Chart. A remix of the song, dubbed as the "World Carnival Mix '94" was later released in 1994 and peaked higher than the original, at number 38 on the UK Singles Chart.
The song was used as the theme song of the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. // The song was covered in 1987 by American singer David Johansen, as his lounge singer persona Buster Poindexter, and released as the first single from his album Buster Poindexter. It garnered extensive airplay through radio, MTV, and other television appearances.
A music video was produced for Johansen's version of the song, in which he appears both as Buster Poindexter and as himself. The video begins with Johansen mentioning his role as the frontman for the 1970s proto-punk band New York Dolls, showing the band's albums and tossing them aside while talking about the "really outrageous clothes" he wore and how he came to be interested in a "refined and dignified kind of a situation", which leads into the song.
In an interview on National Public Radio, Johansen called the tune "the bane of my life", owing to its pervasive popularity as a karaoke and wedding song. [...]
The song was used in the movie Beverly Hills Chihuahua. (wikipedia)
But back to the puzzle: despite the fact that I do not care for the song in question (which you can hear here in its original version, and here as the Poindexter cover), I thought the theme was perfectly adequate for a Monday. Simple, straightforward, slightly playful. All three of the themers are "hot" in different ways. There's very little else of interest in the puzzle, but despite being somewhat on the dull side, the fill is perfectly serviceable. Very little in the way of dreck. So ... there you go. Clean, basic, fine.
Bullets:
- 17A: Steamy segment in a movie (LOVE SCENE) — It's weird that we still call these "love scenes" when what we mean is "sex scenes," which is maybe a more common term now. I'm watching a terrible movie right now called Sliver (1993) for my Movie Club and there are several sex scenes but calling them LOVE SCENEs seems ... really wrong. It's Sharon Stone and the one Baldwin you can kinda remember but can't name. No, not Alec. And no, not Stephen. The other one. Anyway, it's one of the more putrid sex scenes I've ever seen. I hope his character dies before they have the chance to go at it again. (I stopped the movie halfway to come upstairs and write the blog, so I don't know—I'm actually hoping every man in this movie dies a horrible death, as there is not a decent or ever tolerable one among them)
- 38A: Volcanic spew (ASH) — in Sliver, the Baldwin in Question (OK, it's William) has a dumb crystal volcano sculpture in his apartment and at one point utters the very plausible and definitely seductive line, "I love volcanos. Someday I want to fly into one." (you can see the sculpture in the background at the very beginning of the aforementioned sex scene, which I definitely do not recommend that you watch in full). Apparently the original ending of Sliver actually featured Stone and Baldwin doing just that—flying into a volcano. But apparently they decided to go with a more pedestrian ending (I'm half-heartedly avoiding spoilers at the moment), one where Baldwin does not experience a lava-based death, which is too bad. He deserves it. Did I mention that Academy Award-winning actor Martin Landau is also in this movie? The '90s were wild. All this volcano talk has me thinking of another Tom Hanks movie: Joe Vs. The Volcano (1990). I know that movie was maligned, but it has got to be better than Sliver.
- 35D: Singer Newman with the hit "You've Got a Friend in Me" (RANDY) — this is a song from Toy Story ... hey, another Tom Hanks movie, and this one's actually in the puzzle! (well, sorta). Anyway, Tom Hanks good, this puzzle fine, Sliver unbearable.
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