THEME: "IT'S A / WRAP!" (68A: With 66-Across, director's cry ... or hint to 20-, 37- and 58-Across) — letters in "IT'S A" (!?!?!), in that order, are "wrapped" around the theme answers; that is, the letter string "ITSA" starts at the end of each answer and then "wraps" around to the front:
Theme answers:
A BATTLE OF WITS (20A: What intellectual rivals engage in)
SARGENT PORTRAIT (37A: "Theodore Roosevelt" or "Robert Louis Stevenson"
TSAR NICHOLAS I (58A: Mid-19th-century Russian ruler described as "autocracy personified")
Word of the Day: AMOCO (44A: Classic gas brand) —
Amoco is a brand of petrol stations operating in the eastern United States, and owned by British company BP since 1998. The "Amoco Corporation" (/æməkoʊ/, originally "Standard Oil Company of Indiana" until 1985) was an American chemical and oil company that was founded in 1889, around a refinery located in Whiting, Indiana, United States. Part of the Standard Oil Trust, it focused on gasoline for the new automobile market. In 1911, during the breakup of the trust, it became an independent corporation. Incorporated in Indiana, it was headquartered in Chicago. Amoco merged operations with BP in 1998.
Although the Amoco Corporation merged in 1998, the Amoco name was resurrected in 2017 as a brand that service station owners could choose to use when they purchase supplies from BP in selected areas of the United States.
In 1925, Standard Oil of Indiana absorbed the "American Oil Company",[1]founded in Baltimore in 1910, and incorporated in 1922, by Louis Blausteinand his son Jacob. The combined corporation operated or licensed gas stations under both the Standard name and the American or Amoco name (the latter from American oil company) and its logo using these names became a red, white and blue oval with a torch in the center. By the mid-twentieth century it was ranked the largest oil company in the United States. In 1985, it changed its corporate name to Amoco.[3] Amoco merged with British Petroleum in December 1998 to form BP Amoco, renamed BP in 2001.
• • •
Oof, this puzzle. What is even happening? Saw the split AITS in the first themer and thought "so ... it's about islands? River islands? Islands in the stream?" But no. It's a, it's a, it's a ... IT'S A / WRAP :( I grasp the concept, I do, and yet ... I don't get it. You're supposed to notice things that no solver is going to care about. Like the fact that IT'S A always appears in that exact letter order. All I saw was an ITSA jumble where some letters appeared on one end and some on the other. Only in writing the theme description did I notice the exactness of the "wrap" thing, but here's the thing: it's not like that discovery made me think "wow!" It made me think "huh ... why?" Yes, the "IT'SA" string advances one letter place with each subsequent theme answer, Who Cares? Noticing these details made me even sadder than I was before I noticed them because it meant that there was such a level of intentionality to the way the theme was built, and yet still the results were still incredibly dull and disappointing. I can't imagine wanting to do anything with the letters in "IT'S A" ... it's a [wink] mystery why anyone would think, "you know what would be fun ... something with the letters in 'IT'S A'." Discovering that those letters "wrapped" *in order* (as opposed to in some kind of jumble) didn't increase my appreciation of the puzzle; it couldn't go back and take all the wincing out of my solve. It did explain why we got *this* (weak) answer set—possible theme answers are a *lot* more limited when your "ITSA" has to be in order, as opposed to just a jumble. But do I now love a random Tsar with a Roman numeral at the end of his name? Do I love that as fill? I do not. Do I love that one of the "A"s (in A BATTLE OF WITS) is not embedded in a larger word but is instead a free-standing word, a gratuitous addition to an answer that under normal circumstances would never feature the indefinite article? I do not. Do I like SARGENT PORTRAIT as a standalone answer? Not really. It's a phrase. And he certainly did paint portraits. But it's not good on its own, the same way DEGAS BALLERINA or TURNER LANDSCAPE would not be good. I say this as someone who loves Sargent and who once stood mesmerized for the better part of an hour one afternoon in front of this astonishing painting:
Up close it's breathtaking. The patterns, the textures ... her incredible stare. Peak museum experience, truly (this was in Edinburgh sometime in the mid-'90s, I think). Anyway: Love the painter, love the portrait, don't particularly love SARGENT PORTRAIT as an answer. And the revealer is the thing I resent the most, I think, because it's positioned so awkwardly... but that awkwardness is intentional? Because the answer itself is supposed to "wrap" around the grid (even though it's actually just split in half and doesn't "wrap" in the same mid-word way that ITSA does in the themers). I don't read the Across clues in order, ever, so all I saw was a butchered, awfully laid-out revealer. And again, I keep coming back to the idea that the core of the theme idea here is ... ITSA ... ITSA not-a thing-a. It's a horrible partial in any other grid. If you want to see what I mean by "horrible partial," then just lift your eyes literally one answer up from "IT'SA" and look at ANET (seriously, How Are These Unsightly Answers *Abutting*??).
The fill overall tends toward the stale (AMOCO ATOI AIDA SEPT AWS SAAB IDA OER NERFS plural (?) ARTOO GAL AROD NRA EDU ... then there's the attempt at clever repeated cluing that just results in misleading / inaccurate cluing, where [Long time] is the correct clue for EON, but then the "no, not necessarily" clue for ERA. When the clue is [Long time], E-- should not be a kealoa*. That is, you should not feel as if you are choosing between two equally valid answers. EON is valid for that clue, ERA really isn't. EONs are long by definition. The idea that an ERA is long is totally arbitrary. We refer to coach / manager stints in sports as ERAs but some of them don't last long at all. A stretch of time is called an ERA because of a certain quality of that time, not the length of that time. So with this repeated cluing, the puzzle once again *intentionally* gives us awkwardness because it thinks it's a feature, not a bug. I don't understand the design mindset here. This is such a hard come-down after yesterday's delightful romp.
It was easy, though, so at least I didn't have frustration stirred into the mix. I got stymied at STORIED (28A: Like the Tower of Babel, in two ways) and (for whatever reason) TRIBE; I wrote in REST (as in musical notation) before RUSTat 54A: Sign of inactivity; and I misspelled AMACO thusly, which made the DOOM cross slightly challenging, but otherwise, no real challenges here. Just a train wreck of a theme. It's not enough to have a theme concept; you really have to think about whether that concept is going to provide any solving pleasure. Otherwise you're just pleasing yourself. See you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
P.S. [Hookup that may get kinky?] is a good clue for HOSE. That was the high point of the puzzle for me—a sexy HOSE.
Easy for me, and I liked it. I liked it a WHOLE LOT better than @Rex did ("a lot better" is normal; "a whole lot better" is frequent; "a WHOLE LOT better" is unusual). Good theme and a little "aha moment" at the revealer(s), which explained the standalone "A" in 20A. Only correction was ScadS for SLEWS at 70A. A pleasant Wednesday outing.
The long across answers were all kind of dull and I guess that’s owing to that each had to contain some variant of part of SAIT on one end and some variant of part of SAIT on the other end. I don’t think a single answer in the entire puzzle gave me that satisfied “oh” feeling of assembling letters into squares with a satisfaction and surpirse.
NRA?!? Again?!? Must we?!? Especially after what happened last week AND then the absolutely tone-deaf Christmas card from the representative from Kentucky?!? I don’t care that the clue was not gun related because we’re all thinking the same thing when we write or type NRA.
I solved this as a themeless, and after completing it, have no idea what the theme is. Obviously AITS are split between the beginning and ends of phrases. Good thing @Rex can help me understand the theme (actually, the reason I first started coming to this blog years ago was to discover themes that made no sense to me). The theme makes sense after reading the title (for some reason, the iPhone app does not always show the titles)
I really liked some of the answers. For A BATTLE OF WITS, I initially had AcAdemic____, but ARTOO put an end to that thought. I was happy with the real answer. I really liked the clues for HOSE, STORIED, EDU, and TITLE. Good to see DIASPORA in the puzzle – not a word I would think of as a mid-week answer.
The solve was relatively smooth, but there was enough interesting material that I had to pause and think here and there. An enjoyable Wednesday. Per discussion yesterday, on a quick count the 3-letter fill today was slightly over 50% abbreviations (NRA, EDU, RPM, RCA etc) and sounds (AWS). However, the ION, EON, ERA triplet seemed to flow from one to the other.
Today was my 500th consecutive puzzle with happy music. To be fair, I count as a finish any puzzle that I complete with no external help (i.e. no dictionary or Google) as long as it is completed before midnight. If I do not get the music initially, I look for typos, then words where I may have put in a wrong letter not knowing it was wrong on first glance (cATANA for KATANA). Finally, I look elsewhere where I may have made an error that is less obvious. It may involve a kealoa type answer crossing with PPP that I did not know. I know that many here have a stricter definition of completion versus dnf, but this is how I have done it. Seems like almost all of my issues over the past five years or so have been related to PPP.
I love to guess the theme before uncovering the reveal. This one stumped me, and I love when that happens if it’s good, and this one is. When I uncovered the reveal, it elicited a “Bravo!”
When I have the time, I like to hang around a puzzle afterward and see what treasures lie within. This one had many, such as: • Muscle SHOALS, talk about storied! Home of a recording studio where legends have cut albums, including the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Picket, Bob Seger, Paul Simon, Joe Cocker and many more. I learned in Wikipedia that in 2017, the Alabama Tourism Department named it as the state’s top tourist attraction. • Beautiful pairing in the grid of TAIL and AKITA, because, I learned that the Akita’s plush tail that typically curls over its back, is the breed’s trademark (according to the AKC). • I love how DIASPORA rolls off the tongue. • I also love how the wrap is ordered, one circle at the start of the first theme answer, two in the second, and three in the third. • There are far more finds, I’m sure, but looking for other “wrapped” answers in the grid, I found three men’s names (Ted from EDIT, Tom from OMIT and MEAN TO, and Tad from DATA); the crossword-stalwart pseudonym of H.H. Munro (Saki, from AKITAS); and a football team in the national championship hunt (Bama, from MARIMBA).
Thank you for a lovely solve, Philip, and the post-solve enrichment. Congratulations on your debut, and SAvor IT!
Are circle revealers in a puzzle ever good? Does anyone actually like them? I see commenters saying they dislike circles in crosswords often enough. I don't think I ever see anyone gushing over, or swooning for them. I get the sense anchovies on pizza have more fans. Or Hawaiian pizza for that matter. People are passionate about Hawaiian pizza (one way or the other). I'm all for keeping crosswords square.
Not much resistance from this one. Most of the fight in this puzzle came from questions I asked myself like "TSAR who?" or my reaction to "Sargent Portrait," when I briefly filled it in, erases it, and watched the crosses refill those squares, "Were they both in the army?" A quick Google after the happy music was a reminder of my ignorance. A further Google also revealed that spelling ARTOO, a-r-t-w-o, I as I felt was appropriate, is highly suspect.
I completely missed the revealer in the puzzle. I got the answers for 66- and 68-across easily, but did not get these answers were the revealer. After reading the blog and early posts here, I had to go back through the puzzle clue by clue until I saw it at the bottom. Now that is subtle, as it didn't point out that it was a revealer in the clue, and the theme was so opaque to me during the solve.
Smooth sailing from SWAB to INLAID. No hitches along the way.
While most "bridge' games' don't require BOARDs, there is at least one exception:
"In duplicate bridge, a BOARD is an item of equipment that holds one deal, or one deck of 52 cards distributed in four hands of 13 cards each. The design permits the entire deal of four hands to be passed, carried or stacked securely with the cards hidden from view in four pockets. This is required for duplicate bridge tournaments, where the same deal is played several times and so the composition of each hand must be preserved during and after each play of each deal." (Wikipedia)
When tutoring the granddaughters on the multiplication table, one of the mnemonics for 8x8 was the use of the chess BOARD, which they learned early on, has 8 files and 8 ranks, for a total of 64 squares.
Fun puz! :) ___
yd 0*
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Muscle SHOALS got the swampers. That was the high point of this one for me, and I uncharacteristically shared OFL's reaction of "that's it?" when I got the revealer.
And that's it from me, as my laptop battery is no longer recharging and needs to see the computer doc.
Solved as a themeless - the circles don’t show up in the app. Overall liked the fill more than Rex - DIASPORA and INLAID are cool and liked the TWANG x GROWLS cross.
So much great music from Muscle SHOALS - our crossword friend Etta, Prine, Drive-By’s but I’ve always loved this beauty from Boz Loan Me a Dime
Rex, Sargent was THE Amrican Portrait artist of his era. You are simply incorrect to dismiss Sargent portait makes you look foolish. Sargent is know for his portraiture in amlost precisely the same way Degas is known for his ballerinas.
Aslo, Constable is better than Turner.
I invite you to the Morgan Libraray, my treat, and show you just how signifigant Sargent's portraiture is.
What @Rex said and especially what @Mireille (who beat me to it) said: the expression I’m familiar with is THATS A WRAP. I would hear ITS A WRAP maybe in a restaurant of some kind… “What’s this buffalo chicken thing on the menu? Is it a sandwich?” “No — it’s a wrap.” “Oh, thanks.”
Ugh, this one was borderline ugly. Couldn’t figure out the theme, so ignored it and waited for OFL to explain what I missed, which turned out to be a big nothingburger. Didn’t know what SARGEANT PORTRAIT was, and now that I know, I don’t care. And of course there is ATOI - enough said.
Found Sargent Portrait clunky as clues, even though, like Rex, am a fan of the painter. He did one of Isabella Stewart Gardner I'm fond of. Not so fond of the puzzle. I will appreciate Lewis' points.
@pabloinnh, I posted before reading the comments. Sorry! I have no idea why that line has stuck in head for so many years but I was excited when I finally got a chance to use it.
My reaction to 'the exactness of the "wrap" thing" was neither Rex's 'huh ... why' nor his hoped-for 'wow', but more of a 'why did I not notice that?'
Thought this was a little hard for a Wednesday, thanks in part to the 'A' in front of BATTLE OF WITS, the 'TSAR' in front of NICHOLAS I, the defunct car company, the defunct gas company, and the clue for AIDA.
"The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section is a group of American session musicians based in the northern Alabama town of Muscle Shoals. One of the most prominent American studio house bands from the 1960s to the 1980s, these musicians, individually or as a group, have been associated with more than 500 recordings, including 75 gold and platinum hits. They were masters at creating a southern combination of R&B, soul and country music known as the "Muscle Shoals sound" to back up black artists, who were often in disbelief to learn that the studio musicians were white. Over the years from 1962 to 1969, there have been two successive groups under the name "Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section" and the common factor in the two was an association with Rick Hall at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals." (Wikipedia) ___
td pg -13 (timed out)
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Wow, what a cranky lot you folks seem to be. I found the revealer to be clever and the themes to be well executed.
Re: rex's whine that "We refer to coach / manager stints in sports as ERAs but some of them don't last long at all." Well, some managers/coaches only last a year or two, and then they are replaced. So we don't refer to *their* tenure as an era, because it was so brief. Other coaches (Phil Jackson; Red Shoendienst (?); Bear Bryant . . .) seem to have been around forever, hence the term "era" is employed. If rex is going to be nit-picky, which is his right as it's his blog, at least he should get it right. Don't go off on a silly rant for the sake of your schtick. You can do better. And it curdles the morning.
Completely agree with Rex today and may I just say - wow! The picture of that painting is astonishing. I can’t even imagine how mesmerizing it must be in real life.
Struggled with the theme here and the revealer didn’t help a bit. I kept looking at the themers for some sort of hidden WRAP in the answers. Like a tortilla or a pita or a stole or a poncho or a hoodie. Nope, no luck. Gave up and came here to see what was going on and I have to say Rex’s “oof” was a good expression for my reaction because the theme just sort of landed with a quiet thud for me. I think because the expression I’ve always thought a director used would be THATS A WRAP, not ITS. Even when I first saw the revealer I thought really? It just sounded wrong and maybe why I resisted seeing the I T S A as it was intended.
I tried to imagine how this would’ve worked using the letters T H A T S instead: THAT/S THA/TS TH/ATS T/HATS The second combination would be the biggest challenge but TSAR is already in place. Something ending with a THA might be hard. Names like ARETHA, BERTHA, MARTHA are the only things that come to mind. I’m no constructor but it seems doable to me.
If it hasn't already been mentioned, I'd like to submit ERA/EON to the kealoa klub. Is it bettter or worse when they're in the same grid with cloned clues? I can't decide.
This one went faster than yesterday and it felt easy for the Wednesdee for me.
I thought this theme was clever and cleanly executed. Initially, I was a tad irked about the inverted locations of linked/lookie-loo type entries. "Why should I have to do a backflip for those to make sense? Put them in the correct order!"
But, this revealer has the added distinction of working in both directions. ITSA WRAP is the saying and WRAP ITSA is our grid directive. And OILER in-between serves as a convenient lubricant for the yaw. Nice!
Another fine debut. Congratulations, Mr. KOSKI - well done, you!
I liked the intentionality of the theme. IT’S A WRAP seems justification enough. Looking forward to next week’s sequel, IT’S A Sandwich, where controversial sandwiches like tacos and hot dogs “sandwich” longer theme answers.
SWAB as a sample collector was too spot on for the Pandemic ERA for me. Speaking of, agree with Rex on the EON/ERA distinction. I actually thought to myself at the EON answer, “has to be EON when clued this way.”
The AMOCO clip surprised me in that I thought the AMOCO brand was resurrected earlier, sometime after the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe made BP anathema to many people. I seem to remember at least one BP in Dearborn changing it’s name, but now that I think about it I think it went from being a BP franchise to a Citgo franchise.
@Trey - The only NYTXs that have titles are Sunday puzzles. Also, I suspect you are not seeing the entire clue for 68A as it finishes with “…or hint to 20-, 37- and 58-Across” (OMG - The Oxford Comma isn’t standard for crossword clues or is the omission just a typo?) When Rex posts the theme it is his own interpretation of what the theme is.
@Anon 7:49 - You seem to have missed Rex’s point. He loves at least one SARGENT PORTRAIT and wrote I say this as someone who loves Sargent…. He doesn’t believe SARGENT PORTRAIT holds up as a stand alone phrase, Do I like SARGENT PORTRAIT as a standalone answer? Not really.
@egsforbreakfast late yesterday - I wouldn’t have said “wrong.” I am certain I’ve seen it used the way you defined it by others, including one of the regular monthly bloggers (August I think). @Nancy - I was just using the cookie aisle because of “Oreo,” so it wasn’t really intentional. But when you highlighted it like that I really liked it, too.
Easy puzzle. Completely ignored the circles and forgot all about them until I read this blog. Best words: DIASPORA & ASIAGO. GROWLS autofilled from cross words; good thing because growling is not speaking brusquely. TSAR NICHOLAS I mildly irritating because of Roman numeral but good to see correct transliteration of Ц
At some point after I'd filled in all the theme answers and their encapsulated tiny little circles, I tried to guess the revealer. After eliminating SITA, AITS, TISA, SIAT, ASTI, SAIT and TIAS, I landed on ITS A and tried to guess "It's a what?" Nothing came to mind. "It's a container"; "It's at the end of the line"; "It's the alpha and the omega" -- nothing was in the language. So I was pleased to see the revealer which I couldn't have guessed.
The theme did not make the puzzle more fun to solve, though, and only SARGENT PORTRAIT (37A) provoked real curiosity. When I first read the clue, I thought the two names in quotes might be a pair of ships, but no ships end in RAIT, which is what I had at that point.
What I liked most about the puzzle was not the theme but the clues that provoked real curiosity -- and there were several. WOMBAT at 2D (!!); AIDA at 16A (that's where she ends up?); DATA at 30D (mine's not at all "valuable", because if I'm not gonna buy it, I'm not gonna buy it, so there!) and even TRIBE at 21D where I had TRI and absolutely nothing was occurring to me.
A nicely clued puzzle that made me have to think in a number of places -- and I always like that.
ITSA Bird, ITSA plane....no....ITSA a SWAB of DOTS sitting on a STORIED BOARD . This just didn't fancy my tickle. I wanted it to, but I ended up saying something stupid like "shucky darn." I did like seeing John SARGENT (my newest avatar) only because he was one of my idols when all I did was nothing but charcoal. However....and a big however....I stared at that 37A clue and thought "what the frijoles is this all about?" I'm going to try and find my MARIMBA... and if I feel like it, I'll do a fandango tango tomorrow.
I most certainly didnt miss Rex's point. Sargenty Portarit and Turns landcaspe Degas dancer ( or ballerina) are all common phrase when didscussing the artists at hand. Rex has a bad handle on it. And his ear, ofetn good, is off today.
@Anonymous 7:49 - the message I got from the blog is not that Sargent was not famous, or a great portraiturist (probably a made-up word), but that the phrase SARGENT PORTRAIT is not a phrase one would use, even if talking about the artist and his work. His examples illustrate similar phrases that many would find awkward. I would have said "PORTRAITS by SARGENT", or something similar. To rearrange that just to fit into the grid is less than ideal.
@JD-Hey, no offense taken, and I'm sure none was intended. Just great minds, and all that. I'm going to have that in my head all day, so thanks for providing the second line.
If OFL or anyone else is having trouble spelling AMOCO, I suggest they remember Oil COmpany. This works for SUNOCO and some others too.
PS-Computer magically healed itself. Love when that happens.
Wow! What a nice painting! It made me read Rex's appraisal of it -- Rex who describes himself as "someone who loves Sargent and who once stood mesmerized for the better part of an hour one afternoon in front of this astonishing painting."
I once went to the Met with a friend who stood in front of a huge tapestry hung outside a three-room-exhibition for "the better part of an hour." I left her there, entranced and unmovable, to wander apace through the three rooms of the exhibition. I came back to find her still there -- entranced and unmovable.
When a painting really speaks to me, I'll stand in front of it for maybe a full four minutes instead of my usual 6.7 seconds. But, c'mon, after four whole minutes...? What's left to say after you've said to yourself: "what a nice painting!!"?
So if you're a serious art lover who can gaze at a single painting for the better art of an hour, you do not want to go to a museum with me. Nor do I blame you in the least.
Hey All ! Sorry to rain on your debut Phillip, but kind of a miss for me. (Although you did get your puz in the NYT, so you're better than me!) Thought the ITSAs were jumbled somethings, but couldn't figure out what. SAIT? AITS? TISA? Then the Revealer totally flummoxed me, as I wanted it to be in "grid order", as in 66A first, then 68A. For a brief moment, I asked myself "WRAP ITSA? What is that?" Eventually figured it out, but didn't ellicit a "Cool!", more of a "hmm, ok, so there's that".
Anyway, maybe that sounds SNOOTY, but this puz didn't do anything for me. Or am I being a WOMBAT?
Damn-DOOM, viAl-SWAB, maybe one more not coming to mind. Being my unsophisticated self, haven't heard of SARGENT. Gasp, I know. Who has the brain space to allow painters/artists/opera things and people plus all the Sci-Fi and Comedies that are better? (Har, no offense intended to the Art lovers. Just we're all different!)
STORIED above BOARD was neat.
yd -1 Argh! should'ves (technically) 0, although the one I missed I have seen before
Am I the only one to think something else is going on between SARGENT and Lady Agnew? Forget her left arm, look at those eyes! That little coy smile!
My reaction to the puzzle was pretty much Rex's, except that I didn't notice the way the WRAP worked at all, and when he pointed it out my appreciation of the puzzle did go up a bit.
Where I part from Rex is with the theme answers. The extra indirect article in the first one is annoying, but the other two are OK. Rex always likes the answers themselves to be striking as phrases, but for me the fun is in figuring out what Stevenson and Roosevelt could possibly have had in common, or what TSAR would have the right length. So that was OK with me.
As for the circles, no, I didn't like them. But it would have been really tough to figure out the theme without them. As it happened, I didn't figure it out anyway, not having @Nancy's dedication and persistence, until I got to the revealer, but on the whole I was glad they were there.
Now I have to go clean those WOMBAT droppings off my breakfast table.
Yep. As several others have stated, the phrase is "that's a WRAP" (unless you're having lunch with @mmorgan -Hi!), but I still don't care. Also, while technically I agree with OFL on the Era/EON differences, I'm just gonna Joaquin's Dictum it.
@bocamp 856am Thanks for the link - great story!
@Z 913am The ITSA Sandwich needs to be a standard on the menu at the P&T. Only bread option of course is rye.
"Anonymous" posting at 7:49 is absolutely correct in his assessment of Sargent as a portrait painter, but for a total different Sargent painting (and an example of his genius) look up "Gassed" which is Sargent's great painting from 1918 (it hangs in the Imperial War Museum in London). Oh, and while I agree on "Anonymous" and his esteem for Sargent, I will totally and loudly disagree with his views on Constable v. Turner!
Trey, No. Not a bit of it. Degas's picturews with dancers as the subject are referred toas Degas ballerinas, It's a term and a useful one. Just as Turner landscape or Hopper Couple. Sargent portrait is one in a long list of artists who have enough or imporatnt enough works ina s tyle or subject that the style and or subject has become a term. Rex, unaware that the term sargent exists, derides it. Because that's what he does: elevate his ignorance as trenchant crticism.
Just curious: how many of you never-miss-a-day commenters are crossword constructors yourselves, published or un? Again, just curiosity on my part.
I, personally, could no more construct a x-word puzzle as climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. Climbing out of my chair to make it to the kitchen coffee maker for a refill is my major physical exertion for the day.
@Canon, thank you for the reference to "Gassed." What a powerful painting. I'm more a Nancy than a Rex, but I think I'd stand looking at that one for a good while. And it was done in 1919! Sadly, the world is still doing this, and worse.
Some great answers in this one: DIASPORA and ASIAGO are my favorites. I'm not a purist about catch phrases—ITSA WRAP works just fine for me.
I'm with @Rex on the theme and the reverse reveal. Some bright spots: DIASPORA, WOMBAT, the "sounds" cross of TWANG and GROWLS, the pairing of STORIED and SNOOTY. Help from previous puzzles: AKITA. No idea: SHOALS.
Re: standing in front of a SARGENT PORTRAIT... on a visit to the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, this one captivated me for a good long time - Dr. Pozzi at Home. Dr. Samuel Pozzi was a Parisian gynecologist.
Easy-medium. q tip before SWAB and (like many of you) Eon before ERA were it for erasures. Not as delightful as yesterday’s, but a solid and reasonably smooth Wednesday. Liked it quite a bit more than @Rex did, nice debut.
There is a third "KEALOA" to go with ERA and EON. It would have been fun to have AGE in the puzzle, too. Another KEALOA today is TSAR/czAR. I was sure I had it right but ended up with REBUcTAL and zEPT for the downs. HAR!
Just yesterday I read an article in the June 2021 Discover magazine. It was about the discovery of chromium and cadmium(at the turn of the 19th century) in the context of yellow pigment in paintings. VanGogh's Sunflowers had chrome yellow. Edvard MUNCH's(see 24A) The Scream used cadmium yellow. The point is that these yellows were not stable and eroded to other shades. It was very interesting on 2 fronts, art and chemistry. It's an article that would interest you if you're interested in that type of article.
Congratulations on joining the elite group of Crossworld folk whose work has made the grade Phillip; ITS A goal few achieve. I find myself in the camp of commentariat who feel your grid is (like that SARGENT PORTRAIT arm) a bit stretched. Put my reaction between @foxaroni and @RooMonster perhaps? Always nice to reread @Lewis for a Pollyanna balance when I’m feeling SNOOTY as I was during today’s solve. DIASPORA was the highlight in this BATTLE OF WITS that was paused only briefly at DO in blocking MARIMBA as OFL noted.
Thanks to Rex for the lovely Sargent portrait. I really like to go the fine art museums. Whenever we visit a city which has one we are there. But I don't think that I've ever lingered in front of a single painting for more than five minutes. A serious painter trying to learn technique would.
Our museum here, The De Young, has just one Sargent portrait, Caroline de Bassano. It's lovely. I wish that we could get a show of his portraits. The Met had a show with 92 of them in 2015.
I hope that someone here gives a list of all the states whose name is also the name of an Indian tribe.
Hands up for CLOCK before BOARD? (The Champeeenship of Da World is ongoing. Last I checked.)
EON/ERA isn't controversial. The former is, by definition, millions of years, the latter at best a few decades in human terms, which is how civilians use it. Just check your favourite dictionary. Even the on-line dictionary says that two or more (geologic) ERAs make up 1 EON.
This puzzles offers some great clues. especially the ones for HOSE and TITLE, but the theme seems like a lot of work for not much payoff. I get the concept but I don’t really see any wrapping going on when I look at those circles. And as others have pointed out, the phrase is usually “that’s” not “it’s” a wrap. Maybe the puzzle needs a couple of wrappers like NAS or DR. DRE to spice things up.
Yesterday we had OWS. Now we have AWS. “Several AWS emanated from the museum when the SARGENT PORTRAIT was unveiled,” said no one ever. “And who is that guy who’s been staring at that painting for the past hour? Would somebody please get a guard in here.”
GAL Gadot is becoming the new Alan Alda in Crossworld. Meanwhile I’m not sure if the WOMBAT clue is interesting or TMI.
A wrap-around theme genre entry, with symmetric(al) circles. Also the WRAP ITSA theme revealer sorta does a wrap-around, too boot. Nuthin too monumental, but certainly serviceable.
Hi-lights and such, at our house: * The cube-shaped droppings info for WOMBAT. Good to know. * Not quite as PizzaJoint scrabbly as yesterday's, but that's ok. * No Xmas refs, today. Forgivable. * D'Angelo and Doja Cat artists on RCA records. Not to M&A's knowledge. Better RCA clue: {Record label for Elvis and Jefferson Airplane}. * DIASPORA, REBUTTAL, WOMBAT, SNOOTY, GOBLET. * Debut puz. Nice premiere.
staff weeject picks: RCA & RPM. Ominously separated by DOOM.
Thanx for the wrappers, Mr. Koski dude. And congratz on yer debut.
@Jim in Canada 10:41 - once a term is out in the public, there is little that the originator can do about it. We use the word "Legos" all the time in our house, as do some others in my daily orbit. The Lego corporation has as much control over the use of their word as Xerox does from keeping me from calling copying Xeroxing.
In a way, this may be similar to the issue with anonymous today - he may be right that some refer to the art discussed today as SARGENT PORTRAITS, but this may be a point of reference issue. Purists or art lovers may think that the phrase is perfectly appropriate, but the common, non-art loving community may think it is odd. Purists, and the Lego company, may have a strong idea about how to pluralize Lego, but the general public may think otherwise.
We seem to see this a lot on this blog - we had discussions recently on parsing the letters for salt. Some felt that Na and Cl had to remain in order whereas others were fine with the mixing of all letters. Maybe those where chemistry is a professional interest view what is acceptable different than many others? Hard to say since I do not know the backgrounds of most posters, but I would suspect that acceptance of the answer has a lot to do with one's training, profession, or hobbies
Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota and Utah. Other state names have their origins in indiginous words, but they are not tribe names.
@jberg. I think you are right, and I think I know what the "something going on between them" is. I think he painted her naked and then painted the dress. The stare,the hint of a smile, the line of her thigh, the see-through effect of the sleeves...That stare is definitely saying something.
Mini theme today, Spongy Balls(which is laugh out loud funny on its own) and Dermatological sac(k). But seriously, a cousin of mine was treated for spongy balls. It was rough but he's fine now.
From the Bureau of Indian Affairs https://www.indianaffairs.gov/as-ia/opa/online-press-release/origin-names-us-states
Alabama, Iowa, Kansas, Tennessee, and Utah are named after tribes. There are another 25 or so states named after Native American words or phrases
There are also tribes (or other groupings) that share a name with a state, such as the Dakotas and Delaware. However, I cannot find enough information quickly to understand why these did not make the list. Maybe Dakota is the language and not the tribe? It seems as if many of the Delaware Indians refer to themselves as Lenape, and that the name Delaware came from the river near where they originally lived,
For the second day in a row, I am tempted to violate my policy of not trying to explain themes. Suffice it to say that this one works and is kinda impressive for a Wednesday.
@Nancy 9:57. I once went to the Met with a friend who stood in front of a huge tapestry hung outside a three-room-exhibition for "the better part of an hour." I left her there, entranced and unmovable, to wander apace through the three rooms of the exhibition. I came back to find her still there -- entranced
I had read exactly this much of your second post today and my mind wanted to fill in the remainder of the sentence as something like: …. and exited another 4 times, and the girl finally says “Tapestry really isn’t that interesting.”
The amusement I’m pointing out is that “To Entrance” could mean “fill someone with wonder and delight.” (as you use it in both instances) or it could mean “come in” in a street-slangy way. Like outside the Grammy’s (or the Grammy as Jim in Canada might have it). “ Hey, don’t go take a pee now, Megan Thee Stallion about to entrance.”
I’m going back over my comments one I’m off opioids and deleting the vast majority.
Nice Ronstadt clip, Rex! Yes, this one was not as good as yesterday's. Few puzzles ever will be, IMO. But it was doable, though I paid no attention to the theme.
I have been asking myself what art has just awed me so much I could not tear myself away, and spent 15 minutes or longer in front of. Two paintings: The first, which I had heard of but never seen, was El Greco's Vista de Toledo. I really wanted to see it at the Prado in Madrid. And was politely told by the guard whom I asked that it was in the Metropolitan Museum in New York! Now I had been there, but only on a day trip from Philadelphia, and probably also when I visited New York at age 13, with my mother. Hadn't seen it. Next time I was in New York, I went, found it, and I can still feel the emotion I felt when I did. I was in total AWE. Still am, and I have made a point of seeing it on subsequent visits.
The other, and the one that blows me away as a long-ago History major, is David's Coronation of Napoleon. That is in the Louvre, and is worth looking at for hours, with the aid of a guidebook that explains the many characters in the painting, including Josephine and many Napoleon family members, and even the omnipresent Talleyrand. The centerpiece is the Pope, brought almost by force to Paris, putting the imperial crown on Napoleon's head. One of the great virtues of David was his brutal honesty. He makes it absolutely clear the Pope hated every minute of the ceremony.
(And, it seems, the Pope did not actually put a crown on Napoleon, but just sat there with his hands in his lap. David painted what he saw, and Napoleon insisted that David re-do the picture, to give the Pope the air of having done something more important than just sitting there. David, who was glad to be Napoleon's court painter, complied.) David, in my opinion, was the greatest painter of his era, even greater than SARGENT was in his time.
@OffTheGrid 1123am Those cadmium pigments are not only unstable, they're toxic/carcinogenic. I often wondered how many oil painters died due (at least in part) to their use. Perhaps @Barbara S can provide some insight. Where has she been, BTW? I hope all is well with her.
@Z 1150am Thanks for the LEGO info - I had a sneaking suspicion (more like an overt certainty) that you would have something to offer on the subject. Because, as you so often say, English. As for the other link, knock me over with a feather that you cite the Twitter handle "Whores of Yore".
Best part of the puzzle was learning that WOMBATs poop cubes. Makes me, for the first time ever, wonder about an animal’s “ano” to use the Spanish word that often shows up in puzzles pretending to mean “year.” How does the cube form, exactly? It sounds like it has a 3D printer there.
Like many, I solved it as a themeless then looked to see what the theme was post-happy music. Never my favorite kind of solve.
Kind of how one defines speed. The physicists amongst us call it velocity. There are two versions in this example: the velocity wrt the needle (LP) or laser (CD) varies with position. That's the linear velocity. OTOH, is the angular velocity, which is the rotational speed. That's fixed for the LP, but variable for the CD (not by definition, but implementation). The reason is simply that by the time of the CD, it was possible to control disc transports well enough to keep the linear velocity constant, more or less, from edge to edge. Can't do that with the LP. Angular velocity can be expressed as RPM. It is fixed for the LP, but the linear velocity at the needle decreases from outer edge to inner, which is one reason why heavy bass lines at the end of a symphony, for example, generally are poor, since there's less vinyl to absorb that much deflection. CDs don't have that problem, in part because the data stream is at a (more or less) constant speed.
If you have a CD player that's a top loader with glass, you'll see the disc slow down from beginning to end. The laser starts at the inner edge, which must run faster to attain the spec linear velocity at the laser; the disc slows done as the radius increases since each revolution of the disc passes ever more track under the laser.
@godfrey 12:55. Speed is the time rate at which an object is moving along a path. (Britannica.com). Seems like this, applied through the lens of Joaquin’s Dictum, makes this a perfectly good clue.
"brought almost by force". Um, no. Pius VII was broughtby force to Paris. Just as his predecessor had been. Yep. Pius VI was defeated in battle by French forces led by that narcissistic tyrant Bonapart. He died in exile, a prisoner of the French. Pius VII was also defeated by the French, masde a prisoner and haued of To France remaining there until Napolean was final;ly dfeated. No, Pius VII was not pleased to be part oif Napolean's theatrics. He's having teh last laugh; he's on the way to canonization.
I have been doing a prolonged head scratch on today’s theme. The solve itself we t fairly smoothly almost everywhere. Even with MARIMBA a d AKITA for some inexplicable reason, I got well and truly stuck in the extreme SE, but finally the ITSA came through the fog. I also wanted pOints for DOTS, DOTS seeming just too pedestrian for the beauty of the type of impressionist art employing the technique.
That’s a wrap,” seems lime the phrase I have heard and read more often, but I am fine with the constructor’s choice. When I got the reveal though, I have to say that I was sorely disappointed that the circles went with the IT’S A rather thr an WRAP. I wanted the circles ti sol out a type of wrap like , stole, scarf., etc. because of that, the “wrapped” IT’S A did not show itself willingly. And to be (over?) critical, IT’S A is. It itself a wrap, but is WRAPped around the long answers. So, when i finally got it, I was a tad disappointed from a language perspective.
Doesn't mean I didn’t enjoy much of the solve, just that the technical precision of the theme material was a tad “lumpy.”
Well....because it's a dreary, rainy and cold day and I don't want to go out, I decided to try and find out why a WOMBAT has square poop. You can't believe what I found out. But here's the best one: Evidently, a bunch of scientists who had nothing better to do, decided to solve the conundrum of the century.. In other words....Why the hell does the WOMBAD have square caca. Well....they found a poor little critter that was road kill and did a 10 million dollar autopsy on it because everyone in the world wants to know if they, too, can poop squares....This is what I found: "The WOMBAT's softer intestinal regions squeeze slowly and mold the final corner of the cube. The final corners of the irregular contractions shape firm, flat sided cubes." Now, if only we could all do that....wouldn't that be some interesting fodder at the cocktail party? Hey, honey...I just did a square. As you were. I need a drink.
@Frantic Sloth 1:02 - Just atoning for my Dutch Reformed upbringing. 🤣😂🤣 - Seriously, The good doctor explains the Twitter handle as if she’s some sort of expert or something. The commentary on Lady Agnew reminded me of the thread on Madame X. Amazing that a portrait could have had such an impact, but it does drive home that stories like Britney Spear’s are nothing new.
This morning on the radio I heard about Oreo 🍷 wine, yikes. You order online and get 2 bottles of wine plus a package of Oreo Thins - since it was "news" rather than an ad the announcer added, "I guess that's so you can compare the taste."
Oh, and in the...[tries to remember exactly, fails] mid-seventies AMOCO was the first credit card I got. They used to send those little charge slips back with the statement. Then they started digitally capturing your signature and the statement was a list of purchases with your (very pixellated) signature next to each one. I drove a lot, lot, lot then, bought a lot of gas, and built up some kind of credit rating and clearly remember getting a Visa card and thinking it was *amazing*.
This train of thought also reminds me that when I lived in NYC from 1978-1980 I had... a CITI card! People who didn't live in a metropolis were basically astounded by the concept.
@dgd - Likely, but not definitively. “Life Long Bachelor” usually makes it likely, but I don’t think there’s any firm evidence of his preferences, just circumstantial conjecture and rumors. I just did a quick look to see if there’s any new scholarship in that area that I missed and I didn’t see anything. And there are also rumors of him having had affairs with women (Lady with a Rose supposedly being of his lover but then she married somebody else so who knows).
@Frantic.....I squealed with laughter. I might even buy one of those little square poops for my granddaughter...She has a delightful sense of humor.....
Two easy days in a row thanks to little to no proper names (my nemesis), ? clues, and conversational phrases in quotes. Also a refreshing dearth of woke/preachy answers, just ordinary/common fill. I am surprised that Rex didn't crow over the National Restaurant Association as an alternative clue for NRA.
But then again, tomorrow is Thursday, my highest average time of the week (even over Fri and Sat) for some mental block reason. So I've got that to look forward to.
... and after reading some other comments I realized I didn't even notice the circled squares or use them in any way. But looking at their solution it wouldn't have helped me in the solve as easy at it was on its own.
Rex is right about this one. Lately the editor has been giving the green light to puzzles that can best be described as cube-shaped droppings. Debuts are not an excuse to publish mediocre stuff. At least the correct name for the constructor appears now.
I just now realized that the link "Post a comment" sounds an awful lot like "eat a sandwich." So there.
I get what OFF is saying, but somehow I didn't dislike this puzzle nearly as intensely as he did. Some playful clues, including in the NW, made for a fun solve. No mention of good longer fill like DIASPORA and REBUTTAL. No single-letter add-ons till we get to TSARNICHOLASI, and by that time the jig was up.
The theme is convoluted, and one does wonder "Why?", but it does work; it delivers its promise. And we do have DOD GAL Gadot. Par.
HER REBUTTAL OF his TITLE went toward ABATTLE against the BASEST things he'd done: "ITSA BETTER use when ITSA dart BOARD" - IDA's PORTRAIT OF TSARNICHOLASI.
A long time ago, I was solving this puzzle and got stuck at an unguessable (to me) crossing: N. C. WYETH crossing NATICK at the "N"—I knew WYETH but forgot his initials, and NATICK ... is a suburb of Boston that I had no hope of knowing. It was clued as someplace the Boston Marathon runs through (???). Anyway, NATICK— the more obscure name in that crossing—became shorthand for an unguessable cross, esp. where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known. NATICK took hold as crossword slang, and the term can now be both noun ("I had a NATICK in the SW corner...") or verb ("I got NATICKED by 50A / 34D!")
96 comments:
Easy for me, and I liked it. I liked it a WHOLE LOT better than @Rex did ("a lot better" is normal; "a whole lot better" is frequent; "a WHOLE LOT better" is unusual). Good theme and a little "aha moment" at the revealer(s), which explained the standalone "A" in 20A. Only correction was ScadS for SLEWS at 70A. A pleasant Wednesday outing.
The long across answers were all kind of dull and I guess that’s owing to that each had to contain some variant of part of SAIT on one end and some variant of part of SAIT on the other end. I don’t think a single answer in the entire puzzle gave me that satisfied “oh” feeling of assembling letters into squares with a satisfaction and surpirse.
NRA?!? Again?!? Must we?!? Especially after what happened last week AND then the absolutely tone-deaf Christmas card from the representative from Kentucky?!? I don’t care that the clue was not gun related because we’re all thinking the same thing when we write or type NRA.
I solved this as a themeless, and after completing it, have no idea what the theme is. Obviously AITS are split between the beginning and ends of phrases. Good thing @Rex can help me understand the theme (actually, the reason I first started coming to this blog years ago was to discover themes that made no sense to me). The theme makes sense after reading the title (for some reason, the iPhone app does not always show the titles)
I really liked some of the answers. For A BATTLE OF WITS, I initially had AcAdemic____, but ARTOO put an end to that thought. I was happy with the real answer. I really liked the clues for HOSE, STORIED, EDU, and TITLE. Good to see DIASPORA in the puzzle – not a word I would think of as a mid-week answer.
The solve was relatively smooth, but there was enough interesting material that I had to pause and think here and there. An enjoyable Wednesday.
Per discussion yesterday, on a quick count the 3-letter fill today was slightly over 50% abbreviations (NRA, EDU, RPM, RCA etc) and sounds (AWS). However, the ION, EON, ERA triplet seemed to flow from one to the other.
Today was my 500th consecutive puzzle with happy music. To be fair, I count as a finish any puzzle that I complete with no external help (i.e. no dictionary or Google) as long as it is completed before midnight. If I do not get the music initially, I look for typos, then words where I may have put in a wrong letter not knowing it was wrong on first glance (cATANA for KATANA). Finally, I look elsewhere where I may have made an error that is less obvious. It may involve a kealoa type answer crossing with PPP that I did not know. I know that many here have a stricter definition of completion versus dnf, but this is how I have done it. Seems like almost all of my issues over the past five years or so have been related to PPP.
I love to guess the theme before uncovering the reveal. This one stumped me, and I love when that happens if it’s good, and this one is. When I uncovered the reveal, it elicited a “Bravo!”
When I have the time, I like to hang around a puzzle afterward and see what treasures lie within. This one had many, such as:
• Muscle SHOALS, talk about storied! Home of a recording studio where legends have cut albums, including the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Picket, Bob Seger, Paul Simon, Joe Cocker and many more. I learned in Wikipedia that in 2017, the Alabama Tourism Department named it as the state’s top tourist attraction.
• Beautiful pairing in the grid of TAIL and AKITA, because, I learned that the Akita’s plush tail that typically curls over its back, is the breed’s trademark (according to the AKC).
• I love how DIASPORA rolls off the tongue.
• I also love how the wrap is ordered, one circle at the start of the first theme answer, two in the second, and three in the third.
• There are far more finds, I’m sure, but looking for other “wrapped” answers in the grid, I found three men’s names (Ted from EDIT, Tom from OMIT and MEAN TO, and Tad from DATA); the crossword-stalwart pseudonym of H.H. Munro (Saki, from AKITAS); and a football team in the national championship hunt (Bama, from MARIMBA).
Thank you for a lovely solve, Philip, and the post-solve enrichment. Congratulations on your debut, and SAvor IT!
Are circle revealers in a puzzle ever good? Does anyone actually like them? I see commenters saying they dislike circles in crosswords often enough. I don't think I ever see anyone gushing over, or swooning for them. I get the sense anchovies on pizza have more fans. Or Hawaiian pizza for that matter. People are passionate about Hawaiian pizza (one way or the other). I'm all for keeping crosswords square.
Not much resistance from this one. Most of the fight in this puzzle came from questions I asked myself like "TSAR who?" or my reaction to "Sargent Portrait," when I briefly filled it in, erases it, and watched the crosses refill those squares, "Were they both in the army?" A quick Google after the happy music was a reminder of my ignorance. A further Google also revealed that spelling ARTOO, a-r-t-w-o, I as I felt was appropriate, is highly suspect.
Wow, the NYTXW really screwed me over, giving me a DNF. It said the "E" and "O" in EROS were wrong!
I completely missed the revealer in the puzzle. I got the answers for 66- and 68-across easily, but did not get these answers were the revealer. After reading the blog and early posts here, I had to go back through the puzzle clue by clue until I saw it at the bottom. Now that is subtle, as it didn't point out that it was a revealer in the clue, and the theme was so opaque to me during the solve.
After spending an hour looking at that portrait did you notice her left arm is too long and the left side of the chair is totally fkd up?
Thx Philip; IT'S A fine Wednes. construction! :)
Med.
Smooth sailing from SWAB to INLAID. No hitches along the way.
While most "bridge' games' don't require BOARDs, there is at least one exception:
"In duplicate bridge, a BOARD is an item of equipment that holds one deal, or one deck of 52 cards distributed in four hands of 13 cards each. The design permits the entire deal of four hands to be passed, carried or stacked securely with the cards hidden from view in four pockets. This is required for duplicate bridge tournaments, where the same deal is played several times and so the composition of each hand must be preserved during and after each play of each deal." (Wikipedia)
When tutoring the granddaughters on the multiplication table, one of the mnemonics for 8x8 was the use of the chess BOARD, which they learned early on, has 8 files and 8 ranks, for a total of 64 squares.
Fun puz! :)
___
yd 0*
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Muscle SHOALS got the swampers. That was the high point of this one for me, and I uncharacteristically shared OFL's reaction of "that's it?" when I got the revealer.
And that's it from me, as my laptop battery is no longer recharging and needs to see the computer doc.
Thanks for the fun, PK. Pretty Kinky hose clue.
Solved as a themeless - the circles don’t show up in the app. Overall liked the fill more than Rex - DIASPORA and INLAID are cool and liked the TWANG x GROWLS cross.
So much great music from Muscle SHOALS - our crossword friend Etta, Prine, Drive-By’s but I’ve always loved this beauty from Boz Loan Me a Dime
Enjoyable Wednesday solve.
Rex,
Sargent was THE Amrican Portrait artist of his era. You are simply incorrect to dismiss Sargent portait makes you look foolish. Sargent is know for his portraiture in amlost precisely the same way Degas is known for his ballerinas.
Aslo, Constable is better than Turner.
I invite you to the Morgan Libraray, my treat, and show you just how signifigant Sargent's portraiture is.
Happy Feat of the Immaculate Conception. Might want to say a prayer to The Blessed Mother. Without her, we'd all be S.O.L.
What @Rex said and especially what @Mireille (who beat me to it) said: the expression I’m familiar with is THATS A WRAP. I would hear ITS A WRAP maybe in a restaurant of some kind… “What’s this buffalo chicken thing on the menu? Is it a sandwich?” “No — it’s a wrap.” “Oh, thanks.”
Ugh, this one was borderline ugly. Couldn’t figure out the theme, so ignored it and waited for OFL to explain what I missed, which turned out to be a big nothingburger. Didn’t know what SARGEANT PORTRAIT was, and now that I know, I don’t care. And of course there is ATOI - enough said.
Found Sargent Portrait clunky as clues, even though, like Rex, am a fan of the painter. He did one of Isabella Stewart Gardner I'm fond of. Not so fond of the puzzle. I will appreciate Lewis' points.
I guess Rex didn't like this one.
Yes, "That's a wrap", not "It's".
Sargeant was a genius, I don't care how long her arm is.
We are really working this "kealoa" thing to death, aren't we ?
I really like Happy Feat of the Immaculate Conception. Would make for a great procession.
"Now Muscle Shoals has got the Swampers
And they've been known to pick a song or two (yes they do)"
Thanks to Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Muscle Shoals rhythm section on Sweet Home Alabama for 1D.
Great cluing from a novice constructor. Enjoyed it.
@pabloinnh, I posted before reading the comments. Sorry! I have no idea why that line has stuck in head for so many years but I was excited when I finally got a chance to use it.
My reaction to 'the exactness of the "wrap" thing" was neither Rex's 'huh ... why' nor his hoped-for 'wow', but more of a 'why did I not notice that?'
Thought this was a little hard for a Wednesday, thanks in part to the 'A' in front of BATTLE OF WITS, the 'TSAR' in front of NICHOLAS I, the defunct car company, the defunct gas company, and the clue for AIDA.
Black White and Blue: The Muscle Shoals Sound
"The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section is a group of American session musicians based in the northern Alabama town of Muscle Shoals. One of the most prominent American studio house bands from the 1960s to the 1980s, these musicians, individually or as a group, have been associated with more than 500 recordings, including 75 gold and platinum hits. They were masters at creating a southern combination of R&B, soul and country music known as the "Muscle Shoals sound" to back up black artists, who were often in disbelief to learn that the studio musicians were white. Over the years from 1962 to 1969, there have been two successive groups under the name "Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section" and the common factor in the two was an association with Rick Hall at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals." (Wikipedia)
___
td pg -13 (timed out)
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Wow, what a cranky lot you folks seem to be.
I found the revealer to be clever and the themes to be well executed.
Re: rex's whine that "We refer to coach / manager stints in sports as ERAs but some of them don't last long at all." Well, some managers/coaches only last a year or two, and then they are replaced. So we don't refer to *their* tenure as an era, because it was so brief. Other coaches (Phil Jackson; Red Shoendienst (?); Bear Bryant . . .) seem to have been around forever, hence the term "era" is employed. If rex is going to be nit-picky, which is his right as it's his blog, at least he should get it right. Don't go off on a silly rant for the sake of your schtick. You can do better. And it curdles the morning.
Completely agree with Rex today and may I just say - wow! The picture of that painting is astonishing. I can’t even imagine how mesmerizing it must be in real life.
Struggled with the theme here and the revealer didn’t help a bit. I kept looking at the themers for some sort of hidden WRAP in the answers. Like a tortilla or a pita or a stole or a poncho or a hoodie. Nope, no luck. Gave up and came here to see what was going on and I have to say Rex’s “oof” was a good expression for my reaction because the theme just sort of landed with a quiet thud for me. I think because the expression I’ve always thought a director used would be THATS A WRAP, not ITS. Even when I first saw the revealer I thought really? It just sounded wrong and maybe why I resisted seeing the I T S A as it was intended.
I tried to imagine how this would’ve worked using the letters T H A T S instead: THAT/S THA/TS TH/ATS T/HATS
The second combination would be the biggest challenge but TSAR is already in place. Something ending with a THA might be hard. Names like ARETHA, BERTHA, MARTHA are the only things that come to mind. I’m no constructor but it seems doable to me.
If it hasn't already been mentioned, I'd like to submit ERA/EON to the kealoa klub.
Is it bettter or worse when they're in the same grid with cloned clues? I can't decide.
This one went faster than yesterday and it felt easy for the Wednesdee for me.
I thought this theme was clever and cleanly executed. Initially, I was a tad irked about the inverted locations of linked/lookie-loo type entries. "Why should I have to do a backflip for those to make sense? Put them in the correct order!"
But, this revealer has the added distinction of working in both directions. ITSA WRAP is the saying and WRAP ITSA is our grid directive.
And OILER in-between serves as a convenient lubricant for the yaw. Nice!
Another fine debut. Congratulations, Mr. KOSKI - well done, you!
🧠
🎉🎉🎉
I liked the intentionality of the theme. IT’S A WRAP seems justification enough. Looking forward to next week’s sequel, IT’S A Sandwich, where controversial sandwiches like tacos and hot dogs “sandwich” longer theme answers.
SWAB as a sample collector was too spot on for the Pandemic ERA for me. Speaking of, agree with Rex on the EON/ERA distinction. I actually thought to myself at the EON answer, “has to be EON when clued this way.”
The AMOCO clip surprised me in that I thought the AMOCO brand was resurrected earlier, sometime after the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe made BP anathema to many people. I seem to remember at least one BP in Dearborn changing it’s name, but now that I think about it I think it went from being a BP franchise to a Citgo franchise.
@Trey - The only NYTXs that have titles are Sunday puzzles. Also, I suspect you are not seeing the entire clue for 68A as it finishes with “…or hint to 20-, 37- and 58-Across”
(OMG - The Oxford Comma isn’t standard for crossword clues or is the omission just a typo?) When Rex posts the theme it is his own interpretation of what the theme is.
@Anon 7:49 - You seem to have missed Rex’s point. He loves at least one SARGENT PORTRAIT and wrote I say this as someone who loves Sargent…. He doesn’t believe SARGENT PORTRAIT holds up as a stand alone phrase, Do I like SARGENT PORTRAIT as a standalone answer? Not really.
@egsforbreakfast late yesterday - I wouldn’t have said “wrong.” I am certain I’ve seen it used the way you defined it by others, including one of the regular monthly bloggers (August I think).
@Nancy - I was just using the cookie aisle because of “Oreo,” so it wasn’t really intentional. But when you highlighted it like that I really liked it, too.
Easy puzzle. Completely ignored the circles and forgot all about them until I read this blog. Best words: DIASPORA & ASIAGO. GROWLS autofilled from cross words; good thing because growling is not speaking brusquely. TSAR NICHOLAS I mildly irritating because of Roman numeral but good to see correct transliteration of Ц
That's Duane Allman sittin in with Boz on "Loan Me A Dime". Classic.
At some point after I'd filled in all the theme answers and their encapsulated tiny little circles, I tried to guess the revealer. After eliminating SITA, AITS, TISA, SIAT, ASTI, SAIT and TIAS, I landed on ITS A and tried to guess "It's a what?" Nothing came to mind. "It's a container"; "It's at the end of the line"; "It's the alpha and the omega" -- nothing was in the language. So I was pleased to see the revealer which I couldn't have guessed.
The theme did not make the puzzle more fun to solve, though, and only SARGENT PORTRAIT (37A) provoked real curiosity. When I first read the clue, I thought the two names in quotes might be a pair of ships, but no ships end in RAIT, which is what I had at that point.
What I liked most about the puzzle was not the theme but the clues that provoked real curiosity -- and there were several. WOMBAT at 2D (!!); AIDA at 16A (that's where she ends up?); DATA at 30D (mine's not at all "valuable", because if I'm not gonna buy it, I'm not gonna buy it, so there!) and even TRIBE at 21D where I had TRI and absolutely nothing was occurring to me.
A nicely clued puzzle that made me have to think in a number of places -- and I always like that.
ITSA Bird, ITSA plane....no....ITSA a SWAB of DOTS sitting on a STORIED BOARD .
This just didn't fancy my tickle. I wanted it to, but I ended up saying something stupid like "shucky darn."
I did like seeing John SARGENT (my newest avatar) only because he was one of my idols when all I did was nothing but charcoal. However....and a big however....I stared at that 37A clue and thought "what the frijoles is this all about?"
I'm going to try and find my MARIMBA... and if I feel like it, I'll do a fandango tango tomorrow.
I most certainly didnt miss Rex's point. Sargenty Portarit and Turns landcaspe Degas dancer ( or ballerina) are all common phrase when didscussing the artists at hand. Rex has a bad handle on it. And his ear, ofetn good, is off today.
@Anonymous 7:49 - the message I got from the blog is not that Sargent was not famous, or a great portraiturist (probably a made-up word), but that the phrase SARGENT PORTRAIT is not a phrase one would use, even if talking about the artist and his work. His examples illustrate similar phrases that many would find awkward. I would have said "PORTRAITS by SARGENT", or something similar. To rearrange that just to fit into the grid is less than ideal.
@JD-Hey, no offense taken, and I'm sure none was intended. Just great minds, and all that. I'm going to have that in my head all day, so thanks for providing the second line.
If OFL or anyone else is having trouble spelling AMOCO, I suggest they remember Oil COmpany. This works for SUNOCO and some others too.
PS-Computer magically healed itself. Love when that happens.
Wow! What a nice painting! It made me read Rex's appraisal of it -- Rex who describes himself as "someone who loves Sargent and who once stood mesmerized for the better part of an hour one afternoon in front of this astonishing painting."
I once went to the Met with a friend who stood in front of a huge tapestry hung outside a three-room-exhibition for "the better part of an hour." I left her there, entranced and unmovable, to wander apace through the three rooms of the exhibition. I came back to find her still there -- entranced and unmovable.
When a painting really speaks to me, I'll stand in front of it for maybe a full four minutes instead of my usual 6.7 seconds. But, c'mon, after four whole minutes...? What's left to say after you've said to yourself: "what a nice painting!!"?
So if you're a serious art lover who can gaze at a single painting for the better art of an hour, you do not want to go to a museum with me. Nor do I blame you in the least.
Still, that SARGENT is a really nice painting!!!
Meh.
Hey All !
Sorry to rain on your debut Phillip, but kind of a miss for me. (Although you did get your puz in the NYT, so you're better than me!) Thought the ITSAs were jumbled somethings, but couldn't figure out what. SAIT? AITS? TISA? Then the Revealer totally flummoxed me, as I wanted it to be in "grid order", as in 66A first, then 68A. For a brief moment, I asked myself "WRAP ITSA? What is that?" Eventually figured it out, but didn't ellicit a "Cool!", more of a "hmm, ok, so there's that".
Anyway, maybe that sounds SNOOTY, but this puz didn't do anything for me. Or am I being a WOMBAT?
Damn-DOOM, viAl-SWAB, maybe one more not coming to mind. Being my unsophisticated self, haven't heard of SARGENT. Gasp, I know. Who has the brain space to allow painters/artists/opera things and people plus all the Sci-Fi and Comedies that are better? (Har, no offense intended to the Art lovers. Just we're all different!)
STORIED above BOARD was neat.
yd -1 Argh! should'ves (technically) 0, although the one I missed I have seen before
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Am I the only one to think something else is going on between SARGENT and Lady Agnew? Forget her left arm, look at those eyes! That little coy smile!
My reaction to the puzzle was pretty much Rex's, except that I didn't notice the way the WRAP worked at all, and when he pointed it out my appreciation of the puzzle did go up a bit.
Where I part from Rex is with the theme answers. The extra indirect article in the first one is annoying, but the other two are OK. Rex always likes the answers themselves to be striking as phrases, but for me the fun is in figuring out what Stevenson and Roosevelt could possibly have had in common, or what TSAR would have the right length. So that was OK with me.
As for the circles, no, I didn't like them. But it would have been really tough to figure out the theme without them. As it happened, I didn't figure it out anyway, not having @Nancy's dedication and persistence, until I got to the revealer, but on the whole I was glad they were there.
Now I have to go clean those WOMBAT droppings off my breakfast table.
Yep. As several others have stated, the phrase is "that's a WRAP" (unless you're having lunch with @mmorgan -Hi!), but I still don't care.
Also, while technically I agree with OFL on the Era/EON differences, I'm just gonna Joaquin's Dictum it.
@bocamp 856am Thanks for the link - great story!
@Z 913am The ITSA Sandwich needs to be a standard on the menu at the P&T. Only bread option of course is rye.
"Anonymous" posting at 7:49 is absolutely correct in his assessment of Sargent as a portrait painter, but for a total different Sargent painting (and an example of his genius) look up "Gassed" which is Sargent's great painting from 1918 (it hangs in the Imperial War Museum in London). Oh, and while I agree on "Anonymous" and his esteem for Sargent, I will totally and loudly disagree with his views on Constable v. Turner!
...and again, "Legos"
This is not a thing. Lego themselves have addressed this.
Lego is an adjective, not a noun. "Lego bricks" or "Lego sets" is the plural.
If you're really in a pinch and need to use it as a noun, then the plural of "Lego" is "Lego".
I have lots of Lego.
Trey,
No. Not a bit of it. Degas's picturews with dancers as the subject are referred toas Degas ballerinas, It's a term and a useful one. Just as Turner landscape or Hopper Couple. Sargent portrait is one in a long list of artists who have enough or imporatnt enough works ina s tyle or subject that the style and or subject has become a term. Rex, unaware that the term sargent exists, derides it. Because that's what he does: elevate his ignorance as trenchant crticism.
Just curious: how many of you never-miss-a-day commenters are crossword constructors yourselves, published or un? Again, just curiosity on my part.
I, personally, could no more construct a x-word puzzle as climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. Climbing out of my chair to make it to the kitchen coffee maker for a refill is my major physical exertion for the day.
@Canon, thank you for the reference to "Gassed." What a powerful painting. I'm more a Nancy than a Rex, but I think I'd stand looking at that one for a good while. And it was done in 1919! Sadly, the world is still doing this, and worse.
Some great answers in this one: DIASPORA and ASIAGO are my favorites. I'm not a purist about catch phrases—ITSA WRAP works just fine for me.
I'm with @Rex on the theme and the reverse reveal.
Some bright spots: DIASPORA, WOMBAT, the "sounds" cross of TWANG and GROWLS, the pairing of STORIED and SNOOTY.
Help from previous puzzles: AKITA. No idea: SHOALS.
Re: standing in front of a SARGENT PORTRAIT... on a visit to the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, this one captivated me for a good long time - Dr. Pozzi at Home. Dr. Samuel Pozzi was a Parisian gynecologist.
It's a drag.
Easy-medium. q tip before SWAB and (like many of you) Eon before ERA were it for erasures. Not as delightful as yesterday’s, but a solid and reasonably smooth Wednesday. Liked it quite a bit more than @Rex did, nice debut.
There is a third "KEALOA" to go with ERA and EON. It would have been fun to have AGE in the puzzle, too. Another KEALOA today is TSAR/czAR. I was sure I had it right but ended up with REBUcTAL and zEPT for the downs. HAR!
Just yesterday I read an article in the June 2021 Discover magazine. It was about the discovery of chromium and cadmium(at the turn of the 19th century) in the context of yellow pigment in paintings. VanGogh's Sunflowers had chrome yellow. Edvard MUNCH's(see 24A) The Scream used cadmium yellow. The point is that these yellows were not stable and eroded to other shades. It was very interesting on 2 fronts, art and chemistry. It's an article that would interest you if you're interested in that type of article.
Congratulations on joining the elite group of Crossworld folk whose work has made the grade Phillip; ITS A goal few achieve. I find myself in the camp of commentariat who feel your grid is (like that SARGENT PORTRAIT arm) a bit stretched. Put my reaction between @foxaroni and @RooMonster perhaps? Always nice to reread @Lewis for a Pollyanna balance when I’m feeling SNOOTY as I was during today’s solve. DIASPORA was the highlight in this BATTLE OF WITS that was paused only briefly at DO in blocking MARIMBA as OFL noted.
I got the theme but it doesn't really click.
Thanks to Rex for the lovely Sargent portrait. I really like to go the fine art museums. Whenever we visit a city which has one we are there. But I don't think that I've ever lingered in front of a single painting for more than five minutes. A serious painter trying to learn technique would.
Our museum here, The De Young, has just one Sargent portrait, Caroline de Bassano. It's lovely. I wish that we could get a show of his portraits. The Met had a show with 92 of them in 2015.
I hope that someone here gives a list of all the states whose name is also the name of an Indian tribe.
Idtag before INTRO
A sexy hose?? Just don't put your's on the smartphone and call someone. naughty.
@Frantic Sloth (10:15 AM) yw :)
___
td pg -4*
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Hands up for CLOCK before BOARD? (The Champeeenship of Da World is ongoing. Last I checked.)
EON/ERA isn't controversial. The former is, by definition, millions of years, the latter at best a few decades in human terms, which is how civilians use it. Just check your favourite dictionary. Even the on-line dictionary says that two or more (geologic) ERAs make up 1 EON.
This puzzles offers some great clues. especially the ones for HOSE and TITLE, but the theme seems like a lot of work for not much payoff. I get the concept but I don’t really see any wrapping going on when I look at those circles. And as others have pointed out, the phrase is usually “that’s” not “it’s” a wrap. Maybe the puzzle needs a couple of wrappers like NAS or DR. DRE to spice things up.
Yesterday we had OWS. Now we have AWS. “Several AWS emanated from the museum when the SARGENT PORTRAIT was unveiled,” said no one ever. “And who is that guy who’s been staring at that painting for the past hour? Would somebody please get a guard in here.”
GAL Gadot is becoming the new Alan Alda in Crossworld. Meanwhile I’m not sure if the WOMBAT clue is interesting or TMI.
@mathgent - Here you go.
@Frantic Sloth - Ah, yes, the Wry Rye Taco will definitely be on the menu.
@Jim in Canada - 🤣😂🤣😂🤣 - As if the company gets to decide. Owners of trademarks are free to make whatever pronouncements they like regarding how people should use their trademarks. Users of the English language, however, have the final say of how the English language works. (No I didn’t write that answer although I would have)
Fascinated by the (deserved) SARGENT love. For those interested in an episode less frequently told, This lengthy Twitter thread may be interesting to you.
A wrap-around theme genre entry, with symmetric(al) circles. Also the WRAP ITSA theme revealer sorta does a wrap-around, too boot. Nuthin too monumental, but certainly serviceable.
Hi-lights and such, at our house:
* The cube-shaped droppings info for WOMBAT. Good to know.
* Not quite as PizzaJoint scrabbly as yesterday's, but that's ok.
* No Xmas refs, today. Forgivable.
* D'Angelo and Doja Cat artists on RCA records. Not to M&A's knowledge. Better RCA clue: {Record label for Elvis and Jefferson Airplane}.
* DIASPORA, REBUTTAL, WOMBAT, SNOOTY, GOBLET.
* Debut puz. Nice premiere.
staff weeject picks: RCA & RPM. Ominously separated by DOOM.
Thanx for the wrappers, Mr. Koski dude. And congratz on yer debut.
Masked & AnonymoUUs
**gruntz**
@Jim in Canada 10:41 - once a term is out in the public, there is little that the originator can do about it. We use the word "Legos" all the time in our house, as do some others in my daily orbit. The Lego corporation has as much control over the use of their word as Xerox does from keeping me from calling copying Xeroxing.
In a way, this may be similar to the issue with anonymous today - he may be right that some refer to the art discussed today as SARGENT PORTRAITS, but this may be a point of reference issue. Purists or art lovers may think that the phrase is perfectly appropriate, but the common, non-art loving community may think it is odd. Purists, and the Lego company, may have a strong idea about how to pluralize Lego, but the general public may think otherwise.
We seem to see this a lot on this blog - we had discussions recently on parsing the letters for salt. Some felt that Na and Cl had to remain in order whereas others were fine with the mixing of all letters. Maybe those where chemistry is a professional interest view what is acceptable different than many others? Hard to say since I do not know the backgrounds of most posters, but I would suspect that acceptance of the answer has a lot to do with one's training, profession, or hobbies
Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota and Utah. Other state names have their origins in indiginous words, but they are not tribe names.
@jberg. I think you are right, and I think I know what the "something going on between them" is. I think he painted her naked and then painted the dress. The stare,the hint of a smile, the line of her thigh, the see-through effect of the sleeves...That stare is definitely saying something.
Mini theme today, Spongy Balls(which is laugh out loud funny on its own) and Dermatological sac(k). But seriously, a cousin of mine was treated for spongy balls. It was rough but he's fine now.
@Mathgent 11:23
From the Bureau of Indian Affairs https://www.indianaffairs.gov/as-ia/opa/online-press-release/origin-names-us-states
Alabama, Iowa, Kansas, Tennessee, and Utah are named after tribes. There are another 25 or so states named after Native American words or phrases
There are also tribes (or other groupings) that share a name with a state, such as the Dakotas and Delaware. However, I cannot find enough information quickly to understand why these did not make the list. Maybe Dakota is the language and not the tribe? It seems as if many of the Delaware Indians refer to themselves as Lenape, and that the name Delaware came from the river near where they originally lived,
I was thinking "Sari" instead of it's...
For the second day in a row, I am tempted to violate my policy of not trying to explain themes. Suffice it to say that this one works and is kinda impressive for a Wednesday.
@Nancy 9:57. I once went to the Met with a friend who stood in front of a huge tapestry hung outside a three-room-exhibition for "the better part of an hour." I left her there, entranced and unmovable, to wander apace through the three rooms of the exhibition. I came back to find her still there -- entranced
I had read exactly this much of your second post today and my mind wanted to fill in the remainder of the sentence as something like: …. and exited another 4 times, and the girl finally says “Tapestry really isn’t that interesting.”
The amusement I’m pointing out is that “To Entrance” could mean “fill someone with wonder and delight.” (as you use it in both instances) or it could mean “come in” in a street-slangy way. Like outside the Grammy’s (or the Grammy as Jim in Canada might have it). “ Hey, don’t go take a pee now, Megan Thee Stallion about to entrance.”
I’m going back over my comments one I’m off opioids and deleting the vast majority.
My favorite posts this morning.
Rex
Lewis (6:56)
bocamp (8:56)
Joseph Michael (11:41)
johnk (12:05)
Trey (12:24)
RPM is not record speed , it is revolutions per minute No way is that clue correct
Nice Ronstadt clip, Rex! Yes, this one was not as good as yesterday's. Few puzzles ever will be, IMO. But it was doable, though I paid no attention to the theme.
I have been asking myself what art has just awed me so much I could not tear myself away, and spent 15 minutes or longer in front of. Two paintings: The first, which I had heard of but never seen, was El Greco's Vista de Toledo. I really wanted to see it at the Prado in Madrid. And was politely told by the guard whom I asked that it was in the Metropolitan Museum in New York! Now I had been there, but only on a day trip from Philadelphia, and probably also when I visited New York at age 13, with my mother. Hadn't seen it. Next time I was in New York, I went, found it, and I can still feel the emotion I felt when I did. I was in total AWE. Still am, and I have made a point of seeing it on subsequent visits.
The other, and the one that blows me away as a long-ago History major, is David's Coronation of Napoleon. That is in the Louvre, and is worth looking at for hours, with the aid of a guidebook that explains the many characters in the painting, including Josephine and many Napoleon family members, and even the omnipresent Talleyrand. The centerpiece is the Pope, brought almost by force to Paris, putting the imperial crown on Napoleon's head. One of the great virtues of David was his brutal honesty. He makes it absolutely clear the Pope hated every minute of the ceremony.
(And, it seems, the Pope did not actually put a crown on Napoleon, but just sat there with his hands in his lap. David painted what he saw, and Napoleon insisted that David re-do the picture, to give the Pope the air of having done something more important than just sitting there. David, who was glad to be Napoleon's court painter, complied.) David, in my opinion, was the greatest painter of his era, even greater than SARGENT was in his time.
@OffTheGrid 1123am Those cadmium pigments are not only unstable, they're toxic/carcinogenic. I often wondered how many oil painters died due (at least in part) to their use. Perhaps @Barbara S can provide some insight. Where has she been, BTW? I hope all is well with her.
@Z 1150am Thanks for the LEGO info - I had a sneaking suspicion (more like an overt certainty) that you would have something to offer on the subject. Because, as you so often say, English.
As for the other link, knock me over with a feather that you cite the Twitter handle "Whores of Yore".
Best part of the puzzle was learning that WOMBATs poop cubes. Makes me, for the first time ever, wonder about an animal’s “ano” to use the Spanish word that often shows up in puzzles pretending to mean “year.” How does the cube form, exactly? It sounds like it has a 3D printer there.
Like many, I solved it as a themeless then looked to see what the theme was post-happy music. Never my favorite kind of solve.
@godfrey
Kind of how one defines speed. The physicists amongst us call it velocity. There are two versions in this example: the velocity wrt the needle (LP) or laser (CD) varies with position. That's the linear velocity. OTOH, is the angular velocity, which is the rotational speed. That's fixed for the LP, but variable for the CD (not by definition, but implementation). The reason is simply that by the time of the CD, it was possible to control disc transports well enough to keep the linear velocity constant, more or less, from edge to edge. Can't do that with the LP. Angular velocity can be expressed as RPM. It is fixed for the LP, but the linear velocity at the needle decreases from outer edge to inner, which is one reason why heavy bass lines at the end of a symphony, for example, generally are poor, since there's less vinyl to absorb that much deflection. CDs don't have that problem, in part because the data stream is at a (more or less) constant speed.
If you have a CD player that's a top loader with glass, you'll see the disc slow down from beginning to end. The laser starts at the inner edge, which must run faster to attain the spec linear velocity at the laser; the disc slows done as the radius increases since each revolution of the disc passes ever more track under the laser.
@godfrey 12:55. Speed is the time rate at which an object is moving along a path. (Britannica.com). Seems like this, applied through the lens of Joaquin’s Dictum, makes this a perfectly good clue.
Old timer,
"brought almost by force". Um, no. Pius VII was broughtby force to Paris.
Just as his predecessor had been. Yep. Pius VI was defeated in battle by French forces led by that narcissistic tyrant Bonapart. He died in exile, a prisoner of the French. Pius VII was also defeated by the French, masde a prisoner and haued of To France remaining there until Napolean was final;ly dfeated.
No, Pius VII was not pleased to be part oif Napolean's theatrics. He's having teh last laugh; he's on the way to canonization.
@Godfrey 12:55
If an LP record spins at 33 1/3 RPM, how is that not a "record speed"?
@godfrey 12:55. I believe the clue was speaking of vinyl records- 33 rpm, 45 rpm, 78 rpm…
I have been doing a prolonged head scratch on today’s theme. The solve itself we t fairly smoothly almost everywhere. Even with MARIMBA a d AKITA for some inexplicable reason, I got well and truly stuck in the extreme SE, but finally the ITSA came through the fog. I also wanted pOints for DOTS, DOTS seeming just too pedestrian for the beauty of the type of impressionist art employing the technique.
That’s a wrap,” seems lime the phrase I have heard and read more often, but I am fine with the constructor’s choice. When I got the reveal though, I have to say that I was sorely disappointed that the circles went with the IT’S A rather thr an WRAP. I wanted the circles ti sol out a type of wrap like , stole, scarf., etc. because of that, the “wrapped” IT’S A did not show itself willingly. And to be (over?) critical, IT’S A is. It itself a wrap, but is WRAPped around the long answers. So, when i finally got it, I was a tad disappointed from a language perspective.
Doesn't mean I didn’t enjoy much of the solve, just that the technical precision of the theme material was a tad “lumpy.”
Well....because it's a dreary, rainy and cold day and I don't want to go out, I decided to try and find out why a WOMBAT has square poop. You can't believe what I found out. But here's the best one:
Evidently, a bunch of scientists who had nothing better to do, decided to solve the conundrum of the century.. In other words....Why the hell does the WOMBAD have square caca. Well....they found a poor little critter that was road kill and did a 10 million dollar autopsy on it because everyone in the world wants to know if they, too, can poop squares....This is what I found:
"The WOMBAT's softer intestinal regions squeeze slowly and mold the final corner of the cube. The final corners of the irregular contractions shape firm, flat sided cubes." Now, if only we could all do that....wouldn't that be some interesting fodder at the cocktail party? Hey, honey...I just did a square.
As you were.
I need a drink.
A hilariously long waste of letters by Rex!
@Frantic Sloth 1:02 - Just atoning for my Dutch Reformed upbringing. 🤣😂🤣 - Seriously, The good doctor explains the Twitter handle as if she’s some sort of expert or something.
The commentary on Lady Agnew reminded me of the thread on Madame X. Amazing that a portrait could have had such an impact, but it does drive home that stories like Britney Spear’s are nothing new.
@Zzz, Nancy etc al yest
This morning on the radio I heard about Oreo 🍷 wine, yikes. You order online and get 2 bottles of wine plus a package of Oreo Thins - since it was "news" rather than an ad the announcer added, "I guess that's so you can compare the taste."
Oh, and in the...[tries to remember exactly, fails] mid-seventies AMOCO was the first credit card I got. They used to send those little charge slips back with the statement. Then they started digitally capturing your signature and the statement was a list of purchases with your (very pixellated) signature next to each one. I drove a lot, lot, lot then, bought a lot of gas, and built up some kind of credit rating and clearly remember getting a Visa card and thinking it was *amazing*.
This train of thought also reminds me that when I lived in NYC from 1978-1980 I had... a CITI card! People who didn't live in a metropolis were basically astounded by the concept.
So now I feel old (BETTER than the alternative 😄)
Enter it into the puzzle and get on with your life.
FWIW
Sargent was gay.
@dgd:
all creatives are. says so in the Bible.
@GILL 356pm Thanks for the update. Furthermore, I knew there was a reason why Etsy needed to be. 😉
@Smith 4:44 - Only while supplies last. Looks like an excuse for a Saturday clue to me.
@dgd - Likely, but not definitively. “Life Long Bachelor” usually makes it likely, but I don’t think there’s any firm evidence of his preferences, just circumstantial conjecture and rumors. I just did a quick look to see if there’s any new scholarship in that area that I missed and I didn’t see anything. And there are also rumors of him having had affairs with women (Lady with a Rose supposedly being of his lover but then she married somebody else so who knows).
@Frantic.....I squealed with laughter. I might even buy one of those little square poops for my granddaughter...She has a delightful sense of humor.....
Easiest Wednesday ever…..
Two easy days in a row thanks to little to no proper names (my nemesis), ? clues, and conversational phrases in quotes. Also a refreshing dearth of woke/preachy answers, just ordinary/common fill. I am surprised that Rex didn't crow over the National Restaurant Association as an alternative clue for NRA.
But then again, tomorrow is Thursday, my highest average time of the week (even over Fri and Sat) for some mental block reason. So I've got that to look forward to.
... and after reading some other comments I realized I didn't even notice the circled squares or use them in any way. But looking at their solution it wouldn't have helped me in the solve as easy at it was on its own.
Guess Rex didn't have his coffee this morning.
Rex is right about this one. Lately the editor has been giving the green light to puzzles that can best be described as cube-shaped droppings. Debuts are not an excuse to publish mediocre stuff. At least the correct name for the constructor appears now.
Wow. Droppings? YOU make a better puzzle. I am still in awe of all constructors who arrive at the NYT.
My husband, a fan of Sargent's paintings, thought that clue/answer was particularly tough. But, I said, quite fair.
I, for one, liked it.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
I just now realized that the link "Post a comment" sounds an awful lot like "eat a sandwich." So there.
I get what OFF is saying, but somehow I didn't dislike this puzzle nearly as intensely as he did. Some playful clues, including in the NW, made for a fun solve. No mention of good longer fill like DIASPORA and REBUTTAL. No single-letter add-ons till we get to TSARNICHOLASI, and by that time the jig was up.
The theme is convoluted, and one does wonder "Why?", but it does work; it delivers its promise. And we do have DOD GAL Gadot. Par.
I take your point LDIW. But in in fact I have made much better puzzles.
STORIED GAL
HER REBUTTAL OF his TITLE went toward
ABATTLE against the BASEST things he'd done:
"ITSA BETTER use when ITSA dart BOARD" -
IDA's PORTRAIT OF TSARNICHOLASI.
--- AIDA AKITAS
Best thing about this puzzle: Lady Agnew of Lochnaw.
Otherwise, IT’S [just] A WRAP.
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