Relative difficulty: Challenging
Word of the Day: ambigram (19A: Kitchen brand whose name is an ambigram) —
: something (such as an image of a written word or phrase) that is intended or able to be oriented in either of two ways for viewing or reading // NOTE: The word was apparently introduced by the author and cognitive scientist Douglas R. Hofstadter (born 1945) in chapter 13 of the book Metamagical Themas: Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern (New York, 1985). (merriam-webster.com)
• • •
Now about the NW corner. Maybe I'll start with -THS. I just ... I ... so ... this is ... *twenty-seven years*! That's how long it's been since -THS has been in the puzzle. It's so, so bad, and much worse than other bad answers because there's no easy way to clue it, so what we get is the Worst answer in the puzzle doubling as one of the toughest answers in the puzzle. Most weak fill you can just blow by. But this one, this one you have to sit with. You are forced to linger. And the thing is, you think the problem is *you*. "Why can't I figure this out?" you wonder, "What is wrong with me?" And *then* you get it, and it's ... -THS. And so now you're (rightly) mad at the puzzle, not yourself. -THS. Just say it out loud a bunch of times. I'm begging constructors—erase it from your wordlists. It's bad enough that we are going to have a wordlist-inspired "UM, NO" epidemic for the next 100 years; don't let -THS sneak into the modern crossword ecosystem like some Maleskan-era* invasive species. Stand firm! Ugh, not happy when I have to spend time on what should be an inconsequential three-letter answer, but -THS is a three-alarmer, so I gotta do what I gotta do. The other issues up here are APAT crossing APLAY—they are bad individually, but together they are a cringe tornado. I also wonder about "THE PALE HORSE," an answer I want to like, but ... that is a pretty obscure Christie title. I can rattle off a dozen or so Christie titles, but that is not one of them (it was apparently made into an BBC mini-series in 2020, but like so much of 2020, I don't remember that). The clue helps a little, but the THE remained recalcitrant for a bit (I had ON A...). I don't think that particular Christie title really rises to the level of crossworthiness, but then I also think "eh, it's gettable and it's kind of colorful, so it's OK." If it hadn't been gummed up in this already icky corner, I probably would've minded its relative obscurity much less. I had no idea who TAMARA was (5D: Actress Taylor of TV's "Bones"), or that there was custard in FRUIT TART (1A: Colorful custardy confection), but those are more *me* problems.
STEPSON before STEPDAD messed me up a bit (48A: Relative by marriage), as did the fact that I couldn't remember ELWOOD's name and only wanted ELROY, which wouldn't fit (43A: One of the Blues Brothers). "LAWD!" was very tough, but I like it (38D: "Heavens!"). Wanted VENUTO before VENETO (57A: Street featured in Fellini's "La Dolce Vita" (that's also 50-Across)) (50A = IN ROME), and PLAYA before PLATA (49D: South America's Rio de la ___). The one answer that baffled me the most was probably GASPS (10A: Sudden inspirations). The misdirection on "inspirations" absolutely froze me. Was not expecting "literal intakes of breath" to be the meaning there. Clever, if ruthless. So this one wobbled a bit, but ultimately held up, I thought. Tough but fair, and pleasingly wide-ranging in its subject matter. A nice way to round out the year. See you in 2022, everyone.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
It's official. Lookie-loos are now firmly ensconced in second place behind the letteral clues. And I have (29D) ARS to thank for that.
ReplyDeleteTrio of horrors? How about:
ARS I guess you could sell this spelling since it is a non-word. Kinda like non-word.
THS This fill is bad enough, but the clue is singular) Editing!!
PPP up the wazoo. Okay, maybe it was just because too much of it was not familiar to me, but geez Louise! It seemed to rear its ugly head at every turn and exactly wherever I got stuck.
Some really nice entries like the intersecting 15s, THEPALEHORSE (Hi, @Nancy!), OBSESSEDOVER, and...BLOCKY? No - get outta here with that poopy word.
This was very challenging for me, but it was a combination of wavelength, PPP from hell to me (gonna regift that), and my ignorance.
Dear Gof! What a concoction of doom!
This all resulted in minimum fun for the Sloth.
🧠🧠🧠
🎉🎉
ReplyDeleteHuge problems in the @Rex NW.
2D: Had eggs instead of ROUX for the sauce ingredient
3D: ohNO instead of UM NO
4D: I don't drink a whole lot of beer or ale, so I had no clue that IPA could be a "double or triple"
5D: Never heard of the "Bones" actress
6D: " " " that Agatha Christie book
7D: Adash before APLAY
9D: WTF
15A: I associate OOM-PAH-PAH with polka, not waltz.
So yeah, I needed a lot of help from Sergey and Larry to bring it home. The rest of the puzzle was a normal Friday.
Polkas are in 2/4. Oom-pah-pah is in 3/4: hence, a waltz.
DeleteThanks for the Paris Is Burning poster, Rex. One of my all-time favorites, despite Dorian Corey's...um...skeleton in the closet. And the tragically ironic scene where Venus speaks of her narrow escape from a murderous attack.
ReplyDeleteThis makes SLAYS a reference more apt than I care to think about.
Also started and ended up in the NW.
Rex, ELrOy is George Jetson's son, so...easily confused with the Blues Brothers. 🤣
I had snake bite and refused to put rattle in because it’s wrong based on my experience. I’ve lived in the Mojave and the mid-Atlantic and the Central Valley of ca and Appalachia, and I saw way less rattle snakes in the Mojave than any of those other places. You can’t believe everything you see in movies!
ReplyDeleteFact.
DeleteFor love I had amore not adore so that gave me amult which I knew was wrong. I did get ths but found that weird
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle presents a lovely portent for the new year and beyond in crosswords. This is Meghan’s second NYT puzzle, her first being a brilliant Tuesday puzzle in September, visually and semantically playing on the three types of geometric angles. And here she’s stepped up to the plate with a lively high-quality end-of-the-weeker. With more than 90 debut constructors this year in the NYT, I believe we can expect – as we got today – much freshness in theme, answer, and clue.
ReplyDeleteProps to Will and company for putting the work together to make this happen, and I’m guessing it takes quite a bit of extra work to workshop with new constructors than with established pros. Props and thank you, team!
Props also to the established pros who have also helped new solvers. Meghan said in her comments after her first puzzle that she was mentored by Caitlin Reid and Sid Sivakumar.
As for today’s puzzle, it indeed had freshness with five lovely NYT debut answers: BLOCKY, OBSESSED OVER, REAR TIRES, RUB ON, and THE PALE HORSE. I liked the crossing of the two famed foreign streets, and another crossing – ROUX and TUNA MELT – that highlighted the breadth of cuisine.
In the grid, an A-train rumbled along: ERICA, TAMARA, PLATA, ERA, ANNA LEICA, and PETA. Speaking of PETA, Meghan went with a lovely math clue over the usual kind-to-animals group clue, and speaking of the latter, here is my favorite PETA clue ever, by Johanna Fenimore, who used to comment regularly here: [Org. that loves fur … but not on humans].
Thank you, Meghan, for a sweet solve. IMO you’ve got that special knack, and please, come back soon!
Doesn't 'slays' come from old time comedy? The comic really slayed that audience.
ReplyDeleteYou’re right. This term has been around since Vaudeville.
DeleteThx Meghan; you got all my synapses firing on this one! :)
ReplyDeleteTough.
Almost above my pay grade (esp the NW), but managed to reach the finish line without collapsing. lol
Had 'oh no' before FOTO (finally realized there was no '!' in the clue).
The NW was blank for a long, long time. FRUIT TART finally showed up to save the game.
This is the kind of bATTLE I really enjoy, esp. with fair crosses to make it doable.
@Barbara S. 👍 for latest 0's
@okanaganer (2:10 PM yd)
The dbyd word you missed appeared on the SB last year. It's on my list; even so, it was the last word I got.
___
yd 0*
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
I am as obsessed with the Spelling Bee as some of you are but don't understand the abbreviations you use here. I'd love to know, though. Could you translate just once for us wannabes?
DeleteI had a lot of the same issues as Rex but lean more negative as a whole. He mentions most of the garbage - but I’ll add A PAT and the ridiculous plurals of ELSAS (please enough of her already) and WOMANS. Some real ugly stuff here.
ReplyDeleteI did like OOMPAHPAH, OBSESSED OVER and ATTENUATE and they fill up a lot of real estate. Clue for REAR TIRES was solid.
My Umbrian born grandmother had a rule in which she never mixed cheese and fish - I continue to abide by it. My wife however orders TUNA MELTS every chance she gets and I explain the error of her ways every time.
Teetering on the not so hot line today.
That’s a good rule from your grandmother, but I feel a tuna melt in a diner is like a different universe
DeleteTHX 4 THE THS!
ReplyDeleteWe use fiveths all the time in our house. Along with twoths and threeths. It’s one of those family oddities, like scrambled eggs and French fries for dinner, or pronouncing the p in ‘pneumonia’.
ReplyDeleteInteresting mix of the interesting (ATTENUATE, VIM, LATENT), the dull (REAR TIRES, FRUIT TART, AIM AT), and the terrible (ADULTS crossing ELSAS, APAT, ARS). Overall, not really to my taste but I’m sure others will like it.
BEER will make you a PEER, you bet.
My primary quibble is that a roux isn't really an ingredient for a mother sauce. Flour and fat are used to create a roux, and recipes I've seen call for those ingredients.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't say "ingredient " but "component " Ah there's the rub.
DeleteCan we talk about that UMNO/OOMPAHPAH crossing? I had UHNO/OOHPAHPAH and stared at the puzzle for about five minutes trying to find my error. Finally realized it was probably where two fake words crossed and ran the alphabet.
ReplyDeleteMee too! I came here for a cathartic rant about that cross, and was disappointed
DeleteI don't know the Christie book, but I do know Katherine Anne Porter's Pale Horse Pale Rider and figured they were both from the same Bible passage. A beautiful puzzle to end this not-so-beautiful year. Cheers to all.
ReplyDeleteMiddle east was last for me. I had ELWOOD, I was so sure it was ELWOOD (for some reason JAKE comes to mind much more readily), but that gave --WD as the vertical cross, and LAWD? Seriously? So I had to take out ELWOOD for a while until I finally got -LIDE for the completion of LETSTHINGSS, and that was such a relief. I mean, I'm of an age where regular nouns, not just propers, are becoming elusive enough that even gimmes like that can feel less secure than they should, but Jake and ELWOOD? I SO didn't want to have lost that synapse. Now it's back securely in place. Phew.
ReplyDeleteRex being ill-tempered as always, mostly about stuff that just feels like standard XW misdirection, like THS, which didn't really phase me that much.
I appreciate the Piers Anthony reference, tho. Prolific and uneven as Anthony is, he SLAYS it every once in a while and I don't think I've read that one. Cover looks like fun. When I used to teach Science Fiction, "Judge a book by its cover" was one of my standard paper topic suggestions. Students rarely took me up on it, alas.
THS, ARS and LAWD were forbidden to go into the bar. BLOCKY, the bartender said "When IN ROME, you gotta toss out all the OOMPAHPAH you have...no IPA or BEER allowed."
ReplyDeleteBut did you like this? you ask. I've like better. I lost interest several times. I still don't know what THS means. Thyroid Stimulating Hormone? And LAWD...good gravy. Who says that? Don't even let me get started on ADULTS.
I had trouble everywhere. I thought I've read every Agatha book but I never heard of THE PALE HORSE. My sudden inspirations aren't GASPS. I GASP when someone bends over and lets out gas. So people actually had bumper stickers that said A WOMANS place is in the House......?
If I ever have the courage to make a crossword, I will do everything in my power to not fill my puzzle with a ton of names, silly words that nobody uses and a ton of PPP.
Happy New Year. Harrumph.
SouthsideJ is gonna love 9d.
ReplyDeleteFRUITTART is only nominally a custardy treat. A baked treat, a flaky crust treat, a fresh treat, an individual treat. They do not even always have custard in.
ReplyDeleteSecond of all, apart from the horribleness THS on its own, the clue is singular. So I struggled over that repeatedly, looked at it, went away, came back, racked my brain, had another cup of tea, and eventually just stuck that S in even though it hurt.
Finally, I still have no idea what ARS is. Got it by the acrosses, but can somebody please explain the clue to me?
There are three 'R's in 'Horror' -- just say 'ARS' aloud to get the answer.
Deleteand the most common is colorful either - apple tart
DeleteWow - it’s no secret that the NYT is very gunk-friendly, but they really outdid themselves today - THS, MEAD, APAT, ARS, LAWD, PLATA, VIAVENETO, NUI, LEICA, OXO, IDNO, TAMARA, PETA . . . even BLOCKY ! ! ! Omg - it’s like the all-star game of gunk. Those things aren’t even close to being real words. Oh, well - just hold your nose and do the best that you can I suppose. It doesn’t make for a very enjoyable solving experience though.
ReplyDeletePersonally, I find it much more enjoyable when the difficulty level is increased by creative cluing rather than by amping up the level of esoterica (or simply making stuff up). To each his/her/their/its own. Good riddance to this one.
Happy New Year's Eve. Never got into a flow, but a fair Friday. @Irene's comment caused me to recall that Katherine Anne Porter was also a survivor of the 1918 flu epidemic. The novella Pale Horse, Pale Rider is based on that experience.
ReplyDeletehttps://lithub.com/heres-katherine-anne-porter-describing-how-she-resisted-death-during-the-spanish-flu-pandemic-of-1918/
I had TYS before THS. I just couldn't accept that OOM PAH PAH was onomatopeia for waltz. OOM PAH PAH is what you expect at Oktoberfest. Perhaps those bands play waltzes some of the time, but 2/4 time and polkas are more of what I expect. I also question ROUX. It isn't an ingredient; it is made with flour and butter or the like.
ReplyDeleteYes! OOM PAH PAH is onomatopeia for the SOUND a TUBA makes. Waltzers dance to music, but WALTZ does not make a SOUND.
Delete@Allison - I would vote to give ROUX a pass on this one. In many professional kitchens, the ROUX is made ahead of time and used as an ingredient (similar to chicken stock, for example). It saves the line chefs time as they can just add in the ROUX at the last minute when they are finishing the sauce. I know you characterized your comment a quibble and I agree, it just seems like it is close enough for CrossWorld (especially with all of the other WoE stuff included in today’s grid - ROUX actually looks right at home by comparison, lol).
ReplyDeleteDarn. DNF on rub in instead of rub on. For some reason, prise seemed like a legitimate possible crossing to me. Frustrating way to break my (very short) streak.
ReplyDeleteNo clue on the ars answer for trio of horrors. Some help please?
NW was hard for me because TAMARA Taylor wouldn’t let me have my TUNA MELT, especially with Death on a Pale Horse. Like Rex, I remembered the Piers Anthony, not the Agatha Christie. THS was one of my first thoughts, but I couldn’t make it work with the mess I had already made.
ReplyDeleteI hate “Modern lingo” and I hate “Adulting” (my wife prefers the term “not living like idiots”) and I chuckled thinking “a ‘modern lingo’ clue is just the insult that this answer deserves.
56A irked me, because if you’re shopping for a LEICA, Canon isn’t even worthy of consideration. It’s like calling Nestle a Lindt competitor. Sony, with its Zeiss optics, might be, though.
Seemed extremely tough more OR LESS but looking back at it now, I wonder why. Most trouble in the NW and SE corners. I would never describe a FRUIT TART as custardy, OOMPAHPAH just didn’t come to me for a waltz sound, and I wanted a PLATE in 17A. The other end was a little EASIER and I was ABLE to get REAR TIRES right off but it wasn’t enough to overcome my ignorance of Italian streets.
ReplyDeleteRe cluing, I thought 10A was a stretch. GASPS are often the result of sudden inspirations but a synonym? UM, NO. And I’m beginning to hate the term “modern lingo” but when IN ROME ….
Wishing a happy and safe New Year’s Eve to all you scintillating ADULTS who make up this eclectic community. If you’re driving to a TACKY party tonight, please stay SOBER. I have come to ADORE your daily witticisms and would hate to be deprived of the pleasure of your company in 2022.
I second that thought. The pleasure of the blog is the witicism of those who routinely post.
DeleteRATTLESNAKE BITE was my first entry (as I was working the NW downs, and fanned on everything else). Without this gimme, the puz would've been tougher than tough.
ReplyDeleteHad a look at Christie's and Anthony's PALE HORSEs on Goodreads; gonna pass on those rides.
Chuckled at self after entering TYS, forgetting the 'ies' rule; having the right idea, THS was an easy replacement. Alas, nothing else in the NW came easily.
Happy New Year's Eve! 🥳
Auld Lang Syne ~ The Choral Scholars of University College Dublin
___
td 0
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
I'm glad Rex found this challenging, as did I. But otherwise, I can't say I agree with him. Call me weird, but I loved THS. It made me giggle once I could get past “teen” not fitting.
ReplyDeleteKealoa with RUB_N at 18A. And I guessed wrong, with PRint before PROSE. I more or less needed OR LESS to fix that (plus no TRts had rings, as far as I knew.)
gAWD before LAWD. GenX before XERS. And I was really hoping 29D would turn out to be RRR rather than ARS. I wasn’t even sure how to “spell” ARS.
I liked this crunchy Friday puzzle, definitely a good way to end the year. Thanks, Meghan Morris!
The Rex haterade about ADULTS always cracks me up. The first time I heard the oldest use it I thought “perfect term.” Thanks to a burst cold water line in the wall behind my washer I’ve been doing far far far too much ADULTing all week.
ReplyDeleteNeeding to go to Agatha Christie to make the THE work turned me a whiter shade of PALE. You know the PPP reference is obscure when the clue writer adds a biblical PPP reference to make it accessible. Since the clue has two Pop Culture references should this count as two PPP answers?
@Frantic Sloth - I had the same thought so counted it up and it’s not actually all the
at bad, 17 of 72. But, and this is a big but and I cannot lie, there is one area that is PPP dense. The SW corner has 26 squares and 19 of them have a PPP letter in at least one direction. Oof.
Anyone else thinking Mr. Mom should be retired as a Teri GARR clue? It’s from 1983, it’s hardly her biggest role (her IMDB page says she’s known for Close Encounters, Tootsie, Young Frankenstein, and After Hours) and you could even go “Phoebe Abbott’s mom” since Friends is still being streamed a lot/a ton. I guess Mr. Mom is in the clue hopper as a change up from the more common Tootsie clue, but if it never were used again I wouldn’t mind.
Finally, I was less bothered by THS than by all the articles, definite and indefinite. Shortz should set the maximum number of articles allowed in puzzles at one a month. Three (well two plus A PAT which the clue saved) in one puzzle means we shouldn’t see another article until March.
So we have onomatopoeia, ambigram, and eponym. See how smart the constructor is !! Where is @LMS when we need her ?
ReplyDeleteLoved Shaq billed as a TV talking head. And Joe Dimaggio is famous as Mr. Coffee.
What's with the Mays/MVP deal.
Actually I was enjoying the challenge until I got to that "idno" / "Lawd" area. I won't even write what I think of that.
And I just realized that I am going to miss the Michigan / Georgia game because of another stupid New Years Eve party.
Um...bye.
BTW - You all probably have figured this out by now, but nobody has said this explicitly, yet. The “or” in the clue for 9D is how we know it is THS and not TyS. TYS is not an ending for “four” or “six” so it would have to be “and” in the clue to show that we were looking for two TY endings, TYS. But THS is an ending for “four” and for “six” (cut a pie into fourTHS) so we were looking for a singular example of an ending that could be used for two of the words, but not the third example.
ReplyDeleteTough, but ultimately relatively easy. Yes, NW corner was toughest. Yes, THS is less-than-ideal. But ROUX and (therefore) OXO were gimmes. UMNO was either that or UHNO, or perhaps EHNO, but anyway the __NO was a gimme. Had SEC before IPA (Triple Sec). And both APLAY and RATTLESNAKE were gettable. Thus FOTO fell and TUNAMELTS and OOMPAHPAH at which point THS drops and finally FRUITTART. All done in 21 minutes which is quick for me. Good puzzle. Well done Meghan. Surprised that being female didn't insulate you from the slings and arrows of Rex's outrageous animosity.
ReplyDeleteHey Rex. I'm 73. My Mom used "slay" or "slays me" frequently. I don't think she was into culturally appropriating "Black/queer" subculture.
ReplyDeleteSame here, and I am even older.
Delete@Roger … the word horrors has 3 Rs, the world ARS is being used as a phonetic spelling for Rs.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDelete@All (if not answered 127 times already) - ARS stands for the spoken-out sound of the Letter R. Like BEE for B. There are three R's in horrors. A Trio of ARS.
Roughish puz here. Was stuck in each section, finally had to break down and Goog for Death's horse. So, that helped me finish, but still not calling this a DNF, as the lookup was basically another clue, not a direct help. If that makes sense. 😁
I did get a good chuckle out of Death's horse's name. Ready? Binky! Who can be scared of a horse named Binky? Seems to elicit an "Aww, how cute!" rather than a "AAAAAH! Death's horse!" It should be named Slaughter, or something ominous.
I also found out Death's horse is white, whereas Plague's horse is Pale. Wrong clue?
As iffy as BLOCKY is, it got me into Rex's mini-puz SW corner. My beef down there is LEICA. What in tarhooties is that? Never heard the name. Wanted Xerox first.
Overall, a good brain-stretching FriPuz.
If I am in France eating some sauce at a friend's house... Would it be ROO RUE ROUX? 🤪😂🤢 YMMV on that one!
Don't overdo your celebrations tonight! Wanna see y'all in 2022.
yd -4, should'ves 2
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Re ARS: There are three R’s in hoRRoRs. Those types of clues appear with some frequency.
ReplyDeleteWine before Roux. Gas(P) took forever (sensed but refused to believe). (Menachem) Begin before Barak. Amore before Adore. Rub In before On. And, like @Conrad, thinking of Oom-Pah-Pah relating to Polkas (and tubas). Hung onto Vrb. over Var. for a while.
ReplyDeleteWas very into Agatha Christie last year and Amazon never once suggested The Pale Horse.
Agree with @Pamela, comedians have used Slay for a loong time. Shecky Greene years.
Liked Oxo because I knew it but learned what an Ambigram is. Liked Rapa Nui because I knew it but don't know why. Here's this, " Rapa Nui (“Great Rapa”) or Te Pito o te Henua (“Navel of the World”) …" Oh wait, it includes Easter Island, land of those giant stone heads and there was a movie about it in the '90s.
So, I may not know my Book of Revelation all that well, but, boy, do I know my Agatha Christie! The PALE HORSE part popped into my head immediately -- well, maybe not immediately since nothing is all that immediate when you reach my age -- but quite quickly. Now it was just a question of what came before the PALE HORSE.
ReplyDeleteRide a PALE HORSE?
Behold a PALE HORSE?
Upon a PALE HORSE?
If I'd counted the # of letters remaining, I would have gotten THE PALE HORSE immediately too -- but I was much too stubborn for that. I remembered the book title as being more colorful than just THE PALE HORSE. Agatha had such a wonderful way with titles that rested on familiar quotations. No one was better at it.
I was already predisposed to like this Christie-dependent puzzle and in fact I loved it. It was just crunchy enough to have me struggling in certain places: I saw hEART where REARTIRES goes (62A) and wondered what couple was making out in the back seat. I hesitated between PLATA and PLAYA at 49D. I always want to spell the drink as MEDE and not MEAD -- no idea why. I didn't know ANNA so LAWD gave me a lot of trouble.
Other than UM NO -- I just hate that kind of arbitrary answer -- I thought this was a terrific puzzle and a terrifically entertaining one. I was sorry when it was over.
ROUX naysayers, permit me to differ: you make a ROUX first, then you make the sauce from that base. It is a constituent part, or ingredient, of the sauce.
ReplyDelete@Rex's conclusion on THS "returning only spectrally, once every generation or so" is a nice turn of phrase to conclude the year. I have the strong SENSE that THS is nearby much more often, when the wind changes unexpectedly, etc. Say what you will -- you couldn't have the FRUIT TART - OOM PAH PAH - TUNA MELTS triple stack without it.
Bravo, THS -- don't wait so long to come back. Every New Year's Eve, we'll put a candle in the window for you.
This I know. I now have a true goal fo4 2022. Get this, it’s getting “this” into as many puzzles as possible.
ReplyDeleteMostly easy-medium except for, like @Rex and many of you, the NW which was very tough so mediumish over all.
ReplyDeleteI needed crosses to remember if it was GARR or POLO in “Mr. Mom”. If you haven’t seen or read something in ten years you can rewatch/read it like it was almost new. (I have long term memory data that supports this). I’m currently doing that with “The Sopranos” and “30 Rock” and enjoying them even more the second time around.
Solid with some nice 15s, liked it.
@Z 948am I see your point, but would it have killed them to clue it as endings?? THS is still a plural ending.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year to one and all. Stay safe!
@Frantic, you're putting way too much thought into this. Wether the ending makes something plural or singular it's still just an ending.
DeleteI started with WOMANS so basically solved this one inside out, with a lot of staring at the NW as a finale, like many of us. Finally the 1-2-3 of OOMPAHPAH arrived, and I filled in the missing spaces while chortling in my glee.
ReplyDeleteKnew the "Death's mount" reference and had PALEHORSE almost instantly, but what would precede it? Pleas don't be THE, I was thinking, but there it was anyway. Oh LAWD.
Agree with @kitshef that BEER will make you a PEER (hey-we've got IPA too) but I think what you'll have is not a Rio de la Plata but a Rio del ORO.
Nice tough Friday, MM. My Merriment was enhanced by the challenge, for which thanks.
Happy New Year to all worthy cruciverbalists out there, and let's hope 2022 is an improvement and not just a damn variant.
Harold Wentworth & Stuart Flexner, Dictionary of American Slang, first edition (1960) reports instances of slay in a similar entertainment sense going back to 1930 or so:
ReplyDeleteslay v.t. To make a strongly favorable impression on; to win the affection or approval of, esp. by means of superior charm, humor, etc.; to "kill," esp. to cause a person to lose control of his emotions, usu. through laughter. 1938: "Really, A.P., pardon me, this will slay you." H[eywood Hale] Broun in New Repub[lic], Sept. 21 185/2. 1943: "The boys who slay me are the ones who have set pieces to recite when the answer the phone." H. A[llen] Smith, Putty Knife, 247. Very common since c1930 ….. From The Honeymooners c 1956 Alice: I'll go fix my lipstick. I won't be gone long, Killer. I call you "Killer" 'cause you slay me.
Ralph : And I'm calling Bellevue 'cause you're nuts!
Terrific way to close out 2021! Great puzzle Meghan. Struggled in the NW but actually finished in the SW.... struggled with LEICA (so many other more modern options like Nikon and Ricoh). Also didn't like pit-APAT or "XRAYLAB". I'm a doctor, and that is kind of a common dept name, but not a thing per-se.
ReplyDeleteLoved the long answers--RATTLESNAKEBITE, THEPALEHORSE, OBSESSEDOVER, all terrific. Thanks! Took us 25 minutes, my son and I. Happy 2022 to all. --Rick
Lots of resistance, but great to feel an accomplishment in finishing, and everything checked out. Only side-eyes went to FOTO and IDNO. It was convenient that NUI was close to WOE:)
ReplyDeleteTrouble in NW broke open when I asked my wife about French sauces. "lait" was plausible enough, so her reminding me about ROUX did the trick! Getting into the NW with novel and actress did make that section tough.
@Conrad - Oom pah pah seems a little marching band-ish rather than elegant waltz-ish, so I resisted that also, but makes sense. (A Polka is not in 3/4 time, so wouldn't work there)
Rex could have just written the end of his 2nd paragraph and ended there: but those are more *me* problems.
I'm sure I'll be in the minority, but enjoyed figuring out "THS"
Acase before APLAY. I don't think that A- is the same configuration as A- in APAT.
@Will - agreed about the snakes; I almost stepped on one 40 miles outside of NYC.
@Unknown 8:47 - I vote for the crossing at square 58 to be SouthsideJ's main malaise.
@Alison - you are correct about ROUX, of course. However, I think it is fair to call it an ingredient. If, for instance, you asked for curry in a recipe, you wouldn't spell out every single spice used to make it.
Wow, this was a toughie for me although I somehow stumbled into completion once I got my brain to the pix, pics, FOTOS relationship to FOTOS. I DO say “did you take any pics” but I never say SNAPS.
ReplyDelete@Will, the ONLY time I have seen a rattlesnake was hiking/backpacking on a two mile stretch in the Grand Canyon. I was in my early 20s and was thinking “Death Valley Day” during the hike. The sucker was luckily curled up and asleep beneath a rock overhang that we were able to give wide berth to. So yes, rattlesnake as a desert danger came to my mind right away. While BITE is obvious in retrospect I thought it might be a type of rattlesnake.
I also got screwed up on “custardy treat” because that evoked more of a pudding/parfait/trifle type concoction to me. I guess it’s fair to say I found the NW problematic.
I don’t know. I had to read what Rex said twice about SLAYS as potential cultural (mis)appropriation. Pretty such I’ve heard that term my whole life and I’m no spring chicken. That’s when I think he just feels the need to pad the comment section just a little more but he DID throw some praise to the puzzle in the beginning.
All in all the puzzle provided my brain cells some good exercise!
Really enjoyed this one, despite the tight corners @Rex points out.
ReplyDelete@will - we live in Southern California and rattlers are a real worry. Due to the more temperate daytime temps, they are out during prime hiking times. Our 3-year-old black Lab was died after being bitten by a rattler snake none of us even saw. So yeah, rattlers are a hiking danger.
Rex apparently wants Friday puzzles to be easy. I want them to be hard, and this one obliged. I struggled with this one -- only two writeovers (PLATe and ohNO), but lots of blank space as I thrashed around looking for traction. Thank God for ROUX, since I wasn't sure what an ambigram was. (And ROUX is clued as a "component," not an "ingredient," for all you quibblers.)
ReplyDeleteIt had to be ADULTS, but 'modern lingo?' I haven't heard or seen the word used that way for a couple of decades.
@Z and others -- the other reason it can't be Tys, Ties, or Ty is that you can't add any of those endings to four, only to for.
@Will, I've seen a total of two rattlesnakes in the wild, and each was about 10 miles from my home in Boston. But I imagine you can find them in the desert, as well.
Now about OOMPAHPAH - ugh. Sure, the syllables capture the waltz rhythm, but so do many other random syllables. I think one would be more likely to say DUM-dee-dee, for example. That was one tough corner.
Maybe appropriate to have BEER, IPA, VINO and MEAD all together on NY Eve, but at least SOBER is there to keep us sots and boozehounds from going too far tonight. Between omicron and my tendency to fall asleep by 11 at the latest, there will be no revelry here tonight. Just a quiet game night, but VINO will be there.
ReplyDeleteI was sure the Blues Brother was ELmont and that held me up a long time in that section. As with everyone, the NW was very tough but I liked it when I finally got it, including the much-maligned THS. Nice clue on XRAY LABS and clever misdirection on the clue for REAR TIRES.
Happy New Year to all.
The cluing for FRUIT TART as "colorful custardy confection" was written by someone who doesn't bake desserts (or eat them, either, apparently). I guess technically a Fruit Tart is colorful, has custard, and is a confection, but it's the weirdest way to describe one I can imagine. And I don't think the clue is supposed to be misleading. It's just written by someone who fell in love with alliteration and looked up a picture of a fruit tart rather than cooked or ate one.
ReplyDeleteRex really didn't like THS but I think ARS as clued is much, much worse.
Surely 28a will have made NYers of a certain generation think of
ReplyDeleteDennis Elsas, longtime DJ on WNEW-FM.
@Son Volt – the only exception to the no-cheese-with-fish rule is anchovies, because, you know, anchovy pizza. There was an Italian restaurant I used to go to where they refused to grate fresh Parmigiano Reggiano onto any pasta or risotto that included fish or seafood. It even said NO CHEESE! on the menu next to those items.
How could Rex possibly know how many times a word has been used by Muleska?
ReplyDeleteThere's at least one website where you can find every instance of a word I'm the NYT crossword, with the clues, going back to the 1940s (I think).
DeleteRex’s pretty much mirrored my own experience of this one. Some good, challenging fun marred by some real dreck. Surprised there wasn’t more outcry over XERS. Is that a thing we’re calling them (us) now? Are YERS a thing now, too? LAWD…
ReplyDeleteAnon @ 8:36
ReplyDeleteI also finished with UHNO/OOHPAHPAH & came here for a cathartic rant about that cross (my first thought for a waltz was something more like dum-dah-dah), but two nonsense sounds crossing at a letter where either one of two would fit seems pretty bad.
Richardf8 @ 9:20
I really resisted putting in LEICA, I've owned both a Canon & a couple of of Leicas, and do not at all consider them competitors.
Unknown @ 10:37
Leica is still in business & makes really expensive, high quality digital cameras. Mine are old 50s era rangefinders, and I think they are still better known for those, but they do still exist as a modern company.
UM, NO. That pretty much sums up my response to this puzzle which seemed like one Proper Noun after another Proper Noun interspersed with Unwords like APAT, ARS, LAWD, and THS. The latter is my nomination for Worst Crossword Answer of 2021. Congratulations, THS. It’s December 31, and you just made it under the wire.
ReplyDeleteIt’s not to say that the puzzle didn’t have some highlights. I liked the clues for GASPS, BEER, and IN ROME, for example, and the grid spanners LETS THINGS SLIDE and RATTLESNAKE BITE. But UM, NO. I didn’t enjoy the solve overall and feel like I need an aspirin now that I’m finally done with it.
And what’s with the TUNA MELTS? When I go to a diner, my classic order is a RUBON sandwich.
Nobody OOMPAHPAHed like Georgia Brown:
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/LW8Ja6bXU0k
As Nancy said, "terrifically entertaining." Lively fill, smart cluing, crunchy, learned something (ambigram -- you can turn OXO upside down).
ReplyDeleteI looked it up. In the Bible, Death, one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, rode in on a pale horse. I know about the Four Horsemen not from the Bible but from the immortal lead by the sportswriter Grantland Rice. He was writing about the Notre Dame backfield when they beat Army in 1924. "Outlined against a blue, gray October sky the Four Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden."
.
@SouthsideJohnny. I'm generally in agreement with you that a crossword should, ideally, cross WORDS, not acronyms or names or partials etc. etc. But not understanding why MEAD makes your hit list today. Absolutely a word, and (I think) not a particularly obscure one. I can think of three mead brewers within a fifteen-minute drive of my house. (With normal traffic.)
ReplyDeleteOn Google Engram it performs about the same as 'attenuate', and well ahead of 'roux' or 'esoterica'.
Pick some up today and make it your New Year drink. It's good stuff.
AR, AR, AR! Kinda SENSE that’s what 2021 has been IRL. Glad to have spent many hours in Crossworld as partial compensation. Grids and commentariat have truly served as counterbalance to the ongoing Covid-19’s coverage and Meghan’s puzzle today is a diversion I ADORE. FEW GASPS & a BLOT here and there as OFL noted, but one which LETS THINGS SLIDE until it’s time for the Sun Bowl and a coffee refill.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes to all for a new and improved year👶
Can someone explain what 'var' means in this context? How is it a dictionary abbreviation?
ReplyDeleteOFL is so wrong about SLAY as has already been noted (I always get hear too late to be first with anything. whine). but... there must be a reason he immediately jumped to Black/queer association and theft by us White Folk. I don't know what that is. anyone?
ReplyDeleteAn X marked the spot where I got in and got out: first in was OXO x ROUX; last was XERS x XRAY LAB. In between was a pleasurable struggle, probing here, guessing there, enjoying finally seeing through the many opaque (to me) clues.
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: double or triple "sec." daB ON. Help from previous puzzles: ADULTS. No idea: PETA, TAMARA, THE PALE HORSE.
The way I arrived at 38 D “Heavens!” was with this much already filled in: _ AW _. I laughed aloud and concluded that Shortz actually does read Rex until I concluded that rAWr wasn’t going to be correct.
ReplyDeleteI’m not sure what we’ll do for NYE tonight, but we’ll surely go to the TATAMI room TAMARA. I asked Mrs. EGS what I did for New Years Eve last year, but all she could remember was that ATTENUATE. It was probably a pastry, as I generally LEICA TACKY FRUITTART.
I loved this puzzle and would second everything that @Nancy said about it. Thank you so much, Meghan Morris for a wonderful end to a not-so-wonderful year.
This played out like a normal FriPuz rodeo at our house … not too hard, not too easy. The NW was indeed -- as @RP said -- the hardest part, altho the hardest innard parts of it for m&e was the TAMARA and IPA parts. However, the magnificent THS beast does rate some sort of recognition (even tho I actually figured it out pretty early) ...
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick: THS. Primo, desperate feel to it. It's an AR! [As in: One of them horror bits.] Some might rate it an UMNO, but I thought it was kinda cute, in a raised-by-wolves sorta way.
Better clue for ARS: {Hars from wise guys with no heads??}.
Better clue for THS: … um no. Its clue was epic great, as is.
fave stuff: RATTLESNAKEBITE. LETSTHINGSSLIDE. XRAYLAB (cool clue). "Ambigram".
I'd sit and opine longer, but my REARTIRES.
Thanx for the themeless fun, Ms. Morris darlin. Good, solid, funky job.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
part of the M&A national anthem:
**gruntz**
Was hoping to call for "American Renaissance Society" as the erudite alternative, but, alas, while it does exist, its name is "Renaissance Society of America". So near, yet so far. Bring me my flagon of mead!
ReplyDeleteConfidently wrote in ONAPALEHORSE for the Agatha Christie title, since I've never heard of the novel but have heard the expression "On A Pale Horse" before. Also never heard of Pit-APAT (is it pit-a-pat? If so, the clue should've been Pit-_- to indicate a double hyphen). Seen plenty of Patty Melts in various diners across the country but haven't seen a TUNA MELT. Does the word 'classic' in the clue mean discontinued, like calling an Edsel a 'classic' car? Still not sure how GASPS can be 'Sudden inspirations,' since I think inhalations is correct if the clue is indicating sudden intakes of breath. Is there some esoteric form of "respiration" that can be called inspiration? Maybe. Hopefully.
ReplyDeleteLoved the answer for 30 Across; never seen "Beer" me in the NYTXW before. Great clue for New Year's Eve and a phrase I'm sure will be heard across the country as the majority of college football watchers are cheering on Cincinnati and Michigan later today.
As a former tuba player, I got OOMPAHPAH right off the bat :)
ReplyDeleteCheated, alas! For TAMARA, without whom I never could have solved that pesky corner
ReplyDeleteWhat broke the rest of the puzzle open for me was THE PALE HORSE. I have most of the Christie books, and this is by far the best that does not feature Miss Marple. Way better than the Poirot books, too. THE PALE HORSE is well worth finding and reading. It does feature Agatha's alter ego, Ariadne Oliver, but she does not tell the story, though she helps with the solution.
RATTLESNAKE BITE took a while to get, but without it I could not have easily done the bottom half of the puzzle. Though if you have been to Rome, you surely know the VIA VENETO, which is the heart of what many like to call "The English Ghetto". The giant old Excelsior Hotel is there, and any number of upscale shops catering to English speakers. My last trip, a daughter and I stayed in a less prestigious, but uber-comfortable hotel, down the hill from the Spanish Steps, near what once was Rome's main drag, the Corso. Best location ever, as pretty much everything worth seeing is within a half-hour's walk, including St Peter's and the Pantheon and the ruins of the forum. I did go up the steps a few times, partly in search of the best Negroni in Rome, which turned out to be in a famous place on the VIA VENETO.
Agree with the challenging assessment from @RP (time about 50% above Friday average) but IMO it was all for the good. I even liked THS, with its riddle-like clue. Same for ARS. Thought the clue for GASPS was brilliant. Didn’t know what an ambigram was, but glad I do now, and even without a look-up was able to infer OXO (one of my favorite brands), which led quickly to ROUX, another great short answer and clue combo (much nicer than the eggs or milk I’d been considering). OFLs cultural appropriation rant about SLAYS seemed completely off-base to me.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of WOMANS place, while I haven’t been counting, it seems as though the number of female constructors in 2021, especially for late-week puzzles, was up considerably from past years. And there seems to have been a coincident overall uptick in quality. (The relatively large number of recent debuts noted by @Lewis today no doubt has relevance here.) So kudos to those who have been pressing for this, including of course @Rex, and also of course WS. No way of knowing if it reflected a change in Will’s judging practices, or increased interest among and submissions from constructors who are women, but again it’s all for the good.
And speaking of ADULTS, verbifying nouns is now a long-accepted practice, and the millennial generation clearly created a need for this one, given that so much of their time and effort through their twenties and beyond seems to be expended on pursuits that can hardly be classified as adult (see—it’s an adjective too!). My daughter will turn 25 in a month. She is a college graduate who excels at a very respectable full-time well-paying job, and takes good care of her health and her finances. But she continues to live with me and my wife, and is personally responsible only for herself and her dog. She seems to spend most of her discretionary time watching podcasts and binging on TV series. Part of this is clearly pandemic related. (I feel like Covid has reinforced some of the very tendencies that were already problematic in her generation.) On the other hand, consider that when my wife’s mother was my daughter’s age, she was raising FIVE children…
ReplyDelete@JD, @GILL and @Bocamp: If you've missed Christie's THE PALE HORSE, you haven't missed much. It's out of her bottom drawer, as I remember. I remember nothing about it other than that it was bad. I just checked the dates and it seems she was 70 when she wrote it. All her real clunkers come after age 70: "Sleeping Murder"; "Elephants Can Remember" and the godawful, completely unreadable "Postern of Fate". The archives of The Mystery Guild are riddled with my negative reader's reports on those and other clunkers. A tip to the wise: other than "Curtain", stick to the books she wrote prior to 1960.
"Curtain" is a masterpiece though -- and [supposedly] it was the last book she wrote. Only it wasn't. She wrote it in her prime and then her British publisher and Dodd Mead in NY kept a copy in their respective vaults for decades. It was to be published posthumously. Maybe three days after she died, I got a phone call from the Rights Director at Dodd Mead, who I was very friendly with. "I'm sending you a manuscript by special messenger," he said. "Eyes only. Don't let anyone else see it!!!"
"Marie has to see it," I said. She was my boss at the Literary Guild and had run Mystery Guild before me.
"Of course. Marie can see it. But no one else!"
"Curtain" was, as I say, a Christie tour de force and one of the most exciting days of my time at the Literary Guild. OTOH, the day I read THE PALE HORSE was not such a day.
A great ROUX is why they're France and we're not. Also that great puzzle word AIOLI. Stir them together and you have the beginnings of a bouillabaise sauce-- a dish that they make superbly and we don't. Brown, not red, when I had it on the French Riviera in the 1960s. I've been trying to find something of equal scrumptiouness in NYC ever since, but no such luck. All the restaurants -- even the French ones -- seem to use tomatoes in the sauce -- which takes away the bouillabaise-ness of the dish. Sigh. I bet it's a dish that both @GILL and @Birchbark can make properly though.
ReplyDeleteLewis, there is no famed foreign street crossing Via Veneto. Were you referring perhaps to the foreign river?
ReplyDeletep.s.
ReplyDelete… And everybody have safe/fun new year's eve-fests and happy startoffs to 2022.
Thanx to @RP for another great, scrappy year of NYTPuz blogs.
And many thanx to all the great Comment Gallery folks here. Keep up the good words.
Hopin to see more of @Muse darlin, makin for an even happier 2022. (Would kiss her, if she weren't a suspected bill collector.)
M&Also
special celebratory 49-box bonus:
**gruntz**
"WOMANS" was not trying to be a plural. It's WOMAN(')s. It used to be said, and still is in some places, that a woman's place was at home, or in the home, doing wifely and motherly duties and certainly not having a job or career. Then in the 70's a slogan was coined as a rejoinder to that concept. Hence, "A woman's place is in the house(of representatives) and in the senate."
ReplyDeleteToo Gunky for me. And a DNF because I rejected "ars." "IRS" fits the clue, and maybe there is a Disney "Elsi". (I kept changing my mind on that....)
ReplyDelete@jae
ReplyDelete"I have long term memory data..." as related to forgetting things. I got a chuckle out of that oxymoron! One I like to say is, "My memory has been shot for as long as I can remember."
@pablo
"... let's hope 2022 is an improvement and not just a damn variant."
Very well said! I agree 1000%. I'm not smooth-tounged enough to put it so accurately.
RooMonster ROUX Guy
IPA stands for India Pale Ale. Which pales in comparison to THE PALE HORSE but to use both in a puzzle is beyond the pale.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was an undergrad we were required to have several hours of physical education courses. Whilst looking in the catalog for some options I came across Social Dance 101 and with no further ado I signed up. It became one of my all time favorite classes. All we did was dance! For the final exam we danced! (Plus females out numbered males by like two to one so we males never missed a dance.) The waltz was one that we did many times---and one of my favorites---but OOMPAHPAH for a waltz!? Not for me. I think OOMPAHPAH is a desecration for that beautiful and elegant dance and better clued with the marching band tuba.
ReplyDeleteI would urge anyone who bad mouths Eugene Maleska (1916-1993) for his job as editor of the NYTXW to go to a reference library and using pencil and paper and hard copy sources only, construct a crossword puzzle and then see how yours compares to some Maleskan fare. I think we should judge his puzzles by comparing them to others of his era and not to contemporary ones. And I'll take some Greek mythology, heraldry, esoteric geology, etc., over OOMPAHPAH any day.
I see a silhouette of an Anoa being project on the clouds so here goes. What do TH, GASP, SENSE, TUNA MELT, XER, ADULT, ELSA, AR, LET THINGS SLIDE, WOMAN, JILT, STAY, MAY, SLAY, WOE and REAR TIRE have in common? Yep, none of them fit their designated slots and need a letter count boost from the ever so convenient S to fill the bill. I'd say that makes the grid POC assisted.
The one night each year that I never ever go out is New Year's Eve. Too many amateur drinkers out there getting shitfaced. Better to stay at home and repeatedly say ARS in my best pirate voice.
REAR TIRES? Really? At least no one can accuse that of Scrabble F***ing!
@Nancy, Thank you. I was tempted.
ReplyDeleteI consider my average for a Friday to be about 24 minutes. This came in at 33 so challenging for a Friday but not terribly so. Part of the problem was being distracted by TV while I initially bounced off that NW section.
ReplyDeleteI started in the NE and had to overcome an AMORE/ADORE write over. I was very slow on making the connection between tell and SENSE. I actually didn't get it until OR LESS put the final letter in.
I was just as slow with ARS and I use AR in Scrabble all the time.
A GAWD/LAWD write over slowed down my getting the across grid spanner but after that things became normal Friday resistance for the rest of the solve. In the SE I didn't have to read the clue for FEW and in the SW it was the same for MAYS.
Back filling the NW turned out to be not so bad after all. In trying to start there initially all I could come up with was OXO and ROUX. My problem with THS was thinking fifTHS eliminated it. I mentally change five to fif without even noticing it.
Happy New Years to all.
yd -0, td -0
My favorite comments this morning. Bumper crop!
ReplyDeletePamela (7:22)
Irene (8:37)
Anonymous (9:11)
SouthsideJohnny ((9:12)
TJS (9:53)
Joe Dipinto (11:16)
old timer (12:28)
Nancy (12:36)
@Unknown (11:50 AM)
ReplyDeleteWelcome aboard, fellow SBer! For the shortcuts, see my 10:31 AM post of yesterday; looking forward to seeing your SB results. All the best! :)
@Nancy (12:36 PM)
Thx for the confirmation re: Christie's THE PALE HORSE.
___
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
@upstate George -- Aargh! Thank you for pointing this out -- my goof! I was thinking that the Rio De La Plata -- and I don't know why because it's obviously a river -- was a street, and thus I was referring to the "streets" crossing in the puzzle. Sigh. Fortunately, tomorrow my comment will be so last year!
ReplyDelete@pablo via @Roo:
ReplyDelete"... let's hope 2022 is an improvement and not just a damn variant."
Well, epidemiologists are converging on the notion that viruses, generally and most often, mutate towards transmission over lethality. As Darwin showed, if you kill your host too fast, you die too. SARS and MERS and Covid-β (though not so much) and may be Covid-γ and Covid-μ moved up the scale in lethality, but, as a consequence, diminished both in duration and area as a result. Which is not to assert that all viruses do so all the time. Covid-α/β/γ/μ were, obviously, variants of Covid-19 that were more lethal.
The article(s) of faith as I type:
1 - Covid-ο spreads like water
2 - it's less lethal than even Covid-19
3 - thus no one will avoid it; it's just a bad cold
One hopes 3) turns out to be true.
I need to put it in the record that the last thing I would ever order at a diner would be a tuna melt. I feel better now.
ReplyDelete@Everyone
ReplyDeleteA HAPPY & HEALTHY NEW Year!!!
From the clue "Danger for desert hikers" I tried PRICKLY PEAR CACTUS (too long) then RATTLESNAKE and WESTERN RATTLER (too short). Where I grew up in Kamloops we supposedly had both, although I had many painful run-ins with the cacti but never saw a rattler. Where I am now in the South Okanagan, I have seen some cacti, but had several encounters with rattlers. (In fact a few years ago they ran out of rattler antivenom because so many people were getting bitten.)
ReplyDeleteI really hated ARS!
[Spelling Bee: yd 0]
[@Unknown 11:50 am... translation: yesterday missed zero words. For a complete guide see @bocamp 10:31 am yesterday.]
I think XRAY LAB is pretty green-painty. I don't think anyone would call the place where you get your x-rays done as a patient an "XRAY LAB." Your lab results are your bloodwork, etc. Radiology and x-rays are completely different.
ReplyDeleteThere are research laboratories that use x-rays, so there is such a thing as an XRAY LAB, but that's not a common phrase as opposed to two words randomly strung together (like "green paint").
@JC66 - Thanks and all best wishes for the same to you.
ReplyDeleteSo should white people be mad at queers and blacks for appropriating one of their terms?
ReplyDeleteAsking for a friend.
Hands up for Playa before Plata.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if yesterday's souses have their eyes on today's MEAD BEER IPA.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite clues in order were for GASP INROME REARTIRES OOMPAHPAH FEAR. The last only because I was happy the final answer was better than my first thoughts: want need love hate.
As I went from 0 to 5 crosses my thoughts progressed from a room to a grab to a plan to A PLAY.
The SW isolated corner was my first completion.
THEPALEHORSE RATTLESNAKEBITE were my saving graces.
TAMARA VIAVENETO were my only cheats.
The advantage of having low standards is that THS went in quickly. I recently said wha? to tha. I also gave an asp eye to ELSAS.
Enjoyed ATTENUATE and Rex's recalcitrant. A dear friend once started a lyric with I used to be recalcitrant. Maybe Rex will go for contumacious next.
Thought I’d wade back into the fray on the final day of 2021, just over a year since my first dip. Still grateful for all of you. Also grateful to Meghan Morris for the challenge to my gray cells this morning. I liked its voice overall so was more forgiving than OFL. I rose to the challenge and learned some things in the process. Good plan for the new year, eh?
ReplyDeleteBiggest mistake - I made A case, then sPace, for, before making A PLAY.
Loved the “component” part of the ROUX clue. So accurate, but so close to “ingredient” that it’s a devilish misdirect.
“Oh, LAWD.” Living in the deep south, I’ve heard it plenty. (Alert - shocking memory ahead.) The time that eclipses all the others was during the live news coverage on September 11, 2001. It was before the collapse, and people in the streets weren’t running for their lives yet, just watching the towers. The camera was on the tower and we saw people leap from the burning building to certain but swift death. You could hear the reaction on the street, and they captured one woman saying “Oh, Lawd, they’s jumpin’.” The tone of her voice conveyed, all at once, disbelief, horror, sympathy and prayer. Those words, spoken in a southern black voice that is so familiar to me, brought that moment home and seared it into my brain. They never showed it again as far as I know.
That day I was in a hotel in Birmingham after rehearsal was canceled while they determined if the attacks were over. I was there again in March of 2020 when everything was canceled. Yesterday I left for Birmingham for the first time since then. Headed to the clinic for the required Covid test they decided to ask for at the last minute. While I was waiting for the (negative) result, I got the word this concert was canceled as well. Hoping for better luck next week.
Birmingham is the birthplace, and today is the birthday of, Odetta, and she’s going to help me ring in the new year:
Be gone, 2021.
C’mon, 2022, let it shine!
An oom-pah-pah waltz. The musicians are all white, I'm so sorry. But there's a dude playing the harp—obviously he's gay, so that should placate Rex.
ReplyDeleteI’m late to the party but just have to say my piece. This was very hard for me and not in a fun way. OOMPAHPAH Is too ploddy and heavy for a waltz, I hate ADULTS used in this way, one does not say XRAYLAB. You get your x-ray in the radiology dept and your blood drawn in the lab. Custardy confection isn’t associated in my mind with FRUITTART. So basically I hated most of the cluing. I like a challenging Friday puzzle but this was just a tough slog. But tomorrow is another day and another year!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year to all!
Late, as usual, and you've all said everything I was thinking with my omicron brain, so I'll settle for sending thanks for another year of witty and inspiring commentary and best wishes to all for the new year.
ReplyDelete@Pablo Amen!
@jberg 11:05 - D’Oh. You’re right.
ReplyDelete@Anon11:17 - xwordinfo.com has that information. Here you go. For example, I now know that my first name has appeared 235 times in the puzzle, while the variant spelling has appeared only 75 times and not always as a name.
Speaking of variant spellings… @RyAnna - VAR is an abbreviation for “variant” and is often used by dictionaries. It has appeared 87 times and the dictionary clue has replaced the French Department clue.
Speaking of the French Department… @AnoaBob - I think Maleska is infamous for the cluing more than the grids. For example, Its capital is Draguignan for VAR. Granted, that was a Saturday clue, but a town of 40,000 in a foreign country to clue a three letter answer like VAR is what I think people are complaining about.
Sigh. Eugene Maleska is infamous for nothing.
ReplyDeleteHe was the wildly successful and al oat universally revered( there are always cranks).
To dismiss him tells you more about the guy trying to brush him aside than any particular clue or answer. ( which his later attacker has wrong anyway)
I would put RATTLESNAKEBITE way down low on the list of desert hiking dangers as long as you're wearing boots.
ReplyDeleteHyperthermia, dehydration, hypothermia, flash floods, sunburn, dust storms, lightning, getting lost/starvation, falling off a cliff are all way higher on my list than a snake bite.
Also, rattlesnakes aren't particular to the desert. Plenty of them in the Appalachians.
Villager
Exactly and ditto, 🦖👏🏽🦖
ReplyDeleteOne 🦖 for the puzz today.
😂
(Going to start giving 🧩s from between a low one and five 🦖s - highest.)
Happy 2022. (There’s going to be some number fun with thatj
🤩🎉🤩
Just popping in to wish everyone a Happy New Year. And to link to this in case it hasn’t already been posted. Cin Cin!
ReplyDelete"OOM PAH PAH, OOM PAH PAH: That how it goes
OOM PAH PAH, OOM PAH PAH: Everyone knows
They all suppose what they want to suppose
When they hear OOM PAH PAH."
@Nancy 12:37. Yes, I have made my share of Buillabaise. It's not an easy one especially if you want it authentic. A lot of people buy fish stock and throw in a bunch of fish, clams and mussels. UM NO.
ReplyDeleteI've never had the "Brown" one you mentioned; there are always some red plum tomatoes in all the ones I've tasted .... (even in France). The absolute "trick" for the best ones are making your stew stock with fish heads. It takes time but it's worth the effort. Next, buy yourself at least 6 or 7 really good fish....no clams. The "piece de resistance" is "sauce rouille." It's like the aioli you mentioned. You MUST make it by hand in a mortar and pestle - although many will use their blenders. The star of this ROUX is the saffron.
Once your fish is slightly sautéed, laden it into a bowl with your fish sauce and top it with the rouille. HEAVEN in your mouth.
I haven't made in for quite some time since fresh fish is very hard to come by here in Sacramento. We have one good fish company and you can order from them, but now you'er talking about a $100 cup of "Gods watering pie hole." (I would never call my mouth a pie hole but evidently crossword constructors like that word.....)
I have made a lot of fruit tarts in my life and not a single one with custard. The woman clearly does not bake.
ReplyDelete@Z, Maleska did not have access to computers or any of the cybernalia that spun off from that technology like software, computer constructing platforms (I use Crossword Compiler), ever expanding word lists, codes for searching eighty-seven quadrillion letter sequences for a particular patterns, etc. And I appreciated and still admire that he always tried to make his clues factually accurate. All those mythological figures, world rivers, unusual geological formations, Byzantine royalty and so forth are still the same today as when they were clued under his editorship. Will we be able to say the same about contemporary puzzles 28 or more years from now?
ReplyDeleteSure, one can cherry pick clues that may seem hopelessly antiquated but I still say that the NYT puzzles during his tenure as editor should be compared to other puzzles of that time and at the same level of technology. I'm not trying to be contumacious here; I think contemporary puzzles are far superior to the old, musty ones. But making him seem, as you say, infamous is I think unfair if not a tad mean spirited. I think he would be right in there with the best of them if he had the same tools as do those constructors and editors of today.
I don’t think any of us could get through the day without using a word or phrase that wasn’t “appropriated” from some culture. Rex needs to chill. Oops.
ReplyDelete@Z, @Anoa, I first started doing the puzzle (though not regularly) under Maleska in 1977. I accepted what I didn't know and learned. What the puzzle regularly requires now is a suspension of disbelief, a forgiveness of sloppiness, and a what-of-it use of the language.
ReplyDeleteRe all of the above plus fires in Boulder: reading Cloud Cuckoo Land in my omicron fog. Definitely recommend.
ReplyDeleteTD -QB
ReplyDeleteTook some time to find which "UN" word Sam would accept.
RIP Betty White. Bummer news for the last day of the year.
ReplyDeleteAgree ++ about unsuitability of OOMPAHPAH, but how many people nowadays know anything about the elegance of the waltz? We used "Fascination" for our wedding's first dance.....
ReplyDeleteManaged the whole south without much trouble, but was thoroughty disgusted with a) the north end, and b) my own performance there.
p -many, not even at genius level today. yd pg -3.
@Joe D
ReplyDeleteAgree, but 99 ain't bad.
NW and SE really got me. Movies I haven't seen, books I haven't read, people I haven't heard of. Plus PIT-A-PAT (what is this the 1800s?) ADULTS (grow up) ], don't understand XERS for 22D (the movies i never saw), plus some tough cluing throughout.
ReplyDeleteAnd SLAYS does not appropriate anything. Did Rio de la Plata appropriate Brazilian culture? Or Via Venuto Italian? Records show SLAYS being used in this form dating back to the 1800s, and most certainly in the 1920s.
Yes, @Joe D, RIP Betty! One more reason to give 2021 the boot. Here's a neat clip - think she'll make a great guardian angel.
ReplyDelete@JC...I was hoping she'd live to be 110. Won't we all miss her?
ReplyDelete@JC – I know, I just wish it hadn't happened today. The last 4 MTM cast members all left us this year. @A, where've you been?! That clip is great – why didn't she sing more, I wonder.
ReplyDeleteWow. I was so far off the wavelength on this puzzle that I had to out it away and come back to it. Lucky for me my receiver tunednin at long last.
ReplyDelete‘Tis a very rare occasion when my solve mirrors OFL’s, but mine did today. I had different reasons for the NW being frustrating, but that corner was the very last to fall. My biggest nit is that a FRUIT TART does not necessarily include a custard element. I jept trying to get some sort of frozen fruity dessert because of the custard component and failed miserably. Even the downs in the NW were tough, especially FOTO - a non-word invented by the ad industry. I loathe those.
Next we have the onomatopoetic OOM PAH PAH, which, to me prefers to ALIGN itself with a German beer garden rather than a waltz. That one remained a head scratcher to the bitter end.
Generally, when Insee a grid with very few opportunities to move from one area to another, I know I’m in for a tussle. Today was no exception, although once Ingot my foot hold in the NE, I fairly sailed diagonally down to the SW without difficulty. The SE however, don’t give in as easily. I did get VIA VENETO and FEW (especially because FEAR going down fell so easily)
The NW finally fell when THE PALE HORSE added enough to give me the TART that I thought it must be. Added to the ROUX I had from the off and IPA plus A PLAY, and the proverbial light bulb came on.
Overall a bery Friday puzzle. No real excitement or “aha” moments but masterful construction in a devilish grid shape. Thanks for a very good workout Ms. Morris!
She was only 18 days away from her 100th birthday -- Jan 17.
ReplyDeleteWhat a gal. Ageless. Timeless. Hilarious. And beyond charming.
•••••••East Coast Spoiler Post•••••••
ReplyDeleteIt's 2022! Happy New Year to all!
Good puzzle except for "BEERME" and "UMNO." Has any living human ever uttered either phrase?
ReplyDeleteI give you Google Books, where I love to go to prove that sort of thing wrong, or at least wrong-ish. I'd have to dig up a paper copy of American Philosophical Quarterly Volume 36 [1964] to feel fully vindicated, using "ambigram" well before the MW thinks it happened.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/books/edition/American_Philosophical_Quarterly/4Cu6AAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=ambigram&dq=ambigram&printsec=frontcover
@Unknown. I was just on another blog and someone with the user name Unknown claims to have participated in the riots at the Capitol last year.
ReplyDeleteYou should prove that you arent him and that you didnt assault anyone.
Rex is being nice - maybe because this is a new constructor? So much flotsam: FOTO UMNO THS XERS TWA ARS LAWD VAR NUI APAT and a pluralized Disney princess - ELSAS. And more. Just too much. The editor needs to ATTENUATE the frequency of such bad fill.
ReplyDeleteFill schmill. I remain in awe of constructors.
ReplyDeleteSo, of course, I did get MOST of this, but not all. Kudos to Friday - it wins by an unknown name. (isn't that always the case?)
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
Oh, no no no no no. Folks, I have spent more of my life than I'd like in hospitals: as a worker, visitor, and/or patient--and have seen the inside of more than I'd care to count. And NOwhere, people, does there exist an XRAYLAB. Can you imagine the signage confusion?
ReplyDelete<----XRAY (that's where you get a FOTO of your innards)
LAB----> (that's where they draw your blood)
There is simply no such thing as an XRAYLAB. The name is ludicrous.
Now, as to the rest of today's puzzle, it was hard only because I was forced, kicking and screaming, to fill the above entry in. A single letter writeover occurred when I tried LAWs before LAWD. {"M-O-O-N, that spells MOON, LAWS yes!")*
All the ladies of "Bones" are DOD-worthy, including TAMARA, but the sash has to go to perennial favorite Teri GARR because this time she was my way into the grid. Typical Friday-tough, but doable. The egregious error pulls it down to a par.
TACKY IPA PROSE
ReplyDeleteINROME it’s VINO for ADULTS,
but it’s BEER I’m OBSESSEDOVER,
it’s EASIER to SENSE THE results
(have NO FEAR I’m more ORLESS SOBER).
--- JOEL ELWOOD O’NEAL, VIA VENETA, OXOOXO
I didn’t think the NW was tough at all - OOMPAHPAH, OXO APAT, and RATTLESNAKEBITE all gimmes, the rest just fills in. This puz would have been even EASIER if one of the down clues hadn’t been missing in the Pioneer Press yet *again*.
ReplyDeleteANNA, TAMARA, Ms. GARR – a HORSE apiece.
I feel LEICA BEER.
This is as tough as they come for a Friday, I think. Here was the struggle :
ReplyDeleteIn the NW, I stained a clean slate with FRUIT TART, ROUX, and THS.... Oh, LAWDy, LAWDy, what a way to start. So I proceeded to LET[s] THINGS SLIDE.
Had most trouble in the Middle East with its cluster of ELSAS, EASIER, ARS, MEAD and ELWOOD. In the NE I wanted AmOuR instead of ADORE for “Love". That amused me with “couple in the back of a car” clue for REAR TIRES.
Finally, the two grid-spanners, down and across, helped bail things out, more OR LESS, but not a lot.
*Tom Cullen, The Stand (Stephen King)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
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