Boho-chic furniture material / SAT 2-26-22 / Green research site / Moroccan quarter / When doubled a 2010s dance craze / Chief magistrates in Italian history / N.F.L. kicker Graham who payed for 14 teams / Celebrity chef Burrell / Openly discussing one's kinks, say / Use a shuttle, say
Constructor: Ori Brian
Relative difficulty: Easy
THEME: none
Word of the Day: CLARA Schumann (14A: Pianist/composer Schumann) —
Clara Josephine Schumann ([ˈklaːʁa ˈʃuːman]; née Wieck; 13 September 1819 – 20 May 1896) was a German pianist, composer, and piano teacher. Regarded as one of the most distinguished pianists of the Romantic era, she exerted her influence over a 61-year concert career, changing the format and repertoire of the piano recital from displays of virtuosity to programs of serious works. She also composed solo piano pieces, a piano concerto (her Op. 7), chamber music, choral pieces, and songs.
She grew up in Leipzig, where her father, Friedrich Wieck, was a pianist and teacher, and her mother, Mariane, was a pianist, singer, and piano teacher. She was a child prodigy, trained by her father. She began touring at age eleven, and was successful in Paris and Vienna, among other cities. She married the composer Robert Schumann, and the couple had eight children. Together, they encouraged Johannes Brahms and maintained a close relationship with him. She premiered many works by her husband and by Brahms in public.
After Robert Schumann's early death, she continued her concert tours in Europe for decades, frequently with the violinist Joseph Joachim and other chamber musicians. Beginning in 1878, she was an influential piano educator at Dr. Hoch's Konservatorium in Frankfurt, where she attracted international students. She edited the publication of her husband's work. Schumann died in Frankfurt, but was buried in Bonn beside her husband. (wikipedia)
• • •
It's possible this puzzle has confused SEX-POSITIVE (34A: Openly discussing one's kinks, say) with OVERSHARING, depending on the imagined context, but most other things it seems to get right. It's got a lovely central stack with absolutely solid longer answers slicing through it, and most of the rest of the fill holds up pretty well. The only wincing I did was at the very, very end, when I stepped in that puddle of names at the bottom of the grid. Bad enough to meet Paul RYAN down there (so many RYANs in the world, whyyyyy?), but then to have my final square be the intersection of two names I don't know crossing at a vowel ... bah. Major anticlimax. I don't know why you don't clue at least one of those names, either EVA or ANNE, as someone legitimately famous, or at least from somewhere outside pop culture. Go back in time, go sideways into science or literature, something. There are too many ALLEGEd "celebrity chefs" for me to keep track of. So, you know, keep EVA Noblezada and move ANNE back in time or to some other field. It would be great if ANNE were a much more universally famous person, too. You can clue very famous people in tricky ways, so you don't have to give up difficulty. Nobody likes name soup, particularly short-name soup, so at least draw from very different fields or time periods. Especially when crossing names at a vowel. Luckily, in this case, "A" was the only reasonable guess. I had no idea if "EVE" or "EVA" was correct, but _NNE leaves you with only one plausible option. If I hadn't *finished* here, I probably wouldn't be talking about this moment nearly so much. But how you finish matters, even if where you finish is an unpredictable matter of chance. I can't believe I'm going to advocate for ERA, but I do think ERA / ANNE is better than EVA / ANNE. Ordinary words > short names of not-terribly-famous people crossing at a vowel. "Why are you focusing on these tiny details!?!?!" I know. I just can't dismiss the small stuff as insignificant. Every inch of the puzzle should be thoughtfully and carefully designed, even if many solvers will blow through it in 10 seconds. Plus I'm just generally interested in the kinds of values that drive construction and editorial choices. Putting new people in the puzzle! Good! But I tend to land in the "keep the name count reasonably low" and "don't cross unfamous names at vowels" and "draw from lots of different knowledge bases" camps.
There is only one BATMAN. There are different actors, but just the one man. This is to say, BATMEN, bah (26A: Christian Bale and Val Kilmer, for two). I think BATMEN is a cricket term. Or is that BATSMEN? Anyway, I don't think BATMEN is a thing / are things. If they are real, they probably work not in Bat Caves but ECOLABS, which are also not things. BARMEN are things. Gendered, yes, but their drinks are so tasty. No other clues / answers really bothered me. I quite enjoyed the "what the hell part of speech is this?" cluing on both SEX POSITIVE (34A: Openly discussing one's kinks, say) and SLIM TO NONE (29D: Long). The former clue really looks like it wants to be an -ING-ending present participle, while the latter looks like a jillion things; I thought it had to do with length, or yearning, and then I got the SLIM- part and thought "what does SLIME have to do with it?" and *then* I saw what it was: a phrase related to odds or likelihood. If the odds are long, you might also say they're SLIM TO NONE. Nice. The only difficulty I had today was with the names (SHAYNE, EVA, ANNE), but I also had some good luck with names. For instance, I knew ALAN Watts, who has arguably the least well-known name in the grid, depending on how old you are and what you care about (Watts was one of the great popularizers of Buddhism in America in the last century). I had several moments of hesitation before getting BONOBOS, even with the BON- in place, simply because I couldn't understand how "ours" was being used (27A: Close relatives of ours). Seemed weird for the clue to suddenly take on a first-person persona. . . which made me think "waaaaaaaait a minute, is this gonna be a French animal name!?" ("ours" in French = "bear" / "bears").
But no, not relatives of French bears, relatives of human beings—if you've ever heard of BONOBOS, one thing you know is how closely related they are to human beings and the other thing you know is that they are extremely SEX POSITIVE.
[WARNING: just kidding, it's fine]
Just one explainer today:
37A: Use a shuttle, say (TAT) — this is a lace-making term, so different "shuttle" and different "TAT" than you're probably used to encountering in everyday speech
That's all. See you tomorrow, or whenever.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
P.S. the "BATMEN of All Nations" existed for a time, in the 1950s, so BATMEN are, or were, a thing, though not in the way the clue imagined.
Got 1D ECOLAB with no trouble so 1A "Eagle" was a gimme. Or so I thought. Oy!
Has anyone in the known universe ever been ANGSTY? That's a first for me. As is the term SEX POSITIVE (I would have guessed that this meant one was certain of the outcome of a specific date, the type of which I never had!).
When I quashed the NW in a blink, I thought, “Oh dang, not a faith solve today.” But as soon as I exited that friendly area, things toughened considerably, with a scatter of answers and little more. And suddenly I was deep in faith territory. At one point I arrived at crossword purgatory, where there was plenty of white, and nothing was yielding, and I yelled and yelled, but the cavalry didn’t come. Nothingness.
Until it did, that blessed ping that unlocked an answer, giving my brain several new filled-in squares to work with, and it went from silence to whirr. Then, step by step – or, since this is a crossword, BOXSTEP by BOXSTEP, inch by inch, my faith was slowly rewarded.
A big holdup for me was when I confidently entered STATE for [OK, in a way], thinking, “Wow! What a clever clue!” The clues I really love at the end of the week, because they are so tough, are those one-worders, like [Long] for SLIM TO NONE, [Charge] for ALLEGE, and [Nonstarter] for SUB.
Above all, I love the experience of opening the door, stepping into the grid, all alone, having to draw on my resources to earn my way through parries and seeming dead ends, and, by golly, getting through. That’s the experience I long for, and you gave it to me in spades today, Ori. Thank you greatly for this puzzle!
The last time I was in Florida, I noticed an unusual number of KIA ads on the radio, so I started counting cars as they passed me (everyone in Florida passes me). Of the first 20 cars, seven were KIAs, two were VWs, and two were Jeeps. Nothing else got more than one.
Pretty sure there has never, EVER, been a more obscure clue for RYE.
Ended exactly where Rex did, and with pretty much the exact same thoughts.
Easy? Hardly. Entering 'Baboons' before 'Bonobos' didn't help, but this Saturday was as difficult as any other one to me. I'll still give myself a pat on the back for (finally) getting it -- and thanks for the challenge(s), Ori. Keep 'em comin'!
Fairly smooth Saturday - the KASBAH - SEA WATER combo in the SW kept me from really running thru this quickly. We get our case of RYE up top. The center triple was fantastic. Agree with Rex that some of the trivia was odd. CLARA, ANNE and EVA escaped me. No issue with BATMEN entry - the clue was clear. Old friends UVULA and BONOBOS helped.
Sadly it’s been three years this week since I last used my US PASSPORT.
FH Yes, easy. Record time for me of 12.37 which, given that it takes me 5 minutes to type all the answers in on a Monday when I get every answer immediately, means that the 'solve time' here was about 7 minutes. For a Saturday.
More time to enjoy the Prof's woke-splaining of answers.....
Well, yesterday we had OFL go bonkers over PILAU, yet today DOGES doesn’t even merit a mention. Although - it is good to see him focus his tirade on the trivial crossing of EVA and ANNE, on a Saturday no less - there is hope for you yet Rex !
I’m sorry, but what the heck is an ECOLAB ? It sounds like something that Monty Python might have cooked up at one time. What do you do there - make Ozone ? (I forget - does the earth need more ozone, or less ?). Maybe they make plastic bags or styrofoam that won’t last in the pacific until the end of the universe. Ok, ok - I googled it and it brought me to a really amateurish looking corporate website - what’s up wit dat ?
Anne Burrell is a really cool lady, and her bolognese is to die for.
Easy Saturday ... until I didn't get the happy music. Checked my "questionable" answers, even consulting Sergey and Larry. All OK. I was ready to DNF when I noticed the formerly-overlooked clue at 36A. Clearly KIA, not cIA, which corrected the oh-so-certain cASBAH and appeased the happy music gods. D'oh!
Fair crosses again come into play for CLARA, SEX POSITIVE, SHAYNE, SALTY, ALAN, ANNE, EVA.
Liked the clue for CELLMATE.
Still trying to fully grok SLIM TO NONE. Reckon it refers to a 'long shot', long odds, 'slim chance', etc. The clue, 'Long', just seemed to be incomplete. Maybe someone can come up with a sentence that works better than, "their chances were long" in lieu of "their chances were SLIM TO NONE".
Anyhoo, had fun with this one. :) ___ yd pg: 7:53 / W: 4* (scary; had only one yellow after three tries)
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
My chances of breezing through a Saturday are SLIMTONONE, so I remain impressed by those that find them easy.
Started great - ooh ooh people will fall for eagle or heron but I know it's an EGRET. Got through, and loved, the long downs and acrosses, then flamed out in the north and SW.
But I finally finished this one, in the SW, with that triumphant feeling you dont get from 'easy'. Last night, STAMP, BITE, HERD,and AMEN just wouldn't gel. And I've been in KASBAHs and couldn't get that either as I was trying to think of some sort of Sahelian abode. This AM, after some sleep and a coffee, fine. AMEN in fact. Perfect Saturday here.
Absolutely shocked! that the 9D clue made no mention of the marina. The omission caused an ANGSTY hole to open in my heart. No happy hour specials at Z’s Placebo and Tentacle for Shortz.
I’m a little surprised that ANGSTY gave anyone problems. I’m pretty sure Emo has gotten ANGSTY clues in the past since being ANGSTY is the defining characteristic of EMO.
Is it SHAYNE Graham or Graham SHAYNE? That he played for 14 teams suggests that he wasn’t exactly a pro bowler.
That middle staggered stack is telling an interesting story. It definitely reminds me of this song, that feels as if it should be sung by a choir.
I stared at that TAT clue/answer pair for many precious nanoseconds post solve. Somewhere in the deep recesses the lace-making meaning exists and it slowly worked its way to the surface. I’m glad those crosses were fair so still an easy solve, so I appreciated the cluing variety rather than getting stymied by what is typically fairly common crosswordese.
Despite what seemed like an overdose of misdirect/"clever" clues, this one felt rather easy for the Saturdee. Either that or I'm suddenly brilliant. 🤔 Nah.
Just can't work up a lather either way about this, but it was better than a sharp stick in the eye.
🧠🧠 🎉🎉.5
Wordle 252 3/6
🟩⬜⬜🟨⬜ 🟩🟨🟨⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Haven't read anything on the blog lately, so I wonder if I'm the only one who thoroughly enjoyed the smooth Wordle transition courtesy of NYT tech people. More genius brought to us by the progressive, forward-thinking .puz-killers. No, I will not get over it.
I can't relate to Rex's EVA/ANNE rant (EVA who?) because I watch the Food Network fairly often and you can't not know who she is; she's in a lot of the ads (I don't actually watch any of the show she frequents, she kind of drives me nuts). So ANNE was a gimme. I had to think hard to bring to mind Mitt Romney's supercilious running mate, Paul RYAN, thank goodness.
I loved the clue for SLIM TO NONE. A la Rex, I went the "yearning" direction. I was solving from the bottom when I got to that spot and when ONONE was in the grid, I struggled mightily to undook that to create a phrase meaning yearn. Har.
I've seen enough Audubon Society literature that I just had to get one cross to confirm whether their symbol was an EGRET or a heron. Juliet and a TARP cleared it up.
ANNE Burrell is all over the place, and with her spiky ice cream swirl of white hair quite recognizable. It's surprising Rex does not know her, since he seems to be a foodie.
Yep. 201 appearances of “Emo” in the NYTX. At first it was always the comedian Emo Philips, but he was getting replaced by the rock genre starting in 2004. Since 2004 ANGSTY has been part of an Emo clue 10 times, including four times from August 2020 to May 2021. This is only the second appearance of ANGSTY as an answer, but the first time it appeared (last February) the clue was Like the emo genre.
Speaking of Paul RYAN, he was the “cause” of one of the more infamous bad crosses of a proper name. The Down word was “chocolaty” but the clue easily could have been for “chocolate,” leading to many a “who the hell is Paul ReAN” type comments. The clues were P.R. man? and Like many éclairs. It was so infamous that the day it happened John Stewart referenced it on The Daily Show.It was the January 23, 2013 puzzle and you can read Rex et alia if you’re curious.
FH @Teedmn: You thought Paul Ryan was 'supercilious'? Do you know what that word even means, or did you just hear someone say it? You could choose a lot of adjectives to describe Ryan (many of them chosen by disappointed conservatives) but 'supercilious' wouldn't even be in the top 100
Is SEXPOSITIVE a portmanteau of SEX and EXPOSITIVE? If not, it just sounds like something that Dr. Ruth would chirpingly urge everyone to be.
And how can SALTY, which already has two meanings -- 1) oversalted and 2) full of bad words like a sailor's language -- have this third meaning of "annoyed"? When did that happen?
Sometimes I think I have as much trouble with modern slang as I do with rappers and car models. But even the slang couldn't stymie today because the puzzle was so easy for a Saturday. Not uninteresting, mind you. But easy.
I loved cluing SLIM TO NONE with "long" as in long odds. But I had so many crosses that there was no surprise when it came in. Ditto for the nicely clued U.S. PASSPORT and DESSERT MENU.
Even the car didn't throw me today. I actually used KIA to change cASBAH to KASBAH -- though I don't think "The Sheik" would have spelled it that way. Even I knew that the CIA was many things, but that it wasn't a car.
I gotta go with OFL on the EVA/ANNE cross. I zipped through this mainly because I got the long answers pretty quickly. I especially appreciate the idea that a crossword grid being relatively small (except for Sundays) and you should make the best use of the space.
I think we have to talk about the Shayne Graham clue. Per Wikipedia, he played for 14 teams OTHER than the Bengals, meaning he played for 15 teams. Some of those teams (Seahawks, Redskins, Cowboys, and Browns) roster him only on off-season or practice squads, meaning he 'played' for 11. And then there's the Richmond Speed, a pro team, just not an NFL team, where he began his career. Played for 14 teams? I don't think so.
When people say "to die for" as a superlative for a food ... do they "die" right after they eat it? There wouldn't be much of an incentive to save that recipe.
This was a charming Saturday, made difficult by SHAYNE, ANNE and ALAN. I might have yelled, “Who are these people?!” Even the recently deceased Bob SAGET gave me pause since these puzzles sit in piles for what may be years and the clue must have had a very quick update. Dear CLARA was a recent Jeopardy question so she gave me no trouble at all. DESSERTMENU and SEXPOSITIVE were very nice.
Ok, you had me at RYE! I don't know why that answer made me laugh out loud. That's LOL for you kids out there. With D - G - S, I initially put down DAGOS, wondering what rex's comments would be, but eventually sussed out BONOBOS, which was the cleverest of clues.
Like many of you, I found this *much* easier than yesterday's. The EVA/ANNE cross was very inferable, and while I never watch the Food Network, I had a mental image of Anne Burrell with her spiky hair, but kind of confused her with Paula Dean, who had to resign.
In more important news: kind of an unfair Wordle today as my last three guesses show: This could easily have been a birdie. Wordle 252 5/6
Well, I knew anything "green" had to start with ECO, which begat EGRET, and away I rode madly in all directions, to quote Robert Benchley.
I was thinking we were in the realm of the old crossword puzzle dictionary when I saw "Moroccan quarter" as a clue to an obscure foreign currency, so was relieved to have it finally be KASBAH.
Wanted ANTSY, which was too short, so slid seamlessly into ANGSTY, which still doesn't sound just right, but there it was,
Had no real trouble with the proper names, even the ones I didn't know, but kept reading SLIMTONONE as a nine-letter DOOK until the obvious SUB for "nonstarter" finally kicked in, which lead to a major self dope slap. Jeez.
Have actually visited CALTECH, where they were doing research on a condition my son has called ACC. Beautiful campus.
And glad that others found this enjoyable if pretty easy. Same here. Thanks for all the fun, OB. Oh Boy, said I when I finished this one, that was a good time.
Hey All ! Didn't find it as easy as some of y'all. Got hung up on a few spots. That South Center area was made more difficult by my own doing, as had addUP first for RUNUP, then was quite sure it was sUmUP. That perplexed me, causing me to not see SLIM TO NONE easily, partly because SUB was mysteriously clued, and adding in my wrongness, lead to me having _LIMTOm_m_. Let out a Huh? Off of sUmUP, put sara in for RYAN (thinking Sarah Palin [wrong spelling, and probably wrong year]), and also had prIm for VAIN, which is where that other M came from in my previous Huh. Erased everything except DUEIN, and then the ole brain cottoned onto EYEOPENERS. Which got the dominoes to fall, RYAN, RUNUP, VAIN, SLIM TO NONE, and ending on that final A. And... Happy Music!
LALALAS before TRALALA, eensy-TEENY (a kealoa that I will put in the wrong answer 95% of the time, regardless that it's a 50-50 shot), think that's it for writeovers.
SUB and TAT had tough clues. Some names I didn't know today, but crossers got them.
A good SatPuz overall, with me able to retain some brain cells.
yd -0!! (Last three easy 4's, almost missed'em!)(Today's is a toughie!)
No F's (two days in a row!)(TSK!) RooMonster DarrinV
An annoyance or two but an agreeable time spent solving.
I like anagrams but I would have preferred LAUREN to have been clued in terms of the divine Bacall.
You really have to stretch Joaquin's Dictum to permit SLIMTONONE. First, it isn't the common expression. "What are the chances of that happening?" "There are two chances, slim and none." Second, LONG refers to "odds" not "chances." We say that there are "long odds" against something happening, not "long chances."
Another similar annoyance. STAMP for "OK, in a way."
I thought that Nancy, that Downton Abbey aficionado, might have commented that Bates, Lord Grantham's valet, was his batman during the war.
I used to watch the Food Channel a lot and really liked the very cool ANNE Burrell.
“ Pretty sure there has never, EVER, been a more obscure clue for RYE.”
I have to assume this was said with your tongue firmly in your cheek, since I’m quite sure you were around for the 8/9/20 group gasp of WTF for 61D New York City with a marina.
Guy: Ya wanna dance? Lass: Nae, nae. Guy: Sure, whatever dance ya want, bae.
Easy puzzle. But very enjoyable. Thanks, Ori Brian.
I can't put my finger on it: While I was solving in a pretty good fashion clip, I kept asking myself why I wasn't having much fun. This last week was full of squeals of delight. Today, I will try and figure out why my clam wasn't happy. Perhaps having to really, really, really work hard on the names I didn't know. If I'm having fun, I don't mind. I wasn't really having fun despite my filling in a plethora of answers. Oh, @Rex. My one lickety split name was ANNE Burrell. If you've ever watched any TV foodie shows like I do, the name would pop right in. Maybe some of the other sad faces I made was wondering what SEX POSITIVE is. I was able to fill it in but I wasn't sure if I should've smiled or cried. I loved DESSERT MENU (hah) and GOSPEL TRUTH. Whenever my brother lied (which was often) he'd yell: That's the gospel truth and I'll swear on the Bible. I was worried he'd go to hell. KASBAH elicited a much needed smile. I've spent some time in Morocco. My mom, sister and I would be the only "white" people strolling around the Marrakech market. We'd buy rugs, eat cherries that had been licked with some black tobbaqui, and hope we'd make it back to our lovely hotel with all are goodies and a stomach intact. We were an anomaly but we were treated with gifts and kindness and toothless smiles. I think my US PASSPORT has expired. I'm dreading applying for a new one because my picture always looks like I was heading for jail and my CELL MATE weighed 200 lbs.
Mostly easy, entirely enjoyable. In the "not easy" zone were the clues that so cleverly disguised their meaning (e.g., for CELLMATE) or that were ambiguous (SUB) or that were hard to parse, like "Long," as @Rex and others have noted. That last one reminded me of my early days of daring to try a Saturday puzzle and realizing that Saturdays were hard not (just) because of arcana but because of one-word clues that could be nouns or verbs or adjectives and have multiple meanings; I specifically remember feeling baleful about "cover." Anyway, I liked that throwback to days-of-yore Saturdays. Favorite entry today: BUTTERCUP, although I thought the grid was filled with winners.
@pabloinnh - Thank you for the Benchley quote!
@Gill I. from yesterday - If you were flying from BA to Santiago in January of 1969, then maybe we were :) @Nancy from yesterday - Thank you for posting video of that amazing vista.
Started easy, got a little sluggish but then finished well below average time for me. Plopped down Eagle and ran with it. Happily plunking down ECOLAB and adhEre(?) at 2D until I saw the USPASSPORT clue and switched to EGRET and the NW sorted itself out quickly. Being a Westchester resident I got RYE immediately. Loved all the long clues. Didnt know BOXSTEP but that was easy enough with the crosses. Put BAssEs for Bale and Kilmer (ha!) thinking it plausible they both sang at some point. Had a good chuckle at myself when I saw the answer. Learned TAT, LEAH, BOXSTEP, EVA and SHAYNE which I will all surely forget in an hour.
All in all a great puzzle.
:::::::::::::::::: My first eagle in awhile, 4 over after 38:
I am feeling lithesome and conviviallitiness because my amiga, @Frantic, is back. All is finally good in Guacamole.... xoxo
@Carola. Oh Lordy. If you were the pretty, fun, lady singing and dancing down the aisles and you had me clapping away and joining you...then yes. We took the flight together....
I filled in the NAE/SAGET and ANNE/EVA/RYAN areas with my fingers crossed. The rest of the puzzle was a little here, a little there until some of the longer answers started to appear.
CELLMATE DIDTIME BUTTERCUP and BONOBOS get thumbs up.
Argghh! A technical DNF for me because I know the Moroccan quarter as a cASBAH - and the Clash song (“Rock the Casbah” - a song I love) is in my side on this one. Of course I wondered why cIA is an “auto import,” but I figured there was some joke I wasn’t getting about spies abroad. When I didn’t get the happy music, I found the mistake pretty quickly.
I was very much slowed in the NW by confidently putting in Eagle and Big apes. Sounds like many made the first mistake, but was I the only one who made the second? I kind if like my answer better for “close relatives of ours,” but BONOBOS are pretty cute.
LOTS of Saturday-worthy misdirection today - clues for TARP (“cover up in a shower”), US PASSPORT (“book with an eagle on its cover”), CELLMATE (“person you’re in with”) and SUB (“nonstarter”) all fooled me, in a good way.
In college, my roommates and I got a tarantula, whom we named BUTTERCUP. We liked to take her down to the girls’ floor, thinking, you know, girls always love guys with cute animals they can pet and coo over. Now why didn’t that work?
I remember the phrase he rode off madly in all directions as a quote from a Stephen Leacock short story. That is also the name that comes up in googling the phrase.
Quite an EYE OPENER for me to come here and find out so many of you found this easy. Let it suffice to say I would have been better off giving mine to one of the BONOBOS to solve. And that’s the GOSPEL TRUTH!
This was medium for me. Just enough resistance to make a solid Saturday. I zigged when I should have zagged on the clues for 2D and 29D. For "Stick on" I thought noun and for "Long" I went with verb. As always the crosses straightened me out.
BONOBO is an SB classic.
There was a mini- prison theme with CELLMATE and DIDTIME.
In the words of Gilda Radner " Take care of your UVULA and your UVULA will take care of you."
I have always remembered it as a Benchley quote but Leacock would certainly have written such a thing as well. My memory is not what it used to be, and if you don't believe me, you can ask my wife what's-her-name.
As a female classical pianist myself, I was really thrilled to see Clara Schumann make an appearance! My immediate instinct was Robert, of course, and when that didn't work I thought it was a rebus––that's how rare it is to see female classical pianists getting any attention, lol. Clara Schumann absolutely doesn't get enough historical credit, and her legacy is mostly related to her husband, an unfortunate fate that befalls many amazing women in history. Hats off to the creator for putting her in without using "female pianist" or something of the like in the clue.
Fun Saturday puzzle for me; close to my personal best. Finished with the Y in RYE, and beamed with delight when "Congratulations!" appeared. (I had the sound off, so inaudible happy music.)
Eighteen T's in the grid today--seemed like a lot.
Today’s 30 across tempt me into a risqué tit for TAT riff, but any such SALTY cheek smacks too much of my residual frat bro damage. Rex spotted all the EYE OPENERS that I otherwise found worthy of comment & the easy rating was appropriate though getting out of the NW took a quantum of solitude. Nice diversion Ori and appreciated on multiple levels this week 🙏🏾
Good puzzle today. Started easy, finished hard. Thumbs up from me.
For me, the only thing of importance in Rye is the Dragon Coaster. But I immediately had to smile when I came across the (for easy) very easy entry.
Perhaps there has been some overthinking these recent days, but I don't think one needs to understand anything about music to understand the concept of a transposing instrument. You don't have to know how to read music, you just have to know that musicians do (well, maybe not in the pop world). You need to know that a violin sound tones that are "higher" than a cello, and you don't need to be familiar with music to hear that. I suppose it's better to simply relax and listen to the music than talk about it, which can be frightening to some.
Funny stuff from OFL today. I almost fell into the ‘French animal name” rabbit hole, too, though I didn’t think of bears. BATMEN made me smile.
Good day for musicals. TRALALA reminds me of Gigi, with librettist ALAN Jay Lerner right below. Shuttle reminds me of this scene from Carousel.
Speaking of singing, I finally got UVULA, but wanted something VEL-related after a recent post by @LMS.
Never heard SEXPOSITIVE. Had heard of BONOBOS and DOGES. Knew the chef because Mr. A loves food shows.
Fair Saturday, maybe easier than some but still put up enough plenty of resistance for me.
Today is the birthday of English composer Frank Bridge, also a violinist, conductor and teacher of Benjamin Britten. Here’s something for anyone wanting a Rebus today.
I was curious about whether Wordle ever uses a plural. I found a list of Wordle words that went back to June 2021. No plurals but some words ending in S : TRUSS, REBUS, FLOSS, CRASS, ABYSS. But the website has a lot more. It says that there are 2315 words on the Wordle list and that each will be used once finishing up in 2027. Not only that, but it has a word for each day from now until then. The name on the web page is Owen Yin. He seems to be a computer guy and maybe he hacked into the Wordle list.
With 34 black squares this grid has a themed puzzle look to it with more short stuff than usual for a typical Saturday offering. All those 3s and 4s had me feeling A TAD ANGSTY.
Like mathgent @10:09 I would have much preferred a clue for one of the all-time great icons of the Golden Age of Hollywood Cinema LAUREN Bacall to the colorless and uninteresting anagram one for "unreal". I can't see any other connection between LAUREN and "unreal" so the anagram thingie seems just happenstance. Yawn.
The grid shows a commendably restrained reliance on the plural of convenience (POC to complete the fill. There were a couple of run-of-the-mill short ones with only BONOBO and EYE OPENER being the only major fill that needed some letter count boost from the letter S. There are no two-for-one POCs where a Down and an Across both share a final letter count boosting S. I think this makes a noticeable difference in the overall quality of the puzzle and provides a "heartier meal" feel to the solve, SO TO SPEAK.
I got my first U.S. PASSPORT in the early 80s and renewed it twice. I decided not to do it a third time because for some reason I kept looking older in each subsequent photo. Same issue with driver's license renewals. Now I'm starting to feel more than A TAD ANGSTY!
I wonder if anyone has ever gotten a TAT on their UVULA. Anybody remember the 50s-60s rock guitarist DUEIN Eddy?
Finally decided to create an alias for here after a year of being one of the many Anonym...i. (?) Same one as on Comics Curmudgeon. I wonder what the overlap is between the two blogs. These are the only two blogs I check.
As is almost always the case, Saturday was easier than Friday for me. And I laughed out loud to see RYE, thinking of this group. DOGES went right in, but I mainly solved bottom to top. Usually easier, with a late week puzzle.
I kicked myself for forgetting BOXSTEP. Brought back memories of Dance Class when I was in late elementary school. We boys all had to wear suits and ties. Two years, maybe three, and I basically learned two moves, the Waltz pattern and the Foxtrot's BOXSTEP. But you know, that was enough to survive my prep school dances, which were all about getting into close contact with girls, and had little to do with fancy dancing. (When I took the classes, I was way to young to care about girls at all, who belonged to some alien race as far as I was concerned).
I got VAIN right away, which gave me EVA. I had almost forgotten Paul RYAN, who was, I thought, a pretty decent guy for a Republican. Never heard of Chef ANNE, and my immediate thought was, shoulda had a Seattle clue. Say, "Seattle's most famous monarch" or "best-known queen". I think everyone who spends two or three days there goes to Queen ANNE Hill, to admire the Victorian houses that sometimes are in the style named after her. We have a few Queen Anne houses in my neighborhood, though none, of course, were built in her ERA. Most, like my own house, were built during the reigns of Victoria and Edward, or perhaps George V.
But then, there are plenty of houses in Northern California that are Georgian, but practically none actually built during the reigns of Georges I, II, and III, after whom the style is named. (George I succeeded Queen ANNE, circa 1714).
I can't wait to tell my niece that her name anagrams to UNREAL. She likes word trivia, like: what two very common words are pronounced exactly the same but have no letters in common?
For "Cover up in a shower", looking at ---P I of course put in SOAP.
re:SHAYNE Graham - If Shortz has really good lawyers they might convince a jury that, having played on a total of 15 NFL teams, SHAYNE Graham did, indeed, play on 14 NFL teams. I mean, he did. But it sure looks like somebody did not read the entire sentence in Wikipedia. Looking at the possible SHANE clues I think I’d have gone with some sort of Guiding Light clue. 😉
@Victory Garden - TAT is most commonly clued as short for TATtoo.
SEX POSITIVE and SEX POSITIVE feminism are hardly new terms (the guy mentioned in the first link died before I was born) so I was a little surprised at it being new to people.
@mathgent - Every time you list one of my comments my immediate reaction is “What did I say?” 🤣😂
@ 8:59 - Supercilious seems like a top three adjective for the former Wisconsin representative. Actually, I’d say it’s a coin flip between supercilious and venal for which is the #1 RYAN adjective. I’d go even further and suggest that supercilious applies to every supposed conservative who spouts Randian dreck.
The Previous SHAYNE appearances: Date/Grid/Clue/Author Sat Feb 26, 2022/13D/N.F.L. kicker Graham who played for 14 teams/Ori Brian Sun Apr 18, 2021/87A/Man's name that anagrams to HYENAS/Johan Vass Sun Dec 4, 2016/57D/Michael ___, Brett Halliday detective/Bruce Haight Fri Feb 20, 2009/40D/Private detective Mike of Brett Halliday novels/Paula Gamache
Apparently Rex may not know the the origin of supercilious since I believe he referred to its root cilia as science junk yesterday. The lashes of yesterday are the eyebrows or supercilia from which supercilious sprang into existence. Super as in above as in the haughty arched eyebrow of those who feel they are superior. Remember those soulful self-adoring photos of Ryan in the gym? The prideful posting of his morning workout? A crossfitter maybe? Lean and mean with his posse in tow ready to take over the Republican Party and American politics while worshipping at the shrine of the self-devoted SEXPOSITIVE atheist Ayn Rand. Rand and Ryan believed that they were superior and such special people did not have to follow rules like normal people. They were destined to be transcendent. Out with old school Bohner. In with The Young Guns. Somewhat ironically what defeated them was not the Democrats but the future Magaheads, the Tea Party, the populist wing of their own party. So yes, conceited, say supercilious, in style, belief, action, and philosophy. And stymied by far less impressive people. And the Repubican Party devolves ever further. That is not good for the Democratic Party nor the Country nor Democracy. Thats just me today. Your mileage may vary.
I hope someday this puzzle will be easy for me. The SE fell into place without too much work and then up to BATMEN at SHAYNE's corner. Did I think of RYE as soon as I read the clue? Of course. Did I really believe it woould be right? Alas no. Never ever again will I ever do that again. It is the only 3 letter city in NY. I checked. Except when abbreviation is indicated.
So shamefully I looked up SHAYNE.
After that it was street fighting. Block by block. SEXPOSITIVE was the nastiest. Never heard of it. Brand new. Made me feel like an old man in a cave. I try not to look in the mirror.
I did like the clues. Faked me out in all directions. I said that. The fun was breaking the code.
Kiev is now KY4. There is a joke there soewhere but it's too soon.
Apologies for the politics in advance but CILIA lead-in was too much to resist.
False steps. next TO NONE, AD gEEK x SEAgAToR (love adgeek as a marketer mag).
I knew TAT from shuttle but no idea of what the shuttle looks like.
@Nancy, congrats on your KIA “Triumph.” Your portmanteau question got me thinking - would a portmanteau of SEX and EXPOSITIon be SEXPOSITIon? Also liked your G&S link - hadn’t seen it when I mentioned TRALALA/Gigi and shuttle/Carousel. All that musical fun plus CLARA and foxtrot, too!
@Unknown 12:05, good observations re CLARA. Didn’t she have eight children too?
@pablo, I looked up ACC - Agenesis of the corpus callosum. Hope your son’s is mild. I was particularly interested because one part of my group’s “educational informances” is about how playing a musical instrument makes the two sides of your brain more connected. Did the research at CalTech involve music-making?
@okanaganer, I came up with two - both three letters.
@Z, thanks for the links - I see I knew the ideas, just not the terms.
LOL Couple of people pointing out suprcilium means eyebrow. Well, yeah. Ask any birder and he’ll tell you that without batting an eye. Or raising an eyebrow.I mention because quite recently Rex said malar was a specialty word. And every birder knows that word too.
@A-No "mild" as far as I know. There are degrees, as in "partial", but in our case it's total agenesis, just no corpus collussum at all. We knew something was going on, but didn't find out about this until he was four and had an MRI when it was feared he had suffered a concussion. We're been to ACC conferences and heard some heartbreaking stories about kids that just stopped developing intellectually. Our boy is married and has a college degree, a super bright daughter, a son on the way, and a good job working with autistic kids We often wonder what he would be like with a fully functional brain.
As for playing musical instruments, it wasn't included in the research they were doing at the time (we also had a visit to San Francisco, where studies were being done). This may be going on now. Everything is relatively new in this field, as previously the only method of a certain diagnosis was autopsy (yikes).
Thanks for your interest. We'd never heard of this thirty years ago, and now there's a national organization devoted to it.
@pablo, that must have been quite a shock, to say the least. It's great to hear how your son is able to thrive in spite of such an enormous challenge.
There is a lot more research about music and the brain now. I even saw posts about music therapy on a blog devoted to ACC, agenesiscorpuscallosum.blogspot.com
@okanaganer, my guess was the second of your options. Didn’t consider the first one, but I can see it now.
I’m with @ Lewis today. I am a member of the local Audubon Society, my dear friend (a Québécois mentioned yesterday) did his DMA project (thesis and recital) on CLARA Schumann, and NPR did a piece on BONOBOS earlier this week so our distant cousins were on my mind.
After breezing through the. NW, my hubris got the better of me, and I confess to being anything but on our constructor’s wavelength today. Im going to have to adopt the “faith solve” technique. Thank you , @Lewis. So much of this one just was not in my wheelhouse. SALTY to me means proficient in my era slang. A musician, for example lays down SALTY licks. ATME ? Just no. While I was certain the subject matter that resulted in SEX POSITIVE, that answer is still meaningless to me, but I figured it out. And wow, how long has it been since we have seen TAT?!! So long its not outre.
All kn all, everything a Saturday should be. Going to en no y the stiff drink I have earned and fix some dinner.
@JC66-Thanks for the kind words. I have to say it didn't hurt that both of his parents were teachers.
@A-Music and the brain is indeed fascinating. I just read that there are neurons that only respond to singing. They're just starting to work on the implications of that one. My friend and I sing in nursing homes fairly often, and people who remember little have no problem coming up with song lyrics, which is fascinating.
How astounding that we (or at least I) can play back familiar recordings in our thoughts, with seemingly something akin to the entire orchestra playing in real time??!!
Should I be troubled that in the post-Trump world I seem to accept Paul Ryan, GW, Romney, Reagan, Boehner, so many others, as reasonably decent human beings?
At Anonymous 10:58 - nothing hard about enjoying your suffering.
Today's crap more than redeemed by sex positive, bonobos, cellmate, slim to none, outer space, just about all the long stuff.
I don't usually complain after finishing a puzzle 100%. But the clue for 28-DOWN, "Long," only fits the answer "SLIMTONONE," if the word "long" applies to odds. There's no reference to odds here.
Sexposition is totally a thing: see Game of Thrones. It's when plot points are given out while the characters happen to be in bed together. Make sense? Nope, me either
People sure cam be different. @Lewis breezed (!) through the NW, then got stuck; I was the polar opposite. Didn't get OUTERSPACE for a while because to me, that term starts a little farther out than our own solar system. That left nothing to go on up there except LET. Eventually I backed into it from POACH to TARP and from DOGES to ATAD. Perhaps I have a thing against the NW, slowly accumulated over the years. It seems a very disproportionate part of the time that section is the most brutal. Now I dread all NWs except North By Northwest, my favorite movie.
One sticking spot outside of there was parsing SLIMTONONE even with most of the letters in place. "Long" as in odds. O...kay.
I am a football fan--have been for years--yet have never heard of SHAYNE until this very day. And I also asked "Is it SHAYNE Graham or Graham SHAYNE?" For me it was 50-50. I can only say he was never an Eagle. Certainly must've been a head case for being traded so may times--but then a lot of kickers are.
Managed to finish this; I'd call it medium overall, NW dragging it out of the "easy" camp. Suitable for a Saturday, peppered with tricky clues. Birdie.
I love how Rex declares there's no such thing as Ecolab, but that was my first guess, since I've had several friends who worked there. It's the name of a company, Rex.
Also, I think Anne Burrell is famous enough for a Saturday NYT xword puzzle, even if you don't watch cooking shows. I know that I'd find her, well before I found Waldo.
Last names in Russian (and possibly other Slavic languages) change their spelling according to the person's gender, with "a" as the usual feminine ending for both first and last names. So if the last name ends in "a" (Noblezada), the first name will also end in "a" (Eva).
Got 1D ECOLAB with no trouble so 1A "Eagle" was a gimme. Or so I thought. Oy!
ReplyDeleteHas anyone in the known universe ever been ANGSTY? That's a first for me. As is the term SEX POSITIVE (I would have guessed that this meant one was certain of the outcome of a specific date, the type of which I never had!).
All-in-all, a fun Saturday.
shayne?? how obscure is that?? and the crosses there were problematic. ella and salty
ReplyDeleteWhen I quashed the NW in a blink, I thought, “Oh dang, not a faith solve today.” But as soon as I exited that friendly area, things toughened considerably, with a scatter of answers and little more. And suddenly I was deep in faith territory. At one point I arrived at crossword purgatory, where there was plenty of white, and nothing was yielding, and I yelled and yelled, but the cavalry didn’t come. Nothingness.
ReplyDeleteUntil it did, that blessed ping that unlocked an answer, giving my brain several new filled-in squares to work with, and it went from silence to whirr. Then, step by step – or, since this is a crossword, BOXSTEP by BOXSTEP, inch by inch, my faith was slowly rewarded.
A big holdup for me was when I confidently entered STATE for [OK, in a way], thinking, “Wow! What a clever clue!” The clues I really love at the end of the week, because they are so tough, are those one-worders, like [Long] for SLIM TO NONE, [Charge] for ALLEGE, and [Nonstarter] for SUB.
Above all, I love the experience of opening the door, stepping into the grid, all alone, having to draw on my resources to earn my way through parries and seeming dead ends, and, by golly, getting through. That’s the experience I long for, and you gave it to me in spades today, Ori. Thank you greatly for this puzzle!
Agree with @Roberto today. That NE corner was a bear. Yeesh. SALTY as clued is new to me. Off to a 5K this morning.
ReplyDeleteThe last time I was in Florida, I noticed an unusual number of KIA ads on the radio, so I started counting cars as they passed me (everyone in Florida passes me). Of the first 20 cars, seven were KIAs, two were VWs, and two were Jeeps. Nothing else got more than one.
ReplyDeletePretty sure there has never, EVER, been a more obscure clue for RYE.
Ended exactly where Rex did, and with pretty much the exact same thoughts.
Easy? Hardly. Entering 'Baboons' before 'Bonobos' didn't help, but this Saturday was as difficult as any other one to me. I'll still give myself a pat on the back for (finally) getting it -- and thanks for the challenge(s), Ori. Keep 'em comin'!
ReplyDeleteFairly smooth Saturday - the KASBAH - SEA WATER combo in the SW kept me from really running thru this quickly. We get our case of RYE up top. The center triple was fantastic. Agree with Rex that some of the trivia was odd. CLARA, ANNE and EVA escaped me. No issue with BATMEN entry - the clue was clear. Old friends UVULA and BONOBOS helped.
ReplyDeleteSadly it’s been three years this week since I last used my US PASSPORT.
I’ll place the pearls around the only girl for me
Enjoyable Saturday solve.
FH
ReplyDeleteYes, easy. Record time for me of 12.37 which, given that it takes me 5 minutes to type all the answers in on a Monday when I get every answer immediately, means that the 'solve time' here was about 7 minutes. For a Saturday.
More time to enjoy the Prof's woke-splaining of answers.....
Well, yesterday we had OFL go bonkers over PILAU, yet today DOGES doesn’t even merit a mention. Although - it is good to see him focus his tirade on the trivial crossing of EVA and ANNE, on a Saturday no less - there is hope for you yet Rex !
ReplyDeleteI’m sorry, but what the heck is an ECOLAB ? It sounds like something that Monty Python might have cooked up at one time. What do you do there - make Ozone ? (I forget - does the earth need more ozone, or less ?). Maybe they make plastic bags or styrofoam that won’t last in the pacific until the end of the universe. Ok, ok - I googled it and it brought me to a really amateurish looking corporate website - what’s up wit dat ?
Anne Burrell is a really cool lady, and her bolognese is to die for.
ReplyDeleteEasy Saturday ... until I didn't get the happy music. Checked my "questionable" answers, even consulting Sergey and Larry. All OK. I was ready to DNF when I noticed the formerly-overlooked clue at 36A. Clearly KIA, not cIA, which corrected the oh-so-certain cASBAH and appeased the happy music gods. D'oh!
Thx Ori, for a fine Sat. offering! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy+
Smooth solve all the way.
Fair crosses again come into play for CLARA, SEX POSITIVE, SHAYNE, SALTY, ALAN, ANNE, EVA.
Liked the clue for CELLMATE.
Still trying to fully grok SLIM TO NONE. Reckon it refers to a 'long shot', long odds, 'slim chance', etc. The clue, 'Long', just seemed to be incomplete. Maybe someone can come up with a sentence that works better than, "their chances were long" in lieu of "their chances were SLIM TO NONE".
Anyhoo, had fun with this one. :)
___
yd pg: 7:53 / W: 4* (scary; had only one yellow after three tries)
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
My chances of breezing through a Saturday are SLIMTONONE, so I remain impressed by those that find them easy.
ReplyDeleteStarted great - ooh ooh people will fall for eagle or heron but I know it's an EGRET. Got through, and loved, the long downs and acrosses, then flamed out in the north and SW.
But I finally finished this one, in the SW, with that triumphant feeling you dont get from 'easy'. Last night, STAMP, BITE, HERD,and AMEN just wouldn't gel. And I've been in KASBAHs and couldn't get that either as I was trying to think of some sort of Sahelian abode. This AM, after some sleep and a coffee, fine. AMEN in fact. Perfect Saturday here.
yuk
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely shocked! that the 9D clue made no mention of the marina. The omission caused an ANGSTY hole to open in my heart. No happy hour specials at Z’s Placebo and Tentacle for Shortz.
ReplyDeleteI’m a little surprised that ANGSTY gave anyone problems. I’m pretty sure Emo has gotten ANGSTY clues in the past since being ANGSTY is the defining characteristic of EMO.
Is it SHAYNE Graham or Graham SHAYNE? That he played for 14 teams suggests that he wasn’t exactly a pro bowler.
That middle staggered stack is telling an interesting story. It definitely reminds me of this song, that feels as if it should be sung by a choir.
I stared at that TAT clue/answer pair for many precious nanoseconds post solve. Somewhere in the deep recesses the lace-making meaning exists and it slowly worked its way to the surface. I’m glad those crosses were fair so still an easy solve, so I appreciated the cluing variety rather than getting stymied by what is typically fairly common crosswordese.
It's Shayne Graham. He didn't play for 14 different teams though. Didn't notice that until I saw your comment but that clue is incorrect.
DeleteDespite what seemed like an overdose of misdirect/"clever" clues, this one felt rather easy for the Saturdee.
ReplyDeleteEither that or I'm suddenly brilliant. 🤔
Nah.
Just can't work up a lather either way about this, but it was better than a sharp stick in the eye.
🧠🧠
🎉🎉.5
Wordle 252 3/6
🟩⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟩🟨🟨⬜⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Haven't read anything on the blog lately, so I wonder if I'm the only one who thoroughly enjoyed the smooth Wordle transition courtesy of NYT tech people.
More genius brought to us by the progressive, forward-thinking .puz-killers. No, I will not get over it.
@Z - au contraire, SHAYNE Graham, who spend more time with my beloved Bengals than any other team, was a Pro Bowler (2005).
ReplyDeleteI can't relate to Rex's EVA/ANNE rant (EVA who?) because I watch the Food Network fairly often and you can't not know who she is; she's in a lot of the ads (I don't actually watch any of the show she frequents, she kind of drives me nuts). So ANNE was a gimme. I had to think hard to bring to mind Mitt Romney's supercilious running mate, Paul RYAN, thank goodness.
ReplyDeleteI loved the clue for SLIM TO NONE. A la Rex, I went the "yearning" direction. I was solving from the bottom when I got to that spot and when ONONE was in the grid, I struggled mightily to undook that to create a phrase meaning yearn. Har.
I've seen enough Audubon Society literature that I just had to get one cross to confirm whether their symbol was an EGRET or a heron. Juliet and a TARP cleared it up.
Ori Brian, this was a fun, easy Saturday, thanks!
ANNE Burrell is all over the place, and with her spiky ice cream swirl of white hair quite recognizable. It's surprising Rex does not know her, since he seems to be a foodie.
ReplyDeleteYep. 201 appearances of “Emo” in the NYTX. At first it was always the comedian Emo Philips, but he was getting replaced by the rock genre starting in 2004. Since 2004 ANGSTY has been part of an Emo clue 10 times, including four times from August 2020 to May 2021. This is only the second appearance of ANGSTY as an answer, but the first time it appeared (last February) the clue was Like the emo genre.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Paul RYAN, he was the “cause” of one of the more infamous bad crosses of a proper name. The Down word was “chocolaty” but the clue easily could have been for “chocolate,” leading to many a “who the hell is Paul ReAN” type comments. The clues were P.R. man? and Like many éclairs. It was so infamous that the day it happened John Stewart referenced it on The Daily Show. It was the January 23, 2013 puzzle and you can read Rex et alia if you’re curious.
ReplyDeleteFH
ReplyDelete@Teedmn: You thought Paul Ryan was 'supercilious'? Do you know what that word even means, or did you just hear someone say it? You could choose a lot of adjectives to describe Ryan (many of them chosen by disappointed conservatives) but 'supercilious' wouldn't even be in the top 100
Is SEXPOSITIVE a portmanteau of SEX and EXPOSITIVE? If not, it just sounds like something that Dr. Ruth would chirpingly urge everyone to be.
ReplyDeleteAnd how can SALTY, which already has two meanings -- 1) oversalted and 2) full of bad words like a sailor's language -- have this third meaning of "annoyed"? When did that happen?
Sometimes I think I have as much trouble with modern slang as I do with rappers and car models. But even the slang couldn't stymie today because the puzzle was so easy for a Saturday. Not uninteresting, mind you. But easy.
I loved cluing SLIM TO NONE with "long" as in long odds. But I had so many crosses that there was no surprise when it came in. Ditto for the nicely clued U.S. PASSPORT and DESSERT MENU.
Even the car didn't throw me today. I actually used KIA to change cASBAH to KASBAH -- though I don't think "The Sheik" would have spelled it that way. Even I knew that the CIA was many things, but that it wasn't a car.
I gotta go with OFL on the EVA/ANNE cross. I zipped through this mainly because I got the long answers pretty quickly. I especially appreciate the idea that a crossword grid being relatively small (except for Sundays) and you should make the best use of the space.
ReplyDeleteOh, and P.S. Ecolab is a real thing.https://www.ecolab.com
ReplyDeleteI think we have to talk about the Shayne Graham clue. Per Wikipedia, he played for 14 teams OTHER than the Bengals, meaning he played for 15 teams. Some of those teams (Seahawks, Redskins, Cowboys, and Browns) roster him only on off-season or practice squads, meaning he 'played' for 11. And then there's the Richmond Speed, a pro team, just not an NFL team, where he began his career. Played for 14 teams? I don't think so.
ReplyDeleteWhen people say "to die for" as a superlative for a food ... do they "die" right after they eat it? There wouldn't be much of an incentive to save that recipe.
ReplyDeleteThis was a charming Saturday, made difficult by SHAYNE, ANNE and ALAN. I might have yelled, “Who are these people?!” Even the recently deceased Bob SAGET gave me pause since these puzzles sit in piles for what may be years and the clue must have had a very quick update. Dear CLARA was a recent Jeopardy question so she gave me no trouble at all.
ReplyDeleteDESSERTMENU and SEXPOSITIVE were very nice.
Ok, you had me at RYE!
ReplyDeleteI don't know why that answer made me laugh out loud. That's LOL for you kids out there.
With D - G - S, I initially put down DAGOS, wondering what rex's comments would be, but eventually sussed out BONOBOS, which was the cleverest of clues.
Like many of you, I found this *much* easier than yesterday's.
The EVA/ANNE cross was very inferable, and while I never watch the Food Network, I had a mental image of Anne Burrell with her spiky hair, but kind of confused her with Paula Dean, who had to resign.
In more important news: kind of an unfair Wordle today as my last three guesses show: This could easily have been a birdie.
Wordle 252 5/6
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜⬜⬜🟩
🟩⬜🟩🟩🟩
🟩⬜🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
I see no one got here first. For anyone wondering if 26D has ever been heard in the wild, the answer is yes...here.
ReplyDeleteWell, I knew anything "green" had to start with ECO, which begat EGRET, and away I rode madly in all directions, to quote Robert Benchley.
ReplyDeleteI was thinking we were in the realm of the old crossword puzzle dictionary when I saw "Moroccan quarter" as a clue to an obscure foreign currency, so was relieved to have it finally be KASBAH.
Wanted ANTSY, which was too short, so slid seamlessly into ANGSTY, which still doesn't sound just right, but there it was,
Had no real trouble with the proper names, even the ones I didn't know, but kept reading SLIMTONONE as a nine-letter DOOK until the obvious SUB for "nonstarter" finally kicked in, which lead to a major self dope slap. Jeez.
Have actually visited CALTECH, where they were doing research on a condition my son has called ACC. Beautiful campus.
And glad that others found this enjoyable if pretty easy. Same here. Thanks for all the fun, OB. Oh Boy, said I when I finished this one, that was a good time.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteDidn't find it as easy as some of y'all. Got hung up on a few spots. That South Center area was made more difficult by my own doing, as had addUP first for RUNUP, then was quite sure it was sUmUP. That perplexed me, causing me to not see SLIM TO NONE easily, partly because SUB was mysteriously clued, and adding in my wrongness, lead to me having _LIMTOm_m_. Let out a Huh? Off of sUmUP, put sara in for RYAN (thinking Sarah Palin [wrong spelling, and probably wrong year]), and also had prIm for VAIN, which is where that other M came from in my previous Huh. Erased everything except DUEIN, and then the ole brain cottoned onto EYEOPENERS. Which got the dominoes to fall, RYAN, RUNUP, VAIN, SLIM TO NONE, and ending on that final A. And... Happy Music!
LALALAS before TRALALA, eensy-TEENY (a kealoa that I will put in the wrong answer 95% of the time, regardless that it's a 50-50 shot), think that's it for writeovers.
SUB and TAT had tough clues. Some names I didn't know today, but crossers got them.
A good SatPuz overall, with me able to retain some brain cells.
yd -0!! (Last three easy 4's, almost missed'em!)(Today's is a toughie!)
No F's (two days in a row!)(TSK!)
RooMonster
DarrinV
An annoyance or two but an agreeable time spent solving.
ReplyDeleteI like anagrams but I would have preferred LAUREN to have been clued in terms of the divine Bacall.
You really have to stretch Joaquin's Dictum to permit SLIMTONONE. First, it isn't the common expression. "What are the chances of that happening?" "There are two chances, slim and none." Second, LONG refers to "odds" not "chances." We say that there are "long odds" against something happening, not "long chances."
Another similar annoyance. STAMP for "OK, in a way."
I thought that Nancy, that Downton Abbey aficionado, might have commented that Bates, Lord Grantham's valet, was his batman during the war.
I used to watch the Food Channel a lot and really liked the very cool ANNE Burrell.
Allow me to rewrite Rex’s PS.
ReplyDeleteI was wrong about Batmen.
Anon 9:09
ReplyDeleteSave your breath. If Rex hasn’t heard of it, it doesn’t exist.
If he doesn’t like it, it’s offensive.
Kitshef,
ReplyDeleteShh. Don’t correct z. And for God’s sake don’t tell him Graham played for 15 not 14 NFL teams.
Am I the only one who went with UNAMI as part of the palate and then had way to hard a time giving it up?
ReplyDelete@kitshef 7:10 am.
ReplyDelete“ Pretty sure there has never, EVER, been a more obscure clue for RYE.”
I have to assume this was said with your tongue firmly in your cheek, since I’m quite sure you were around for the 8/9/20 group gasp of WTF for 61D New York City with a marina.
Guy: Ya wanna dance?
Lass: Nae, nae.
Guy: Sure, whatever dance ya want, bae.
Easy puzzle. But very enjoyable. Thanks, Ori Brian.
I can't put my finger on it:
ReplyDeleteWhile I was solving in a pretty good fashion clip, I kept asking myself why I wasn't having much fun. This last week was full of squeals of delight. Today, I will try and figure out why my clam wasn't happy.
Perhaps having to really, really, really work hard on the names I didn't know. If I'm having fun, I don't mind. I wasn't really having fun despite my filling in a plethora of answers. Oh, @Rex. My one lickety split name was ANNE Burrell. If you've ever watched any TV foodie shows like I do, the name would pop right in.
Maybe some of the other sad faces I made was wondering what SEX POSITIVE is. I was able to fill it in but I wasn't sure if I should've smiled or cried.
I loved DESSERT MENU (hah) and GOSPEL TRUTH. Whenever my brother lied (which was often) he'd yell: That's the gospel truth and I'll swear on the Bible. I was worried he'd go to hell.
KASBAH elicited a much needed smile. I've spent some time in Morocco. My mom, sister and I would be the only "white" people strolling around the Marrakech market. We'd buy rugs, eat cherries that had been licked with some black tobbaqui, and hope we'd make it back to our lovely hotel with all are goodies and a stomach intact. We were an anomaly but we were treated with gifts and kindness and toothless smiles.
I think my US PASSPORT has expired. I'm dreading applying for a new one because my picture always looks like I was heading for jail and my CELL MATE weighed 200 lbs.
Mostly easy, entirely enjoyable. In the "not easy" zone were the clues that so cleverly disguised their meaning (e.g., for CELLMATE) or that were ambiguous (SUB) or that were hard to parse, like "Long," as @Rex and others have noted. That last one reminded me of my early days of daring to try a Saturday puzzle and realizing that Saturdays were hard not (just) because of arcana but because of one-word clues that could be nouns or verbs or adjectives and have multiple meanings; I specifically remember feeling baleful about "cover." Anyway, I liked that throwback to days-of-yore Saturdays. Favorite entry today: BUTTERCUP, although I thought the grid was filled with winners.
ReplyDelete@pabloinnh - Thank you for the Benchley quote!
@Gill I. from yesterday - If you were flying from BA to Santiago in January of 1969, then maybe we were :)
@Nancy from yesterday - Thank you for posting video of that amazing vista.
Started easy, got a little sluggish but then finished well below average time for me. Plopped down Eagle and ran with it. Happily plunking down ECOLAB and adhEre(?) at 2D until I saw the USPASSPORT clue and switched to EGRET and the NW sorted itself out quickly. Being a Westchester resident I got RYE immediately. Loved all the long clues. Didnt know BOXSTEP but that was easy enough with the crosses. Put BAssEs for Bale and Kilmer (ha!) thinking it plausible they both sang at some point. Had a good chuckle at myself when I saw the answer. Learned TAT, LEAH, BOXSTEP, EVA and SHAYNE which I will all surely forget in an hour.
ReplyDeleteAll in all a great puzzle.
::::::::::::::::::
My first eagle in awhile, 4 over after 38:
Wordle 252 2/6*
🟨⬛⬛🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
I am feeling lithesome and conviviallitiness because my amiga, @Frantic, is back.
ReplyDeleteAll is finally good in Guacamole.... xoxo
@Carola. Oh Lordy. If you were the pretty, fun, lady singing and dancing down the aisles and you had me clapping away and joining you...then yes. We took the flight together....
It must be so hard to be Rex and get indigestion every time you see the name of a Republican.
ReplyDeleteI filled in the NAE/SAGET and ANNE/EVA/RYAN areas with my fingers crossed. The rest of the puzzle was a little here, a little there until some of the longer answers started to appear.
ReplyDeleteCELLMATE DIDTIME BUTTERCUP and BONOBOS get thumbs up.
@Nancy and
@Bocamp, Thanks for yesterday!
OVERSHARING
ReplyDeleteIs a word used by 🦖 today.
a shoe fit for many rhyming “girdle.” Players 🤗😂🤗
Enjoy 🦖’s fine tuned crits and agree today.
Good week of 🧩s. 🤸🏽♀️
🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤗
Argghh! A technical DNF for me because I know the Moroccan quarter as a cASBAH - and the Clash song (“Rock the Casbah” - a song I love) is in my side on this one. Of course I wondered why cIA is an “auto import,” but I figured there was some joke I wasn’t getting about spies abroad. When I didn’t get the happy music, I found the mistake pretty quickly.
ReplyDeleteI was very much slowed in the NW by confidently putting in Eagle and Big apes. Sounds like many made the first mistake, but was I the only one who made the second? I kind if like my answer better for “close relatives of ours,” but BONOBOS are pretty cute.
LOTS of Saturday-worthy misdirection today - clues for TARP (“cover up in a shower”), US PASSPORT (“book with an eagle on its cover”), CELLMATE (“person you’re in with”) and SUB (“nonstarter”) all fooled me, in a good way.
In college, my roommates and I got a tarantula, whom we named BUTTERCUP. We liked to take her down to the girls’ floor, thinking, you know, girls always love guys with cute animals they can pet and coo over. Now why didn’t that work?
SEX POSITIVE is being comfortable talking about other's kinks. Talking about your own is still TMI.
ReplyDeleteMedium. Solid with s soupçon of sparkle. Liked it.
ReplyDeleteWOEs - CLARA, SHAYNE, EVA, and ALAN
Kealoa - TSKtut
I remember the phrase he rode off madly in all directions as a quote from a Stephen Leacock short story. That is also the name that comes up in googling the phrase.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteQuite an EYE OPENER for me to come here and find out so many of you found this easy. Let it suffice to say I would have been better off giving mine to one of the BONOBOS to solve. And that’s the GOSPEL TRUTH!
@GILL I. - LOL! :)
ReplyDeleteThis was medium for me. Just enough resistance to make a solid Saturday. I zigged when I should have zagged on the clues for 2D and 29D. For "Stick on" I thought noun and for "Long" I went with verb. As always the crosses straightened me out.
ReplyDeleteBONOBO is an SB classic.
There was a mini- prison theme with CELLMATE and DIDTIME.
In the words of Gilda Radner " Take care of your UVULA and your UVULA will take care of you."
yd pg -1
@Anon 11;38
ReplyDeleteI have always remembered it as a Benchley quote but Leacock would certainly have written such a thing as well. My memory is not what it used to be, and if you don't believe me, you can ask my wife what's-her-name.
As a female classical pianist myself, I was really thrilled to see Clara Schumann make an appearance! My immediate instinct was Robert, of course, and when that didn't work I thought it was a rebus––that's how rare it is to see female classical pianists getting any attention, lol. Clara Schumann absolutely doesn't get enough historical credit, and her legacy is mostly related to her husband, an unfortunate fate that befalls many amazing women in history. Hats off to the creator for putting her in without using "female pianist" or something of the like in the clue.
ReplyDeleteKinda figured on a fight, when BONOBOS/DOGES showed up, right after tusslin with CLARA in the ECOLAB. But, hey -- it's a SatPuz.
ReplyDeleteHoly plurals, Batmen!
staff weeject pick: TAT or RYE. Both were feisty lil devils.
ANGSTY. har
Thanx for the challenge, Ori Brian dude. Primo DESSERTMENU clue.
Masked & Anonym8Us
Warning--dangerous earworm ahead
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbFbre_M9Uc
Whistling Jack--I Was Kaiser Bill's BATMaN
Fun Saturday puzzle for me; close to my personal best. Finished with the Y in RYE, and beamed with delight when "Congratulations!" appeared. (I had the sound off, so inaudible happy music.)
Eighteen T's in the grid today--seemed like a lot.
MFCTM.
ReplyDeleteZ (8:41)
Anonymous (10:58)
pabloinnh (12:02)
Today’s 30 across tempt me into a risqué tit for TAT riff, but any such SALTY cheek smacks too much of my residual frat bro damage. Rex spotted all the EYE OPENERS that I otherwise found worthy of comment & the easy rating was appropriate though getting out of the NW took a quantum of solitude. Nice diversion Ori and appreciated on multiple levels this week 🙏🏾
ReplyDeleteWhy not relate 22 across to 34 down?
ReplyDeleteSalty seawater
Good puzzle today. Started easy, finished hard. Thumbs up from me.
ReplyDeleteFor me, the only thing of importance in Rye is the Dragon Coaster. But I immediately had to smile when I came across the (for easy) very easy entry.
Perhaps there has been some overthinking these recent days, but I don't think one needs to understand anything about music to understand the concept of a transposing instrument. You don't have to know how to read music, you just have to know that musicians do (well, maybe not in the pop world). You need to know that a violin sound tones that are "higher" than a cello, and you don't need to be familiar with music to hear that. I suppose it's better to simply relax and listen to the music than talk about it, which can be frightening to some.
Kinda agree with @Rex re: the EVA / ANNE cross; almost certainly had to be an 'A', tho, for one who wasn't familiar with either celeb.
ReplyDeleteClara Schumann - Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 (w/Francesco Nicolosi, soloist / Alma Mahler Sinfonietta, Stefania Rinaldi, conductor)
Re: Shayne Graham; is the clue a gaff? Does "Joaquin's Dictum" hold? You decide. 🤔
Imo, I think the author of the following para might have said 'in addition to the', rather than 'excluding the':
"… he played for 14 different NFL franchises over 9 seasons, excluding the 7 seasons he spent with the Cincinnati Bengals." (Wikipedia)
1) New Orleans Saints
2) Seattle Seahawks
3) Buffalo Bills
* Seattle Seahawks (second stint)
4) Carolina Panthers
5) Cincinnati Bengals
6) Baltimore Ravens
7) New York Giants
8) New England Patriots
9) Washington Redskins
10) Dallas Cowboys
11) Miami Dolphins
* Baltimore Ravens (second stint)
12) Houston Texans
13) Cleveland Browns
14) Pittsburgh Steelers
* New Orleans Saints (second stint)
15) Atlanta Falcons
@RooMonster 👍 for 0 yd
@Frantic
Good to see you! 😊
Wordle transition not so smooth for me. :(
@beverly c 👍
___
td pg: 25:14 / W: lucky guess for 3*
Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊
Funny stuff from OFL today. I almost fell into the ‘French animal name” rabbit hole, too, though I didn’t think of bears. BATMEN made me smile.
ReplyDeleteGood day for musicals. TRALALA reminds me of Gigi, with librettist ALAN Jay Lerner right below. Shuttle reminds me of this scene from Carousel.
Speaking of singing, I finally got UVULA, but wanted something VEL-related after a recent post by @LMS.
Never heard SEXPOSITIVE. Had heard of BONOBOS and DOGES. Knew the chef because Mr. A loves food shows.
Fair Saturday, maybe easier than some but still put up enough plenty of resistance for me.
Today is the birthday of English composer Frank Bridge, also a violinist, conductor and teacher of Benjamin Britten. Here’s something for anyone wanting a Rebus today.
********** WORDLE STUFF **********
ReplyDeleteI was curious about whether Wordle ever uses a plural. I found a list of Wordle words that went back to June 2021. No plurals but some words ending in S : TRUSS, REBUS, FLOSS, CRASS, ABYSS. But the website has a lot more. It says that there are 2315 words on the Wordle list and that each will be used once finishing up in 2027. Not only that, but it has a word for each day from now until then. The name on the web page is Owen Yin. He seems to be a computer guy and maybe he hacked into the Wordle list.
I’ve wondered about plurals too, and it would be very helpful to know if they are excluded from answers. Does anyone know?
DeleteWith 34 black squares this grid has a themed puzzle look to it with more short stuff than usual for a typical Saturday offering. All those 3s and 4s had me feeling A TAD ANGSTY.
ReplyDeleteLike mathgent @10:09 I would have much preferred a clue for one of the all-time great icons of the Golden Age of Hollywood Cinema LAUREN Bacall to the colorless and uninteresting anagram one for "unreal". I can't see any other connection between LAUREN and "unreal" so the anagram thingie seems just happenstance. Yawn.
The grid shows a commendably restrained reliance on the plural of convenience (POC to complete the fill. There were a couple of run-of-the-mill short ones with only BONOBO and EYE OPENER being the only major fill that needed some letter count boost from the letter S. There are no two-for-one POCs where a Down and an Across both share a final letter count boosting S. I think this makes a noticeable difference in the overall quality of the puzzle and provides a "heartier meal" feel to the solve, SO TO SPEAK.
I got my first U.S. PASSPORT in the early 80s and renewed it twice. I decided not to do it a third time because for some reason I kept looking older in each subsequent photo. Same issue with driver's license renewals. Now I'm starting to feel more than A TAD ANGSTY!
I wonder if anyone has ever gotten a TAT on their UVULA. Anybody remember the 50s-60s rock guitarist DUEIN Eddy?
What's the usual context in which we'd hear TAT?
ReplyDeleteFinally decided to create an alias for here after a year of being one of the many Anonym...i. (?) Same one as on Comics Curmudgeon. I wonder what the overlap is between the two blogs. These are the only two blogs I check.
As is almost always the case, Saturday was easier than Friday for me. And I laughed out loud to see RYE, thinking of this group. DOGES went right in, but I mainly solved bottom to top. Usually easier, with a late week puzzle.
ReplyDeleteI kicked myself for forgetting BOXSTEP. Brought back memories of Dance Class when I was in late elementary school. We boys all had to wear suits and ties. Two years, maybe three, and I basically learned two moves, the Waltz pattern and the Foxtrot's BOXSTEP. But you know, that was enough to survive my prep school dances, which were all about getting into close contact with girls, and had little to do with fancy dancing. (When I took the classes, I was way to young to care about girls at all, who belonged to some alien race as far as I was concerned).
I got VAIN right away, which gave me EVA. I had almost forgotten Paul RYAN, who was, I thought, a pretty decent guy for a Republican. Never heard of Chef ANNE, and my immediate thought was, shoulda had a Seattle clue. Say, "Seattle's most famous monarch" or "best-known queen". I think everyone who spends two or three days there goes to Queen ANNE Hill, to admire the Victorian houses that sometimes are in the style named after her. We have a few Queen Anne houses in my neighborhood, though none, of course, were built in her ERA. Most, like my own house, were built during the reigns of Victoria and Edward, or perhaps George V.
But then, there are plenty of houses in Northern California that are Georgian, but practically none actually built during the reigns of Georges I, II, and III, after whom the style is named. (George I succeeded Queen ANNE, circa 1714).
I can't wait to tell my niece that her name anagrams to UNREAL. She likes word trivia, like: what two very common words are pronounced exactly the same but have no letters in common?
ReplyDeleteFor "Cover up in a shower", looking at ---P I of course put in SOAP.
[Spelling Bee: yd 0. td 13 min to reach pg.]
In the old days, when an English army officer went to war, he took a servant or "batman" along to serve him. So BATMEN could have been clued that way.
ReplyDeletere:SHAYNE Graham - If Shortz has really good lawyers they might convince a jury that, having played on a total of 15 NFL teams, SHAYNE Graham did, indeed, play on 14 NFL teams. I mean, he did. But it sure looks like somebody did not read the entire sentence in Wikipedia. Looking at the possible SHANE clues I think I’d have gone with some sort of Guiding Light clue. 😉
ReplyDelete@Victory Garden - TAT is most commonly clued as short for TATtoo.
SEX POSITIVE and SEX POSITIVE feminism are hardly new terms (the guy mentioned in the first link died before I was born) so I was a little surprised at it being new to people.
@mathgent - Every time you list one of my comments my immediate reaction is “What did I say?” 🤣😂
@ 8:59 - Supercilious seems like a top three adjective for the former Wisconsin representative. Actually, I’d say it’s a coin flip between supercilious and venal for which is the #1 RYAN adjective. I’d go even further and suggest that supercilious applies to every supposed conservative who spouts Randian dreck.
The Previous SHAYNE appearances:
ReplyDeleteDate/Grid/Clue/Author
Sat Feb 26, 2022/13D/N.F.L. kicker Graham who played for 14 teams/Ori Brian
Sun Apr 18, 2021/87A/Man's name that anagrams to HYENAS/Johan Vass
Sun Dec 4, 2016/57D/Michael ___, Brett Halliday detective/Bruce Haight
Fri Feb 20, 2009/40D/Private detective Mike of Brett Halliday novels/Paula Gamache
Apparently Rex may not know the the origin of supercilious since I believe he referred to its root cilia as science junk yesterday. The lashes of yesterday are the eyebrows or supercilia from which supercilious sprang into existence. Super as in above as in the haughty arched eyebrow of those who feel they are superior. Remember those soulful self-adoring photos of Ryan in the gym? The prideful posting of his morning workout? A crossfitter maybe? Lean and mean with his posse in tow ready to take over the Republican Party and American politics while worshipping at the shrine of the self-devoted SEXPOSITIVE atheist Ayn Rand. Rand and Ryan believed that they were superior and such special people did not have to follow rules like normal people. They were destined to be transcendent. Out with old school Bohner. In with The Young Guns. Somewhat ironically what defeated them was not the Democrats but the future Magaheads, the Tea Party, the populist wing of their own party. So yes, conceited, say supercilious, in style, belief, action, and philosophy. And stymied by far less impressive people. And the Repubican Party devolves ever further. That is not good for the Democratic Party nor the Country nor Democracy. Thats just me today. Your mileage may vary.
ReplyDeleteI hope someday this puzzle will be easy for me. The SE fell into place without too much work and then up to BATMEN at SHAYNE's corner. Did I think of RYE as soon as I read the clue? Of course. Did I really believe it woould be right? Alas no. Never ever again will I ever do that again. It is the only 3 letter city in NY. I checked. Except when abbreviation is indicated.
So shamefully I looked up SHAYNE.
After that it was street fighting. Block by block. SEXPOSITIVE was the nastiest. Never heard of it. Brand new. Made me feel like an old man in a cave. I try not to look in the mirror.
I did like the clues. Faked me out in all directions. I said that. The fun was breaking the code.
Kiev is now KY4. There is a joke there soewhere but it's too soon.
Apologies for the politics in advance but CILIA lead-in was too much to resist.
False steps. next TO NONE, AD gEEK x SEAgAToR (love adgeek as a marketer mag).
I knew TAT from shuttle but no idea of what the shuttle looks like.
@Nancy, congrats on your KIA “Triumph.” Your portmanteau question got me thinking - would a portmanteau of SEX and EXPOSITIon be SEXPOSITIon? Also liked your G&S link - hadn’t seen it when I mentioned TRALALA/Gigi and shuttle/Carousel. All that musical fun plus CLARA and foxtrot, too!
ReplyDelete@Unknown 12:05, good observations re CLARA. Didn’t she have eight children too?
@pablo, I looked up ACC - Agenesis of the corpus callosum. Hope your son’s is mild. I was particularly interested because one part of my group’s “educational informances” is about how playing a musical instrument makes the two sides of your brain more connected. Did the research at CalTech involve music-making?
@okanaganer, I came up with two - both three letters.
@Z, thanks for the links - I see I knew the ideas, just not the terms.
The word supercilious comes the Latin supercilium, literally “eyebrow.” Regardless of whether RYAN is supercilious, the timeliness of his appearance in the puzzle raised my brow.
BATMEN gave me a smile, as it reminded me of the great Michael Caine impression scene from The Trip, with Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan:
ReplyDelete"I won't bury another Batman, Master Bruce"
"ANOTHER Batman?? How many Batmen have you buried?"
"I've buried fourteen Batmen"
LOL
ReplyDeleteCouple of people pointing out suprcilium means eyebrow. Well, yeah. Ask any birder and he’ll tell you that without batting an eye. Or raising an eyebrow.I mention because quite recently Rex said malar was a specialty word. And every birder knows that word too.
Birders are obviously superior. You can ID them by the arched eyebrow and the long life list.
ReplyDeleteA shell,
ReplyDeleteFinally you acknowledge my superiority. what took you so long?
At least the clue for RYE was more straightforward than the one from a year or two ago about a city with a marina.
ReplyDeleteVillager
@A-No "mild" as far as I know. There are degrees, as in "partial", but in our case it's total agenesis, just no corpus collussum at all. We knew something was going on, but didn't find out about this until he was four and had an MRI when it was feared he had suffered a concussion. We're been to ACC conferences and heard some heartbreaking stories about kids that just stopped developing intellectually. Our boy is married and has a college degree, a super bright daughter, a son on the way, and a good job working with autistic kids We often wonder what he would be like with a fully functional brain.
ReplyDeleteAs for playing musical instruments, it wasn't included in the research they were doing at the time (we also had a visit to San Francisco, where studies were being done). This may be going on now. Everything is relatively new in this field, as previously the only method of a certain diagnosis was autopsy (yikes).
Thanks for your interest. We'd never heard of this thirty years ago, and now there's a national organization devoted to it.
@A, these 2 words are what I had in mind. There are also these two, but one of them is not so common.
ReplyDelete(My question was: "What two very common words are pronounced exactly the same but have no letters in common?")
@pablo
ReplyDeleteThat's absolutely fantastic. So glad to learn he's doing well.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete@pablo, that must have been quite a shock, to say the least. It's great to hear how your son is able to thrive in spite of such an enormous challenge.
ReplyDeleteThere is a lot more research about music and the brain now. I even saw posts about music therapy on a blog devoted to ACC, agenesiscorpuscallosum.blogspot.com
@okanaganer, my guess was the second of your options. Didn’t consider the first one, but I can see it now.
I’m with @ Lewis today. I am a member of the local Audubon Society, my dear friend (a Québécois mentioned yesterday) did his DMA project (thesis and recital) on CLARA Schumann, and NPR did a piece on BONOBOS earlier this week so our distant cousins were on my mind.
ReplyDeleteAfter breezing through the. NW, my hubris got the better of me, and I confess to being anything but on our constructor’s wavelength today. Im going to have to adopt the “faith solve” technique. Thank you , @Lewis. So much of this one just was not in my wheelhouse. SALTY to me means proficient in my era slang. A musician, for example lays down SALTY licks. ATME ? Just no. While I was certain the subject matter that resulted in SEX POSITIVE, that answer is still meaningless to me, but I figured it out. And wow, how long has it been since we have seen TAT?!! So long its not outre.
All kn all, everything a Saturday should be. Going to en no y the stiff drink I have earned and fix some dinner.
@JC66-Thanks for the kind words. I have to say it didn't hurt that both of his parents were teachers.
ReplyDelete@A-Music and the brain is indeed fascinating. I just read that there are neurons that only respond to singing. They're just starting to work on the implications of that one. My friend and I sing in nursing homes fairly often, and people who remember little have no problem coming up with song lyrics, which is fascinating.
How astounding that we (or at least I) can play back familiar recordings in our thoughts, with seemingly something akin to the entire orchestra playing in real time??!!
DeleteShould I be troubled that in the post-Trump world I seem to accept Paul Ryan, GW, Romney, Reagan, Boehner, so many others, as reasonably decent human beings?
ReplyDeleteAt Anonymous 10:58 - nothing hard about enjoying your suffering.
Today's crap more than redeemed by sex positive, bonobos, cellmate, slim to none, outer space, just about all the long stuff.
Not easy, at least medium for me. Thanks Ori.
I don't usually complain after finishing a puzzle 100%. But the clue for 28-DOWN, "Long," only fits the answer "SLIMTONONE," if the word "long" applies to odds. There's no reference to odds here.
ReplyDeleteSexposition is totally a thing: see Game of Thrones. It's when plot points are given out while the characters happen to be in bed together. Make sense? Nope, me either
ReplyDeleteDitto what Rex said. In spite of the few flaws this was a very enjoyable medium-challenge.
ReplyDeleteTEENY SOTOSPEAK
ReplyDeleteSABRINA poders EACH of her STEPs,
the 'DESSERTMENU' is ANGSTY fun,
but she's POSITIVE the chance for SEX
with BATMEN is SLIMTONONE.
--- RYAN "RYE" LAUREN
must proofread - ponders
ReplyDeletePeople sure cam be different. @Lewis breezed (!) through the NW, then got stuck; I was the polar opposite. Didn't get OUTERSPACE for a while because to me, that term starts a little farther out than our own solar system. That left nothing to go on up there except LET. Eventually I backed into it from POACH to TARP and from DOGES to ATAD. Perhaps I have a thing against the NW, slowly accumulated over the years. It seems a very disproportionate part of the time that section is the most brutal. Now I dread all NWs except North By Northwest, my favorite movie.
ReplyDeleteOne sticking spot outside of there was parsing SLIMTONONE even with most of the letters in place. "Long" as in odds. O...kay.
I am a football fan--have been for years--yet have never heard of SHAYNE until this very day. And I also asked "Is it SHAYNE Graham or Graham SHAYNE?" For me it was 50-50. I can only say he was never an Eagle. Certainly must've been a head case for being traded so may times--but then a lot of kickers are.
Managed to finish this; I'd call it medium overall, NW dragging it out of the "easy" camp. Suitable for a Saturday, peppered with tricky clues. Birdie.
I love how Rex declares there's no such thing as Ecolab, but that was my first guess, since I've had several friends who worked there. It's the name of a company, Rex.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I think Anne Burrell is famous enough for a Saturday NYT xword puzzle, even if you don't watch cooking shows. I know that I'd find her, well before I found Waldo.
ReplyDeleteLast names in Russian (and possibly other Slavic languages) change their spelling according to the person's gender, with "a" as the usual feminine ending for both first and last names. So if the last name ends in "a" (Noblezada), the first name will also end in "a" (Eva).
ReplyDelete