Friday, February 11, 2022

Notable founding of 1701 / FRI 2-11-22 / Terra's Greek counterpart / 1962 pop hit with a rhyming title / Onetime cable giant acquired by AT&T in 1999 / Subject of the so-called surgeon's photograph of 1934

Constructor: Trenton Charlson

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: GERHARD Richter (21D: ___ Richter, contemporary artist whose painting Abstraktes Bild (599)" sold at auction for a record-setting $46.3 million dollars) —
 
Gerhard Richter (German: [ˈʁɪçtɐ]; born 9 February 1932) is a German visual artist. Richter has produced abstract as well as photorealistic paintings, and also photographs and glass pieces. He is widely regarded as one of the most important contemporary German artists and several of his works have set record prices at auction. [...] In November 2011, Sotheby's sold a group of colorful abstract canvases by Richter, including Abstraktes Bild 849-3, which made a record price for the artist at auction when Lily Safra paid $20.8 million only to donate it to the Israel Museum afterwards. Months later, a record $21.8 million was paid at Christie's for the 1993 painting Abstraktes Bild 798-3. Abstraktes Bild (809-4), one of the artist's abstract canvases from 1994, was sold by Eric Clapton at Sotheby's to a telephone bidder for $34.2 million in late 2012. (It had been estimated to bring $14.1 million to $18.8 million.) // This was exceeded in May 2013 when his 1968 piece Domplatz, Mailand (Cathedral square, Milan) was sold for $37.1 million (£24.4 million) in New York. This was further exceeded in February 2015 when his 1986 painting Abstraktes Bild (599) sold for $44.52 million (£30.4 million) in London at Sotheby's Contemporary Evening Sale. This was the highest price at auction of a piece of contemporary art at the time; Richter's record was broken on 12 November 2013 when Jeff Koons' Balloon Dog (Orange), sold at Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale in New York City for US$58.4 million. // When asked about art prices like these, Richter said "It's just as absurd as the banking crisis. It's impossible to understand and it's daft!"
• • •

Triple stacks puzzles just aren't as fun to solve as more free-flowing grids where the longer answers are scattered throughout. A grid like this, if the short Downs are even moderately gettable, is very easy to dispose of. I've got nine (!) different shots at 3- or 4-letter stuff in the crosses of the triple stacks, and I only need to get a few of those to dramatically increase the likelihood that I'll know at least one of the 15s. With just one 15 in place, I can work on more of the short crosses, and so on, and that's that, really. Then I sort of hack my way through the center, and repeat the process down below. Somehow crowding all the longer answers together like that both makes the puzzle easier to solve and takes the zing out of the long answers. I don't have that rush of a feeling I get when a longer answer sends me careening across the grid, breaking me into a new section. I'm just hemmed in, stacking, until I can move on. As stack answers go, these 15s seem just fine, though I always hear an "O" (or "OH"? or "AH"?) at the beginning of "YE OF LITTLE FAITH," so that one clanked a bit for me. The only answer in the puzzle that really seems worth the price of admission is "IS NOTHING SACRED?" I only ever hear it used hyperbolically and at least semi-ironically, but I do hear it, and it's colloquial and original and good. Everything else is a bit flat. Completely adequate, but not snappy. I don't quite know why a puzzle like this would "tickle" the editor so much that he'd accept it when (he brags) he gets hundreds of submissions a week over there. There's nothing wrong with this puzzle, but there's nothing exceptional either.  


Why is the word "dollars" in the GERHARD Richter clue when the "$"-sign is attached to the monetary figure ("$46.3 million"). Is that not redundancy? Is this an NYT Style Guide thing that I don't want to get into? Probably. I found the clue on GERHARD grating in that it's art-markety, and the art market is the least interesting / most off-putting thing about art (see Richter's own words at the end of the wikipedia citation, above). And the clue couldn't even get the crass commercialism right, in that "record-setting" is meaningless unless you tell me what the "record" is that the auction sale "set." I guess it's supposed to be assumed that, since the clue tells us he's a "contemporary artist," the record referred to is the one for a painting by a "contemporary artist." But the sale was also a record for a "living European artist" (acc. to The Guardian). The way the clue is written, you could easily interpret it to mean that the sale was an overall painting record, which might then make you cock your head and wonder: "Wasn't there a Van Gogh that sold for, like ... way more?" (this is the only semi-art-literate voice in my particular head). Anyway, I'd like to know more about art than just what a bunch of celebrities and investment bankers are willing to pay for it. Boring. It's like you felt you needed to justify having the artist's name in the grid, and this was the most interesting justification you could come up with. Boo. 


Moving through this grid was easy. Here's the opening:

[16A: What friendly opponents may do]

As you can see, I didn't even wait to work all the short crosses before I looked at the long answers up there. I was doing an ENTS / ORCS comparison in that space, so I did a quick check of the Acrosses to see if the letters from one looked any better than the letters from the other and voilà! AGREE TO DISAGREE! The upper section is basically done at this point, to be honest. Even messing up with YDS instead of TDS couldn't keep the other long answer from showing up real quick with just a little help from the short answers. I liked FAN ART (11D: Some unauthorized drawings), which is up there with "IS NOTHING SACRED?" as a real high point (for originality) of the grid. I was not at all sure about LENTANDO but it felt right, and I could sort of infer its parts from "lento" and "glissando" so I figured all was well (5D: Gradually slowing, in music). Biggest screw-up came in the center and leading down from the center. I had GLEAM crossed by FAN and SUR (instead of GLINT crossed by WIN and BEN) (28D: Flash / 33A: Morale booster / 36A: Big ___). That's a lot of wrong answers to put in / take out. I then had WEAR DOWN / SAD instead of WEAR THIN / EAT. I had literally no other problems. SET A GOAL is fine as "[verb] A [noun]" answers go but it still set off the little "EAT A SANDWICH" bell in my brain, which is not the bell that tells me "hey ... you should eat a sandwich" but the bell that wonders "is that really a standalone phrase?" I think it is. But it also feels like a verb phrase that has a whole bevy of siblings that you've crammed into the high-powered wordlist you and your software use to create puzzles: SET A GOAL SETS A GOAL SET GOALS SETS GOALS SETTING A GOAL SETTING GOALS SEEING GOATS SELLING COATS SEA GROATS etc. I mean where does it end? 

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. It's Dom DELUISE (37D: Reynolds's co-star in 1981's "The Cannonball Run"), a very familiar comic actor from the '70s / '80s. He worked consistently right up until just a few years before his death in '09, but I still feel like his real heyday was circa 1980, and if you're younger than Gen-X there's at least a reasonable chance you've never heard of him.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

95 comments:

  1. Thx Trenton; nice, smooth Fri puz! :)

    Easy+

    AGREE TO DISAGREE & READ BETWEEN THE LINES were the keys to a quick solve. Everything fell into place nicely from quickly getting those two grid spanners.

    Only real unknowns were GERHARD & DENIS.

    Used ESO BESO with batters, as a reminder to SwingOverBaSeball, in order to put the sweet spot of the bat into the center of the ball, resulting in line drives or hard grounders. Doesn't apply to low pitches, tho. 💋⚾️

    One more fun, enjoyable solve. :)

    @LateSolver (9:14 PM yd)

    Welcome to the SB gang! :)
    ___
    yd pg: 6:03 / yd Wordle: 3

    Peace ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊

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  2. I agree with @Rex's Easy rating. Only overwrite was GLeam for the Flash at 28D, changed to GLare because of Big sur before Mt. Ararat forced GLINT. Didn't know the artist Richter at 21D, the muse at 24D or M. Diderot at 37A, but all went in easily from crosses.

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  3. What the FEH? AGREE with Rex that we lost our OH at 1A leading me to ask IS NOTHING SACRED? I also wrinkled my nose at the TMC clue. HBO or Showtime work, but The Movie Channel not so much. The only thing keeping me from aMC is that LENaANDO seems implausible. OTOH, I briefly wondered about LENgANDO and, candidly, gMC is as much a Cinemax competitor as TMC.

    Something about “Implicatively” made me smile. First, the single word clue has more syllables than the three word answer, lending it an ostentatiously ornate feel as it trips the tongue. And then, as your tongue is picking itself up and dusting itself off the brain has to stop a figure out what exactly the word means…just so much going on that all meaning is lost. And then you get the answer and realize that making the clue into an adverb was required because we lost the verb in the phrase. Just a vainglorious “Ef You, I only have 15 letters so if you can’t read BETWEEN THE LINES that’s your problem.” Glorious Constructor Insouciance wrapped in a simple one word clue.

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  4. Only tangentially related to today's puzzle, because it's by Robyn Weintraub, who brings Fridays to mind, but I ran across this clue (and answer)) of hers that I think is wonderful and want to share, from a Saturday in 2018. Try to figure out the four-letter answer first, before scrolling down to see it:

    [Two stars, maybe]
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    ITEM

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  5. Anonymous6:45 AM

    Whole center west was a disaster for me. Not enough crosswordese to be familiar with LAM as a noun, never heard of BATEAUs, Never heard of GERHARD, SHUDDER didn't come to me.

    Only ones I feel bad about are AREA (Just did't know the meaning of the (relatively common) word, but definitely won't forget it now!), GIRTH, which, I was stuck in 2D geometry, and I tend to think of that as a 3D term, and LITHO, which I might have gotten with some crosses, but not off just the O.

    Fine puzzle, easy enough, but my personal failings annoy me.

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  6. I'll have to agree to disagree with Rex on this one, it was a regular Friday here, i.e. not easy! Luckily the long fills weren't too challenging, but there was enough detritus in the downs to make it a bit of a slog. Would like to fast-forward to Sunday and hopefully a more enjoyable solve!

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  7. **wordle comment haters should go to the next comment**
    Late last night (but not as late as I thought) I went to the wordle site and saw a new puzzle. I was two guesses in when I realized I’d already done this puzzle, it wasn’t after midnight yet, and my web browser tab was now on the NYT games site instead of the original wordle site. All my previous data, as promised, was still there, but yesterday’s puzzle is in my data twice, the original par and then the “birdie” I got the second time around. It’s a classic “first world problem,” but I am nevertheless irked that my wordle data is no longer a pristine reflection of my solves.
    Another par today. Three yellow after two guesses and it took me longer than usual to come up with my third guess and then longer still for my fourth guess. Fortunately, there’s no time component in the game.

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    Replies
    1. @Z same happened to me, except the second time took longer, 4 instead of 3. because I didn't think they would use the same word twice. It was really late, I wasn't thinking straight.

      Delete
  8. Anonymous7:20 AM

    FEH to ORCENTs in the same puzzle!

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  9. Tom T7:23 AM

    Couldn't get to the Thursday puzzle until Thursday night, but wanted to add my "Mary Poppins" rating for it--"Practically perfect in every way" (for a Thursday). And made even more wonderful by the presence of a 6 letter Hidden Diagonal Word (HDW)--very rare!

    It might be clued as: "Hints at, cryptically" or "Unravels eventually (with "out")

    Answer: TEASES (you'll find it in the SW if you look back at yesterday's grid)

    As for today's puzzle, I agree with Rex that a) it was easy and b) grids with the long stacks top and bottom are usually easy.

    But I like the occasional grid like this, because it plays into my sweet spot/wheelhouse. It's only the second time I've completed a Friday in under 30 minutes, and would have been my fastest if I hadn't overlooked a typo in MTARARAT.

    DARN!

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  10. Here is my solving TALE: “AARGH!” I muttered as I was all ASEA, finding no toeholds in that northern stack, so I headed south and shouted, “ICEE the light!” as that stack filled in a FLASH, then I successfully paddled the BATEAU up through the middle, back to the top stack where I flexed my DELTS, SANTA gave me AGREE TO DISAGREE, and that was that. Basically, a galvanizing yeesh-to-whoosh solve.

    Which brings me to Sylvester the Cat. How? Well, LENTANDO made me think of “lentil”, which made me think of LIMA BEAN, which made me think of “succotash” which made me think of “suffering succotash” which made me think of Sylvester the Cat. That’s how.

    I liked having BERMUDA, as in “Bermuda Triangle” in the puzzle with LOCH NESS MONSTER, and those two stacks are simply gorgeous, including the most lovely NYT debut answers IS NOTHING SACRED and YE OF LITTLE FAITH.

    A rollicking ride, Trenton, for which I’m very grateful. From your notes, it sounds like this puzzle took several years to come together, and I’m so glad you had the patience to see it through. Excellent one!

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  11. Did Trenton curtail his use of the more scrabbly letters? This was a little easier than his usual. Don't disagree with Rex's account of the solve, but hacking around between the short stuff and the spanners didn't lessen their zing. Found this to be an excellent, if fast, Friday. That's ok; we have a Super Bowl on Sunday!

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  12. This was a fine puzzle - Rex seemed to have a a few issues with something he deemed easy. All six spanners were solid - and the goofy mid level fill in the center just as good. Liked LITHO x GERHARD - and yes it’s all about the money Rex - it’s always about the money.

    Liked the TOSCA clue. Same side eye and harrumph as @Z to the TMC entry. Honeymooned on beautiful BERMUDA all those years ago.

    Enjoyable Friday solve.

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  13. I liked the things about this puzzle that Rex didn’t care for (the triple long acrosses, for example) because it allowed me to keep making progress by picking off the smaller threes - and the long acrosses were also pretty familiar and gettable.

    Come late-week, I know they loosen the restrictions and today they took full advantage of it. We have pretty much everything one can imagine - gibberish (ESOBESO, ADESTE), the Tolkien crap which by now is at least familiar crosswordese (which is very sad, btw - ORCS, ENT), fringe esoterica (URANIA, GAIA), foreign crap (GARDE), verbal synonyms (SHUDDER) and of course one entry that surely looks nonsensical to me (AARGH).

    I got to wondering, how would one pronounce an AARGH - as near as I can tell it is pronounced like “are” and is apparently an expression of resignation and/or anguish. So somewhere, someone may actually say something like “Everyone be careful, this is a dangerous situation - ARE !”

    I’m really enjoying the fact that I can work my way around the late-week grids to see what the graduate and post-graduate solvers here are actually dealing with (and I don’t feel as bad about being totally blown away on Fridays years ago when I first began solving).

    I don’t know who the GERHARD dude is, and don’t care - but a common sense rule of thumb that WS may want to consider is “if an entry can not be clued in at least double-digit font, well GET ANOTHER CLUE OR ENTRY ! AARGH ! A magnifying glass should not be required solving equipment because the editors are lazy.

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  14. I'd have appreciated a Sonic Youth clue for Gerhard Richter.

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  15. Anonymous7:52 AM

    Guy who puts “for a Monday” after relative difficulty complaining about redundancy. smh

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  16. Realized too late that I should have gone with “Constructor’s Glorious Insouciance” so that the initialism would be CGI. Drat.

    @amyyanni - Charlson replaced one constructioneering feat, high value scrabble letters, with a different feat of constructioneering, the triple stack. I would say he was more successful at this feat of constructioneering because the solve was still mostly pleasant. FEH is the only entry that made me wince. Some others seem a tad esey (ESO BESO stands out) but are not horrid. Still, he’s no Martin Ashwood Smith, still the champion of the triple and quad stacks.

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  17. Looking around for a toehold, found ETTA, which lead to MUTANTS in BERMUDA, and then went down and solved from the bottom up. I like the stacked grid spanners, after a few downs they play like Acrostic fill ins. Very helpful when you recognize part of a phrase and infer the rest.

    ESOBESO always bothers me, If you want "that kiss", it's ESE BESO. ESO is legitimate, but only when it refers to an unspecified something--Que es eso? (What's that?) or Eso es! (That's it!). Also, if it was a pop hit in 1962, I missed it entirely, and that's when I was paying attention to pop music It was just before I became interested in Spanish though, so maybe that's it.

    Nice Fridecito, TC. I found it Totally Charming. Thanks for the fun.

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    Replies
    1. I’ve always thought that too about ESO BESO and wondered if it was just the songwriter’s poor Spanish … or mine.

      Delete
  18. HER released her compilation album in 2017 and it won a Grammy in 2019, so why does the clue say she's a 2018 Grammy winner? Bruno Mars won that Grammy in 2018. Is this an error, or is that some secret crossword way people refer to the Grammy Awards? Really threw me off.

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    Replies
    1. I was just coming here to write the same

      Delete
  19. W. Gutman8:56 AM

    Bowled a 191 last night. Four better than my average.

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  20. Anonymous9:27 AM

    Not really @Anon. I was formally known as TJS but I changed my Google password after getting a warning about possible unauthorised access, and now I can no longer post here as TJS. (Also lost access to other sites). Anyone know how to correct this ? I am not good at this stuff.

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  21. Hey All !
    Liked the Double Triple 15 stacks. And clean fill, which is really tough to get in a stacker puz. Last square in was the Natick DENIS/URANIA cross, but guessed the I correctly. Unfortunately, had DELUISE starting with a C (typo/silly brain mistake, as I know it's a D), so no Happy Music. AARGH! Had to Goog ole DENIS to see my mistake. So a technical DNF, but I consider it a complete solve/WIN, as I'm not in a competition or anything. 😁

    BATEAU was a new one here, luckily crossers were easy. Is that boat word where bathtub comes from?

    Again, nice fill job Trenton. If y'all have ever tried to make a stack puz, it's quite tough to get actual words/things in the crosses. Especially when they branch out into the longer Downs.

    Liked 1A, 18A, 48A, and 54A. Couple oopsies in SE, DAmN (was thinking, damn, NYT getting sassy!), edys for ICEE. Don't remember TCI. MCI, sure.

    Happy Friday, everybody!

    yd -6, should'ves 3

    Two F's
    Roo(non-LOCHNESS)Monster
    DarrinV

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    Replies
    1. BATEAU is French for boat. I don’t think it’s to be flat bottomed.

      Delete
  22. This was surprisingly difficult for a triple stack puzzle. The bottom tier was easier than the top one. Initially I had only the middle west section filled in. BATEAU took a little thinking but the rest of that section went in smoothly.

    The biggest single hold up in the north was probably FEH. That held up entering YALE as the letter strings looked all wrong.

    AGREETODISAGREE is an easy to guess grid spanner that doesn't really give you much to work with.

    READSTHERIOTACT was also easy and provided a string of first letters. That was a major factor in why the south was so much easier.

    Correcting my AMC/TMC write over was how I finished. Since I solved on my phone I had to take the A out and leave it blank until I made the final decision on the T. I got the congrats when it went in so I guessed right.

    yd -0, dbyd -0 the only one I've missed for over the last two weeks was Mon the 7th, that was pg-2

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  23. Long vague clues are harder than long specific ones -- so that while nothing in this puzzle was especially hard, I found the bottom three-stack more difficult than the top three-stack.

    Having filled out the top almost on automatic pilot, I now contemplated what "gives an earful" meant. And you can give someone quite an earful without doing anything remotely like "reading them the riot act." Here are some choices:

    Talk at punishing length about the ins and outs of your recent root canal.

    Complain at punishing length about how the IRS is mistreating you.

    Play your slide trombone at excruciating volume.


    And then there's the "rhetorical question lamenting a lack of respect." Gee, and my thought was that it was a lack of respect for me, not for some unnamed "sacred" thing. I tried to fit WHAT AM I, CHOPPED LIVER? into the space, but couldn't.

    Because the crosses were all quite easy, as well as very fair, even the vague long answers filled in nicely. This was a colorful, enjoyable puzzle that didn't make me suffer at all. Other than leaving GERHARt where GERHARD should have been for much too long, I solved it fairly quickly.

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  24. Good catch, Rex. I suspect it's a style guide thing. Still wrong.

    As for Gerhard Richter, it's worth getting to know his art, which is amazing. And if you'd like to learn about his life in a more entertaining way than WIKI, I recommend the German film "Don't Look Away." Fictionalized but apparently accurate. I believe it was his favorite aunt who told him not to look away from art. She was murdered by the Nazis for being mentally ill. He was to have a big show here in NYC right smack dab in the middle of the pandemic. Cancelled.

    As for the puzzle, my complaint was that the long answers were too easy! Once I got the "g" I got the whole thing. Once I got the "Y" I got the whole thing. Once I got the "TH" I got the whole thing. Etc.

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  25. The six multi-word spanners were all good. It was fun figuring them out.

    Trenton Carlson can make fiendishly hard puzzles. I think that he eased up on this one so that we could frolic through the two triple stacks. That was nice.

    We saw five of the ten movies nominated for Oscar. I liked King Richard a lot, I thought West Side Story was OK, but I was bored by Licorice Pizza, Don't Look Up, and The Power of The Dog. Dog is favored to win but I thought that it was terrible.

    I'm in a slump, my second bogey in a row today.







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    Replies
    1. “Dog…” was terrible, typical Jane Campion mush. I knew the plot the first time I saw the kid making paper flowers.

      Delete
  26. This was very enjoyable for me. I felt like Trenton sprinkled gold fairy dust on my head.
    I'll start with you giving me GERHARD Richter. I urge some of you to try to find some of his abstract work. I was never an abstract fan until I saw what he does. I think I first saw his work at the Getty. I didn't like how they group his art together because you can't really appreciate each work as an individual. Your eyes tend to wander. But, if you just look at one piece and stare for a while, you really begin to appreciate his incredible talent. His use of certain colors and how he applies them are stunning.
    My other fairy dust moments were being able to get all six of the stacks with no help...they took some thinking, but the enjoyable kind. Seeing YALE at 1D was the hardest for me. I had LITTLE FAITH but doesn't it start O YE OF? Do I choose ORCA or ents? Is it ick or ugh? Leave that for a while and clap hands with delight at LOCH NESS MONSTER. I saw him, I really did, and Nessie opened the water ways for me.
    Speaking of: My brother-in law and my sister live in Charleston SC. They have several boats to enjoy. Mark has a BATEAU that he uses to go from island to island and ferry kids to go get some beautiful seashells.
    I had two lookups. I didn't know that philosopher DENIS...should I? And I wasn't sure how to spell DELUIS. I guessed right on both of them
    I got to 45D and thought is it DAMN? Is it DANG? Oh...it's DARN. IS NOTHING SACRED to my rescue.
    Thank you, Trenton....A fine, enjoyable Friday puzzle.

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  27. True, stacks get easy quickly, but that doesn’t detract from the elegance of pulling off stacks of interesting/clever 15s without resorting to ugly fill. Very well done!

    But I shake my head at a world where works of an artist whose name I don’t know regularly sell for tens of millions of dollars. Something is amiss with either the world or my cultural knowledge. I fear the latter. Or “C, all of the above.”

    And I don’t get Rex’s problem with the dollar sign: without it, “46.3 million” is just a number, like “46.3 million people watched curling last night.” And even when the context implies currency, which one? Dollars? Euros? Bhat?

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  28. Wordle 237 4/6

    ⬛⬛⬛🟩🟨
    ⬛⬛🟨🟨⬛
    ⬛🟨⬛🟩🟩
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

    Tough 4-par today. 3 under, taking the clubhouse turn in. I think someone reported being at 6 under, so at least I’m on the leader board halfway through round two.

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  29. Anonymous10:22 AM

    Today's puzzle was much easier for me than for all the rest of you because I'm much smarter. If I was even smarter than that, I wouldn't waste my time bragging about myself here like the rest of you do.

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  30. Unlike OFL, I love the long triple stacks. My anticipation is heightened by staring at the blank grid and seeing all that white space. I know that even though it’s Friday and it may be tough, I have a good chance of filling those in because of all the short downs. This one did not disappoint although I did mess myself up starting off by misreading the clue at 9D. Instead of the food I entered the capital as in LIMA PERU which fouled things up for a bit.

    Doubt I’m the only one who had trouble spelling DELUISE. What a funny man he was. My favorite role of his was another one with Burt Reynolds, an oldie from 1978 titled “The End” where he hilariously plays a patient in a mental hospital.

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  31. Medium. Slightly tougher than the last few Fridays for me. The top stack was the last to fall.

    olds > ford > BENZ

    Pretty smooth with delightful stacks, liked it. Jeff at Xwordinfo gave it POW.

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  32. Beezer10:29 AM

    AARGH! @Southside, I LOVE that term and in my mindI pronounce it with the G and a little H gurgle at the end.

    I really liked the puzzle and was amazed I confidently put in AGREETODISAGREE since I’m usually not that good at the long answers. This time the ONLY one that really gave me trouble was YEOFLITTLEFAITH. I just could now get the angle on YEO and tried to make it PEOPLE and came up with silly thoughts like PEOPLESAYIMRIGHT. Crosses finally took care of that.

    I have NEVER read nor heard FEH and, therefore, I OBJECT!

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  33. Challenging for me and fun to solve. A first look at the grid made me happy that we were returning, at least for today, to those days of yesteryear when triple stacks used to be a regular weekend feature. I see @Rex's point that this structure can make solving less fun, but unlike him, I was defeated entirely by the upper stack. I had to work from the center out, where a critical mass of "happened to know" entries opened things up: on the left, GAIA +BENZ x GERHARD + BATEAU and on the right URANIA x DENIS. Then the bottom stack went fast, still had to chip away at the top. Last in: FEH x LOCH.

    Loved WEAR THIN, and YE OF LITTLE FAITH and IS NOTHING SACRED make a great pair.

    Do-over: GAeA. No idea: FAN ART, TCI, TMC, HER.

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  34. Re-reading yesterday's discussion of the term "Rebus," it occurs to me that a rebus, in its original incarnation, was basically a textual equivalent of Cockney rhyming slang -- which, for some reason, I get quite a kick out of.

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  35. @Amelia - I highly doubt it's a style guide thing. I was able to find the 2015 NYTimes Manual of Style and Usage online, and it says for US dollar amounts to use the symbol "$" and nothing about pairing it with "dollars." Every single example they have of amounts only uses the dollar sign, never with the word "dollar." It just slipped through the editor. Look up any New York Times article and you'll see it is never written as "$10 million dollars," but as "$10 million."

    @schwa - Wow, how dumb am I? I never knew the connection between the cover of Daydream Nation and Sonic Youth, and I am a fan of both Richter & Sonic Youth. In my defense, I came into Richter years after Sonic Youth, and more for his later, more colorful, expressionist work, but now that I look at the cover of Daydream Nation, I should have tweaked at some point that it was one of his.

    I found the puzzle an average Friday. Nothing easy about it; nothing too terribly hard, either. I had a heck of a time getting "WEARS THIN" for some reason, and that plugged me up in the south.I somehow have never come across LENTANDO in music, though it's been decades since I played anything classical. I kept wanting "ritardando" (or "rallentando") to somehow fit in there.

    ReplyDelete
  36. @Lewis (6:37) -- I got it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Right off the bat!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Yay me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Or do you think that maybe from somewhere within the deep recesses of my always fuzzy memory, I remembered it???

    ReplyDelete
  37. @Inferiority Complex Anonymous- We solve crossword puzzles and discuss them. If you think that makes us smarter than you you are probably correct. As for me, the fact that Rex solves these thing 2 to 5 times faster than me leads me to believe he’s better at crosswords than I.

    @Bowling Anonymous- It would be funnier if you were a better liar.

    @Michael Page - I think Rex complained about the word “dollar” when “$” was already in the clue.

    @Bouvitude - The 2019 Award Show is for the 2018 awards. I know this because your question gets asked here often and is also answered in Rex’ FAQs. I never knew this before doing crosswords.

    @Gio - way to keep the wordless universe balanced.

    ReplyDelete
  38. George11:19 AM

    Any puzzle that includes The Cannonball Run is a winner for me! I own a car that ran in the 1975 race, finishing a disappointing 7th. And yes, the movie, albeit pretty bad, is based on an actual race.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Joseph Michael11:28 AM

    FEH and AARGH were my reactions through much of this puzzle which for me was quite difficult until finally it wasn’t.

    Seemed like one proper noun after another. Richter who’s first name? Galileo’s muse? A rhyming song title from 60 years ago? I’m impressed by the triple stacks. but wish I could have had a little more fun figuring them out.

    Thought that IS NOTHING SACRED was the best themer and that GESTURES had the best clue. An oasis of word play in a desert of trivia.

    ReplyDelete
  40. ARRGH, DARN FEH made me SHUDDER!

    Almost total AGREEment with Rex today as I was a bit disappointed with Trenton’s grid though I couldn’t understand why. OFL’s explication of the triple stack issues cleared the fog & now I can SET A GOAL more reasonably when future trifecta challenges arise. Always a nice Friday when something new creeps into the consciousness.

    👍🏼 For Wordle fans. Personally I’m finding the posts easily skipped when they include the Wordle 237 5/6

    🟨⬜⬜🟨⬜
    ⬜🟨🟨🟩⬜
    🟨⬜🟩🟩🟩
    ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 But, I remain a fan of emoji and Thursday rebus though other posters AGREE TO DISAGREE, so that shouldn’t surprise anyone. What’s this Super Bowl? And who is HER? Can’t we all just puzzle along?

    ReplyDelete
  41. Getting better at these long answer puzzles. So it was fun, but not that easy for YT!
    Yay Gerhard Richter! Haha more contemporary art answers please! 😂
    🦖🦖🦖🦖
    🤗

    ReplyDelete
  42. Anonymous11:43 AM

    FH
    Zex: Pretty sure that anonymous entry was trolling you and the other frequent posters here ("...because I'm much smarter"). And you took the bait.

    ReplyDelete
  43. I had a few words sprinkled here and there, taking a chance with MUTANTS. Always a little intimidated by the big open spaces. I worked out AGREETODISAGREE but the center and south were obstructed by faN instead of WIN. Once that was corrected - tada! GLINT to GESTURES to LIMABEAN to LOCHNESSMONSTER. And I knew I was going to make it. I liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  44. 2$ on Wordle.
    Its an okay game using luck and deduction. But do not understand the reason for sharing finished game, and why here?
    ✌🏼out and carry on if you must.
    🤗

    ReplyDelete
  45. TV Guy12:01 PM

    Cinemax and TMC(The Movie Channel) are indeed competitors. Both are premium TV channels. Cinemax is owned by HBO, TMC is owned by Showtime.

    ReplyDelete
  46. B. Bliss12:11 PM

    @sixtyni yogini

    Be careful what questions you ask. Even though you raise a legitimate question about the propriety using this forum to post regularly about a topic unrelated to the blog, you will be labeled a hater for doing so.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Anyone notice the dupe of 8D TDS and 47D ETDS? Might as well throw in an STD (FEH) and a case of the DTS.

    Of course the ESE that @Pablo wants for 10D to replace ESO, can be found at 49D.

    Is the “Surgeon’s photograph” ever referred to as the LOCHNESS likeness? I think that those may be pronounce identically in certain parts of the country.

    The puzzle was easy, but I liked (or loched) the smooth flow. Thanks, Trenton Charlson.


    ReplyDelete
  48. Excellent job describing how I go about solving. This one was really in my wheelhouse; here I am remembering where I first encountered Gerhard Richter years ago when a local art museum was featuring him and starting to acquire his works. Now they have a much larger building with a large section of Post WWII German art which is difficult to look at but well worth the effort.

    I hope the next puzzle isn’t about football and how much the Super Bowl ads cost.

    ReplyDelete
  49. @TV Guy - technically I think you are correct. But I get TMC rolled in with Showtime, whereas Cinemax is a separate subscription from HBO. I’ve never seen TMC as something separate one can subscribe to, so to me it is Showtime that is the competitor to Cinemax. Of course, that may just be a function of my cable company.

    @FH - Was I too subtle? I suppose a direct “F off” would have been less subtle, but I felt like I was already being maybe a wee bit too harsh.

    @sixtyni yogini 11:50 - Commiserating and annoying the fun police pretty much cover my reasons for posting my wordle results here. I also have a certain level of fascination with how others are doing. What I really wish was easy is aggregating our results to see how the distribution works out. My hypothesis is that results will approximate a bell curve with a mean slightly less than 4, but some mathematical types think I’m wrong. I’d love a larger data set than just my own results to see. My guess distribution right now is 0,3,11(not 12),14,7,2. I’m also wondering if there’s any significant difference between regular mode and “hard” mode.

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  50. Anonymous12:38 PM

    Folks: there is nothing more DeLuise than the 'Tush Dance' at the end of 'Blazing Saddles'. How OFL missed that, is beyond me. If ROFL has any exemplar, that's it.

    ReplyDelete
  51. Boston Blackie12:47 PM

    for those wondering, this is the real one:
    Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannonball_Baker_Sea-To-Shining-Sea_Memorial_Trophy_Dash

    certain parts of the political spectrum complain about law flouting, but you can't top that.

    ReplyDelete
  52. Anonymous12:48 PM

    FH
    Zex: No, I think a direct "F off" would be moving in the wrong direction. Lighten up. Don't be so thin-skinned.

    ReplyDelete
  53. @Mathgent - I had the same take on Power of the Dog.

    ReplyDelete
  54. Anonymous1:00 PM

    I'm not sure if it was because I started this when I was already tired or if I just wasn't on the same wavelength or what, but I found this really challenging, and it took me much longer than my Friday average. AGREE TO DISAGREE and READS THE RIOT ACT came easily enough, but even with those filled in, I had trouble seeing what followed from them. Even a lot of the shorter fill was tough for me today. Never heard of BATEAU, though I was able to infer it. It took me forever to see WEAR THIN, which I kept wanting to parse as something IN, like cave in or crush in or something. FEH seems made up to me—I wanted EWW or ICK. And so on. I was eventually able to to see LOCH NESS MONSTER, which opened up YALE and then YE OF LITTLE FAITH, and from there I was able to finish pretty easily. Kudos to everyone who found this easy!

    ReplyDelete
  55. WordSleuth1:02 PM

    @jazzmanchgo (10:52)

    Use your loaf!

    ReplyDelete
  56. @FH - Gotcha. The “don’t feed the troll” strategy. My working hypothesis is that both anons I responded to are the same anon so ignoring them wasn’t working. But you have a point.

    Just looked up ESO BESO. Made it about 35 seconds into the song. ESO BESO is the only Spanish I heard in the short while I listened.

    @B. Bliss - To me there’s a big difference between “I don’t get why you like sharing about x” and “you should stop sharing about x.”

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous1:06 PM

    Mathgent,
    Check out Belfast. Better by worlds than all the films you mentioned.

    ReplyDelete
  58. For the first couple of minutes I was ready to hate this one. "Too many names!"... tosses random papers in the air.

    But then I got traction and remembered how much I love stacks. We don't get them all the time, and that's probably a good thing. But geez they're nice when they're snappy phrases.

    I was puzzled why FIELD wouldn't fit for 37 down "Reynold's co-star..." Then I looked it up and I was remembering the wrong Burt Reynolds movie: Smokey and the Bandit.

    [Spelling Bee: yd 0. td pg in 12:50.
    @puzzlehoarder 9:34am: I think I missed the same 2 words on Monday.]

    ReplyDelete
  59. MFCTM.

    Zex (12:33)
    jae (12:55)
    Anonymous (1:06)

    ReplyDelete
  60. IS NOTHING SACRED could be the start of many a post on this blog, such as yesterday’s about the word “rebus” or complaints about the word “oh” appearing twice in a puzzle.

    I knew Rex would dislike it because he never likes anything by this constructor. I liked it pretty well, although I found it lacking in one of my favorite things about late-week puzzles: clever word play and misdirection in clues. Only GESTURES and maybe TOSCA made me smile.

    The crazy prices for works of art (GERHARD Richter) made me wonder when NFT will make its NYTXW debut (or has it already?). People paying ridiculous prices for non-fungible tokens such as the original code for some silly internet meme makes me think the end is nigh. At least with an overpriced work of art you can hang it up and look at it - and rub your hands gleefully because no one else can. With NFTs, you get nothing but someone’s dubious assurance that YOU ALONE own something anyone can Google on the internet and see whenever they want to. But people are making money from them - at least for now.

    Food answers usually make me salivate, and I like almost any food commonly eaten and many that are not. Except LIMA BEANs.

    ReplyDelete
  61. Anonymous1:25 PM

    mods:
    if Zex can tell FH to F off which is what he did at 12:33.
    Why cant I tell Zex to F off?
    Please explain why there are two diffrent standards being used.
    Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  62. LENTANDO, schmentando. I took 8 years of piano lessons, never saw that once. I asked my co-worker, who majored in music and was a music teacher at a school for a while, if she had seen it rather than the usual ritarDANDO and she hadn't. Hmmph.

    Unlike Rex, I found no purchase in the top of this puzzle, had to go down to ETTA crossing MUTANTS to start. Once I filled in everything back up to the top stack, I had to chip away, with ORCS, LIMA BEAN and ESO BESO as my chisel. I loved the long phrases but then, I've always had a soft spot for triple stack puzzles.

    While not easy for me, I still found great pleasure in the chipping so thanks, Trenton Charlson.

    ReplyDelete
  63. East Coaster1:48 PM

    @Anon 1:25

    You don't need a mod to help with that. It's easy. It is because Z is a mature, credible, contributing poster here, and you are an anonymous troll.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Har-lights:
    * Jaws of Themelessness. Always a puzgrid plus. Gives it some teeth.
    * Grid-spanner stacks. Good stuff in em, too boot. Leads to neat little ahar-moments.
    * Quad weeject stacks, crossin the grid-spanner stacks. Primo-istic constructioneerin, dude.
    * Only 68 words. Gives U lots of long answers -- has some luvly Ow de Speration potential.
    * Only AARGH/FEH/SHUDDER-worthy stuff at our house: LENTANDO. TCI. DENIS. GERHARD. Not enough to shake up the M&A nanosecond hope chest, much.

    staff weeject pick: FEH. From the times-proven Yucky-Oriented arsenal.

    Thanx for the fun, Mr. Charlson. Good job. Always enjoy a good, solid AARGH.

    Masked & Anonymo4Us


    remember to cross yer I's, but not yer eyes:
    **gruntz**

    ReplyDelete
  65. @Southside
    I pronounce it with the G, as in "are-g" or "arg" if you prefer. I don't like the double-A, however. That's a slippery slope, how many A's can you add? Three, ten? 100,000,000?

    @Bouvitude 8:32 &
    @Nic(NotPerfect) 9:01
    The Awards that are given out in any particular year, say 2022, are for the previous years movies, music, performances, etc. As in, awards this year, 2022, will be for 2021 songs. They can't give awards for the year we are still in, because the whole year has to be over for inclusion. Example: a great movie comes out in December, it gets considered for an Oscar to get awarded the next year, but for that last year. So every time there's a clue for [award] in 2022, it'll be for an [catagory] in 2021. Get it?

    RooMonster Flummoxing Guy

    ReplyDelete
  66. @bocamp - Thanks for that truly awesome word list!

    ReplyDelete
  67. I'm getting less rigid, but I generally like to get at least one across and then start working the crosses, so my first entry today was ESS. These little tricks are getting more transparent -- I hope the trend doesn't go too far or the puzzles will get boring. Not this one, though, it was fun.

    I've seen a lot of Richter paintings, but it took a few nanos to recall his first name. DENIS Diderot, though -- he was the guy who first conceived the notion of an encyclopedia, and then proceeded to create one, writing quite a few of the articles himself.

    I got about 2/3 of the way through the comments (to date) before I realized that I had an error: fade away meant DIE, not my answer, DIm. mTDS doesn't make much sense, unless maybe the terminal is an ATM and it will give you your month-to-date credit card charges, or something.

    @Nancy, me too for wanting chopped liver, but it was obviously too long. My grandfather earned his living as a lumber grader; he could walk by a stack of boards and tell you how many board-feet were in it. I can look at a space in a crossword and tell you whether a particular word will fit, but I don't think anyone will pay me for that.

    @What? I had the same thought, but M-W gives a second meaning of boats with flat bottoms and raked in front and back. Go figure.

    Speaking of French words, I seriously considered vIN for the morale-booster. Works for me.

    I can see Rex's point about ORCS fitting the crosses better than entS, but I held off in case there was metaphor about Spiro AGnew that would fit.

    Finally, I don't hold with the growing crossword use of LAM(S) as a verb. You can be on the LAM, you can take in on the LAM, but I can't imagine someone's responding to the question "Where's Joey?" with, "Oh, he LAMmed."

    Even more finally, September 19 is the annual "Talk Like a Pirate Day," when people go around saying "Avast there, matey," "Shiver me timbers," and "AARGH!"

    ReplyDelete
  68. @What - Merriam-Webster claims BATEAU is from “Canadian French” and says the definition is, any of various small craft
    especially : a flat-bottomed boat with raked bow and stern and flaring sides - Based on that both you and the clue are correct.

    @East Coaster - Thanks for the kind words, but let me add that I didn’t tell anyone to Ef off, and @anon/FH’s point that not feeding the trolls is the generally preferred response is well made.

    re:AARGH - I was thinking it was from Peanuts, but it turns out Charlie Brown said AAuGH. Personally, I’m a blrrgher.

    ReplyDelete
  69. alicat4:43 PM

    I never thought of AARGH or heard it as a word but have heard lots of throaty growls that fit the definition. Sort of like the tongue-clicking Tsk Tsk sound written as words.

    For me, the puzz was lots of fun.

    As for the post about being the smartest, seems like the troll targeted one person who s/he knew would defensively take the bait.

    Posting non-puzzle stuff is easy to skip if I’m not interested in it, as long as RP doesn’t mind.

    Thanks for a nice puzzle, Trenton.

    ReplyDelete
  70. Canadian French? Hmm. Parisians also say bateau. French French. Pardon.
    Reminds me of an old cartoon whose point escapes me.
    The scene is obviously Paris (there’s the Tower) and a small cafe displays a sign which reads “Ici on Parle Francais”.

    ReplyDelete
  71. I have very few food prejudices, but like @Wanderlust, I absolutely loathe lima beans. I spent hours at Camp Pinecliffe trying to get them out of my succotash. It's always nice to find someone who avidly shares your culinary dislikes.

    And by the way we may have to coin a new crossword acronym: NPOCS. Non-plurals of convenience. Has anyone ever seen a single LIMA BEAN in the wild?

    ReplyDelete
  72. Re the Grammys: they're kind of vague about what they consider the "year" that something won. Unlike the Oscars, but like the Tonys and Emmys, the eligibility time frame does not correspond to the calendar year. It usually runs from October to the following September, so releases in the last quarter of the year are not eligible for the proximate awards.

    Typically I see winners cited for the year or number of the actual ceremony in which they won, which for the H.E.R. album would be the 2019 Grammys or the 61st Annual Grammys. But the Grammy website does have those winners listed under "2018". So call it whatever year you want. The important thing to remember about the Grammys is that they are the most pointless of all entertainment Awards.

    ReplyDelete
  73. @What? - Merriam-Webster is saying BATEAU is an American English word (since 1711) that comes to us from Canadian French, where it comes from French. So, in English, it’s “especially,” but not exclusively, that flat-bottomed boat. I don’t quite know how much “Canadian French” there was in 1711, nor do I know what to make of one of their “recent examples from the web,” (f)rom classic tote bags to sporty BATEAU tops, there are countless lust-worthy pieces in the collection (from Vogue), but that’s what M-W is saying.

    ReplyDelete
  74. Post Analyzer7:10 PM

    RE: Anon 10:22
    Maybe I'm nuts, but I thought this post was hilarious and self-deprecating. Someone who baldly claims to be "much smarter" than "all the rest of you" has to be toying with self-mockery. And then to say "If I was even smarter than that, I wouldn't waste my time bragging about myself here like the rest of you do" is an admission that this person is NOT "smarter than that" because he/she has just wasted time bragging exactly like he/she alleges that we do. I don't know, maybe I'm not yet appropriately jaded by online trolls, but I actually LOLed when I read that post.

    ReplyDelete
  75. Never liked a Trenton Charlson puzzle, probably never will. Just nowhere near my wavelength.

    ReplyDelete
  76. You know you've been solving for a long time when you drop in URANIA off of the U in BERMUDA without blinking an eye. Time was when knowing The Muses, and Greek mythology in general, was de rigueur for solving xwords. Two of her sisters, CLIO and ERATO, used to be regulars. Still see them occasionally. THALIA looks like she has xword potential.

    I thought the "flat bottomed riverboat" would be a BARGE. Never heard of (or don't remember) BATEAU. Sounded like it might just be French for "boat". Glad to see What? @1:02 confirm that hunch.

    Nancy @5:30 some folks here call that a "singular of convenience" or SOC. Happens now and then, especially with Greek and Latin words where, for example, a -UM ending gets shortened (for the convenience of fitting its slot) to an -A. NPOCs has a nice ring to it though.

    ReplyDelete
  77. old timer7:34 PM

    Perfectly good puzzle and a lot of fun. Took a lot of time to figure out those common figures of speech, and it was fun to figure them out.

    My DNF was thinking that "WIN" was really din. WIN is far more accurate but I didn't see it, and after all "din" does sort of fit.

    I don't think for a minute tomorrow will be more fun. For me, this has capped off a splendid week of solving, and it is hard to imagine a cleverer tomorrow.

    ReplyDelete
  78. Anonymous8:40 PM

    This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  79. Never heard of “lentando” in all my years of reading and making music. “Ritardando” is the correct word for gradually slowing down .

    ReplyDelete
  80. Anonymous10:51 PM

    @8:40

    mine, too. same subject. and no, I'm not 8:40.

    ReplyDelete
  81. Anonymous12:44 AM

    Can’t see the phrase “Is nothing sacred?” without thinking of the brilliant Gahan Wilson’s cartoon featuring that as its caption. For those of you unfamiliar with his work, please do yourself a favor and Google it.

    ReplyDelete
  82. Easy peasy Friday. LOCH NESS MONSTER was my entry, but I have no idea how I knew that.

    ReplyDelete
  83. Burma Shave10:59 AM

    ASEA MUTANT?

    READ THE TALE OF THE LOCHNESSMONSTER,
    FANs may AGREETODISAGREE:
    GESTURES OFLITTLEFAITH and you lost HER,
    NOTHING IS SACRED, ICEE.

    --- GERHARD "BEN" BENZ

    ReplyDelete
  84. DNF. Went with aERHARt instead of GERHARD for 21D. Looked it up to verify and The Google provided the correct answer. I should have kept chipping away at the crosses but that Greek godess at 21A was not in my wheelhouse and the clue to 41A was a bit too obtuse.

    ReplyDelete
  85. I looked at the clue list and went "AARGH!" Can I even find a way in? Found GARDE/GIRTH, so started in the middle.

    This puzzle was tougher than a Texas steak. I eventually reached a solution, after about two hours of intense study. And there goes OFF again, rating it "easy." Easy my left foot.

    I SETAGOAL to finish; doing so garnered a gazillion triumph points, so it's going to get a good score whether I "liked" it or not. I did wind up liking it.

    Wow, I remember Dom DELUISE as a singer turned comic; forgot he also acted. ETTA gets another DOD sash. Score this one a birdie.

    ReplyDelete
  86. Anonymous1:47 PM

    Really enjoyable to solve, even with the numerous pissers.

    ReplyDelete
  87. rondo2:31 PM

    AGREETODISAGREE and LOCHNESSMONSTER ere out and out gimmes and it was off to the races. Just DELUISE and SETAGOAL set up the RIOTACT and the rest was fill in the blanks. Never read the clues for the threes in the top three rows. DARN easy.

    ReplyDelete
  88. Diana, LIW5:13 PM

    I think the combo of unknowns with the long across answers made this a less-than-enjoyable Friday for me. Must...read...Tolkein...some...day

    Along with the periodic table of course.

    Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

    ReplyDelete
  89. leftcoaster6:59 PM

    Diderot, DENIS Diderot.

    ---Bond, James Bond.

    ReplyDelete