Relative difficulty: Easy (wink)
Theme answers:
There's not much to this, as a puzzle. It's an assortment of symmetrical arranged words related, with varying degrees of specificity, to MARDI GRAS (which is today, I'm guessing ... my brain is still on Pandemic Time, i.e. No Time, and the war in Ukraine isn't really helping my time/space awareness). Easy puzzle, easy trivia test, EZ. The one thing that elevates it slightly is that "EZ" gimmick at the bottom of the grid. The gimmick doesn't really work, visually. I thought maybe the newspaper version has just one "big" cell for the "E" and the "Z," but it looks like there are just four regular cells shaded gray. You have to draw your own "big" letters at the end. The app probably changes those cells to big cells at the end, along with some confetti visual effects and music and other bells & whistles nonsense. Just hypothesizing. Anyway, there are four "E"s and four "Z"s and the "big" is in your heart, if you even have one, you monster (this is me talking to me now). Still, I like the "Z" corner a lot. Normally when someone tries to cram a lot of Scrabbly letters into a small corner, the results are very much not worth it and I cry 'foul." But today, that little section is the most entertaining part of the puzzle by far. "BZZT!" is oddly charming, and then throw in LIZZO (an accomplished flutist) playing some LIVE JAZZ at Preservation Hall, and you've got a very FIZZy corner. They also managed to fit not one but two political liberation movements in there (civil rights, women's LIB). Yes, I'm quite taken with this corner. I also think BOURBON STREET over MARDI GRAS looks great as a big bold stack right at the heart of the grid. The rest of it doesn't get much above a connect-the-dots level of interest. But maybe the visual gimmick is enough. It's breezy, it's easy, the mood is nice and festive ... it's hard to be mad at a MARDI GRAS puzzle, is what I'm saying.
- BAYOU (5A: *Gulf Coast waterway)
- GUMBO (1D: *Cajun stew)
- "TREMΓ" (13D: *2010-13 HBO series set shortly after Hurricane Katrina)
- BOURBON STREET 28A: *Main drag of the French Quarter)
- MARDI GRAS (34A: *Celebration with king cakes)
- ΓTOUFFΓE (37D: *Cajun shellfish-over-rice dish)
- LIVE JAZZ (40D: *Music heard at Preservation Hall)
Alain Leroy Locke (September 13, 1885 – June 9, 1954) was an American writer, philosopher, educator, and patron of the arts. Distinguished in 1907 as the first African-American Rhodes Scholar, Locke became known as the philosophical architect —the acknowledged "Dean"— of the Harlem Renaissance. He is frequently included in listings of influential African Americans. On March 19, 1968, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed: "We're going to let our children know that the only philosophers that lived were not Plato and Aristotle, but W. E. B. Du Bois and Alain Locke came through the universe." [...] Locke was the guest editor of the March 1925 issue of the periodical Survey Graphic, for a special edition titled "Harlem, Mecca of the New Negro": about Harlem and the Harlem Renaissance, which helped educate white readers about its flourishing culture. In December of that year, he expanded the issue into The New Negro, a collection of writings by him and other African Americans, which would become one of his best-known works. A landmark in black literature (later acclaimed as the "first national book" of African America), it was an instant success. Locke contributed five essays: the "Foreword", "The New Negro", "Negro Youth Speaks", "The Negro Spirituals", and "The Legacy of Ancestral Arts". This book established his reputation as "a leading African-American literary critic and aesthete."
Locke's philosophy of the New Negro was grounded in the concept of race-building; that race is not merely an issue of hereditary but is more an issue of society and culture. He raised overall awareness of potential black equality; he said that no longer would blacks allow themselves to adjust or comply with unreasonable white requests. This idea was based on self-confidence and political awareness. Although in the past the laws regarding equality had been ignored without consequence by white America, Locke's philosophical idea of The New Negro allowed for fair treatment. Because this was an idea and not a law, people held its power. If they wanted this idea to flourish, they were the ones who would need to "enforce" it through their actions and overall points of view. (wikipedia)
• • •
The fill skews crosswordesey due at least in part to the way the grid is built, i.e. with a ton of 3- / 4- / 5-letter answers. UVEA YURT and ALOU O'DAY and so on. The once-ubiquitous NEVE even makes a reappearance. Lots and lots of repeaters, but you can just fill them in and move on, and they don't really detract much from the main event, i.e. the theme (or, as I'm calling it today, the THEMΓ).
Today I learned that the Gr. word for "cloud" is nephos (46A: What nephology is the study of => CLOUDS). I also learned that "nephology" isn't used much any more as a meteorological term. I was then reminded (by my own curiosity and googling) that "nephrology" is the study of the kidneys, and "phrenology" is a pseudoscience involving the measuring of cranial bumps—it's also a fantastic album by The Roots.
Maybe next year we'll get a king cake-themed puzzle and we'll have to find a BABY somewhere in the grid. I am deadly serious. And hungry. Please, constructors, get on this. [nevermind, it seems my wish has already come true]:
See you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
I absolutely hated this puzzle as there were way too many proper nouns for my taste. Take, for instance, the upper right-hand corner - a Netflix series name, an HBO series name, a Simpsons name, an actress and an actor's names. All in one corner. Luckily, I have been to New Orleans enough to be able to get all of the longer clues to fight my way through this drudgery.
ReplyDeleteThe Big E Zs delighted me, and I was reminded of this Chen tour de force from December 15, 2013. **Spoiler alert – the link is the solution.
ReplyDeleteRex – I’m so happy you liked the Z corner. I did, too. And I agree on the visual appeal of BOURBON STREET over MARDI GRAS. I’m wondering, though, on the “symmetry.” Why is the clue for 11D starred?
What a sea of possibilities for New Orleans entries: crawdads, Cajun, pralines, beignets, creole, stifling humidity, Pontchartrain. . . Too bad NORA couldn’t have crossed something else and been NOLA, clued as some woman’s name. But I guess it’s just not a common-enough name. Still, cool little Easter egg.
I had no idea that today was Mardi Gras. Fat Tuesday, indeed. Last night I tried on my mother-of-the-groom dress, thinking I’d still need to have it taken in some. . . nasty little surprise had me googling Spanx.
Loved the clue for VETO. And I kept looking at 3D’s clue: “Arrive at ahead of.” Arrive at ahead of, UP FOR anything.
I’m unfamiliar with LIZZO, but I liked the putting the sing in single singer dealie. Wonder if Matty ALOU ever bragged that he was the “put the bat in battle” batter.
Yesterday we were revisiting the idea denotation/connotation and thinking of stuff like stare, gaze, rubberneck, ogle. . . Never thought of GAPE. (I did tell them to look up and make eye-contact with me when they had come up with a couple of synonyms. I added as a joke that they should make it creepy eye-contact. This one new student, shy girl I hadn’t figured out how to engage yet, caught my eye and almost imperceptibly waggled her eyebrows at me. Yesssss.)
The thought of DUMPing OUT the contents of my purse in front of anyone is chilling. God knows what’s in there, but five’ll get you ten that there’s something organic possible growing tentacles.
Jeff – always a pleasure. Lisa – congrats on your NYT debut!
@LMS 6:04am, Congrats on the impending nuptials. Mother-of-the-Groom is a delightful role and you’re so far down on the list of supporting characters that you can forget the Spanx, or at least order a size up so you can breathe while doing the Electric Slide.
Delete@LMS-hearty congratulations! My wonderful son-in-law’s mother and I discussed her “mother kf the groom” role as compared to mine, her comment being “You must be exhausted!”. But the event was wonderful. I agree with @Hartley70. Skip the Spanx and enjoy!
Delete@LMS, so good to see you back occasionally! As a former MOG, I was told by friends that my job was to”smile and wear beige.”
DeleteIt was easy for a Tuesday,close to personal best. The only that slowed me down was the ZZ corner. Didn't know Alain Locke Barely know who Lizzo is, never heard of any of her songs. And I found Bzzt a lot less cute than Rex did.
ReplyDeleteExcept for a tiny speed bump or two, this was incredibly easy for me. That’s not a judgement on the quality of the puzzle one way or the other, just a comment. Laissez le bon temps rouler! I love N’orlins so much…our son lived there for 6 years and we used to visit him there 2 or 3 times a year. After the first year or so we never went back to the Quarter, there are so many more interesting and less touristy areas. We really thought about moving there but he moved away (to France!) and we haven’t been back. Sad. Thinking about NOLA always brings a tear, I miss it so much. And we loved Treme on HBO and watched it several times. The music…. I always watch the Parade Cam online and listen to WWOZ online a lot this time of year. I’m obsessed with the Mardi Gras Indians, musically and culturally. There is nowhere in the US (and probably nowhere in the world) like New Orleans. Not an easy place to live, but so deeply powerful. Not to mention the food!
ReplyDeleteAs a former resident of Louisiana, lover of New Orleans, and occasional Mardis Gras visitor back in the day, I enjoyed this E-Z puzzle. Slight side eye to LIVE JAZZ. Would we expected to stop by Preservation Hall to enjoy recorded JAZZ?
ReplyDeleteMy habit of scanning the grid for diagonal words sometimes leads me to notice things that seem unusual in a given grid. Today it was what seems to be an UnUsUal preponderance of U's. There are 10 U's in this grid (11 if one includes 5A, BA- YOU). So in recognition of all you U's (or "y'all," as you might hear someone say in NOLA), here are clues for two Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW) that involve the letter in question.
1. The first t in TTh
Answer: TUE (begins with the T in 37D, ETOUFFEE--makes my mouth water just typing the word)
2. Dolphin who plays with a snapper
Answer TUA (begins with the T in 24A, OUTDO--TUA Tagovailoa, quarterback for the Miami Dolphins, who receivers the ball each play from a snapper)
Happy Fat TUE, y'all!
Discussion late yesterday on blog history. For anyone who did not read my late post, I added LudyJynn and Tita A to the “missed friends”. And now … Bob Kerfuffle, ‘mericans in Paris, Glimmerglass. And there was a Shu … Holy Shu??
ReplyDeleteI’m guessing today is MARDI GRAS. If not … that’s a real miss by the NYT.
TREME is a new one on me, probably not appropriate on any day … definitely not on a Tuesday.
@kitchef 7:09am, I returned late to the party yesterday too. I’m still thinking of @Numinous and his wife and daughter who left the Navy and ended up at Penn State law school. What of MohairSam, AliasZ, ChuckMacGregor, agingsoprano, and WhirredWhacks? Such a cast of characters in the names alone!
DeleteSome random thoughts:
ReplyDelete• 73 theme squares and remarkably junk-lite. Jeff Chen is a master technician.
• Yay to O’DAY / ETOUFEE / EPEE / TREMΓ.
• Speaking of TREME – Oh, man, the music in that HBO series!
• DUMP OUT is one terrific NYT debut answer, colorful and in-the-language.
• Two New Orleans fun facts: It is illegal to ride in a Mardi Gras parade without wearing a mask, and the city has more canals than Venice.
• Gorgeous stack of MARDI GRAS under BOURBON STREET, the icing being BATTY just below that.
This puzzle was a lovely reminder of a national treasure. Congratulations on your debut, Lisa, and Jeff, you are a constructing beast. Thank you both!
This was fun and apt.
ReplyDeleteIs it too early for Wordle comment? If so I'm done.
If not.......I am stopped in my Wordle quest today. I had the three middle letters in green for 2nd guess. I could only come up with one word but it's wrong and I can't see another. It has to be there. I'll give it a rest so I don't go BATTY.
Thx Lisa & Jeff; challenging Tues. puz! :)
ReplyDeleteMed+
Not on the right wavelength for this one. Dnf'd at EVER / TREME; had an 'h' in place of 'R'.
Learned ETOUFFEE recently from Spelling Bee.
New to me: EVER, TREME, CLOUDS, ALAIN, LIZZO, BZZT, AV CLUB, BAKE, BEN.
Nevertheless, an enjoyable adventure in New Orleans! π
@jae
Yes, the 685 was relatively easy-med for a Croce, but, for me, still tougher than any Sat. NYT puz I can recall. (took the better part of 3 hrs.) Really enjoyed the challenge, and was very pleased to have finished with no errors, altho, the 'soirΓ©e giver' / 'knee tapper' cross gave pause, esp since I initially had the wrong consonant for the 'separator'. Btw, these days, an 'illegal pitch' adds another thing, which could change the last letter in that answer.
___
yd pg: 15:18 / W: 3*
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all π
Puzzle-engendered puzzler:
ReplyDeleteToday's puzzle just missed having perfect theme answer symmetry, which it would have had if 3-down was a theme answer. (This is not a knock on the constructors! What they created was amazing!)
But what was needed for perfect theme answer symmetry was a six-letter answer ending in the letter O, related to New Orleans. The only thing I could come up with was [New Orleans born entertainer Fats] for DOMINO.
Maybe some of you can think of more???
I had "DE-MONEY" at first for "empty, as a purse." I thought, wow what an obscure word I learned today.
ReplyDeleteI think the Spelling Bee game might be affecting me. Just throwing random letters together that sound like words.
@LMS 11D because those are famous streets in NOLA.
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ReplyDeleteLove NOLA, love spicy food, so Cajun and Creole inspired dishes all rise to the top of my list. Enjoyed this puzzle for the most part. I don’t know why they ruined it by stuffing that awful trivia quiz in the NE, which is an absolute shame considering the talent level of the constructor. If I recall correctly, I believe his last NYT puzzle was heavy on PPP as well, but this one is really uncalled for (or maybe not - maybe trivia/esoterica/snoozefest is the new normal). Too bad, could have been a really stellar situation today as I don’t think they could have done much better with the theme and the rest of it. Another self-inflicted wound. It’s got to be the new normal - the constructor and editor have too much experience to not be aware of what they are doing. Yuk.
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ReplyDelete@Greg in Sanibel - yeah, I figured. I guess I should have rather questioned why 3D wasn't a themer, what with symmetry and all. . .
ReplyDelete*Fixing a terrible typo then forgetting to but back the html is why I don’t usually bother to correct typos after I hit publish.*
ReplyDeleteIs a well done tribute puzzle a good puzzle? Because this is better than just about any tribute puzzle I’ve done, but still is a tribute puzzle with the flaw all tribute puzzles suffer from, trivia accumulation about the subject. Tribute puzzles are better than quote puzzles and this is the best tribute puzzle ever, but that still is not enough to get this into the “Liked” column for me.
The trip down memory lane is interesting and fun. So many fascinating commenters have offered up their views. But I am amused by the “Rex is meaner, now” thread in the comments. Let me state up front that I think all you “Rex is mean” people must never read any of the reviews in the Arts section. Rex always writes about the puzzle and never personalizes it (well, maybe about Shortz, but rarely even then and not since they reorganized). He is a hard grader, but he keeps it about the puzzle. But, aside from that, I wonder why you think he was less direct before. Fifteen years ago today, This wasn't much fun. An impressive number of theme. clues, but half the fun of doing puzzles is getting to experience clever cluing, and here - well, it was like I was being bludgeoned. It has been true since the day I started reading Rex, if you are a constructor and you want praise about your puzzle don’t come here, but if you want to make better puzzles this is the guy to read.
**wordle talk**
Curious about others distributions. I guessed that over time the distribution would look sort of like a bell curve with a mean slightly less than 4. Right now my distribution is 0, 3, 20, 23, 8, 2 for an average of 3.75 guesses per wordle.
0, 1, 18, 27, 7, 1 for me.
Delete@z and @wanderlust, got to an even 4.0 today (lol, my.'par'), with 0,1,12,17,10,2.
DeleteWordle 255 3/6
π¨⬛⬛⬛π©
⬛π¨⬛π¨π©
π©π©π©π©π©
BZZT?
ReplyDeleteOkay. So maybe it was inescapable in order to create the theme with all the EE-ZZs...what do I know?
The puzzle was not much of a Tuezzie Tues - I kinda of liked it and seeing all the NOLO references.
But, question: Why on earth wouldn't they run this on TUESDAY GRAS?
I mean it's right there.
I don't like this trend of the NYTXW misplacement and worse, downright ignoring of the holidays. When and why did that start??
Tis a wee joy that's been pilfered from my humdrum life. That's just mean.
π§ .5
ππ.75
Clever celebration of Fat Tuesday. The clue for VETO gave me fits (No Power). Major props!
ReplyDelete@Wordler (7:11 AM)
ReplyDeleteI may be going 'batty' with you, lol. Got the terminal greens on my first guess, so with your three in the middle, we'd be aces. It'll be a challenge to try to come up with all the possibilities. π€
@Lewis (7:21 AM)
How about Zydeco?
@The Other Lewis (7:24 AM)
Lol, re: SB fake word slinging: join the club! :)
___
td pg: 9:16 / W: tba
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all π
Perfectly timed theme, and appreciated the reminder that today is Mardi Gras (and the heads up that Lent starts tomorrow. Seems late this year...). Like @LMS, 11D still seems odd as a themer - I get that the clues are NOLA related, but it, and I suppose OLD, are the only answers that don't by themselves say 'New Orleans'. Speaking of OLD, I love Vieux Carres (basically a Manhattan, but instead of two shots of rye use one shot of rye and one shot of cognac, and add a teaspoon of Benedictine along with the Vermouth and bitters). All that's missing from this puzzle is a Sazerac.
ReplyDeleteDidn't know AVCLUB or TREME, so will check those out. After that great animated '2' last week, I thought for sure the E and Z blocks would do something fun, but alas, just 4 E's and Z's. Happy Fat Tuesday, all.
Wait. It's March??
ReplyDeleteNever mind.
A trivia fest but timely and pleasant. Wonderful city - I’ve had so many good times there over the years it was hard not to like this puzzle. I’ll take the crawfish ETOUFFEE at the Royal House.
ReplyDeleteTous les temps en temps
@Lewis 7:21a - there’s always ZYDECO or even VOODOO.
Enjoyable Fat Tuesday solve.
We've attended the French Quarter Festival since 2009, save for the last two years owing to Covid cancellations. Superb (free) music festival - https://frenchquarterfest.org/.
ReplyDelete@Kitshef and @Lewis and others — I didn’t read yesterday’s blog (too busy) but I just did. I’ve been here a long time as well and miss all those folks you named. From time to time I look around now and think, hmm, lots of new people here, where are all the others I used to see? I guess they just drift off, one way or another. Things change, life goes on, but it’s both pleasant and sad to think about all those folks.
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ReplyDeleteI was DEF UPFOR an EZ JAZZy FIZZy MARDIGRAS today!! Loved it. Agree that the SE corner was JAZZy and FIZZy fun!
ReplyDeleteI inferred the names in the NE corner I didn't know, it wasn't difficult.
Happy Fat Tuesday everyone!
(glad March has arrived so my house stops feeling like an IGLOO :-))
--CS
Out of respect, the NYTXW usually notes MOS DEF’s name change to Yasiin Bey, at least cross it with NEE or pick a different a clue.
ReplyDeleteTuesday record for me. Breezed through it so fast, I had to go back and reread clues to find the clever ones. As @LMS points out, there’s an odd lack of symmetry which you look at the yellow squares in the grid (which you can see on the app when you are on the revealer). The constructors must have spent hours trying to change BEAT TO to something NOLA-related. You can’t lose the “o.” I might try it except I am guessing it can’t be done if Jeff couldn’t do it. Arguably they should have clued AVENUE in a non-theme way to make the symmetry work.
ReplyDeleteI love New Orleans but I will probably never go to Mardi Gras. I hate crowds and the thought of being pressed into a bunch of beaded, sweaty, drunk people revealing body parts to those on balconies sounds awful to me. But I love Jazzfest and hope to go back soon. In my younger days, we drove down every year, staying at our friend’s house on the BAYOU in Raceland. Get up early, stop at the drive-up bar for bloody Marys, and head into town for the music. There was always a crawfish boil too.
What a puz! Easy? Yes. Fun? Yes. The sets of four squares at the bottom? Genius.
ReplyDeleteForgot that it was Mardi Gras, so I wondered why the theme ran today . . .
Only visited New Orleans once, and after spending time in the touristy section Bourbon Street et al.) was not impressed. The smell of vomit, the strewn garbage in the morning, made me feel sad. Visiting true Cajun Country, on the other hand, was awesome: etouffee, shrimp jambalaya, xydeco music, two-step dancing.
To Z @ 7:52 Maybe it's because you come across as a rex-fanboy (which is totally your thing, to each his own), but I'm going to respectfully disagree. It's fine to comment on technical or thematic flaws in a puzzle, but rex's rants often have a jaded/mean/sour quality to them. And while yes, he seems to have let up on the Will Shortz criticism, not too long ago Shortz-bashing was a pretty common denominator in his blog. Not a cool look. (It reeks of jealousy, or an unrequited crush. And I get that. Shortz has the job that rex drools about.) I wonder some days why rex even does the NYTXW anymore, since he rarely seems to enjoy it. It feels like he enjoys trashing the puzzle/constructor more than the puzzles themselves. (Now you will probably disagree, and that's fine. I'm just throwing out a different perspective on his "constructive criticism." No need to correct me.)
I do agree with you about the bell curve for WORDLE and par being 4. My curve is similar. Unfortunately I've hit a few words where I'm down to the last letter with multiple options to fill in the blank, and then of course it just becomes a guessing game. Today, however, using a brand new seed word, was an easy birdie:
Wordle 255 3/6
π©⬜π¨⬜π©
π©π¨⬜π¨π©
π©π©π©π©π©
Once again I get to ask the question you've heard me ask before:
ReplyDeleteWho are all these people and what are they doing in my puzzle?
Who are all these people and I finished the puzzle. Never can figure out how this often happens.
DeleteLove Rex's idea of a king-cake themed puzzle. Would the baby be dead center of the grid or actually hidden? And how would one hide it?
ReplyDeleteOoh! Ooh! I hope it's with anagrams! π
Wondering if @LMS's purse could provide an endless supply of food stuffs for @Z's pub. Nah. I just wanted to say "food stuffs".
Could someone explain her avatar to me, please?
@Z 752am So we're still talking Wordle here? I lost all my stats with the switch to the NYT site. How do you still have yours?
@Frantic, if you google "lost wordle stats" you'll find all sorts of stuff related to this problem. Mine transferred seamlessly. But try going to the original site (powerlanguage.co.uk/wordle/) with the same browser on the same device and letting the browser handle the redirect. If that doesn't work, there's lots more to try, but may not be worth it.
DeleteI knew today is Mardi Gras as it came up at our Monday night hootenanny last night, so the theme became obvious to me pretty early. I liked the Big E's and the big Z's. good stuff.
ReplyDeleteHowever. I don't usually complain about things like this, but I think this puzzle must have set the record for Most First Names in a Weekday Puzzle Ever. I counted seven, eight if you count LIZZO, nine if you think DREVIL's first name is DR, and ten if you count SRI, which I'm doing because it's my list, so there.
So no more calls please, we have a winner in our first name contest, and, note to constructors, please don't try to beat it.
Certainly a timely Tuesday, LS and JC. Let's Say I Just Couldn't take anymore first names.
Thanks for a medium amount of fun.
Frantic Sloth…. I always enjoy your contributions, but I’m a bit confused by your ‘misplacement’ comment today. This puzzle did run on Fat Tuesday. Perhaps I’m misunderstanding something.
ReplyDeleteLoved the puzzle… love NOLA… love Mardi Gras.
Sadly, just when the pandemic seems to be (hopefully more than temporarily) waning, we have the maniacal despot Putin going to war. May we find some joy in Mardi Gras today. Just wish there was more peace to go with it.
@Frantic Sloth: Re LMS's avatar: My guess is :the saints are marching in
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ReplyDeleteRex,
ReplyDeleteYou don't find a baby in a king cake, you find THE baby. The King of the Universe. Jesus. Maybe you would have known today was Mardi Gras if Lent and Easter were part of your reckoning.
Z,
ReplyDeleteRex absolutely personalizes his reviews. He gushes over some like CC and belittles Bruce Haight. Not just his puzzle, but him personally. Everyone knows this. Go ahead and die on the Rex-is-even-handed hill. But die you will. That argument is a dead end.
Ah....Lisa and Jeff..you give me a wonderfully fat full Tuesday . All about New Orleans. What's not to like?
ReplyDeleteI pretty much figured where you might be going with GUMBO and BAYOU and memories of MARDI GRAS. My first was in RIO and it's beyond spectacular.
First and foremost...I love New Orleans and I love their food. My husband and I would go to a restaurant named "Galatoire's" on BOURBON STREET. They have the best GUMBO as well as the shrimp Remoulade. The people are so friendly, the atmosphere sings JAZZ with delight, I cried when Hurricane Katrina hit.
I had a few problems with some of the names. Didn't know a lot of them but they were fairly easy to get.
I now know that nephology is the study of CLOUDS. I was about to put deaths in there. Oops, I was thinking necrology. I also just read that all you ever wanted to know about TV comes from the AV CLUB.
I really enjoyed this....All of it....it was fun...
Speaking of food and fun:
@Frantic and Z from yesterday:
I have compared Rex to one of my favorite characters in the animated movie "Ratatouille."
Anton Ego is the most feared food critic in all of Paris. Everyone knows that when Anton comes to review their restaurant, he won't like it. Anton was harsh because all he wanted was the food to be good; not cheap or badly made glop. He was a brilliant connoisseur of all things food and scared everyone silly
Senor Ego was on a quest. He compared all food to his mother's divine cooking and would only settle for her awe inspiring recipes.
THEN....he ate Remy's (a rat) ratatouille. The smile...(his first) and the delight at eating something sublime was worth watching the movies a hundred times.
Rex is Anton Ego.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteHow about not having 11D as a Themer? Just clue it differently. Symmetry achieved! Seemed a big oversight for such a good puz.
A bit of a nit, 45 Blockers. Way high for a 15x15 grid. But, needed for the tons of theme in here. 10 Themers, plus the E and Z four-square bunches! Holy GUMBO! Plus, using two of the EE and ZZ as part of other Themers. And to come away with clean fill is amazing. My mouth is GAPED.
If you squint, the grid looks like someone dancing on BOURBON STREET.
YURT makes a reappearance. Neat word, neat abode. It looks like a teepee. But solid material rather than animal skins. DR EVIL always fun to see. Always put my pinkie to my mouth when I see that!
Maybe change 3D to HEAT TO, and clue it as "___ eat, like one would with King cake?", maybe?
Embarrassing SB yd, -16, should'ves 8
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Pro golfer Ernie Els is nicknamed The Big Easy. Pro golfer Michelle Wie West is The Big Wie-sy.
ReplyDeleteWhen all is said and done, I admit to liking the puzzle even though I left a number of squares containing proper names blank. Attending a funeral yeaterday and having a doctor's appointment today crimps my time when bothering with the crosses. But the aptness of the puzzle won me over, I guess.
ReplyDeleteNancy: This is a debut puzzle. Newer constructors seem (to me) to like to jam names into puzzles that they relate to. I think you would agree, a bad trait. Seems to me, that's where the names come from.
Sometimes it's not what you say but how you say it. Z admits to disliking tribute and quote puzzles, but I don't think his comments demand Shortz to publish only puzzles that cater to his tastes. I think some here may read the comments of Sharp (maybe a little too quickly) and interpret his comments as expressed too imperially. Or maybe to much on the aggressive tone of one who is passive-aggressive. That the manner in which Sharp expresses himself annoys many who come here is a given, whether you agree with his stated observations or not. My own conclusion that he has lost his power to influence Shortz is borne out by some of the comments Shortz has expressed I think is justified by the comments I have read in a number of places. I sometimes feel this blog, which certainly is well known and read, is a lot less influential than it should be. It really matters not to me as my biggest concern is enjoying the puzzles. And getting to doctor's appointments on time.
Faster than yesterday.
ReplyDeleteDo, re, mi, fa, sol, ti, do
ReplyDeleteMaybe tomorrow the theme can be cigarette and cigar names.
Fun puzzle. But yes pretty EZ.
pmdm,
ReplyDeleteYes, this is blog is not very influential and that rankles OFL. In turn his frustration is given form via this blog, where, unchecked, Rex is free to spew all manner of venom, innuendo and calumny. All while remaining virtuous-- a a regular Caesar's wife. ( a couple of days ago he accused a constructor of plagiarism. And used an unconvincing fig leaf to pretend he didn't))
He truly believes he knows best. that the powers that be are unpersuaded is maddening to him. His envy of Shortz seems almost pathological.
gill,
ReplyDeleteMi amiga. No. Rex is just ego.
"It was easy for a Tuesday,close to personal best..." says one commenter - could anyone else possibly give a hoot? The slog of comments like this make me want to give up reading this blog - but like Gatsby, I "beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle remains, for me, a sort of constant in a changing (and, seemingly) downward spiraling world - so I cling to it. I am 75 y.o. + and considered by my ever dwindling number of contemporaries a "cockeyed optimist" (thank you, "South Pacific"). But it gets harder.
I'll wait for Nancy and that precious few of the actually interesting commenters to have their morning cup of coffee and perhaps post something of value. Now it's just back to my income tax returns.
@Lewis (7:21) -- Yes, I can. It's amazing what a little research can do.
ReplyDeleteClue: Harrah's or Carnival Club in New Orleans
Answer: CASINO
But someone else would have to work it into the grid. That does not look EEEE ZZZZ.
Casino good wordle.
Delete@mbr 904am Of course! Thank you. I've been known to be somewhat dense. π
ReplyDelete@GILL 920am I like your Rex/Anton Ego comparison. Based on your description, of course - I've never seen the movie. π€·♀️
@pmdm 926am I wholeheartedly agree with your newer constructors theory and hope it's just a foot-wetting phase that will evolve (and improve) with experience.
@RAD2626 927am Ha! I see what you did there. π
I just realized that I have NOLO in my first comment instead of NOLA. Autocorrect? Typo? I'm going with idiocy.
Am I the only one who pondered the highlighted theme answers and thought they might form a Big Easy chair?
ReplyDeleteWell at least I didn’t have to consult an encyclopedia to figure out the theme today thank goodness. So I’m very grateful for that but all the PPP and trivia? Not so much. A whopping 40% plus by my estimate. It was fun though. I thought the bottom boxes were going to be N-O-L-A but I liked the Es an Zs too.
ReplyDeleteThe BIG EASY is one of my favorite places on earth to visit. Not the BOURBON STREET area per se, but the food, the people, the art, the music, the aura - such an eclectic culmination of a unique culture. Where else on earth can you be publicly intoxicated at NITE without the slightest bit of judgment and then go eat square donuts to sober up the next morning?
Not to be dense but is there some sort of grid art going on? I was trying to picture a shrimp or a bowl of gumbo or maybe a cocktail glass but nothing is really jumping out at me.
A fine tribute to the city and the day, and fun to solve (although I'm still wondering why there's a "missing" theme answer at 3D - lingering damage from Katrina?). I agree with others about that very pleasing center stack, ending with the emphatic YES.
ReplyDeleteDo-over: ETtouffe. Help from previous puzzles: OMAR, DR. EVIL. No idea: BEN, TREME, ALAIN.
@pabloinnh 8:50 - Where some other commenters are nostalgic about trips to New Orleans, for me it was your mentioning your "hootenanny last night" that hit me with a wallop. I can't tell you how envious I am. Did you sing "500 Miles"?
@Frantic 10:18. If you want a pick-me-upper, watch the film...It'll make you laugh and smile. It's all about cute little meeses.
ReplyDelete@Hartley 10:25. @Mohair Sam comes here - usually on Saturday. All of the people mentioned were such a lively, fun contributor to the blog. Sometimes, I miss you, too!
I now have a hankering for a beignet !
So someone who studies kidney-shaped clouds would be a nephology nephrologist?
ReplyDeleteALAIN was new to me. All the other names were PEEPs for me. I too had no idea it was Fat Tuesday, and the theme was a nice way to realize that Lent is upon us. EZ was a fun touch by the constructors but the digital tech squad missed an opportunity to delight the online solvers. They are getting better and better at it lately and I’ve come to anticipate pyrotechnics!
ReplyDeleteSome show, either CBS Sunday Morning or 60 Minutes, did a whole piece on King Cakes this past Sunday. I was impressed by this one family owned baker that only worked 3 months of the year, making King Cakes for Carnival, taking the other 9 months off. The correspondent asked one of the sons what they did the 9 months and he just said "fish". He then corrected himself, and said he fished for 5 months, hunted for 4. I don't know that I approve of those activities particularly, but I respect the hell out of the work 3 months and do something else for 9 concept.
ReplyDeleteI never knew that Carnival started the day after the Epiphany. Nice to know that the festival of sybarism is bookended by dates of Christian importance.
Anon 9:14 No one knows who first put the porcelain baby in the King Cake, but there is no indication it has any significance other than the person who gets the baby has to buy the next cake.
Pete,
ReplyDeleteThere is every indication that the baby in a king cake is Jesus.
https://kingcakeshop.com/tasty-info/the-history-of-king-cake/#:~:text=Why%20Is%20There%20a%20Baby,cake%20to%20the%20next%20event.
So, nephology is not the study of nephews?
ReplyDeleteLiked the theme in that it reminded me that today is Fat Tuesday. (Or would Rex want me to say Overweight Tuesday?) New Orleans is a special place that deserves a tribute. Liked the play on E Z and congratulations to the constructors on crossing all those double E and double Z words and getting away with it.
The only themer that doesn’t work for me is AVENUE since it is not specific to New Orleans any more than, for example, DUSK which can also be found there. (Twilight in the French Quarter.) Otherwise, memories of GUMBO, ETOUFFEE (there should be a prize for spelling that correctly), and LIVE JAZZ are all welcome on this chilly gray morning in Chicago.
@thfenn 1023am Thanks! When I had trouble getting Wordle to load (starting at the original site which redirected to the NYT URL), the only thing that worked was clearing my Safari history and website data. Unfortunately, googling explained that that's where the data was held. Oops.
ReplyDelete@GILL 1045am I like meeses. I'll give it a try - maybe even move it up on my v e r y long watchlist!
Out for the day now...later, peeps!
@bigsteve46 9:57. I may be the only one, but I give a hoot. It makes me smile when someone does well. Silly? Probably.
ReplyDeleteWhat fun!
ReplyDeleteNice tightly themed π§©!
Very EZ.
π€΄πΌπΈπΌMARDI GRAS RULES! πΈπΌπ€΄πΌ
π€΄πΌπ¦π¦π¦π¦π¦πΈπΌ
@kitshef (11:19 AM)
ReplyDeleteHands up for caring! :)
___
W: 3*
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all π
What a wonderful way to remind me that today is Fat Tuesday! I have nothing but fond memories of NOLA, and revere the tenacity of her citizens. The dedication and love necessary to bring the city back after such devastation speaks volumes about the power of community.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the puzzle enormously and about the time I put in AVENUE, remembering the beautiful tree lined streets, the historic homes and the trolley rumbling down St. Charles, I hoped for some homage to the “Big Easy,” and there it was at the end. Disappointed that the app didn’t do something to celebrate the EZ, but a delightful solve.
Due to global warming an indigenous person now RESIDES in a YURT rather than an IGLOO.
ReplyDeleteSewing machine inventor moves to Louisiana, takes up residence on a swamp, which is thereafter known as Howe’s BAYOU.
You can’t OUTDO an ALOU IGLOO if you’re BEATTO the AVENUE. Nothing new to see here.
I liked the puzzle. Didn’t have any glitches. Fun Fat Tuesday. Good work, as always, Jeff Chen. And congrats on a nice debut, Lisa Senzel.
Saw the Simpson’s clue and had to don my @Lewis happy face to fight my knee-jerk reaction to lob this at @Nancy’s wall. Looked around the clues, saw the NO theme and felt much better.
ReplyDeleteDecided to jazz things up by starting at the bottom and working counterclockwise. Thought briefly we were going to be assaulted by LInE JAZZ, thinking that the clue was asking for a specific type of music. Ok, LIVE JAZZ works. Only other hangup was at the MCAT/AVCLUB cross. Knew The Onion but not the pop culture site. The usual NYTXW tests are sAT -related, but I just couldn’t leave in AVsLUB.
All in all a fun time in the big EZ.
Interesting birthday quartet of “big names” - Chopin, Glenn Miller, Dinah Shore, and….Justin Bieber. But it’s Mardi Gras, so here’s something appropriate: Sweet Emma Barrett & her New Orleans Boys -
“Down By The Riverside (Ain’t Gonna Study War No More)”
and a bonus Saint for @LMS’s avatar: “St. James Infirmary”
I didn't say that some people don't think it represents Jesus, just that there was no reason for them to think so. If someone believes it represents Jesus, they're free to do so, they just have no reason supporting their belief. Maybe when they put it in the King Cakes from Huong Tran Bakery (best King Cake in NOLA) they believe it represents the baby Buddha.
ReplyDeleteMedium. Pretty darn smooth given the theme density. Hand up for highly recommending HBO’s TREME. Liked it. Nice debut.
ReplyDelete@bocamp - Yeah, that was a tough cross.
I had never heard of a king cake before. When I run across bizarro stuff like this, I always wonder, "How was it that this occurred for the first time?" Accident? Practical joke? Poor judgement? Pot?
ReplyDeleteVery pleasant way to be reminded that today is Mardi Gras. Jeff Chen seldom disappoints.
ReplyDeleteLearned about King Cakes with a ceramic baby baked in. Getting the piece with the baby is good luck. The Greeks make a vasilopita with a coin baked in for New Year.
Mom, you'll be lovely no matter what you wear. As long as you wear something, and wear it throughout the reception. Not like the New Years Eve '02 debacle.
ReplyDeleteSince we're still ranting about yesterday's T. Rex rant, here's something to consider. I am the mouse who suggested that T. Rex longs for the days of yesterpuzzle, which were crunchier, and, I suppose, more fun for him. As it happens, I regularly do a bit of Sunday Times puzzles from compilation books as I wait to fall asleep (possibly contra-indicated, but works for me). My current book has puzzles from 86 to 93. The one currently in progress has the following as clues (no answers, just to keep the Mod Squad from hyperventilating; yet some of the answers, with recognizable clues, are also arcane in the extreme).
ReplyDeletevainglory - 4 letters
part of a markka - 5 letters
_____ shrike of Madagascar - 5 letters
where Warden Lawes worked - 5 letters
vilipend - 4 letters
mazuma - 4 letters
dowitcher - 5 letters
welkin - 3 letters
composer of "The Seasons" - 5 letters (can't be who you think)
Scandinavian goddess of the future - 5 letters
"Rosmersholm" playwright - 5 letters
city in Perm Oblast, USSR - 9 letters
So, the point isn't to comment including the answers - NO, NO. After all, there could be dozens of folks working the same book out there.
The point is to vote on whether, in 2022, such clues meet the legendary criterion that Sunday is just a Big Wednesday?
Great point! I notice the same thing when I do those old Sunday puzzles in the book collections. I’ll take PPP like LIZZO, BART and TREMΓ over that stuff any day
DeleteMFCTM.
ReplyDeletePete (10:56)
The grid looks like an alien from a 1980s video game. Lots of NOLA clues!
ReplyDeleteFor me, Mardi Gras means Dentist Tuesday. Not quite as much fun.
[Spelling Bee: yd (Mon) pg -1; missed this unknown word.
td (Tues) quick dash to pg in 4:05; will try for QB after the dentist.]
@frantic, if you are still having trouble finding your Wordle data, try this:
ReplyDeleteAssuming you have the NYT app, open it and go to Sections, search for “Wordle” then find the original article where you first read about Wordle. For me that is “Wordle is a Love Story”. In the article, hit the hot link to Wordle. Maybe your data will be there despite your deleted Safari tabs? This is how I access the original game every day, avoiding the browser and the app.
Never been to the BIG EASY, but heard about it a lot, so it was mostly, well, Easy. To my immense shame, I actually had to look something up on a Tuesday -- to wit, ALAIN Locke. As a result, I had to change "Kink" to KNOT. Having done so, I ended up with the delightful BZZT. Genuine word, but I had not come across it before. But really, who ever has trouble with tying a shoelace KNOT? Like it says in a favorite song, "Jack's Red Cheetah", "I can tell the time, I can tie my own shoes, and my Momma can't keep me home." I do remember when tying my own shoes was a Major Accomplishment. Probably all boys do. And in those days, my Momma could not keep me home. If I wasn't next door playing with the neighbor girl, I was across the street playing Monopoly or whatever with some older boys. I could read those Title Deeds more easily at ages 4 and 5 than I could read my Catholic Catechism in kindergarten.
ReplyDeleteBut those were the days when in our Westwood Hills neighborhood, parents had absolutely no fear of anything bad happening to their kids. If the kids were suddenly needed, all it took was calling next door or walking across the street, or worst case scenario, seeing if your boy had gotten into an accident riding his Flexy down the sidewalk.
Among the things I really admire about OFL is his talent for coming up with just the right video clips. That one for TREME was first-rate. Folks, when he asks for money every year, send it! I always do, on the theory that the money he makes off of us is a fairly important reason for him to keep doing this day after day,
And, you know, I do still miss Evil Doug. I think this was before @Rex recruited moderators to calm the occasionally roiled waters around here. But he was amusing!
The big E & Z boxes were the best. Made the puz sparkle.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick: BRB. Short for Bourbon.
Primo E/W symmetric(al) puzgrid. Looks like some puz-art legs at the bottom.
BZZT. har … But perhaps needed to enable that there Big Z. Sooo … ok.
No-knows: ETOUFFEE. How to spell BOURBIN right. ODAY. Why AVSLUB/MSAT ain't right. DREVIL. ALAIN. BEN/NEVY [Well, NEVY sounds sorta familiar, after the fact]. OLD Square.
Did-knows: LIZZO. DION. OYL. DEBRA. ALOU. EARL. OMAR. BART. NORA [Plus, close to bein NOLA].
Thanx for gangin up on us, Lisa darlin & Chenmeister dude. Luv me an E-Z solvequest.
Masked & Anonymo10Us [, who has been to Bourbon Street]
beware of runt; has lotsa bite to it:
**gruntz**
"First he was an Earl, then a King -- and then New Orleans music royalty". EARL could have been an additional NOLA clue with symmetry retained. I did not know him but NOLA folks probably would, and the crosses are EZ. Fun timely theme. Fun and EZ puz just like the city so why would anyone care about short answers crosswordese or excess names. You do? I doon't. Not on this one.
ReplyDeleteNice reminder it is Mardi Gras. War and stuff kinda distracting.
I was hooked on TREME. Music characters atmosphere.
Weird how hung up on Rex that one person is who thinks Rex is so hung up on Shortz because he is envious of his job or had a crush on him. Now if he applies that reasoning to his own self... well.
A Shell,
ReplyDeleteWhy not address my analysis of Rex and his blogging? Put another way, do you dispute my assessment?
Pete,
ReplyDeleteYou're fundamentally misunderstanding what the cake means. Jesus is the reason for mardi gras. It's the last hurrah before the lenten season. Why on earth would anyone put a generic baby in a cake? The reason is because it ends the season of the epiphany. And the epiphany occurred when Christ was a baby.
It isn't a matter of interpretation. King Cakes contain the baby Jesus. Why on earth are you refuting a widely known fact? Just to be obstreperous?
@A (11:49 AM)
ReplyDeleteThx for the 'Sweet Emma Barrett & her New Orleans Boys' vid; amen to them and 'war no more'! π
@jae (12:19 PM) π
@okanaganer (1:09 PM)
Yeah, had that one on my list and still missed it. Some of these just take repetition. :)
@old timer (1:19 PM)
Good point re: supporting Rex!
___
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all π
I was so put off by all the names in this puzzle, that I neglected to do what so many here today have already done: pay homage to the gorgeous, utterly unique city of New Orleans.
ReplyDeleteI was there for 3 days at the impressionable age of 16. New Orleans didn't seem like an American city; it seemed like a European city. (Which is a truly odd reaction because at the impressionable age of 16, I had never even seen a European city in the flesh.)
But, oh, all that lacy wrought iron!!! Those magical balconies!!! Houses that looked a bit like wedding cakes. And also so romantic: the muddy Mississippi -- very brown, sure enough, when I was there. And boats going by at leisure -- boats that looked as though they came right out of "Show Boat".
The downside? Those damnable grits! I'd never had or even heard of them before but whatever I ordered for breakfast, those grits would appear on the plate. For the two days following my first revolting taste of them I'd tried to get the waiters to stop serving them...but they wouldn't. You order eggs, you get grits. You order pancakes, you get grits. You order cereal, you get grits. You order toast, you get grits.
I wonder how much has changed in all these years? All these decades? I fervently hope that the uniquely charming architecture-- architecture I've never seen anywhere else in this country -- survives. I hope the Mississippi is still romantically muddy. And I also hope they've stopped serving grits to anyone who hasn't actually asked for them.
Nancy, I am a native northerner who lived in the South for years and came to loooove grits. Other Southern foods like chitlins and boiled peanuts, not so much, but I can eat me a mess of grits. Some friends from home came to visit once and when a waitress asked them if they wanted grits, they had no idea what they were. She said, “y’all didn’t look
Deletelike grit eaters.”
@Anon 1:36 - You clearly don't understand Mardi Gras vs Carnival. They celebrate Carnival in NOLA, ending at Mardi Gras, except when it drags over a bit. 2-3 months of partying. Nothing Jesus-ey about it, it's sybaritic partying. It doesn't end on Shrove Tuesday, it ends with Mardi Gras. It is bounded by two religions seasons, the extended Christmas season, ending at the Epiphany, and the beginning of Lent. But there is nothing religious about it, it's almost anti-religious. You should go there some day.
ReplyDeleteDear Albatross @1:25,
ReplyDeleteThank you for making me laugh out loud. If I mention rex, it is only because it's his blog and his screeds set the tone (sour) for the day. (Compare rex's posts to those of Lewis, what a sweetheart! If only he had his own blog . . .)
I think you're not so subtly suggesting that I have a crush on rex. I can assure you, nothing is farther from the truth. I do admire his knowledge of the XW world, but that is all. Not that there's anything wrong with homoerotic crushes, as I'm sure you'd agree.
Peace & hugs!
@Carola-Wow, another hootenanny fan. Nice to not have to explain that term to someone.
ReplyDeleteOur local hoot took a hit during Covid , and our usual pub/venue changed hands, but we've managed to reconnect.
No 500 Miles last night, although it's a song I love. M y favorite was a nice rendition of John Prine's "Hello in There" with a lovely cello accompaniment, even if I did play it myself.
Glad to have awakened a fond memory.
@Nancy 1:46 and your grits story...!!!!
ReplyDeleteAy frijoles negros...I hated them as well. My parents shipped me off to the the middle of swamp land in Florida so that I'd get me some Americanization pushed into my brain. At every single meal, we had grits. Grits this, grits that....I had to shove them in my napkin because we were supposed to clean our plate.
UNTIL....UNTIL.....My sister told me to try the shrimp and grits at this restaurant in South Carolina. I said "NO THANKS." My husband ordered them and they looked awfully good. I took a bite off his plate and screamed with delight.
Do our taste buds change with age and wisdom?
@Pete:
ReplyDeleteit's sybaritic partying ... But there is nothing religious about it, it's almost anti-religious.
Almost??? Isn't it the case that all these religious (i.e., Judeo-Christian) holidays/events/etc. just happen to fall on days/dates of long existing Pagan festivities? Make it easier to fill the tent: you Pagans get to keep your fun, but with a new name.
Growing up with Catholic folks (we were Protestant), the meme was: "Sin all week. Get out of jail on Sunday. Rinse. Repeat". Easy to see how religions acquire the reputation as organized hypocrisy.
Pete,
ReplyDeleteMardi Gras is the same as Shrove Tuesday. And that day is today. My goodness that's simply a fact.
Bad Mouse,
That's a rather poor take on Catholicism. I'd offer a brief lessen in the catechism but your sneering take on holy days (whence holidays) assures me you wouldn't be very open to the truth.
"the 'big' is in your heart, if you even have one, you monster" reading this made my degradation kink act up for a second lol
ReplyDelete*lesson
ReplyDeleteGill,
ReplyDeleteFWIW, T too came late to the grits party. And like you I was converted via shrimp and grits. Oh my, what a dish. Only question is whether it's my first Lenten dinner ( tomorrow) or Friday. The only problem, no bacon....
There sa food network recipe that's pretty great. Google it and include Bobby Flay in the search. He's not the chef. He's just being schooled by an expert in the dish.
Funny story about Mardi Gras. My very young high school French teacher decided the French club needed to go to New Orleans for Mardi Gras - well, the Saturday before (or maybe the one before that). We did all the touristy stuff, and, having been properly admonished to stick together, several of us naive teens were walking down Bourbon Street when one of the girls got picked up. Literally picked up and carried by some maniac running by. A couple of our braver French students gave chase and he dropped her after a block or so. Thankfully she was unhurt (more embarrassed than anything), and the teacher didn’t get sued. The other thing that happened was a shooting in a restaurant we were thinking of going into. This was probably 1977 and I’m guessing a pretty rough point in terms of crime. Things seemed safer when I went back in college, and of course everything changed after Katrina. But I’ll never forget that image of my classmate being carried, in one arm of some large festival-goer, down Bourbon Street.
ReplyDeleteDidn’t see the discussion about missing blog PEEPs yesterday, but I was just recently thinking about Diana, LIW, and ‘mericans in Paris and their thoughtful perspectives.
@Frantic, I see the @LMS avatar was ‘splained to you directly - my bonus song today was a tribute to it. Love the way she thinks.
@bocammp, yw! Have my blue and yellow on today for Ukraine. Guess I should add the Mardi Gras beads.
@Tom T, agree about LIVE JAZZ - my first thought was the even worse LInE JAZZ, thinking it was a clunky reference to second LInE.
Before it went in, I was a BZZT doubter. Then I tried it, and now I’m a BZZT believer. Though as a southerner I say it with a bit of a drawl - BZZZZZT.
Speaking of accents, a N’awlins native I know taught us to how to ask someone if they had eaten and wanted to go out to eat: “Jeetjet? Wongweet?”
@Nancy, @GILL, I was raised on grits and I love them, but if you get the instant kind and don't drown them in butter they taste like cardboard. My sympathies. Go for stone ground!
@3:10
ReplyDeleteBut... the facts remain:
- Christian events do follow, almost to the day, pre-existing Pagan rituals
- I didn't concoct the Catholic's meme, they educated me. Nearly converted, for the convenience of it all
- wars, through history, have been waged over two things: control of natural resources and control by religion
- free thinkers do take note of the hypocrisy of it all
- not all Catholics behave like Sybarites all the time, just as all Protestants don't behave in a catholic (note the case) manner all the time; note Northern Ireland
The esteemed Alton Brown did one (or more) episode(s) on grits; Southern by heritage but grew up on the West Coast. The one I remember has him telling Southerners that grits and polenta are really the same thing. Much hilarity ensued.
ReplyDelete@Anon 3:10 Shrove Tuesday & Mardi Gras are the same? One's a solemn religious observance, Mardi Gras is a sybaritic party, and while it has its roots in clearing your house of the things may be giving up for Lent, it's still only a damned party dedicated to excess. They occur on the same day, but they are not only not the same thing, they are antithetical. Also, Epiphany ends 2/2. This year, Mardi Gras is on 3/1. Mardi Gras does not mark the end of Epiphany. And King Cake != Mardi Gras, King Cake = Carnival.
ReplyDeleteAs mentioned above, putting specific items in cake,and whomever finds that wins a prize, has been a thing forever, across time and cultures.
As I said before, if you believe the baby is representative of Jesus, go on believing that. Just don't tell me that its a fact, or that you have any evidence so support it, or that your belief is anything other than a result of the goggles through which you perceive the world. Withing reason, they're perfectly fine goggles, but they're still goggles. People used to put fava beans in the King Cakes. Was the fava bean Jesus, or just something put there as a surprise for someone? Some people put a coin in the cake, is the dime Jesus?
"@Loren's Son" at 12:49 is either the funniest send-up ever posted on Rex or else an absolutely extraordinary and provocative glimpse into past secrets of the Muse-Smith family. Maybe you'd like to run that by me again, @Loren's Son??!!
ReplyDeleteHow did I miss this post the first time around? How did so many of you?
I was brought up Episcopalian, aka RC in English (yes, many decades ago), and Epiphany was a single day: the 12th day of Christmas, aka Three Kings Day in Caribbean cultures, and well known in some song or another. According to the wiki (make of that what you will) the notion of Epiphany as a time period is extremely recent. No Paganism involved.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed learning about Alain Locke, I gather from lack of other comments that I'm unique in not knowing about him before. Oh well, I didn't grow up in the US. (Can't say I learned from puz about king cakes, because apparently unlike some others I do read my NYT.)
ReplyDelete-0 today, first for ages.
I am "truly humbled", if not humiliated, by Dordle.
ReplyDeleteDaily Dordle #0036 X&7/7
⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬜⬜⬜π¨⬜
⬜⬜π©⬜⬜ π©π©⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜⬜π©⬜ π©π©π¨π¨⬜
⬜⬜π¨⬜⬜ π©π©π©⬜π©
π©⬜π©π©⬜ π¨π¨⬜⬜⬜
π©π¨π©π©⬜ π¨⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜π¨⬜⬜ π©π©π©π©π©
Maybe the baby in a cake thing was misunderstood by Q'anon and that lead to the idea that Democrats were eating actual babies.
ReplyDeleteLike @Loren, I was bothered by the nonsymmetrical 11D. Also it differs from most of the other themers in that the actual answer does not really indicate NOLA (or, in the case of BAYOU, areas near NOLA.) 70A is another, though, so I guess that's not a rule. While some of the suggested answers are great, they'd be hard to fit in -- so I think @Roo's suggestion is best.
ReplyDelete@Gill, me too for Galatoire's. I actually like the food better at any of Emeril's various places, but it doesn't say NOLA as much as Galatoire's.
@Pete, Mardi Gras is not the day after Epiphany; Carnival, which goes on for weeks, starts after Epiphany.
@Nancy, I'm guessing Loren may have written that post herself; it fits her sense of humor.
@The Joker:
ReplyDeleteDemocrats were eating actual babies.
"I like children. If they're properly cooked."
"Hell, I never vote for anybody, I always vote against."
-- W.C. Fields
"In 1946, on Christmas Day—the holiday he said he despised—he had a massive gastric hemorrhage and died, aged 66."
the wiki
So, I guess he wasn't a Democrat and they weren't in his diet.
@jberg -- Her sense of humor, yes, but not her writing style. And one's writing style -- especially when it's as distinctive as Loren's -- is not all that easy to disguise. I doubt very much that she wrote it. If she had, there would be many more details.
ReplyDeleteI had to come back because I started wondering, as I filled in 51A, why UTERus is in the masculine gender.
ReplyDeletePete,
ReplyDeleteMardi Gras ( literally Fat Tuesday), Shrove Tuesday, Pancake Tuesday, Carnival, Carnival Tuesday are all the same day. Marking the same thing. The end of one Liturgical season and anticipating the next. That different people behave differently on this day does not contradict the fact that not only are they all the same day, they are marking the same thing.
@jberg:
ReplyDeletebecause UTERUS is, too. which is contra-indicated, of course. but back then only men could be doctors, and they decide everything that needed deciding.
@jberg:
ReplyDeleteI misread your comment, oops. but the back end of mine is the reason.
Does Rat in this Pearls strip remind you of a certain anonymous?
ReplyDeleteI grew up in Tennessee but joined the Navy while I was in Nyah Lens. That meant there were several guys with Cajun accents in our basic training company. They were a fun bunch and added some much needed levity to counter the daily grind of boot camp.
ReplyDeleteThe EZ part of the grid reminded me of a chain of lending businesses called E-Z Cash Loans. They set up shop in area convenience stores and would loan you money if you had a title to your vehicle to use as collateral. You could get a loan in like 10 minutes. E-Z indeed! They were around for a couple of years and then vanished, why I do not know.
I think some GUMBO recipes call for OKRA as one of the ingredients. Speaking of GUMBO, here is Hank William's Jambalaya on the Bayou. The "fill fruit jar" in the lyrics refers to whisky---most likely home made---in a Ball Mason glass caning jar.
I misread nephology and put kidney. π€·♀️
ReplyDeleteIsn't New Orleans called "The Big Easy," not "Big Easy?" Ive always heard it called The Big Easy. Much like NYC is called The Big Apple. Nobody calls it Big Apple. A "The" is needed here.
ReplyDeleteSide Note: this is the opposite of how "the" is misused by many Californians when speaking of their freeways. They say "the 5" or "the 405," but they'd never say "the Rodeo Drive" or "the Mulholland Drive." Those freeways, like Rodeo Drive or Mulholland Drive, already have names; why do Californians feel the need to add a superfluous "the" to them?
Okay, whew! Got that off my chest :-)
@Gill I - I fear I upset you last week or so with my meeses story. Perhaps this will restore you faith in the ultimate goodness of nature.
ReplyDeleteBest, P
No, I am not actually not Loren, nor her son, just someone who makes a Loren related joke from time to time. I hold Loren in the highest of esteem, and with the greatest affection.
ReplyDeleteOh, hell. I'm Sage, her daughter, and am just trying to get my brother into some trouble. Not a lot, just a little. It won't happen again.
Gotta run now, as I have to get up early to castrate about 100 ram-lambs. Have to make sure your Easter lamb roast is tender and well marbled. And please buy your lamb, and all meats, from a halal abattoir. We want all our animals harvested with love and mercy.
Oh, hell. Maybe I'm not Sage.
I was right!!! The "@Loren's Son" post was a very funny send-up. Now if I had THIS AMAZING NEW MACHINE, I could almost certainly identify the writer. Since I don't have that machine -- a machine capable of conducting "linguistic analysis" and that's recently been used to identify "Q" of QAnon -- I'll have to make an unscientific, analog guess.
ReplyDeleteMy money's on @Joe Dipinto.
Today’s AVCX Spoiler But if you’re doing that puzzle this was a useful answer.
ReplyDelete@Wordler/Dordler - ππ½ - I had a quordle DNF yesterday.
@Nancy – it isn't me (I think the post is funny too). But I seem to remember that awhile back someone posted as "Loren's Son" (or a similar name), pretending to be annoyed by something she had said about him in that day's comments. Some members of the commentariat misinterpreted the post and it became a bit of a mess; the poster resurfaced later to clarify that it was meant in fun. This is maybe the same poster.
ReplyDelete@Photomatte 8:00
ReplyDeleteBecause "the" is easier to say than "interstate". π
RooMonster Ba-Dum-Tss Guy
@Nancy:
ReplyDeletethat's recently been used to identify "Q" of QAnon
See, now if T. Rex would spring for one, the Mod Squad could, with due effort, distinguish each of us mice in real-time (not Maher's by God), and thus allow the Named Commenters (black and cyan or whatever that color is) to pick on victims with specificity. It would be a brave new world.
@Photomate, 8pm: it’s only Southern California folks who say “the…” Up here in NorCal we say, “take 280 to 101 to 580” (that’ll put you in either Berkeley or Oakland, depending on your next move.)
ReplyDeleteThe theory behind the SoCal “the” is that freeways were originally named after their terminal point: “the San Bernardino” = “the 10; the Santa Monica, the Long Beach, the Pasadena, etc. Nowadays there are so many crisscrossing to and from anywhere they just throw a number up…but still with “the” in front.
Wait wait, has no one mentioned the grid is shaped like a New Orleans fleur de lis? ⚜️⚜️⚜️ That’s so charming and added to my enjoyment of this puzzle immensely.
ReplyDeleteOK I guess. But annoyingly assymetrical. Either rejig things so that 3D becomes a themer or re-clue 11D so it isn’t. AVENUE on its own isn’t a themer without the clue anyways so reword the clue and restore the symmetry. Lots of three-letter glue holding it together, but it’s pretty decent anyways.
ReplyDeleteEVER EVIL
ReplyDeleteLIZZO was UPFOR MARDIGRAS -
the BEATTO LIVEJAZZ breezy -
on BOURBONSTREET at DUSK you saw
her LAP dance as "BIGEASY".
--- DR. DEBRA O'DAY
A theme-filled paean to the BIGEASY, but to get there, what a formidable lineup of PPPs, many of them way past Tuesday-level. No idea about 13-down, nor 16-across. I guess EVE_ just about had to be EVER, so natick narrowly avoided.
ReplyDeleteWhat, no JAMBALAYA? I s'pose that would be asking too much. ETOUFFEE IS asking too much, on a Tuesday. Finally, the award for the year's (to date) most awkward partial goes to: BEATTO. That one's gonna be tough to "BEAT." Par.
Reminds me of the one and only Mardi Gras I went to back in 1975. So thanks, puzzle, for the fun memories. Still have some of the beads!
ReplyDeleteDiana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords