Thursday, March 24, 2022

Sports star turned model Gabrielle / THU 3-24-22 / Strip of computer shortcuts / Half of an old movie duo / Marvel mischief-maker / Traditional canoe material / Like oxygen therapy chambers

Constructor: Jess Shulman

Relative difficulty: Easy (for a rebus, very easy)


THEME: RAISE THE [BAR] (58A: Heighten expectations, say ... or a hint to entering four answers in this puzzle) — for four answers, you have to "raise" a box containing the word BAR at the end of the answer in order for it to make sense in the grid—that BAR box then works like a regular rebus box in the Across and Downs. So:

Theme answers:
  • SUSHI [BAR] (as you can see in the grid, the [BAR] has been "raised" above the "I" in SUSHI) (20A: Place to order sake and sashimi)
    • RAIN BARRELS (17A: Sustainable water receptacles)
    • BARISTA (18D: One with the grounds to serve you?)
  • TASK [BAR] (34A: Strip of computer shortcuts)
    • EMBARGOED (28A: Banned from trade or commerce)
    • BIRCH BARK (8D: Traditional canoe material)
  • MINI [BAR] (47A: Where you might find very little liquor)
    • DISEMBARK (44A: Get off)
    • HYPERBARIC (25D: Like oxygen therapy chambers)
  • DIVE [BAR] (62A: Shabby establishment)
    • RAISE THE BAR (58A: Heighten expectations, say ... or a hint to entering four answers in this puzzle)
    • CABARET (51D: Club with dinner and a show)
Word of the Day: SARA Delano Roosevelt (46A: New York City's ___ Delano Roosevelt Park) —

Sara Ann Delano Roosevelt (September 21, 1854 – September 7, 1941) was the second wife of James Roosevelt I (from 1880), the mother of President of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt, her only child, and subsequently the mother-in-law of Eleanor Roosevelt.

Delano grew up in Newburgh, New York, and spent three years in Hong Kong. She gave birth to Franklin in 1882, and was a devoted mother to him for the remainder of her life, including home schooling and living close by in adulthood. She had a complex relationship with her daughter-in-law Eleanor, which has led to media portrayals of her as a domineering and fearsome mother-in-law, though these are at odds with other views. She died in 1941, with her son, then the President, at her side. (wikipedia)

• • •

This puzzle was fun to solve even though the theme was actually kind of a mess. Let's start with the basic concept—the BAR is not raised. Or, rather, it is raised, but only after it is also squashed into one square. Nothing about RAISE THE BAR indicates that there will be squashing. You can't just say RAISE THE BAR and then leave out "oh, also squash it first." Further, the BAR isn't so much raised as it is sitting on top of the prior letter in the answer. A "raised" bar would've just floated straight up; e.g., the [BAR] would not be sitting on top of the "I" in SUSHI but instead sitting above where the [BAR] *should* be had the answer continued normally (so, where the "REL" is in RAIN BARRELS). The revealer is incomplete, in that it doesn't account for squashing, and it's incorrect in that "raising" isn't precisely what's happening. I initially thought that the revealer was more inaccurate still, in that I could count only three (not "four") BARs that had been raised. The BAR in the revealer / CABARET didn't appear to have been "raised" at all. But I had failed to notice that DIVE was actually DIVE [BAR]. You really (really) don't need BAR there to make the answer work, so I never registered that BAR was supposed to be there. A [Shabby establishment] is a DIVE. Full stop. Hence my confusion. But yes, DIVE [BAR] also works for the clue, so fine. And about these four [BAR]s. It's at least slightly weird that SUSHI [BAR] actually terminates in a black square (which seems appropriate), whereas the others ... somehow terminate ... in the middle of a Down answer??? Since [BAR] is not so much "raised" as turned up, it really feels as if we're supposed to read ... up. SUSHI [BAR] functions normally in that respect, i.e. the answer terminates with a black square, as all answers in a crossword terminate with a black square (or the edge of the grid, I guess). But TASK [BAR] stops in the middle of BIRCHBARK, so you get TASK [BAR] HCRIB if you follow normal crossword rules for answer termination. This is yet another problem with not *actually* raising your [BAR] but instead turning it up, as if the answer had merely veered off in a different direction. So much conceptual slop. And yet ...


And yet the [BAR]-containing answers were mostly a joy to uncover, by far the best part of the solving experience. Normally, tracking down rebus squares, especially if they are all the same, is kind of a dreary experience, but the [BAR] answers today were a lot of bouncy fun. RAIN BARRELS, BIRCH BARK, HYPERBARIC! Delightful. So I can't say I didn't enjoy myself, even though I think the theme is broken in multiple ways. The rest of the grid is solid too. No real groans or cringes. Well, ODIST is always a bit of a cringe, but it's an outlier today. So I don't think the theme really worked but I liked it anyway. Weird. But true. 


I had the usual "huh?" struggle before getting the rebus, but it didn't last long. I got SUSHI early and could see that the [BAR] was missing, so ... it was just a matter of *how* it was missing. Didn't take long to circle the rebus square and pin it down. After that, it was just a matter of [BAR] hunting, and none of the [BAR]s was that hard to find. Only struggles I had along the way were very minor. I had MIC TAP instead of TAP TAP (which I don't *love*, and which cost me a handful of seconds) (31A: Sound check sound), and I simply had no idea who SARA Roosevelt was (never heard of the park in question). But every cross was not just fair but easy, and SARA is a recognizable, common name—a name I'm happy to learn today. The end. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

117 comments:


  1. At first I thought the answer to 20A would be SUSH[ibar] and the revealer would have something to do with construction beams. That sorted itself out quickly when I couldn't make sense of -[ibar]--- in what was obviously going to be BARISTA. It didn't take long for the bulb to light up and the rest was -- as @Rex says -- an unusually easy rebus.

    I was left with a great deal of admiration for the constructor's art. Getting the rebus into four completely in-the-language words/phrases AND situating it directly above four real words to form completely in-the-language bar types must have been one helluva challenge. Kudos!!

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  2. Teresa6:07 AM

    Anybody else put in UTAH for a place where there's very little liquor?

    And just for fun, I entered HAMSTERS. Well, they would also not be kosher, no?

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  3. You know those times when you're just sure of an answer (that later turns out to be wrong) and spend your idiotic time trying to "correct" the cross?

    Yeah, me neither. [wink wink nudge nudge]

    Technical DNF that's almost too embarrassing to mention, but the intersection of 49A (USC - I despise the school initial entry), 51D CABARET, and 65A PET had me staring in a stupor for almost as long as it took to complete the rest of the puzzle.
    I left a blank at US_ temporarily while I finished the rest of the across answers, including PEn for "Stroke...or the object of strokes". Stroke of a pen, you know? Went back to US_ and figured a "C" would fit nicely there, but WTH was a CABAREn?? Or a fABAREn? Or a - you get the idea. All complicated by the googly-eyed effect of a rebus in the middle of a down answer (which I sometimes have difficulty reading) that blinded me to the obvious CABARET. But, gotta love that PEn and run the alphabet at US_ , right?

    Eventually revisited every cross and *doink* PET! PET, you imbecile! 🙄

    *sigh*

    I really enjoyed the theme, the freshness of the longs, and the clever cluing. So, despite doing my utmost to self-sabotage like a Homo Erectus discovering fire, I enjoyed my stay.



    🧠🧠🧠 (I blame myself)
    🎉🎉🎉.5

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  4. Anonymous6:56 AM

    Well, it’s Thursday, so I was expecting (dreading) a rebus. Hit 20 across, typed in SUSH[IBAR], and thought, “Hey, a puzzle about alphabetical construction materials.” Kept waiting for T nut and U bolt to show up.

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  5. It felt like we were due for a Thursday rebus, as the past five Thursdays were rebus-less. And what a lovely one to come to, doing its thing in the across and down answers, then taking a step up by going a step up from the answer below it. And not only a debut NYT puzzle for Jess, but she had never even done a NYT puzzle until less than two years ago!

    Then she kindly filled the puzzle with a lovely collection of non-boring answers overall. There were other things I liked too. The PUR over the anagram of PURE. The two BARKs in a puzzle with LEASH and PET. And from the R U kidding me department, there are an amazing eight answers where those two letters abut: URDU, URSA, CURSE, SUR, PUR, EURO, DRUG, PERU.

    A very promising debut, with its fresh feel, smart theme, and first-rate construction. It’s a yes, Jess, and a thank you for this eye-opener!

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  6. OffTheGrid7:18 AM

    I ration my nits so as not to get too jaded. Over all, today's was a pleasant solve. But I did give the side eye, accompanied by a raised eyebrow, when I saw that two of the rebi answers ended the same-BARK. 8D,44A.

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  7. The whole thing worked for me. Great first puzzle!

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  8. Very nice theme, although I agree with Rex that the revealer does not really describe what is going on.

    I thought that there must be a more crossworthy REECE out there, but if there is, I can’t think of it. Which makes me wonder why REECE was chosen in the first place. IN TWO/REELS/OWLS/MOSS gets rid of REECE. And MOES for that matter.

    While I'm nitting, having UNH and USC is just being greedy (and that’s on top of CFO, EDT, STN, PGA, and honorable mention ITD). I do get that both are in areas with limited flexibility due to the theme entries.

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  9. Wordler7:21 AM

    Are we still doing this?

    First EAGLE.

    Wordle 278 2/6

    🟩⬜⬜🟩🟨
    🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

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  10. Oh! And I forgot that this was a debut! (Thanks, @Lewis) Now that's talent. Congratulations and well done, Ms. Shulman - hurry back!

    @Teresa 607am LOL! Also, I just love the word HAMSTErs.

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  11. Tom T7:42 AM

    Personal best time for a Thursday--very little resistance from start to finish once I quit trying to squish the BAR in with SUSHI.

    Liked STEAM OPEN. Slight side-eye to UNHIP.

    Tiny nit that EMBARGOED/DISEMBARKED/BIRCHBARK were so similar (I guess SUSHI BAR/MINI BAR also qualify.

    Had HAM SalAd before HAM STEAK.

    The puzzle got my attention with AHEM and PSST in the same grid.

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  12. A very nice puzzle. I fail to understand why Rex goes on and on and on about how 'raise the bar' does not describe the rebus. Sheesh! Here we have this lovely puzzle where the bar is raised above a word, and Rex can't just accept it. Well we all know that Rex has a minimum word requirement for his blog, and there's nothing wrong with that. Indeed it took the week of substitute bloggers to make me appreciate how much we need Rex.

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  13. Well ... I don't care how joyless a solve it was for Rex. I thought it was great! A two-way rebus plus the "raised bar" thing - very cool. And a debut! Congrats and thanks, Jess.

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  14. Mike F8:19 AM

    I gotta say, the gripes with this theme feel pedantic in the extreme. The bar is very clearly raised above the answer, and it allows for almost all very good extra long acrosses and downs (BARISTA/RAIN BARRELS, BIRCH BARK/EMBARGOED, etc.). To be fair, Rex notes all that, but the smushed comment just seems like an unneeded nit to pick, at leas to me. I'd echo some comments above that I was really impressed with how it all fit together!

    Found the NE most challenging--unfamiliar with Gabrielle REECE, struggled a bit with BOSOM buddies, but I was bailed out by Tolkien and Simpsons knowledge (ORCS and MOES, respectively). I could see that section being pretty tough for anyone who didn't have those two answers ready to roll. I also thought the two similar attention getter clues (AHEM and PSST) made a nice, clever pair.

    Good Thursday puzzle! Exactly what I like out of a rebus.

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  15. Anonymous8:19 AM

    Never noticed the "raised" part of the theme - I somehow never looked at those four across clues while solving.

    I picked up on the rebus with 17A. I worked the down clues first had filled in all of the downs crossing 17A, except for 5D, 14D and 18D, and knew where the rebus square was located. From there, I worked more downs than acrosses, so never caught onto the theme until I was finished.

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  16. Not a rebus fan, but this went down easy. Delightful and fresh. Had STUDY buddy (instead of BOSOM), which I anchored with TIPTOE (instead of ONE LEG) going down from the T, so that took some sorting out.
    Wonder if Clare liked this, since she recently passed the BAR.

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  17. I was thrown by the canoe clue - it seems like making a boat out of bark wouldn't be very sturdy - I thought you would just hollow out the tree (and maybe even remove the bark). I obviously am not an outdoorsman.

    Got URDU from my index card - need to commit that one to memory (along with ARLAN and ELSA - or is ELISA, anyway there is another of those Disney toons that stops by frequently).

    Quite the party animal theme going on with BARS everywhere (including a MINI-BAR), POT SMOKER, EGG NOG and even a CABARET if we haven't gotten ourselves into enough mischief yet.

    I love the way Rex dissects the theme as if it is the zapruder film - to me it's just a BAR raised up one row, lol.

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  18. Hand up for missing the two-way aspect of this, as the BAR for RainBARrel and RARista was instantly obvious and instead of looking for a raised BAR I was wondering if the rebus might include things like lemons that you might see on a slot machine. Nope, it was BARs all the way down, and the revealer at the end just added to the appreciation for an ingenious construction. Wow and phew.

    So far, no complaints about "how to enter BAR as a rebus". Where is everybody?

    There are so many NCAA teams with "Wildcats" as a mascot that I was trying to think of all of them before arriving at UNH. Both my sons graduated from UBG and I have been back and forth to Durham dozens of times. A mind is a terrible thing to waste, or not to have a mind, is very wasteful.

    REECE and SARA as clued were the only unknowns in this one, which went too fast, as I was having a great old time with lots of zippy clues and answers. And was honored to see so many BARKs, which is one of my nicknames.

    Congrats on a really nice debut, JS. Just Splendid, as solves go, and thanks for all the fun.

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  19. Professional singer here. Please never, never TAPTAP the mic during sound check. It is injurious to the electronics and to the ears of everyone in the room. “Test one, test two”, a short monologue, a verse from a song, but no tapping. Thank you for your kind attention.

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  20. Seems like a lot of iconic BARs are missing:
    Salad
    Tiki
    Open
    Gold
    Steel
    Iron
    Re
    Dis (but not dat)
    Candy
    Sand
    Cross
    Zed’s Placebo and Tentacle
    Just saying’.

    Rex’s RAISE plaint seems to be because he’s picturing a crossBAR that RAISEs by pivoting upward 90°. There are other ways to RAISE a BAR. I do agree with the revealer being incomplete, though.

    Cannot decided which pop culture clue rankled more, 70’s rock band or MCU. Please please please go Greek and Norse myth. There’s a difference between dated (or soon to be dated) and timeless.

    EBERT is today’s Beatles. TBF, he didn’t give off the same themey vibe.

    Anyone else always take a nanosecond pause to ponder the deep question of who is the oddist ODIST? Just me? Oh, now you too? Sorry. Of course, the oddist ODIST has to use dactyls and anapests in their septets. Right? Hey, it could be worse. I could be imagining them stroking their PEns as they write.

    I sussed out the rebus at RAIN (BAR)RELS so avoided the SUSH(IBAR) trap. Yay Me because that could have caused problems.

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  21. Jeez Rex, Sara Roosevelt was FDR's motion for crying out loud! How hard was that?

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  22. I was raised in a bar, so this puzzle really brought the memories gushing back. I must say that Rex could use a quick course in Joaquim’s Dictum. In fact, it would have detracted immensely from the pleasure I got out of this puzzle if the revealer had been “Place THE BAR over the last letter of four answers after squishing BAR into one square.” This might have made for a perfect themer/revealer relationship for Rex. It wouldn’t have for me.

    Nice to have our own @Birchbank drop by during my solve.

    A very enjoyable debut puzzle. Congratulations and thanks, Jess Shulman.

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  23. Thx Jess, you definitely RAISEd THE BAR for this one; great Thurs. puz! :)

    Med.

    Caught the trick early on.

    Started at the SUSHI BAR and ended at the DIVE BAR.

    Fun solve; enjoyed it a lot.

    @Whatsername (10:27 AM yd)

    Thx for the Wordle2 heads-up; I've been doing it once a day, and will look forward to a daily double dose from now on! :)

    Wordler (7:21 AM) 👍 for you eagle

    @okanaganer 👍 for QB dbyd

    That was my final word dbyd, as well (for the same reason you cited). lol
    ___
    yd pg: 6:20 / W: *4

    Peace 🙏 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊

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  24. Rex whiffed on this one. Granted it was fairly easy - but the two direction rebus with the added BAR is elegant construction. Figured the trick at BARISTA and it was off to the races. Cluing was fun and straightforward.

    ASLAN x URSA is cool. EBERT is today's BEATLES. Learned about Bhangra dancers.

    Sara Roosevelt Park is a classic Clarke and Embury park that covers multiple blocks - starting at the foot of the Manhattan Bridge and extending north to Houston. Get a hot knish at Schimmel’s and sit in the park at Rivington.

    Enjoyable Thursday solve.

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  25. Well, missed the "raised" piece completely, which is super funny because I mentally added BAR after SUSHI and MINI (not DIVE though because it does stand on its own). Got the rebus at BIRCH[BAR]K / EM[BAR]GOED which suddenly made RAIN[BAR]REL appear.

    Another name from nowhere was Stone Cold Steve; even as I write this I don't remember from the clue if he's a sports guy or a famous chef or an influencer, but the name did appear. And it's weird because we don't have regular TV since downsizing (cut it when we dropped the landline), just streaming. So not sure where I'd get a pop culture name. Maybe the TV at the dentist?

    Glad to have a rebus, missed 'em the last 5 (@somebody said) weeks. Great debut!


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  26. @Joaquin - Now it’s just a reflex. …joy to uncover…lots of bouncy fun…delightful. I can’t say I didn’t enjoy myself…The grid is solid, too. Yeah Yeah, he expends more verbiage on what he found problematic about the theme, but this is a rave review for the most part.

    @Mr. Grumpypants - Quick, list all 46 presidential moms.

    @Fearless Kim - Not a professional singer but I had the same thought. How about an odd ode?

    @Theresa and @Frantic Sloth - HAMSTErs on Rye, maybe with a good brown mustard and provolone. Delish.

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  27. It's not that the bar rebus placement can bother you at first. It more or less did to me. But you get over it, especially by thinking diagonally. After beginning to read the write up of a puzzle I very much enjoyed (even it it was an easy Thursday), I just smiled and thought how sad it is not to be able to roll with the punches, so to speak. Time may be limited, but at times it can be very useful to slow down and ponder before going on and on about an invented problem. Or maybe a half problem. If there sometimes appear comments complaining about the general atmosphere, I can understand why even when I disagree with them.

    But I certainly don't disagree with those who liked this puzzle.

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  28. An enjoyable, fun puzzle...and I think Rex is being ridiculously critical about the revealer. The "bar" is raised above the other part of the answer—good enough! Works just fine for me. Congratulations to Jess Shulman for a very nice Thursday puzzle.

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    Replies
    1. Completely agree. I agree with most of Rex’s SNITS (common xw answer) but not this one.

      Delete
  29. Canon Chasuble9:26 AM

    An odd and surprising coincidence? One of the more obscure clues (to me) was
    57A. It was a wonderful/strange coincidence that the lead article in the section of the
    Times that contains the puzzle was actually about the clue in 57A. With great photos as well.

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  30. I don’t really know what Rex’s beef with this puzzle is, frankly. “Raise” is a completely valid way to show what was done here. Theme revealers that have “up” in them is really what he’s talking about. So—sorry, Rex, but big fail on this point for me. Great, enjoyable puzzle all around.

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  31. Hey All !
    Well, Holy HAMSTEAK. Blown away by how difficult this must've been to construct. Triple checked Rebus squares? OH MY. And to end up with clean fill with those Hugh constraints is amazing. And you tell me this is a debut? Good golly, Miss Jess, talent oozes from you!

    One example: the Revealer. You have RAISETHEBAR going across, then have to find a Down word that'll work with your BAR Rebus, Then find another word (phrase) that'll end with BAR, stack that word under the Themer word, still have the Downs be actual words, THEN do it three more times, While keeping your symmetry, AND come out with clean fill.

    If you aren't wowed by this (Ala Rex) I don't know what to tell you. Twas a pity it was a quick solve. So much work over too fast.

    Is this the first time for Triple checked Rebus squares? @Lewis?

    Was upset Rex didn't like this. Seemed like something he would dig. Woman constructor and everything.

    This puz RAISEs THE BAR for me in my own construction. I do think my puzs are good, but dang, this one blows mine out of the water! Nice puz Jess, keep cranking them out!

    yd -1, should'ves (waffling twixt 0 & 1, not really realizing the word I missed was an actual "in the dictionary" word)

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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  32. Anonymous9:35 AM

    LOL. Exodus is on TCM right now.

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  33. Beezer9:35 AM

    @Rex pretty much said everything I thought EXCEPT for the negative stuff. I’m still scratching my head on the “squish” and the BIRCHBARK example. Did @Rex make a mistake on that? To me, it all worked perfectly well, and like @Conrad said, the BAR themers were all well within common language usage.

    @Frantic, I loved your explanation of when you (everyone) are so confident an answer is correct that it can create the feeling that you (everyone) must be incredibly dense. I have that happen a lot but quite often have repressed that memory by the time I read through @Rex and the comments.

    You know that you e worked a lot of crosswords when you KNOW the word for pajamas came from URDU.

    In closing, HAMSTer might actually BE kosher but what would GUINEAPIG be?


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  34. Um, my sons went to UNH. Not sure where UBG is. As I said, a mind is.... and so on.

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    Replies
    1. I was just heading to Google to find it. Knew it was U. of Bowling Green . . .

      Delete
  35. Anonymous9:45 AM

    Yeah, FDR is simply one of 46 presidents🙄
    Son volt and Mr.Grumpy pants are right. Not a lot of presidential moms make the list of “you should probably know”, but Sara Roosevelt is one of them.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Anonymous9:47 AM

    yeah, i had onetwo instead of TAPTAP at first

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  37. Never even noticed the bars could be raised. Doh. I think it's better they're raised above the last letter. Keep it simple.

    Lots of mayhem in this puzzle:

    Malediction, fraud, spam, math class (be honest), rile, amnesty, sodium (by modern dietary standards), gripe, sleet, steam open (did anyone ever really do that?), drug, pot smoker...

    I bet it's fun to hang out with Jess.

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  38. Anonymous9:57 AM

    Rose Kennedy, Hanna Mulhouse Nixon, miss Lillian Carter, …. Lots of 20th century presidents mothers were quite, quite well known.

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  39. So let's say you are mentoring someone new to crossword puzzle solving and you -- rebus-lover that you are -- feel really, really sad when that person says: "I don't like those rebus-type puzzles. Too hard. Too frustrating. I can't do them. I like puzzles that are more straightforward and predictable."

    Here's the puzzle I'd start that person off with. It's fun, it's fair, and as rebuses go, it's not especially unpredictable. The rebus word is always the same and it always gets raised. And the first place it appears-- the stand-alone SUSHI that needs a BAR to complete it -- is sort of an early giveaway, even for someone new to the rebus game.

    I liked this a lot. While it's not hard to solve, it must have been a bear to create. You've got to use each BAR three different ways: Across, Down, and Across-raised. Whew! And Wow! Great job, Jess!

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  40. @Birchbark. Please forgive the typo in your nom de blog in my last post. I always like, sometimes love, your comments.

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  41. Before coming here, I was wondering how I could express why RAISETHEBAR doesn't explain the placement of the rebus squares. Then I read Rex. He did it beautifully.

    I've read the several comments saying that RAISETHEBAR is apt. They didn't come close to convincing me.

    But I liked the puzzle, so did Rex. The rebus squares were fun to find and they fit nicely.

    By the way, Joaquin's Dictum governs clues, not themes. Even the lame early week themes aren't as sloppy as this one.

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  42. This was just a lovely Thursday rebus for me. It’s been a while and I’ve been missing one. The theme was great and the execution was flawless. HYPERBARIC gave me the rebus. RAISE worked perfectly for me. Luckily I could get STEVE from the crosses. My only complaint is that it was over too soon.

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  43. Joseph Michael10:23 AM

    In spite of Rex’s overthinkingness about the theme, I thought this puzzle was both an impressive feat of construction and a fun solve. Lots of fresh fill and creative cluing. Congrats to Jess on the debut.

    Favorite Clue: Where you might find very little liquor.

    Favorite Answer: POT SMOKER.

    Favorite Combo: STEAM OPEN and SPY.

    Greatest Personal Achievement: Remembering Elvis Presley’s middle name.

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  44. Blue Stater10:31 AM

    I thought this was quite good, even allowing for the corrupting influence of the rebus, which I detest in XWs. Apart from the rebus, no tricks, only legitimate curveballs, etc. More, please.

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  45. What the hell is he talking about ??? "Sushi" is just an outlier that could have been clued differently if the constructor was concerned about consistency. It's his puzzle, so apparently he wasn't.

    This gave me no Thurday difficulty feeling whatsoever.

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  46. Probably the silliest and most forced Rex Rants that I've seen.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Yep @Gary, Jess sounds like that guy in the insurance commercials now that you mentioned it. Mayhem may lurk throughout this puzzle, but I’m still so impressed by her debut grid w/ Thursday rebus that I’m giggling ��

    A quick check at xwordinfo shows a POW from Jeff, and I look forward to reading constructors note post haste. Even the temptation of a Wordle solved in only two shall not dissuade! Almost as good as the rebus cavorting through my grid was today’s WONDERFUL misdirection in clueing MOES with Homer, MAST as an overseas post and other such nonsense…simply delightful. I’m betting that you had even more fun polishing this gem than we did in appreciating its many facets.*


    *I hope you’re able to get future puzzles past the NYT staff’s inclination to add ? to perfectly fine clueing like today’s at 33d and 40a.

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  48. Whoops...Never mind...just got it.

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  49. If STYX isn't loathing death, then I don't understand the separation of the living from the dead. BAR me from hell, please.
    So did you like this puzzle? you ask....Well, I only had one hellish spot. I've never heard the term HYPER[BAR]IC. Mr. Roboto's band could've been STIX/STEX/STOX/STUX for all I knew. I started to hyper ventilate. Move on...
    Well, I caught on to the rebus at SUSHI BAR and the handsome BARISTA who finally makes me a good, frothy, coffee. So...I did a little TAP TAP dance I love a good rebus...this was a good one. Everyone is invited to my BAR. HYPERBARIC is our bartender de jour. URSA, REECE and SARA will be serving a special EGG NOG and I promise the Bhangra dancers will be fully clothed.
    I once tried to STEAM OPEN a letter I got. Just for fun....It didn't work. The ink ran all over the place. It was a letter from a secret admirer and I never found out if he was going to take me out to eat a HAM STEAK.
    Buen hecho, Jess. Will you be my BOSOM buddy?

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  50. I was with @Gary Juergen in my responses today….made a longish riff on that melody, but the blogger ate my homework……so, just a second quick note in total agreement with @ Nancy’s insightful post….this puzzle is a gem AND a debut! May we look forward to many future delights from Jess Shulman. Thanks for sharing 👍🏼

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  51. @FearlessKim - good point, I had "onetwo" in there. If you must touch the mic, a scratch of the cover seems to be fair game. Then there was the kid at the local drama awards who decided to end his acceptance speech with a literal mic drop, ensuring that nobody could hear anyone else for the rest of the night.

    Terrific (debut not necessary) puzzle, JS!

    Someone did a terrific podcast series about the history of Siskel and EBERT recently. Interesting stuff about their love/hate relationship, and an interesting trip back to a very different era. Just looked it up: it is called "Gene and Roger" from THERINGER podcast network.

    I was the right age to be into STYX (old enough to listen to rock music, but not enough to develop taste). Despite having a few albums, I completely missed "domo arigato mr roboto". I remember it from a puzzle a few years back, seems like it might be due, so store that spelling...

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  52. LOKI as some sort of a comic book character? I thought he was a Norse Trickster god.

    Presidential moms: the only other one I remember from my day is Miss Lillian, Jimmy Carter's mom. She had joined the Peace Corps when she was fairly old, and worked as a nurse in India. I seem to remember some story about her talking some Mumbai pharmaceutical mogul into donating a lot of medications to the indigent by telling him what good friends she was with Eli Lilly. She was from the USA, he was from the USA, from that distance we most likely all know each other. She told it better.

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  53. I enjoyed the many little clevernesses in this one. CFO/FRAUD crossing was nice.

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  54. Easy. Delightful rebus twist. Liked it a bunch! Jeff at xwordinfo gave it POW. Excellent debut and I thought the theme worked just fine!

    CeO before CFO and Sent before SPAM.

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  55. Just continuously amazing. Personally, if I’m going to argue somebody is important historically and was culturally relevant I’m going to make sure I don’t misspell two of her names.

    @Gill I’s post sparked again the realization that STYX and Kansas are basically scrambled into one band in the HS memories section of the old gray matter filing cabinet. Spend about 37 seconds with each video and the reason should be pretty obvious. I do not recommend spending 38 seconds unless pablum is your thing.

    Again, Rex RAISEd some issues with the theme, issues others also have to varying degrees and others do not see as an issue, but he liked the puzzle. I can only hope that those writing that he didn’t like the puzzle just didn’t bother to read the whole post.

    @Newboy 10:49 - If you preview a comment with emojis then hit publish the emojis get changed into those black diamond thingies. If you must preview first select all and copy, then after seeing the preview select all again and paste.

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  56. A Thursday rebus with an extra trick. Love it love it love it! I liked it so much I didn’t even read Rex because I didn’t want to dull the shine of my happy face. Some fun cluing like the one for PGA and a low level of PPP. At first I got a bit frustrated before I saw the second part of the rebus with the cross answer going up but once I did, a delightful aha moment.

    Thank you so much Mrs. Jess for this fine Thursday debut, and such a touching way to honor your grandfather. Please honor us USA neighbors with another puzzle soon. You can sing in my Crossword band anytime.

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  57. I'm sitting here in amazement at my own idiocy today. Not seeing that sushi,task,mini and dive could all take a "bar" addition totally affected my appreciation of the solving experience and the quality of the construction. Oh, well, back to being sarcastic tomorrow.

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  58. Beezer11:33 AM

    I must be missing something. I have NO clue as to why some peeps (hi, @mathgent) find the theme today sloppy. I am big into the @Nancy camp on this one. Yes. It was easy for a Thursday plus catching the rebus was easy. I could EVEN suss out the theme revealer DURING the solve. Plus, it was fun.

    @Zed…don’t be dissing Kansas on me! They were more than Carry on Wayward Son (one of my least favorite but most well-known probably). I confess to loving Icarus/Borne on Wings of Steel from the Masque album. Orchestra! Kickass violins!

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  59. Had Abbot from Abbot and Costello.
    But that didn't hold. Finally corrected it to Ebert

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  60. WestofNatick11:33 AM

    A delightful puzzle with so many hidden treasures. Thank you Lewis (as always). Thank you Rex. A magnificent debut. Easy for a Thursday but that’s not the constructor’s call. I look forward to more from you Ms Shulman.

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  61. It’s spring! I like everything- including this fun, easy rebus puzzle.
    🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤗🤸🏽‍♀️

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  62. I may have missed it. Has anyone explained 49A? Is it University of South Carolina? They call themselves "U of SC." Those are the correct initials, of course.

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  63. @Zed

    "Yeah Yeah, he expends more verbiage on what he found problematic about the theme, but this is a rave review for the most part."

    How is that possible?

    @GILL

    If you use a tea kettle, the steam comes out in a small stream, making it possible to zero in the the glue that seals the envelope.

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  64. The end is not the end — See you tomorrow is the end. And you are not actually going to see me tomorrow. — This is the kind of drivel you espoused in your blog today.

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  65. Funny puz joke ... A SUSHI, a TASK, a MINI, & a DIVE walk up into a BAR …

    "Hold my beer!" snorted M&A, after watchin many precious nanoseconds go down the drain, while havin to put up a puzfight for some time around the RAINBARREL SUSHI area of mystery.

    The revealer does sorta work, as the BAR part has to be raised, for each of the four bar-flies I just mentioned above. QED.

    @Zed: Nanosecond pauses: a way of life, within the M&A solvequest sphere.
    @Lewis: yep. Them U's can really help spice up yer rodeo's fillins. SUR & PUR get M&A staff weeject co-picks today, f'rinstance. [Sorta like a Chenmeister POW for 3-letter answers.]

    some more fave stuff: MATHCLASS [with great clue]. EGGNOG. POTSMOKER. STEAMOPEN. AMNESTY. SODIUM.

    Thanx for a different take on ThursPuz rebus hi-jinxes, Ms. Shulman darlin. M&A likes different. And congratz on yer fine debut.

    Masked & Anonym8Us


    **gruntz**

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  66. Agree that the theme doesn't hold much, but what an impressive construction of a rebus-grid. Great job there!
    Cluing felt fresh and lively, too.
    And so few proper names!
    This could be a shiny little gem if it wasn't for 50d' clue.
    Of all the Steves in the wotld...

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  67. I knew HYPERBARIC and when HYPER was confirmed the BAR rebus became apparent. When the mini-mystery of the highminded POTSMOKER was solved the MINIBAR jumped out to complete the rebus format of the day.

    I enjoyed Rex's writing about the theme even though I thought it was nonsense. Squish bar and all. I agree the theme was fun and by far the highlight of the day. I'm glad Rex did not drag out his newest show-word to illustrate the serta-sealyness of today's puzzle with Sent-SPAM.

    Likes: BOSOM(buddy) TERRY(cloth) PSST-AHEM attention-getters PINTA new fact clue.

    A wee side-eye to lead-LEASH until I saw in British lead can mean LEASH.

    I wonder if Rex spotted the double tap and chose not to rant.

    Solid construction but a bit meh fill proving a mostly minimal PoC does not automatically make for excitement.

    The URDU URSA INTRO I half like and half don't.

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  68. I enjoyed this one quite a bit -- but only after struggling with my initial assumption that the black square after SUSHI must be a BAR, and therefore that the next across, 21A, must start with the same BAR. Fortunately, 'bar mitzvahs' was both too short and in conflict with ASLAN, which I was sure of without ever having read those books.

    @Southside, you're thinking of dugouts, aka dugout canoes. The disadvantage to them is that they are a) heavy, and b) limited by the size of the tree you have available. BIRCH BARK was widely used by Native Americans of the northern woodlands.

    Speaking of which, I saw that 44A was also going to end with BARK, but when I realized it was a totally different word I thought it was a nice touch -- feature, not bug.

    Anyone else want "pointe" before ONE LEG?

    Oh, and I did need all the crosses for STYX, even when I had the TYX. 27D could have been STN or STa, but the S was what I needed.

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  69. Rex, I read what you wrote twice and still don't understand. You are overthinking this. Great puzzle. Yeah, the revealer doesn’t really raise the bar, but its not supposed to. Clever. Loved it. Thank you Jess Shulman.

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  70. Re famous Presidential Moms, don’t forget Barbara Bush and one familiar mom-in-law, Marian Robinson.

    @bocamo (8:58) I had assumed that the name “Wordle 2” was based on the added 6th letter. But perhaps its 2 puzzles per day was the meaning all along. In EITHER case, I noticed today the site has a revised look, new colors and an announcement that it is not a part of the NYT. Also my statistics started over at zero which was fine with me since I had several losses under the old version.

    🤍💛🤍🤍🤍🤍
    🤍💛🤍🤍💙💙
    💙💙💙💙💙💙

    https://www.wordhurdle.in

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  71. Anonymous12:10 PM

    Umm, maybe the constructor decided on "RAISE the bar" as the revealer because RAISE the bar is an ACTUAL, commonly-used phrase. . . as opposed to the rarely used "SQUASH the bar" or "VEER the bar up". . . Nitpicking this utterly enjoyable puzzle is preposterous. . . and, unfortunately, EXPECTED. Good Day.

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  72. @jberg 12:02

    No, but I had better: TOETIP

    I assure you, the word exists bel et bien.

    (This is a hilariously interesting link for the linguistically curious avid learners:

    https://stancarey.wordpress.com/2018/10/03/why-do-we-stand-on-our-tiptoes-and-not-our-toetips/

    (Posting on my cellphone, doesn't make active links really possible)

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  73. Anonymous12:30 PM

    EBERT and Abbot were a Kealoa if you had the _B___T in place. Not.

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  74. @wordler
    Me too. So did I. I Also. Ditto.
    Wordle 278 2/6*

    🟦🟦⬛⬛🟦
    🟧🟧🟧🟧🟧

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  75. Had ONEtoe at first.

    It's Abbott, not Abbot.

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  76. Loved this puzzle, squeezed BAR and all. Solving experience was a joy. Made for a nice morning break in my grueling workload.

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  77. Osprey12:57 PM

    As a math teacher, absolutely hated the [Place to learn values] clue. More reinforcement of the harmful narrative that what you're supposed to do in math class is sit around memorizing numbers. And it wasn't even clued as wordplay!

    At least it's better than the "most hated class" cluing that we usually get in crosswords!

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  78. I just tried Wordle 2 (WordHurdle?) for the first time. Rounded circles instead of green squares. But they dance the same way when you get the word.

    I got a three. Beginner's luck, I suppose, unless they are they easier. What's par?

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  79. Every year, enjoyed taking my class to the SIKH Temple in east Vancouver.

    @Roo 👍 for -1 yd :)

    @Whatsername (12:09 PM)

    That's '2' ways to look at it, lol; haven't got around to today's yet. I generally do SB first, then last yr's NYT xword of this date, then all the various Wordles, ending with Wordle2. Octordle is my fave.

    @mathgent (11:34 AM)

    I dropped it right in, based on having heard of UofSC as USC on occasion.

    @albatross shell (12:37 PM) 👍 for eagle :)
    ___
    td pg: 13:14 / W: 4*

    Peace 🙏 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊

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  80. @JC66: I don't think we ever had a tea kettle. In our house the only thing anybody drank were Cuba Libre's or martinis.
    My STEAM OPEN experiment came about after I tried a little facial using my mom's hair curlers. She put her rollers in this thingie and STEAM would shoot up. Since I watched a lot of I Love Lucy, I thought I'd try opening my letter with some of her roller-steam. The ink dripped down the water spout.

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  81. Like @Teresa, I was tempted by HAMSTErs but I think they might be kosher whereas HAM STEAK is definitely not. (My co-worker's son once pointed out that giraffe is kosher, in case anyone needs to know.)

    My two writeovers today involved 4A's Sent before SPAM and snERT before EBERT. Otherwise, I agree with Rex that this was quite easy.

    I found this fun. Thanks, Jess Shulman, and congrats on the debut!

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  82. @JC66 - greatest in quantity, extent, or degree (the first definition for “most” at Merriam-Webster)- So the greatest quantity of verbiage can be about the perceived flaw in the theme and still the overall review be to a greater degree that the puzzle is pretty good. Consider So I don't think the theme really worked but I liked it anyway. Weird. But true.

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  83. Anonymous1:15 PM

    way too lazy to find the exact quote, but kosher's goes something like, "eat not the meat with a cloven hoof". do hamsters have hooves? too lazy...

    I, among many it appears, wanted TIPTOE at first, but realized that males to pirouettes, too, and, except for the Trocs, not en pointe. so had to wait for the fog to clear.


    @pablo:
    A mind is a terrible thing to waste, or not to have a mind, is very wasteful.

    had to take my annual geezer test, mandated by the Insurance Conspiracy. passed, of course. but the whole thing is silly. if someone fails, and is diagnosed Alz., the only thing you can get is $56,000/year and doesn't really work. why would the Insurance Conspiracy want to know? few, if any, members of the Insurance Conspiracy have authorized its use.


    if memory serves, those BARS are MINI mostly because they're stocked with those (mini-)shot bottles, not pints, quarts, or fifths.

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  84. Anonymous1:21 PM

    @Osprey:

    part of the whole Qanon/MAGA insanity is that expertise in STEM (and quant, generally) is proof positive that you're some kind left-wing/woke conspiracy to kill off those with Traditional Values, aka 'party like it's 1829'. the Christian illiterates are the real elite who should be running the Country. may be the rest of us require that such morons not be allowed to partake of the fruits progress? if you're sick, you get 1829 healthcare. you know, leaches and blood letting and such.

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  85. @RooMonster -- I don't remember ever seeing the triple-check before, and someone I highly respect who comments on WordPlay didn't either, but I asked the Crossword Memory King himself, Jeff Chen, and he said he couldn't remember ever seeing something like that. So there you go!

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  86. Great debut, Jess! A POW from Jeff no less.

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  87. Rex's mistaken analysis.
    First rebuses do not usually tell you to squeeze things in or squish them. An accordion themed one with BOX in the rebus might but it certainly isn't a standard for rebus puzzles.

    Next the revealer clue just tells you RAISETHEBAR is a hint how 4 answers should be entered. It does not tell you how it is hint. OMG you have to think to get the solution. It does not tell you whether it is the 4 words with the rebus or the 4 words with the missing BAR.

    He thinks it weird that SUSHI ends in a black space. But look at the other 3 words with missing BARs. MINI TASK DIVE. Two end in black spaces and one at the side of the puzzle. That is for practical purposes the much the same thing. Nothing weird at all.

    Now suppose instead of missing BARs you decide they need rebuses. You add them. SUSH(IBAR) TAS(KBAR) MIN(IBAR) DIV(EBAR).

    You notice right away the vertical answers do not work.

    So you look at the hint in the revealer! How clever! Raise the bar. No do not double the bar just raise it as if you have not yet filled in the rebus above. Why yes you have raised the BARS and the hint has allowed you to fill in 4 of the answes as it has told you it would.

    Now you sit back and smile because you have remembered that famous Corollary:

    If a theme revealer can be interpreted in a way that it works, then that is the way it should be interpreted.

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  88. I like OFL's calling this a "Squashed" puzzle because multiple letters are crammed/squashed into single grid squares. Much more accurate than calling it a "rebus" puzzle. I believe that one day, probably in the distant future, crossworders will look back and call this the era of Rebusgate.

    albatross @11:59 I also noticed the overall restrained use of the plural of convenience to get the grid filled, with one glaring exception---one of the themers was a letter short of its slot and needed some help from the oh so convenient S.

    I agree that it was an admirable feat of construction to get all those squashed letters to mesh together as smoothly as they did. Only hiccup for me was that a couple of the themers would have worked better with a squashed BEAR, to wit BEAR-rel and BEAR-ic. Still, I join those rating this a most impressive debut puzzle.

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  89. Today is a good day. Like when you're at a game and briefly see yourself on the jumbo-tron.

    @Egsforbreakfast (8:56, 10:03) -- Thanks -- I chuckled at your "raised in a bar" twist as well.

    @Gill I. (10:56) -- Maybe the most profound observation about STYX I've seen since high school.

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  90. Hats off to the constructor for this three-dimensional theme - a wowza of a constructing feat and a real treat to solve. And a debut no less! I saw the BAR combo early (BARREL, BARISTA, SUSHI), but that didn't make it any less enjoyable to seek out the others. After parking the first three BARS correctly above their corresponding entries, I still had no clue as to the "why" - until I read the reveal clue--->instant fill-in - such a solver's high. For a moment I feared that the reveal had replaced the last RAISED BAR, but no! There was the DIVE BAR, a terrific place to end up.

    What a panoply of great entries: BIRCHBARK, HYPERBARIC, STEAM OPEN, POT SMOKER.... Also liked HAM STEAK next to SODIUM - and how.

    Do-overs: CeO, Sent, bAnd CLASS (for note values). Help from previous puzzles: STYX, MOES. No idea: SARA. @Rex, thank you for the bio.

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  91. I crushed this puzzle except for one little place that caused me serious strife. I thought “very little liquor” is obviously in the very popular these days “Teeny Tinis” so I plunked in tINI, which gave me POT StOKER, which I thought completely reasonable if a bit “off.” Seeing as this is a debit, I gave our creative constructor a pass since the rest of the puzzle was 100% delightful and a legit rebus!

    Why, you ask is a “high minded sort” a POT StOKER? C’mon folks, this is the person who is always right, whose ego forces the issue even in casual discussion and pretty soon the flames of dissent being well and truly fanned to anfare-thee-well, the proverbial pot boils over.

    What? Just because you have heard of a POT STirrER but not a STokER and of one who STokEs but doesn’t STIR the flames of dissent y’all think I’m over the hill? you’re right as it turns out. When I failed to get the happy music when I had finished in record Thursday time by a huge margin, I was stunned! And it took me as long as it took to finish this gem of a puzzle to find my error. Sheesh!!!! So glad I could contribute to everyone’s levity today. Mine included.

    As for the rebus, I got it immediately simply because I installed a RAIN BARREL last weekend. I immediately checked the downs and saw that BARISTA nestled comfortably. Made my way through the remainder without any real difficulty. Thankfully, through her careful work, our constructor fairly included REECE a d STEVE, either of which would have quickly come to mind.

    I adored STEAM OPEN and TAP TAP. Out of the park success, Ms. Shulman. My husband’s mother’s family were entwined with Shulmans and have a very colorful history that ultimately brought them to Oklahoma.

    Excellent puzzle that made me happy!

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  92. @Anon 1:15-Congratulations on passing your geezer test. Not sure of the age requirement, but I probably qualify.

    I was trying, not very successfully, to quote Dan Quayle in his speech to the Negro College Fund, whose motto is "A mind is a terrible thing to waste". I looked up what he actually said and it is:

    "What a waste it is to lose one's mind. Or not to have a mind is very wasteful. How true that is."

    My excuse is that this too far from actual speech to remember. I wonder if he had any opinions on windmills.

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  93. Beezer4:27 PM

    @CDilly52, I loved your POTSTOKER story! 🤣 Funny how our minds work sometimes. You definitely contributed to MY levity for the day!

    @Zed…I THOUGHT you might throw some shade my way on Kansas…to each his own on THAT but I whimsically decided to Goog Styx versus Kansas. Not being one to know “genres” that much I found out that both Styx and Kansas were called “art/prog” rock (for that time). Oddly, I never was into Styx. Anyway, the (informal) results were that Kansas won (with the folks that cared to comment) as a better group. I think they were too “out there” for most peeps. I can’t even say I had or listened to any Kansas album other than Masque and Leftoverture (preferred Masque). I GET that some folks would consider the music to be noise. My musical rock (or whatever we call it) tastes are pretty eclectic and accepting…I’m not saying I would do my newfound hobby of watercolor while listening to Kansas (hmmm…maybe doing an abstract) but I think they were legit. You are younger than me but I remember when Weather Report was fringe/out there. (I never got into WR, btw)

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  94. @Beezer - 🤣😂🤣 - For me the big issue is those two songs I linked to are basically the same song in my head so I can never remember which is which even though I once went to a Kansas concert but never a Styx concert. I think both groups did better songs but those two songs were huge and those two songs are just… well… pablum. Yes and ELP both hold up better today, and I would add The Alan Parsons Project in there, too. I’ve also spent some time lately with Supertramp. Babaji, for example, never got the same kind of radio airplay but is a far superior song IMHO.

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  95. Realized halfway through "pointe" that the clue had no indication of a French word, so went to ONELEG instead.

    @Bocamp, I got the pg today in about 10:00, having gotten its precursor in about 2:00. Did the same thing happen to you?

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  96. Loved the theme; the BARs were perfectly situated, raised above the answers below, answers that were standalone words but needed that extra little bit - BAR - to make them fit the clues. Jess certainly raised the bar for first time constructors!
    Are rain barrels illegal anywhere else? Here in Oregon it's actually illegal to collect and store rainwater. In Oregon! wtf...

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  97. Beezer7:56 PM

    @Zed…I confess I didn’t click on link. Geez. I totally forgot about Dust in the Wind. Two hit songs then. Yes. DITW…pablum…bbllgrhh…I say uncle on that. I guess a group got’s to make a living…

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  98. @Beezer - Full confession. Looked at that DITW video and remembered that I wore a baby blue tux with a ruffled shirt to my senior prom. OMG! What. Were. We. Thinking?

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  99. ARON is the third blatant spelling mistake I’ve found in an NYTXW. (The other two were different clues for the same answer: “STRAIT-laced,” which should actually be “straight.”) Wasn’t Elvis’ middle name double-A’ed? Stuff like this gets the little pedantohamster in my head running on his wheel. Gah!!

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  100. Take a look at Elvis’s grave. his middle name is chiseled as ARON

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  101. @Tony

    Why ARON is not wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That’s clearly a double bluff to throw people off his trail. He’s living out his retirement in Argentina, right? ;-)

      Seriously though, thanks. Stuff like this bugs me until I learn more.

      Delete
  102. Anonymous9:44 PM

    Elvis was, and the spawn of, southern knuckleheads who can't spell even an important Biblical name. why should anyone be surprised. I will admit that it's less jarring than Chuwanda and other made up names concocted to sound like other continent.

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  103. Anonymous9:53 PM

    deja vu, once more. TCM just started "Tom Jones". Music by John ADDISON. Soon to visit a puzzle near you.

    ReplyDelete
  104. @Tony
    STRAITLACED
    8 time answer 1 Shortz, 7 preShortz
    All clued prudish or the like

    STRAIGHTLACED
    2 time answer, 1 Shortz (corset clue) 1 Meleska (prudish clue)

    AP style straight for prudish prim conservative; strait for corset constrictive.

    Most dictionaries are based on usage and consider them alternative spellings or imply one or the other british or american. I can imagine you think of that. I might suggest you are a pickanitty but certainly wouldn't fight about it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The more you know! I’d only ever associated the term with lining all the laces up in parallel, as befitting proper moral character, whereas a STRAIT is a narrow stretch of water connecting two seas.

      Delete
  105. @Zed I cannot list all presidential moms, as you undoubtedly know, but some are iconic. Sara Delano Roosevelt is one of those.

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  106. Speaking of dive bars, Pine Lounge still around?

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  107. One of the finest Thurdays in quite some time. Fun to solve and not much junk. Rex’s nitpicky GRIPES do not apply here. A great debut by Jess Shulman. Bravo!

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  108. See now this is how to make a rebus puzzle:

    --> Look how open and flowing the grid is. No pinched-off corners.

    --> A "BAR" theme that ignores the black-square "BARS." First time, I bet.

    --> Only four theme spots. Room to flesh them out and generate good fill.

    --> And contrary to our resident contrarian, a clear and perfectly fitting (to me) revealer--itself part of the theme!

    This puppy got worked on by Somebody Who Cares about construction. A most promising debut--and it even includes DOD Gabrielle REECE. Eagle.

    P.S. GL in the draft, Eagles!

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  109. OFL's meandering thoughts about RAISETHEBAR are somewhat (if not totally) off.
    Actually, you do not RAISETHEBAR, the BAR has already been raised. What you do is "step up to the BAR" to finish those four answers. Woulda been a much better reveal. RAISETHEBAR let me down.

    What a great vacation! From hiking to 750 feet below the earth's surface (Carlsbad Cavern) to jumping from 855 feet up to the ground below (Stratosphere in Vegas) with a concert in L.A. in between, and other hiking and biking thereafter. 3 weeks of summer, only to return to MN cold. And work.

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  110. rondo2:00 PM

    CFO FRAUD

    TERRY SIKHS to RAISETHEBAR,
    THE TASK IS HYPERBARIC some say.
    TO GRIPE and CURSE - not UP to par
    to make a DIVE BAR a CABARET.

    --- STEVE REECE

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  111. Diana, LIW3:25 PM

    I used to go to this wonderful DIVE BAR - known as Dirty Frank's (13th and Pine) in Philly. I lived around the corner in one of those little "trinity" houses that had three floors with one room on each level. Good times.

    So when I saw DIVE, I immediately thought BAR - that was before the other BARs showed up.

    Oh the ironies of life.

    Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

    ReplyDelete