Joy that might come from being aligned in one's body / FRI 9-23-22 / Setting for Life of Pi / Limbo prerequisite / It's often drawn with three ellipses / Beer Hall Tokyo landmark / Book that becomes a synonym for Finally when t is added to the end / Hardison Aldis Hodge's character on Leverage / Climbing a tree Sichuan noodle dish

Friday, September 23, 2022

Constructor: Erik Agard

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Aldis Hodge (25D: ___ Hardison, Aldis Hodge's character on "Leverage" (ALEC)) —
Aldis Alexander Basil Hodge (born September 20, 1986) is an American actor. Among his significant roles, he played Alec Hardison in the TNT series LeverageMC Ren in the 2015 biopic Straight Outta Compton, Levi Jackson in the 2016 film Hidden Figures, Noah in the WGN America series Underground, Matthew in Girlfriends and Jim Brown in the 2020 film One Night in Miami.... He will play Carter Hall/Hawkman in the upcoming DC Extended Universe film Black Adam. (wikipedia)
• • •

This managed to be properly tough(ish) and have a lot of that zoom-zoom whoosh-whoosh feeling I look forward to experiencing on Fridays. Like many of Erik's puzzles, this grid is consciously, pointedly, even provocatively inclusive, by which I mean you can feel how whole-heartedly it's trying to represent various kinds of experience that crosswords have historically ignored. Even modern crosswords tend to hew to an imagined "norm" or "mainstream" that has been, unsurprisingly, straight, white, male, Anglo-American-centric, etc. That is, puzzles have tended to look a lot like the people making and producing and especially editing them. Today's puzzle moves its lens all over human experience, all over the globe, while still managing to feel pretty damn mainstream. Basically it was always a lie that being inclusive meant sacrificing mainstream appeal, and this puzzle proves it (as do, increasingly, many puzzles, both in the NYTXW and (esp.) other venues, including, most notably, all the puzzles at the AVCX, as well as the L.A. Times (under Patti Varol's new leadership) and the USA Today (under Erik's own leadership)). The longer answers had so much energy and sizzle. But inclusiveness is hardly the puzzle's only asset. Yes, GENDER EUPHORIA is a wonderful burst of trans-positive joy, but its symmetry-mate on the other side of the grid, ONE STEP AT A TIME, involves a really clever pun clue (which is a high compliment from me, I assure you) (5D: Not in bounds?) (not "bounds" as in "boundaries" but "bounds" as in "leaps & bounds"). And though it's not that showy, I loved the pairing of "NO COMMENT" over "THERE IT IS..." I just imagine someone saying they have NO COMMENT and then not being able to contain their COMMENT, and then some nearby party, who just *knew* there was going to be a COMMENT, exclaiming, "THERE IT IS..." It's a whole short story, is what I'm saying. A wide-ranging lens, a strong colloquial sensibility, and a great sense of fun—that's this puzzle's winning combination. 


Here's the whoosh-whoosh I mentioned up top: bold, bright longer answers just shooting out of the NW and then across the center:


And yet the puzzle wasn't easy for me. I had to earn the whoosh. I put in LINGO right away at (1A: Jargon), but in the back of my head I kept thinking "ARGOT also fits" and then I also maybe wanted MONO at 1D: Like old-fashioned sound reproduction (LO-FI), which obviously doesn't start with LINGO's "L," so I ended up pulling LINGO before eventually working my way back there via SECTS / OCEANS / ICONS. Once I realized it was FORTE and not FORCE at 17A: Strength ... bam, I just exploded out of that section. Great feeling. 


I struggled with short stuff, mostly. Didn't know you needed to have a whole damn MBA just to get a job in "marketing," but I guess for certain jobs in marketing, yeah. Association just wasn't strong for me, so I waited for crosses to help me out. Also could not get hold of the neopronoun FAE, despite its "folklore" hint. Once I got it (via AGES, which was also hard (29D: Characteristics that rarely change in cartoons)), I realized I had probably heard of FAE in this context before, but despite knowing a number of nonbinary people I don't know anyone personally who uses neopronouns, so they just don't come readily to mind yet. Don't really know what "Leverage" is but now that I see Aldis Hodge's face, he definitely looks familiar. Is it weird for an actor to play a character whose name is so much like his own? Aldis playing ALEC? A.H. playing A.H.? I've typed some version of "Aldis Hardison" a bunch of times this morning, a confusion no doubt exacerbated by the fact that I am a big fan of NZ musician Aldous Harding.


I haven't yet mentioned the fact that the grid is absurdly smooth. There's a lot of short stuff, but the closest it comes to grating is stuff ACER and ITSY, and that's not very close, especially when your marquee answers are paying off the way the ones in this puzzle are. Strategic use of cheater squares* (under LOFI, above MBA, and their symmetrical counterparts) undoubtedly helped manage the fill around those longer answers in the middle, resulting in an overall immaculate grid. Hope you found things to like about this puzzle. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. The Finger Lakes Crossword Competition (in support of the adult literacy programs of Tompkins Learning Partners) is tomorrow. The competition (entirely online) starts with a Zoom Kick-Off Event that includes a pre-taped crossword-history show-and-tell by Will Shortz, as well as a live round-table discussion of crossword topics moderated by New Yorker crossword constructor Anna Shechtman. The roundtable panel includes yours truly, "Wordplay" writer Deb Amlen, and longtime constructor (and Ithaca resident) Adam Perl. The Kick-Off starts at 1pm. For the competition itself (a fairly low-key, three-puzzle affair), you can compete solo, as a pair, or as a team. Registration closes at 11:30am on the day of the tournament (i.e. tomorrow). For more info, visit the tournament home page.

*cheater squares = black squares that do not increase the word count, generally used (sparingly) to make a grid easier to fill cleanly

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

94 comments:

Conrad 6:22 AM  


Super-challenging for me. Eric and I just weren't on the same wavelength this morning. Last square filled was 28, FAE/FIVE, which, like many others in the grid elicited an "of course."

WOES: Many, especially since I'd never heard of Alec Hardison, Aldis Hodge OR "Leverage."

Overwrites: Too many to mention, including the @Rex argot/LINGO kealoa.

Wordler 6:23 AM  

The door opened slightly yesterday. I'll see if I can squeeze through before it closes.

Wordle 461 6/6

⬜🟨⬜⬜🟨
⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Plagued with bad guesses.

Loren Muse Smith 6:23 AM  

Lordy mercy did I learn some things this morning. GENDER EUPHORIA – it’s apparent what it is, but I googled it and now just feel so happy for someone who has openly settled into faer identity. See? There’s another one: FAE. I knew that alternatives to the singular they/their existed, but I felt pretty wobbly on them. One of my daughter’s best friends is now using they/their, and our recent conversation about them was really good practice using they when the whole time I’ve known them, they were a she. It's interesting that the non-gender singular they carries with it the plural verb. So it’s They are getting married next month. and not They is getting married next month.

While reading up on this, I learned terms like pleopronouns, noun-self pronouns, exopronouns, non-themed neopronouns, emojiself pronouns. . . It’s all hard to follow, but I’m happy to try to get them into the rotation the best I can.

Rex – most excellent catch of the symmetry of GENDER EUPHORIA/ONE STEP AT A TIME.

First thought was “asps” climbing a tree and vaguely pictured some kind of thick menacing noodle making its way up a crown roast.

“Force” before FORTE. Bet I’m not alone.

That WHITE GAZE? It wasn’t until I was working in an urban school that I even noticed, and now I’m so ashamed that I hadn’t. Google, say, “boy at desk clipart” and you get white boys. Google “Their/they’re/there practice sentences” and all the names are white names. Nary a Jamarion (I have three on roll), Laquarius (two) or Aniya (four, plus one A’Naya) anywhere. Now I make sure to be a hell of a lot more inclusive in this stuff than I was. Still. . . so embarrassed that I never even noticed. Shame on me.

GO TO – cool that it’s an adjective now. I have this loose-ish black dress that is my GO-TO Monday fat dress that accommodates a weekend of waffles, Reubens, and ice cream.

LINGO and TONAL had me feeling linguisticky, so SPAREME kept waving back from the grid. Phoneme, morpheme, lexeme, sememe, toneme – all little linguistics morsels. I propose that SPAREMEs are those POW! BAM! OOF! that alert the Batman and Robin watcher that this one deadly fight.

HOTELs have wised up and eschewed the tiny bottles for tony dispensers that can be refilled, and now I have to buy the little travel-size versions myself. Ah me. Oh well – if our landfills have fewer tons of tiny bottles, I can live with this.

WATER SIGN – squishy carpet in your basement guest room. This is arguably one of the worst discoveries possible for any homeowner.

Erik – you offered up a lovely puzzle, one that challenged me while broadening my horizons. I’m a 61-year-old white cis-gender person who needs to get more with the program. MESSAGE RECEIVED. I’m on it, MY GUY.

Anonymous 6:25 AM  

@Conrad. Is anyone ever on Eric's wavelength?

Anonymous 7:13 AM  

I enjoyed the puzzle for the most part, and correctly predicted that some of the answers would be like catnip to Rex, but I take issue with the notion that it is *provocatively* inclusive. In a world fairly suffused with wokeness and inclusivity themes (as even a casual viewing of current tv shows, commercials, movies, print media, etc. would indicate), it’s “provocative” in the same way that having a tattoo these days is - which is to say, not at all.

Anonymous 7:28 AM  

Yes

Son Volt 7:34 AM  

Good puzzle but I’m not as moist about it as the big guy. I count 8 ?clues - I like the “Current issue” clue but some of the others were strained - like ONE STEP AT A TIME.

After reading the clue - GENDER went right in - needed the crosses for EUPHORIA. Liked WATER SIGN and THERE IT IT. Don’t remind me about ENERGY TAX. Whoopi’s first movie is not discussion worthy - and we get the sequel today? Total blank on FAE.

The one and only V

Enjoyable Friday solve.

Phillyrad1999 7:42 AM  

Very much enjoyed the longer fills. I did not get to whoosh at all but really needed to hop around and uncharacteristically finished in the NE. From a time perspective the clock said it was easy but it did not feel that way.

kitshef 7:54 AM  

Puzzle is chock full of ‘people saying things’ answers:
MESSAGE RECEIVED
NO COMMENT
IN OR OUT
E.T.A.
THERE IT IS
I CARE
WE WON
SPARE ME
MY GUY

I understand and am fine with the fact that a lot of people like these in puzzles. I do not. So, for the second day I’m just not in the target audience for a puzzle.

mmorgan 8:08 AM  

A challenge, a struggle, a series of head scratches and smiles and a-ha’s, and a very satisfying solve accompanied by a feeling of accomplishment for solving such a well-constructed and masterful puzzle. Wow, thanks!

Anonymous 8:10 AM  

Erik Agard is so hip that a new slang term appears in one of his crosswords ten minutes after it's first uttered by some guy in Brooklyn. He also knows his international cuisines. Turns out that "ants climbing a tree" is a classic Chinese dish--"classic," as in "well known for a long time," although not on any Chinese menu I've ever seen. So I always learn something from his puzzles, which are also devilishly clever, as in 51A and 37A.

WHITE GAZE and FAE--or any "neopronoun"--were today's additions to my vocabulary. I am not a robot, so I didn't have, and still don't have, any idea about what a MAZE has to do with robotics, but the crosses were easy. Please note use of the word "easy," which almost never happens with one of Erik's puzzles.

My only quibble is with 35D. In my experience, no one who's any good at marketing would look for an MBA in a potential employee. The opposite, in fact. A degree in just about any liberal arts discipline would be preferred. As with Erik's puzzles, you have to be imaginative and clever and hyper-aware of the world around you to do well in marketing.

Excellent Friday puzzle!

The Joker 8:41 AM  

16D. Joy that might come from being aligned in one's body. I thought this would be something about chiropractors.

Anonymous 8:57 AM  

Amy.: really liked this. Kept circling back, fiing in here and there until BAM! Finished. Went with MONO, 1D, as OCEAN for Life of Pi worked, so ended at the beginning. So happy when LOFI came to me. Super Friday.

Anonymous 8:58 AM  

ANTS on tree was a gimme. Had it at The China House in SF back in the 80s. Delicious. Just that once, but never forgot it. Great puzzle, Erik. Thank you.

Diane Joan 9:09 AM  

I loved the “LEAK” “LEAP” cross and their clues. “Something not to look after?” made me laugh.
I had trouble with “Robotics club challenge” because I kept thinking it had to be a computer term of some sort. The crosses helped there. I had “MY MAN” for awhile instead of “MY GUY”.

It’s a beautiful day here in the NYC metro area. We have an azure sky and crisp autumn air with a warm sun coming through the window. Happy Friday to all!

Anonymous 9:11 AM  

For me the most challenging (difficult is more accurate) puzzle by a factor in years. Stuck on white gaze and other concepts I really should know and now plan to learn about. Great puzzle —and a whopping dnf for me.

Anonymous 9:21 AM  

Still don't understand the answer to 5D. A step instead of a leap of some kind?

pabloinnh 9:22 AM  

Hand up for OFL's initial takes on ARGOT and/or MONO, neither of which worked, and elsewhere I went. Tried to start with TRES bien, which of course needed changing later. Idiota yo. Off to the bottom where THOUGHTSO was inspired, but eventually became THEREITIS. Well, at least the T was right. A British weight ending in -NE was of course TONNE, until it wasn't.

Better luck with UNH, as my sons are both alumni. Help from Acrostics on ONESTEPATATIME and GENDEREUPHORIA, as parts of words or phrases became actual words and phrases.. See also MESSAGERECEIVED.

No idea about FAE or ALEC or AKA as clued, and MYMAN still makes more sense to me than MYGUY for BRO.

Overall just a terrific Friday with exactly the right amount of crunch. Well done, EA, and I hope you Eagerly Accept your Fridazo! award. Thanks for all the fun.

RooMonster 9:48 AM  

Hey All !
Toughie for me today. After fighting and scratching for 45 minutes (long for me on a FriPuz,) put my last letter in... Almost There! Argh! Hit the Check Puzzle button, and it turned out that my last letter in was the wrong one! Double Argh! Had WHITEGAtE/MAtE.
Dang

MYman for MYGUY holding me up in NE for quite a while. Also, paLm for HULA thrown in.

Who knew Aquarius was Not a WATER SIGN?

tonNE-STONE, Kealoa ITTY/ITSY, ikEa-ACER, nee-AKA, Ajar-Abit-ATAD. Wanted eGos for AGES, but didn't write it in.

Nice FriThemless. THERE IT IS.

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 9:52 AM  

Zipped through except on the NW — couldn’t let go of mono instead of LOFI even though 1A was obviously LINGO. Then just decided to put it on and see how things panned out. Once I got ICON everything fell into place.

bocamp 9:53 AM  

Thx, Erik; nice, chewy Fri. puz! :)

Med+

Slow, steady solve, with no major hitches.

Spent a few minutes just sussing out the NW, then worked the rest of the top section and gradually moved down, finishing with ASAHI (which I always seem to have trouble remembering).

Had 'MY man', which gave me WHITE mAlE before GAZE.

Needed many crosses before getting GENDER EUPHORIA.

I'm somewhat aMAZEd I finished unscathed.

Fun adventure; liked it a lot! :)

Will miss you Z; all the best! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

jberg 10:00 AM  

Yeah, FORcE is a fiendish trap--you get nonsense at 4D, but all the other crosses work, so you KNOW it has to be right ... until you finally figure it out.

I know what a neopronoun is, and although I didn't know FAE it is easy to get it from crosses. What threw me off was the "nod to folklore" in the clue. Huh?? All I can think of is "Fee, Fie, Fo Fum" but that doesn't seem very relevant.

@Loren, the singular you takes plural verbs, as well.

I've never seen or heard, much less eaten, ANTS climbing a tree, but I do know the classic American dish "ants on a log," which led me to try ANTS rather than apes (although I was secretly hoping it would be 'asps.')

It was nice to see the WHITE GAZE just over NUDES, since John Berger famously critiqued the latter with the concept of the male gaze.

It's no good grilling your dog, it's just waiting to see which way you want to go.

Frankie 10:00 AM  

Although I do the Wordle every day, the instant I saw SPAREME, “Please can you just not”, I thought of these jerks who see the need to post their little Wordle picture here. We don’t care! Sheesh!

jberg 10:02 AM  

@Beezer from yesterday -- the injection site is a tad sore, but nothing else 20 hours later. My wife did have a strong reaction to the shingles shot, though.

Anonymous 10:04 AM  

Anyone else confuse ellipses for ellipsis?

Jon 10:10 AM  

Truly excellent Friday. This is why I appreciate that Rex doesn't take it in easy on the more average offerings we get.

Tom P 10:17 AM  

Very satisfying solve. After my first pass, I still had lots of blank squares, but I stuck with it and eventually finished in just slightly over my average Friday time. My ONE STEP ON A LINE answer felt right for "Not in bounds," but the crosses forced me to change it to ONE STEP AT A TIME, which didn't make sense to me until I read today's blog. So thanks, Eric and Rex, for a stimulating start to my Friday.

Gary Jugert 10:22 AM  

Phew. What a beast. At some point after staring at this thing for way too long, I said, "Oh phooey, get me Uncle G," but then I only needed one or two boosters and now I'm here.

MONO instead of LOFI made opening up super sad.

Hmms:

ATOM=Three elipses? K. 🦖 the scientist will explain it when I go back to read him.

WHITE GAZE again? Lotsa empowered leering lately. Crossing GENDER EUPHORIA too. We're getting us some clunky modernity fer sure in that there little move, eh?

Yays:

MESSAGE RECEIVED made me smile when it finally appeared a year later.

IN OR OUT! Laughed. I have an indoor condo cat and his greatest thrill is to race out into the exotic environs of the hallway where he bravely faces the noise of the elevator and where his tail points straight up as he gleefully marches to Hilda's door and back.

BAGEL=Nil. I don't watch sports anymore, but I love that expression.

Boos:

ONE STEP AT A TIME and GATE CRASH clues are torturous. Sure happy those of you in this thing for decades love yer themeless Fridays.

Energy "tax" is a phrase politicians harp on to make the other side lose. When we understand the real cost we've created by living our lives in disharmony with the environment (and we may get to see it sooner than we could ever imagine) we'll know whatever tax wasn't real.

The clue for LEAP was pushing a bit too hard. Sure, you look before, but have we ever ascertained what the procedure is afterward? Who knows, maybe more looking. Where's our Anonym-oti to explain?

(tee-hee):

NUDES!

Uniclues:

1 Shake those hips.
2 A dam.
3 All of them. Frankly the main one is the most.
4 Snaps yer fanny.

1 HULA MAMA LINGO (~)
2 OCEAN ENERGY TAX
3 SHADY SECTS (~)
4 USES BATH TOWEL (~)

Dan 10:29 AM  

When I saw that 24D [Place that distributes things in tiny bottles] was HOTEL, I immediately thought of the booze in the mini-bar and didn't think much more about it.

So when LMS wrote "...HOTELs have wised up and eschewed the tiny bottles for tony dispensers that can be refilled..." I spent a couple of minutes trying to figure out how hotels were now dispensing vodka in disposable bottles. The coffee hadn't kicked in yet...

MkB 10:36 AM  

Very much enjoyed this one, but was severely disappointed when “washer dryer?” Turned out not to be SPIN CYCLE.

Pete 10:38 AM  

@Z - Gonna miss you guy, but I never for a second thought that the DISCI / DISCUSSES / DISCOPODES issue was really that important to you. Oh well, live and learn.

Odd how different the two phrases MALE GAZE and WHITE GAZE are. MALE GAZE is all about men objectifying women, WHITE GAZE is black authors worrying about white people objectifying black characters in their works. Bet some white man is going to join in about how they're so put upon. ...[reads comments]... Too late.

Nancy 10:42 AM  

If you really, really love to suffer, you should find this puzzle irresistible. It's fiendishly difficult in the cluing -- mostly fair, but occasionally not so much, I thought. But I don't regret the 97 hours it took me to solve it -- no, not at all.

I couldn't come up with LINGO and wanted ARGOT, but it refused to work with any crosses. I wanted some sort of BOAT for "Life of Pi". Moving right, I had PALM instead of HULA (which worked with LEI) and therefore couldn't see HEWS or ART. I had MAR instead of ART -- even though it's the wrong part of speech.

NUDES wouldn't give me MY MAN. I tried MY BUD first. I wanted WHITE MALE for the ethnocentric lens. Had no idea that Robotics involves a MAZE.

And right smack dab through the middle was the answer I couldn't figure out at all. What on earth was "not in bounds"? I had crosses for the pesky 5D but they all added up to one gigantic DOOK and I just couldn't see ONE STEP AT A TIME. Only when I got that was I able to finish the puzzle.

Is that a fair wordplay deception? NO COMMENT. I want to see what the rest of you think. But I find it a stretch.

What I admire most about this puzzle is that all the substantial difficulty is from clues and not from trivia. It's a masterful job of clue-writing. But solving it did not make me feel smart -- even though I managed to finish it.

jae 10:45 AM  

Medium. I started out with mOno at 1d and quickly decide to work from the bottom up, which went pretty well. I’ve finally learned how to spell ASAHI on the first try. FAE was it for WOEs. A fine Friday and POW at Xwordinfo, liked it a bunch.

Mary McCarty 10:47 AM  

@Gary Jugert, same here on most of your comments. Finally figured out “3 ellipses” doesn’t refer to “…” but ovals, which, drawn crossing as an X with one more vertically, represents an atom. (Sorry I can’t include a picture)….”slaps yer fanny”-LOL

Carola 10:48 AM  

Challenging for me, and made more difficult by early missteps that others have already mentioned. It was WATER SIGN that gave me my foothold; then the cross of GENDER EUPHORIA and ENERGY TAX provided the crosses I needed to chip away at the rest. For me, this was a great "matching wits" puzzle, with its tricky clues and so satisfying answers - loved figuring it all out. To the apt grid correspondences @Rex and others have pointed out, I also liked the parallel WATER SIGN and BATH TOWEL.

Do-overs: argot, mOno, MY man, SHOck before SHORT. Help from previous puzzles: ASAHI, ACER, and I CARE, which I feel is becoming the new OREO. No idea: ALEC, FAE.

@Whatsername from yesterday - Thank you for explaining IRL.

CT2Napa 10:52 AM  



SPAREME

Anonymous 10:52 AM  

Leverage!? I know no one has had an original thought in about a century, but even Leverage got a reboot? A nothing show from the recent past that was originally on Ted Turner's 5th station? Just because Netflix / Amazon / Disney / whomever has infinite bandwidth doesn't mean it needs to be filled.

Diego 10:54 AM  

@jberg, same here, very familiar with the male gaze (and Morrison’s fiction) but not the white equivalent. But it makes total sense. Had white bias at first, which hung me up for more than a tad.

egsforbreakfast 11:17 AM  

Is a SISTERACT something that can be corrected with laser surgery?

LSD, ASAHI, is preferable to THC, IMHO.

I suppose that a series about religious cults in an urban environment could be titled SECTS and the City.

Funny to have the 42A row STONE WHETS, when whetstone is a lovely, x word-eligible phrase itself.

I’ll personally miss @Z, and I hope that the sleuths among us will uncover the cause of his exit from the clue he left and report back with it.

Wonderful POW, but I always know that I’m in for a treat when I see Erik Agard at the top. Thanks for another great one, Erik.

beverly c 11:24 AM  

LEAP, BATHTOWEL, NOCOMMENT all were a delight to deduce. ONESTEPATATIME had to be explained here.
The F of LOFI was my final letter to fill in.

I had the WHITE but GAZE wouldn’t come - even though we've recently seen MALEGAZE and it was bobbing around in Broca’s area.

I didn’t know FAE used in the clued sense - only from reading fantasy. I kind of like it as the alternative- not that I get to pick. It led me to imagine folks of indeterminate gender being seen as mystical beings by people of a more magical bent than we are today. No offense meant to anyone - I realize the F____Y word has been used to shame, rather than express awe.

All in all, pleasantly challenging and therefore rewarding. No sense of giddiness like after a really fun puzzle, but those are rare. Otherwise, everyone would do them. I had a little whooshing, but not out of the NW!

Whatsername 11:27 AM  

A most excellent Friday and beastly hard for me as most of Erik’s puzzles are. In answer to someone’s earlier COMMENT, no I don’t think I’ve ever been on Mr. Agard’s wave length. Well THERE IT IS. Now ASK ME IF I CARE. Maybe it’s a generation gap or could be I’m suffering from Covid brain which I strongly suspect after reading an article about it yesterday. The power of suggestion I suppose.

I think the only answer I got with no hesitation whatsoever was IN OR OUT because I say it at least once a day. Badly wanted something using the word OUT of bounds at 5D, what with it being Fall and my addled brain tending TO RUN straight to football. I tried every bien I knew - TRÈS ETRE and even a misspelled MUEY - but (three ellipses) NO GO.

My answer to “Bro!” would be an automatic MY MAN so I thought maybe MY GUY was some sort neopronoun term I have yet to discover seeing as how I thought FAE might be a neoinitialism akin to BAE. Not wanting to be unwoke, I did look that one up but I’m still not sure I understand everything I now know about it.

albatross shell 11:31 AM  

This took some labor filled with un-sures and unknowns but also much wit and humor along the way resulting in much pleasure but not quite EUPHORIA, one of my favorite words and songs.

power to FORCe to FORTE for the double play.

INViteS to InVEnTS to INVESTS

argot to lingo
acT to OPT
diSHTOWEL to BATHTOWEL.

Looked up the beer garden spelling to sort out the SW. In wordlese I had 2 greens 2 yellows and a white.

WATERSIGN POLE SPAREME SHADY was the big early breakthrough. SISTERACT helped alot.

About cheater squares. I know what they are but not what they are not. Being somewhat math-minded I see all black squares as cheater squares. Take the sideways back T in the NE. Obviously the black squares below LOFI and above MBA are cheaters. Remove them. Then the square below nerve and above ESTA becomes a cheater. Similarly the square to the left of that one becomes a cheater. And of course any single isolated black square is a cheater.
Give me the rule that prevents this reasoning. All bar shaped black formations are by definition non-cheaters. What else?

Joseph Michael 11:34 AM  

ATLASt, an Erik Agard puzzle I enjoyed.

Favorite fill: GENDER EUPHORIA

Great clues for BATH TOWEL, LEAP, SHORT, and many others.

ANTS on a tree? No thank you. I’ll have the fried neopronouns with a side of steamed fae and a large Asahi.

Anonymous 11:50 AM  

FWIW--A Goog search of FAE shows it means Fairy. ?????

Anonymous 11:55 AM  

Tricky, interesting and fun. Especially liked 5D. So many ways to go wrong. But at 10D I think an opportunity was missed to recall that great early Motown hit by Mary Wells “My Guy.” I think it’s a better fit all around.

Masked and Anonymous 11:58 AM  

Woof. Our solvequest played out a lot harder than U woulda thought, considerin almost every entry in the puz was either known of or inferable. The clues musta got to m&e. Looks like at least seven ?-marker clues, plus stuff like {Pisces, but not Aquarius} and Robotics club challenge} and so on.

staff weeject pick: FAE. The only standout no-know in this here FriPuz. Not in the M&A Official Help Desk Dictionary. Found some fuzzy info on Google, but still don't quite have a handle on FAE's exact meanin. Wikipedia mentions its existence under the "Neopronoun" subject, but that's about it.
Short for FA(v)E, maybe? Well, then ...

some faes included: GATECRASH. ONESTEPATATIME. MESSAGERECEIVED. BATHTOWEL & its clue. THEREITIS. MYGUY.

Thanx for the faen … er … fun, Mr. Agard dude. Nice job.

Masked & Anonymo4Us


**gruntz**

OffTheGrid 12:11 PM  

@egs. After reading @Z from late yesterday I did some sleuthing. I have a hypothesis based on what I found. That is all I will say.

GILL I. 12:14 PM  

I don't always click with Erik but I must say that this time the lock popped open.
His FORTE (pronounced fort) is getting your attention. The details are in his devilish cluing; you ask yourself "what may he be thinking)...
Parts were easy and in my LINGO. Others TAXed my ENERGY. I had my GENDER aligned in my body, but what follows....You have your NUDES and your IN OR OUT segment to fill in some blanks. MESSAGE RECEIVED gave the E and USES gave me the U. So I have enough letters to infer a little EUPHORIA. These are the kind of clues and answers I like.
There were many pauses...If Erik can push my ONE STEP AT A TIME button, then I'm able to finish. I did.
MY BATH TOWEL had a WATER SIGN on it....it said: "My happy was slapped and so was my clam.

@Z Sleuth 12:17 PM  

UNBORN BABY

puzzlehoarder 12:29 PM  

Fiendishly difficult puzzle for me. Just look at the NE corner alone with the kea/ loa of NERVE and FORTE crossing on their matching center letter. My attempt at starting was MONO supported by NERVE and OCEAN only to try and use NERVE again at 3D and this was one of the easier sections to sort out. My WHITEGAZE made parts of this puzzle almost impossible but I managed to get a clean grid anyway.

I haven't commented in awhile as I spent a week in my basement cleaning up the sewer backup from an intense rainstorm in Chicago on 9/11. Now we're about to leave on a weeks vacation. Since 9/10 I've only missed getting a QB on a couple of SBs. Two out of thirteen is about average.

Bob Mills 12:37 PM  

I had "DISHTOWEL" instead of "BATHTOWEL" for a long time, but after fixing that I was able to finish in reasonable time. One nitpick, however..."AKA" usually suggests a law-breaker's alias, while "NEE" means "real name at birth."

Anonymous 12:47 PM  

@egs; the last time @Z commented was on 9/12 so the 9/13 puzzle was the one that caused him to stop commenting. The most controversial answer in that puzzle based on the commentary was “unborn baby”.

damsel 12:47 PM  

This one, like all Fridays and Saturdays, gave me a run for my money. Starting in the NW and working clockwise I just couldn't find a clue that I felt certain about answering. Until, that is, I got FAE. This clue -- and this puzzle -- made me feel a certain kind of seen. My delight at knowing this answer, especially as my first answer in a (so far) impenetrable grid, was immeasurable. "I have friends who use that!" I squealed. GENDER EUPHORIA coming nearby it made me equally happy. It's the little things.

Some other highlights for me:
-MY GUY. I loved this and all of the phrase answers, but this one was so cute.
-WHITE GAZE. Just a solid answer to me (I think it was in a rebus the other day, where I decidedly hated it). MAZE crossing it is cool too.
-All of the puns. Most puns in puzzles are groaners but all of the ones here made me go "hahahhhhh" and finger gun at my phone.

The Donald 12:49 PM  

@Gary:
Energy "tax" is a phrase politicians harp on to make the other side lose. When we understand the real cost we've created by living our lives in disharmony with the environment (and we may get to see it sooner than we could ever imagine) we'll know whatever tax wasn't real.

The econ types, Krugman et al, have been talking about externalities for decades if not a century or two. Just ask any Carolinian about living near a pig factory farm. Or down stream of most any kind of processing plant. The Red States will rise again.

Anonymous 12:50 PM  

Ditto! But the more you try to get them to stop, the more that come out. Very juvenile.

kitshef 12:58 PM  

@albatross shell - my understanding is a cheater is a black square you can remove without changing the total number of words.

So the one below LOFI, if you take that out, you have the same number of words but two of you are entries are slightly longer.

But if you take out the one beneath NERVE, then you have one long word (from top of NERVE to bottom of ESTA), instead of two shorter words. You have decreased the total word count one (or by two, since you need to by symmetrical and remove the one above TONAL).

Anonymous 12:59 PM  

Hah! I finished it, but not without a battle. Definitely not Medium for me, more like a Saturday. Started last night, got no more than 1/3, but all came together slowly this morning. Very satisfying. Good puzzle. Thanks!

albatross shell 1:18 PM  

@kitshef
Thanks. Simple and logical.

@anon
LEAP derives from look before you LEAP. Not after. Good yuk here when I finally saw the jump.

@Z sleuth nailed it.

@sun volt
I really enjoyed that video. Never knew the band at all. Thanks.

Trina 1:37 PM  

FRANKIE:

It’s done purely to annoy you. Stop rising to the bait and the trolls will go home.

Wordle 461 3/6

⬜🟨⬜⬜⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩


NEOPRONOUNS- I was stuck on ‘fey’ for the longest time …

Anonymous 1:56 PM  

Finally a worthy Friday. It’s been awhile. I enjoy clues that require thought rather than trivia expertise and this puzzle was all about thinking. I loved Leverage and tolerated the sequel; Sister Act was an ok amuse bouche that did not warrant a sequel. Thank you Erik!

okanaganer 2:11 PM  

Yes hands up for thinking 3 ellipses was "... ... ..."?? I was held up for a while by MY MAN before MY GUY, ACT before OPT, and STORY then SPARK before SHORT.

About 20 years ago at my brother's girlfriend's family's house, their xmas eve tradition was a talent show: everyone had to stand up and do a song. I did a terrible version of the In and Out Cat Song by Garrison Keillor, an entire song about 49 across.

[Spelling Bee: yd 0; QB streak now at 9 days straight and 13/14.]

Masked and Anonymous 2:15 PM  

p.s.
Well, I for one, would really miss The Magnificent Beast dude @Z. Will especially miss his placebos and his tentacles.
Take care, @Zdude. Feel free to come back sooner or later, if that there whole situation of mystery ever changes for U.

Good to hear from a commenter, that FAE means somethin personally cool to them. Good enough for M&A to accept FAE's legitimacy-ness. Learnin somethin new there, which is almost always a plus [notable exception was PEWIT, tho].

M&Also

pmdm 2:45 PM  

This was one of Eric more benign efforts - so it seems to me. I liked the puzzle to a point, but still too much hip stuff I don't know or care to know. Eric has gotten better from when he almost took a cream in the face on Jeopardy!, but his work still puts me off. Today, mostly for different reasons than in the past. Jeff gave it a POW. Yes, I admit it was goo, but not that good.

Cheater squares came up. If one removes a non-cheater square, two entries will combine into one entry. If you remove a cheater square, you will have the same entries (with one or two beginning in a different square) but the lengths of [two of the] entries will increase by one for each cheater square deleted from the grid. Maybe that was a bit wordy, but in the end it is easier to describe what cheater and non-cheater squares do than to define them.

BlueStater 2:49 PM  

Alas, I disagree with OFL about this one. I thought it was one of the worst I've seen in years. I should have given up early, but wasted a couple of hours in vain struggle. Hated it, hated it, hated it.

Geezer 2:51 PM  

@Bob Mills. Yeah, disH TOWEL is much better. This is an example of EA's too cute by half clues. Another one, previously mentioned, is the one for LEAP, "Something not to look after?" We get the reference but it makes bagel sense. I think he is overrated but I also think he could be really outstanding.

bertoray 3:07 PM  

Wow. What a swell solve. Always impressed with Eric Agard's constructing prowess. I kept coming back to that northwest with argot/LINGO, mono/LOFI, verve/NERVE, India/OCEAN, force/FORTE. Even wanted to somehow squeeze in Acura for ICONS. Three thumbs up.

Gary Jugert 3:16 PM  

@Mary McCarty 10:47 AM
There might have been some point in my life where I knew what an ellipses is, but that day is long ago. Thank you for explaining!

EdFromHackensack 3:46 PM  

Had disHTOWEL for far too long. MdA is a thing (Management Discussion and Analysis) that seemed quasi-reasonable and my Spanish cluelessness accepted ESsA. So that section took awhile to unknot. Other than that kind of easy - I got ALEC from the crosses - never heard of the actor or the show.

Larry 4:17 PM  

I initially had [Hand]TOWEL, then [dish]TOWEL, then finally BATHTOWEL, yet I am befuddled as to how anyone can thing that either HAND or DISHTOWEL was better then BATHTOWEL. One uses a BATHTOWEL after washing. It couldn't possibly be more apt.

@Z - Sorry to see you go.

sixtyni yogini 4:20 PM  

Clever clues.
Not easy but
Doable!
Enjoyable!
🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤗

Anonymous 4:58 PM  

Marketing is very much an MBA field. Not at all related to the arts. You might be thinking of advertising design.

Anoa Bob 5:17 PM  

For anyone curious about cheater squares, more charitably called helper squares, draw a 4X4 or even a 3X3 crossword grid and fill it in. Note the difficulty and time involved to get it done. Now take that same grid a make one or two of the corner squares a black square.

You will still have the same number of entries to make but now the task will become easier, mainly because the average word length will be shorter. Longer average word length grids are more difficult to fill while shorter average word length grids are easier to fill, Q.E.D.

Average word length is a standard statistic seen, for example, at xwordinfo.com under "Analyze this puzzle". Today the average word length is 5.19 and the black square count is 38. The average word length for all Friday grids is 5.58 and the average black square count is 31.5. Those four cheater squares account for the lower than average word length and the lower degree of difficulty to get it filled.

There are also four virtual cheater/helper squares in the grid. These are the two for one POCs, where a Down and an Across share a final, letter count boosting S. The first is at the end of 56D HEW and 19A INVEST. That S could be changed to a black square and little or nothing of value would be lost. It would just make it easier to fill the grid. See the other three?

Now the virtual black square count would go from 38, which is already quite high for a themeless, to 42, 10.5 higher than average. Compare that to yesterday's themed puzzle count of 32 black squares.

If you are still reading this, I hereby dub you a full fledged Crossword Puzzle Nerd.

Nancy 5:38 PM  

Somehow I missed the kerfuffle. @Z's giving up the NYT puzzle for the rest of his life because UNBORN BABY was an answer last week???!!! Yes, I agree it was a rather creepy clue/answer, but I don't see how @Z's bailing on the crossword will 1) hurt the NYT in the slightest or 2) prevent a single woman in Texas or Missouri from being forced to bear a child against her will and being turned into a glorified vessel.

This gesture strikes me as a cross between tilting at windmills and cutting off your nose to spite your face. It's a bit late for a Letters to the Editor response, but that's the sort of response that actually might have done some good.

And also, @Z -- why are you punishing us on the Rexblog? We haven't done anything to you. If you're going to boycott someone, why not boycott Adam Wagner, the constructor of the UNBORN BABY puzzle. Robyn Weintraub and Tom McCoy, say, haven't done anything wrong.

kitshef 6:05 PM  

@Anoa Bob 5:17 - I only see three two-for-one POCs: AXES.NUDES, INVESTES.HEWS, USES.AGES.

Whatsername 6:35 PM  

@Nancy (5:38) You raised some excellent points and some good reasons to consider a change of heart eventually.

dgd 6:38 PM  

I am always slow, but for me it was an easy puzzle, since you asked.

dgd 6:44 PM  

You go one step at a time instead of in leaps and bounds.

pmdm 6:56 PM  

Nancy: If Z has given up doing the NYT crosswords, there is nothing he could comment here. (I've notice that if your first comment doesn't critique the puzzle or state your reaction, the comment may not be accepted.) I think it's probably an over-reaction. And he may know it, since he doesn't specify the actual reason which means others here can't say he's wrong.

Neither of us link our email addresses to the names we use in this blog, unlike Z. I did email him a few times, and found him to be quite intelligent. If some of his comments seemed pedantic or quarrelsome to some that post here, it was probably just his response to some of the more maddening posts I've read here. I will probably contact him soon to wich him well and bid him good bye. Maybe you might. And at the same time, you might try to convince him that there's a better way to make your point. Or so I think.

Anonymous 7:04 PM  

That was what I thought too.

Anonymous 7:22 PM  

I actually came across a Twitter thread about the use of fae as personal pronouns just yesterday, so very much on that wavelength!

Jay 7:34 PM  

Bad error at 45D: Sutras are Buddhist texts, not Hindu.

albatross shell 7:54 PM  

@Jay
Oxford dictionary
1.a rule or aphorism in Sanskrit literature, or a set of these on grammar or Hindu law or philosophy.
2.
a Buddhist or Jainist scripture

Also the Kama Sutra is Hindu.

BobL 8:21 PM  

I always thought Z as a voice of reason. Sometimes too engaged with the trolls, but the guy I wanted to speak for me.

Anoa Bob 9:17 PM  

kitshef @6:05, I would like to say that I knew all along that there were only three of the two for one variety POCs (plurals of convenience) and that I was just seeing if any POC sleuths out there would pick up on my ruse. Truth is, I saw that S down there in the lower, right most square and too hastily counted that as one also. Alas, ATLAS isn't plural.

Good catch.

I also fumble fingered the location of 6D HEW.

CDilly52 12:20 AM  

WooHOO!!!! I made it! Any time I see an Agar, I start to sweat - almost literally. Don’t get me wrong, I see an Agar byline and I know I am in for clever and inventive wordplay and some humor and a wide range of eras and disciplines and topics and languages and on and on. Once I’m done, I sincerely look back with deep appreciation and enjoyment.

And so it was today. Exactly like OFL, I got off to a stonking quick start. Following my crack start, I proceeded to want to enter about fifteen wrong answers, either falling for the “Agarish” cleverness - even when I KNEW I was falling for the trap, or just hitting on a dumb possible answer.

Right before I absolutely crashed and burned, I decided to spend the remainder of the day gathering my wits and letting the puzzle steep. I relegated the dilemma to my “librarian” who dwells back in my grey matter archives. And I waited for guidance.

Well, she apparently was working swing shift today like my nephew at the air base in OKC, and didn’t GO TO work until after three this afternoon. Nonetheless, I wouldn’t always take her advice. For example, disH TOWEL for BATH TOWEL. That error made the really fairly easy middle-west chunk impossible to fill in until the bitter end when I had to accede to my librarian. Hubris will out.

Reminds me of Gran, who would never actually roll her eyes as I developed some expertise and I would mulishly insist on keeping one of my dopey answers. She would always raise one eyebrow (left one) and look at me and ask, “Are you so sure that you want to put it down in ink?” She always and only solved in ink, and insisted we do so when she allowed me to participate. No dumbing down for her. She said solving in ink gave her discipline.
Well no kidding!

“You know we cannot erase, and if we (always so kindly including herself as if we really were a team) have an incorrect answer that we must change, it will not count as a perfect finish. She gave me the “Gran look.” And waited for me to say, “Ok, we should wait.” Gran’s response . . . every time? “I think so too. Let’s remember that idea and come back to it.”

No home computers from 1962-1982 when we solved together. She was absolutely happy with “the notebook” that held our daily record of the solve, complete or not, how hard, and other notes. I’m 100% certain Gran learned things every day of her life, not always from puzzles, but her curiosity and hunger for knowledge never waned, even when the cancer was ravaging her body.

On the last day of her life the family was gathered to say goodbye. Because of a law school exam, I was absent from her bedside, but in her usual fashion, she had words for everyone.

She told my Uncle Merrill that she knew I was at school and that she was proud of me. She also told him to remind me that she hadn’t gotten to finish the puzzle, but it was on her table but it was easy and I could finish it. The theme was Cole Porter songs and she had gotten them all except MISS OTIS REGRETS was circled. That meant she had learned something about that answer and it needed to go in the notebook.

I went to my folks’ house and closed the door to her room and finished the puzzle. With her pen, and I put “Miss Otis” in the notebook with a note saying it was circled but I was i sure why, and noted it was her last solve. I knew for certain she knee the song.

For much of my youth, when I would do my very best to behave and partially use my best behavior in my attempt to finagle Gran into something. She always played along until she could see I believed I had convinced her. And then she would say I’d done a very good job of finagling but “Miss Otis regrets . . . “

Sorry, I digress. I have no idea when or why these “Crossword Chronicles” (my daughter’s name) pop up. I got a solid finish today thanks to my “librarian” and as usual, Gran (they may be synonymous). She was right as usual.

Anonymous 10:33 AM  

Sorry to be so dense but why is "short" clued as current issue in yesterday's puzzle? Eric said it was the NYT's team clue and I'm just not getting it. Thanks.

TedP 11:29 AM  

There has been much gripping about how dated this puzzle is (accurately so), and yet we can’t expect EACH puzzle to offer an equitable balance between old and new generations, popular culture and academic esoterica, sports and science, etc. We all have our comfort zones, but if you take ALL NYT crossword puzzles together, you will encounter a wide range of fields, facts, concepts, and references. I learn something new from each one, even though I struggle mightily at times. Kudos to the constructors, of all ages, who coerce us into foreign realms. Complaints aside, we couldn’t do without this daily challenge.

Anonymous 11:31 AM  

An electrical current, improperly directed, can result in a short circuit.

spacecraft 9:49 AM  

I thought it was ATAD easier than the usual Friday suspects. Funny but I never even thought of FORcE; I saw "Strength" and wrote FORTE in right away. My only other hesitation was the (totally to me) unknown FAE, but V had to be FIVE going down, so all was well.

Gridspanners have a way of simplifying a solve, if you can suss them out--which I did here. Sometimes stacks of shorter (but still long) entries will mess with my mind a lot more. Anyway call it easy-medium, and give it a birdie.

Wordle bogey, second in a row. ):

thefogman 11:35 AM  

I love Erik Agard’s puzzles. This one was spot on for a Friday. Tough, but fair. As usual there were plenty of clues and answers that fell outside the usual WHITEGAZE lens.

PS - TV tip: A show on the topic of the so-called culture war taking place inside the crossword world airs tonight on CBC at 9:00 EDT. I wouldn’t be surprised if Erik Agard will be making an appearance or at least gets a mention.

CBC The Passionate Eye Presents: Across and Down
Crossword constructors fight for representation in the world’s most beloved puzzle.

https://www.cbc.ca/passionateeye/episodes/across-and-down

Burma Shave 11:54 AM  

SHORT SORT

Don’t TAX my NERVE and ENERGY TO my TOES
with NOCOMMENT what IT IS about.
Just ACT ONESTEPATATIME so this SISTER knows
whether MYGUY IS INOROUT.

--- MAMA DALY

rondo 6:17 PM  

Puz seemed medium to easy. Not much trouble.
Wordle birdie for two in a row.

Anonymous 12:26 PM  

Far too woke for me, with apologies to anyone whom that might offend and I’m sorry but graffiti is not art, it’s vandalism.

Scarlet 8:38 AM  

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