Classic Wilson Pickett cover / WED 10-12-22 / Top 10 funk hit from War with an iconic bass line / Friend of Telly and Zoe / Catfish airer / Rich, fashionable sorts
Constructor: Drew Schmenner
Relative difficulty: Easy
THEME: AUTOTUNE (60A: Modern music staple that's a punny description of 17-, 24-, 38- and 48-Across) — songs ("tunes") with cars ("autos") in their names:
Theme answers:
"LOW RIDER" (17A: Top 10 funk hit from War with an iconic bass line (1975))
"MUSTANG SALLY" (24A: Classic Wilson Pickett cover (1966))
"FAST CAR" (38A: Tracy Chapman hit with the line "I had a feeling I could be someone" (1988))
"MERCEDES BENZ" (48A: Janis Joplin's final recording, which had an anticonsumerism message (1970))
Word of the Day: "LOW RIDER" (17A) —
"Low Rider" is a song written by American funk band War and producer Jerry Goldstein, which appeared on their album Why Can't We Be Friends?, released in 1975. It reached number one on the Billboard R&B singles chart, peaked at number seven on the Hot 100 singles chart, and number six in Canada.
According to the AllMusic review of the song, "the lyric takes the cool, laidback image of the lowrider—the Chicano culture practice of hydraulically hot-rodding classic cars—and using innuendo, extends the image to a lifestyle". The song features a driving bass line by B. B. Dickerson, which is present almost throughout, and an alto saxophone riff by Charles Miller, who also provides lead vocals and a saxophone solo towards the end of the song that includes a siren-like noise. This song is the theme song for the TV series George Lopez, which ran from 2002 to 2007.
• • •
OK, that's good. And so seemingly obvious, so right-out-there-for-the-taking that I can't believe this theme hasn't been done before. Maybe it has, but if so, I missed it. AUTOTUNE ... tunes ... about autos. I mean, the puzzle practically writes itself. If I have any issues with the theme, it's the execution, specifically the themer set, which must have been heavily determined by symmetry potential. There's a type of car, a make of car (that is actually a person), a ... car (?), and then another make of car (that is actually a car). I guess my only real quibble here is with "FAST CAR," a song I love, and love seeing in the grid, but ... it seems really different from all the other answers, car-wise. The rest of the answers give you *types* of car, and "FAST CAR" just gives you .. car. Granted, it's not just any car. It's a FAST CAR. But still, pretty generic compared to the brand names and the specific car type that make up the rest of the themers. There must be tons of other "AUTOTUNE"s out there. Seems like the theme has good Sunday-sized grid potential. "LITTLE DEUCE COUPE" ... "PINK CADILLAC" ... "BIG YELLOW TAXI" ... If someone wants to redo this theme on a bigger scale, with totally different answers, I wouldn't mind. The core idea is good, and remembering songs is fun.
I got "MERCEDES BENZ" without looking at the clue because I had the BENZ part filled in from crosses, but I actually would've known the answer to that clue cold, with no help, thanks to WFMU (my fav station, hello New Jersey!). "What was Janis Joplin's final recording?" was a trivia question on "Wake 'N' Bake" (hosted by Clay Pigeon, weekdays 6-9am) just last week, or recently, anyway. After the listener got, and/or missed, the question, Clay played the song, so I've had it in my ears. It's pretty indelible (sung a cappella). I also learned this week that MCJOB was a term popularized by Douglas Coupland in his generation-naming novel "Generation X" (1991); I learned this from reading Chuck Klosterman's new book about the '90s entitled, enigmatically, "The Nineties," which is completely enthralling—way, way more than a catalog of kitsch. It's a lot about memory, especially collective memory—how it works, and how it changed, drastically, over the course of roughly one decade. But it's also a hilarious trip through music, politics, movies, etc. Just a joy to read. In retrospect, the decade comes off as way, way more momentous than I would've believed while I was living through it.
TMC is not a [Cable option for cinephiles]. I keep saying this, to no avail. TCM (Turner Classic Movies) is the [Cable option for cinephiles]. It's also the only TV channel I watch. TMC (The Movie Channel) ... I don't know who watches that, or why, but stop calling them "cinephiles." Also, stop hiding names inside words (36D: Name hidden in "paleontology"). It feels so condescending. "Can you find the man's name in 'paleontologist'? Good boy!" Child's placemat stuff. Boo. LEON Bridges would like a word. Here he is now (No idea if he has a song about a car, so this'll have to do):
Bullets:
5A: Undergrad conferrals, for short (BAS) — had -AS and wanted either TAS or RAS (because you "confer" with them? Maybe?). This kept BADASS hidden from me for a while ("a while" being, in actuality, probably like 5-10 seconds) (5D: Supercool individual).
9D: "___ más!" ("UNO") — huh ... I wanted "NO más!" (the Roberto Duran quotation), but it wouldn't fit so I wanted something like "A! NO más!" or "O! No más!" UNO was a surprise.
11D: Many messages in spam folders (EMAIL SCAMS) — dead stop after EMAIL. Just staring at the space, thinking "well, it can't be SPAM, so ..." I never go in my spam folder so how the hell do I know what's in there?
40A: What "XXX" might represent in comics (ALE) — more likely moonshine, right? Maybe not. I think of "XXX" as something harder than ALE. One "X" for each distilling? Something like that.
30A: Some damning evidence (TAPES) — I'm too old to believe this is true. People do and say horrible *&%^ on tapes all the time and somehow don't end up "damned" at all. Also, we're entering the age of Deep Fakes, which makes the future persuasive value of TAPES even more dubious. Have a nice day!
Having misspent all my youth and most of my adult life in Southern California, I am a full-fledged car guy. From low-rider to Mercedes I know 'em all. But the puzzle provided enough challenge as I wouldn't recognize any of the songs if they were performed live in my living room.
Someday I'll learn that the great Ms. Raisman is ALY and not ALi. Today was not that day. LOW RIsER before LOW RIDER at 17A. Like @Rex, was thinking tAS or rAS at 5A, but just left the first letter blank until BADASS came along. I came at 11D from the end, so had SCAMS and figured the first word couldn't be anything but EMAIL. I almost never watch movies on TV, but a friend who does watches TCM (Turner Classic Movies). It looked good at 61D when it was confirmed by the T in AUTOTUNE, but was quickly dispatched.
More car songs: LITTLE RED CORVETTE, RED BARCHETTA, BLACK AND YELLOW… come to think of it you could build a theme around car songs with colors in their name.
I can’t think of MUSTANG SALLY without thinking about Sally Ride – the first American woman in space. But that themer seems off to me. MUSTANG SALLY is a woman, while all the others refer to, well, cars.
Knew all the themers – yay!
Love FAST CAR. The song, that is. Hate actual fast cars.
@Rex. Some thoughts on TMC/Tcm. First they are both available on cable. You may have to pay extra. The cinephile question is less clear. The term can mean a person who really loves movies. It can also mean a person who studies movies and knows a lot about them. Given the relative looseness in crosswords, I think the clue and answer are fine. It's basically a KeaLoa thing. You need the second or third letter to be sure.
RIP Angela Lansbury. I made a Murder, She Wrote-themed puzzle this year, rejected by all the publishers. If any AL fans out there would like a copy of the puzzle, email me.
Ah, two feel-good puzzles in a row, after yesterday’s SUPERGIRL. Today we get toe-tapping earworms and maybe even some related memories, hopefully good, that they trigger. All that on top of a crossword solve that had spots of delicious bite, a clever theme, water balloons, a pangram, a clue with Turkey to go with BASTED as an answer – plenty to like today, and thank you for throwing it together, Drew!
Then there was the “name” subtheme. If you count DEAN as a name, there is, I believe, ten names overtly in the grid. But then I was inspired by the clue for LEON – [Name hidden in “paleontology”] to look for other hidden names, and there’s probably more, but I found a good number: Ray (FORAYS), Lew (LEWD), Sid (ASIDES), Pat (SPATE), Cam (SCAMS), Ben (BENZ), Len or Lena (ELENA), and Ted (BASTED).
Drew, you stand on the precipice of a possible great accomplishment. Only one constructor (Andrew Reis) has hit the cycle – a NYT puzzle for every day of the week – in their first seven puzzles. You have published three puzzles, a Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, so you are still in the running to join Andrew. Just saying…
And in any case, thank you again for today’s sweet treat!
Usually I abhor PPP themes, but this one held together for me cuz I’m old enough to remember all of the songs (I think I still have an original vinyl copy of Pearl with a MERCEDES BENZ track). Thought the clue for BASTED was kind of cool. I’m starting to remember the one-named singers simply from CrossWorld - I think the only two I could come up with on my own would be Cher and maybe the Eminem dude.
Well filled - pangram grid. Thought the revealer cute - but wide open which results in the generalities Rex mentions. LOW and FAST - MUSTANG and MERCEDES. All meet the spec but not very elegant.
BADASS, ENAMOR, UGLY TRUTHS are all solid. ENYA’s sister is MoYA Brennan. No e for ADZ today.
I knew MERCEDES BENZ (and love it!!!) and MUSTANG SALLY, but never heard of the other two… but they filled themselves in. I started this last night and somehow forgot that there was an AUTOTUNE theme at all and solved it as a themeless. Well, it was for me. Agree that XXX is usually something like moonshine/stronger than ale in comics. Actually had trouble with UNO because of the exclamation point. First, there should be an upside down one at the start. But with the emphasis it’s more likely to be “nunca” or “no”… I guess it could be UNO but that seems less exclamation point-y. Overall, pleasant puzzle.
LOL, a Wednesday I can call easy. And fun, if only because all those songs played in my head while I dusted off their names. Old enough to know them all, and to put my hands on at least two of them. And i even like ENYA, though would.offer that Pink mightve been a better one named artist pairing - but lots.of inspiration here for a.playlist.later. Also old enough to think "ur joking, right?!" Might've been SaSsY, so did stumble in the NE a bit. Fun Wednesday.
The theme is fine, as is most of the fill -- but saying that your spam folder contains EMAIL is like saying that your mailbox contains letters -- a bit too basic.
The parallel clues for IDEA and CLUE don't quite work for me. I would certainly say "I have no IDEA," but it would be "I haven't a CLUE" or maybe "I have not clue," or just "no clue." Don't ask me why because....
@Pete from yesterday -- thanks for setting me straight on pacing. I sometimes have an unfortunate tendency to rely on hearsay I heard say 60 years ago.
Here's the UGLY TRUTH: There's so much to dislike in this LEWD puzzle with so much privilege oozing out everywhere and so many cringe-y moments, I think I will say I enjoyed the theme (even though it will lead to a lotta car talk today). Now I will go onto my BAD ASS day and my MCJOB as a JET SET "close chica" (SRSLY WTF?).
Uniclues:
1 Getting on with life even though you forgot a belt. 2 Broadcasts the Denver Broncos every year since 2015. 3 A jaded crossworder's opinion of an entry he thinks missed the mark. 4 I think vanilla ice cream and plain black Indonesian dark roasted coffee are the best. There, I said it. 5 Seeing Shakespeare tonight? Watch out for the unnecessary explainers. 6 Drink heavily.
I know it's Wednesday, because it's the day I put the trash out, but I wouldn't have known from the difficulty level here. Maybe it's because all the songs were gimmes-got MERCEDESBENZ from the M, although it would have been my first guess, and the others were "read the clue write in the answer", and almost everything else was similarly obvious.
I'm probably feeling cranky because I'm nearly a week into a nasty cold that will not go away and I was hoping to spend more time with the puzzle. Maybe tomorrow.
I really did like the theme, DS. Great tunes. Do Some more like this, but toughen them up a little. Thanks for the speed test, at least.
Hey All ! CAR TUNEs, with a tiny bonus CEL corresponding to sound-alike cartoon.
Dang, Drew, according to @Lewis, your first three puzs you've gotten published are a Mon, Tues, and Weds. Bravo. I will live vicariously through you! 😁
Plus, he threw in a Pangram. With no complaint about it from Rex. That's an accomplishment in and of itself. QED. Har
I have tried only about three times to get a puz published in another paper, LAT e.g., but really my dream is to get my first one ever here in the NYT. I need to find the magic formula that tickles the editors* fancy.
Sometimes pangrams just happen, as you aren't really trying to make one, but when certain fill is needed, and you're one or two letters away, you say, eh, why not try? Drew had the Z from the theme, getting a J from MCJOB (granted, there might be other fill you could have there, but it's quite clean as is), then after getting the X in (again, unforced, clean fill), figured why not? and found a spot to chuck in a Q. At least that's my read.
Anyway, nice one Drew, looking forward to your ThursPuz. Oh, and let me know the secret formula. Har.
* I'm actually unsure if WS had much to do with the editing process. He may finalize it, or at least vote yay or nay at the beginning, it seems like a team of editors are doing the major stuff. I'm probably way off, though...
So yesterday we had teen slang and today seems dedicated to the golden oldies. That works for me. I knew all of these except FAST CAR but that was a pretty obvious one. I haven’t taken the time to think about what other songs there might be other than to wonder how on earth this entire grid got field without having the letters G-T-O in there somewhere. I mean not only was there a song about it, it’s one of the most classic cars in history.
CADILLAC RANCH is missing, live it is one of the best car songs I’ve ever seen. Bruce, summer of 1985 Wembley in London, out of this world... I am aging myself. OK... I do not think LOWRIDER fits the theme. And ELMO was easier than it first looked... I was thinking of a Teletubby - remember those weird things? Easy, fun puzzle
Not much to say about this puzzle…seemed fine while I was working it…looked back at it when I was done and didn’t see much to comment on. I knew all the songs, liked the theme, and UGLYTRUTHS was my favorite answer.
@jberg, ELMO, Telly, and Zoe are from Sesame Street.
Like@Rex, I think of XXX as being much stronger than ALE. No prob with crosses but I guess that’s my one nit to pick.
I am an outlier here on the "Easy" designation. Must've been a wheelhouse problem, but I staggered in right around my average Thursday time. I look back through it and wonder why it was such slow going. My biggest blanks were in the W/SW.
Anyway, this was, like 99% of all crosswords ... Fun, Fun, Fun, but now "daddy" has to take the Tom T-bird away.
Easy? SRSLY? For me, this was one of the toughest Wednesdays in a while and ended in a DNF because I couldn’t get past my GRIM TRUTHS and little POM to see what was happening on the west coast. Also struggled for a while in the NE due to having FIRSTS before FORAYS and no IDEA who that palace resident might be.
I like the AUTO TUNE theme and enjoyed the puzzle overall, but I definitely got schmennered in the process.
Alice - I agree... Bruce live is always incredible. I thought MAYA should have been MAYAn given the clue. Also - is TRI-city really a thing? TRI-State definitely. Fun puzzle.
Fun, especially "hearing" the songs. I was truly puzzled by the ELMO ALE crossing. Figured Sesame St, but not sure, and XXX for ale seemed off, like it should be something closer to poison...? So plunked in the L, got happy music, done. Huh.
A shout out for Hot Rod Lincoln. It takes me back to a Commander Cody concert on my 21st birthday. I won’t bore you with the whole story, but I’ll bet I’m the only commenter here who has been charged with Inciting a Riot. SRSLY.
Just noticing after reading comments that this puzzle was a pangram. Sweet! I wanted to say I take issue with Rex a statement that TMC/ The Movie Channel does not fit the CLUE. “I don’t know who watches that, or why, but stop calling them "cinephiles.” Well what on earth else would you call someone who not only watches the movies on that channel that pays extra to have it. What a convoluted argument.
I liked the double clue for "I have no ___," because it perfectly described my response to the theme, with the one partial exception of AUTOTUNE (partial because I knew the term from an earlier puzzle but have no ____ what it is or does). File under UGLY TRUTHS (my favorite answer).
Do-overs: ALi, FirstS before FORAYS. Help from previous puzzles: SRSLY. Flummoxed by: XXX indicating ALE: to me, "ale" seems way too fancy for comics. I was sure that entry was going to give me a DNF.
@Carola 12:14 PM Auto-Tune is software used in recording studios to correct the pitch of a singers voice when they haven't hit the note correctly. In modern times, recording artists use it heavily as it puts them in the correct pitch and makes them sound like robots are harmonizing with them. It can be a cool effect. Purists don't like it, modern listeners don't care what purists think, and the music you consume is largely based on what is marketed to you rather than the quality of the tunes anyway.
Feathered serpent, Kukulcan whose name means just that: feathered (k'uk'ul) and serpent (kan). He was a creator god, and the god of rain, wind, storms, and life.
Just now noticing after reading the comments that this puzzle was a pangram. Sweet! And so smooth and unforced that I didn’t even notice.
Also I had to take issue with Rex’s statement that the CLUE for 61D is wrong. TMC (The Movie Channel) ... I don't know who watches that, or why, but stop calling them “cinephiles.” SRSLY?? What else would you call a person who not only subscribes to a movies-only channel but pays extra money for it? Yes TCM features only the classics but the definition of the word is simply “a film or movie enthusiast,” no specific genre required.
The harmonica riff between verses is the most memorable (or "iconic") thing in LOW RIDER. The bass line is a variation on the "Cool Jerk" bass line and isn't even up front in the mix.
I hate this compulsion to pad clues with extraneous or subjective details that won't particularly help the solver get the answer. "Top Ten funk hit from War (1975)" would be enough. Ditto "Janis Joplin's last recording (1970)" and "Tracy Chapman hit (1988)".
Although I knew all of the songs, was able to splatz in MERCEDES BENZ off the NZ and loved the theme, I didn't find this easy. I floundered around for an entry at first, not knowing which 4-letter veggie was rich in Vitamin K (okra?) and having the same thoughts about BAS and UNO as Rex.
Always worrying when LSD gets you into a puzzle.
Other than that, only E_M_ enticing me into throwing in EsMe (for all I know, she's a great friend to Telly, Zoe and ELMO) really caused a holdup but still, it took me longer than Wednesday average.
Matthew Sweet's UGLY TRUTHs is not an AUTO TUNE but the video would have you believe it is.
@Joe Dipinto - one man's meat is another man's poison. For me, the helpful part of the Janis Joplin clue was the 'anti-consumerism message'; the fact that it was her last recording was the extraneous and unhelpful detail. I completely agree with you about LOW RIDER, though,
Another neat theme might be general features or parts of cars. Low Rider would fit with that. Also Beth Orton's Stolen Car. I've always loved Driver's Seat by Sniff n the Tears; while test driving my first car that song came on and I knew it was fate.
I'm having fits with this puz, can't believe it's graded "easy" - but haven't read Rex or commentariat as I'm still working on Northeast and Midwest. Much too much pop content for me.
But on the other hand, QB for me today; I couldn't believe the last 4-letter thing I typed in desperation was a real word. Celebration!
@WindBonnet 10:28 Have not seen a response to your ? Not quite sure what the ? was. but if you've put colored ink in your printer you must have seen cyan on a label.
I'm with (forget who) earlier commenter who said he wouldn't recognize the songs if they were played in his living room. And Nancy "Like I really cared about... But don't agree with her "awful" I just cheated for the song titles and enjoyed the rest of the puzzle.
Also got a smile from Lewis's riding ofd ames in so many other answers, tho I did not enjoy the clue itself.
I agree with Rex that ALES is a weird answer for XXX in comics. XXX is found on a jug of something.
I do not agree with Rex that FAST CAR is odd here. There is some inconsistency in theme, but if anything, the one that sticks out is MUSTANG SALLY, which is about the person who owns the Mustang, not about the car itself.
@jberg - No problem. Further, they actually do train and race in hobbles. They are there not to learn to pace, but to make it difficult for the horse to break into a gallop, which would disqualify them in a race. The poor horse is constantly being urged to go faster and faster, but it risks being dog food if it does the natural thing and break into a gallop to go faster.
@edfromHackensack - Here in Washington State Wikipedia tells us The Hanford Site is a decommissioned nuclear production complex operated by the United ... The site is bordered on the southeast by the Tri-Cities.
( Richland, Pasco and Kennewick would like not to be remembered solely for the role played by the mid-Columbia basin in the development of the atom bomb.)
SRSLY not easy. First of all, I cannot stand acronym speak or whatever the garbage is that makes me skip text messages and then requires me to wait until the (and I use the term very loosely) “writer” asks, “Did you get my text?” I reply, “It came in garbled, a bunch of meaningless letters.” I swear I am planting my flag on the hill of clear, cogent written communication, which includes fully spelled words. I loathe including such drivel in this puzzle. Go ahead and call me old. I am, and proud of it. And we shall see whether I die first upon said hill or my next door hill of I refuse to do Facebook. Yep, I may be an old witch, but I have a key chain crafted for me by my daughter in honor of a (as Rumpole of the Bailey would say) “famous victory” (that came after over a month of trial and three appeals that were finally upheld by the 10th Circuit en banc) that says “You are a BADASS.” I’ll take it all day long.
Other than the above, I thiroughly enjoyed this one. I’ll be singing Janis all day long and that’s not a bad thing.
@Lewis spells out all the goodness. I concur. A crunchier than usual Wednesday that took me for a ride. Loved it.
That was a truly impressive legal accomplishment! For those who don't know, a month long trial in Federal Court is a major event. And in her case, the losers appealed to the Federal appellate court system, then appelead again to the next level ("en banc" it has come up in the NYT crosswords!) just below the US Supreme Court.
I will stand firm in my conviction that TMC is a bad (and borderline incorrect) clue, but not exactly for the reason that Rex mentions.
Nowhere in The Movie Channel's current branding do they go by "TMC". Googling "TMC" has no links to "The Movie Channel" in the first five pages of results, and on page 2 sends you to a Wikipedia article for a DIFFERENT TV NETWORK (see below)
According to Wikipedia (which, by the way, the page for TMC (TV Channel) links you to the French network Tele Monte-Carlo) The Movie Channel briefly went by TMC from 2001 to 2006. The rest of their history from 1979 to 2001, and since, from 2006 to present, the name of the channel has been and is "The Movie Channel", not TMC.
All of that, combined with the fact that there are two similarly acronymed, movie-focused channels, AMC and TCM, the latter of which most definitely fits the clue of a "Cable option for cinefiles", makes "TMC" misleading at best and flat incorrect at worst.
It might take some finagling to get it to work as a themer but Johnny Cash had an AUTO TUNE about his unique Psycho-Billy Cadillac called One Piece At A Time.
I think CDilly said in the past she does have eye sight issues, hence her mistakes. I find it much harder to write a message accurately to this blog via my phone than a regular text. I tend to make many more mistakes that I don't catch. I don't react as much as she did above but I mostly avoid these abbreviations myself and I do find many of them confusing. I do use BTW and FWIW for what it's worth! Texting, tweeting etc. are changing the language and maybe the (retired) lawyer in me makes me tend to agree with her, a retired lawyer, that the change is not good. Clarity of language is such a big thing in law. I don't think she intended to be holier than thou.
Apologies for spelling. I do have eyesight problems and rarely catch all the typos. Alas, I no longer have an assistant who made certIn nothing went out with misspelled words. But I do try because I care about spelling.
Sorry to have offended. But along with opinions expressed herein, I care equally about the wonderful examples of tolerance of feee speech and exchange of ideas exhibited here daily.
I don't have anything to say about the puzzle, but came here to mention a coincidence that happened after solving it... Immediately after finishing this puzzle, I pulled up another, random puzzle from the archives to solve (8/28/10 if you're curious). That grid had MCJOB located in the exact same position as today's puzzle -- running down right in the SW corner. It sort of creeped me out.
Easy? I guess that isn’t a joke. I didn’t know any of those songs . . Worst Wednesday for me—ever. I like Janis Joplin. I did remember that she never. knew that Me and Bobby McGee was a hit.
Since the moderator has chosen to apparently not print my last three postings, I'm not holding my breath, but here goes:
Two sweet puzzles in a row. Great themes. I think today's might have been tougher for a younger generation who might never have heard of Janis Joplin, but if this is the gateway puzzle to get them to explore her music, that's a good thing!
"First of all, I cannot stand acronym speak or whatever the garbage is that makes me skip text messages and then requires me to wait until the (and I use the term very loosely) 'writer' asks, 'Did you get my text?' I reply, 'It came in garbled, a bunch of meaningless letters.'" Oh, come on now. We're not in English class. We can skip the red-pen histrionics. Good communicators know when and how to shift gears.
"Texting, tweeting etc. are changing the language and maybe the (retired) lawyer in me makes me tend to agree with her, a retired lawyer, that the change is not good." Calling it a change in language is a mischaracterization. I'd say it's more like a new branch or an adaptation. The difference is, you can get through life generally without knowing legalese, but textspeak is a lot more common and thus, I'd say, a lot more important to be relatively on top of.
I think Rex's TCM argument is fairly easily punctured, but I get it.
I read "¡Uno más!" like "Another round!" Made sense that way. On that note, agreed that XXX would go on a bottle of something a lot stronger than ALE.
The Nineties is a great book. I usually find Klosterman a little insufferable but also kind of can't stop checking him out whenever something new of his pops up. Point for him there, I guess. In this particular instance, however, I felt his style worked very well with the subject matter. It's an easy weekend read. I recommend it.
I'm pretty new to this joint but so far it's been fairly beguiling to see what stumps folks. Personally, I got three of four of the songs without any crosses (only MUSTANG SALLY took a minute). ELMO was also easy—Telly was in my Sesame Street–watching days, but even though Zoe was a little after my time, I'm aware of her from where her behavior drives Elmo up a wall. Then again, I sense I'm a wee babe compared to most of this site's demo (turned 38 last week).
Whoops, I thought I could be a fancy boy and try HTML for the first time in eons, and instead it ate my link. What I meant is, I'm aware of Zoe from *certain viral clips* where her behavior drives Elmo up a wall. Like this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLoAPA_wYn4
At least that channel for cinemaphiles was not answered by AMC!
Which would be as bad as the still happening answer of CNET as a computer information site. I'm a systems programmer, and I haven't checked CNET in years.
Oh, those were some GREAT songs! I love these trips back INTO my youth. Some other ones: 409, Beep Beep, No Particular Place To Go.
Bonus oldie: BEATIT. By golly, we snuck in a pangram right under OFF's nose! That must mean the big count letters were smoothly integrated INTO the grid--and they were. The Q in the SE corner made me look back.
Well done and fun to solve, if easy. A boffo DOD in Lady GAGA. What else do you want? Birdie.
To those who said "CYAN?": It's the shade of blue that cyanide exhibits, hence the name.
Pangram ALERT!
ReplyDeleteLots of ladies in this grid
But SYRIASLY folks............
RULERS crosses ROYALS
JETSET, where have you been?
Everything ADZ up to a pleasant Wed. even though it TAXED my brain at times.
Maybe not quite ENAMORed or GAGA but I liked it.
Having misspent all my youth and most of my adult life in Southern California, I am a full-fledged car guy. From low-rider to Mercedes I know 'em all. But the puzzle provided enough challenge as I wouldn't recognize any of the songs if they were performed live in my living room.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteSomeday I'll learn that the great Ms. Raisman is ALY and not ALi. Today was not that day. LOW RIsER before LOW RIDER at 17A. Like @Rex, was thinking tAS or rAS at 5A, but just left the first letter blank until BADASS came along. I came at 11D from the end, so had SCAMS and figured the first word couldn't be anything but EMAIL. I almost never watch movies on TV, but a friend who does watches TCM (Turner Classic Movies). It looked good at 61D when it was confirmed by the T in AUTOTUNE, but was quickly dispatched.
More car songs: LITTLE RED CORVETTE, RED BARCHETTA, BLACK AND YELLOW… come to think of it you could build a theme around car songs with colors in their name.
ReplyDeleteThx, Drew; I was ENAMORed with today's 'menu'! :)
ReplyDeleteMed+ (Thurs. time).
My FORAY in the NW was successful, but was CLUEless in some other areas; just not on the right wavelength this a.m..
Love the inspirational MARIE Kondo and her message.
Knew only one of the AUTO TUNEs:
MUSTANG SALLY ~ The Commitments (from their eponymous movie).
Anyhoo, finished on an UPBEAT 'note'; didn't necessarily ACE it, but quite liked it, tho! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
A good news--bad news puzzle. Good---every letter in the alphabet is used. Bad--- too much nouveau culture stuff.
ReplyDeleteI can’t think of MUSTANG SALLY without thinking about Sally Ride – the first American woman in space. But that themer seems off to me. MUSTANG SALLY is a woman, while all the others refer to, well, cars.
ReplyDeleteKnew all the themers – yay!
Love FAST CAR. The song, that is. Hate actual fast cars.
@Rex. Some thoughts on TMC/Tcm. First they are both available on cable. You may have to pay extra. The cinephile question is less clear. The term can mean a person who really loves movies. It can also mean a person who studies movies and knows a lot about them. Given the relative looseness in crosswords, I think the clue and answer are fine. It's basically a KeaLoa thing. You need the second or third letter to be sure.
ReplyDeleteBTW, Spellcheck does not like cinephile.
RIP Angela Lansbury. I made a Murder, She Wrote-themed puzzle this year, rejected by all the publishers. If any AL fans out there would like a copy of the puzzle, email me.
ReplyDeleteAh, two feel-good puzzles in a row, after yesterday’s SUPERGIRL. Today we get toe-tapping earworms and maybe even some related memories, hopefully good, that they trigger. All that on top of a crossword solve that had spots of delicious bite, a clever theme, water balloons, a pangram, a clue with Turkey to go with BASTED as an answer – plenty to like today, and thank you for throwing it together, Drew!
ReplyDeleteThen there was the “name” subtheme. If you count DEAN as a name, there is, I believe, ten names overtly in the grid. But then I was inspired by the clue for LEON – [Name hidden in “paleontology”] to look for other hidden names, and there’s probably more, but I found a good number: Ray (FORAYS), Lew (LEWD), Sid (ASIDES), Pat (SPATE), Cam (SCAMS), Ben (BENZ), Len or Lena (ELENA), and Ted (BASTED).
Drew, you stand on the precipice of a possible great accomplishment. Only one constructor (Andrew Reis) has hit the cycle – a NYT puzzle for every day of the week – in their first seven puzzles. You have published three puzzles, a Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, so you are still in the running to join Andrew. Just saying…
And in any case, thank you again for today’s sweet treat!
Usually I abhor PPP themes, but this one held together for me cuz I’m old enough to remember all of the songs (I think I still have an original vinyl copy of Pearl with a MERCEDES BENZ track). Thought the clue for BASTED was kind of cool. I’m starting to remember the one-named singers simply from CrossWorld - I think the only two I could come up with on my own would be Cher and maybe the Eminem dude.
ReplyDeleteWell filled - pangram grid. Thought the revealer cute - but wide open which results in the generalities Rex mentions. LOW and FAST - MUSTANG and MERCEDES. All meet the spec but not very elegant.
ReplyDeleteBADASS, ENAMOR, UGLY TRUTHS are all solid. ENYA’s sister is MoYA Brennan. No e for ADZ today.
We’re the old Chevrolet set
Enjoyable Wednesday solve.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteI knew MERCEDES BENZ (and love it!!!) and MUSTANG SALLY, but never heard of the other two… but they filled themselves in. I started this last night and somehow forgot that there was an AUTOTUNE theme at all and solved it as a themeless. Well, it was for me. Agree that XXX is usually something like moonshine/stronger than ale in comics. Actually had trouble with UNO because of the exclamation point. First, there should be an upside down one at the start. But with the emphasis it’s more likely to be “nunca” or “no”… I guess it could be UNO but that seems less exclamation point-y. Overall, pleasant puzzle.
ReplyDeleteLOL, a Wednesday I can call easy. And fun, if only because all those songs played in my head while I dusted off their names. Old enough to know them all, and to put my hands on at least two of them. And i even like ENYA, though would.offer that Pink mightve been a better one named artist pairing - but lots.of inspiration here for a.playlist.later. Also old enough to think "ur joking, right?!" Might've been SaSsY, so did stumble in the NE a bit. Fun Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteThe theme is fine, as is most of the fill -- but saying that your spam folder contains EMAIL is like saying that your mailbox contains letters -- a bit too basic.
ReplyDeleteThe parallel clues for IDEA and CLUE don't quite work for me. I would certainly say "I have no IDEA," but it would be "I haven't a CLUE" or maybe "I have not clue," or just "no clue." Don't ask me why because....
Who on earth are Telly and Zoe?
@jberg 8:45
Delete👋👋 I'm standing over here with the "Who on earth are Telly and Zoe?" crowd
They’re muppets cmon now.
DeleteryE for ALE was my only moonshine hiccup…
ReplyDelete@Pete from yesterday -- thanks for setting me straight on pacing. I sometimes have an unfortunate tendency to rely on hearsay I heard say 60 years ago.
ReplyDeleteHere's the UGLY TRUTH: There's so much to dislike in this LEWD puzzle with so much privilege oozing out everywhere and so many cringe-y moments, I think I will say I enjoyed the theme (even though it will lead to a lotta car talk today). Now I will go onto my BAD ASS day and my MCJOB as a JET SET "close chica" (SRSLY WTF?).
ReplyDeleteUniclues:
1 Getting on with life even though you forgot a belt.
2 Broadcasts the Denver Broncos every year since 2015.
3 A jaded crossworder's opinion of an entry he thinks missed the mark.
4 I think vanilla ice cream and plain black Indonesian dark roasted coffee are the best. There, I said it.
5 Seeing Shakespeare tonight? Watch out for the unnecessary explainers.
6 Drink heavily.
1 LOW RIDER FORAYS
2 TAPES SLUMPS (~)
3 QED SPLAT CLUE (~)
4 LEWD UGLY TRUTHS
5 ASIDES ALERT (~)
6 ENTICE BLURS
Wordle 480 3/6*
ReplyDelete⬜⬜🟨⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟨🟨⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
WordleBot
Skill 90/99
Luck 61/99
With assistance from Onelook.com script: ?o???,//in???-aerspt
I know it's Wednesday, because it's the day I put the trash out, but I wouldn't have known from the difficulty level here. Maybe it's because all the songs were gimmes-got MERCEDESBENZ from the M, although it would have been my first guess, and the others were "read the clue write in the answer", and almost everything else was similarly obvious.
ReplyDeleteI'm probably feeling cranky because I'm nearly a week into a nasty cold that will not go away and I was hoping to spend more time with the puzzle. Maybe tomorrow.
I really did like the theme, DS. Great tunes. Do Some more like this, but toughen them up a little. Thanks for the speed test, at least.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteCAR TUNEs, with a tiny bonus CEL corresponding to sound-alike cartoon.
Dang, Drew, according to @Lewis, your first three puzs you've gotten published are a Mon, Tues, and Weds. Bravo. I will live vicariously through you! 😁
Plus, he threw in a Pangram. With no complaint about it from Rex. That's an accomplishment in and of itself. QED. Har
I have tried only about three times to get a puz published in another paper, LAT e.g., but really my dream is to get my first one ever here in the NYT. I need to find the magic formula that tickles the editors* fancy.
Sometimes pangrams just happen, as you aren't really trying to make one, but when certain fill is needed, and you're one or two letters away, you say, eh, why not try? Drew had the Z from the theme, getting a J from MCJOB (granted, there might be other fill you could have there, but it's quite clean as is), then after getting the X in (again, unforced, clean fill), figured why not? and found a spot to chuck in a Q. At least that's my read.
Anyway, nice one Drew, looking forward to your ThursPuz. Oh, and let me know the secret formula. Har.
* I'm actually unsure if WS had much to do with the editing process. He may finalize it, or at least vote yay or nay at the beginning, it seems like a team of editors are doing the major stuff. I'm probably way off, though...
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
@RooMonster 9:39 AM
Delete"I need to find the magic formula that tickles the editors* fancy."
Just make sure it has some variety of ASS in it.
And no, clearly WS is not actually editing the puzzles. They'd be way better if he did.
Leon bridges has a song called motorcycle. That could have been in the puzz.
ReplyDeleteSo yesterday we had teen slang and today seems dedicated to the golden oldies. That works for me. I knew all of these except FAST CAR but that was a pretty obvious one. I haven’t taken the time to think about what other songs there might be other than to wonder how on earth this entire grid got field without having the letters G-T-O in there somewhere. I mean not only was there a song about it, it’s one of the most classic cars in history.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this a lot Drew. Thanks for the memories.
CADILLAC RANCH is missing, live it is one of the best car songs I’ve ever seen. Bruce, summer of 1985 Wembley in London, out of this world... I am aging myself. OK... I do not think LOWRIDER fits the theme. And ELMO was easier than it first looked... I was thinking of a Teletubby - remember those weird things? Easy, fun puzzle
ReplyDelete@Alice Pollard 10:25 AM Hand waaay up for Cadillac Ranch!
DeleteCyan?
ReplyDeleteNot much to say about this puzzle…seemed fine while I was working it…looked back at it when I was done and didn’t see much to comment on. I knew all the songs, liked the theme, and UGLYTRUTHS was my favorite answer.
ReplyDelete@jberg, ELMO, Telly, and Zoe are from Sesame Street.
Like@Rex, I think of XXX as being much stronger than ALE. No prob with crosses but I guess that’s my one nit to pick.
Cyan?
ReplyDeleteLittle Deuce Coupe
ReplyDeleteI am an outlier here on the "Easy" designation. Must've been a wheelhouse problem, but I staggered in right around my average Thursday time. I look back through it and wonder why it was such slow going. My biggest blanks were in the W/SW.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, this was, like 99% of all crosswords ... Fun, Fun, Fun, but now "daddy" has to take the Tom T-bird away.
Have a groovin' hump day.
XXX from Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote, would be either TNT or Lye. From Acme whatever.
ReplyDeletedoes anyone else remember that HBO began life as a second- or third-run movie theater for you teeVee? near as I can tell TCM still is.
ReplyDelete@Alice:
ReplyDeletea Teletubby - remember those weird things?
perhaps the lavender gay one?
@Wind:
Cyan?
most color rendition is done in complementarys: cyan, yellow, magenta. some better ones use black for density.
Easy. Caught the theme fairly early and knew all the songs...so easy. Smooth grid, delightful theme, some fine long downs, liked it.
ReplyDeleteEasy? SRSLY? For me, this was one of the toughest Wednesdays in a while and ended in a DNF because I couldn’t get past my GRIM TRUTHS and little POM to see what was happening on the west coast. Also struggled for a while in the NE due to having FIRSTS before FORAYS and no IDEA who that palace resident might be.
ReplyDeleteI like the AUTO TUNE theme and enjoyed the puzzle overall, but I definitely got schmennered in the process.
Like I really cared about any of this nonsense. Awful.
ReplyDeleteMercedes Benz was the only themer I knew, had to get all others by the crosses, so this played harder than a Wednesday for me.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteAlice - I agree... Bruce live is always incredible. I thought MAYA should have been MAYAn given the clue. Also - is TRI-city really a thing? TRI-State definitely. Fun puzzle.
ReplyDeleteFun, especially "hearing" the songs. I was truly puzzled by the ELMO ALE crossing. Figured Sesame St, but not sure, and XXX for ale seemed off, like it should be something closer to poison...? So plunked in the L, got happy music, done. Huh.
ReplyDeleteHOT ROD LINCOLN. [Gotta reach back to 1955 by Charlie Ryan, unless U are more partial to the Commander Cody cover version in 1971]
ReplyDeleteA Super Girl puz followed by a Souped-Up Pangram puz. Primo stuff. And always neat to have a passel of earworms thrown yer way by the puz.
If trucks count, may we also recommend: MAMA HATED DIESELS [by Commander Cody, 1972].
fave non-theme item: UGLYTRUTHS.
staff weeject pick: QED. But only cuz GTO didn't turn up.
Thanx for the fun, fun, fun [til someone took the T-Bird away] time, Mr. Schmenner dude. Good job of DJ-in'.
Masked & Anonymo6Us
**gruntz**
[Wish your "Auto Correct" puz were still available, so i could check if it fits the theme, har]
DeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteA shout out for Hot Rod Lincoln. It takes me back to a Commander Cody concert on my 21st birthday. I won’t bore you with the whole story, but I’ll bet I’m the only commenter here who has been charged with Inciting a Riot. SRSLY.
ReplyDeleteEasy, fun puzzle. Thanks, Drew Schmenner.
Did anyone else get a highlighted in yellow response for 24D, 38D and 48D in the NYT on-line version? What was that about?
ReplyDeleteYes! I was hoping someone else noticed that, so I wouldn’t feel quite so insane.
DeleteJust noticing after reading comments that this puzzle was a pangram. Sweet! I wanted to say I take issue with Rex a statement that TMC/ The Movie Channel does not fit the CLUE. “I don’t know who watches that, or why, but stop calling them "cinephiles.” Well what on earth else would you call someone who not only watches the movies on that channel that pays extra to have it. What a convoluted argument.
ReplyDeleteI liked the double clue for "I have no ___," because it perfectly described my response to the theme, with the one partial exception of AUTOTUNE (partial because I knew the term from an earlier puzzle but have no ____ what it is or does). File under UGLY TRUTHS (my favorite answer).
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: ALi, FirstS before FORAYS. Help from previous puzzles: SRSLY. Flummoxed by: XXX indicating ALE: to me, "ale" seems way too fancy for comics. I was sure that entry was going to give me a DNF.
@Carola 12:14 PM
DeleteAuto-Tune is software used in recording studios to correct the pitch of a singers voice when they haven't hit the note correctly. In modern times, recording artists use it heavily as it puts them in the correct pitch and makes them sound like robots are harmonizing with them. It can be a cool effect. Purists don't like it, modern listeners don't care what purists think, and the music you consume is largely based on what is marketed to you rather than the quality of the tunes anyway.
Telly and Zoe are ELMO's friends.
ReplyDeleteFeathered serpent, Kukulcan whose name means just that: feathered (k'uk'ul) and serpent (kan). He was a creator god, and the god of rain, wind, storms, and life.
ReplyDeleteJust now noticing after reading the comments that this puzzle was a pangram. Sweet! And so smooth and unforced that I didn’t even notice.
ReplyDeleteAlso I had to take issue with Rex’s statement that the CLUE for 61D is wrong. TMC (The Movie Channel) ... I don't know who watches that, or why, but stop calling them “cinephiles.” SRSLY?? What else would you call a person who not only subscribes to a movies-only channel but pays extra money for it? Yes TCM features only the classics but the definition of the word is simply “a film or movie enthusiast,” no specific genre required.
The harmonica riff between verses is the most memorable (or "iconic") thing in LOW RIDER. The bass line is a variation on the "Cool Jerk" bass line and isn't even up front in the mix.
ReplyDeleteI hate this compulsion to pad clues with extraneous or subjective details that won't particularly help the solver get the answer. "Top Ten funk hit from War (1975)" would be enough. Ditto "Janis Joplin's last recording (1970)" and "Tracy Chapman hit (1988)".
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I knew all of the songs, was able to splatz in MERCEDES BENZ off the NZ and loved the theme, I didn't find this easy. I floundered around for an entry at first, not knowing which 4-letter veggie was rich in Vitamin K (okra?) and having the same thoughts about BAS and UNO as Rex.
ReplyDeleteAlways worrying when LSD gets you into a puzzle.
Other than that, only E_M_ enticing me into throwing in EsMe (for all I know, she's a great friend to Telly, Zoe and ELMO) really caused a holdup but still, it took me longer than Wednesday average.
Matthew Sweet's UGLY TRUTHs is not an AUTO TUNE but the video would have you believe it is.
Thanks Drew, nice catch on the theme answer!
@Gary Jugert 1:06, thank you. Boy, I could use my own personal autotune implant. I love to sing but can't carry a tune.
ReplyDelete@Joe Dipinto - one man's meat is another man's poison. For me, the helpful part of the Janis Joplin clue was the 'anti-consumerism message'; the fact that it was her last recording was the extraneous and unhelpful detail. I completely agree with you about LOW RIDER, though,
ReplyDeleteToday on TMC you can watch American Graffiti, Inside Llewan Davis, and Tiny Alice. So yeah, it’s for cinephiles by any definition I know.
ReplyDeleteAnother neat theme might be general features or parts of cars. Low Rider would fit with that. Also Beth Orton's Stolen Car. I've always loved Driver's Seat by Sniff n the Tears; while test driving my first car that song came on and I knew it was fate.
ReplyDelete[Spelling Bee: yd 0, my last word was 43 across.]
I'm having fits with this puz, can't believe it's graded "easy" - but haven't read Rex or commentariat as I'm still working on Northeast and Midwest. Much too much pop content for me.
ReplyDeleteBut on the other hand, QB for me today; I couldn't believe the last 4-letter thing I typed in desperation was a real word. Celebration!
@WindBonnet 10:28 Have not seen a response to your ? Not quite sure what the ? was. but if you've put colored ink in your printer you must have seen cyan on a label.
ReplyDeleteI'm with (forget who) earlier commenter who said he wouldn't recognize the songs if they were played in his living room.
And Nancy "Like I really cared about...
But don't agree with her "awful" I just cheated for the song titles and enjoyed the rest of the puzzle.
Also got a smile from Lewis's riding ofd ames in so many other answers, tho I did not enjoy the clue itself.
I agree with Rex that ALES is a weird answer for XXX in comics. XXX is found on a jug of something.
ReplyDeleteI do not agree with Rex that FAST CAR is odd here. There is some inconsistency in theme, but if anything, the one that sticks out is MUSTANG SALLY, which is about the person who owns the Mustang, not about the car itself.
@Eniale (1:25 PM)
ReplyDelete🎉 for your QB! 🐝
____
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
@jberg - No problem. Further, they actually do train and race in hobbles. They are there not to learn to pace, but to make it difficult for the horse to break into a gallop, which would disqualify them in a race. The poor horse is constantly being urged to go faster and faster, but it risks being dog food if it does the natural thing and break into a gallop to go faster.
ReplyDeleteToday's puzzle was notably missing Rocket 88
@edfromHackensack - Here in Washington State Wikipedia tells us The Hanford Site is a decommissioned nuclear production complex operated by the United ... The site is bordered on the southeast by the Tri-Cities.
ReplyDelete( Richland, Pasco and Kennewick would like not to be remembered solely for the role played by the mid-Columbia basin in the development of the atom bomb.)
SRSLY not easy. First of all, I cannot stand acronym speak or whatever the garbage is that makes me skip text messages and then requires me to wait until the (and I use the term very loosely) “writer” asks, “Did you get my text?” I reply, “It came in garbled, a bunch of meaningless letters.” I swear I am planting my flag on the hill of clear, cogent written communication, which includes fully spelled words. I loathe including such drivel in this puzzle. Go ahead and call me old. I am, and proud of it. And we shall see whether I die first upon said hill or my next door hill of I refuse to do Facebook. Yep, I may be an old witch, but I have a key chain crafted for me by my daughter in honor of a (as Rumpole of the Bailey would say) “famous victory” (that came after over a month of trial and three appeals that were finally upheld by the 10th Circuit en banc) that says “You are a BADASS.” I’ll take it all day long.
ReplyDeleteOther than the above, I thiroughly enjoyed this one. I’ll be singing Janis all day long and that’s not a bad thing.
@Lewis spells out all the goodness. I concur. A crunchier than usual Wednesday that took me for a ride. Loved it.
That was a truly impressive legal accomplishment!
DeleteFor those who don't know, a month long trial in Federal Court is a major event. And in her case, the losers appealed to the Federal appellate court system, then appelead again to the next level ("en banc" it has come up in the NYT crosswords!) just below the US Supreme Court.
I will stand firm in my conviction that TMC is a bad (and borderline incorrect) clue, but not exactly for the reason that Rex mentions.
ReplyDeleteNowhere in The Movie Channel's current branding do they go by "TMC". Googling "TMC" has no links to "The Movie Channel" in the first five pages of results, and on page 2 sends you to a Wikipedia article for a DIFFERENT TV NETWORK (see below)
According to Wikipedia (which, by the way, the page for TMC (TV Channel) links you to the French network Tele Monte-Carlo) The Movie Channel briefly went by TMC from 2001 to 2006. The rest of their history from 1979 to 2001, and since, from 2006 to present, the name of the channel has been and is "The Movie Channel", not TMC.
All of that, combined with the fact that there are two similarly acronymed, movie-focused channels, AMC and TCM, the latter of which most definitely fits the clue of a "Cable option for cinefiles", makes "TMC" misleading at best and flat incorrect at worst.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteIt might take some finagling to get it to work as a themer but Johnny Cash had an AUTO TUNE about his unique Psycho-Billy Cadillac called One Piece At A Time.
ReplyDelete@CDilly52 2:07. “I swear I am planting my flag on the hill of clear, cogent communication, which includes fully spelled words.”
ReplyDeleteIt does not, apparently, include correctly spelled words, as you go on to say, “…I thiroughly enjoyed this one.”
I think CDilly said in the past she does have eye sight issues, hence her mistakes.
DeleteI find it much harder to write a message accurately to this blog via my phone than a regular text.
I tend to make many more mistakes that I don't catch.
I don't react as much as she did above but I mostly avoid these abbreviations myself and I do find many of them confusing. I do use BTW and FWIW for what it's worth!
Texting, tweeting etc. are changing the language and maybe the (retired) lawyer in me makes me tend to agree with her, a retired lawyer, that the change is not good. Clarity of language is such a big thing in law. I don't think she intended to be holier than thou.
Apologies for spelling. I do have eyesight problems and rarely catch all the typos. Alas, I no longer have an assistant who made certIn nothing went out with misspelled words. But I do try because I care about spelling.
DeleteSorry to have offended. But along with opinions expressed herein, I care equally about the wonderful examples of tolerance of feee speech and exchange of ideas exhibited here daily.
I don't have anything to say about the puzzle, but came here to mention a coincidence that happened after solving it...
ReplyDeleteImmediately after finishing this puzzle, I pulled up another, random puzzle from the archives to solve (8/28/10 if you're curious). That grid had MCJOB located in the exact same position as today's puzzle -- running down right in the SW corner. It sort of creeped me out.
Easy? I guess that isn’t a joke. I didn’t know any of those songs . . Worst Wednesday for me—ever. I like Janis Joplin. I did remember that she never. knew that Me and Bobby McGee was a hit.
ReplyDeleteAutotune is the worst
ReplyDelete@okanaganer 1:20 Driver's Seat is one of the great unappreciated songs. A song that demands to be played at max volume whenever I (rarely) hear it.
ReplyDeleteLoved this theme! A big smile spread across my face when it was revealed. Clever yet straightforward, and delightful.
ReplyDeleteSince the moderator has chosen to apparently not print my last three postings, I'm not holding my breath, but here goes:
ReplyDeleteTwo sweet puzzles in a row. Great themes.
I think today's might have been tougher for a younger generation who might never have heard of Janis Joplin, but if this is the gateway puzzle to get them to explore her music, that's a good thing!
"First of all, I cannot stand acronym speak or whatever the garbage is that makes me skip text messages and then requires me to wait until the (and I use the term very loosely) 'writer' asks, 'Did you get my text?' I reply, 'It came in garbled, a bunch of meaningless letters.'"
ReplyDeleteOh, come on now. We're not in English class. We can skip the red-pen histrionics. Good communicators know when and how to shift gears.
"Texting, tweeting etc. are changing the language and maybe the (retired) lawyer in me makes me tend to agree with her, a retired lawyer, that the change is not good."
Calling it a change in language is a mischaracterization. I'd say it's more like a new branch or an adaptation. The difference is, you can get through life generally without knowing legalese, but textspeak is a lot more common and thus, I'd say, a lot more important to be relatively on top of.
I think Rex's TCM argument is fairly easily punctured, but I get it.
I read "¡Uno más!" like "Another round!" Made sense that way. On that note, agreed that XXX would go on a bottle of something a lot stronger than ALE.
The Nineties is a great book. I usually find Klosterman a little insufferable but also kind of can't stop checking him out whenever something new of his pops up. Point for him there, I guess. In this particular instance, however, I felt his style worked very well with the subject matter. It's an easy weekend read. I recommend it.
I'm pretty new to this joint but so far it's been fairly beguiling to see what stumps folks. Personally, I got three of four of the songs without any crosses (only MUSTANG SALLY took a minute). ELMO was also easy—Telly was in my Sesame Street–watching days, but even though Zoe was a little after my time, I'm aware of her from where her behavior drives Elmo up a wall. Then again, I sense I'm a wee babe compared to most of this site's demo (turned 38 last week).
Final note: Khruangbin are awesome.
Whoops, I thought I could be a fancy boy and try HTML for the first time in eons, and instead it ate my link. What I meant is, I'm aware of Zoe from *certain viral clips* where her behavior drives Elmo up a wall. Like this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLoAPA_wYn4
ReplyDeleteSome of still prefer complete sentences.
DeleteFMU!!
ReplyDelete@dgd replying to mine 2/42 PM. You are way to kind. Thanks.
ReplyDelete@Lewis
ReplyDeleteMAZEL TOV on tomorrow's NYT's puzzle! It's great.
At least that channel for cinemaphiles was not answered by AMC!
ReplyDeleteWhich would be as bad as the still happening answer of CNET as a computer information site. I'm a systems programmer, and I haven't checked CNET in years.
BTW: Regarding TAPES:
ReplyDeleteYeah, useless these days, but think back to the days of Richard Nixon and Rosemary Woods and some of the SNL skits ever.
Not ENAMORED with it but it’s fine.
ReplyDeletePS - AUTOTUNE music makes me AUTOTUNE out.
ReplyDeleteOh, those were some GREAT songs! I love these trips back INTO my youth. Some other ones: 409, Beep Beep, No Particular Place To Go.
ReplyDeleteBonus oldie: BEATIT. By golly, we snuck in a pangram right under OFF's nose! That must mean the big count letters were smoothly integrated INTO the grid--and they were. The Q in the SE corner made me look back.
Well done and fun to solve, if easy. A boffo DOD in Lady GAGA. What else do you want? Birdie.
To those who said "CYAN?": It's the shade of blue that cyanide exhibits, hence the name.
Wordle six, a "Phew!" Too many _A_ER combos.
Messed up my game in the NE corner - hate it when I do that.
ReplyDeleteOtherwise, fairly straightforward and fine.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
ENAMOR AMIGA
ReplyDeleteMUSTANGSALLY likes a FASTCAR,
a BADASS AUTO right ASIDE her,
IT will ENTICE her UP TO so far,
the TRUTH is, I TRI TO RIDER.
--- LEON DEAN
Yesterday's got tossed out several times.
ReplyDeleteEGOS ENTAIL ASSENT
PRETTYPENNY IS FAR from OKAY,
A COY SUPERGIRL IN A way,
OR LOGICAL depending
on A KEY happy ENDING
while ROCKIN' after asked, "LET'SPLAY?"
--- LUI "DINO" TERRINE-GATEAU