Folded in French / FRI 10-21-22 / Sclera neighbor / Company that acquired Skype in 2005 / Weaselly animal / Unadon ingredient / Ties for vaqueros

Friday, October 21, 2022

Constructor: Rafael Musa

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: BOTTLE GREEN (5D: Dark hue named after a type of glassware) —

Bottle green is a dark shade of green, similar to pine green. It is a representation of the color of green glass bottles.

Green bottles on a windowsill

The first recorded use of bottle green as a color name in English was in 1816.

Bottle green is a color in Prismacolor marker and pencil sets. It is also the color of the uniform of the Police Service of Northern Ireland replacing the Royal Ulster Constabulary's "rifle green" colored uniforms in 2001. It is also the green used in uniforms for South Sydney High School in Sydney.

Bottle green is also the color most associated with guide signs and street name signs in the United States.

Bottle green is also the background color of the Flag of Bangladesh, as defined by the government of Bangladesh. Another name for this color is Bangladesh green. (wikipedia)

• • •


Wow I just learned an awful weird lot about BOTTLE GREEN there. One of the perks of writing the blog is falling into wikipedia holes, which, as I write it, doesn't sound like a perk at all, but they can be fun while they last. Most things I learn in such holes on one day I forget by the next day, but I still like learning things and then knowing them for a time; then I can forget them and (maybe) learn them all over again someday. Bangladesh green! Gonna stick with BOTTLE GREEN, but I like knowing its other name. What might stick is the fact that BOTTLE GREEN is the name of the green on U.S. highway / street / road signs. That is a ubiquitous green the exact name of which I never really considered. I'm starting here because, well, it's the Word of the Day, which sort of spilled over into the beginning of my write-up, and because I just really like the term. And the color! And the idea of a color named for bottles that were that color. I enjoy things that come in such bottles. Mainly wine, but I feel like (mostly in my childhood) glass soda bottles were sometimes that color. All your citrusy ones like 7-Up and Sprite, but even Coke bottles were sometimes green. Almost all soda bottles are plastic now. Safer (can't break a plastic bottle over anyone's head, probably), but duller too. Thank you for allowing me to ruminate haphazardly about green bottles and BOTTLE GREEN.

["... and sometimes there'll be sorrow"]

This one started out SO-SO (literally and figuratively), but then PLAY IT COOL made things interesting, and then whoosh "IT CAN'T HURT" and whoosh BOTTLE GREEN sent me flying into the middle of the grid and goodbye SO-SO, hello fun. Did the puzzle dupe *and* cross the two-letter word "IT" there? Yes. Do I care? Not really. If you'd crossed "IT" at "DO IT" and "IT'S BAD," I would've wondered aloud what the hell you were doing, but in two gorgeous marquee answers like this, those "IT"s become small and fade into the background. Speaking of "IT," I got all turned around for a bit at 51A: Where it's at (VENUE) because ... well, it seemed like it could be anything, and also I've been doing so many cryptic crosswords that I thought maybe the puzzle was asking me where "it"aly was "at," so I briefly tried to think of how to make some abbr. for EUROPE or MEDITERRANEAN fit. And then ITALY actually showed up in the grid! (42D: Where the piano was invented). Crosswords are full of chance encounters and weird opportunities to get lost down various thought byways. But I didn't get truly lost very much today. Once I came whooshing out of the NW, it didn't take long for that center stack to come into view. Once I changed OOZY (ick) to OILY (still kinda ick) (30D: Sebaceous), things settled into place. I love love love "HANG ON A SECOND" over "WAIT RIGHT HERE!" because they sound like things that might be said in immediate succession by someone who has a surprise for you! Like maybe he goes into the next room and comes back to show you numbers that indicate that you WIN THE LOTTERY! (The clue on WIN THE LOTTERY is clever (34A: Make dough from scratch?), though when I think of winning the lottery, I'm thinking the big prize, a lotto drawing, and scratch-off tickets aren't usually involved, I don't think).


The NE was the toughest section for me. Until I got the "F" in FACADE, I couldn't see it, and I also couldn't work my way up into that section from the bottoms of the long Downs (i.e. from the -ORY of ADULATORY or the -NE of "WE'RE DONE!" (another good colloquial phrase). I thought about TON at 28A: Load but couldn't commit to it for a while. But once I finally put together FAST-TRACKED, that "F" got me FACADE and that was enough to start that whole section toppling. Finished up in the WINE CAVE. That CAVE part did not go in nearly as fast as the WINE part. I was thinking of wine storage in one's home or a restaurant, so when "cellar" didn't fit, I was out of ideas. But WINE CAVEs (usu. not actual caves, but just vast underground areas) are a common place for winemakers to store / age wine, apparently).

A few more things:
  • 1A: Company that acquired Skype in 2005 (EBAY) — not really paying attention to the year in the clue, I wrote in ZOOM
  • 39D: They parallel radiuses (ULNAS) — one of two places where I was like "please be the English -s plural, please be the English -s plural," and it was (the other place was CONCERTOS). I like that "radiuses" sort of tells you "don't worry, the answer's gonna be in the normal, non-Latin plural."
  • 20A: "The other one!" ("NO, NOT THAT!") — More conversational goodness. I had "NO NO-" and was happy the answer wasn't, "NO, NO, IDIOT!"
  • 48A: It's shortest at the Equator (DAWN) — you know what's remarkable—truly remarkable—about this grid? There's not one bit of pop culture in it. From Any Era. Oops, sorry, the puzzle does reference the NAE NAE there at 13D: When repeated, a 2010s dance move. Still, the almost total lack of proper nouns is noticeable ... once you look for it. But if you're not looking, all you feel is a delightful and entertaining and accessible puzzle. The grid is smooth, the fill is fresh, and all are welcome. It's kinda nice. I don't think pop culture is bad, by any means; it's just interesting to see that you don't *need* it to make a puzzle feel current. (oh, and I said all this in relation to DAWN because that's a good example of an answer that could've been a name but wasn't)
See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. wait, is this Rafa's NYTXW debut!? (checks Twitter) Wow, it is! He's constructed for other VENUEs, so he's not new to this ... and it shows. Big congratulations to him.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

82 comments:

Conrad 6:24 AM  


Like @Rex considered TON for the "Load" at 28A, dismissed it and then reverted when crosses forced it. My own personal kealoa: Bhat or BAHT. Unlike a real kealoa, only one is correct. Also halo before aurA before IDEA for the "head light" at 16A. Smooth, enjoyable Friday.


Anonymous 6:25 AM  

Really enjoyed this one. The long phrases were all perfectly colloquial and unforced, and the lack of pop culture based clues/proper nouns made it feel less like a trivia night than a lot of recent NYTXW puzzles. Cheers to the constructor, can’t wait to see more of him!

Anonymous 6:49 AM  

Great puzzle

Phillyrad1999 7:26 AM  

A lot to like in this puzzle - BOITTLEGREEN, CONCERTOS, ADULATORY but especially enjoyed the positioning of WAITRIGHTTHERE and HANGONASECOND!. Not much trouble with this one. Dawdled a little in the south east. I badly wanted DRUINKDIALS to be BUTTDIALS (maybe subliminally influenced by ASSES) but once it didn’t fit it took me a while to reset. Only minor gripe is BAREHEADED. A little forced, not a thing.

Mike in Bed-Stuy 7:36 AM  

This was my fastest Friday ever, and I could feel myself flying through it; so it's encouraging that @Rex rates it easy-medium rather than just easy. The relatively low level of Gen Z pop culture might have had something to do with that. Also minimal sports references. But I would not agree with @Rex that there is "no pop culture" other than NAE. Maybe he and I have different definitions of pop culture, but there was ESPNU, EBAY, BAE, DRUNK DIALS. But I have no objection. I very much enjoyed (flying through) this puzzle.

David 7:42 AM  

Grew up in Northern Jersey. Syracuse University is my alma mater. Boy, do I recognize that sign! Let’s Go Orange 🍊!

Son Volt 7:52 AM  

After a bunch of cute puzzles this week - we get the real deal today. At first glance - thought the grid to be a little funky with the big Tetris blocks on either side - but the fill and cluing made this super smooth to work. Saw the same deeper level connection with HANG ON A SECOND and WAIT RIGHT THERE as Rex - a fantastic central stack.

ADULATORY is wonderful as is FAST TRACKED, IT CANT HURT etc - the overall fill is nearly ideal. We do get the unfortunate UEY, BAE and a few other shorts that stick out but I’ll deal with them.

I think DRUNK DIALS can be a subset of butt or ASSES dialing.

The LILAC Time

Enjoyable Friday solve.

Lewis 7:57 AM  

Standing O. First NYT puzzle, and it radiates with the sheen of seasoned pros – Make-me-smile conversational clips à la Weintraub, cut-above cluing like we get from Agard, and technical polish evocative of Chen. All in one box.

I don’t know what you’re doing in your life, Rafael, but please continue to make crossword constructing part of it!

The puzzle’s sheen is buttressed by sparks – UEY abutting RETURN, lovely one-word answers such as ADULATORY, ENNUI, FAÇADE, LILAC, even BASTE. I liked seeing END on the last row, and then there are the lovely clues for IDEA, FAÇADE, DRUNK DIALED, and the world class [Make dough from scratch?] for WIN THE LOTTERY.

It’s always exciting to see the work of a new NYT constructor, and especially so when it shows such potential. You gave me a fun and satisfying outing today, Rafael, and you got me hungry for more from you. Congratulations on your debut, and thank you for this!

NYDenizen 8:00 AM  

Wordle 489 X/6*

⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

mathgent 8:04 AM  

I learned the meaning of DAWN. I thought that it was the same as "sunrise." But "sunrise" is a moment and DAWN must be a period of time if it is shortest at the equator. DAWN begins when light first appears on the horizon and ends at sunrise.

Joe R. 8:08 AM  

I had WAITONESECOND at 29A, so when WAITRIGHTHERE showed up just below it, I knew something had to be wrong, but it took me a while to figure out which. HANDTOWEL finally saved me. Other than that, I had very few hiccups in this one.

bocamp 8:09 AM  

Thx, Rafael; COOL Fri. puz! :)

Med.

Pretty much on the RIGHT wavelength most of the way.

Stop before WAIT; woN'T before CAN'T; ULNAe before ULNAS.

New: WINE CAVE; BOTTLE GREEN.

Getting close to remembering ANCHO.

DUG this one; a pleasant trip! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

Diane Joan 8:17 AM  

Thank you Rafael for a puzzle in my wheelhouse! I usually struggle with restating quoted clues but these were music to my ears. It is a great start to the weekend! Have a great one crossword bloggers!

mmorgan 8:19 AM  

Liked this a lot, great NYT debut, more medium than easy-medium for me. Several parts gave me (long) pause, but no major roadblocks. I’m really not sure how I knew STOAT, and even got it just off the O. Too many crosswords, I guess. Anyway, delightful, fresh puzzle, totally deserving Rex’s kudos.

Anonymous 8:26 AM  

Amy: Rafael Musa. I will remember that name because now I know it will spark joy when attached to a puzzle. Yes, love Rex's description of the Friday Feeling. Definitely got that this morning.

pabloinnh 8:41 AM  

Great Friday, not crunchy but definitely chewy.

A minor slow down when my phrase started ITCOULDNT instead of ICANT, but I fixed that quickly enough. The NE was a brief struggle, as I had the brilliant HALO for "head light", which, sadly, didn't work. Also had a word ending in C from FACADE and couldn't think of any colors ending in C for the longest time, until LILAC appeared, which made me wonder if this was maybe my first crossword.

Hola vaqueros! Today's fun fact-"vaquero" got mangled enough to become "buckaroo" in English. See also "hoosegow", from "juzgado".

Super fun Friday, RM. Congrats on the NYT debut. You Really Made my morning, and thanks for all the fun.

Anonymous 8:51 AM  

Terrific puzzle. Kind of a perfect Friday, and really appreciated both the lack of pop culture clues and the lack of deliberately obscure/"Gonna trip you up" clues. Fun and satisfying.

On first pass, I typed in ASANA for 24A, realized it was too short, started on the downs and found it in 3D.

Favorite clues were for BAE, WIN THE LOTTERY, and DRUNK DIALS.

Smith 8:59 AM  

Really fun, also a new PR for Friday (and fastest time of the week so far). Not sure why but all the long answers popped right in. ULNAe before ULNAS, hesitated at TON. Had ITCA and wrote in NTHURT before looking at the clue, which I think speaks to how in the language these phrases are. BAREHEADED sounds odd these days but it certainly would have been a noticeable category before Kennedy ditched the toppers.

Thanks for a fun Friday, Rafael, and hoping for many more!

Photomatte 8:59 AM  

Wow, what a great puzzle. Very little crosswordese and lots of fun. I was in eastern Thailand awhile back and came across an entire building made out of green bottles. The floors were bottle caps, all glue together like bathroom tile. It was amazing.

Smith 9:04 AM  

@Pablo 8:41

Didn't know that re vaquero & juzgado, thanks! Never know what you'll learn here.

Reminds me that I didn't fill in BOLO immediately because my brain was saying, "bolero???" 😄

sixtyni yogini 9:05 AM  

Liked PLAYITCOOL balanced with DRUNKDIAL.
(QInteresting about bottle green.)
‘twas fast and fun.
🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤗

John Face 9:11 AM  

Like others, I really enjoyed this one. My only hiccup was adulatory. I had adoratory, which is a word, apparently. They are sorta related, maybe, haha. Anyway, I knew it was wrong because then bare made no sense for bale, and crossed with bareheaded, but I just couldn’t see it for a while. Lore sorta made sense instead of lure, so it took me a long time to figure that out. Eventually bale came to me and tada.

Good times had by all.

Wright-Young 9:20 AM  

Loved the long ones…

Really wanted HOT SPOT for “WHERE IT’S AT” & BEHEADED for “UNCAPPED?” even though they didn’t fit.

Too bad I didn’t enjoy as much as I should’ve b/c I was in a little snit about what I thought would be a double natick at USA, not being an ESPN watcher, but once I popped in the ending “A” I thought was correct for ASANA, the “U” became clear.

Nice puzzle!

Bob Mills 9:25 AM  

Good puzzle. I was gratified to finish it. But...why is BAE the answer to BOO?

thfenn 9:26 AM  

Loved it, for all the reasons already noted. Medium for me, but then I'm still a ways away from getting to call a Friday easy. Going with fOal and Dusk before COLT and DAWN held me up in the SE. I wanted HANGONAminute, and for the life of me couldn't switch in my head from THERE to HERE and kept trying to play with WAITRIGHT. But this was everything I could hope for in a Friday, fun, challenging, and a pleasure to solve.

RooMonster 9:35 AM  

Hey All !
Got stuck everywhere for a while, a smattering of words hither and yon, then it seemed like the floodgates of a dictionary opened up, and answers started to flood in like a broken dam, and whoosh! I was done. Strange how that happens. You get one word (finally), that unlocks the cross that seemed impossible, which unlocks the next cross, and Bam. Done. My time says 24 minutes. At 15, I was panicking.

Center Longs had a few writeovers. Had waitONeSECOND, while already having WAITRIGHTHERE, then thinking the next one would start with WAIT, kind of a mini-FriPuz-theme type thing. Also had hitTHELOTTERY.

Funny clue for DRUNK DIALS. With the 10A clue, ___bowling, at first thought DUCKPIN, thinking maybe DUCK would be a surprise Rebus. Then wrote in opeN. aurA for IDEA. Uie-UEY.

Nice puz. Glad the ole brain decided to kick in. Off to do Wordle and more SB. Lots of words today, that SB.

WE'RE DONE. Har.

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

KateA 9:43 AM  

Had trouble with UVEA and ULNAS but loved the lottery answer.

Anonymous 9:52 AM  

Hands up if you learned BOTTLE GREEN from “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.” (It was the color of Willy Wonka’s trousers.)

Anonymous 9:57 AM  

Hi all, really reveled in the lack of pop culture references, as did others. Smooth and easy except for my choosing idolatory (a real but far less common religious term) for adulatory. Pretty rare kealoa there!

GILL I. 10:17 AM  

Nary a strange name to be found. Oh, Wait..who is CERN? I suspect he's a collider with Hadron?
A delightful puzzle with 3 little snafus:
Carve...>BASTE
Adulating...>ADULATORY
Bald...>BARE
But who cares? Everything was fixable. I REDID my errors and smiled from EBAY to EYES.
I do wonder, though...how is a Manhattan purveyor a BAR? I wanted a bit of RYE.
Fridays like this fancy my tickle. I get excited when I don't strain to death. Today, I will TOOT my horn and pat myself in my UVEA. IT CANT HURT...can it?

ad this run on Monday, I would've had a field day with all these wonderful word. Alas...we shall see.

Whatsername 10:32 AM  


WAIT RIGHT THERE. This is a debut?? Holy BOLOS! Wow! I am dazzled, absolutely dazzled by this fantastic CONCERTO I got to PLAY on my Friday morning . . . then was gobsmacked to see it was this constructor’s NYT intro. And not just a debut either, but a rare Friday one, plus Puzzle Of the Week from Jeff Chen and a rave review from Rex Parker. I’d call that the equivalent of an EGOT in cruciverbalist terms. I thank you, Rafael and can’t wait to see the result of your next IDEA.

Some of these clues belong in the Crossword Hall of Fame: Boo/BAE, dough from scratch/WIN THE LOTTERY, buzzed buzzing/DRUNK DIALED. But I think the very best part was the lack of pop culture or slang and a minimum of trivia - all from a young new constructor. See THAT? It really can be done.

Beezer 10:40 AM  

Nifty puzzle that I finished with NO cheats although when I filled in the last square I didn’t get the congratulations. Sigh. Luckily I finally found that my ONeSECOND needed to be ONASECOND…a vestige left from initial waitONeSECOND. I’m glad I wasn’t alone.
While the puzzle was low in pop culture, I agree with Mike in Bed-Stuy that @Rex exaggerated a tad on that point.

LAWN bowling!? Okay, totally legit. It exists. Have any commenters on this blog actually lawn bowled or seen it done? @Nancy, I DID see there is a “league” in Central Park. Apparently the Central lawn bowling association includes one PLACE in each of these states: Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, South Dakota (!), and Wisconsin. I live in a large city and would have to travel 3 hours to lawn bowl. Like @Roo, I initially thought of duckpin bowling and had to remind myself there would be no rebuses on a Friday. Am I griping? Nah, the crosses were fair and it gave me the opportunity to see that some people still participate in what seems like a Great Gatsby pastime.

Nancy 10:41 AM  

Consistently interesting, with a lot of nice long colloquial phrases that were clued fairly, as well as some cute clues for WIN THE LOTTERY, DRUNK DIALS, BAREHEADED and FACADE.

But what would HAND TO--- be at 29D? I needed crosses and that's because for so many years there were HAND TOWELS in public bathrooms: admittedly not made of the soft, cozy terry cloth you have in your own home, but paper ones that did the trick perfectly adequately.

Then they took the paper towels away and put in those ear-blasting noise machines that don't dry your hands at all -- they leave them chapped, in fact -- but exist simply to rupture your eardrums.

Do you know how I know that the ETs visiting Earth from all those galaxies far, far away are superior to us in every way? They have built flying machines capable of travelling across lightyears of distance and yet these machines do not make any noise at all.

(Rant over.)

Anonymous 10:41 AM  

Too easy for a Friday. Otherwise a fine puzzle.

KateA 10:44 AM  

@Bob MIlls: In New Orleans, a boo can mean a sweetie pie or close friend. And I think that BAE can mean the same thing though it’s not in use around here.

Tom T 10:52 AM  

Really fun puzzle. And quick, for me--just under 22 minutes, about two and a half minutes off my PR. I spent more than that 150 SECONDs pondering the SE corner. Didn't want to see "hot flash," but it was all I could see, leaving me to marvel at the possibility that the piano was invented in Haiti! :-) Also wanted hareS instead of ASSES.

Like Rex, FACADE took a moment, because I had WE'RE gONE before WEREDONE (12D).

Hand up for cArvE before BASTE, probably because carving is my primary duty each Thanksgiving.

Gary Jugert 10:57 AM  

Happy Friday everyone. Easiest puzzle of the week oddly, but as 🦖 points out, it's mainly due to the absence of starlets and Asian baking ingredients. BAE for BOO is classic. DRUNK DIALS was cute.

ASSES took a day off so I thought maybe the editorial team had grown up, but nope.

I've never thought of a facade as a posture.

Uniclues:

1 Let's put everything on the top shelf to help strengthen our calves.
2 A pretty girl.
3 Neigh neigh neigh neigh neigh.
4 Less precious buzzing while buzzing.
5 Sushi on the little boat on the mini lazy river.
6 Prevaricator ends relationship ironically.

1 SO SO ON TOE IDEA
2 PLAY IT COOL LURE
3 COLT CONCERTOS
4 DAWN DRUNK DIALS
5 EEL FAST TRACKED
6 WE'RE DONE, NO LIE

Joseph Michael 10:58 AM  

This is everything a Friday should be. Challenging and satisfying with a minimum of trivia and crosswordese. Congrats to Rafael Musa on a terrific debut that has left me feeling ADULATORY and wanting more. You’ve accomplished what few other constructors can do. You made me agree with Rex.

Pete 11:05 AM  

Very nice puzzle, but I hated HANAGONASECOND, because I had ____ON_SECOND, immediately threw in WAITONESECOND and spent well over that nominal second wondering what the hell was going on in the lower left quadrant.

LAWNBOWLING = curling = bocce ball = all games, just some random pecker-measuring of "I can do this better than you can".

Jess Wundrin' 11:07 AM  

Is "BOTTLEGREENPAINT" now officially not "green paint"?

Diego 11:22 AM  

Exceptional work—and a debut.
Loved that it was virtually junk-free. How often does that occur? Look forward to more from RM.
Bravissimo!!!

CT2Napa 11:23 AM  


Am I the only one who went with "bottle brown". Put it in, verified it on google, and found that crosses didn't work.

Joseph Michael 11:23 AM  

@Nancy, you can add leaf blowers to that rant. I had two of them outside my window while I was solving this.

egsforbreakfast 11:27 AM  

I tend to fall down after too much Bordeaux, so when we’re going out to a social event, the wife always warns me sternly not to WINECAVE. OTOH, I once DRUNKDIALSoap. Don’t recommend it.

Madonna co-wrote a 2011 movie called W.E. If someone does a remake, it’ll be WEREDONE. Which brings me to the near dupe of WEREDONE and REDID.

I don’t remember if anyone has mentioned this, but coming up with a really good way of cluing AND at 35A (“So what?”) seemed awfully clever. But wait, this is the 4th time for that clue, appearing first in a Jacob Stulberg puzzle on 12/15/16. I don’t know why it seemed so fresh to me today.

I’m not usually one to recite my redos, but confidently writing in India with only the I in place for “Where the piano was invented” seems comically stupid.

I’m with almost everyone else that this was a great puzzle. Being a debut makes it greater. Congrats, Rafael Musa.





Pete 11:34 AM  

Oh, forgot. Our new puppy is named Beaux, but I call her Boo. I worried about that for a while, what with the cultural implications, but ultimately decided she was just innately a Boo, but not a BAE. She also used to be a stealth ninja dog, as she's totally silent and sneaks up on you, but not these days, as she's wearing the collar of shame and is totally clumsy and dejected.

jae 11:39 AM  

Easy. ADULATing before ADULATORY and @Rex OozY before OILY were it for erasures. Solid and very smooth with plenty of sparkle, a well deserved POW. Liked it a bunch, @Rafa, a fine debut!

johnk 11:42 AM  

I grew up LAWN bowling. NO LIE.

jberg 11:51 AM  

Having read Rex and everyone here, I agree that this is a terrific puzzle. I would have felt that way while solving had I not made a serious error -- I misread the clue number for 3-D as 5-D, and confidently write in "yOga posture." Since it fit, I didn't bother to check it, but none of the crosses would work. By the time I worked that one through, I was too frustrated to appreciate the puzzle's beauties, which are considerable.

I do have two minor nits:

1. Did anyone else notice that both @phillyrad1999 and @Son Vollt quoted the answer to 33-A as WAIT RIGHT tHERE, rather than WAIT RIGHT HERE? That's because you're much more say the former, since you say it as you are moving away from the person whom you want to not move. Easy enough to figure out when you run out of space, but still.

2. I guess you can make a case that FACADE and posture mean the same thing, but it's a horrible mixing of metaphors. I resisted that one for many nanoseconds.

If I remember right, CERN stands for the European Center for Nuclear Research, only in French. They do a lot of atom smashing, which left them with a lot of hadrons on their hands, so they decided to smash them as well. That's how they found the Higgs boson.

Nancy 12:00 PM  

Leaf blowers are already factored in, @Joseph Michael. Along with wood chippers, weed whackers, electric lawnmowers, jackhammers, helicoptors, cement mixers and sirens.

Anonymous 12:11 PM  

Both are terms of endearment/a way to refer to a significant other.

Whatsername 12:21 PM  

@Phillyrad (7:26) BARE HEADED is definitely a thing in my world although as @Smith mentioned at 8:59, it may sound a little odd these days. But when winter rolls around I still recall the advice of my sweet Mom who, when temperatures dropped, would as often as not say “Don’t go out bare headed. You’ll catch a cold.” And she was usually right.

@Bob Mills (9:25) Boo is a term of endearment for a loved one and BAE means the loved one who comes Before Anyone Else - your significant other/partner.

@Joseph Michael (11:23) You can say that again about the blasted leaf blowers. We had a nice warm day yesterday and I was sitting outside enjoying the peaceful late afternoon when BOOM, my neighbor fired his up. Not just the noise but also the leaves flying everywhere and I was soon sneezing. Whatever happened to raking anyway?

Gary Jugert 12:24 PM  

@Nancy 10:41 AM
Hold on... Every space ship I've ever seen makes noise. Mostly they go pee-chow, some go ruuuuuumble-pchoing, others are zipzipzipzip-meooooow, the ones in Star Wars are oddly accompanied by the theme song bum-bum-bum-bum-ba-dum-bum-ba-dum. And the ETs all enjoy the sound of Doctor Seuss instuments playing in a 1910 ragtime fashion in a bar prior to the patrons blasting each other ka-blam or slicing them up swoozh-woozh. Ya gotta figure the bar staff will need to Hoover up the body parts afterward, but you never see that or the hand dryers in the bathroom of the USS Enterprise. The aliens themselves are forever beep-bopping and schklorking and scrawking. Let's remember all alien races also have quaint sardonic robots making all manner of racket. And since the main thing space people do is shoot at other space people, they appear to have developed fire that explodes without the use of oxygen making great kah-booms. In Earthling physics, a phaser attack pzz-owie or a photon torpedo gah-boosh would make the sound only long enough for the oxygen to leave the ship and then you'd spend the next four minutes dying silently and weightlessly. Maybe we're the quietest galaxy inhabitants with our Dyson hand dryers... AMC movies ironically proclaims those woosh machines are "helping save the planet." (They have a sign and everything, rather than saying, "We installed these stupid things because we aren't going to pay staff to clean this bathroom during the day.") I went to a movie last night for the first time in years and the volume was so loud I was positive I was trapped in an elderly hearing-impaired person's living room. So yeah, ba-zhoink to you.

Whatsername 12:25 PM  

@Nancy (12:00) YES! I don’t get many jackhammers or cement mixers in my neighborhood but those weed whackers and lawnmowers the size of tractors are relentless, especially on the weekends. As soon as one person gets done another one starts up.

Bauskern@nmh.org 12:29 PM  

A wonderful Friday, a bit on the easy side, but no complaints!

I do wonder whether BOO and BAE will stand the test of time. I don't know anyone who refers to their BAE, but that could just mean I'm too old. But I do wonder if those terms are still going to be around in ten years.

The only clue I quibbled with was BASTE. It made it sound like there was a person whose sole job was to BASTE the turkey every half hour or so. But that's all they were responsible for. No cleaning off the table. No dishwashing. Just basting. That's getting off pretty easy, IMHO.

Masked and Anonymous 1:06 PM  

Nope. Too perfect. Even had the Jaws of Themelessness and a lotta U's. Even @RP liked it. POW at xwordinfo.chen. Really hard to defend this debut effort.

staff weeject pick: BAE. Mostly becuz it decided to abandon all regular cluin, and just start gettin into the Halloween spirit, with its {Boo} clue. Like.

fave stuff: About every day-um thing. The fill really needs a PEWIT in it, to balance things out. As is, it sets the bar way too high.

Thanx, Mr. Musa dude. And congratz on this outstandin-from-outer-space debut. Do U normally Wordle in 1 or 2? Just askin.

Masked & Anonym007Us


[the runtpuz was too ashamed to show its face, today]

LenFuego 1:10 PM  

This was my fastest Friday ever in five years of online solving by 20 seconds. So, yeah, enjoyable puzzle, but felt like an easy Wednesday to me.

Teedmn 1:56 PM  

If you want to add a little bit of time to your solve, substitute OozY for OILY as "sebaceous" and let the fun begin.

WAIT RoG had my brain making connections to Roger Rabbit. Did _INTHEzO have something to do with a zoo and how does that tie in with dough, or are the monkeys "scratching"? None of these things did I take seriously but it was still hard to keep them out of my forebrain as I solved. Once I dove down to the SE and climbed back up, everything realigned nicely.

Rafael Musa, congrats on the debut and the POW and thanks for (what should have been) a breezy Friday solve.

dgd 2:06 PM  

I really don't understand the comment about "bare headed".(I noticed my phone completed the expression autocorrectly). It is a very common term. Very much a thing.

jazzmanchgo 2:21 PM  

"BOO," as discussed earlier, is a longstanding term of endearment (roughly equivalent to "sweetheart" or "honey") in the American South. (Soul-blues singer Stan Mosley had a hit with the song "Has Anybody Seen My Boo?" several years back.) I still hear it quite a bit in Chicago, where a lot of folks in the Black community have strong familial Southern roots.

"BAE"? I've heard "Bae-Bae" a few times over the years, but "BAE," never.

Eniale 2:34 PM  

I really enjoyed this puzzle -- finished it, not a given for a Friday. Especially the lack of pop culture trivia.

@Nancy et al, re the bathroom hand dryers: there was a Harvard study showing how they spread bacteria around the whole room:


"To test this theory, scientists exposed petri dishes to bathroom air under different conditions and took them back to the microbiology laboratory to look for bacterial growth. Petri dishes exposed to bathroom air for two minutes with the hand dryers off only grew one colony of bacteria, or none at all. However, petri dishes exposed to hot air from a bathroom hand dryer for 30 seconds grew up to 254 colonies of bacteria (though most had from 18 to 60 colonies of bacteria)."

J.W. 2:38 PM  

Man I vibed with this one big-time. I don't think I've ever solved a Friday in less than 10 minutes until today. Yet it was smooth as butter with minimal crosswordese/junk fill. It's not as much a balm to my soul to not see pop culture in a puzzle as it is to many here—crosswords to me are a good way to stay brushed up on many facets of life—but it is nice to see it done and still have a very satisfying puzzle. Rafael Musa is a name I'll be on the lookout for in the future.

MetroGnome 2:43 PM  

Natick'd on EBAY/ESPN (Brand name crossed w/ television trivia!); everything else went smoothly.

dgd 2:51 PM  

I read long ago that acronym based words are fairly unusually. Snafu is one of course.
Wikipedia ( I know it is not always accurate but it is right in this case) notes this fact when it refutes "before anyone else" or similar as the origin of the word.
It notes that people invent an acronym origin after the fact and it gets spread around and the mistake becomes accepted and cited as fact. It happens with many words. Etymologists are constantly refuting acronym based origins. Probably "bae" is just a shortening of"babe"'
Bae is a generational slang word and it may well not last.
Boo is NOT a recent slang word. It is regional, Southern, and has been around a long time. It is from beau, which many in the South pronounced as boo, which inevitablly led to the variant spelling. It might die out because many regionalisms are disappearing but it is not a flash in the pan.
One thing, I would never use "bae" other than in a crossword answer!

Carolita 2:54 PM  

Fantastic puzzle, Rafael, keep 'em comin'! Fun, fresh, and little to no PPP. Loved it!

MetroGnome 3:09 PM  

RE, Bathroom hand dryers: What bothers me most about them is that they're just that -- *HAND* dryers -- and unless they're equipped with a moveable nozzle (which many now are not), you can't dry your face if you've washed it.

Leaf blowers aren't just annoyingly noisy, they're the epitome of American selfishness: The leaves don't go away; they simply get blown onto someone else's yard. And, of course, they're a waste of fuel.

jazzmanchgo 3:12 PM  

RE: "BOO" --

If anyone's curious . . .

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVeyFVqCNeo

Masked and Anonymous 3:13 PM  

p.s.

Ahar!
Finally found *one* imperfectional thing! …

This now-near-perfect FriPuz has 6 primo ?-marker clues, but …
It did not have the required-for-absolute-perfection single double ??-marker clue. [Only one ??-marker should be allowed per puz, tho. CDC has put out OD-warnings on this.]

Usually the double-??-marker clue would be used for some obviously-desperate entry in the puz. But on rare occasions, this easy-to-revere cluemarker can also be used with entries such as:
* Alphabet runs, such as : UVW.
* Semi-questionable abbreve meat, such as: SMS [which is evidently some sorta texting system standard].
* French words seldom uttered in the States, such as: peu [runty in Rouen].
* Musical terminology that Frank Zappa would kinda snicker at, such as: piu [more, in scores].
* Raised-by-wolves slang words, such as: BAE. ( ooh, hey … bingo!)

OK, sooo ... a ready-made BAE clue, in this here puz, woulda been: {Boo??}. Just missed a golden opportunity, there. Can't believe the editors missed that. Take heed, @Shortzmeister.

Now, all is forgiven.

M&A Paragon of Vertigo Desk


themeless, imperfect, and ??-marker clue user:
**gruntz**

p.p.s.s.
"Peu-puz" does sound awful neat, tho...

Anonymous 3:51 PM  

It’s funny, I didn’t even think of “scratch” as being a scratch off lottery ticket… I thought of it as another slang term for money, like “dough.” So taking money and turning it into more money by buying a lottery ticket. I imagine your interpretation is more accurate, mine was just more generous.

Rick Sacra 5:17 PM  

Fantastic Debut, Rafael! We enjoyed it! 15 minutes for this father-and-son team. Loved CONCERTOS and NO,NOT THAT!. Also have lived at the equator, so knew very well that DAWN and dusk are much shorter there... but that one still took me a while. Great Puzzle!!! Thanks. -Rick

Anoa Bob 5:50 PM  

Yikes! Judging by the number of positive comments, I'm in the minority (of one?) on today's offering. I think a colloquial phrase or two can add a little spice to a puzzle but I think this one overdid it. There was a lot of grid real estate filled with what I think of as arbitrary conversational snippets. The overall effect is too casual or breezy for me. Low calorie fare, as it were.

Another demerit in my book was the need to boost the letter count of two long entries, CONCERTO and DRUNK DIAL by adding an S to each. Plural of convenience (POC) to the rescue. Dropping ASSES at 44 Down does the trick. Not only is ASSES a convenient plural itself, it is also part of a two for one POC where it shares a final S with 65A EYE. All that plus facilitating the two long Across POCs. That corner is POC gold.

Okay, I'll go over to the other corner and stand by myself.

Anonymous 6:16 PM  

Fun puzzle! I might quibble that WAIT RIGHT HERE thinks it's WAIT RIGHT THERE, and DRUNK DIAL is really trying to be DRUNK TEXT. In my world you BUTT DIAL - a good laugh for everyone - but the more frequent DRUNK TEXT can lead to those "morning after" issues DRUNK DIAL less successfully tries to commandier.

Like others I raised an eybrow at ...LOTTERY as lotteries aren't really "scratchies" the clue is getting at - they are usually some kind of numbers game.

And while I threw down BASTE I agree that "basting" is not enough of a TG "job" the clue phrasing needs for it to be totally successful.

But a good quick Friday.

egsforbreakfast 7:07 PM  

Does Plural of Convenience Store = Convenience Stores? Or would a Plural of Convenience be Conveniences? Perhaps we should have a Singular of Conveniences to denote Convenience? I feel like @Anoa has only scratched the surface in his ongoing exploration of the POC.

Aelurus 7:48 PM  

This cleverly and at times obfuscatingly clued puzzle was wonderful and though I thought I might not, I finished cleanly.

Musings:
PLAY IT COOL ~ got a beatnik beat in my head, fingers snapping, people singing in a movie...West Side Story! (the original)

If you
HANG ON A SECOND, and
WAIT RIGHT HERE, you could maybe
WIN THE LOTTERY (since you’re on line for it),
and anyway,
IT CAN’T HURT your chances

Don’t we all have this “world-weary” feeling these days? Don’t know if I’d call it ENNUI, though.

Couple of ”head light”s with lovely aha moments:
ULNAS (when I recollected the radial bones)
DRUNK DIALS (just guessed & learned)

Got right off the “B” (and better yet it turned out to be correct): BAREHEADED

Thank you, Rafael, for the great fun!

PS:
Had to post through LTE because Comcast has shut down services to my neighborhood all day in hopes they will be able “to enhance the Xfinity network” (what was that world-weary clue again?). So I pre-apologize for any reduplicative duplicate musings of those here and any dreadful typography if I can get mine to post.

PPS:
@Rex — Thanks for the bottle green rumination. Me too. I look up puzzle answers and most don’t last long but I think every time I look at a highway sign I’ll remember bottle green. Very cool term. Weren’t Coke bottles, when there were bottles, once a paler green hue?

CDilly52 7:51 PM  

Two good ones in a tow! Yesterday nearly flummoxed me. Finally at about 1 this morning - still staring at the ORGHINI and the reveal BLACK SHEEP. Literally as I was almost asleep, I sat bolt bolt upright, scared my sleeping cat who raced off the bed and out of the room and took two jet propelled Zoomie laps through the house while I knocked my glasses and my phone off the table trying to grab them finish the “ - “ clues. Yesterday’s was a Thursday masterpiece of construction and entertainment.

And the. Today, the fun continued. OK, today’s difficulty could have been more robust, but the smooth beauty with only one pop culture reference took me over the moon. And looking for an equatorially short but very bright DAWN.

And the clues were clever and original. Clues for IDEA, FACADE, and FAST TRACKED were tough! Like @Rex, I could not see FACADE without the F and with so much of FAST TRACKED depending on the middle colloquial stack, that was a hole in my solve until I was probably 70% done.

Clever and fun was the clue for BAREHEADED. It popped right away and made me smile. At 45A, it took me a while to choose the correct baby animal from among fOal, pOny and cOlt. Don’t know whether Rafa specifically saw how smokin’ clever it was to have three - count ‘em 3!!!! four letter answers, all possibly correct and ALL with O as the second letter. Just so impressive.

Of the long triple stack, WIN THE LOTTERY was my favorite. The other two certainly feel currently colloquial and are just fine. Liked them. But the LOTTERY clue had it all. Clever.

No complaints at all.

Anonymous 8:55 PM  

Great puzzle. I liked ‘poetry’ of BOTTLEGREEN, WINECAVE & DRUNKDIALS. Perfect while sipping my Friday evening cocktail.

Blog Goliard 11:06 PM  

So fresh and clean and lively…and clearly a lot of work went into this but it doesn’t creak from the effort like so many puzzles can.

Simply outstanding.

pavj 8:12 AM  

RE: 1A: Company that acquired Skype in 2005 (EBAY) — not really paying attention to the year in the clue, I wrote in ZOOM

BTW, Zoom never bought Skype in any year. Microsoft bought them most recently - and that folded into Teams.

Just in case we get more Skype references in the future!

kitshef 7:46 AM  

Well, I am a huge outlier today. I thought this was Awful. At one point, I read consecutively as clues "Hold up ...", "Don't move", "Might as well try", and "The other one". Almost quit right there.

thefogman 10:51 AM  

Nicely done! I love puzzles that are a bit tough but fair. And this one is a perfect example of a well-constructed and fairly-clued themeless. It’s rare that a debut puzzle is virtually flawless like this one is. Congratulations to Rafael Musa. I really DUG it.All I can say is: “More please!”.

spacecraft 12:34 PM  

Y'know, you can win a million dollars on a scratch-off. That a "big" enough "prize" for ya? Of course, we don't have those in Nevada; the casino lobby is too strong.

This one was daunting at the start; I was a while searching for a way in. Found it with ULNA...was it -E or -S? Soon enough determined. Why is it that I seem to start most of my late-week puzzles down south? I'm thinking that by that time, the constructor is tired of coming up with hard clues and just slips a gimme in there.

RAN the alphabet for _AR, word with horse or hero, and got all the way to W before it hit. This gave me WINTHELOTTERY--and yes, I'll be supremely satisfied with a mil--and on into the center. Wanted LIB for 31d, but wound up with NGO. That's a new one on me, and I just had to hope it was right. Non-Government Org. Makes sense, I simply never heard it before.

I'd say it was medium for a Friday; brain work was certainly involved. Couldn't make up my mind whether it was BEEP or HONK; it turned out to be TOOT. Glad I waited. NONOTTHAT was hard to parse, but again it made perfect sense. Hmm. Clues that make sense, even if not gimmes, several long entries that are square-on in-the-language, and no fill detritus. That all adds up to an eagle.

Wordle bogey.

Burma Shave 2:18 PM  

BARE BAIT (NAE NAE BAE BAE)

SO, WAITRIGHTHERE, AND PLAYITCOOL for me,
NO,NOTTHAT my dear, WE'll commit ADULATORY.

--- DAWN BALE

Diana, LIW 7:29 PM  

Began last evening, finished this morning. Not too bad for me.

and BTW, PLIE is a ballet move. rrrr

Diana, LIW

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