Metal next to tungsten on the periodic table / WED 12-21-22 / Country with second-most Portuguese speakers / Large-scale corporate union / Manhattan on an envelope / Ideal for audiophiles in brief
Constructor: Nancy Stark and Will Nediger
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: "WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?" (63A: "Why are you making such a fuss?" ... or a hint to 17-, 36- and 43-Across) — theme answers are all different kinds of "big deals":
Theme answers:
FIFTY PERCENT OFF (17A: Sign in a clearance section)
MEGAMERGER (36A: Large-scale corporate union)
ROYAL FLUSH (Dream hand for a poker player)
Word of the Day: AGNI (30D: Hindu fire god) —
Agni (Sanskrit: अग्नि, romanized: Agni, Sanskrit pronunciation: [ˈɐgnɪ]) is a Sanskrit word meaning fire and connotes the Vedic fire deity of Hinduism. He is also the guardian deity of the southeast direction and is typically found in southeast corners of Hindu temples. In the classical cosmology of the Indian religions, Agni as fire is one of the five inert impermanent elements (pañcabhūtá) along with space (ākāśa), water (ap), air (vāyu) and earth (pṛthvī), the five combining to form the empirically perceived material existence (Prakṛti).
In Vedic literature, Agni is a major and oft-invoked god along with Indra and Soma. Agni is considered the mouth of the gods and goddesses and the medium that conveys offerings to them in a homa (votive ritual). (wikipedia)
• • •
Hmm. OK, so ... hmm. The theme works in a very general sense. The first two themers, however, feel arbitrary: very and somewhat, respectively. It's not inaccurate to say that either one is a "big deal," though, so my main problem with those first two is really with the second, which is that it is dull. And "mega" is just standing in for "big," so ... a big merger is a big deal, yes, that is true. FIFTY PERCENT OFF has a snap to it, where MEGAMERGER is just a depressing sludge of a word. But OK, technically both answers are apt. But ROYAL FLUSH kinda goes off the rail. Do you call a good hand a "big deal"? Of course you “deal” a hand in poker. I get that "big" is (now) being used metaphorically, and that a ROYAL FLUSH is "big" in that it is the best hand you can hold, but the thing is "big deal" is a perfect description of themers 1 and 2, but an iffy one of 3. The revealer is the best part of the puzzle, as an answer in its own right. It would be welcome in any puzzle at any time. And as a revealer, it has some sass, it's clever. Thank god they didn't just hand us BIG DEAL, that would've been dull. Still, even with the good revealer, the theme as a whole feels workmanlike. Functional, but not exciting.
I don't really understand some of the fill choices today. Specifically, above all, RHENIUM? That seems like one of your more obscure elements. If I've heard of it, I've barely heard of it. I think it's reasonable to expect solvers to know *a lot* of the elements of the periodic table. But some deep cuts ... feel desperate. And aren't so fun to encounter. At least the last time this answer appeared, the clue told us it was named after a German river. Today: "next to tungsten"??? What the hell? How is that supposed to help? It's Wednesday. The rest of your fill is widely accessible and familiar, and then you just drop RHENIUM in? With *that* clue? As I say, I don't understand these choices. RHENIUM was jarring. AGNI was also jarring, as I still see it as ye olden fill meaning "lambs" (Lat.).
Just as I wonder how deep into the periodic table is fair game, so I wonder about the Hindu pantheon, though AGNI is pretty major (per the "Word of the Day" description, above), so you (I) can't really complain. But HUFFISH? Hoo boy, I can complain there. What ... is that? Is it like the normal word "HUFFY?" I asked my wife if she'd heard of "HUFFY": "Kind of ... I've heard of 'in a huff'..." "OK, well have you heard of HUFFISH?" "[long pause] ... no." Again, not a choice I understand. And because FWORDS was also bad (what, are we just doing any letter of the alphabet+WORDS now!?!?!) I quickly rewrote the whole damn grid (well, the east side, anyway). Just to satisfy myself. I managed to pick up both HASHISH and ARSE, which pleases me, if no one else.
[dang, looks like I duplicated ERA ... ah well, just make it EPA, it's fine...] [oh no, NEEDY dupes NO NEED ... this is why you have proofreaders!!! I could fix it, but I'm not getting paid to fix it, so I'm not gonna.] [OK, I'm gonna ...]
[Why has no one used PGUP before!?! It's a perfectly cromulent abbr.!!] [If I had more time, I'd open up the constructing software and go after RHENIUM!]
I had O--T at 49A: Expel and was mad when the answer was OMIT because that is not accurate cluing. Thankfully, the answer was not, in fact, OMIT, but OUST, a much more accurate answer. The only good thing about FWORDS (plural!?!?) is that it crosses SALTY, and if any language qualifies as SALTY, it's the F-word. The real F-word. Not "fie" or "fiddlesticks." I liked FOIST ON, for reasons even I don't quite understand. There's just something ... I dunno, oddly energetic about it. Maybe I just like the clue (44D: Shove down the throat of). I like that the puzzle went for BAFTA / BODE over the more obvious but dated choice, NAFTA / NODE. Remember NAFTA? Remember Ross Perot? I mostly try not to. Gotta wrap things up, as wife will be back soon with dosa and samosa and probably some other -osa I forgot. See you tomorrow (assuming I can get the wifi hotspot on my phone to work in the nowheresville no-wifi place we're headed to tomorrow).
As I have said many times, crosswords are best when they both entertain and inform. This puzzle was a good DEAL of fun! And who knew they speak Portuguese in ANGOLA?
Congrats to Nancy and Wil on a terific Wednesday crossword.
Agree with Rex the theme is a bit light but just fine with me. I'm surprised he didn't mention the multiple I's: I DID, MAY I, DO I, I BET. Is that some kind of record?
Also several food clues: 32d, 33a, 33d. And LIP BALM reminds me that my dentist always gives me a baggie of dental swag which includes a tube of that. Thankfully I don't suffer from dry lips, so now I have about 30 of those buggers in my medicine cabinet.
Some typeovers: with OREO in place, 15 across "-R--- setter" just had to be TREND. And 44 down was obviously FORCE ON.
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0; my last word was this 6er which doesn't look familiar, even though I somehow randomly guessed it and many of my tools evidently have one.]
Never relied on the theme, which seems vague. But I found it easy to solve, because the difficult words, like rhenium, could be gleaned through the crosses.
Congrats, Nancy! Well, you probably knew Rex wouldn’t like it because two of the themers are about things he hates - business and poker. I thought the theme was great. I agree that ROYAL FLUSH felt a little different from the others but I actually liked stretching the definition of a BIG DEAL.
I absolutely disagree with Rex on F WORDS, which was my favorite non-theme thing in the puzzle. Of course we’re not doing any random letter plus “words” now. Does P word mean anything? Does T word mean anything? No, but F WORD definitely does. And the plural absolutely works because of the great clue. Those are words that you could say in place of the real F WORD but do so in front of your grandmother. Maybe not “fudge,” which I think is meant to sound just off from the cuss word.
I do agree that RHENIUM and AGNI are pretty obscure but the crosses were easy. And while I don’t care that much about obscure elements, Hindu mythology is kind of interesting to me. (Mythology is probably the wrong word, though, because millions of people still worship these gods.)
@Joaquin I definitely knew that ANGOLA is a Portuguese-speaking country (as is Mozambique) but I didn’t know it had the second highest number of Portuguese speakers. My first thought was, “not Brazil?” - which of course is stupid. Brazil has the most Portuguese speakers. But I assumed Portugal would be second.
Nice job, and congrats Nancy and Will ! I enjoyed the theme (Rex’s dissecting it as if it were the Zapruder film notwithstanding, lol).
Like some others have mentioned, RHENIUM and AGNI were the real struggles (with FOIST ON and HUFFISH a distant second). I had to work a bit at various places around the grid (and take a leap of faith here and there) - pretty much exactly what you want on a Wednesday.
Enjoyed the food related sub theme as well (including the milk and cookies clue).
Found the puzzle too easy for a Wednesday and made NOISES (grunts and groans, e.g.) when I hit the theme revealer. Definitely uninspiring, though I did like F WORDS because of the subtle nod to naughtiness, in a PG way. Literally can’t think of anything else nice to say about this puzzle. -brando
RHENIUM is obscure but "pgup" isn't? (Pgup is also unsightly, IMO.) And no, please not "arse". Please cross that off your word list. Anyway, not sure how I feel about such a substantial rewrite and whether it's in good taste, but obviously you can do whatever you want. But that treatment, and the review, seem a bit harsh.
Wait, ANGOLA has the second most Portuguese speakers? (Looking it up) well, it seems so -- thank you Wikipedia. And I just now learned the word "Lusophone". Cool. When I visited Portugal a couple of decades ago, it seemed the locals in the service trades -- cab drivers, restaurant servers, tourist guides at the zoo -- had collectively decided to use French as the lingua franca. Interesting. Well, when in Rome, right?
Yesterday's TWELVE is a "rare roll of two dice". Today's ROYAL FLUSH says "hold my beer".
Was there ever a clue that felt less Nancy-like than “Metal next to tungsten on the periodic table”? Thank goodness ‘tantalum’ didn’t fit as I'm sure that was everyone's first thought.
AGNI, though, I recognized from yoga where AGNI sara is a breathing technique.
A royal flush is BIG in that it is the best hand that one can DEAL. Yes, if you were dealt that hand, you’d say that’s a big “deal”. Your criticism of themer 3 is odd to me. It’s the best one of the bunch imho.
Nancy is fiendishly clever, as her regular comments here show, and as today’s smart theme displays. I filled the puzzle out down to the reveal, and tried to guess the connection between the theme answers – the sweet kind of work my brain craves – and couldn’t find it, crickets. When the reveal finally showed itself, out came a satisfying “Hah!” and “Yes!”, and “Brilliant, Nancy!”, my brain not only satisfied but delighted. (Will N.'s notes indicate that Nancy created the theme.)
Along the way, there were a trio of words I love – SWIG, FOIST, and FEINT. As a Broadway fan, I enjoyed the abutting NOISES/OFF. As an aficionado of sing-song sounds, I liked the trochaic ELI / DO I / HIFI / MAY I. As a contrarian, I enjoyed seeing LOWER in the top row, and NORTH in the bottom.
You were bringers of joy for me today, Nancy and Will, with your combination of crackling wit and constructing deftness. You make beautiful puzzles together, including this one. Thank you!
Yay to Nancy and Will! I liked it a lot, despite having no idea about RHENIUM (easy to get from crosses, though, but I still had to hope it was right). When I finished, I didn’t quite grasp the theme, thinking for some reason that the revealer had to do only with the first words of the themers. But then it clicked and it was a delightful click! As others have said and will say, Rex is just being HUFFISH.
You can add BAFTA to AGNI , RHENIUM, and probably HUFFISH to the new-to-me stuff in this one. Otherwise sailed through nicely and with smelt-like smoothness.
Knew about ANGOLA as I have just finished a Paul Theroux book about his last African travels. Most people advise him against even visiting ANGOLA and after reading his descriptions of the place I can see why.
Nice enough Wednesday, NS and WN. Not Spectacular but Wednesday nice, and thanks for all the fun.
Wednesday’s are Sundays at Carvels and Saturdays at the NYT. Some of the cluing was just off (OMIT - really?). MEGAMERGERS are mergers of two corporate giants. A corporate union of any two businesses is just a merger. This one was forced into the theme. Etickets come as QR codes not PDFs.
Really liked the nuance - the theme developed all the way through to the apt revealer. Not sure the big guy picked up on the second level DEAL or not. Like Rex - FOIST ON was tops for me but I liked the adjacent and odd HUFFISH.
This played firmly in my midweek category. Some fill that took some thought. I’m assuming intent to include the grouping of the I colloquial phrases. Knew the colonial background of Angola so that fell quick. Like the overall lack of trivia.
Enjoyable Wednesday solve - well done Nancy and Will.
Oh, I adored this puzzle. Both for the reminders of things I once knew - I went to a science high school (RHENIUM) and was a religious studies major in college (AGNI), and for the things I didn’t quite but could puzzle out (ANGOLA, RECTO, FAME). My partner has a large tattoo of Emily Dickinson, so this household is especially pleased with that clue as a whole.
I also was delighted by the clever clueing for both the theme revealer and for more common answers: “Hunter more visible at night” (ORION), “Peach or plum” (HUE).
I’m with @Wanderlust on FWORDS, I think it was lovely and clever even if I had CUSSES or CURSES down for an embarrassingly long time. (I also now have the phrase “Fie upon thee!” stuck in my head, sigh.) I do agree with Rex on HUFFISH, but I can forgive it for how generally enjoyable I found today to be.
All in all, Nancy (and Will), thank you for a real treat of a puzzle and congrats!
Some clever clues. Liked FARE and PREY at opposite sides. Enjoyed the one poser: RHENIUM. 👍🏽 . (My word of the day 🤗) Also appreciated🦖’s careful scrutiny of the 🧩. 🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤨
@Wanderlust: From p. 97 of the Executive Summary of the January 6 Committee report:
Committee Staff: And the word that she relayed to you that the President called the Vice President – apologize for being impolite – but do you remember what she [Ivanka] said her father called him?
@Phillyrad1999 (1) OMIT is not one of the answers.
(2) How is the cluing for MEGAMERGERS off? They did say "large scale".
(3) And how do you come by those QR codes? You print out the appropriate PDFS, right? Maybe you're just reading it differently; I'm reading "come as" as "are delivered by".
Holy FWORDS Batman! This is how you F. See other constructors? Not that tough.
Agree with @Wanderlust that BIG DEAL works perfectly fine for ROYAL FLUSH. The cards get DEALt, and if you end up with a ROYAL FLUSH, you DEAL is a BIG one. As opposed to 2,5,6,9,K. That's a SMALL DEAL. C' mon Rex.
FIFTY PERCENT OFF=BUY ONE GET ONE FREE. Ever realize that?
Some nice clues here. @Nancy, do you and @Will both decide on the clues? HITIT was tricky, even after having _ITI_. Haven't heard of RHENIUM, but crossers took care of it. Have heard of Tungsten, so not totally element-illiterate. Those two extra lines (or whatever those are called) have some odd elements in them. I do know the YTT ones. Ytterbium, Yttrium. Yay me!
Double dose of NY today. For @Nancy, that's almost as good as getting her name in the puz!
_WORDS could get an S on the front, which is also SWORDS, and you can cross it with another word containing A and theme it as CROSSING S-WORDS. Get on that @Nancy. Har.
Oddly enough Rhenium was very easy for me. Had the RH, dropped in RHODIUM, and then thought "no, that's nowhere near tungsten, ah yes it's RHENIUM". Spending chunks of time staring at tables of characteristic emission lines finally pays off!
I've had an app on my phone forever (or at least going back to the days when it delivered me a Shakespeare Sonnet of the Day) called Atomic. It gives you the periodic table with a few details. RHENIUM is one of the rarest elements in the earth's crust, concentration of 1 part per billion. It has the second highest boiling point of any stable element at 5903 K. It is mainly obtained as a byproduct of the extraction and refinement of molybdenum and copper ores.
I remember leaping up into the air when I first saw F WORDS in the elegant grid Will N sent me. I couldn't wait to clue it and I clued it immediately -- long before sitting down to clue anything else. I thought it added a real sense of additional fun to the entire puzzle and I still do.
I'm quite sure I didn't clue RHENIUM. Or if I did, I did it with my head buried in Wikipedia. You certainly know me well, everyone: I wouldn't know the periodic table if I fell over it.
Sitting down to solve my own puzzle (with a memory like mine, everything old is new again), very little rang a bell. Other than the themers, only FWORDS and LIP BALM looked familiar. I remembered the Emily Dickenson quote and I remembered being really pleased with myself for cluing the answer that way when I was cluing it all those many, many months ago. But what was the answer? "[ ] is a fickle food." This morning, my poet/lyricist's ear told me I wanted a two-syllable answer for that with the stress on the first syllable as in "freedom is a fickle food." I actually needed crosses to get FAME. You may find that hard to believe, but it's true.
Thanks to everyone who enjoyed the puzzle and has said so. It's always nice to hear. There's a really strong, positive review over on Wordplay
I am fascinated by the origin of words. I looked up AGNI the last time it was in the Times puzzle and learned that it is related to ignis in Latin (from which ignition in English). So for me it was a gimme.
Got hung up on 15A--ruled out Irish bc "setter" wasn't capitalized. Surely for a dog breed it should be? Wrote in "trend" instead, caused some hiccups.
Always nice to be on the constructors' wavelength; such was the case td.
Had a twinge of angst at AGNi, but what else could a 'flourless cake' be but DENSE.
Played lots of 'poker' back in the day; had plenty of FLUSHes – even some straight ones – but the ROYAL always eluded me.
Got deked by 'deceptive', and dropped FEIgn in before FEINT.
Way to serve up some 'tennis' FARE in your puz, Nancy! 🎾
Had a great DEAL of fun with this one! :)
@pablo
Bit the dust on another Anna Shechtman. One cell dnf at the 'skier'. Finding the New Yorker Mondays often tougher than Croce's and/or Sat. Stumpers. LOVE the challenge, tho. :) ___ Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
Didn't intend to post anymore this week, but a reply to the comment I made yesterday and a wonderful puzzle co-constructed by Nancy forces me to comment today.
Today's puzzle seemed to me easier than most Wednesday puzzles, so it makes sense to throw in an obscure element or a God not too familiar. No complaints there. I tend to not be a fan of Will's solo efforts, but I very much enjoyed this puzzle. Congratulations, Nancy, and I hope to see more from you.
The nameless person who responded to my comment apparently understands the difference between an aria and chant. Chant should simulate the spoken word, but too often today congregations turn it into a slowish one uniform beat to a syllable 1/4 bar dirge. So with other chants. I should post how I played chants like Salve Regina or Where Charity and Love Prevail (and how the congregations followed or fought me). There's a goal I need to work on.
Just got QB! A monumental moment in Roo history! 😁 Unlike some of yous who get it every day, I only have a total of 14 for the Entire Year. Ouch! February was legendary for me, I had 5 of them!
WHATSTHEBIGDEAL? Well, OBIES and BAFTAs are, at least to those who get them. A much bigger deal than a ROYALFLUSH. (I actually get that DEAL is being used in three different senses and I think it’s a great theme).
Another way of cluing 53A (FWORDS) that might have had solvers scratching their heads for a while would be: 33A, 33D, 44D, 51A and 51D are some of the printable ones.
I believe that HUFFISH prefer a REEDY and SALTY environment, which might also be a productive place to go SEALIN. Perhaps a mini theme?
Recognize, please, that I’m just having fun with this really clean, enjoyable puzzle by @Nancy and her collaborator Will Nediger. Nice job, you two.
♪ I could cry salty tears Where have I been all these years ♪
Well at least it wasn't tantalum (element #73), which always takes me forever to think of. My problem with #75 is remembering if it's rhenium or rhodium, the other being #45.
Well what can I say except that when Nancy and Will decided to collaborate was a good day for all of us solvers. Another one that really hit the mark for me. Just a lot to LOVE here and I did. Thanks for this entertaining and clever Wednesday, you two.
As much as I enjoyed it, I did encounter some resistance. I probably should’ve known but didn’t remember AGNI or RECTO. Had HIT ME before IT, DEMS before POLS, FORCE before FOIST ON, GULP before SWIG and CURSES before FWORDS which is the best clue/entry I’ve seen in a while - and crossed with SALTY was a devious little trick BTW. I also made note of three great clues across the top: OREO, WIRES, ESC.
The tennis clue reminded me of a movie I watched recently. King Richard, the biopic about Venus and Serena Williams with Will Smith in the title role. (Yes, the one where he infamously slugged the host of the Academy Awards before going on to win for Best Actor.) Very entertaining movie with splendid performances from the entire cast. I’ve never followed tennis so it was enlightening to learn about their family background and how they got started. Highly recommend it, even for non-fans of the sport.
Not bad for a CITY girl @Nancy. I’m more impressed than was OFL in large part due to the AGNI & ANGOLA learning experiences coupled with some cute clueing to (OREO) and others to give solvers some toe stobbers to slow progress. I admit that having cUrses overlap gUlp was such a moment for both of us this morning….and then she who must be obeyed dropped the F WORD….true LOVE? Well, MAY I say we enjoyed your tag teaming with Will and can forgive the RHENIUM inclusion as we learned that it, like our answer, was the last to fall naturally into both the periodic chart and our grids.
Well that's funny. Just yesterday I said to my wife, "Hey, it's been some time since I've seen 'oboe' or 'oreo' in a puzzle, I guess they're getting a vacation."
Solid WedPuz. Like the combo of ROYALFLUSH & IBET a lot. AGNI did kinda look like an answer that somebody took FIFTYPERCENTOFF of, tho. Evidently it's one of them F-gods, huh? Learned somethin new, there.
some faves included: SWIG. FOISTON. THATSO. NONEED. FWORDS. Learnin about new elements like RHENIUM [Re, on the atomic scoreboard]. The theme revealer. The one ?-marker clue [for ATE]. And @RP, HUFFISH was indeed found in the Official M&A Help Desk Dictionary, sooo … ok.
staff weeject pick: DOI. Since the puz fillins did the "I"-word several times, includin close cousin IDID.
Thanx for gangin up on us, @Nancy & Will folks. Enjoyed it.
Hi Nancy. Enjoyed solving your puzzle. Just the right amount of crunch for a Wednesday and fair in setting off esoterica with doable crosses. Happy holidays.
Kudos and congrats to @Nancy and Will for a fun puzzle with a clever theme, imaginative cluing. and just enough bite for a Wednesday. (Step aside, AGNI, and make room for some RHENIUM from ANGOLA.) The play on WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL is a keeper.
Favorite answer: F WORDS.
Favorite clues: the Emily Dickinson quote and the ant factoid.
Mark of accomplishment: a new clue for the O.E.D. (Oreo English Dictionary)
My only nit is the error in the clue for HUFFISH.*
FOIST! DEFOG! HIFI! FWORDS! Fun to see @RooMonster flipping for his Xmas gift!
I had to work a little at the top - ANGOLA was news to me. Loved clue for ORION. And my WIRES are crossed before coffee.
@conrad Thanks for the Element Song link! I only recognized it from the snippet used in Finding Nemo and thought it charming. RHENIUM makes the cut there.
@mathgent - thanks for reminding me of my one nit about the puzzle. If you change FAME/MAYI/ELI to FADE/DAYS/ELS, with ELS clued as Chicago transit, you get rid of one of the 'I' phrases and have a puzzle with NO names. Or at least change MAYI/ELI to MAYS/ELS to get rid of one of the 'I' phrases and swap a somewhat obscure name for a truly famous one.
A clever array of deals and a terrific reveal -->smiles all around. I also enjoyed FEINT x FOIST (hi, @Lewis), figuring out F-WORDS, and the idea of a HIFI ERA.
Do-over: Me, too, for RHodIUM before RHENIUM. No idea: ELI, AGNI.
Phillyrad1999 - With apologies for piling on, the e-tickets I just received from the Lyric Opera came as PDFs with bar codes.
@Nancy: Loved it! This actor never won a Bafta nor an Obie, but I played the Oboe and used to practice "Agni" Yoga. I've even baked a flourless "Queen Mother's" cake. A NY friend of mine had a Royal Flush hand signed and framed in her kitchen. I never was dealt one but one day I wrote "Dandy" for the first word in Wordle and 5 green letters filled the top line. I still wonder how that happened. DANDY! Has anyone else here had a Hole-in-One?
I enjoyed this one. The theme had me stumped. I spent a lot of time looking for hidden words--all I could come up with were TPE, GAME, and ALF, which didn't help much. So I really needed the revealer -- and what a revealer!
And I liked the many misdirects. I was saved from RHodIUM by FIFTY PERCCENT OFF, but still wanted it; I decided it must be RHENIUM, which certainly sounds like an element, but had no idea it actually was. And I spent another few minutes trying to think of a nobleman or woman, or maybe a sports champ, for the title holders.
Fie is certainly an F-WORD, but not a euphemism for THE F-word; but that's very nitty.
As others have pointed out, the nice thing about the clue for ANGOLA is that many of us are going to think "but what about Brazil?" and only then realize that of course Portugal is not that high on the list. I had to look it up (post-solve) to see if it beat Mozambique. It does, because only 10% of Mozambicans actually speak Portuguese. It's funny how it doesn't surprise us at all that England is not #1 in English speakers, but takes us a minute to see the similar relationship of Portugal to Portuguese.
As for HUFFISH, that was my very favorite entry; just a beautiful word that I'd like to see more of.
@TTrimble from yesterday -- I don't mean to be prescriptive. It was a good theme, but having all the clues in the same form would make it even better. There's always something that could be added to the them and its clues, but some of those things may not prove feasible. Your suggestion would certainly have improved it. (I'm being a little general here so as not to provide a spoiler for anyone who hasn't solved it yet.)
@jberg Thanks for being a gentleman and a scholar. You and Rex certainly gave me food for thought, and I'm glad you and others are so attentive to such fine points.
Thank you Justin. I thought I was losing my mind. Of course it’s the same… and never called that. It’s just a royal flush. A,K,Q,J, 10 of the same suit. Every other straight flush is not royal.
My favorite was FWORDS as clued. Rex did not notice or did not find humor in the fact that the 3 words in the clue were all substitutes for THE real FWORD. He even went to the trouble of re-writing it out of the puzzle!! In any case I better see it again on Monday, @Lewis
My only regret was there was no F in MEGAMERGER, so that an unstated second revealer would be ITS A BIG F-ING DEAL.
@oldactor No hole in one. Close in a couple ways. One starting word I used for 3 weeks I changed to an anagram of the word the day it was the Wordle anwer. Another time I had a complete whiff on my first word and a perfect hit on my second word. 28 twos in 323 played. No ones.
@Nancy A bit easy but still a fun solve. Thanks. You are on a roll. Letter and puzzle in the Times in quick succession.
@okanaganer (02:02) If you really do have a big collection of LIP BALM and want to put it to good use, donate it to a women’s shelter. That’s item they always have a NEED for.
Not a bad puzzle, I said to myself as I filled in HIFI, which had not been obvious to me. Got the themers early, especially WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL and ROYAL FLUSH. Which is, technically an Ace-high ROYAL straight FLUSH, but no one ever sees the need to say "straight" when referring to it. Like most poker players, I have never been dealt one, but have sometimes gotten them in draw poker or seven-card stud. Like many of you, I was wowed to learn about ANGOLA. I have been once to Portugal, where my friend Peter and I visited Oporto, and crossed the RIO to go port wine tasting at Villa Nova. We ate the same dish three nights running, in three different cities. In none of them did they speak French at the restaurants. Some English, and we could also make do with Spanish, in a pinch.
Hands up for putting "trend" in before IRISH. My only writeover. I seem to be on Will and Nancy's wavelength, which made for an Easy solve. I felt very different about yesterday's opus.
As someone else already said, "royal flush" = "royal straight flus". But five of a kind beats a royal flush, assuming you have wild cards. The absolute best poker hand is five aces. It's also a sure-fire way to get shot in the Old West for cheating ;-).
Can anyone shed light on Rex's musical selection from Everything But The Girl, i.e., why he chose it, what it has to do with the puzzle? I'm partial to Tracy Thorn although I can't say I know her stuff well.
@oldtimer Yeah, I've often wondered about this French-speaking business; it was in Coimbra in 1999. Certainly I would have expected English instead of French when they were addressing foreigners; it was quite surprising, and I would not blame anyone here for not believing me. I don't think I ever heard French when we were in Lisbon.
Lisbon is memorable for other reasons, including one of the greatest shocks of my life when I was tapped on the shoulder on the street by a man whose name I subsequently learned was Jose Mestre. I turned. Behold: his entire face was completely hidden, being engulfed by an enormous hemangioma tumor; it was my understanding that he was asking for money. Years later he underwent operations to have it removed. I will not link to an image, as some may find it disturbing.
It was a puzzle. Not surprised they're using FWORDS in this pro-ARSE era.
Uniclues:
1 Don Juan type rakishly brags about wooing local gingers. 2 One of the many odd goals of the 1% apparently. 3 Large town known for being downstream from the king's toilet. 4 Baby boomers who don't care what you think of the way they act, think, or talk. 5 Procedures followed by those wishing to decorate their wildebeest for Christmas.
1 I DID AREA IRISH (~) 2 MEGAMERGER FAME (~) 3 ROYAL FLUSH CITY 4 YOLO ELDERS 5 WIRES THEIR GNU (~)
Rex, rhenium is indeed an element, To say is a bit obscure is an understatement. I got the clue immediately, only because I am a chemist and actually worked with the stuff. It's very rare. Buried in the 3rd row of the transition elements, atomic number 75.
@Nancy - Another beauty from the team. We had the "L" and "E" for 66 Across and I told Pat that it would be LOVE off a tennis clue. The "Know Your Constructor" rule worked.
This one was pretty nice. I like themed puzzles where the themed entries play on multiple senses of the words in a common phrase. This one reminds me of one of the more reliable laugh-getters in my dad-joke repertoire: I went up to the widow at a funeral and told her, "Bargain." She said, "Thank you. That means a great deal."
Some bits of fill reeked of mothballs (OREO, OBOE, ADOS), but then again, you can't hardly have a crossword without a few that do. Many more clues than usual for a Wednesday caught me short. Confidently inserted: tRend instead of IRISH, "not I" instead of "I DID", gulp instead of SWIG, curseS instead of FWORDS, and set instead of ERA (on 62A, "Swing ___"). I could not make _AME/_ARE (33A/D) make sense in my head for several literal minutes. That's my bad, obviously, but it was a surprising one.
ORION was clued excellently. Major hat tip for that one.
I accept HUFFISH as a word in the technical "it's in the dictionary" sense, but not in the "something that people use daily" sense. I also maintain that ESC has not been a key used to exit a program in decades at least and that crossword clues need to stop perpetuating this idea.
Also, am I the only one who thinks it feels super tacky to rewrite someone else's crossword in front of God and everybody?
Let's split hairs: RECTO is a page, not one side of a page 38D, it is the right hand page, VERSO is a left hand page in a bound book, each is one SIDE of a LEAF, no big deal!
Rex makes some valid points but my overall impression of this puzzle was that it did a good job being a Wednesday puzzle. Not too hard, not too easy. Just right.
Well, you know me with letter add-ons, so FWORDS elicited one of my own. Also RHENIUM was the stuff of desperation (Googled it; used in small rockets). Still, with two tens and two fifteens it's a fairly DENSE theme, so there's that. HUFFISH recalls Jabberwocky: "And as in uffish thought he stood..." Anything that reminds me of Lewis Carroll is OK by me.
I got a ROYALFLUSH once; I was playing a penny slot and I won forty dollars. Whoop de do. Big theme with a cute revealer, but some fill problems. Par.
Wordle bogey--but with a ten-pointer in the word, maybe should be a par-5 hole.
MAYI? DOI? IBET IDID. WHAT? Hand up for tRend setter before IRISH. Otherwise easy with not that much for PPP. Wordle birdie! largely by starting with trial and few errors.
As I have said many times, crosswords are best when they both entertain and inform. This puzzle was a good DEAL of fun! And who knew they speak Portuguese in ANGOLA?
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Nancy and Wil on a terific Wednesday crossword.
Agree with Rex the theme is a bit light but just fine with me. I'm surprised he didn't mention the multiple I's: I DID, MAY I, DO I, I BET. Is that some kind of record?
ReplyDeleteAlso several food clues: 32d, 33a, 33d. And LIP BALM reminds me that my dentist always gives me a baggie of dental swag which includes a tube of that. Thankfully I don't suffer from dry lips, so now I have about 30 of those buggers in my medicine cabinet.
Some typeovers: with OREO in place, 15 across "-R--- setter" just had to be TREND. And 44 down was obviously FORCE ON.
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0; my last word was this 6er which doesn't look familiar, even though I somehow randomly guessed it and many of my tools evidently have one.]
Easy-medium. No erasures and RHENIUM and AGNI as clued were my only WOEs. Liked it, except for maybe @Rex HUFFISH.
ReplyDeleteI'll just second what Joaquin posted.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThere's antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium
And hydrogen and oxygen and nitrogen and rhenium
-- The Elements by Tom Lehrer
Never relied on the theme, which seems vague. But I found it easy to solve, because the difficult words, like rhenium, could be gleaned through the crosses.
ReplyDeleteCongrats, Nancy! Well, you probably knew Rex wouldn’t like it because two of the themers are about things he hates - business and poker. I thought the theme was great. I agree that ROYAL FLUSH felt a little different from the others but I actually liked stretching the definition of a BIG DEAL.
ReplyDeleteI absolutely disagree with Rex on F WORDS, which was my favorite non-theme thing in the puzzle. Of course we’re not doing any random letter plus “words” now. Does P word mean anything? Does T word mean anything? No, but F WORD definitely does. And the plural absolutely works because of the great clue. Those are words that you could say in place of the real F WORD but do so in front of your grandmother. Maybe not “fudge,” which I think is meant to sound just off from the cuss word.
I do agree that RHENIUM and AGNI are pretty obscure but the crosses were easy. And while I don’t care that much about obscure elements, Hindu mythology is kind of interesting to me. (Mythology is probably the wrong word, though, because millions of people still worship these gods.)
@Joaquin I definitely knew that ANGOLA is a Portuguese-speaking country (as is Mozambique) but I didn’t know it had the second highest number of
Portuguese speakers. My first thought was, “not Brazil?” - which of course is stupid. Brazil has the most Portuguese speakers. But I assumed Portugal would be second.
@wanderlust I also loved FWORDS! Feels a lot fresher than most filler
DeleteP-word is definitely a thing, as t**** labelled pence, per testimony in the jan6 hearings.
DeleteNice job, and congrats Nancy and Will ! I enjoyed the theme (Rex’s dissecting it as if it were the Zapruder film notwithstanding, lol).
ReplyDeleteLike some others have mentioned, RHENIUM and AGNI were the real struggles (with FOIST ON and HUFFISH a distant second). I had to work a bit at various places around the grid (and take a leap of faith here and there) - pretty much exactly what you want on a Wednesday.
Enjoyed the food related sub theme as well (including the milk and cookies clue).
@conrad. Thanks for that clip. Started my day of with a laugh. He’s amazing.
ReplyDeleteFound the puzzle too easy for a Wednesday and made NOISES (grunts and groans, e.g.) when I hit the theme revealer. Definitely uninspiring, though I did like F WORDS because of the subtle nod to naughtiness, in a PG way. Literally can’t think of anything else nice to say about this puzzle.
ReplyDelete-brando
I’ll third Joaquin and OffTheGrid. A terrific Wednesday!
ReplyDeleteRHENIUM is obscure but "pgup" isn't? (Pgup is also unsightly, IMO.) And no, please not "arse". Please cross that off your word list. Anyway, not sure how I feel about such a substantial rewrite and whether it's in good taste, but obviously you can do whatever you want. But that treatment, and the review, seem a bit harsh.
ReplyDeleteWait, ANGOLA has the second most Portuguese speakers? (Looking it up) well, it seems so -- thank you Wikipedia. And I just now learned the word "Lusophone". Cool. When I visited Portugal a couple of decades ago, it seemed the locals in the service trades -- cab drivers, restaurant servers, tourist guides at the zoo -- had collectively decided to use French as the lingua franca. Interesting. Well, when in Rome, right?
Yesterday's TWELVE is a "rare roll of two dice". Today's ROYAL FLUSH says "hold my beer".
I enjoyed it -- thank you Nancy and Will!
SB: yd, missed this.
Was there ever a clue that felt less Nancy-like than “Metal next to tungsten on the periodic table”? Thank goodness ‘tantalum’ didn’t fit as I'm sure that was everyone's first thought.
ReplyDeleteAGNI, though, I recognized from yoga where AGNI sara is a breathing technique.
A royal flush is BIG in that it is the best hand that one can DEAL. Yes, if you were dealt that hand, you’d say that’s a big “deal”. Your criticism of themer 3 is odd to me. It’s the best one of the bunch imho.
ReplyDeleteNancy is fiendishly clever, as her regular comments here show, and as today’s smart theme displays. I filled the puzzle out down to the reveal, and tried to guess the connection between the theme answers – the sweet kind of work my brain craves – and couldn’t find it, crickets. When the reveal finally showed itself, out came a satisfying “Hah!” and “Yes!”, and “Brilliant, Nancy!”, my brain not only satisfied but delighted. (Will N.'s notes indicate that Nancy created the theme.)
ReplyDeleteAlong the way, there were a trio of words I love – SWIG, FOIST, and FEINT. As a Broadway fan, I enjoyed the abutting NOISES/OFF. As an aficionado of sing-song sounds, I liked the trochaic ELI / DO I / HIFI / MAY I. As a contrarian, I enjoyed seeing LOWER in the top row, and NORTH in the bottom.
You were bringers of joy for me today, Nancy and Will, with your combination of crackling wit and constructing deftness. You make beautiful puzzles together, including this one. Thank you!
I try to predict what Rex will say and tbh I thought you would hate the clue “shove down one’s throat” but i guess that was me. I hate that clue! Lol.
ReplyDeleteI also cringed at "huffish." But looking it up I discovered a really fun synonym: "TOPLOFTY" (arrogant)
ReplyDeleteNancy and Will - congrats on two puzzles in one week!
ReplyDeleteAs a chemist, I had the more prevalent RHodIUM prior to RHENIUM.
Someone has to convince me that Nancy is not a nom de plume for Fran Lebowitz as they both write in the best curmudgeoness of NYC.
Yay to Nancy and Will! I liked it a lot, despite having no idea about RHENIUM (easy to get from crosses, though, but I still had to hope it was right). When I finished, I didn’t quite grasp the theme, thinking for some reason that the revealer had to do only with the first words of the themers. But then it clicked and it was a delightful click! As others have said and will say, Rex is just being HUFFISH.
ReplyDeleteYou can add BAFTA to AGNI , RHENIUM, and probably HUFFISH to the new-to-me stuff in this one.
ReplyDeleteOtherwise sailed through nicely and with smelt-like smoothness.
Knew about ANGOLA as I have just finished a Paul Theroux book about his last African travels. Most people advise him against even visiting ANGOLA and after reading his descriptions of the place I can see why.
Nice enough Wednesday, NS and WN. Not Spectacular but Wednesday nice, and thanks for all the fun.
Wednesday’s are Sundays at Carvels and Saturdays at the NYT. Some of the cluing was just off (OMIT - really?). MEGAMERGERS are mergers of two corporate giants. A corporate union of any two businesses is just a merger. This one was forced into the theme. Etickets come as QR codes not PDFs.
ReplyDeletePerhaps you overlooked part of the clue: LARGE SCALE fits mega mergers. Didn't understand your omit reference.
DeleteI liked the puzzle.
Did Rex miss that a Royal Flush is dealt?
ReplyDeleteReally liked the nuance - the theme developed all the way through to the apt revealer. Not sure the big guy picked up on the second level DEAL or not. Like Rex - FOIST ON was tops for me but I liked the adjacent and odd HUFFISH.
ReplyDeleteThis played firmly in my midweek category. Some fill that took some thought. I’m assuming intent to include the grouping of the I colloquial phrases. Knew the colonial background of Angola so that fell quick. Like the overall lack of trivia.
Enjoyable Wednesday solve - well done Nancy and Will.
Sittin’ plush with a ROYAL FLUSH - aces back to back
Oh, I adored this puzzle. Both for the reminders of things I once knew - I went to a science high school (RHENIUM) and was a religious studies major in college (AGNI), and for the things I didn’t quite but could puzzle out (ANGOLA, RECTO, FAME). My partner has a large tattoo of Emily Dickinson, so this household is especially pleased with that clue as a whole.
ReplyDeleteI also was delighted by the clever clueing for both the theme revealer and for more common answers: “Hunter more visible at night” (ORION), “Peach or plum” (HUE).
I’m with @Wanderlust on FWORDS, I think it was lovely and clever even if I had CUSSES or CURSES down for an embarrassingly long time. (I also now have the phrase “Fie upon thee!” stuck in my head, sigh.) I do agree with Rex on HUFFISH, but I can forgive it for how generally enjoyable I found today to be.
All in all, Nancy (and Will), thank you for a real treat of a puzzle and congrats!
Some clever clues.
ReplyDeleteLiked FARE and PREY at opposite sides.
Enjoyed the one poser: RHENIUM. 👍🏽 . (My word of the day 🤗)
Also appreciated🦖’s careful scrutiny of the 🧩.
🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤨
@Wanderlust: From p. 97 of the Executive Summary of the January 6 Committee report:
ReplyDeleteCommittee Staff: And the word that she relayed to you that the President called the
Vice President – apologize for being impolite – but do you remember what she [Ivanka] said
her father called him?
Radford: The “P” word.
@Phillyrad1999
ReplyDelete(1) OMIT is not one of the answers.
(2) How is the cluing for MEGAMERGERS off? They did say "large scale".
(3) And how do you come by those QR codes? You print out the appropriate PDFS, right? Maybe you're just reading it differently; I'm reading "come as" as "are delivered by".
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteShut the Front Door! 😁
Holy FWORDS Batman! This is how you F. See other constructors? Not that tough.
Agree with @Wanderlust that BIG DEAL works perfectly fine for ROYAL FLUSH. The cards get DEALt, and if you end up with a ROYAL FLUSH, you DEAL is a BIG one. As opposed to 2,5,6,9,K. That's a SMALL DEAL. C' mon Rex.
FIFTY PERCENT OFF=BUY ONE GET ONE FREE. Ever realize that?
Some nice clues here. @Nancy, do you and @Will both decide on the clues? HITIT was tricky, even after having _ITI_. Haven't heard of RHENIUM, but crossers took care of it. Have heard of Tungsten, so not totally element-illiterate. Those two extra lines (or whatever those are called) have some odd elements in them. I do know the YTT ones. Ytterbium, Yttrium. Yay me!
Double dose of NY today. For @Nancy, that's almost as good as getting her name in the puz!
_WORDS could get an S on the front, which is also SWORDS, and you can cross it with another word containing A and theme it as CROSSING S-WORDS. Get on that @Nancy. Har.
Nine F's (LOVE it)
RooMonster
DarrinV
Oddly enough Rhenium was very easy for me. Had the RH, dropped in RHODIUM, and then thought "no, that's nowhere near tungsten, ah yes it's RHENIUM". Spending chunks of time staring at tables of characteristic emission lines finally pays off!
ReplyDeleteROYALFLUSH is a big deal because the cards are dealt to you.
ReplyDeleteI've had an app on my phone forever (or at least going back to the days when it delivered me a Shakespeare Sonnet of the Day) called Atomic. It gives you the periodic table with a few details. RHENIUM is one of the rarest elements in the earth's crust, concentration of 1 part per billion. It has the second highest boiling point of any stable element at 5903 K. It is mainly obtained as a byproduct of the extraction and refinement of molybdenum and copper ores.
ReplyDeleteGreat fun! Nancy's fingerprints all over it. Only one person's name -- ELI.
ReplyDeleteI got beat on the AGNI/PEST/PREY box. Weirdly, I wanted NEST instead of PEST. And the clue for prey was too clever for me.
FWORD is my favorite entry. First time in the NYT puzzle.
Loved learning that Portugal has only has the third most Portuguese speakers.
I remember leaping up into the air when I first saw F WORDS in the elegant grid Will N sent me. I couldn't wait to clue it and I clued it immediately -- long before sitting down to clue anything else. I thought it added a real sense of additional fun to the entire puzzle and I still do.
ReplyDeleteI'm quite sure I didn't clue RHENIUM. Or if I did, I did it with my head buried in Wikipedia. You certainly know me well, everyone: I wouldn't know the periodic table if I fell over it.
Sitting down to solve my own puzzle (with a memory like mine, everything old is new again), very little rang a bell. Other than the themers, only FWORDS and LIP BALM looked familiar. I remembered the Emily Dickenson quote and I remembered being really pleased with myself for cluing the answer that way when I was cluing it all those many, many months ago. But what was the answer? "[ ] is a fickle food." This morning, my poet/lyricist's ear told me I wanted a two-syllable answer for that with the stress on the first syllable as in "freedom is a fickle food." I actually needed crosses to get FAME. You may find that hard to believe, but it's true.
Thanks to everyone who enjoyed the puzzle and has said so. It's always nice to hear. There's a really strong, positive review over on Wordplay
Thought it was a great puzzle.
DeleteI am fascinated by the origin of words. I looked up AGNI the last time it was in the Times puzzle and learned that it is related to ignis in Latin (from which ignition in English). So for me it was a gimme.
Got hung up on 15A--ruled out Irish bc "setter" wasn't capitalized. Surely for a dog breed it should be? Wrote in "trend" instead, caused some hiccups.
ReplyDeleteFH
ReplyDelete'ROYAL FLUSH' is a big deal because it is a hand that is dealt; it results from a deal of the cards, by the dealer.
Thx, Nancy & Will; LOVEd your creation! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Always nice to be on the constructors' wavelength; such was the case td.
Had a twinge of angst at AGNi, but what else could a 'flourless cake' be but DENSE.
Played lots of 'poker' back in the day; had plenty of FLUSHes – even some straight ones – but the ROYAL always eluded me.
Got deked by 'deceptive', and dropped FEIgn in before FEINT.
Way to serve up some 'tennis' FARE in your puz, Nancy! 🎾
Had a great DEAL of fun with this one! :)
@pablo
Bit the dust on another Anna Shechtman. One cell dnf at the 'skier'. Finding the New Yorker Mondays often tougher than Croce's and/or Sat. Stumpers. LOVE the challenge, tho. :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
The LA times crossword has been much better this week if anyone doesn't want to deal with Rhenium
ReplyDeleteIt's Wednesday. Day for the Rhenium rave.
ReplyDeleteDidn't intend to post anymore this week, but a reply to the comment I made yesterday and a wonderful puzzle co-constructed by Nancy forces me to comment today.
ReplyDeleteToday's puzzle seemed to me easier than most Wednesday puzzles, so it makes sense to throw in an obscure element or a God not too familiar. No complaints there. I tend to not be a fan of Will's solo efforts, but I very much enjoyed this puzzle. Congratulations, Nancy, and I hope to see more from you.
The nameless person who responded to my comment apparently understands the difference between an aria and chant. Chant should simulate the spoken word, but too often today congregations turn it into a slowish one uniform beat to a syllable 1/4 bar dirge. So with other chants. I should post how I played chants like Salve Regina or Where Charity and Love Prevail (and how the congregations followed or fought me). There's a goal I need to work on.
Once again, happy and holy holidays to all.
Huffish is terrible.
ReplyDeleteJust got QB! A monumental moment in Roo history! 😁 Unlike some of yous who get it every day, I only have a total of 14 for the Entire Year. Ouch! February was legendary for me, I had 5 of them!
ReplyDeleteNow, back to your regularly scheduled comments.
RooMonster AntiHumblebrag? Guy
ReplyDeleteWHATSTHEBIGDEAL? Well, OBIES and BAFTAs are, at least to those who get them. A much bigger deal than a ROYALFLUSH. (I actually get that DEAL is being used in three different senses and I think it’s a great theme).
Another way of cluing 53A (FWORDS) that might have had solvers scratching their heads for a while would be: 33A, 33D, 44D, 51A and 51D are some of the printable ones.
I believe that HUFFISH prefer a REEDY and SALTY environment, which might also be a productive place to go SEALIN. Perhaps a mini theme?
Recognize, please, that I’m just having fun with this really clean, enjoyable puzzle by @Nancy and her collaborator Will Nediger. Nice job, you two.
An advantage of stamp collecting for doing crosswords. "Angola" was a given! (Happily Mozambique didn't fit). Fun puzzle. Thanks.
ReplyDelete♪ I could cry salty tears
ReplyDeleteWhere have I been all these years ♪
Well at least it wasn't tantalum (element #73), which always takes me forever to think of. My problem with #75 is remembering if it's rhenium or rhodium, the other being #45.
Nice job, @Nancy!
Best poker hand is a Royal Straight Flush, for clarity.
ReplyDeleteThank you Nancy (and Will) for a pleasent romp.
ReplyDeletePhillyRad.... I have had several tickets to Broadway shows sent to me via PDF just this month. The clue and answer stand.
ReplyDeleteWell what can I say except that when Nancy and Will decided to collaborate was a good day for all of us solvers. Another one that really hit the mark for me. Just a lot to LOVE here and I did. Thanks for this entertaining and clever Wednesday, you two.
ReplyDeleteAs much as I enjoyed it, I did encounter some resistance. I probably should’ve known but didn’t remember AGNI or RECTO. Had HIT ME before IT, DEMS before POLS, FORCE before FOIST ON, GULP before SWIG and CURSES before FWORDS which is the best clue/entry I’ve seen in a while - and crossed with SALTY was a devious little trick BTW. I also made note of three great clues across the top: OREO, WIRES, ESC.
The tennis clue reminded me of a movie I watched recently. King Richard, the biopic about Venus and Serena Williams with Will Smith in the title role. (Yes, the one where he infamously slugged the host of the Academy Awards before going on to win for Best Actor.) Very entertaining movie with splendid performances from the entire cast. I’ve never followed tennis so it was enlightening to learn about their family background and how they got started. Highly recommend it, even for non-fans of the sport.
Not bad for a CITY girl @Nancy. I’m more impressed than was OFL in large part due to the AGNI & ANGOLA learning experiences coupled with some cute clueing to (OREO) and others to give solvers some toe stobbers to slow progress. I admit that having cUrses overlap gUlp was such a moment for both of us this morning….and then she who must be obeyed dropped the F WORD….true LOVE? Well, MAY I say we enjoyed your tag teaming with Will and can forgive the RHENIUM inclusion as we learned that it, like our answer, was the last to fall naturally into both the periodic chart and our grids.
ReplyDeleteWell that's funny. Just yesterday I said to my wife, "Hey, it's been some time since I've seen 'oboe' or 'oreo' in a puzzle, I guess they're getting a vacation."
ReplyDeleteThey're baaaacccck.
Solid WedPuz. Like the combo of ROYALFLUSH & IBET a lot.
ReplyDeleteAGNI did kinda look like an answer that somebody took FIFTYPERCENTOFF of, tho. Evidently it's one of them F-gods, huh? Learned somethin new, there.
some faves included: SWIG. FOISTON. THATSO. NONEED. FWORDS. Learnin about new elements like RHENIUM [Re, on the atomic scoreboard]. The theme revealer. The one ?-marker clue [for ATE].
And @RP, HUFFISH was indeed found in the Official M&A Help Desk Dictionary, sooo … ok.
staff weeject pick: DOI. Since the puz fillins did the "I"-word several times, includin close cousin IDID.
Thanx for gangin up on us, @Nancy & Will folks. Enjoyed it.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
**gruntz**
Hi Nancy. Enjoyed solving your puzzle. Just the right amount of crunch for a Wednesday and fair in setting off esoterica with doable crosses. Happy holidays.
ReplyDelete@Nancy
ReplyDeleteGreat job, as usual.
Kudos and congrats to @Nancy and Will for a fun puzzle with a clever theme, imaginative cluing. and just enough bite for a Wednesday. (Step aside, AGNI, and make room for some RHENIUM from ANGOLA.) The play on WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL is a keeper.
ReplyDeleteFavorite answer: F WORDS.
Favorite clues: the Emily Dickinson quote and the ant factoid.
Mark of accomplishment: a new clue for the O.E.D. (Oreo English Dictionary)
My only nit is the error in the clue for HUFFISH.*
*Perpetually annoyed sea creatures
HUFFISH
ReplyDeleteAdjective
1. peevish; petulant; sulky
2. Obsolete;
inclined to be arrogant
I liked the puzzle too. Thanks Nancy & Will.
ReplyDeleteFOIST! DEFOG! HIFI! FWORDS! Fun to see @RooMonster flipping for his Xmas gift!
I had to work a little at the top - ANGOLA was news to me. Loved clue for ORION. And my WIRES are crossed before coffee.
@conrad Thanks for the Element Song link! I only recognized it from the snippet used in Finding Nemo and thought it charming. RHENIUM makes the cut there.
@mathgent - thanks for reminding me of my one nit about the puzzle. If you change FAME/MAYI/ELI to FADE/DAYS/ELS, with ELS clued as Chicago transit, you get rid of one of the 'I' phrases and have a puzzle with NO names. Or at least change MAYI/ELI to MAYS/ELS to get rid of one of the 'I' phrases and swap a somewhat obscure name for a truly famous one.
ReplyDeleteA clever array of deals and a terrific reveal -->smiles all around. I also enjoyed FEINT x FOIST (hi, @Lewis), figuring out F-WORDS, and the idea of a HIFI ERA.
ReplyDeleteDo-over: Me, too, for RHodIUM before RHENIUM. No idea: ELI, AGNI.
Phillyrad1999 - With apologies for piling on, the e-tickets I just received from the Lyric Opera came as PDFs with bar codes.
RHENIUM from the crosses, so no problem and I learned something I'll use every day.
ReplyDeleteGetting the revealer helped me nail the second and third themers, and if that's not what a revealer is supposed to do then FWORD.
Fun solve.
@Nancy: Loved it! This actor never won a Bafta nor an Obie, but I played the Oboe and used to practice "Agni" Yoga. I've even baked a flourless "Queen Mother's" cake.
ReplyDeleteA NY friend of mine had a Royal Flush hand signed and framed in her kitchen. I never was dealt one but one day I wrote "Dandy" for the first word in Wordle and 5 green letters filled the top line. I still wonder how that happened. DANDY! Has anyone else here had a Hole-in-One?
I've been Rolfed TWICE maybe that helped.
Good job, Nancy and Will. I enjoyed it a bunch.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this one. The theme had me stumped. I spent a lot of time looking for hidden words--all I could come up with were TPE, GAME, and ALF, which didn't help much. So I really needed the revealer -- and what a revealer!
ReplyDeleteAnd I liked the many misdirects. I was saved from RHodIUM by FIFTY PERCCENT OFF, but still wanted it; I decided it must be RHENIUM, which certainly sounds like an element, but had no idea it actually was. And I spent another few minutes trying to think of a nobleman or woman, or maybe a sports champ, for the title holders.
Fie is certainly an F-WORD, but not a euphemism for THE F-word; but that's very nitty.
As others have pointed out, the nice thing about the clue for ANGOLA is that many of us are going to think "but what about Brazil?" and only then realize that of course Portugal is not that high on the list. I had to look it up (post-solve) to see if it beat Mozambique. It does, because only 10% of Mozambicans actually speak Portuguese. It's funny how it doesn't surprise us at all that England is not #1 in English speakers, but takes us a minute to see the similar relationship of Portugal to Portuguese.
As for HUFFISH, that was my very favorite entry; just a beautiful word that I'd like to see more of.
@TTrimble from yesterday -- I don't mean to be prescriptive. It was a good theme, but having all the clues in the same form would make it even better. There's always something that could be added to the them and its clues, but some of those things may not prove feasible. Your suggestion would certainly have improved it. (I'm being a little general here so as not to provide a spoiler for anyone who hasn't solved it yet.)
ReplyDeleteAll Royal Flushes are Straight Flushes, but not all Straight Flushes are Royal.
ReplyDeleteThere is no "Royal Straight Flush" that would mean anything different from "Royal Flush."
Don't know what above commenter was trying to imply, but he incorrected you.
@jberg
ReplyDeleteThanks for being a gentleman and a scholar. You and Rex certainly gave me food for thought, and I'm glad you and others are so attentive to such fine points.
Thank you Justin. I thought I was losing my mind. Of course it’s the same… and never called that. It’s just a royal flush. A,K,Q,J, 10 of the same suit. Every other straight flush is not royal.
ReplyDeleteWhy are Rex and Jeff Chen so upset about previous “lambs” clues for AGNI?
ReplyDeleteWHATSTHEBIGDEAL?
My favorite was FWORDS as clued. Rex did not notice or did not find humor in the fact that the 3 words in the clue were all substitutes for THE real FWORD. He even went to the trouble of re-writing it out of the puzzle!! In any case I better see it again on Monday, @Lewis
ReplyDeleteMy only regret was there was no F in MEGAMERGER, so that an unstated second revealer would be ITS A BIG F-ING DEAL.
@oldactor
No hole in one. Close in a couple ways. One starting word I used for 3 weeks I changed to an anagram of the word the day it was the Wordle anwer. Another time I had a complete whiff on my first word and a perfect hit on my second word. 28 twos in 323 played. No ones.
@Nancy
A bit easy but still a fun solve. Thanks. You are on a roll. Letter and puzzle in the Times in quick succession.
@okanaganer (02:02) If you really do have a big collection of LIP BALM and want to put it to good use, donate it to a women’s shelter. That’s item they always have a NEED for.
ReplyDeleteNot a bad puzzle, I said to myself as I filled in HIFI, which had not been obvious to me. Got the themers early, especially WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL and ROYAL FLUSH. Which is, technically an Ace-high ROYAL straight FLUSH, but no one ever sees the need to say "straight" when referring to it. Like most poker players, I have never been dealt one, but have sometimes gotten them in draw poker or seven-card stud. Like many of you, I was wowed to learn about ANGOLA. I have been once to Portugal, where my friend Peter and I visited Oporto, and crossed the RIO to go port wine tasting at Villa Nova. We ate the same dish three nights running, in three different cities. In none of them did they speak French at the restaurants. Some English, and we could also make do with Spanish, in a pinch.
ReplyDeleteHands up for putting "trend" in before IRISH. My only writeover. I seem to be on Will and Nancy's wavelength, which made for an Easy solve. I felt very different about yesterday's opus.
As someone else already said, "royal flush" = "royal straight flus". But five of a kind beats a royal flush, assuming you have wild cards. The absolute best poker hand is five aces. It's also a sure-fire way to get shot in the Old West for cheating ;-).
ReplyDeleteCan anyone shed light on Rex's musical selection from Everything But The Girl, i.e., why he chose it, what it has to do with the puzzle? I'm partial to Tracy Thorn although I can't say I know her stuff well.
ReplyDelete@oldtimer
Yeah, I've often wondered about this French-speaking business; it was in Coimbra in 1999. Certainly I would have expected English instead of French when they were addressing foreigners; it was quite surprising, and I would not blame anyone here for not believing me. I don't think I ever heard French when we were in Lisbon.
Lisbon is memorable for other reasons, including one of the greatest shocks of my life when I was tapped on the shoulder on the street by a man whose name I subsequently learned was Jose Mestre. I turned. Behold: his entire face was completely hidden, being engulfed by an enormous hemangioma tumor; it was my understanding that he was asking for money. Years later he underwent operations to have it removed. I will not link to an image, as some may find it disturbing.
@Roo Congrats on your QB(s)! I've never gotten one without hints
ReplyDelete@TTrimble – the name of the song is "Big Deal".
ReplyDeleteIt was a puzzle. Not surprised they're using FWORDS in this pro-ARSE era.
ReplyDeleteUniclues:
1 Don Juan type rakishly brags about wooing local gingers.
2 One of the many odd goals of the 1% apparently.
3 Large town known for being downstream from the king's toilet.
4 Baby boomers who don't care what you think of the way they act, think, or talk.
5 Procedures followed by those wishing to decorate their wildebeest for Christmas.
1 I DID AREA IRISH (~)
2 MEGAMERGER FAME (~)
3 ROYAL FLUSH CITY
4 YOLO ELDERS
5 WIRES THEIR GNU (~)
Will someone please explain the bevy: quails: parliament: owls clue?
ReplyDeleteTautology involving the venereal terms when they flock
DeleteRex, rhenium is indeed an element, To say is a bit obscure is an understatement. I got the clue immediately, only because I am a chemist and actually worked with the stuff. It's very rare. Buried in the 3rd row of the transition elements, atomic number 75.
ReplyDelete@Nancy - Another beauty from the team. We had the "L" and "E" for 66 Across and I told Pat that it would be LOVE off a tennis clue. The "Know Your Constructor" rule worked.
ReplyDeleteCongrats, and thanks. Keep 'em coming.
I liked this one. Had to solve from bottom to top. Perfect Wednesday difficulty for me. And never heard of that element.
ReplyDeleteThis one was pretty nice. I like themed puzzles where the themed entries play on multiple senses of the words in a common phrase. This one reminds me of one of the more reliable laugh-getters in my dad-joke repertoire: I went up to the widow at a funeral and told her, "Bargain." She said, "Thank you. That means a great deal."
ReplyDeleteSome bits of fill reeked of mothballs (OREO, OBOE, ADOS), but then again, you can't hardly have a crossword without a few that do. Many more clues than usual for a Wednesday caught me short. Confidently inserted: tRend instead of IRISH, "not I" instead of "I DID", gulp instead of SWIG, curseS instead of FWORDS, and set instead of ERA (on 62A, "Swing ___"). I could not make _AME/_ARE (33A/D) make sense in my head for several literal minutes. That's my bad, obviously, but it was a surprising one.
ORION was clued excellently. Major hat tip for that one.
I accept HUFFISH as a word in the technical "it's in the dictionary" sense, but not in the "something that people use daily" sense. I also maintain that ESC has not been a key used to exit a program in decades at least and that crossword clues need to stop perpetuating this idea.
Also, am I the only one who thinks it feels super tacky to rewrite someone else's crossword in front of God and everybody?
@J.W. – No, you're not the only one. Particularly when the result is no significant improvement.
ReplyDeletep.s. Love the dad-joke.
No, @J.W., you are definitely not the only one:)
ReplyDeleteLet's split hairs: RECTO is a page, not one side of a page 38D, it is the right hand page, VERSO is a left hand page in a bound book, each is one SIDE of a LEAF, no big deal!
ReplyDeleteRex makes some valid points but my overall impression of this puzzle was that it did a good job being a Wednesday puzzle. Not too hard, not too easy. Just right.
ReplyDeleteWell, you know me with letter add-ons, so FWORDS elicited one of my own. Also RHENIUM was the stuff of desperation (Googled it; used in small rockets). Still, with two tens and two fifteens it's a fairly DENSE theme, so there's that. HUFFISH recalls Jabberwocky: "And as in uffish thought he stood..." Anything that reminds me of Lewis Carroll is OK by me.
ReplyDeleteI got a ROYALFLUSH once; I was playing a penny slot and I won forty dollars. Whoop de do. Big theme with a cute revealer, but some fill problems. Par.
Wordle bogey--but with a ten-pointer in the word, maybe should be a par-5 hole.
Learned RECTO and VERSO from crosswords - as with so many new-to-me ideas.
ReplyDeleteNot a bettin' woman, here. But definately good odds on this one.
Diana, LIW
FARE FWORDS
ReplyDeleteShe SAYS, "FIFTYPERCENTOFF?THE
TOO LOW for a MERGER I feel.
Are you AWARE THATSO soft
for LOVE, WHAT or where's THEBIGDEAL?"
"Well, IDID a STINT IN THE NAVY,
IBET turned a DENSE SALTY HUE,
I'd FLUSH or FEINT when IT's wavy,
MAY be I'll HITIT OFF with you TOO."
--- ELI NORTH
Must proofread: First line meant to end at the ?
ReplyDeleteMAYI? DOI? IBET IDID. WHAT?
ReplyDeleteHand up for tRend setter before IRISH. Otherwise easy with not that much for PPP.
Wordle birdie! largely by starting with trial and few errors.
I kept trying to put “swear”
ReplyDeleteIn place of the f word but it wouldn’t work for the down word and there should not be only one rebus word in the puzzle