Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- PROFILE PICTURE (20A: "Malcolm X” or "Milk"?) (two "pictures" that are "profiles" of a famous person)
- WATER FEATURE (25A: "Titanic" or "Jaws"?) (two "features" that take place on/in "water")
- WALKIE-TALKIE (41A: "Wild" or "The Road"?) (two non-silent (!) movies in which people "walk" a lot)
- FLICK OF A SWITCH (47A: "Freaky Friday" or "The Parent Trap"?) (two "flicks" in which characters "switch" identities)
José Antonio Aguilar Jiménez (born August 7, 1968), better known as Pepe Aguilar, is an American singer.
From a young age, Aguilar accompanied his parents, Mexican singer-actors Antonio Aguilar and Flor Silvestre on tour. He played his first concert at the age of three, joining his father onstage at Madison Square Garden in New York City. He now does the same with his own children, Leonardo Aguilar and Ángela Aguilar, who have also continued in the steps of their father and grandparents.
Aguilar has sold over 12 million albums worldwide. His work has earned him four Grammy Awards, five Latin Grammy Awards, nineteen Lo Nuestro Awards, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. (wikipedia)
• • •
I only went "ick" a couple of times during this solve, first at ZIP TIE, which are restraints used by cops and/or white-right terrorists who invade capitol buildings in winter. I mean, they're also just fasteners that are used for tons of other industrial purposes. I'm just telling you the image that the term evokes for me (I've only ever heard the term in human restraint contexts). It's a fine word, even a good one, crossword-wise, but sometimes words just hit you wrong, and that one did today. I also went "ick" at the clue for POSE, which feels awfully forced (34D: Something you might have to sit still for). It's the "thing"-ness that feels awkward. I don't sit still for a POSE. I ... POSE. The POSE *is* the sitting still. The clue wants to be clever but it gets that cleverness by way of awkwardness, which is never a good idea. You want your cleverness to *land*—perfect and undeniable. Anyway, very minor issue, and the very last answer of the day. The rest of the grid is overwhelmingly clean (and well clued), and there's even some noteworthy longer fill to spice things up. The bottom of the grid is particularly suggestive, with TAWDRY and CORKSCREW dancing around BALI, trying not to get involved in a torrid affair ("WE CAN'T!"). MILE TIME also strikes me as an original, if not particularly sexy, answer.
No real trouble spots. I had no idea who PEPE Aguilar was, but the crosses took care of that, as all good crosses do. I looked at 35A: Instrument prominently heard in both Seal's "Kiss From a Rose" and Sonny & Cher's "I Got You Babe" (OBOE), saw that I had -OE in place, and wrote in ALOE ... which is some kind of weird crossword reflex I didn't know I had. I mean, I knew I was looking for an instrument, and my fingers just went "blah blah blah that clue's too long, it's four letters, ends in -OE, it's ALOE, let's move on." Bizarre. I also wrote in KNOBS at first for 39A: Bozos (BOOBS). Then I changed it because I wanted RELY at 39D: Count (on) (BANK). So that was a weird wrong/wrong patch, but a brief one. I had no idea that FIVES lasted only roughly (and aptly) five years (45D: Bills with an estimated life span of 5.5 years (appropriately)). I wonder if that number will change dramatically as people use cash less and less. I like using cash when I can, and I like that the puzzle is really committed to hard currency today, with its FIVES and its COINS. Not sure anything really needs explaining today. The COLD OPEN is a regular feature of "SNL" and has been for a while—it's the skit that opens ...well, cold, before the opening credits, without any lead-in music or fanfare of any sort. Just ... right in. My morning blogging is the COLD OPEN of my day. Out of bed and right to it. Time now for the hot open (coffee, kitties, Wordle/Quordle, "Wake 'N' Bake" w/ Clay Pigeon on WFMU). Enjoy your day, see you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
ReplyDeleteEasy enough that I was able to solve as an early-week puzzle, i.e., without reading the clues for the long acrosses. Read post-solve, the clues provided a very satifying "Aha!"
Sitting on my commuter train this morning and stifling a little giggle at Rex’s autopilot alOE for OBOE. How can something I haven’t done in my recollection feel so relatable? Maybe because I’ve put the remote in the refrigerator more than once? We need a term for this crossword/crossed wires reflex.
ReplyDeleteOverall a fun easy Wednesday puzzle (even if I don’t know what numismatic means yet.)
Crosswired
DeleteThought I had it cold, but FLICKONASWITCH crossing with NINE didn't work. I finally changed the "N" to an "F"and that did it. I don't go to the movies enough, obviously, because I didn't know about the switch aspect.
ReplyDeleteThe fill was very easy, I thought.
Exactly what happened to me…had to come to Rex’s blog to figure out what square was wrong
DeleteI thought Rex might get hung up on the inconsistencies, like FLICK in the starting spot, and I am glad he didn’t - I loved this too. “There Will Be Blood” and “Deepwater Horizon” could work for OILY FILM. That’s all I got ( and I had to look up “movies about oil” to get the second one.)
ReplyDeleteNot a lot of clever cluing today but the nice long answers make up for it.
Do kids still use WALKIE TALKIEs or do they just call each on their cell phones?
What is this “call” of which you speak? Is it a new term for “text?”
DeleteWas a little concerned coming out of the gate with OKOK, PEPE and TILDA (as clued) and I thought we may be getting another of those NYT crossword puzzles that doesn’t care much for words, but fortunately cooler heads prevailed and the rest of the grid was less egregious. I thought FLICK OF A SWITCH was the pic of the litter here. I also enjoyed BOOBS in lieu of the overused ASS for the juvenile humor entry, so it ended up being a good day overall.
ReplyDeleteThis one left a bad taste in my mouth, mostly for the cluing of PROFILE PICTURE. Why, when literally any two biopics would work, would you ever pick two movies about political leaders who were assassinated? Maybe I'm overly sensitive, but it really rubbed me the wrong way, as it's the logical connection that immediately occurred to me when I saw Malcolm X and Milk. It would have worked a lot better for me if they'd clued it, say, "Bohemian Rhapsody or The Queen."
ReplyDeleteFelt like this took forever, and felt like every entry in the puzzle was four letters long.
ReplyDeleteI do like the theme quite a lot.
NW corner got us off to a bad start with OKOK crossing OPS, and throw an unknown PEPE in there.
“Pinocchio” or “Team America: World Police” – PUPPETSHOW
My only criticism is that I’m not sure ebooks still count as “novel”.
ReplyDelete@ Wanderlust (6:45am)
ReplyDeleteThey don't even talk in the phones. They text.
Rex: My kids have a subscription to a monthly science kit. This month one of the projects was to build a homemade air rocket launcher. At one point the parts were secured together with a ZIPTIE. So there's a much more innocuous image for you to associate with the product.
ReplyDeleteWith Passover coming up, I'm reminded of a sidebar in our Hagaddah that talks about how wine is used at the seder as a symbol of freedom when so many have become enslaved to alcohol. The lesson is that no object is inherently good or bad; it's the choices people make in using it that have moral value.
In some puzzles, there’s fun in trying to guess the theme. In others, it’s in getting the theme early and trying to guess remaining theme answers. Today, for me, as with yesterday’s TABOO BOOBOO theme, it was the latter.
ReplyDeleteGuessing theme answers today was indeed great fun, and cluing them with film titles was perfect.
It all had me thinking movies, so when I scanned the grid post-solve, HOME made me think “Home Alone”, COINS evoked “Three Coins In The Fountain”, BIRDS brought my mind in image of Hitchcock’s face, BALI elicited “Eat, Pray, Love”, and AMEN had me thinking “Lillies Of The Field”.
And [What falls by the wheyside?] for curd, a clue never done before, and IMO hilarious, was icing on the cake.
A NYT debut puzzle with a fresh voice and feel, one that will KEEP. Makes me eager to see what you come up with next, Madeline. Thank you for this, and congratulations!
Rehashed theme and borderline TV Guide fill. I did like FLICK OF A SWITCH - the others didn’t hit. TALKIE hasn’t been used as a movie reference in forever. The recurring double letter sub theme brings this closer to a Monday.
ReplyDeletePressure DROP
Liked CORKSCREW - my longest run last year was only 10k but still track my MILE TIMEs. TAWDRY BOOBS sounds cool. I fixed my grandson’s walker with a ZIP TIE a few weeks ago - the generalization is rough.
Not my kind of Wednesday.
I always liked the burning helmet
I heard "Fire" countless times on the radio in the '60's, but knew little or nothing about who sang it. Never saw this video and have no memory of ever seeing a photo of him. British, seeing Top of the Pops? Too lazy to look it up. Seems like KISS ripped him off, no?
DeleteI dunno, I have a bit of a problem with 45D. did they not give us the answer with that clue?
ReplyDeleteWow, and I thought Rex wouldn’t like it at all.
ReplyDeleteNo runner ever said "MILE TIME" . It's not a thing. It's " mile pace" or possible race time if it's a mile race.
ReplyDeleteAnd someone needs to explain 38A to me. I got it through crosses but WTH am I missing because it makes no sense to me.
Factually incorrect comment. Just Google, man.
DeleteIt’s a common baseball expression. - when you swing and miss the ball three times you fan or strike out - comes from fanning the air with the bat rather than hitting the ball.
DeleteEvery runner knows their MILE TIME. I haven’t run in years and I still know mine (well, from then).
DeleteI got WALKIE TALKIE first, thought it was a giggle of an answer, then was charmed by FLICK OF A SWITCH and WATER FEATURE. A clever and satisfying theme. Here’s another entry:
ReplyDelete“Fiddler on the Roof” or “The Passion of Joan of Arc”
SHOW OF GOOD FAITH
No real problems here. My only error was limA for FAVA, and it didn’t last. I think my biggest hesitation was MONO or pOly for [Prefix with syllabic], and I waited for crosses to inform me. Few gems among the longer downs, although CORKSCREW is nice and I liked ANTIQUES. I thought MILE TIME was slightly awkward, but maybe it's just something out of my experience. Bit of a revelation in the OBOE clue: I’d never really focused on the dominant sound in “I Got You, Babe” to the point of identifying the instrument. Didn’t know that meaning of FAN [Completely miss the ball], but I gather it’s old slang. I wondered if Rex was going to object to OPS and OPERATION, but he was cool and I’m never particularly upset by repetition. Enjoyed the clue for CURD [What falls by the wheyside?]. And liked the mini-theme of love-gone-wrong in WE CAN’T and PINED.
UNICLUES:
1. Clairvoyant automaton beginning its college prep.
2. Call them ginger beer?
3. Is it just me, or are the weekly company reports starting to sound a little pious?
4. Beef up the sheep’s allowance…
5. How to handle yet another financial institution collapse.
6. What sowers try to avoid by warbling soothing songs to everything they’re planting.
7. Defeatist sign on a collectibles shop.
1. SEER ROBOT PSAT
2. OFFEND ALES
3. AMEN ENTER MEMO
4. LEST NEEDY EWES
5. FIRE BANK
6. DROP TENSE SEED
7. ANTIQUES, TAWDRY
[SB: yd, -1. Well, I was down to two shortish words and in brain-wrack mode. Somehow managed to dredge up the shorter (even though it’s weird), but missed the longer. Oh well. And I was annoyed they wouldn't accept CONEY (rabbit).]
FH
ReplyDeleteI found this quite challenging, not really easy. But it was pretty good.
Except for ZIPTIE, which made me shudder, instantly bringing to mind the case of Nicholas John Roske, the white terrorist who - - 8 months ago - - planned to use zip-ties in the execution of his assassination plan. Will Short should have had a trigger warning for that one.
WATERFEATURE and PROFILEPICTURE are not familiar phrases for me. FLICKOFTHESWITCH was excellent.
ReplyDelete@Prefab (7:01). No idea why they picked those two movies.
Someone complained about too many fours. I'm rejoicing at there being only four threes. Near the all-time low.
OFFAL may be scraps now but when I was growing up in the Depression it was often dinner. Tongue, liver, brains.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteThis is how you F a puz. (Har, not FWORD a puz...)
Thought Rex would throw an epic tantrum about FLICK being at the beginning of the last Themer, when the other three are at the end. But he says, "I don't care *at all*..." Rex, always keeps you guessing.
Looking for the Pangram, alas no G (odd), J or X.
Neat puz, repurposing real phrases as movie types. A TARIFFic Wednesday. 😁 Easy, which is fine. Continuing the "Spring of Good Puzs" week. It's weird how some weeks aren't the best, and other weeks shine. The fill here is remarkable clean.
Did have a writeover, rely for BANK.
Nice one, Madeline, keep up those F's!
Nine F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Congrats on getting a nonet/ennead of Fs to make your day! 🕘♋
DeleteAmy: made just about all the errors Rex and others mentioned. Got my money's worth going around and fixing them. Ingenious theme, made me grin.
ReplyDeleteGreat game last night, Japan edging USA 3-2.
And why yes, Rex. I think I will enjoy this day.😉
I liked 3/4 of this puzzle, but A) is FLICK OF A SWITCH an actual phrase? I have no idea what that’s getting on. I understand flick = movie and both movies mentioned involve switches, but where are we getting the phrase “flick of a switch?” Is that in the language? Is it a reference I’m not getting? Sounds like “turn of a knob” to me. 2) This themer breaks the very nice pattern that was established in the first three, where we have a an adjective/modifier followed by a word meaning movie. Ugly way to finish what started as a nice puzzle.
ReplyDeleteYou can turn on the lights with the FLICKOFASWITCH!
DeleteFor Anonymous (re 38-Down)...In baseball, to strike out is to FAN. So the clue is accurate, although adding "three times" would make it clearer (and easier).
ReplyDeleteThis is the kind of morning when I can read a clue like "5.5. years (appropriately), and still take a while to come up with FIVE. I mean, really.
ReplyDeleteNow, about ZIPTIES. Back in the days when my wife had extensive gardens, we ordered them in bulk. They're good for tons of things, from tying up plants to putting up mesh fencing. One of those things that I wish had been invented earlier, like my screw gun.
Very smooth Wednesday with a clever theme, what's not to like? Congrats on the debut, MK. My Kudos to you for a very promising start, and thanks for all the fun.
Zip Ties are so ubiquitous (Rex even acknowledges tons of uses) in so many professions, hobbies, and general household quick fixes, crazy that such a generic fastener would instantly evoke corrupt (implied) cops and white supremacy. (And that someone only ever hears the term in relation to those two contexts). Odd and I guess, sad.
ReplyDeleteI loved this puzzle! The themes were fun, and I love that all the movies are ones I knew. The last themer was hardest. I had ....O_ASWITCH for a long time, but thought the answer would be something "on" a switch. The bottom left corner was hard for me because I had "torch" for Olympic symbol, and then kept me from filling in that portion of the grid.
ReplyDeleteOne complaint I had about cluing: I didn't like the clue for curds ("falls by the wheyside?") I thought curds and whey separated, so curds wouldn't actually fall by the wheyside, right? They'd fall by the curdside. The whey would be sitting there on the more liquidy wheyside. My mom got into making curds and whey a bit during COVID, so I feel like I'm not making this up! I ate it and felt like Little Miss Muffet.
you dont have to swing and miss three times to make it a FAN.
ReplyDeleteNot familiar with the films so theme meant nothing to me unfortunately.
ReplyDeleteZip-ties have hundreds of uses, all long before January 6th, none of them violent. I think of Bono declaring, "Charles Manson stole this song, we're stealing it back."
ReplyDeleteI always love it when a puzzle engenders "Wild" curiosity in me at the outset -- and this one did it in spades. Each of the cinematic pairs obviously had something obvious in common -- but what, exactly? I couldn't wait for the puzzle to fill in so that I could find out.
ReplyDeleteAnd then...a bit of a thud. PROFILE PICTURE seemed a bit, well, flat. WATER FEATURE seemed a bit, well, dry Only when I got to WALKIE TALKIE did I chuckle and think: "Really nice!!! Well done!!!"
Having not seen either "Freaky Friday" or "The Parent Trap", I don't understand FLICK OF A SWITCH and therefore have no opinion about it at all.
I think this is a cute concept that doesn't quite live up to its initial promise -- but it was good fun to solve nonetheless.
I’m surprised no one has mentioned that the last theme answer is about flipped identities, and the answer itself is flipped so that the movie element of the answer is at the beginning of the answer, unlike all the other theme answers that had the movie element at the end. I thought this lifted the last theme answer into the stratosphere and really made the puzzle for me. Brilliant!
ReplyDeleteI am surely the biggest dunce here sucking my thumb all by myself in a dark corner. I had no idea what this was all about. None. Color me embarrassed.
ReplyDeleteI actually finished this as a non theme. And I had three errors. Actress Swinton has a new name... TILCA. Evidently when I move in spirals, I do a TORK SCREW and the final FLICK was ON A SWITCH.
I couldn't wait to come here and have @Rex explain. EASY he rates it. He understood (as the rest of you) that these were kinds of movies. I didn't get the PICTURE.
I seriously thought we were talking about a switcheroo of words. Could Malcom X and Milk be a PICTURE PROFILE? Once I got that notion in my head, I was doomed.
OK OK so now I know it's about movies. And guess what...I think this is primo.
Funny how your mind works. One minute I was pulling hair out of my LOBE....trying every which way to figure this out and hating the fact that nothing made sense, to actually really smiling once this was explained. It felt like trying to explain that taking just one bite of my delicious liver and onions would change your mind about that wonderful taste. I bit...Yes...it was delicious.
I'll read everyone else once I walk the puppies and dust off the idiot meter from my parietal or maybe my occipital brain matter.
Exactly the same issues and a Wednesday dnf.
DeleteI personally prefer to “flip” switches rather than FLICK them. I flip them from the Off to the On position, or vice versa. When I FLICK something, it’s analogous to a “kick”, but it’s done with a finger- think of FLICKing a crumb off of the table. A FLICK sends something flying through the air, is what I’m saying. FLICK boogers if you must, but be more gentle with your switches. Flip them.
ReplyDeleteThx, Madeline, for the ZESTy Wednes. puz! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Pretty much ZIPped thru this one.
Didn't grok the SWITCH FLICKs; don't know the movies in the clue.
Another excellent adventure! :)
___
Gorski's Mon. New Yorker was wonderful and would've made for a easy-med NYT Fri. puz. By far, my quickest NYM.
Also enjoyed Christina Iverson's PandA puz on xwordinfo.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
I have an appointment this morning and wasn’t going to take time to comment but just couldn’t let this terrific puzzle pass without saying wow! Then when I learned it’s a debut – double wow!! And as far as I’m concerned, ought to be POW too. Big congratulations Madeline! I see a lots of great puzzles in the future if you KEEP at it. And I sure hope you do.
ReplyDeleteIf you’re going to get INTO a PPP based theme, this is how you do it. I’ve only seen two of the eight PICTURES but had no problem at all figuring out the answers. Themers were fantastic and the fill downright fulgent which reminds me, I couldn’t help thinking . . .
@Roo - the guy who’s a big FAN of F’s - must be feeling on FIRE after finishing this FINE FEATURE.
I heard when you made your donation to WFMU. I listen every day, especially enjoy Ken's show
ReplyDeleteand Seven Second Delay, never miss them, but three hours of Dancing Queen covers was a bit much.
Alice, I agree with you about FIVE. Too much of a gimme.
ReplyDeleteWonderful debut!
ReplyDeleteFor those that are associating “flick of a switch” with lights, I think this clue is actually referring to horse riding. The crop used by riders can also be called a switch. I’ve definitely heard the phrase used before.
ReplyDeleteGood point. My horse riding days are over, but I never even carried a crop, let alone used one.
Deletemwah
ReplyDeleteLike @RooMonster, I thought Rex would think the inconsistency of the final theme answer would be really, really bad--you know, "OFF-AL." But the SWITCH of the FLICK drew praise. One never knows how OFL will define "Go large or go home."
ReplyDeleteFor me, reversing the syntax of the last movie clue slowed my solve down in the south. I wanted some synonym for movie and what I had was WITCH. And I was stumped on OFFAL and FIVES, the former because I had nAVy beans, the latter because OFFEND wouldn't come.
Speaking of OFFEND, here's a Uniclue:
Brews with an unpleasant aftertaste? OFF END ALES
Loved the World Baseball Classic finale last night, with Otani FANning Trout for the final out. Though I will allow a single swing and miss to be referred as a FAN, it is much much more common for the word to be applied to a completed strikeout and to be used to describe what the pitcher did: "He FANned 9 Yankees today."
Yep easy. My only snag was taking out BOOBS when it looked like 45d could be rely (hi @Rex) but BANK finally fixed that. Clever, amusing and fun, liked it a bunch! A fine debut!
ReplyDeleteWrote in water feature and thought well, why not, I guess. Never heard of it. First three hits on NYT search are 1952, 1949, and 1939. It's okay, has its own wikipedia page, but seems almost comically nonspecific. Trying to picture someone saying, "Gee, that's a swell water feature you've got there."
ReplyDeleteFountains, ponds, and waterfalls in a garden are called water features.
DeleteMy thought was CreatureFeature
ReplyDeleteI love movies and I appreciate Rex’s enthusiasm for the medium but this puzzle just didn’t rock my boat. I found it on the beige end of the spectrum and also unchallenging for a Wednesday, IF you know the titles that is.
ReplyDeleteBut for a debut. . . well, bravissimo!
As a former (heavy) wine drinker, I liked seeing CORKSCREW.
The last two themers were by far the best. First two kinda struggled to sound like somethin I'd heard of before. Sorta like COLDOPEN also did. Every other puzpart was pretty darn cool, tho.
ReplyDeletefave stuff included: ANTIQUES. KEROSENE. OPERATION game. CORKSCREW. TAWDRY. ROBOT. WECANT clue. OBOE clue. TENSE/BOOBS/COLD(OPEN) combo.
staff weeject pic [of a meagerly 4 choices]: (movie)FAN.
fave flick from the puzclues: "Jaws".
fave DOGSHOW: "Cujo". No, wait … "Best in Show".
fave SOAPFILM: "Tootsie".
Thanx for the fun Ms. Kaplan darlin. And congratz on yer fine debut.
p.s. Lotsa puzdebuts, nowadays. The old hand puzmakers must be gettin lotsa rejections. M&A is glad he went the runtpuz route.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
**gruntz**
♪Jenny Diver, Suky Tawdry,
ReplyDeleteMiss Lotte Lenya, and ol' Lucy Brown ♪
What's the phenomenon where an answer turns out to be wrong in one spot but then shows up correctly somewhere else? That happened to me with CURD, which I first had as the lemon meringue pie ingredient.
I like the bottom two themers – they work really well because "flick" and "talkie" are zingy synonyms for movies. "Picture" and "feature" are blander. Too bad there aren't more evocative epithets around.
We can so.
Also, @Rex– please don't write out "chef's kiss". You put the "mwah" already, that's bad enough.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteOh never mind. Just picture Bobby Darin singing "Mack The Knife."
DeleteI liked FLiCK OF A SWITCH and WALKIE TALKIE. The other two themers, not so much. But an okay puzzle overall. Enjoyed learning that FIVES have a life span of 5.5 years. After that, I guess, due to inflation, they become ONES.
ReplyDeleteThe clue for 35A is working overtime. It’s vying for entry into the Oboe English Dictionary (OED).
Alternative clue for 54A:
* DeSantis imagined autobiography about become Emperor of America
* I, RON
FLICK OF A SWITCH is an idiom, or rather part of one ("you can choose [whatever] at the flick of a switch"). Based on the comments here I guess it's not as common as I would have thought. It definitely rings as an in-the-language phrase to me. And, googling for examples just now I learned that there is an AC/DC song called "FLICK OF the SWITCH."
ReplyDeleteYeah, the clue for FIVES is a giveaway and "breaks the rules." But I think it's cute and tossing in a four-letter gimme in the first half of the week isn't such an awful sin. I approve.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteFor @Joe D
ReplyDeleteThank you JC.
Delete@mathgent --- how did you get to 44 permutations yesterday? I'm not disputing you -- I'm just too stupid to figure it out.
ReplyDeleteYes this was a real nice theme. And the bonus that 47 across is kinda both a theme answer and a revealer!
ReplyDeleteTypeovers: LIMA before FAVA, and CIRCLES UP before CORKSCREW.
Like Alice Pollard, I was taken aback that "5" is in a clue for which FIVES is the answer.
@Anonymous 10:05 am, I would agree that FLIP seems more common than FLICK a switch, but Google Ngram says we're wrong.
[Spelling Bee: yd 0; but Barbara S queue up that Twilight Zone theme because again we had the same 2 last answers! I only got the 4er by typing random letter sequences; I swear I have never seen that word before. M-W labels it archaic.]
@Liveprof (1:30). Permutations of an ordered string where no item is in the same position are called derangements. There's a complicated formula for calculating it. It's a summation of factorial expressions.
ReplyDeleteI thought the theme was very clever and deserves an extra "wow" for this being a debut puzzle. After PICTURE and FEATURE, I wondered how the constructor was going to come up with more synonyms for movies - so WALKIE TALKIE was a delight, which was then multiplied by the unexpected switcheroo of the last FLICK. But WATER FEATURE also got a smile, reminding me of the inflated jargon on HGTV home renovation shows touting various FEATUREs ("feature walls," "water features," "curb-appeal features," etc.).
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: OKay, MILEpost. No idea: PEPE - I had PEtE, giving me the kids' game OtERATION - a brain transplant needed here, considering how long it took me to figure that out.
You wouldn't think we'd need so many words for "movie." This took me forever to finish, but I did so without help. So much real estate covered in thematic material and needing lots of crosses meant for more work than usual. Still quite pleasant.
ReplyDeleteLove: ROBOT.
Tee-Hee: BOOBS BOOBS BOOBS BOOBS.
Uniclues:
1 Wait patiently for Jessica's next box office flop.
2 Arson plan nixed.
3 Join the credit union.
4 The digital version of George Clooney's memoir is a bit better than meh.
5 Create nervous spawn.
6 Cheapskate's decor.
1 KEEP ALBA FLAME
2 KEROSENE? WE CAN'T.
3 FIRE BANK
4 IDOL EBOOK FINE
5 DROP TENSE SEED
6 TAWDRY ANTIQUES (~)
@Gary J (3:58) -- #5 is inspired -- especially for those of us who believe that nature outweighs nurture.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this puzzle tremendously, even if the southwest corner gave me some trouble (that awful OFFAL).
ReplyDeleteI do have to comment on the handwringing over ZIPTIE — it is odd to see Rex and others fixate on a niche use of such an incredibly common fastener. I probably come into contact with a ZIPTIE three or four times a week, and I don't have any sort of technical job or hobby.
It's like deciding that NAILS are a no-go because of their use in pipe bombs. Or FROGS are taboo because some chronically-online white supremacists adopted a frog meme as their calling card.
A good opportunity, I think, to take a breath and step back. Some normal things are just... Normal.
Never knew that ZIP TIEs were used in that way, Rex. I associate them with something far less grisly: a band that I like.
ReplyDeleteThe theme seemed corny at first, but the increasing cleverness definitely caused it to grow on me. And that final themer is *chef's kiss* beautiful.
Every spring I use about 200 ZIPTIES to install my awning onto the frame on my deck. They secure my luggage tags to my suitcases and neatly restrain wires around the TV. Thousands of practical uses, so many that a human restraint would never even enter my mind.
ReplyDeleteAnd add to the currency theme (FIVES, COINS) 48D Numismatic Rating = FINE. Numismatic = relating to coins, in this case the condition grade of a coin for collecting. FINE condition is around a medium, not like new but not heavily worn.
Lindsay Lohan started in both Freaky Friday and Parent Trap remakes. It would have been fun if there was a clue that brought her into the mix.
ReplyDeleteI think FLICKASWITCH is perfect. Of course the order is in reverse order from the rest of the themers but that’s what makes it perfect since the movies are about role reversal. Nice job Madeline Kaplan.
ReplyDeletePROFILEPICTURE, OK, you can take a picture in profile. Tenuous, but FINE. WALKIETALKIE and FLICKOFASWITCH: slambang right on. It's the second one I have trouble with. Sorry, but "WATERFEATURE" is just not a thing. It describes the clued films, for sure, but it's not a "familiar phrase." The only "feature" of water is that it's wet.
ReplyDeleteStill, it's an interesting grid, with some good fun fill. On Sesame Street, one might say "This puzzle has been brought to you by the letter F [no fewer than 9] and the NOS. FIVES and SEED." Birdie.
Wordle par.
@spacecraft 11:41am:
DeleteWatch HGTV, or go to Las Vegas and stand in front of the Bellagio late at night, and you will know exactly what a water feature is.
TAWDRY ZEST
ReplyDeleteSTART A FIRE to OPEN the game,
TILDA ANDI will FAN the FLAME,
LEST COLD WATER may ENSUE,
AND then WECAN'T CORKSCREW.
--- PEPE ALBA
To Spacecraft: A WATERFEATURE is something such as a fountain an artificial pond or waterfall, usually in a garden.
ReplyDelete@spacey - I think a WATERFEATURE is landscape architecture-speak for a reflecting pond or waterfall in your back yard.
ReplyDeleteJessica ALBA? I'm a FAN.
Wordle par.
All a Wednesday should be - doable and a bit of a challenge.
ReplyDeleteWhere have some of my posts gone???
Lady Di