Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- AWARD OF THE STATE (24A: Lottery prize?)
- BRUSHED A SIDE (30A: Painted 25% of the house?)
- ABRIDGE TOO FAR (54A: Make one's long story overly short?)
- HALF A WAKE (66A: Just the refreshments, not the viewing?)
- ATONE POEM (68A: Ode to reparation for sin?)
- A CUTE TRIANGLE (85A: One darling percussion instrument?)
- AHEAD OF STEAM (104A: Where stealth is found in the dictionary?)
- SLOWLY GREW A PART (116A: Successfully used Rogaine?)
Weetabix cereals in the UK created Alpen muesli cereal in 1971. Alpen is a whole grain muesli cereal consisting of rolled oats, fruits and nuts.
In the UK, Alpen has been a staple on British shelves since the 1970s, accounting for 3% of the UK and Ireland breakfast cereal sales in 2003. It appeared in the early 1970s in Canada and then in the US in the 1990s after Weetabix established a partnership with natural foods manufacturer, Barbara's Bakery.
In North America, Alpen No Added Sugar and Alpen Original are mainstays in U.S. natural food stores and Canadian grocery stores. In the UK, Weetabix sells Alpen in four varieties. Alpen is exported to other countries in several varieties. (wikipedia)
• • •
Under the "+" column on my puzzle print-out, I have HOT FOR and MASK UP. These are cool, original phrases. They were also the only answers that provided even a modicum of joy today. The theme was ANEMIC, as I say, and the fill was just OK. Not terrible, not noteworthy. Fine. There weren't many trouble spots. Struggled briefly with the ELTON / BLONDS / BOAR bit up top (no idea re: ELTON (28A: Cambridgeshire's historic ___ Hall), and BLONDES, as a noun, is typically spelled with an "E," though perhaps that's because it's typically used as a noun for women. I guess I have seen ALPEN in the grocery aisle before, but yeesh, that seemed slightly obscure (and not at all good). The sides of tic-tac-toe are XS AND OS, not XANDO; no one would ever say that ever ever (77A: Tic-tac-toe sides). Which is why XSANDOS has appeared in the NYTXW ten times and XANDO ... well, this is the third time, but it's really the first time clued this exact way. It's bad. Crossing MOREY and EDENS (neither of them winners), it's especially bad. Could've just gone with LANDO Calrissian or really a bunch of alternative scenarios in that eastern section, but instead we get this awkward garbage, and for what? An "X"? It's bad to get enamored with high-valued Scrabble letters, it really is.
EGOTISM before EGO TRIP (92D: Narcissist's indulgence). WEEP before WEPT (67D: Shed some tears)—that verb tense ambiguity really slowed me up. So did the STRUM / TURN / EMERALDS bit. TURN was well hidden (80D: Time to go), and EMERALDS, how the hell should I know, I'm not 12 (87D: Rare fins in Minecraft). What is a LECTOR? (49D: Class speaker). It's Latin for "reader," but it seems pretty archaic, especially for any schools in the U.S. I think the puzzle wants it to be a simple substitute for "Lecturer," but I assure you, no one uses that term. I truly hope you had more fun than I did solving this one. It would be hard to have less.
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]
I had AHEADOFSTate for far too long. Thought it was right... but nothing was gelling in the SE. then I put money un at 127A with no crosses, but I was desperate in that barren area. I had Sa - - - - for the manatee. racked my brain and knew it had to be SEACOW, so something was amiss with AHEADOFSTate.... change it to AHEADOFSTEAM and things started dropping. This made it tough for me in an otherwise medium puzzle. I thought HALFAWAKE was weak. Dont even really understand it.
ReplyDelete"Viewing" in the clue is meant to be a viewing at a funeral (or WAKE). I agree it was terrible. I don't directly associate "refreshments" with WAKEs.
DeleteI think anyway. That answer and the clue were real groaners.
Half a funerary wake - the viewing of the deceased and then the refreshments.
DeleteEasy. I’m mostly with @Rex on this one. I now know why I had problems making sense of some of the theme answers.
ReplyDeleteYou really wouldn't use HEAD OF STEAM or WARD OF THE STATE without the A in front. A. "...built up a head of steam." "...became a ward of the state." To me they are legit, commonplace phrases inclusive of the article. TONE POEM, no. And you don't "grow" a part in hair. You make a part in hair that's already grown. So that one is suspect.
ReplyDeleteI did like HALF A WAKE and A CUTE TRIANGLE. And I liked seeing PERFORATE in the grid. "Give me the secret algorithm or Slava here will perforate you!" All in all, not an amazing Sunday puzzle, but better than some of the recents.
"B-L-...I don't know"
@Joe Dipinto 1:21am:
DeleteMost people have a natural part in their hair, so if you regrow your hair that natural part will reappear naturally.
Resident of Cambridgeshire here: I too have never heard of Elton Hall so was struggling with Shire Hall and wondering why the crossword creator would think it sufficiently renowned to merit inclusion.
ReplyDeleteWe have Wimpole Hall, Ely and Peterborough Cathedrals, King's College Chapel (and the rest of the Cambridge Colleges). But Elton Hall? Were they out of Elton John clues?
Haha! Very true
Delete@Holly 1:27am:
DeleteElton Hall is an estate with manor that dates back to the 1600's.
Not exactly a scintillating theme, but some good moments. I enjoyed BRUSHED A SIDE and SLOWLY GREW A PART I guess because the A came in the middle, it just seemed more polished that way. Agree with Rex that AWARD OF THE STATE and ATONE POEM were clunkers.
ReplyDeleteNice to see ANTE clued in a non card game and non prefix way, for once.
XANDO could be a brother of XANDER Schauffele (golfer).
The "Unfrozen" clue for THAWED reminds me of the classic SNL skit "Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer". The title explains everything... he's on a plane, and they won't serve drinks because of turbulence or something. "Your modern world is so confusing; the lights, the noise. Me want double Martini!"
For 19 across "Word spelled with an alif in Arabic" I stupidly typed ALEPH. SHEESH!
[Spelling Bee: Sat 0, last 2 words this pair.]
I can't say that I'm happy I stayed up to do this. By the end of it I was asleep half the time. Not a puzzle to do in your sleep. Sections like the XANDO one kept forcing me to wake up and slog on. Busy day tomorrow so I had to knock off the weekend tonight.
ReplyDeleteyd -0
ReplyDeleteI was HALF AWAKE after a particularly trying Saturday, so I appreciated an easy-ish puzzle. As I was solving I kept thinking, "Oh, Rex is going to hate this one." I didn't exactly like it, but I appreciated it.
I’m a muslim and therefore DNF because they wanted me to write ALLAH, which I refuse to do.
ReplyDeletedidn't you just write it?
DeleteLol!
DeleteIs there a difference between writing and typing??
DeleteTroll gonna troll
Delete59A clue is very funny
ReplyDeleteI actually liked this puzzle and was a bit surprised at the quite-negative critique from Rex. But Rex's points are valid; I'm just more forgiving.
ReplyDeleteFun clues I particularly liked:
- Dancer's boss
- Track star?
- Raquel of Fantastic Voyage (only because I sometimes use Fantastic Voyage to illustrate certain concepts about blood flow to students)
- Reserve for later... or something to reserve
I was hung up for a spell in the NE corner because I wrote LEGS instead of EYES (18D). Then, 24A looked like it would end in "...THESTING" which just wouldn't work.
Had PUREE before PULSE (22A).
I admit I've never heard of a SWEAR jar. Had to look this up.
SSNS and ALOU are very "old" puzzle entries. It's astounding how often these show up.
I'll take issue with SIGN as equivalent to "symptom." In clinical medicine, these are two different things: A symptom is something a patient complains about (pain, itch, diarrhea, etc.) while a sign is something the clinician find on examination (rash, swelling, tender abdomen, etc.).
I'm with you! I'd hate to crush the hopes and dreams of an aspiring creator, especially when it has some good moments.
DeleteThere is an expression many bloggers here use, Joaquin's dictum- named after a blogger - which means crossword clues are just that, CLUES not definitions. They need not be exact or technically correct. "Close enough for crosswords" as Joaquin says. This clue /answer combo is fine by the Times rules, so no reason to feel sorry for him.
DeleteAlso a one time blogger -Z- noted that if you know a lot about a subject you might know "too much" and it distracts you.For most people, that's too fine a distinction you are making.
Thanks, Rex.
ReplyDeleteSmall counterpoint - I thought this was just average entertainment until I got to the last square I had left: the intersection of SEXES and XANDO. After just a minute the light went on and all smiles here. I thought the clueing was interestingly clever - and not overly obscure or exotic - throughout.
DNF. The cross 6A: Starting from (iS OF) with 6D: _____ Límon, first Latina poet laureate from the US (iDA) sank me.
ReplyDeleteThis was a very nice, entertaining puzzle. Thought that several of the themers - SLOWLY GREW A PART, BRUSHED A SIDE, A BRIDGE TOO FAR - were wonderfully wacky. Well done, constructor and editor.
ReplyDeleteTalk about an image that hasn’t appeared on my inner movie screen in many a decade: MOREY Amsterdam! That brought a big smile.
ReplyDeleteThere was enough bite in the grid to satisfy my brain’s work ethic and a theme that struck me as unusual and clever. I left the puzzle very glad for having done it. I especially liked HALFAWAKE, which prompted a hearty “Hah!” when it hit me.
For [Manatee] I threw in “dugong” immediately, which, of course didn’t work. But it got me wondering about dugongs, and during a quick investigation, I learned that they are related to manatees, with the main difference being the tail. The dugong’s is forked, while the manatee’s is paddle-like. And get this: Dugongs and manatees are more related to elephants than they are to other marine mamnmals!
I found the backstory inspiring, where Mike had more than 20 puzzles nixed by the Times, and STILL forged on, and here his debut puzzle is a Sunday, no less. Where all those rejections made him dig in deeper rather than bail. Bravo, sir!
Mike, I enjoyed your theme and uncovering your grid. Thank you for a most lovely ride!
Thx, Mike, for Bringing Your "A" Game! :)
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Got the gist early on, and didn't look back. One of my quicker Sundays.
Very enjoyable solve! :)
___
Fellow Sat. Stumpers: success in just over 2 hrs, so a med level for me. :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏
I don’t get 84A, “One of 25 in this clue”. I got the correct answer with fill but 25 what?
ReplyDeleteThere’s a count of 25 letters in the clue.
DeleteI see from a later post that "25", rather than "twenty-five", appeared on the print edition. ANEMIC, HALF AWAKE editing.
DeleteMy print edition had "25" and I came here to find out why the answer from crosses is "letter."
Deletewhy does 59A clue get a question mark, anyone??
ReplyDeleteRogaine - who needs it? Of all the things I've ever lost, I miss my hair the least.
ReplyDeleteFun puzzle, and I really liked a couple of the would-be themers that wound up on the cutting room floor (per the constructor's remarks at Woprdplay). Nice debut, Mr. Hobin!
I thought better than most Sundays. I don’t care that the theme isn’t tight as long as it’s cute. I just got stuck too long on PURÉE for PULSE
ReplyDeleteWe did the print version of the puzzle and were confused by 84 across: “One of 25 in this clue”, with the answer of LETTER. The digital version is clear. “One of twenty-five in this clue”. Thanks
ReplyDeleteANEMIC, HALF AWAKE editing
DeleteLife is so much more pleasant, Rex, when you lower your standards just a wee bit. I savored this puzzle like a fine boxed wine. Actually laughed out loud twice in the same area, at ACUTETRIANGLE and the great clue for STRUM. Also, I never met ATONEPOEM I didn’t like. Current favorite: Gershwin’s “An American in Paris.”
ReplyDeleteI liked it. Chuckled at each of the themers. Favorites..."half a wake" and "abridge too far." I do crosswords for the challenge and do not see the need to criticize every supposed misstep by the constructors.
ReplyDelete@Colin, I thought about that (sign v. symptom), but OUTSIDE of clinical medicine I think they are more synonymous. Think [sign|symptom]s of economic or political turbulence, for example.
ReplyDeleteEveryone seems to like A CUTE TRIANGLE, but I think it misses the mark. Angles come in right, acute, and obtuse. Triangles come in equilateral, isosceles, and scalene. But what's an acute triangle?
ReplyDeleteWikipedia says "An acute triangle is a triangle with three acute angles."
DeleteThough in all honesty your comment made me say "hey, yeah, what the heck!" and then look it up.
An acute triangle has all three angles with fewer than 90 degrees.
DeleteRex hated it, I enjoyed it. The theme contributed to the solving experience without being cryptic at all. The PPP was either in my wheelhouse or less arcane than usual (with the exception of MOREY- which was easy for me cuz I’m older than dirt).
ReplyDeleteI do agree with OFL that the clue/answer for ATONE POEM was the weakest of them all, but I don’t parse every syllable of the theme entries to the same extent that some of y’all do.
I suspect many here might find this one a little too easy, but I would gladly take a puzzle like today’s about once a month or so. I don’t think 10-12 “Easy/Medium” Sunday grids a year is an unreasonable request, yes?
Amy: I like the "fine boxed wine" approach to life, @AndyFreude. Will consider. Getting to where I am pretty good at predicting which puzzles Rex describes as "wacky." 🤷🏻♀️
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this puzzle very much--it felt like a classic Sunday NYTXW to me. The theme answers made me smile as I filed them in, and there was so much clever fill to chomp on: 89A, 15D, 45A, and most fabulous of all, 59A. I'd give an A++ to pretty much any puzzle that had such a delightful clue. Made me LOL. I'm with @Visho: I want to have fun doing a puzzle and not quibble over every little thing.
ReplyDeleteIt's a beautiful spring morning here, and thank you, Mike, for a fine debut and a very happy solving experience.
I don't know, this one just didn't always work for me. Some of the theme answers worked perfectly (ABRIDGE TOO FAR) but others baffled me in that they just weren't phrases that were ordinary enough. A TONE POEM, especially, in that you put the letter A in front of a term, and it doesn't make it a common phrase. How about ABASE TEN? AROSE HIP? And honestly, I don't understand HALF AWAKE at all. I've been to a few wakes, and have never seen refreshments being served. Is that common?
ReplyDeleteThe overall cluing also seemed to stretch things far too often. But again, hey, that could just be me. I'm more of the old school puzzle clue, not part of the "something you don't find in my living room" obscurities. So I solved it in ordinary time, but took no great satisfaction at the end in doing so.
In some cultures, food (and drink) are parts of a wake. In others, not so much.
DeleteExceptionally easy Sunday, despite a lot of unfamiliar things (ELTON, TESS, Minecraft, ADA, ALPEN).
ReplyDeleteMIFF is an underused word. Feels like ‘tick off’ and ‘tee off’ have largely supplanted it. Google Ngram suggests the flip took place around 1902. I blame Teddy Roosevelt.
Also really liked THEM. Working some fun into your short fill is always appreciated.
Costello or Brock: A LOU
I really enjoy Rex’s high standards! I come here to read and to share strong opinions with other people who share the same niche interest as I do. I also have noticed in recent weeks that when OFL goes to town on something he knows might be a “just him” thing, he caveats it, which I appreciate.
ReplyDeleteSo yes, while the theme didn’t bug me as much as Rex, I imagine that if I were a certain type of constructor or veteran solver, it would quite a bit, since folks work so hard to have cohesive coherent themes that follow a consistent internal logic.
So, as for me, I liked the theme okay, some answers more than others. And I feel like the fill was a mixed bag. A lot of crosswordese made it easier than a typically Sunday for me. But some of the cluing was cute, and I was happy to be reminded of my beloved sea cow.
Also, I really wish NYT crosswords didn’t allow ALLAH - there are all sorts of things that wouldn’t fly for Christian or Jewish clues, and I don’t understand why they persist in a clue that would exclude 1.9 billion people from being able to complete the puzzle.
Anyway, I hope folks have a nice Sunday.
Also Sprach Zarathustra is A TONE POEM by Richard Strauss used in the opening scene of 2001 Space Odyssey. You may now skip the first paragraph.
ReplyDeleteHalf a wake seems kind of grim - one final chance to cheap out before putting a loved one 6' under or incinerating them.
I agree that there were some good clues. Looking at the grid, it looks like a series of mini-puzzles with ample entry points. Very few 3 letter answers and very little outright dreck.
The first themer I got was BRUSHED A SIDE, then ABRIDGE TOO FAR, so I was favorably inclined, but randomly including A as an article on three of the answers lessened the charm. HALF A WAKE was my favorite.
ReplyDeleteI think my favorite clue/answer combination was 89a - whatever combination of letters I had was leading me to STRUM, but I didn’t put it in because I wasn’t making the connection to a pick and an ax until the third or fourth time I looked at the clue. (And I just noticed a guitar emoji was suggested by my keyboard when I typed “axe.”)
Rex and others didn't notice that AHEAD breaks a Xword rule?
ReplyDeleteIt's the clue for 16D: "___ ahead" (redundant advice).
And then it's a theme answer at 104A: AHEAD OF STEAM.
All in with the big guy on this one. Theme of convenience. Sunday-sized grid and the only thing that piqued my interest was MOREY. SUERS - really? Add ALPEN, the multiple sobriquet clues, MASK UP, SEA COW, EPODE ET AL and this was a chore.
ReplyDeleteSHEESH
Blues for ALLAH
Rex loved masked up.
DeleteI thought it was okay. 3 different reactions. Sea cow seems okay to me also. I heard of sea cow before I heard of manatee.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteThrow me in the like crowd. Let out a Heh or two at some of the Themers. First one I got, which is my favorite, ABRIDGE TOO FAR. As Larry the Cable Guy says, "That's funny right there, I don't care who you are."
Old Testament ABRIDGEd TOO FAR - God created everything, chaos ensued.
TONE POEM was new for me, with or without the A. Liked AHEAD OF STEAM from the way it was clued. Also like the clue for SANTA.
So a nice, fairly quick SunPuz here. I GIBEd well on this one. Remembered AGLET right off, so that was a plus! PUree holding me up in NW for a bit. I don't Blend, what is PULSE for? Maybe one of you WISE ONEs can tell me.
People say unthawed to mean THAWED, but unthawed would mean still frozen, right? Thought for the day.
Eight F's (Holy SMOKE!)
RooMonster
DarrinV
In this year of the Lord 2023, can we please move away from cluing blond(e)s as airheads? My immediate reaction was OOF, which - I guess - made getting its neighbor easy. I wanted it to be something like balloon, despite the letters not fitting.
ReplyDeleteI'm not even blonde, but it is one of those bits of "hilarity" I had hoped we left in the past.
“Lightheaded” seems clearly a reference to color.
DeleteRex is continually complaining that NYT crosswords are generationally unfriendly to those younger than Xers. Well, here today, Rex nonetheless complains about a Minecraft reference — supposing only 12 year olds would know it. How unfair. LeavIng aside the fact that perhaps millions of adults play the game: even if you started playing at 12 when the game came out in 2011, you would nostalgically remember EMERALDS today at age 24. Also, I have never played Minecraft (and I am the same age as Rex), but because Minecraft is such a widespread phenomenon that comes up in other social contexts, I found EMERALDS extremely inferable.
ReplyDelete@Anonymous, 9:44 AM:
ReplyDeleteI think the cluing for BLONDS ("Lightheaded sorts?") referred to their light-colored hair, not airheadedness.
Hey Ted, whose rule?
ReplyDeleteThought this was a good old-fashioned Sunday. I guess I'm more easily amused than some, but I really didn't mind a certain inconsistency in the themers. They all added an A, after all, and I thought that was the point.
ReplyDeleteMy first stringed instrument was a plastic ukulele endorsed by none other than MOREY Amsterdam, with the memorable slogan "Yukka puk! What a uke!". Some time after that my dad bought me a Sears guitar for something less than twenty dollars. The guitar I have now is worth more than two or three of the cars I have owned. I wish I could play it as well as it deserves.
Today's last word made me wonder when SWEAR became a noun, as in "he uses a lot of SWEARS", not that it is clued that way. It seems relatively recent to me, but is certainly pervasive.
Precious nanoseconds lost with WISEMAN for WISEONE. That'll teach me to be so sexist.
Solid enough Sunday, MH. Many Hars! involved when the themers appeared, and thanks for a nice amount of fun.
Lector obscure? What?!!!! The Lector—I.e., the reader at Mass is a well known term. I mean just because Catholicism is the country’s largest denomination by a wide margin, that doesn’t mean lector is about as easy a synonym for reader imaginable.
ReplyDeleteAlso Rex, in your Twitter feed, the bird is a red tailed hawk not an eagle.
@anon 9:54. I interpreted the clue to indicate that their hair is a light color. “Airhead” was never part of the equation. You and Rex should have a beer together. You would probably get along well with him.
ReplyDeleteBRUSHED ASIDE was the first I encountered and it told me what the theme would be. I doubt it's one I ever would have gotten without quite a few crosses, though.
ReplyDeleteBut once I knew the theme, I leapt into my sometime Sunday solving mode: When punny made-up phrases are the theme, and the surrounding fill is likely to be a lot less fun, try to get the themers with as few crosses as possible. Get them early enough and I can skip most of the surrounding fill entirely.
Result today:
Almost no crosses:
AWARD OF THE STATE
A BRIDGE TOO FAR (off just the "B")
ATONE POEM
More crosses needed:
SLOWLY GREW A PART (GREW A PART came in readily; SLOWLY, not so much)
ACUTE TRIANGLE
HALF AWAKE (If you like black humor, this is by far the funniest and most surprising themer. And wonderfully clued!!!)
Almost didn't get at at all:
AHEAD OF STEAM ("A HEAD OF" what-that-begins-with-an "S"? I kept wondering. I simply couldn't come up with the phrase A HEAD OF STEAM. I needed all the crosses.)
There was nothing in the rest of the grid to thrill me, but I enjoyed trying to suss out the themers. This is the kind of puzzle that solvers can make more challenging for themselves if they choose...and for people who hate Sunday "wacky-phrase-type" puzzles, I'd recommend that they do exactly that.
Perhaps I am misrading the comment about A Tone poem in today’s write up but isn’t atoning making reparations for a sin?
ReplyDeleteFor just a moment, I had the same reaction to the light-headed clue as the poster above, but then I realized that it simply meant that their hair was "light". Not really a slam, and kind of cute.
ReplyDeleteMan oh man, this was 12 minutes of boredom. The “aha” moment (really the “oh” moment) came with the first theme answer.
ReplyDeleteThis felt like a giant Tuesday. That is not a good thing.
MOREY Amsterdam was so wonderful on the Dick Van Dyke Show as Buddy Sorrell. Amsterdam was his real last name; Moritz was his first. He was an openly Jewish character on the show and one episode centered on his adult Bar-Mitzvah.
ReplyDeleteHe wrote lyrics for the show's theme song. This was only revealed in 2010 when Dick Van Dyke sang them during an interview on NPR. Here's the tune, in case you forgot:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QK_8QW8LO-c&t=4s
And here are the lyrics Morey Amsterdam wrote:
So you think that you've got trouble?
Well, trouble's a bubble
So tell old Mr. Trouble to get lost!
Why not hold your head up high and
Stop cryin', start tryin'
And don't forget to keep your fingers crossed.
When you find the joy of livin'
Is lovin' and givin'
You'll be there when the winning dice are tossed.
A smile is just a frown that's turned upside down
So smile, and that frown will defrost.
And don't forget to keep your fingers crossed
Anon 9:44
ReplyDeleteAmen!! I Blondes as airheads is not funny.
But you do know why blondes wear underwear right?
To keep their ankles warm.
See, that’s hilarity.
Nov shmov ka pop!? I have a feeling anyone recognizing these words with a feeling of nostalgia would like this puzzle. Kinda like reading an old Sunday comic strip by Gene Ahern or one of his contemporaries. So maybe to appreciate the silly whimsy it helps to be of a certain age…
ReplyDeleteThis was quick and easy, and I didn't find the theme that troubling. You're just f-ing around with As, with varying results.
ReplyDeleteMain objection was the obscurity of "tone poem" as a thing (never heard of it). Same with "head of steam" (do you find these on angry dragons?).
I'm sitting here with crusty grafts from a six-day-old hair transplant (and I take finasteride orally and use minoxidil, the generic name for Rogaine, topically), so I feel particularly authoritative when I say that I AM ABSOLUTELY NOT TRYING TO GROW A PART.
@OldCarFudd: Triangles do indeed come in equilateral, isosceles and scalene - if you are classifying them based on side length. However, if you are classifying based on angle measure, they come in right, obtuse and acute (contains 3 acute angles).
ReplyDeleteThe end of this week has felt like walking in ankle deep mud in plastic galoshes. Slog slog slog.
ReplyDeleteI don't think there was anything wrong with this one, except for the usual line-up of people I've never heard of, but there wasn't anything right with it either. The theme answers did their job, but failed to dazzle me. Hopefully others got a charge out of them. Off to replace a ceiling fan, so I guess this was the highlight of my day.
Uniclues:
1 Onus for John's chef.
2 How I handled Friday and Saturday cluing.
3 Barbs crooned by smart alec insect.
4 Answer to the uniclue one doesn't type.
5 Every Hollywood couple.
1 SMOKE ELTON SALTINES
2 BRUSHED ASIDE BLEH
3 SINGER ANT'S GIBES
4 ORAL AHEAD OF STEAM
5 SLOWLY GREW APART ICONS
I once thought I’d try my hand at rhyming verse, but I quit AT ONE POEM.
ReplyDeleteIn the 9th inning of the All All Star game, it often comes down to whether the ALPEN can stop the NL hitters.
@Anonymous 9:44. The clue for BLONDS is “Lightheaded sorts?” Not sure how your rant about airheads works with that,
Also, shouldn’t someone be going nuclear over MASKUP as the answer to “Protect oneself agains Covid, say”. This is pure woke talk and has been thoroughly disproved by numerous non-experts.
The inconsistencies highlighted by Rex were all there, they just didn’t matter to me. In fact, they were enjoyable as I didn’t know exactly how the “A” would be used from themer to themer. Thanks for a nice debut, Mike Hobin.
Not sure if this would help Rex to like it any better, but there is some rationale to when a space is added after an "A" vs. when an "A" is added to the phrase.
ReplyDeleteLeft side of the grid puts a space after the "A" in a known phrase to change the meaning:
BRUSHED A SIDE
HALF A WAKE
A CUTE TRIANGLE
SLOWLY GREW A PART
Right side of the grid adds an A to the left of a known phrase to change the meaning of the first word:
AWARD OF THE STATE
ABRIDGE TOO FAR
ATONE POEM
AHEAD OF STEAM
Excellent pick-up. Makes the puzzle much more impressive.
DeleteA dissent from an insufficiently discriminating solver -- I loved all the "A" phrase jokes . . .
ReplyDeleteI'll give Rex his ATONE POEM nit but A HEAD OF STEAM and A WARD OF THE STATE have always had the A article in the phrase when I've run into them so they worked fine with the theme, in my opinion.
ReplyDeleteHALF A WAKE and SLOWLY GREW A PART were my favorites, for wackiness. And I could relate to BRUSHED A SIDE, kind of the philosophy my husband and I have towards house REHAB chores. Luckily, our house currently has fiber cement siding, no painting necessary. There is a house I bike past; its north side remained white for more than two painting seasons while 3/4 of the house was barn red. It's all red now, but I always imagined the painters making a few brushstrokes and then retiring into the interior for some cold lemonade. The ladder remained leaning against the house the entire two or three years.
I don't relate cupolas to DOMEs. Most of the cupolas I see are on the tops of barns, there for roof ventilation and not dome-like at all.
My metaphorical deception was SnaKE. I wasn't happy about how it sounded vis-a-vis the clue, but it wasn't until PLUn_ had to be PLUMB that I considered a different answer.
Mike Hobin, congratulations on your debut, with a Sunday crossword to boot!
Yay! For HALF A WAKE!
ReplyDeleteI thought light-headed referred to color.
Got a smile from A CUTE TRIANGLE.
The origin of Polly wants a cracker! was news to me, but the answer was a snap.
@Lewis - Elephants!
37 D (“Symptom” ... answer “Sign”) is wrong. A symptom is something the patient complains of or notices. A sign is something a doctor notices. They are not interchangeable.
ReplyDeleteBut this isn't a medical manual. It is a crossword puzzle.
Delete{Where to trim ivies, to produce what a real competitive trimmer does??} = ? *
ReplyDeletehar. Readin the SunPuz comments is always kinda a hoot. SunPuzs always have somethin to please and displease almost everybody. A dash of Ow de Speration always has to seep in there, somewheres.
staff weeject pick: ADA. = {Ayes to aRussian??}.
fave themer: BRUSHEDASIDE. Cool, funny, clever clue.
Other fave stuff: MASKUP. ANTIHERO. TUGOFWAR. OBEDIENCE & clue, which coulda been extended to include budgies, as a real hopeless third level.
Thanx for the fun, Mr. Hobin dude. And congratz on yer debut, replete with extra SunPuz-constructioneerin sufferin, no doubt.
Masked & Anonymo8Us
p.s.
* = A PRIOR I. (This puppy vies for yer approval, folks.)
**gruntz**
@OldCarFudd: If you classify a triangle based on its angle measures rather than its side lengths, then it may be right (contains a right angle), obtuse (contains an obtuse angle), or acute (contains 3 acute angles).
ReplyDeleteSo my Pfirst comment was moderated as Pfalse information? Still?
ReplyDeleteWill try again with slightly different post. See if this masks proven to be useless makes the cut.
4D should have been clued “Pfaux ‘protection’ advice from Pfizer and Pfauci?”
@Teedmn -- I originally wanted SnaKE for the metaphorical deception too. And for me, it worked just fine with PLane for 1D's "vertically level". It was the "O" of ALL OR and the "U" of PULSE (I had "PauSE" first for the "blender button"; a valuable button, no?) that finally enabled me to change SNAKE to SMOKE.
ReplyDeleteWhen I threw down ABRIDGETOOFAR I thought "whelp, Rex isn't gonna go for this wackiness." Commentary didn't disappoint.
ReplyDeleteOK, I'm still at sea on 84 A. You're supposed to count out 25 letters by imagining that the word was written in letters, even though it wasn't?
ReplyDeleteThe version I printed out from the NYTimes site had "twenty-five," not "25". Using the numeral makes the clue almost useless. I can't imagine why some version used "25".
DeleteI agree that the A play in the theme doesn’t always quite work, but enjoyed most of the solve and especially liked SLOWLY GREW A PART, HALF A WAKE, and BRUSHED A SIDE.
ReplyDeleteNot familiar with the expression A HEAD OF STEAM, so the humor of that one was lost on me. And thought that A CUTE TRIANGLE was clever by half (too).
Didn’t know that a blender could have a PULSE button. Sounds like something from Dr. Frankenstein’s kitchen.
If I were a manatee, I think I would be offended by being referred to as a SEA COW.
@OldCarFudd: An acute triangle is a triangle with three acute angles. An obtuse triangle is a triangle with one obtuse angle and two acute angles.
ReplyDeleteI loved this puzzle. It's just the kind of silliness I like on a Sunday morning! And very well executed, too. The "A Game" title captures it perfectly: on one side of the grid, the leading "A" of the phrase is joined to the second word to form a new word; on the other, the leading "A" is separated to form two words out of one.
Well done, Mr. Hobin! You brought a smile to my face this morning!
Never heard of TONE POEM, so ATONEPOEM was my final entry. I kept thinking it must be an error and AT ONE PM was the correct answer, somehow. Also, why is the clue for 48 Across in the plural form but the answer - OIL - is not?
ReplyDeleteREX REALLY ! EVERY ONE OF THOSE THEME ANSWERS THAT HAD A AS A SEPARATE WORD AT THE START ARE SAID THAT WAY AND SOUNDED PERFECT TO ME.
ReplyDeleteAnd I found amusing and fun. Kept me working at the puzzle to find the theme answer even though, for some reason the puzzle was the most difficult Sunday I've done in years.
Jury still out. Proper mask use vs. mandated [improper] use many studies away, as Cochrane study acknowledges. “Mask up” is a perfectly cromulent answer.
ReplyDeleteAnother Sunday letdown. Rex said it all.
ReplyDeleteGot everything except the NYPD/ALPEN/TED cross. I still don't know why TED is an authentic hero (Ted who?) I thought the theme was clever, but Rex is right that it wasn't altogether consistent.
ReplyDelete@Bob 1:16. That's Theodore "Ted" Logan, a most non-bogus and truly excellent adventurer with his pal William "Bill" S. Preston Esq.
ReplyDelete@Greater Fall
ReplyDeletere: 84A
The clue: One of 25 in this clue.
The answer: LETTER
HINT: O =1, n = 2, e = 3, o - 4, etc, etc.
I haven't heard the term "LECTOR" in connection with class speakers, but it is a pretty common term for people who do the scripture readings at a Catholic mass. Very odd cluing on that one.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Rex on the superfluous A's in some of the themers. As he says, A BRIDGE TOO FAR is fine, but A TONE POEM is nonsense. A WARD OF THE STATE falls somewhere in the middle.
ReplyDeleteWe already have more than enough answers with an unnecessary definite article tacked onto the beginning (THEPOPE, THENFL, etc.), let's not normalize doing this with indefinite articles too.
TALC is a carcinogen. No longer used in baby powder or deodorant.
ReplyDelete@Anonymous 2:47pm:
DeleteTalc is not a carcinogen, but asbestos is.
can we stop with abe as a five dollar bill. I only see that in xwords, never heard of it in other usage.
ReplyDelete@Anon 10:35 Not quite so, the largest denomination for the past decade has been "None". By a wide margin. Further, clue was "Class reader", and no one has used the term for someone who reads in class (with a possible minor exception for Latin class) a LECTOR in centuries.
ReplyDeleteAs I was doing the puzz this afternoon I kept thinking that the themers were a mess, but enjoyed it any way. @Rex basically hit all my objections.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised by the number of commenters unfamiliar with A HEAD OF STEAM, guess it's old fashioned, but it's what you have to do to get a steam engine running...
Also, TALC, definitely no longer in deodorant, people!!
PUree before PULSE. laPD before NYPD, silly me, too much TV back in the day.
Good job too keep trying, Mike Hobin!
We’ve seen a lot of the hysteric - unsubstantiated TALC claims recently. Let it be known that TALC that doesn’t contain asbestos has not been found to be carcinogenic. But if you want to MASK UP when you use baby powder- go for it.
ReplyDelete@bocamp-I absolutely gave up on the Stumper yesterday and picked it up after doing today's NYT and finished it in about twenty minutes. I never know quite how that works.
ReplyDeleteAnon 11:03, Anon 11:42, and Sailor: Many thanks! After all these years, I learned (or possibly re-learned) something about triangles. As the owner of a steam car, I enjoyed AHEAD OF STEAM.
ReplyDeleteFor 12 down: industrial design is not an “art” — it's design.
ReplyDeleteLiked the theme much better than Rex, bit the puzzle as a whole contained the typical naticks. MOREY/PSY... I categorically refuse to learn the names of rap groups in order to be able to complete a NYT Suxay puzzle.... good luck with that, eh? Then this terrible AGLET/SEGA/ALPEN triplet. I 've ne er used the word "aglet," never have heard anyone else use it, and never seen it written anywhere but in XWord puzzles..
ReplyDeleteGee, Ken, what do you know?
ReplyDeleteWhere TF is OCALA? Never heard of it. Must be next to Natick.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this puzzle. I had blast. I mean, a blast.
ReplyDeleteOne more thing… Rex refers to his repugnance for “tic tac toe” clue, but it wasn’t even that! It was “tick tack toe”!! Never heard it referred to like that…,
ReplyDeleteAwww, Rex. Such a killjoy. I thoroughly enjoyed the theme, the clues, and the answers, (except for "ahead of steam") even if the fill was mediocre. Made me laugh and kept my wife and me busy for a few well spent hours.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this puzzle a lot. After looking at Rex's list of themed clues, I realized that the use of a's alternated (similar to hanDIe's comment). I hadn't noticed that while doing the puzzle. Thanks Mike for your persistence!
ReplyDeleteThe clue for sign (37D) (symptom) is simply incorrect. A sign is not a symptom. Symptoms are subjective complaints by the patient. A sign is objective, observable and measurable by the medical provider. They are not only not synonyms they have nothing to do with one another other than that they are both forms of data used to determine a diagnosis.
ReplyDeleteAgreed on almost everything, except the bashing of the theme. It's not great, but it totally works. All the left themers rip an "A" away to a definite article. All the right themers fuse an "A" from a definite article to an odd phrase. And they alternate. I don't know what your looking for tightness from a theme if not that. It's well executed, if perhaps tepid.
ReplyDeleteOkay... "well executed." Agree 'a tone poem' is complete trash. But, in all the others the "A" is valid. Nobody says 'head of steam' without a. Nobody says 'bridge too far' without a. 'A ward of the state' is arguable for sure, but to me (anecdotally) the phrase has the a attached more often than not.
A sign IS NOT a symptom. A symptom is something felt, like a stomach ache. A sign is something seen, like a rash or a bruise. PERIOD!
ReplyDeleteAlmost stumbled in the mid-west area. Then made a small change, and voila!
ReplyDeleteI am in awe of all constructors - especially new ones who submit a few times and then, voila!
Et merci for a good morning.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
LETTER ONTOP
ReplyDeleteTHE battle OF THE SEXES
is ONE RACY TUGOFWAR,
LISTENTO HALF LEGAL ETHICS
and HALF OF who you're HOTFOR.
--- DR. ELTON EMANUEL SINGER
First: the clue is symptom, quit inferring the word medical.
ReplyDeleteSecond: First the Actor/Actress gets married, then the Actor/Actress gets divorced. It happens multiple times. Isn't this the typical Hollywood celebrity story? Multiple marriages and divorces.
This one was not as bad as OFF wants you to believe, but it does feature the most outrageous ampersandwich ever: XANDO. A pox on all such, but especially this one!
ReplyDeleteRepurposed phrases with a separated A: not the worst theme ever. Kinda cool. Fill, with that one horrendous exception: not bad. Give it a par.
Par on Wordle as well.
Still do not get 84 across clue. I count 15 letters (and 2 numbers) Is “25” a misprint in my neighborhood paper?
ReplyDelete@Anonymous 11:39
ReplyDelete"25" is spelled with ten letters.
So there are 25 letters total.
@Anonymous 6:09 AM
ReplyDeleteYou know you just ... eh ... you know? Fine. Nevermind.
@Weezie
As anon just demonstrated, there's actually no prohibition against writing the name of the Islamic Almighty anywhere in any script. If you're really leaning into putting a fence around the Arabic Torah, you'd need to burn the paper once you were finished with it which is kind of a chore but not terribly difficult to do.
Nit-pickers are out in force today. It was a good crossword IMHO. Let's all allow a little poetic license, ok ?
ReplyDelete