Cult 1990s sitcom set at WNYX / FRI 5-12-23 / Rock band with the 2020 Album of the Year nominee "Women in Music Pt. III" / Portmanteau structure built from discarded cans / Stackers of plastic tubs in brief
Constructor: Enrique Henestroza Anguiano
Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: none
Word of the Day: SHANE Victorino (47D: Baseball's ___ Victorino, nicknamed "The Flyin' Hawaiian") —
Victorino made his MLB debut with the Padres in 2003. He played for the Phillies from 2005 through 2012. With the Phillies, Victorino won three Gold Glove Awards, was named to two MLB All-Star Games, and was a member of the 2008 World Series champions. With the Red Sox, Victorino won his fourth Gold Glove Award and was a member of the 2013 World Series champions. He also won the Lou Gehrig Memorial Award in 2008 and the Branch Rickey Award in 2011.
Victorino was born on November 30, 1980, in Wailuku, Hawaii. (wikipedia)
• • •
I'm somewhere in the vast middle between "IS THAT IT?" and ALL-TIME GREATS on this one. It started and ended well, as I opened with MATCHA (delicious, and answer-wise, fresh) and closed with the puzzle's best answer, BEERAMID (never drank enough to build one of these, but I've seen them in '80s teen movies, for sure). In between those first answers is a solid center stack, but the longer Downs all felt a little tepid to me, and overall there just wasn't as much Pop as I like in a Friday. The entire SE corner feels thrown away. Nothing down there. Admittedly, it's hard to make 6-letter answers pop, but in a themeless, every section should have *something* to offer in the way of flash, and today the NW corner shines much brighter than the SE in that regard. If the grid itself isn't terribly showy, there is at least some interesting stuff going on in the cluing—stuff that slowed me down in an otherwise fairly EASY puzzle. The clue on SPIN SERVE absolutely clotheslined me—and I've watched/played tennis plenty. There's just no way to know what kind of "point" the clue is talking about, and even after getting the SPIN- part I thought it still seemed possible that we were talking about the kind of point you make in an argument of some kind; maybe the SPIN had to do with P.R., I dunno. I needed a bunch of those short Downs up there to see SPIN SERVE. (It's too bad "SPIN CITY" didn't fit up there, as it would've made a nice '90s sitcom symmetrical counterpoint to "NEWSRADIO"). The other clue that tricked / misled me was 30D: Don't blow it! (BIG LEAD). I don't know what you call this type of "it" clue, where the clue seems to be making a familiar exclamation, and your job is to figure out the "it" (e.g. [Step on it!] for STAIR or [Beat it!] for DRUM, stuff like that). This one seemed to me to violate the spirit of that cluing type, though—usually the "it" puts the expression in a completely different context (e.g. [Step on it!] normally refers to stepping on the gas, so STAIR is unexpected). But here ... [Don't blow it!] means "don't screw it up" and blowing a BIG LEADis a form of screwing up. And yet I still enjoyed finding my way to the answer there. Both SPIN SERVE and BIG LEAD are good answers, so battling the clues felt rewarding.
One answer that never got around to feeling rewarding was CASCADING MENU (34A: Computer flow like [Insert -> Picture -> From File]). Never heard of it. I mean, I've seen it, apparently, but that term meant less than zero to me. I had CASCADING and still no idea. MENU was blocked to my mind because I got kealoa'd* at 26D: Minus—I knew it ended in an "S" and I wrote in LESS (it's SANS, which is a horrible word to hear in English, truly, that "A"...). I needed literally every cross of MENU to see, well, MENU. "Oh, is that what that is called?" I learned a term, at least. I expect lots of people learned at least one name today, as this puzzle Really leans heavy into proper nouns, not all of them terribly familiar. My condolences to non-baseball fans on SHANE Victorino. I hope that didn't rough you up too bad. I loved "NEWSRADIO," but I feel like time forgot it. If you forgot it, or never knew it, at least the clue gave you some hope of getting it. I teach (old) comics, so ETTA Candy is a familiar figure to me. I kinda sorta know the name RENÉ Girard, but I don't know why (28A: Philosopher Girard who coined "mimetic desire") (Does the puzzle think most people know that term? I don't). And I enjoy the music of HAIM (as well as the acting of Alana Haim in Licorice Pizza), but I'm quite sure a lot of solver will not recognize the name at all. It's a bit of a name minefield, is what I'm saying. The marquee name should be familiar, though: ISABEL ALLENDE is a major (and prolific) Chilean novelist (now living in the U.S.) who has been called (per wikipedia) "the world's most widely read Spanish-language author." I had to read her in college. She's still living and writing, which I know because she was a recent guest on Julia Louis-Dreyfus's excellent new podcast "Wiser Than Me," which features long conversations between the host and various old(er) women: Ruth Reichl, Jane Fonda, Fran Lebowitz, etc. So much more interesting than a "celebrity" interview show has any right to be, mainly because the host and her guests are so surprisingly, shockingly honest—it's like there's no P.R. person anywhere in the room, and these women are accomplished enough and old enough that they will say Whatever They Want (about sex, death, illness, exes, kids, parents, work, feminism, and on and on. Totally refreshing). Where was I? Oh, names. Lots of them. Some obscure. Hope you survived.
Anything need explanation? I had to explain to myself how the hell FADES works for 44D: Some short cuts ... turns out the "cuts" are "haircuts." Took me a few seconds of screwing up my face and tilting my head for that revelation to come to me.
The term "fade" originated in Black-owned barber shops and has become the popular term for an aggressively tight taper in men's hair. Hair at the sides and back is cut as close as possible with clippers and "fades," or tapers, up into almost any length on top. (byrdie.com)
That's it for puzzling clues, I think. People know that CSA stands for "community supported agriculture," right? Anything else? Hmm. After getting kealoa'd by SANS, it happened again, this time in more classic form, at 37D: ___ Minor—wanted URSA, got ASIA. Oh, hey, I looked up "mimetic desire," which the puzzle generously but erroneously assumed I knew. Here's the gist of it, from Girard himself:
"Man is the creature who does not know what to desire, and he turns to others in order to make up his mind. We desire what others desire because we imitate their desires."
More wikipedia now: "Mimetic theory posits that mimetic desire leads to natural rivalry and eventually to scapegoating - Girard called this the scapegoat mechanism. In his study of history, Girard formed the hypothesis that societies unify their imitative desires around the destruction of a collectively agreed-upon scapegoat." I'm suddenly intrigued. Time for coffee. See you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
*kealoa = a pair of words (normally short, common answers) that can be clued identically and that share at least one letter in common (in the same position). These are answers you can't just fill in quickly because two or more answers are viable, Even With One or More Letters In Place. From the classic [Mauna ___] KEA/LOA conundrum. See also, e.g. [Heaps] ATON/ALOT, ["Git!"] "SHOO"/"SCAT," etc.
Despite not knowing any of the names I finished this in less than half my average Friday time, which must a record. So the fill that wasn't obscure and proper must have been really easy? I had the strange experience of constantly feeling like I had no idea about answers while also quickly plopping down many answers. I never felt kealoas happening which means the crosses must have been extremely fair (for me at least). It was a very unique solve in retrospect!
Fastest Friday ever by a lot. MATCHA gives away the whole NW. “Candide” as an OPERETTA was in the New Yorker Crossword a few days ago. ISABEL ALLENDE is a Gimme. Etc, etc,
For me this was all pretty easy except for the SW, where I literally didn’t know anything. HAIM, never heard of them, BEERAMID really? People do this? Didn’t know NEWSRADIO. But, I’m proud to say I didn’t cheat once or google anything, I managed to figure it all out! Crosses, guesses, intuitions. Guessed FADES. So it was quite a satisfying solve.
56D is not correctly clued: "Dir. travelled on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge." That's the name of the bridge - it does not imply which direction you're heading and it's not a one-way road. So the answer could be either ENE or WSW.
The west span of the Bridge from San Francisco to Yerba Buena Island runs northeast, then the east span from the island to Oakland curves to east northeast.
I never heard of “mimetic desires” which apparently refers to our tendency to emulate others in the things we desire - which seems pretty plausible; could also just be a natural correlation - as desirable things may just be innately attractive. I I ever want to dig deeper into that one I guess I’ll have to spring for Mr. Girard’s book.
It seems appropriate that BEER and NASCAR appear on the same row. Wondering if we’ve ever had a NASCAR themed grid - would be cool to see PIT ROAD, YELLOW FLAG, BUMP DRAFTING, RIGHT SIDES ONLY, THE BLACK WIDOW and all other kinds of good stuff speeding around the grid.
Not the easy ride for me that it seems to have been for everyone else. Didn't know MATCHA, or HAIM, or RENE, or IDEA MAP, or TAO (as clued) or CASCASDING MENU, or ETTA. That's a lot of stuff to have to get from crosses. Fortunately, the crosses were generally fair.
Seems like a competently-done crossword, but lacked much excitement. ART PENCILS, ON RETAINER, WIRELESS, BIG LEAD ... yes all fine, but nothing that makes me happy to see in a puzzle.
@Southside Johnny, you go right ahead and make that NASCAR puzzle, and I’ll finish my puzzle on the theme of historical harpsichord tuning systems. Just make sure all the crosses are fair.
Three lovely misdirecting clues, each leading to “Aha!”: [Musician’s mouthpiece] for AGENT, [One way to start a point] for SPIN SERVE, and [Some short cuts] for FADES.
Six lovely answers warming the heart: MATCHA, IS THAT IT, ALL TIME GREATS, ISABEL ALLENDE (just because), BEERAMID, and TÊTE À TÊTE.
One lovely rare-in-crosswords five-letter palindrome, bringing a “Whee!”: MADAM.
One lovely smile bringer: [Neckwear that’s not constricting, one hopes] for BOA.
One lovely patch of resistance to satisfy my brain’s work ethic: The southwest corner.
And so, a dozen reasons why this puzzle grew on me as it went, and by the time it was over I was marveling at what a fine puzzle I just experienced. Loveliness all around. This was the kind of outing that makes me grateful to have discovered crosswords. Thank you so much, Enrique!
This was a little on the easy side for me, I like to work for my Friday puzzle.
The General Sherman tree used to be named the Karl Marx tree when it was part of the Kaweah utopian community that was on that land. (long ago disbanded) . It was a cheap thrill to write that clue in because I live in a modern day utopian community and the house I live in is named Kaweah, as an homage to that community. Fun meta solving experience.
Like many other commenters, I found much of this one to be easy. And, like them, had a tough time in the southwest. Guessed the Bay Bridge direction by assuming that the clue told me we were traveling east. Once I got BEER I was able to fill in AMID. Also had bATH for OATH, Yes for YOU. Since I was a lawyer for 52 years, was able to write in ONRETAINER quickly. In all thought this was a very pleasant solving experience.
I have, but that’s because I order fresh produce CSA boxes from a local farm. Never actually knew what it stood for until today when I filled it in as the clue!
Didn’t know ETTA so I got BIG LOAD for 30 down and expected to hear the sound of thousands of monocles dropping into thousands of poached eggs all over cross world this morning.
After having seen this here and there and having a vague idea of what it was, today I get a definition of MATCHA. Now I know.
Nice to see old friend SHANE Victorino, who played some stellar right field for the Bosox. ETTA Candy? Really? As in, she ETTA Candy? Har.,
I've hung out with some fairly serious beer drinkers but have never seen or heard of a BEERAMID. Now I feel like I've lost out on something and I'm too old.
Thought the top of this was way too easy for a Friday and then it got stickier and sludgier the farther south I went, where all the gunk was, but eventually got it all stirred up and it made for a smooth flow to the finish. I say this because I'm about to go out and finish painting our deck.
Solid Friday, EHA. Even Had Allende, always welcome. Thanks for all the fun.
Amy: Today I learned BEERAMID. Did know lots of other clues (SHANE was a gimme for this Sox fan, and love CANDIDE), so solved this in fits and starts. [Now that is an odd phrase, no?] Good start to Friday.
CSA is offensive because how can one not think of Confederate States of America, that little outfit that was the prequel of the January 6th Day of Infamy?!
Just kidding, I don’t get offended over initials. Except maybe with TSA.
More maddening is how Monday easy most of this Friday was. And yeah, the bridge runs two ways - dopey clue. The obscurities of HAIM and BEERAMID made it a DNF, but was rolling up till then.
FH I thought this one was pretty easy. Took me about 17 minutes. I never did 'get'. I mistakenly rationalized it as a cinema technique, fading from one scene to another. That, even though 'cut' implies quick and 'fade' implies slow. So it's a haircut? Whaddya know!
@Anonymous 7:09 - many crossword clues have more than one possible answer. Our job is to use the crosses to determine which of those possible answers works in the grid.
The only place where my opinion of the puzzle significantly diverged from Rex’s was in the difficulty rating of the puzzle. Like lots of you, it was easy-peasy and I came close to my fastest ever Friday solve. More bite from late week puzzles, please! (Watch, the weekend will be fiendish now and I’ll regret that request.)
I liked the odd mix of high brow and low brow and tech bro in this puzzle, and there were some great answers, but it didn’t really feel cohesive to me. I coulda used a little more sparkle.
Exact same X-rated overwrite as @Anonymous at 7:48 am; I’m a 12-year-old boy at heart.
Finished ir with one cheat, at the TAO/YOU cross. Just for the record, SANS is French for "without," not "less." Otherwise I thought it was an average Friday in terms of difficulty and misdirection in cluing.
MATCHA/CSA cross got me. Guessed wrong. Never heard of BEERAMID though I’ve constructed my fair share (yes - I dormed in college). Was NEWSRADIO really cultish? For some reason, I could not parse TETE A TETE at first go, so I stumbled a bit there. Nice Friday, not too hard. Lewis make sure you come back on Monday - your Top Five is a highlight of this blog. (As are your succinct, on-point comments). Have a nice weekend all
I flew through this because it was laden with PPP and trivia, which is usually fun for me, but probably makes the puzzle objectively worse than one with less of that stuff. For those less enamored than I with PPP, I hope there was enough here to keep it enjoyable.
Plenty of good stuff to talk about, but in the interest of brevity I will focus on the fact that for almost 30 years, this scene has come to mind whenever I read or hear the word RETAINER. A bit of slapstick in an otherwise earnest and gooey film. I'm glad they kept it in, even though -- or maybe because -- it's preposterous.
Like a lot of others, I was way under my Friday average. Was able basically to fill it in top-to-bottom, albeit with a bit of fretting over SW before it fell together with ANTIGONE. Seemed more like a Wednesday.
Mr. Victorino was so good, one of the ALLTIMEGREATS in fact, that they built a special wing at Cooperstown just for him. They call it the Hall of Shane.
If you’re into staycations, are you ANTIGONE?
I’m not proud to say that my first answer in the grid at 1D (Time to focus on oneself) was rEhAb.
Super easy Friday. Even a bit of whoosh for me. Thanks, Enrique.
Hey All ! My hardest thing here was AGENT. Confounded misdirection, that. "Mouthpiece" as a promoter wasn't anywhere near my general vicinity trying to ferret out that answer. And not knowing the Author (of course), actually had to hit Reveal Square for that.
Already had a DNF, as had Yes for YOU, even though CASCADING MENs made no sense. Maybe the follow-up song to "It's Raining Men"?
A toughie for me today. Made the ole brain sit up and take notice.
Like many others, this one was Wednesday easy for me. Took me one minute longer than my fastest Friday ever. Meanwhile, yesterday (which Rex rated "easy") took me twice as long as today. I came to see how he rated this one and was stunned to see "medium." Sometimes you're in sync with the creator and sometimes you're not, I guess.
TIL BEERAMID. Kinda with @Pablo on that. Pretty much same solving experience as the majority of those posting already, but not a pr for Friday, due to aforementioned BEERAMID. But up top it was just read clue, pop in answer, and I was wondering how it got to be a Friday...
Like many others, a much faster than usual Friday solve here, that would have been faster except for: 1) BIG dEAl (no one wants to blow a big deal!)instead of BIG LEAD, which required some untangling and 2) total unfamiliarity with both MATCHA and Community Supported Agriculture (hello, Alice Pollard and EdFromHackensack)--that C was the last letter entered and required 4 or 5 stabs before the Happy Music. For the most part, the cluing felt "too easy for a Friday;" probably some wavelength factors involved.
Miracle of miracles -- I got the MATCHA/CSA cross, even though I've never heard of MATCHA and the Confederate States of America doesn't sound very "farm fresh" to me. But I was quite prepared to pronounce the puzzle "Solved!" even if I'd gotten that letter wrong.
Great clues for NEST EGGS (61A) and BIG LEAD (30D). Terrible green-paint clue for SPIN SERVE. You begin a point in tennis with a SERVE. What kind of serve it is is sort of beside the point (pun intended).
Re: CASCADING MENU: Nothing like a clue that makes it so abundantly clear to me how completely computer-illiterate I am. This clue might as well have been written in Greek.
Writeovers: I RappED instead of RHYMED which complicated my life in the SE for a while. And by misspelling ISoBEL, I couldn't see CLARINETS for the longest time.
A mixed bag -- some of this quite easy, some of it not so much.
The clue for SPIN SERVE was right on point. As a tennis player ( who has actually won tournaments back in my teens) , I can attest that the best way to ensure that a point begins as server is to hit a spin serve. Best way to ensure the serve will be in and be effective to boot.
On the difficulty front, I'm kind of an unsatisfied Goldilocks, having found three quarters of the puzzle too EASY and the remaining one too hard. In the SW it was ANTIGONE that came to my rescue, thanks to having been assigned Jean Anouilh's take on Sophocles in college French class and then going as her to a Halloween party, the advantage being the simple costume of a bedsheet. There was some "just right" otherwise, though - loved the clue for FADES and figuring out BIG LEAD; liked ERASER crossing ART PENCILS.
Do-over: SAve before SANS. New to me: CASCADING MENU, BEERAMID, SPIN SERVE. No idea: RENE, ETTA, SHANE, NEWS RADIO.
Well I never say EASY on Friday but do admit THAT this was not as hard as most. And IMHO one of the GREATS in recent memory. I leave the technicalities and the mysteries of construction to the pros like Rex and Lewis to evaluate. For me it just comes down to: Did I enjoy the experience and feel good about it when I was finished? Why yes I did, so thank you Enrique.
I recently read a book about ESTEE Lauder and learned she came from poverty and started out with skin care products made from formulas originally created by her uncle. She slowly and steadily built her cosmetics empire almost single-handedly, starting out in beauty salons by virtually forcing free samples on unsuspecting customers. A decent read, historical fiction titled Fifth Avenue Glamour Girl by Rene Rosen.
I must have missed the 1990s cult RADIO because I was too busy going to NASCAR races. Take my word for it, if you ever need enough empties to build a BEERAMID, that’s a good place to find them.
Here's what's worse than the usual Friday collection of starlets and Asian cooking ingredients ... a super in-my-wheelhouse Friday. The entire time I kept thinking, "Something's up. They're lulling me into a trap. It's too easy." After so many abusive Fridays they suddenly hand me a lollipop? Why? What are they up to?
It's a great puzzle and so welcome after such a rotten experience yesterday. I want more of this please and way fewer days when mathematicians try to explain why a joke isn't funny or the programmers can be seen taking a ME DAY.
Never heard of a BEERAMID, but it's funny, and I didn't know what direction the bridge goes so that was my only slow down.
An ERASER doesn't fix a mistake, it makes it go away. DECANT and OPERETTA in the same line is très hoìty-toìty. Another YOYO and I love the idea of yoyos, but I don't own one anymore. I am gonna buy one and leave it in a box for ten years before giving it away.
Uniclues:
1 Why does this green latté taste like the bottom of my lawnmower? 2 My 401K and my IRA are for a rainy day, mm'kay? 3 Boss putting an end to most time off requests. 4 Reeds playing anything really. 5 Activity for the dude in blackout under the bar. 6 Really tall and readily available attorney.
1 MATCHA? IS THAT IT? 2 NEST EGGS RHYMED 3 ME-DAY-ISH BAN 4 TACKY CLARINETS 5 SIPS BIG LEAD 6 TREE ON RETAINER
Hand up for this being one of my fastest Fridays ever, and surprised @Rex dubbed it “medium.” Thanks to my daughter’s penchant for green tea I started out with a bang with MATCHA and felt like I kind of steamrolled from there. Put MENU at the end of 34A and while I’ve heard of CASCADINGMENU, I could only think of “drop-down menu” until I got some crosses. I felt like BEERAMID was inferable…I actually plopped in BEERwall at first then deleted the whole thing since it isn’t a portmanteau. Geez. I might have had a time record to day if I hadn’t had to retype BEER!
Being a tennis player I got SPINSERVE right away but I don’t know if I felt it was “green paint” as @Nancy suggested or just odd to me since I DO play tennis. I don’t know many folks who would ever CHOOSE to start a point with a “flat” serve so it is almost always going to be topspin of backspin. Not a nit…just meandering thought on my part.
OATH caused the most stop&go mental TÊTE-À-TÊTE of the day. Running the alphabet with ?ATH in place I got only b/p as OCCAM possibilities — entirely skipping the only vowel that made any sense, sigh. “ battling the clues felt rewarding,” said Rex, and that’s how TSA, RING and several other spots struck me today. I expected his rating to be easy or overly easy for a Friday, but understand his reasoning for raising the bar due to CASCADING MENU, etc. Back up top to enjoy other commentariat reaction.
I've made precisely one bazillion and twenty-three of what this puzzles is calling a "CASCADING MENU" and have never heard it called such. I believe someone, somewhere named it that and it caught on, but I never got the memo. My question is why? That concept needed a specific term? What's the specific term for when a dog scrapes at the ground after they take a poop? What's the term for that? That's something that needs a term, not some stupid take on computer menus.
@Beezer 10:27 - my ad agency did web design in the 90s when cascading menus were nouveau but so unpredictable (different look with different end user computers) and unwieldy. Even when working properly, had to keep the verbiage short and hope for the steady hand of the user in hovering so as not to start over.
(I’ve tried hyperlinking but haven’t had much luck on this site. And after years where clients were rightfully upset when things didn’t work, am not going back to that frustration. If you want to see how ugly Windows Cascading menus were, copy and paste the above link!)
Rex doesn't like clues like "Don't blow it!" for BIGLEAD. Neither do I. Rex explained why very well. Nancy likes these clues so it may just be the crank in me.
@Beezer (10:27) says that the people he plays with don't hit a flat first serve. These weren't the guys I played with.
Boy did I get stuck with HAIM and BEE AMID. I just did not see BEER and thought Hair was most likely for the band name. Yes, I grew up in the 60s. Thank goodness for ANTIGONE because without it my conducting was a baton WAVE.
This was practically a NASCAR puzzle, the rest of the pack went by so fast.
Tripped up by some names, but crosses led me to the right places eventually. Even once I'd gotten ISABEL ALLENDE I'm embarrassed to say I was still reading it as ISABELA LLENDE, a name I thought was kinda weird.
Add me to the MATCHA/CSA failures. Otherwise, a very doable Friday. I agree with Rex about the clue for BIGLEAD. I’d have preferred something like “Up three in a best of seven”.
Always fun to read the comments here. Staycation = ANTIGONE! CSA = Confederate States of America? Unlike most of you I had my only trouble in the NW since I did not know MATCHA, and then DECANT, YOYO, and ME DAY did not jump to mind. But loved the misdirections FADES and AGENT. And BEERAMID was LOL funny. Good puzzle.
Things in this rodeo started to buck immediately, in the NW corner. Had no idea on MATCHA/CSA. Finally (when in total doubt) guessed "U". Wrong, again M&A breath. Tho, to m&e, made in the USA somehow sounds fresher than somethin made during the Civil War.
fave thing: BEERAMID. Agree totally with @RP, on this. IDEAMAP was also sorta neat.
staff weeject picks: ISH & IST. They IS what they IS.
Primo Jaws of Themelessness, btw.
Lost precious nanoseconds on a few other no-knows: SHANE. ETTA. HAIM. RENE. Speakin of RENE … Took time off, mid-solve to google-investigate what the tarnation "mimetic desire" was all about. First impression was: "Havin the hots for Marcel Marceau", but turned out it was a kinda deeper concept than that.
Seed entries? I'd think ,,, BEERAMID? Anyhoo, definitely not ARTPENCILS.
Thanx for the themeless fun, Mr. Anguiano dude. Nice job.
The hardest thing about this puzzle was trying to figure out TETEATETE after I had filled it in -- Vietnamese holiday, comsume, French season. I'd have seen it faster if it hadn't been a down.
The most fun thing was misreading a clue number and trying to figure out how YOYO was one way to start a point. For a moment I believed that "point" was some yoyo trick I wasn't familiar with. Fortunately, I reread the clue.
Since CSAs don't seem as familiar as Rex assumed, let me explain. You (and a bunch of other people) pay a farmer $400-500 at the beginning of the season; then you get a box of fresh vegetables every week, either picked up somewhere or (for more money) delivered. They are great fun, because you never know what you are going to get, and there is bound to be something you have never heard of. I got to know romesco, tomatillos, and husk cherries that way. Also, since the farmer is packing whatever is in season, you may get more of something than you know what to do with (kind of like growing your own zucchini); you'll be happier if you have room to freeze and store some of it. The first CSA we were in had about 3 points of leeks each of the first three weeks. I did learn to make vichyssoise, at least. (And according to the book "Frenchwomen Don't Get Fat," you can lose a quick 5 pounds by eating nothing but leeks for a whole weekend. I tried it once but couldn't keep it up.)
We had a CSA with our local urban farm last year, but they got a big grant to improve their facility, so they are not doing it this year.
I assume a BEERAMID is one of those triangular things students used to build in their dorm windows (or rather that I used to see ... I supoose they still build them). Not really pyramids, they are 2-dimensional. I never heard the word, but obviously there's going to be beer involved, and a few crosses should tip you off to the portmanteau.
Finally, I want to defend SANS -- or rather, I'll let the melancholy Jaques do it:
All the world’s a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages.
....
The sixth age shifts Into the lean and slippered pantaloon, With spectacles on nose and pouch on side; His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice, Turning again toward childish treble, pipes And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all, That ends this strange eventful history, Is second childishness and mere oblivion, Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
I'm normally ired by too many names but today not so much, I guess so many of them are familiar. Nice to be reminded of NEWSRADIO. Phil Hartman's character was a classic.
For the "computer flow" clue I was hoping it would be something like RECURSIVE FUNCTION because it's a really neat concept: a function that calls itself. Sounds dangerous but very powerful!
Hands up for URSA before ASIA because we just saw it in that constellation theme.
[Spelling Bee: yd 0, the last word was this bizarre 4er. I somehow guessed it, and thought: how can I have NEVER seen that word before? So then I checked thru the archives, and sure enough it is brand new. As recently as March 26 it was not on the list.]
I have a NIT to pick here. DOKTOR is always preceded by HERR, or perhaps Frau or Fraulein. No German would ever address a DOKTOR without inserting the honorific. Never seen that VISTA DEL MAR movie, which sounds like fun. But Vista del Mar is a neighborhood in LA, and a good friend of mine used to live there. Working class, in a good way -- a fair number of engineers and factory staff at Douglas Aircraft bought houses there. It's quite close to LAX, but also an easy commute to Santa Monica and Clover Field, where Douglas was.
This Giants fan has often yelled "Don't blow it!" when the team has an early BIG LEAD. Last night, we had a small LEAD until our boys blew it wide open.
I think I made every possible error the rest of you did, but soon was put right. SIR and MADAM were fun to see. In my imagination, the first man, in Genesis, really does say, "MADAM, I'm Adam."
Well, I'm not sure how I did...I was into Hop, Skip and Jump mode. I hopped all around; I skipped the unheard of's and I jumped for joy when the easy peasy's came. Let's see....IS THAT IT....first entry. Yes. You gave me the bunny slope downs. Hit my first big bump at the computer file. I had CASCAD _N_MEN_. So I stared at 30D for quite some time. My don't blow it became a BAG LOAD. A bag load of air? Eggs? A saxophone? ...I liked my answer because CASCADAMENS looked perfectly fine for someone like me. ALL TIME GREATS slid in like a pair of slick pants. Yippee me. ISABEL ALLENDE next....Yippee me. Almost coming to my grand finale. Oops. Not so grand after all. I don't drink BEER and I don't know what structure you'd build with BEER. So I ended up with a BEERAMIX and my short cuts were FAxES. So I erred. I am human after all. But did you like this? Yes...it was fun and I was proud for getting all the names I didn't know and for knowing how to spell ANTI GONE.
Gee, @Beezer, I don't know. I almost always used my flat, hard, Serena-like (LOL) first serve first and saved my SPIN SERVE, such as it was, for my second serve. It seems to me that most players who have a hard serve will use it 90% of the time for their first serve -- even at the recreational level.
There are exceptions, of course, and I was at the receiving end of it once. Years and years ago, I played a guy who was much too strong for me, but he was stunned at how consistently I was getting back his cannonball first serve. (I had a good service return.) He had an extremely tricky hard spin serve that he normally employed as a second serve against his male opponents and he tried one against me as a first serve. It spun the racket around in my hand and forced my return to fly sideways into the court on my right. After that, that was the only serve he used. I had never faced hard spin as fiendish as his and I couldn't handle it at all. You can block back a cannonball serve, but you can't block back really good spin.
@mathgent -- Normally, like you, I hate the "!" clues such as "Step on it!" for MAT and "Bang on it!" for DRUM. But when I saw the answer BIG LEAD for "Don't blow it!", it gave me an actual "Aha" moment that the more pedestrian clues of this type never do.
Yup, this was an easy, breezy puzzle that resulted in my fastest Friday time ever. Like some others, I had to work a bit in the SW corner (wasn't familiar with BEERAMID or NEWSRADIO), but that felt more like a speed bump than a stop sign. Enjoyed it a lot!
Agree with what Rex was implying; in this era of unrepentant fascist maneuvering to destroy democracy, having "CSA" in the grid is very unsettling, to say the least. We need no references to previous oppressive regimes here in the U.S., thank you.
Easy peasy, but I'm a little surprised by the comments suggesting a spin serve for the first serve (to start a point) is the usual. The first serve, in my experience, is the fast, flat serve, and the second serve is a slower one where you throw in a slower slice serve or kick serve (both types of spin serves.) Watching any professional game bears this out.
I had bEfIT for 43D, which left me with HAIb at 42A, which seemed like a reasonable answer, and BEEfAMID for 55A, and I figured someone had at one point made a pyramid out of beef stew cans. Took me a while to untangle that one!
Great description @jberg! I find it very surprising that many folks’ first thought on seeing CSA is the fascists. Maybe it’s because I used to live on a small farm and have so many friends who still do, maybe it’s more of a thing in the northeast? I don’t know. But I learn new things about my wheelhouse here every day.
Anyway I truly hate that those vengeful fools seem to have ruined the decades-old acronym for something that’s truly wonderful and fun and delicious, and also supports small family farms, often ones with regenerative practices. We aren’t members because I’m allergic to so many things, but I highly recommend checking out what might be available in your area!
@okanaganer (1:25)-- Helpful (I hope) hint: Whenever you see "____Minor" as a clue, treat ASIA/URSA like the kealoa it is, write in only the final "A", and wait for some crosses.
Not only in the northeast. Lived in Skagit Valley, WA and CSAs were everywhere and a great opportunity to encourage and support local farmers. Moved to BC, Canada when #45 was elected and haven't seen many here BUT the abundance of local farmers' markets serves the same purpose.
Good day for me, with my has-to-be-second fastest Friday ever. Maybe the martini helped, but I kept thinking to myself: This is a Friday?
I ended up missing a lot of the fill, 'cause I raged through on just the across clues. It's always fun to finish and then come here to read Rex's commentary about a clue/answer combo meal that I never even saw. Didn't know SHANE Victorino before. Didn't know he was in the puzzle. IWONT know him tomorrow.
Didn't know CSA was in there either but but subscribe to one here in Atlanta. And agree: support your locals as much as you can.
As a 13 year old in 1961 and an American history buff infatuated with the centennial of the Civil War, CSA will always denote Confederate States of America.
Bridge clue is AWFUL. The bridge is two-directional and segmented, and if you measure on-ramp to off-ramp it’s VERY close to 45 degrees. Definitely at a slight disadvantage today if you’re from the Bay Area!
Fastest Friday ever for me. Almost every answer in my wheelhouse. And I knew which News Radio clip that was going to be before I even hit “play”. An all-time sitcom classic bit.
Scanning the across clues, I knew one--and ONLY one: NASCAR. So I started there, and immediately saw one of my ALLTIMEGREAT sports heroes: SHANE Victorino. I had a tee with his name & number on it, and wore it till it turned into a rag. I loved the way he played; on the most routine of ground balls he would bust down that baseline as if his life depended on it. Give me a team full of guys like that and I'll put them up against anybody.
So the SE went down fine, but the rest was a real struggle. Little by little, with some astute guessing, I managed to fill it all in. All my guesses were right! Triumph points, very much SPINSERVEd, accumulated rapidly. Birdie.
HAIM has good harmonies, but few other redeeming qualities. Their songs are repetitive to the nth degree. In their song 'The Wire', which was played to death by 89.3 The Current (you can stream it) the line "but I fumbled it when it came down to the wire" is repeated no fewer than 17 times. I counted. Can't see why OFL thinks so highly of them.
I had B_G___ for the thing not to blow so I filled in BaGpipe. made sense to me before it had to become BIGLEAD.
BTW @rondo and the missus are going to France and won't be back until after the Fourth of July. Blog at you then.
Just what I like in a Friday. First, a tiny toehold. Then, another fingernail gets a grip. Bit. By. Bit. Here and there a long answer opens up lots of new words. As usual, those TSAs are helpful.
Learned the word BEERAMID, which I guess I have seen in the wild.
Despite not knowing any of the names I finished this in less than half my average Friday time, which must a record. So the fill that wasn't obscure and proper must have been really easy? I had the strange experience of constantly feeling like I had no idea about answers while also quickly plopping down many answers. I never felt kealoas happening which means the crosses must have been extremely fair (for me at least). It was a very unique solve in retrospect!
ReplyDeleteMy solving experience echoed yours exactly.
DeleteYes -played like a Tuesday or Wednesday for me.
DeleteMine too. Peculiar but enjoyable nonetheless.
DeleteFastest Friday ever by a lot. MATCHA gives away the whole NW. “Candide” as an OPERETTA was in the New Yorker Crossword a few days ago. ISABEL ALLENDE is a Gimme. Etc, etc,
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteBehold my tale of WOEs: CSA (4D as clued), SPIN SERVE (20A), IDEA MAP (21D), RENE Girard (28A), ETTA Candy (41A), HAIM (42A), SHANE Victorino (47D), NEWS RADIO (49A), BEERAMID (55A)
Cruised through most of this but had trouble in the BEERAMID area. Getting NESTEGG and switching BATH to OATH helped sort that out.
ReplyDeleteWednesday level difficulty with a Friday SW corner (for me). Eventually learned that there's no such thing as a Shin Serve. Good clean fun.
ReplyDeleteFor me this was all pretty easy except for the SW, where I literally didn’t know anything. HAIM, never heard of them, BEERAMID really? People do this? Didn’t know NEWSRADIO. But, I’m proud to say I didn’t cheat once or google anything, I managed to figure it all out! Crosses, guesses, intuitions. Guessed FADES. So it was quite a satisfying solve.
ReplyDelete56D is not correctly clued: "Dir. travelled on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge." That's the name of the bridge - it does not imply which direction you're heading and it's not a one-way road. So the answer could be either ENE or WSW.
ReplyDeleteis it not that either COULD be the answer, and you just need to figure it out ?
DeleteThe west span of the Bridge from San Francisco to Yerba Buena Island runs northeast, then the east span from the island to Oakland curves to east northeast.
DeleteI never heard of “mimetic desires” which apparently refers to our tendency to emulate others in the things we desire - which seems pretty plausible; could also just be a natural correlation - as desirable things may just be innately attractive. I I ever want to dig deeper into that one I guess I’ll have to spring for Mr. Girard’s book.
ReplyDeleteIt seems appropriate that BEER and NASCAR appear on the same row. Wondering if we’ve ever had a NASCAR themed grid - would be cool to see PIT ROAD, YELLOW FLAG, BUMP DRAFTING, RIGHT SIDES ONLY, THE BLACK WIDOW and all other kinds of good stuff speeding around the grid.
Not the easy ride for me that it seems to have been for everyone else. Didn't know MATCHA, or HAIM, or RENE, or IDEA MAP, or TAO (as clued) or CASCASDING MENU, or ETTA. That's a lot of stuff to have to get from crosses. Fortunately, the crosses were generally fair.
ReplyDeleteSeems like a competently-done crossword, but lacked much excitement. ART PENCILS, ON RETAINER, WIRELESS, BIG LEAD ... yes all fine, but nothing that makes me happy to see in a puzzle.
@Southside Johnny, you go right ahead and make that NASCAR puzzle, and I’ll finish my puzzle on the theme of historical harpsichord tuning systems. Just make sure all the crosses are fair.
ReplyDelete@Andy Freude @SouthsideJohnny 7:28 AM
DeleteMake sure the word ASS is featured prominently and you'll each be rolling in a $350 bill.
A grow-on-me puzzle.
ReplyDeleteThree lovely misdirecting clues, each leading to “Aha!”: [Musician’s mouthpiece] for AGENT, [One way to start a point] for SPIN SERVE, and [Some short cuts] for FADES.
Six lovely answers warming the heart: MATCHA, IS THAT IT, ALL TIME GREATS, ISABEL ALLENDE (just because), BEERAMID, and TÊTE À TÊTE.
One lovely rare-in-crosswords five-letter palindrome, bringing a “Whee!”: MADAM.
One lovely smile bringer: [Neckwear that’s not constricting, one hopes] for BOA.
One lovely patch of resistance to satisfy my brain’s work ethic: The southwest corner.
And so, a dozen reasons why this puzzle grew on me as it went, and by the time it was over I was marveling at what a fine puzzle I just experienced. Loveliness all around. This was the kind of outing that makes me grateful to have discovered crosswords. Thank you so much, Enrique!
Administrative note: I will be out of reach for a couple of days, but will happily return on Monday. Wishing all a sublime weekend!
ReplyDeleteThis was a little on the easy side for me, I like to work for my Friday puzzle.
ReplyDeleteThe General Sherman tree used to be named the Karl Marx tree when it was part of the Kaweah utopian community that was on that land. (long ago disbanded) . It was a cheap thrill to write that clue in because I live in a modern day utopian community and the house I live in is named Kaweah, as an homage to that community. Fun meta solving experience.
I’m really surprised Rex rated this medium. I set a PR today that is actually faster than my Thursday best.
ReplyDeleteLike many other commenters, I found much of this one to be easy. And, like them, had a tough time in the southwest. Guessed the Bay Bridge direction by assuming that the clue told me we were traveling east. Once I got BEER I was able to fill in AMID. Also had bATH for OATH, Yes for YOU. Since I was a lawyer for 52 years, was able to write in ONRETAINER quickly. In all thought this was a very pleasant solving experience.
ReplyDeleteI had never heard of CSA in that context anyone else?
ReplyDeleteI have, but that’s because I order fresh produce CSA boxes from a local farm. Never actually knew what it stood for until today when I filled it in as the clue!
DeleteDidn’t know ETTA so I got BIG LOAD for 30 down and expected to hear the sound of thousands of monocles dropping into thousands of poached eggs all over cross world this morning.
ReplyDeleteI've listened to and enjoyed that Haim album. And still needed crosses.
ReplyDeleteLicorice Pizza isn't a great movie, but it is a great collection of scenes.
One of the easiest Friday puzzles I can remember. Barely paused to think, except for the southwest.
ReplyDeleteAfter having seen this here and there and having a vague idea of what it was, today I get a definition of MATCHA. Now I know.
ReplyDeleteNice to see old friend SHANE Victorino, who played some stellar right field for the Bosox. ETTA Candy? Really? As in, she ETTA Candy? Har.,
I've hung out with some fairly serious beer drinkers but have never seen or heard of a BEERAMID. Now I feel like I've lost out on something and I'm too old.
Thought the top of this was way too easy for a Friday and then it got stickier and sludgier the farther south I went, where all the gunk was, but eventually got it all stirred up and it made for a smooth flow to the finish. I say this because I'm about to go out and finish painting our deck.
Solid Friday, EHA. Even Had Allende, always welcome. Thanks for all the fun.
Amy: Today I learned BEERAMID. Did know lots of other clues (SHANE was a gimme for this Sox fan, and love CANDIDE), so solved this in fits and starts. [Now that is an odd phrase, no?] Good start to Friday.
ReplyDeleteCSA is offensive because how can one not think of Confederate States of America, that little outfit that was the prequel of the January 6th Day of Infamy?!
ReplyDeleteJust kidding, I don’t get offended over initials. Except maybe with TSA.
More maddening is how Monday easy most of this Friday was. And yeah, the bridge runs two ways - dopey clue. The obscurities of HAIM and BEERAMID made it a DNF, but was rolling up till then.
ARESO and IWONT. IST and ISH. Das IST gut? NEIN!
FH
ReplyDeleteI thought this one was pretty easy. Took me about 17 minutes. I never did 'get'. I mistakenly rationalized it as a cinema technique, fading from one scene to another. That, even though 'cut' implies quick and 'fade' implies slow. So it's a haircut? Whaddya know!
@Anonymous 7:09 - many crossword clues have more than one possible answer. Our job is to use the crosses to determine which of those possible answers works in the grid.
ReplyDeleteThe only place where my opinion of the puzzle significantly diverged from Rex’s was in the difficulty rating of the puzzle. Like lots of you, it was easy-peasy and I came close to my fastest ever Friday solve. More bite from late week puzzles, please! (Watch, the weekend will be fiendish now and I’ll regret that request.)
ReplyDeleteI liked the odd mix of high brow and low brow and tech bro in this puzzle, and there were some great answers, but it didn’t really feel cohesive to me. I coulda used a little more sparkle.
Exact same X-rated overwrite as @Anonymous at 7:48 am; I’m a 12-year-old boy at heart.
Finished ir with one cheat, at the TAO/YOU cross. Just for the record, SANS is French for "without," not "less." Otherwise I thought it was an average Friday in terms of difficulty and misdirection in cluing.
ReplyDeleteMATCHA/CSA cross got me. Guessed wrong. Never heard of BEERAMID though I’ve constructed my fair share (yes - I dormed in college). Was NEWSRADIO really cultish? For some reason, I could not parse TETE A TETE at first go, so I stumbled a bit there. Nice Friday, not too hard. Lewis make sure you come back on Monday - your Top Five is a highlight of this blog. (As are your succinct, on-point comments). Have a nice weekend all
ReplyDeleteI flew through this because it was laden with PPP and trivia, which is usually fun for me, but probably makes the puzzle objectively worse than one with less of that stuff. For those less enamored than I with PPP, I hope there was enough here to keep it enjoyable.
ReplyDeletePlenty of good stuff to talk about, but in the interest of brevity I will focus on the fact that for almost 30 years, this scene has come to mind whenever I read or hear the word RETAINER. A bit of slapstick in an otherwise earnest and gooey film. I'm glad they kept it in, even though -- or maybe because -- it's preposterous.
Like a lot of others, I was way under my Friday average. Was able basically to fill it in top-to-bottom, albeit with a bit of fretting over SW before it fell together with ANTIGONE. Seemed more like a Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteMr. Victorino was so good, one of the ALLTIMEGREATS in fact, that they built a special wing at Cooperstown just for him. They call it the Hall of Shane.
ReplyDeleteIf you’re into staycations, are you ANTIGONE?
I’m not proud to say that my first answer in the grid at 1D (Time to focus on oneself) was rEhAb.
Super easy Friday. Even a bit of whoosh for me. Thanks, Enrique.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteMy hardest thing here was AGENT. Confounded misdirection, that. "Mouthpiece" as a promoter wasn't anywhere near my general vicinity trying to ferret out that answer. And not knowing the Author (of course), actually had to hit Reveal Square for that.
Already had a DNF, as had Yes for YOU, even though CASCADING MENs made no sense. Maybe the follow-up song to "It's Raining Men"?
A toughie for me today. Made the ole brain sit up and take notice.
tie-BOw-BOA, anyone else on that? ursa-ASIA
FAA-FAA
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Same as Alice Pollard, with the cross of MATCHA and CSA. So close. I thought CASCADINGMENU crossing IDEAMAP was cool, Had ursA before Asia Minor.
ReplyDeleteLike many others, this one was Wednesday easy for me. Took me one minute longer than my fastest Friday ever. Meanwhile, yesterday (which Rex rated "easy") took me twice as long as today. I came to see how he rated this one and was stunned to see "medium." Sometimes you're in sync with the creator and sometimes you're not, I guess.
ReplyDeleteTIL BEERAMID. Kinda with @Pablo on that. Pretty much same solving experience as the majority of those posting already, but not a pr for Friday, due to aforementioned BEERAMID. But up top it was just read clue, pop in answer, and I was wondering how it got to be a Friday...
ReplyDeleteLike many others, a much faster than usual Friday solve here, that would have been faster except for: 1) BIG dEAl (no one wants to blow a big deal!)instead of BIG LEAD, which required some untangling and 2) total unfamiliarity with both MATCHA and Community Supported Agriculture (hello, Alice Pollard and EdFromHackensack)--that C was the last letter entered and required 4 or 5 stabs before the Happy Music. For the most part, the cluing felt "too easy for a Friday;" probably some wavelength factors involved.
ReplyDeleteMiracle of miracles -- I got the MATCHA/CSA cross, even though I've never heard of MATCHA and the Confederate States of America doesn't sound very "farm fresh" to me. But I was quite prepared to pronounce the puzzle "Solved!" even if I'd gotten that letter wrong.
ReplyDeleteGreat clues for NEST EGGS (61A) and BIG LEAD (30D). Terrible green-paint clue for SPIN SERVE. You begin a point in tennis with a SERVE. What kind of serve it is is sort of beside the point (pun intended).
Re: CASCADING MENU: Nothing like a clue that makes it so abundantly clear to me how completely computer-illiterate I am. This clue might as well have been written in Greek.
Writeovers: I RappED instead of RHYMED which complicated my life in the SE for a while. And by misspelling ISoBEL, I couldn't see CLARINETS for the longest time.
A mixed bag -- some of this quite easy, some of it not so much.
The clue for SPIN SERVE was right on point. As a tennis player ( who has actually won tournaments back in my teens) , I can attest that the best way to ensure that a point begins as server is to hit a spin serve. Best way to ensure the serve will be in and be effective to boot.
ReplyDeleteSuper easy but super fun puzzle.
On the difficulty front, I'm kind of an unsatisfied Goldilocks, having found three quarters of the puzzle too EASY and the remaining one too hard. In the SW it was ANTIGONE that came to my rescue, thanks to having been assigned Jean Anouilh's take on Sophocles in college French class and then going as her to a Halloween party, the advantage being the simple costume of a bedsheet. There was some "just right" otherwise, though - loved the clue for FADES and figuring out BIG LEAD; liked ERASER crossing ART PENCILS.
ReplyDeleteDo-over: SAve before SANS. New to me: CASCADING MENU, BEERAMID, SPIN SERVE. No idea: RENE, ETTA, SHANE, NEWS RADIO.
Well I never say EASY on Friday but do admit THAT this was not as hard as most. And IMHO one of the GREATS in recent memory. I leave the technicalities and the mysteries of construction to the pros like Rex and Lewis to evaluate. For me it just comes down to: Did I enjoy the experience and feel good about it when I was finished? Why yes I did, so thank you Enrique.
ReplyDeleteI recently read a book about ESTEE Lauder and learned she came from poverty and started out with skin care products made from formulas originally created by her uncle. She slowly and steadily built her cosmetics empire almost single-handedly, starting out in beauty salons by virtually forcing free samples on unsuspecting customers. A decent read, historical fiction titled Fifth Avenue Glamour Girl by Rene Rosen.
I must have missed the 1990s cult RADIO because I was too busy going to NASCAR races. Take my word for it, if you ever need enough empties to build a BEERAMID, that’s a good place to find them.
generally liked this, but artpencils is some real greenpaint
ReplyDeleteHere's what's worse than the usual Friday collection of starlets and Asian cooking ingredients ... a super in-my-wheelhouse Friday. The entire time I kept thinking, "Something's up. They're lulling me into a trap. It's too easy." After so many abusive Fridays they suddenly hand me a lollipop? Why? What are they up to?
ReplyDeleteIt's a great puzzle and so welcome after such a rotten experience yesterday. I want more of this please and way fewer days when mathematicians try to explain why a joke isn't funny or the programmers can be seen taking a ME DAY.
Never heard of a BEERAMID, but it's funny, and I didn't know what direction the bridge goes so that was my only slow down.
An ERASER doesn't fix a mistake, it makes it go away. DECANT and OPERETTA in the same line is très hoìty-toìty. Another YOYO and I love the idea of yoyos, but I don't own one anymore. I am gonna buy one and leave it in a box for ten years before giving it away.
Uniclues:
1 Why does this green latté taste like the bottom of my lawnmower?
2 My 401K and my IRA are for a rainy day, mm'kay?
3 Boss putting an end to most time off requests.
4 Reeds playing anything really.
5 Activity for the dude in blackout under the bar.
6 Really tall and readily available attorney.
1 MATCHA? IS THAT IT?
2 NEST EGGS RHYMED
3 ME-DAY-ISH BAN
4 TACKY CLARINETS
5 SIPS BIG LEAD
6 TREE ON RETAINER
Hand up for this being one of my fastest Fridays ever, and surprised @Rex dubbed it “medium.” Thanks to my daughter’s penchant for green tea I started out with a bang with MATCHA and felt like I kind of steamrolled from there. Put MENU at the end of 34A and while I’ve heard of CASCADINGMENU, I could only think of “drop-down menu” until I got some crosses. I felt like BEERAMID was inferable…I actually plopped in BEERwall at first then deleted the whole thing since it isn’t a portmanteau. Geez. I might have had a time record to day if I hadn’t had to retype BEER!
ReplyDeleteBeing a tennis player I got SPINSERVE right away but I don’t know if I felt it was “green paint” as @Nancy suggested or just odd to me since I DO play tennis. I don’t know many folks who would ever CHOOSE to start a point with a “flat” serve so it is almost always going to be topspin of backspin. Not a nit…just meandering thought on my part.
OATH caused the most stop&go mental TÊTE-À-TÊTE of the day. Running the alphabet with ?ATH in place I got only b/p as OCCAM possibilities — entirely skipping the only vowel that made any sense, sigh. “ battling the clues felt rewarding,” said Rex, and that’s how TSA, RING and several other spots struck me today. I expected his rating to be easy or overly easy for a Friday, but understand his reasoning for raising the bar due to CASCADING MENU, etc. Back up top to enjoy other commentariat reaction.
ReplyDeleteEasy. No erasures and SHANE, ETTA and RENE (all as clued) were the main WOEs. Pretty smooth with a bit of sparkle here and there, liked it.
ReplyDeleteNEWS RADIO was an excellent show that featured the late GREAT Phil Hartman.
I've made precisely one bazillion and twenty-three of what this puzzles is calling a "CASCADING MENU" and have never heard it called such. I believe someone, somewhere named it that and it caught on, but I never got the memo. My question is why? That concept needed a specific term? What's the specific term for when a dog scrapes at the ground after they take a poop? What's the term for that? That's something that needs a term, not some stupid take on computer menus.
ReplyDelete@Beezer 10:27 - my ad agency did web design in the 90s when cascading menus were nouveau but so unpredictable (different look with different end user computers) and unwieldy. Even when working properly, had to keep the verbiage short and hope for the steady hand of the user in hovering so as not to start over.
ReplyDeleteFar preferred the simplicity of a drop down menu!
https://www.pcmag.com/encyclopedia/term/cascading-menu
(I’ve tried hyperlinking but haven’t had much luck on this site. And after years where clients were rightfully upset when things didn’t work, am not going back to that frustration. If you want to see how ugly Windows Cascading menus were, copy and paste the above link!)
@Andrew 11:16am:
DeleteThank you for that link. I now remember cascading menus, and the horrors of having to start from square one, more than one time.
Another "easiest Friday" experience. As others, I slowed down only in the SW, having never heard of HAIM, NEWS RADIO or BEERAMID.
ReplyDeleteRex doesn't like clues like "Don't blow it!" for BIGLEAD. Neither do I. Rex explained why very well. Nancy likes these clues so it may just be the crank in me.
ReplyDelete@Beezer (10:27) says that the people he plays with don't hit a flat first serve. These weren't the guys I played with.
Quite a nice puzzle.
Best laugh today @Gary Jugert uniclue #1😀 Thanks!
ReplyDeleteBoy did I get stuck with HAIM and BEE AMID. I just did not see BEER and thought Hair was most likely for the band name. Yes, I grew up in the 60s. Thank goodness for ANTIGONE because without it my conducting was a baton WAVE.
This was practically a NASCAR puzzle, the rest of the pack went by so fast.
Tripped up by some names, but crosses led me to the right places eventually. Even once I'd gotten ISABEL ALLENDE I'm embarrassed to say I was still reading it as ISABELA LLENDE, a name I thought was kinda weird.
ReplyDeleteThis was the easiest Friday I ever did which means it was probably Wednesday level for everyone else.
ReplyDeleteYeah, like a lot of you, I found this Friday super fast and easy. Like average Tuesday easy. Too bad I'm not just getting much, much better...
ReplyDeleteAdd me to the MATCHA/CSA failures. Otherwise, a very doable Friday. I agree with Rex about the clue for BIGLEAD. I’d have preferred something like “Up three in a best of seven”.
ReplyDeleteThx, Enrique; well done! 😊
ReplyDeleteVery easy (85%), then very hard (15%) (mostly of my own creating).
Dropped in MATCHA right off (thx to SB), and was off to what looked to be a record Fri.
Worked NW, clockwise, ending up at the problematic SW where self-induced silly errors got in the way of very gettable answers.
First, had SIs before SIR (didn't pay attention to the MADAM); then, Bib before BAN; lead before WAGE.
Took far too long to untangle the knots, not knowing: HAIM; NEW RADIO; BEERAMID; ANTINGONE; RING.
Thus, 2x over avg, and a dnf for filling in the final cell without being 100% satisfied with that section.
Loved the clue for NEST EGGS! :)
In spite of all my woes, still welcomed the battle! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness & Freudenfreude to all 🙏
ROCKET FUEL MALT LIQUOR - DAAAAAAAAAAAMMMMN!!!
ReplyDeleteAlways fun to read the comments here. Staycation = ANTIGONE! CSA = Confederate States of America? Unlike most of you I had my only trouble in the NW since I did not know MATCHA, and then DECANT, YOYO, and ME DAY did not jump to mind. But loved the misdirections FADES and AGENT. And BEERAMID was LOL funny. Good puzzle.
ReplyDeleteThings in this rodeo started to buck immediately, in the NW corner. Had no idea on MATCHA/CSA. Finally (when in total doubt) guessed "U". Wrong, again M&A breath.
ReplyDeleteTho, to m&e, made in the USA somehow sounds fresher than somethin made during the Civil War.
fave thing: BEERAMID. Agree totally with @RP, on this. IDEAMAP was also sorta neat.
staff weeject picks: ISH & IST. They IS what they IS.
Primo Jaws of Themelessness, btw.
Lost precious nanoseconds on a few other no-knows: SHANE. ETTA. HAIM. RENE.
Speakin of RENE …
Took time off, mid-solve to google-investigate what the tarnation "mimetic desire" was all about. First impression was: "Havin the hots for Marcel Marceau", but turned out it was a kinda deeper concept than that.
Seed entries? I'd think ,,, BEERAMID? Anyhoo, definitely not ARTPENCILS.
Thanx for the themeless fun, Mr. Anguiano dude. Nice job.
Masked & Anonymo1U
**gruntz**
@Andrew
ReplyDeleteEmail me and I'll send you my Embedding Cheat Sheet,
The hardest thing about this puzzle was trying to figure out TETEATETE after I had filled it in -- Vietnamese holiday, comsume, French season. I'd have seen it faster if it hadn't been a down.
ReplyDeleteThe most fun thing was misreading a clue number and trying to figure out how YOYO was one way to start a point. For a moment I believed that "point" was some yoyo trick I wasn't familiar with. Fortunately, I reread the clue.
Since CSAs don't seem as familiar as Rex assumed, let me explain. You (and a bunch of other people) pay a farmer $400-500 at the beginning of the season; then you get a box of fresh vegetables every week, either picked up somewhere or (for more money) delivered. They are great fun, because you never know what you are going to get, and there is bound to be something you have never heard of. I got to know romesco, tomatillos, and husk cherries that way. Also, since the farmer is packing whatever is in season, you may get more of something than you know what to do with (kind of like growing your own zucchini); you'll be happier if you have room to freeze and store some of it. The first CSA we were in had about 3 points of leeks each of the first three weeks. I did learn to make vichyssoise, at least. (And according to the book "Frenchwomen Don't Get Fat," you can lose a quick 5 pounds by eating nothing but leeks for a whole weekend. I tried it once but couldn't keep it up.)
We had a CSA with our local urban farm last year, but they got a big grant to improve their facility, so they are not doing it this year.
I assume a BEERAMID is one of those triangular things students used to build in their dorm windows (or rather that I used to see ... I supoose they still build them). Not really pyramids, they are 2-dimensional. I never heard the word, but obviously there's going to be beer involved, and a few crosses should tip you off to the portmanteau.
Finally, I want to defend SANS -- or rather, I'll let the melancholy Jaques do it:
All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages.
....
The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slippered pantaloon,
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side;
His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide
For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
I'm normally ired by too many names but today not so much, I guess so many of them are familiar. Nice to be reminded of NEWSRADIO. Phil Hartman's character was a classic.
ReplyDeleteFor the "computer flow" clue I was hoping it would be something like RECURSIVE FUNCTION because it's a really neat concept: a function that calls itself. Sounds dangerous but very powerful!
Hands up for URSA before ASIA because we just saw it in that constellation theme.
[Spelling Bee: yd 0, the last word was this bizarre 4er. I somehow guessed it, and thought: how can I have NEVER seen that word before? So then I checked thru the archives, and sure enough it is brand new. As recently as March 26 it was not on the list.]
I have a NIT to pick here. DOKTOR is always preceded by HERR, or perhaps Frau or Fraulein. No German would ever address a DOKTOR without inserting the honorific. Never seen that VISTA DEL MAR movie, which sounds like fun. But Vista del Mar is a neighborhood in LA, and a good friend of mine used to live there. Working class, in a good way -- a fair number of engineers and factory staff at Douglas Aircraft bought houses there. It's quite close to LAX, but also an easy commute to Santa Monica and Clover Field, where Douglas was.
ReplyDeleteThis Giants fan has often yelled "Don't blow it!" when the team has an early BIG LEAD. Last night, we had a small LEAD until our boys blew it wide open.
I think I made every possible error the rest of you did, but soon was put right. SIR and MADAM were fun to see. In my imagination, the first man, in Genesis, really does say, "MADAM, I'm Adam."
Well, I'm not sure how I did...I was into Hop, Skip and Jump mode. I hopped all around; I skipped the unheard of's and I jumped for joy when the easy peasy's came.
ReplyDeleteLet's see....IS THAT IT....first entry. Yes. You gave me the bunny slope downs. Hit my first big bump at the computer file. I had CASCAD _N_MEN_. So I stared at 30D for quite some time. My don't blow it became a BAG LOAD. A bag load of air? Eggs? A saxophone? ...I liked my answer because CASCADAMENS looked perfectly fine for someone like me.
ALL TIME GREATS slid in like a pair of slick pants. Yippee me. ISABEL ALLENDE next....Yippee me.
Almost coming to my grand finale. Oops. Not so grand after all. I don't drink BEER and I don't know what structure you'd build with BEER. So I ended up with a BEERAMIX and my short cuts were FAxES.
So I erred. I am human after all. But did you like this? Yes...it was fun and I was proud for getting all the names I didn't know and for knowing how to spell ANTI GONE.
Gee, @Beezer, I don't know. I almost always used my flat, hard, Serena-like (LOL) first serve first and saved my SPIN SERVE, such as it was, for my second serve. It seems to me that most players who have a hard serve will use it 90% of the time for their first serve -- even at the recreational level.
ReplyDeleteThere are exceptions, of course, and I was at the receiving end of it once. Years and years ago, I played a guy who was much too strong for me, but he was stunned at how consistently I was getting back his cannonball first serve. (I had a good service return.) He had an extremely tricky hard spin serve that he normally employed as a second serve against his male opponents and he tried one against me as a first serve. It spun the racket around in my hand and forced my return to fly sideways into the court on my right. After that, that was the only serve he used. I had never faced hard spin as fiendish as his and I couldn't handle it at all. You can block back a cannonball serve, but you can't block back really good spin.
@mathgent -- Normally, like you, I hate the "!" clues such as "Step on it!" for MAT and "Bang on it!" for DRUM. But when I saw the answer BIG LEAD for "Don't blow it!", it gave me an actual "Aha" moment that the more pedestrian clues of this type never do.
Yup, this was an easy, breezy puzzle that resulted in my fastest Friday time ever. Like some others, I had to work a bit in the SW corner (wasn't familiar with BEERAMID or NEWSRADIO), but that felt more like a speed bump than a stop sign. Enjoyed it a lot!
ReplyDeleteAgree with what Rex was implying; in this era of unrepentant fascist maneuvering to destroy democracy, having "CSA" in the grid is very unsettling, to say the least. We need no references to previous oppressive regimes here in the U.S., thank you.
ReplyDeleteRex - I always heard those “!” clues called “and lit” clues when doing Cryptic Crosswords, short for “and literally.”
ReplyDeleteEasy peasy, but I'm a little surprised by the comments suggesting a spin serve for the first serve (to start a point) is the usual. The first serve, in my experience, is the fast, flat serve, and the second serve is a slower one where you throw in a slower slice serve or kick serve (both types of spin serves.) Watching any professional game bears this out.
ReplyDeleteI had bEfIT for 43D, which left me with HAIb at 42A, which seemed like a reasonable answer, and BEEfAMID for 55A, and I figured someone had at one point made a pyramid out of beef stew cans. Took me a while to untangle that one!
ReplyDeleteGreat description @jberg! I find it very surprising that many folks’ first thought on seeing CSA is the fascists. Maybe it’s because I used to live on a small farm and have so many friends who still do, maybe it’s more of a thing in the northeast? I don’t know. But I learn new things about my wheelhouse here every day.
ReplyDeleteAnyway I truly hate that those vengeful fools seem to have ruined the decades-old acronym for something that’s truly wonderful and fun and delicious, and also supports small family farms, often ones with regenerative practices. We aren’t members because I’m allergic to so many things, but I highly recommend checking out what might be available in your area!
Hella easy today. IS THAT IT?
ReplyDelete@okanaganer (1:25)-- Helpful (I hope) hint: Whenever you see "____Minor" as a clue, treat ASIA/URSA like the kealoa it is, write in only the final "A", and wait for some crosses.
ReplyDelete@Weezie 3:17
ReplyDeleteNot only in the northeast. Lived in Skagit Valley, WA and CSAs were everywhere and a great opportunity to encourage and support local farmers. Moved to BC, Canada when #45 was elected and haven't seen many here BUT the abundance of local farmers' markets serves the same purpose.
Support your local farmers!!!
Good day for me, with my has-to-be-second fastest Friday ever. Maybe the martini helped, but I kept thinking to myself: This is a Friday?
ReplyDeleteI ended up missing a lot of the fill, 'cause I raged through on just the across clues. It's always fun to finish and then come here to read Rex's commentary about a clue/answer combo meal that I never even saw. Didn't know SHANE Victorino before. Didn't know he was in the puzzle. IWONT know him tomorrow.
Didn't know CSA was in there either but but subscribe to one here in Atlanta. And agree: support your locals as much as you can.
As a 13 year old in 1961 and an American history buff infatuated with the centennial of the Civil War, CSA will always denote Confederate States of America.
ReplyDeleteBridge clue is AWFUL. The bridge is two-directional and segmented, and if you measure on-ramp to off-ramp it’s VERY close to 45 degrees. Definitely at a slight disadvantage today if you’re from the Bay Area!
ReplyDeleteFastest Friday ever for me. Almost every answer in my wheelhouse. And I knew which News Radio clip that was going to be before I even hit “play”. An all-time sitcom classic bit.
ReplyDeleteScanning the across clues, I knew one--and ONLY one: NASCAR. So I started there, and immediately saw one of my ALLTIMEGREAT sports heroes: SHANE Victorino. I had a tee with his name & number on it, and wore it till it turned into a rag. I loved the way he played; on the most routine of ground balls he would bust down that baseline as if his life depended on it. Give me a team full of guys like that and I'll put them up against anybody.
ReplyDeleteSo the SE went down fine, but the rest was a real struggle. Little by little, with some astute guessing, I managed to fill it all in. All my guesses were right! Triumph points, very much SPINSERVEd, accumulated rapidly. Birdie.
Wordle birdie also.
@ghostoflectricity 2:18
ReplyDeleteCSA is unsettling???
First world problem buddy...
EASY DAY WAGE
ReplyDeleteSHANE ain't an ALLTIMEGREAT,
yet he HIRED ISABEL to sit
for a TACKY TETE-A-TETE,
ALL she'd ASK IS, "ISTHATIT?"
--- MADAM ESTEE HAIM
HAIM has good harmonies, but few other redeeming qualities. Their songs are repetitive to the nth degree. In their song 'The Wire', which was played to death by 89.3 The Current (you can stream it) the line "but I fumbled it when it came down to the wire" is repeated no fewer than 17 times. I counted. Can't see why OFL thinks so highly of them.
ReplyDeleteI had B_G___ for the thing not to blow so I filled in BaGpipe. made sense to me before it had to become BIGLEAD.
BTW @rondo and the missus are going to France and won't be back until after the Fourth of July. Blog at you then.
Wordle par.
Just what I like in a Friday. First, a tiny toehold. Then, another fingernail gets a grip. Bit. By. Bit. Here and there a long answer opens up lots of new words. As usual, those TSAs are helpful.
ReplyDeleteLearned the word BEERAMID, which I guess I have seen in the wild.
And THAT IS IT!
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
Fun with Anagrams: BEERAMID = BEERMAID as in - At the Oktoberfest, the Beer Maids made a gigantic BEERAMID out of all the empty beer cans.
ReplyDeleteTo @Rondo and Mrs Rondo - have a great time in France!
ReplyDeleteLady Di
Seconding @Lady Di and appropriate for the country: Bon voyage!
ReplyDelete