Police officers in British slang / FRI 6-2-23 / Arctic food fish / Attendants at a saturnalia / Website with a No Fear Shakespeare section / Any of the "Bad Boys" in the 1980s-'90s N.B.A. / Taqueria beverage / Land with an enclave on the Strait of Hormuz

Friday, June 2, 2023

Constructor: John Ewbank

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: ACHILLES (24A: Styx figure) —

In Greek mythologyAchilles (/əˈkɪlz/ ə-KIL-eez) or Achilleus (GreekἈχιλλεύς) was a hero of the Trojan War, the greatest of all the Greek warriors, and the central character of Homer's Iliad. He was the son of the Nereid Thetis and Peleus, king of Phthia.

Achilles' most notable feat during the Trojan War was the slaying of the Trojan prince Hector outside the gates of Troy. Although the death of Achilles is not presented in the Iliad, other sources concur that he was killed near the end of the Trojan War by Paris, who shot him with an arrow. Later legends (beginning with Statius' unfinished epic Achilleid, written in the 1st century AD) state that Achilles was invulnerable in all of his body except for one heel, because when his mother Thetis dipped him in the river Styx as an infant, she held him by one of his heels. Alluding to these legends, the term "Achilles' heel" has come to mean a point of weakness, especially in someone or something with an otherwise strong constitution. The Achilles tendon is also named after him due to these legends. (wikipedia) (my emph.)

• • •

This one was pretty FEISTY, with lots of lively fill and some sharp clues. Started in a dismal place with that 1-Across answer, oof (1A: Police officers, in British slang). I guess that's "original" fill but it was the only thing in the grid that was totally unknown to me, and my general reaction to cop content is "less, please" (instead we get more at the bottom of the grid, with the NYPD next to a militarized ARMORED CAR). Sounds like PLODS is derogatory. Hard to imagine how such an ugly-sounding lump of a word could be anything but. Definition I'm reading now says yes, it is derogatory, implying "dull" and "slow." Apparently the term DERIVEs from "PC (Police Constable) Plod," a character in Enid Blyton's "Noddy" stories. I'm gonna step away from this rabbit hole before I fall in... whatever its implications, wherever it comes from, PLODS is not exactly the tone-setter you want at 1-Across. Well, certainly not the tone-setter *I* wanted. I'm here for a good time and you're giving me sneering foreign slang for cops? Harrumph. But as I say, this was actually the puzzle nadir. It all went up from here (in a good way) until it all went down (also in a good way) at EVEREST BASE CAMP (7D: It's an uphill climb from here). Ironically, this answer didn't climb; instead, thrillingly, it plummeted: 


I was already whipping around from all the SPACE OPERA TIME TRAVEL, and then whoosh, down down down. I love that this answer goes from peak to base. It seems to be ... enacting itself, somehow. I was not at all certain that EVEREST BASE CAMP was right when I first plunked it down. I felt like the answer was doing recon, stretching out into the vast unknown of the empty grid, trying to detect ... other signs of life? Fellow answers? And sure enough, the Everest answer picked up PANEL NEATO ATLAS in quick succession, though AT BAY was the answer that really locked me in, confirming the "B" in the part I was least sure about (BASE CAMP). The puzzle unfolded from there, with EVEREST BASE CAMP acting as a kind of ... base camp? ... from which I went out and to which I returned. A bunch. 


Not sure why, but the NW and SE corners played way easier than their counterparts. I mean, the NE and SW weren't terribly hard either, but they definitely took a bit of effort to break into. I got PISTON to go into the NE corner (28A: Any of the "Bad Boys" in the 1980s-'90s N.B.A.) (the Detroit Pistons were a late-80s powerhouse), but I couldn't get STARTERS to come in from below and had no idea what was going on with that STALK clue (23A: Something out standing in its field?) (me: "... hay STACK?"), so I had to break flow and jump into the unknown, hitting those short four-letter crosses in hopes that they would give me traction. Luckily, CHAR and ETNA were accurate and gave me needed traction. Then I looked at the long Downs up there and realized I didn't need that traction after all, in that SPARK NOTES was a total gimme that I could've gotten with no help at all—an extremely easy answer for an English teacher (12D: Website with a No Fear Shakespeare section). Poor SPARK NOTES. I'm guessing ChatGPT is gonna really eat into your "how do we do our homework without doing the actual reading?" business. (I think SPARK NOTES and the like can be valuable, but only for those who actually bothered to read in the first place). 


The SE corner was harder, mainly because I totally forgot about the connection between ACHILLES and the Styx. I talk about ACHILLES all the time, every semester when I teach Virgil's Aeneid (ACHILLES isn't really in it, though his horrible son has a memorable, violent scene). But with -LLES in place I couldn't think of anything, LOL. Seems preposterous in retrospect, but I had nothing. My brain was like "look, if it's not ... I don't know, the SEYCHELLES? ... I can't help you." I was having trouble getting into that corner via FEISTY as well—hard to see from just the back end. Again, I had to jump in and hack at short crosses, and again, my first two guesses came up gold (CREE, SELL), but the thing that really locked me in down there was "Post hoc, ERGO propter hoc" (causal fallacy). Abandoned by ACHILLES but saved by ERGO, that was my SW experience. The classical vibe keeps going down there with CUP BEARERS, a term I've heard only in relation to Zeus / Jove / Jupiter (25D: Attendants at a saturnalia). Specifically, it's the term used for Ganymede, the boy whom Zeus abducted to serve as his "cup bearer" (as well as lover) in Olympus (Zeus, notoriously shaky on things like sexual propriety and consent). I didn't know "saturnalia" had CUP BEARERS. Turns out I'm confusing "saturnalia" and orgies. They're both classical in origin and involve ... reveling, of sorts, so I forgive myself the confusion. Anyway, CUP BEARERS is a pretty tough answer, I think, but the puzzle as a whole, not that tough. Very doable. And fun. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

79 comments:

Todd 6:17 AM  

Pretty close to a Friday personal best. I loved Everest Base Camp. Though never heard of Spark Notes.

Kent 6:22 AM  

STEEPLE and SPACE OPERAS were my leaps of faith early on. Wasn’t sure of either, but they opened up the NW.

To me the bottom half was tougher than the top half, maybe because EVEREST BASE CAMP didn’t reveal itself quickly. Had some of the same troubles in the SW as Rex, and the same two guesses (CREE, SOLD) paid off. I had “top” SINGLES rather than HIT, so I was trying to figure out if the AntILLES islands were named after an obscure figure from mythology.

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

Sad that Styx figure wasn't MRROBOTO

Irene 7:06 AM  

Zoomed through it, enchanted, ERGO expected Rex to give it an Easy and was thrilled when he went higher than that. Made my Friday.

kitshef 7:10 AM  

Slightly tough for a Friday, but would have been too easy for Saturday so this is probably the right day.

Although I have lived most of my life in the US, I was born in England. Parents both English. Lived and worked in England. Never heard of PLODS.

EVEREST BASE CAMP is at something like 17000 feet, so clue could easily have been "It's an uphill climb TO here".

I love the almost complete absence of common names the last two days.

SouthsideJohnny 7:11 AM  

Definitely on the easy side for a Friday, which is a welcome change every now and then. I’m on a first name basis with the owners of two Taquerias and still couldn’t come up with AGUA FRESCO (although in retrospect, AGUA should be a CrossWorld gimmie for me by now). I also had no clue about CUP BEARERS and after reading the background info from OFL, I don’t think I want to know much more about the details. Additionally, UPTO could have been quite a few different things so that section was a mess.

Even after doing crosswords for years now, I still just don’t get along with the whole “genre” this and “genre” that clues. What the hell is a SPACE OPERA? Isn’t DUNE like one of the most famous Science Fiction books of all time (isn’t Science Fiction a “genre”)? What, did they turn DUNE into a Broadway musical or something like that ? Nurse!

Wanderlust 7:13 AM  

It was very whoosh-whoosh for me except the NE. I’ve never heard of SPARK NOTES, I had STeer for “something out standing in its field” and ROI instead of CFO for the shareholders’ meeting figure.

I lounge on the couch in the morning as I solve the X-word. I need a CUP BEARER. I deserve a CUP BEARER.

Lewis 7:14 AM  

Random thoughts:
• John is right on the NYT team’s wavelength, as this is his third puzzle in four months.
• On Friday, my brain longs to have its work ethic satisfied without being frustrated, and this grid fit the bill.
• Sweet indeed that the answers include five double E’s.
• TIME TRAVEL over SPACE OPERA, well, that opens up one’s frame of reference, no?
• I had no idea AGUA FRESCA resided in some brain nook of mine, but out it poured after few crosses.
• PIANO TUNER is often clued with puns. In previous clues it has involved “pulling strings”, say, and “grand opening”. But never a “set of keys”. Bravo on that, John!
• The combo of DAFT, FEISTY, and RUDE – who does that remind you of? For me, it was Don Rickles, may he rest in peace.
• Remarkable number of answers clued as nouns that could also serve as verbs: SNIP, STALK, GUIDE, DECK, STOLE, SLAM, DOT, PLODS, DEALS.

What a varied and sparkly outing – thank you for this, John, and more please!

feinstee 7:20 AM  

Saw A--ILLES...and for some reason was stuck on ANTILLES for a bit

Joaquin 7:28 AM  

Call the PLODS. Someone has plagiarized my SPARK NOTES.

Anonymous 7:29 AM  

SPARKNOTES stumped me, which is ridiculous because I went through both high school and college during its heyday. Agree with Rex: it truly helped when I'd done the reading as well. I suppose I haven't had much use for it in the last 20(!) years. With CHum instead of CHAR, the whole corner was a challenge for me. Overall fun puzzle!

Son Volt 7:32 AM  

Limited pushback here - but a well filled Friday overall. Loved the vertical spanner.

Not a HIT SINGLE

Conrad 7:34 AM  


PLODS at 1A was a WOE

irAN before OMAN at 3D
road before DECK at 4D
mONKEY before DONKEY at 18A
LAssi before LATTE at 31D
CeO before CFO at 32A (really could have been any CxO)
inTO before UPTO at 33A
DEduce before DERIVE at 47A

Self congratulations: For the First Time Ever, I remembered that the estimable Ms. Raisman's name is ALY, not ALi!!!

Taylor Slow 7:55 AM  

I'm constantly amazed by the vast differences in people's experience of language.

I love British mysteries--written or TV'd--and I've read and seen hundreds, maybe thousands, including dozens of recent British police procedurals. And yet, somehow I have never heard the word PLODS used as a noun to describe a police officer. So I got off on the wrong foot right away, by trying to figure out how to stretch DCS, DSS, DCISS (fit, but didn't work) to fit.

SparkNotes? Did they replace Cliff Notes? And Dr. Google tells me that Cliff Notes still very much exist. They used to be the only game in town. I see SparkNotes was founded in 1999 by Harvard students and is now owned by Barnes & Noble.

Really enjoyed this puzzle--good fill, chewy long downs. I was living in Ann Arbor when the PISTONs were the Bad Boys of the NBA, so that was a sweet memory--except that I couldn't warm up to Bill Laimbeer, the baddest of the boys. He was just a thug. A highly skilled thug, but a thug nonetheless.

Johnny Laguna 8:03 AM  

Super duper easy for a Friday with nary a glitch — I think a PB for me — but fun start to finish.

bocamp 8:04 AM  

Thx, John; a NEATO production! 😊

Easy-med.

For the most part, on J.E.'s wavelength.

Laughed at self for thinking 'flea' at the 'vets concern'.

Had inTO before UP TO; saCK before DECK; gritTY before FEISTY, but the crosses quickly came to the rescue IN all CASEs.

Might have to try SPARKNOTES (very reasonable rate of $24.99 p/y). Currently have a CliffsNotes subscription.

DEERE always evokes fond memories of working in the wheat fields.

Grampa was a PIANO TUNER.

Honing in on total 'vegan' status. Just cut egg intake in half, so almost there. Other than that, not missing DAIRY at all.

Very enjoyable Fri. stroll.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness & Freudenfreude to all 🙏

Anonymous 8:33 AM  

Brit in the US here and I’m more used to hearing it as “The plod” to the point that I considered it but didn’t put it in without a lot of confirmation.

Nancy 8:44 AM  

PLODS for police officers?! Wonderful! The Brits sure do have a way with words, don't they?

I thought of veterans and not the animal docs for "vets" right away. And then I thought of PTSD right away too. I think I've probably been doing puzzles for too long. But for most of this puzzle I did feel I was on exactly the same wavelength as the constructor. I thought of DONKEY right away, too, and that confirmed PTSD.

There were a few minor hiccups, however:

I didn't think that EVEREST had a BASEment. What on earth was this answer going to be? Would the fish be a cHAr or a sHAd? The cluing of both FINAL OFFER and STALK were difficult: when I had the S and the A, I thought that the "out standing" something would be a SpAre (as in a bowling alley) though the word "field" didn't fit at all.

I like the idea that FEISTY means "full of pluck". I always thought it meant full of sass and difficult to placate.

This puzzle never PLODS. It's lively and entertaining and I was sorry when it was over.

pabloinnh 8:49 AM  

Agree with the "easy for a Friday" crowd. Started in the NE and went anti-clockwise, as the PLODS would say. IRAN for OMAN (hi @Conrad) but my biggest slow down was GRITTY for FEISTY, which made the obvious AGUAFRESCA a little hard to see, although I don't think of AGUAFRESCA as something I'd order at a taqueria.

I'm with @Taylor Slow in being more familiar with Cliff Notes than SPARKNOTES, I actually knew some people in college who would rely on Cliff Notes and not do the actual reading, if you can imagine such a thing.

And every time I see NEATO, I am more convinced that it exists only in crosswords, as the last person I heard say that was no one, never.

I liked your Friday a lot, JE. Just Easy enough to make me feel smart, and thanks for all the fun.

Bob Mills 8:59 AM  

Finally solved it by realizing that FEISTY had more to do with pluck than FRISKY. It also took a while to pick up PTSD, because I look for misdirects, and assumed "vet" was short for "veterinarian."

It didn't seem easy, but it must have been if I finished it with only one cheat.

BritSolvesNYT 9:05 AM  

Enjoyed Plods as a Brit, a common enough term for the police here. Nice puzzle overall.

Liveprof 9:09 AM  

SPACE OPERA is new to me. Wikipedia says it's a subgenre of fantasy or science fiction that emphasizes space warfare, with use of melodramatic, risk-taking space adventures, relationships, and chivalric romance.

How could I forget Luciano Pavarotti and Beverly Sills in all of those wonderful intergalactic roles?

Ride the Reading 9:22 AM  

Siding with the slightly easy for a Friday group - but I lost a couple minutes finding where I'd erred. Turned out it was at HIT SINGLES - guess I'd skipped over the word Hot in the clue, and wrote in HOT SINGLES - so had some nonsense word at 29A. Examined other entries before finally figuring where my mistake was. An enjoyable puzzle.

I'm no good at embedding - but for a song that ties in today, try Joe Jackson's "Hit Single," from "Laughter & Lust."

Nancy 9:24 AM  

Had a letter in today's NYT. It's also online and, for those who don't get the paper, here's the online link for anyone who might be interested.

mmorgan 9:30 AM  

ETNA was in the puzzle? Didn’t even see it til I read Rex. Spiffy puzzle!

andrew 9:34 AM  

CONCUBINES for CUPBEARERS was today’s ACHILLES heel.

And cmon Rex (in your FEISTY RANTS): all PLODS aren’t DAFT with power!

RooMonster 9:38 AM  

Hey All !
NE corner was tough! Not well read (as you should know by now 😁) so SPARK NOTES was nowhere on my radar. Crossed with SNIP as clued, CHAR an unknown food fish, CFO thinking it might've been IPO. Had to Goog for SPARK NOTES, and also IFS, of all things. I had wanted SOS. (As in SOs)

Rest of puz was crunchy, but ultimately gettable. PIANO TUNER started out as PIANO PLAYER, but ran out of room. The ole brain can't seem to grok ARMORED CAR as "General motor?" Is General an ARMORED CAR company? If so, unfamiliar with it.

One letter DNF - hEPS/hAP. Dang.

Happy Friday!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Gary Jugert 9:39 AM  

Ouch. That took longer than most Sundays. I am getting dumber. It was worth the effort. Lots to love. Ten long answers are all legit.

The first major piece of music I ever wrote was a SPACE OPERA for ukulele. More than 50 tunes about an alien family visiting Earth. I still play some of those songs from time to time.

Tee-Hees: DONKEY and ASS in the same puzzle.

Uniclues:

1 Spicy appetizers.
2 "They could give riding lawnmowers higher gears so we could race them if they understood what their customers want," and so on.
3 Ship he who made the B-flat too flat into slavery.
4 Song book of less angsty hip hopper.
5 Thrill of winning poetry competition prizes.
6 She came 'round the mountain.
7 Native Puruvian good at assessing plan B.
8 A mother's last desperate attempt to turn her daughter from the path of vegetarianism.

1 FEISTY STARTERS
2 DEERE RANTS (~)
3 SELL PIANO TUNER
4 RAP NEATO DIARY
5 SLAM PAY ARDOR
6 SIS GREETED
7 "IN THAT CASE" INCA
8 FINAL OFFER VEAL

Anonymous 9:46 AM  

sparknotes has definitely been in these crosswords before. didn't really make it any easier.

burtonkd 9:47 AM  

@anon 6:28, don't worry, domo arigato mr roboto shows up in some order or another every couple of years. Speaking of which, I had LLEt (misspelled everest, doh) which led me to want some kind of mullet for the Styx clue. Apparently that haircut is back in fashion...

top and hot before HIT SINGLES.
iran>OMAN

@Southside, you calling for the Nurse! is one of the funniest things I've seen in a while:) Imagining Gary's SPACEOPERA for ukes takes a close second.

@Roo - a car an army general would ride in.

10 answers 10 letters long - any meaning in that? All solid answers plus EVERESTBASECAMP made for an enjoyable climb today.



jberg 9:49 AM  

I loved this puzzle, so many beautiful answers, nd such a thrill to take a chance on something like SPACE OPERA and have it pay off. EVEREST BASE CAMP was great too, but less thrilling since I had a lot of the crosses. Hardest part was correcting spunkY for FEISTY. I knew almost as soon as I'd put it in that it was wrong, because of BTS, but the letters were still in the grid until I figured out what to write them over with -- and I was dreadfully afraid, looking at that U, that the Hot 100 was doing to consist of HIT numberS, which would have ruined the whole puzzle. Fortunately AGUA FRESCA came along and saved the day.

SPACE OPERA DERIVEs from the earlier "horse opera," which was what cheesy cowboy movies were called in my day (when you had no choice but Cliff's Notes). Of course the protagonists in Dune are the House of Atreus, or Atreides, presumably direct descendants of Agamemnon, in whose reluctant service ACHILLES died.

I've never read the actual Iliad, but once read a sort of prose version, in which ACHILLES is killed soon after he kills Hector. He ties the latter's body to his chariot and drags it around Troy as a triumph, whereupon Paris gets mad and shoots him in the heel. I gather that was poetic license on the part of the translator.

Calling VEAL an "ingredient" of Wiener schnitzel is almost like calling beef an ingredient of hamburgers. But fair enough, it's a puzzle.

Sir Hillary 10:13 AM  

Great puzzle, but it brought to mind basketball, probably because last night I watched Jokic yet again get a triple-double without seeming to expend an ounce of energy. He's amazing.

Back in the day, a Detroit-Cincinnati matchup would have included PISTON and ROYAL STARTERS like Dave Bing and Oscar Robertson. Yes, compared to today, the game may have been more about who PLODS least, but I would take that over today's SLAM-fest and defenders flopping on their ASS down to the DECK at non-existent contact every TIME, TRAVELing with impunity when they have the ball. And if you want a place in the FINAL, OFFER to PAY a ref. I would rather GOSEE hockey, and I hope the next Stanley CUPBEARERS will be the Panthers. OK, my old-man RANT'S over.

(Back to basketball...if you're a WNBA player in Los Angeles, you're a SPARK, NOTES Sir Hillary.) :-)

Carola 10:33 AM  

Very enjoyable - and much more of a workout for me than for many here who found it easy. I got off to a good start with the drop-downs from the NE's IFS, but then stalled out at the bottom of that chunk. I needed to do repeated circuits of the grid, probing for soft spots, and between guesses and ahas managed to reach critical mass, then sped to the end at PLODS. Fun! On the mythological front, I liked ATLAS supporting ACHILLES (at least his heel).

Help from previous puzzles: BTS. Do-overs: inTO, CRow, tkts before NYPD, boSTON before PISTON, Son before SIS. Biggest surprise: CUP BEARERS - I really wanted bacchantes, obviously having no idea what Saturnalia are.

Bob Knuts 10:36 AM  

"Everest base camp" should become crossword lingo for a clue/answer that is simply one of the best ever. Rex can it, like Natick. If this were baseball, "Everest base camp" is "The Catch" [ Willie Mays].

Peamut 10:38 AM  

For the clue “so inconsiderate, I initially put dUDE! Anyone else?

Joseph Michael 10:38 AM  

Fun Friday in spite of the plodding PLODS. Especially liked the clues for DONKEY, DOT, and STALK, three answers that could easily have had boring clues. Also liked IN THAT CASE paired with FINAL OFFER. Thank you to John Ewbank for making me feel smart on a day that I usually feel stupid.

Chris 10:40 AM  

@jberg: nice job on the Achilles/Atreides link.
I'll pile on with a mild objection to Dune as a SPACEOPERA, although I filled in the answer confidently. I think of the term as mildly perjorative and thus not applicable to the book, at least. And since none of the action takes place in, you know, space, just on various planets, it's a stretch.
But all of a sudden, I feel like I'm kvetching like OFL, so I'll stop.

beverly c 10:48 AM  

Another enjoyable puzzle! Didn’t know SPARKNOTES or PISTON so the final square for me was their shared N.

Unlike REX, I wrote in PLODS immediately, thinking it DERIVEd from walking/plodding along a beat. And it solved the question of flea. Those eastern longs were a pleasure to fill in. FINAL OFFER, ARMOREDCAR, PIANOTUNER. The acme, of course, has to be that center climb - woohoo! EVERESTBASECAMP

This was over too soon.

jae 10:51 AM  

Easy. No erasures except for a couple of spelling errors/typos and PLODS as clued was it for WOEs. Solid with a soupçon of sparkle, liked it.

Anonymous 10:54 AM  

As Rex points out PC Plod is a character in Enid Blyton’s Noddy books. But, as a born and raised Londoner, I assure you that the term is never used as a plural. In slang it is singular as in “The Plod are coming”

mathgent 10:59 AM  

Nice puzzle.

@Taylor Slow (7:55). Skate on down to this corner. We've got a nice piece of cake for you.

Upstate George 11:35 AM  

Born and raised in England, lived there until I was 42 years old, and NEVER HEARD PLODS in the PLURAL! It was always "The Plod", just as we might say "The Law", "The Heat", "The Fuzz" in this country, which has been my home for 34 years.

Anatole 11:47 AM  

Favorite Times puzzle in quite a while. EVERESTBASECAMP as clued is an excellent grid spinner. An aversion to police related crossword fill is a symptom of Woke Mind Virus.

SiminSays 11:48 AM  

Loved EVERESTBASECAMP plus the duos of SPACEOPERA/TIMETRAVEL and DONKEY/ASS.
Fun Friday, my favorites puzz-day.
Keep up the exceptional work, JE.

Kate Esq 11:57 AM  

I had a miserable themeless weekend last weekend, and yesterday’s puzzle also threw me for a loop (I blame the failure of the app to show those dark lines in the fractions) so I feared I was losing my crossword mojo. Thank goodness for this puzzle, which had just the right amount of chew for a Friday without frustrating me unduly. I was intimidated by those long downs in the SW so avoided that section until the end, but Agua Fresca was a gimme for me (I live in LA - taquerias abound and Aguas Frescaz are at every group function) so it ended up being very whooshy.

Smith 12:01 PM  

@Nancy 9:24
Thx for the link, great letter!

Smith 12:26 PM  

Well, I wrote a long comment and it vanished. Tough puzzle for me, all in the NW corner. See you tomorrow

Anatole 12:33 PM  

re 11:47 comment: spanner not spinner, need to remember to proofread

Anonymous 12:48 PM  

This old timer fell into all of your rabbit holes except the last.

Mr. Banjo Pierre 1:02 PM  

Incorrect DEDUCE over PIANOTUTOR with the plausible DUDE got me into an unfixable spot. SPARKNOTES caused trouble but otherwise I whooshed through and enjoyed it.

Jeremy 1:02 PM  

After getting completely bogged down in yesterday’s themers, this one was a breeze.

jb129 1:21 PM  

Doable (like Rex said) & enjoyable.

I don't think I would put "neato" with "groovy" though since they're generations apart but I'm just nit-picking. All in all, a fun Friday solve.

Pete 1:27 PM  

@Kitshef - Thanks for the 17000 feet fact. At over 3 miles in altitude, 99.999% of everything is DOWNHILL from there, not uphill.

Ride the Reading 1:35 PM  

@peanut - hand up for dUDE.

Gary Jugert 1:41 PM  

@burtonkd 9:47 AM
I imagine @SouthsideJohnny to be the dude who gets a date with the nurse. Charming despite the chainsaw sticking out of his sternum.

okanaganer 1:44 PM  

This went very fast for me. As I filled in EVEREST BASE CAMP I said "nice!" aloud.

I have heard of PLOD and PLODS, but my first thought was FILTH. I read a lot of British mystery books and in them, lower class urbanites are always using it to mean Police, even to their face.

Never heard of SPARK NOTES so I first put in STARK until I realized SNIT doesn't really mean a small fragment.

[Spelling Bee: yd -1, missed this 5er which is ironic because I missed "innie" a few days ago.]

GILL I. 1:47 PM  

Well...Rats!. I wrote a cute little story about today's experience and for some reason it appears in yesterdays comments. I haven't a clue how I can transfer my comments over here and delete the other one. I have a MacBook Air and instructions are gobbledygook to moi.

Gary Jugert 1:48 PM  

@Nancy 9:24 AM
They made a movie about AI gone rogue a few years back called Terminator starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and the only way to stop it is to time travel back to today and assassinate its inventor. Rather gruesome choice since everybody seems to be inventing it right now. I think it will be easier if we accept the short-term nature of human usefulness to this planet. .

JC66 2:00 PM  

@GILL

Maybe you can copy & paste.

bocamp 2:38 PM  

@GILL (1:47 PM)

I'd be happy to copy and paste it for you (as per JC66 (2:00 PM)), if you're not familiar with the process. The drawback, of course, would be that it would show up under my user name.

As for deleting it from yd's blog, you'll see a 'trash can' icon next to your user name; click it and at the bottom, you'll have an option to either delete or cancel.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness & Freudenfreude to all 🙏

Anonymous 2:45 PM  

Easy? NO WAY! It was an *uphill climb* for me from start to finish. Even had to consult Dr. Google a couple of times.

Nancy 2:46 PM  

@GILL -- First, hit Ctrl as you run your cursor over yesterday's comment -- highlighting it in blue.

Then hit Ctrl and C at the same time, as I just did with your comment. Look what happens:

"Well...Rats!. I wrote a cute little story about today's experience and for some reason it appears in yesterdays comments. I haven't a clue how I can transfer my comments over here and delete the other one. I have a MacBook Air and instructions are gobbledygook to moi."

Then come back to today's page, go to "Leave Your Comment" and with your cursor on that space, hit "Ctrl" and V at the same time. You have now "pasted" the passage that you just "cut" from yesterday.

Suzie 3:20 PM  

Space opera is sometimes considered a sub-genre of science fiction (though the SF purists might argue that it's not) in which the science aspect takes a significant back seat to the plot. Usually it also features really grand, dramatic, planet- or universe-encompassing plotlines. Sometimes there are fantastical elements--the magic-adjacent powers of the Bene Gesserit in Dune, the Force in Star Wars, etc.

GILL I. 4:43 PM  

Ok...I'm going to try this. @bocamp....I might have to borrow you since I'm worse than @Nancy in using my Mac. I think everyone will know it might be me? Do you ride horses?
I actually have taken a picture of everyone's help info. Let me see where this will go. Might take a while.

GILL I. 5:14 PM  

Well, Jeopardy wasn't on last night at its regular hour, so Scouser husband and I turned off the TV and listened to music. I download the puzzle. I look at my husband who is enjoying a little glass of Pinot Noir and I ask him: "What's a police officer, in British slang?" He tells me to wait until after Grizabella, in the musical "Cats", finishes singing "Memory." She does. He tells me he has no idea. I ask him to please try to jog his memory. He goes to bed. An hours later he shouts PLODS!
Thank you. It's OMAN not Iran.
I got on my swift horse and rode this one with a nice trot. Slow at times, but oh, it was enjoyable. I stopped several times to smell the roses along the way. A big pause at ACHILLES. What's he doing in STYX. At first I had sun BEARERS attending a saturnalia. Why would they do that, I asked. Ah, wait. It's UP TO and it must be a CUP. That looks better
We trot on over to the far right. Came to a halt. A website clue. Thorny. Can I get around it? No. Plod on....Stop again at this little 15D sign that was muddy. Why doesn't the sign read HINDUS? Wrong direction. I know most of my religions. Vishnu/Shiva? SECTS, of course... Then, we actually saw a sweet smelling STALK standing in the field. Awesome. You gave us the SPARK we needed. That PISTON looked like a bad boy. It was.
We finished that area and decided it was time to move on down to where the grass was greener.
Ah...look at that PIANO TUNER. Plunked you right in. ARMORED CAR wanting to give us a lift. We came to our end and look what was waiting for us....an NYPD ASS. He was having a little AGUA FRESCA with some PLODS and eating a little VEAL schnitzel ....
Most enjoyable and I didn't have to get off my horse once. Thanks

I DID IT...YAY me. Thank you @Nancy. I was starting to suck on my dumb thumb....xoxo

CDilly52 5:31 PM  

One of the best Fridays in quite a while. Learned what some of the Brits call “Popo” now. Whatever happened to the Bobbies? Hard to keep up with the slang - thank goodness for crosswords.

For some reason, this was a day that just took a while for my brain to engage. Don’t know why that happens some days, but it does. Anyway, I started this morning after my early tai chi class. And went absolutely nowhere. I. Mean. Nowhere!

I had only ETNA and CHAR after way too long so I did what I usually do and quit. Went about my life and as usual, my subconscious was at work. Came back and went fairly smoothly from the. NE diagonally down to the SW.

But I had issues. I should have kept the “It is Friday!” alarm bells working because I kept ignoring opportunities (taken so cleverly and so often) for misleading clues and I fell for a bunch: CeO for CFO, gone and then away instead of DAFT. Now, here’s where I admit that DAFT was my first thought but I tossed it instanter because I thought “You’re too old for anyone to use that anymore.” Then because I am watching the NCAA Women’s World Series (hoping my Sooners can threepeat my only thought for “first to play was one seEds. And I was certain. Great, one letter correct. So to pay some more homage to my colleagues in London where it is deserved, you can all see what a “dog’s breakfast” I made of that.

The SE and SW and the diagonal connecting area didn’t give me anything but Friday resistance and I managed all but the aforementioned with only a few actual erasures. I even got PLODS from the downs and hopefully have stored it for future reference.

What finally woke me up was IN THAT CASE, EVEREST BASE CAMP and FINAL OFFER which came from seeing the business “mini-theme” of CEO, DEALS, SELL. For some reason those three just helped me see IN THAT CASE.

So so SO much to love lime SPARK NOTES. The clue “General motors” (also a clue with a bit if a British accent since he couldn’t use CAR in the clue), and a high level of additional clever clues.

Thank you John Ewbank! May it be but a trice ere we see your byline again.


JC66 5:33 PM  

Way tp go @GILL!!!

pabloinnh 5:38 PM  

@GILL I-Muy bien hecho! This is about the only trick I know how to do on my laptop, but boy is it handy.

GILL I. 6:02 PM  

@JC66. Can you send me a copy of a copy/paste cheat sheet for the MacBook. I won't feel so stupid next time. Thanks!
@pablito. Me too, on tricks...:-)

I hope all this work was worth my two cents on today's puzzle. Good grief. I hope someone (at least) reads me. HAHAHAHAHA.

@Nancy and @bocamp. Thanks!

Anonymous 6:05 PM  

Delightful puzzle. Was stumped for quite a while by PLODS. Watched a zillion British police tv shows on Britbox, Acorn, and many others , read all of the gtpreat English mysteries and never heard or read this word or a variant used. Also lived in England for over a year. The police weren’t a Plod. Speaking of British ,someone can explain why Yorkshire natives use what appears to be the subjunctive mood where everyone else would use the indicative. I love hearing it: He, she, it weren’t . Is it used only in the negative?

dgd 6:12 PM  

I have only seen Spark Notes in the Times puzzle. This time I remembered it. Part of reason why puzzle was easy for me.

JC66 6:26 PM  

@GILL

I just sent it. Any questions, just let me know.

bocamp 8:52 PM  

@ GILL 😊
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness & Freudenfreude to all 🙏

Anonymous 11:41 AM  

After reading Rex’s review, I realized Taylor Swift is a Veronica Lake clone…

spacecraft 11:47 AM  

Never heard of SPARKNOTES, and the clue for CHAR was, to say the least, mean-spirited. But the only other choice down was N, giving SPAnKNOTES. Somehow I didn't think that was right, so R it was. And *whew!* done.

Yes, good old ACHILLES' mom dipped him in the Styx to give him invincibility--ah, but she had to hold him somewhere: that nasty heel. No problem for me on that line, but the SW proved FEISTY enough anyway. Couldn't get what came after HITS______ until I parsed the S separate and came up with SINGLES. That took a while.

Also in the NW I had "Hit the___" saCK for quite a while before yielding to DECK. !a was a total no-know--and I spent three years over there. The saying goes: "Heaven is where the police are British and the cooks are French; hell is vice versa."

Medium Friday difficulty, nothing terribly outlandish. Par.

Wordle birdie.

Burma Shave 12:42 PM  

BASE NOTES

For STARTERS, you GREETED THAT RUDE guy,
he RANTS with DAFT ARDOR so FEISTY and crass.
INTHATCASE, DO not OFFER a lie -
is he a DONKEY, or ROYAL pain IN the ASS?

--- ALY DEERE

rondo 3:04 PM  

Well, I had some trouble with this puz. It was grItTY before FEISTY and I tried to DEducE before DERIVE. And the long acrosses in the NW would never have come without crosses. I have seen SPARKNOTES in the same area as Cliff NOTES in bookstores. There's an old joke about Magic Johnson, AIDS, and blowing a PISTON; you figure it out. SAPS PASS ASPS in the corners. ALY Raisman, yeah baby.

rondo 5:54 PM  

Wordle par.

Diana, LIW 8:44 PM  

I stalled out a few times and had to change some errors. Then I left it for a while, came back, and saw ACHILLES would fit. Who knew? That guy sure got around.

But it all started with a lot of staring...

Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

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