Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
As for ANNUS horribilis ( 26A: ___ horribilis (1992, per Queen Elizabeth)) ... which Queen Elizabeth!? I mean, of course it's QEII, if the year in question is 1992, but come on. Have some respect for the far more important Queen Elizabeth: number your Elizabeths, please and thank you. Also, do you know, do you have any idea, why Queen Elizabeth (II) thought 1992 was "annus horribilis"?!? Well I assure you it has nothing to do with anything "horrible" happening in the world as a whole. No, it's the most selfish insular petty crap you can imagine, P.S. abolish the stupid monarchy, please and thank you. Here are Elizabeth (II)'s reasons why 1992 was so bad it deserved a hyperbolic Latin name (per wikipedia):
- DOWNWARD DOG (3D: Depose?) (two-word "pose" where both words start with "D")
- NICHOLAS NICKLEBY (24A: Entitle?) (two-word "title" where both words start with "N") (etc.)
- OFFICIAL ORDERS (51A: Omission?)
- BEST BUDDY (68A: Befriend?)
- GALILEO GALILEI (88A: Gee whiz?)
- MIDDLE MANAGEMENT (116A: Embosses?)
- TABLE TENNIS (72D: Tee-ball game?)
Annus mirabilis (pl. anni mirabiles) is a Latin phrase that means "marvelous year", "wonderful year", "miraculous year", "year of wonder" or "amazing year". This term has been used to refer to several years during which events of major importance are remembered, notably Isaac Newton's discoveries in 1666. [...] Annus Mirabilis is a poem written by John Dryden published in 1667. It commemorated 1665–1666, the "year of miracles" of London. Despite the poem's name, the year had been one of great tragedy, including the Great Fire of London. The title was perhaps meant to suggest that the events of the year could have been worse. Dryden wrote the poem while at Charlton in Wiltshire, where he went to escape one of the great events of the year: the Great Plague of London. // The title of Dryden's poem, used without capitalisation, annus mirabilis, derives its meaning from its Latin origins and describes a year of particularly notable events. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Dryden's use of the term for the title of his poem constitutes the first known written use of the phrase in an English text. The first event of the miraculous year was the Battle of Lowestoft fought by English and Dutch ships in 1665. The second was the Four Days Battle of June 1666, and finally the victory of the St. James's Day Battle a month later. The second part of the poem deals with the Great Fire of London that ran from September 2–7, 1666. The miracle of the Fire was that London was saved, that the fire was stopped, and that the great king (Charles II) would rebuild, for he already announced his plans to improve the streets of London and to begin great projects. Dryden's view is that these disasters were all averted, that God had saved England from destruction, and that God had performed miracles for England. (wikipedia)
• • •
I have nothing to say about this theme. Well, not nothing, but almost. It was easy, it was remedial ... there it is. Make of it what you will. I got DOWNWARD DOG first and thought, "so it's just two-word phrases where both words start with the same letter?" and sure enough yes. That is it. There's wordplay in the cluing, of course, where ordinary words have to be interpreted as if they had something to do with the letters it sounds like their first syllables are making, OK ... but somehow this didn't add much enjoyment or levity to the whole solving endeavor. I guess [Peashooter?] is kinda cute as a way to get to POOL PLAYER, but most of these clues felt pretty listless. And the fill didn't come to the rescue in any way. It, too, just lays there. Mostly. Then there's MANYFOLD? I know the word "manifold," but MANYFOLD ... that is ... something. SIEGED. I know "besieged" but SIEGED, no, that's a new one. And what the hell is a "megagram"? Is that a real thing? I have to think it isn't, because ... well, TONNE is a pretty ordinary (if Britishly spelt) word, and when you have that word, why in the world would you say "megagram." Sounds like a really big telegram (Remember telegrams!? Me either!). LIDDED? Like ... my eyes? Sure, I guess that you could get a lawyer to defend that one, but all of these answers feel really marginal and screechy (as in "nails on a chalkboard"-y). AGRO- and not AGRI-!? (112D: Farm-related prefix). And that clue on OMAR, yeeeeeesh (114D: First name in neo-Marxism) (the letters "OMAR" appear in order in the "word" "neO-MARxism"). If "neo-Marxism" were a thing, maybe that clue would've landed better? I mostly just don't appreciate what the puzzle thinks it's doing today.
- Publication of photographs pertaining to an affair between Sarah, Duchess of York, and Texan oil millionaire Steve Wyatt (18 January)
- Separation of the Queen's second son Prince Andrew, Duke of York, from his wife Sarah (19 March)
- Divorce of the Queen's daughter, Anne, Princess Royal, from Captain Mark Phillips (23 April)
- Publication of Diana, Princess of Wales' tell-all book Diana: Her True Story, revealing the problems in her marriage to the Queen's eldest son, Charles, Prince of Wales particularly his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles (The Sunday Times, 7 June)
- Publication of photographs of Sarah, Duchess of York, sunbathing topless with her friend John Bryan (20 August)
- Publication of intimate conversations between Diana and James Gilbey from a tape recording of their phone calls (24 August)
- Fire in Windsor Castle, one of the Queen's official residences (20 November)
After her speech had been recorded, one more notable event transpired: the separation of Charles and Diana (9 December).
Yeah, your daughters-in-law thought your stupid sons were CLODs and they went after hotter guys, boo hoo. Maybe have better sons next time, I don't know. Man, I hadn't realized how much I hate monarchy until I started thinking about this stupid ANNUS clue. And I always cringe when the puzzle contains ping-pong or TABLE TENNIS, as it seems so obviously intended to ingratiate the puzzle to the editor (a famously serious and accomplished player). I'm not being fair, as the answer fits the theme very well, and yet ... yeah, that's just how I feel. It looks like fawning sycophantery, and I'm against it.
There were no real challenges today, though there were a few stumbles. The hardest answer for me to come up with was REGISTRAR, largely because of its deeply ambiguous clue (43A: Record holder). I also had a bunch of tiny mistakes: AGRI- for AGRO-, AGAPE for AGASP (81D: Speechless with shock), LEILA for LAILA (always!) (67D: Ali who retired undefeated), DIET (?) for DUMA (45A: Russian legislature), the usual hesitation on the last vowel in LATKE ("is it 'E' or 'A'!?"). I also made one incredible mistake, namely: I had Y--K in place, looked at the clue (80A: 19th-century adversary of an 18-Down), and, despite having 18-Down in place (REB), and despite knowing very well that the War of the Roses did not take place in the "19th century," I chose only to focus on the word "adversary" and instead of YANK, I wrote in YORK (the House of York being notorious 15th-century adversaries of the House of Lancaster). Like ... you have to really commit to not reading the clue thoroughly in order to come up with YORK in that situation. I'm perversely proud of how perfectly bad that answer was. Hope you enjoyed the puzzle more than I did. If nothing else, it KILLS TIME, right? Right.
See you next time.
85 Down. Tell?
ReplyDeleteAs in a tell in poker
DeleteMost often used when describing a poker player giving away his hand as good or a bluff, because whenever that particular player is bluffing, he always clears his throat. The throat-clearing is his tell.
DeleteWasn't; it odd to have lowlifes as an answer, but not clued as the other themers? The theme was obvious very quickly. Still it took some time for me to make my way through the puzzle. But I always take my time with Sunday puzzles - even when I do them on Saturday night!
ReplyDeleteOK Rex a couple of things...
ReplyDeleteYou hate monarchy? Have you ever lived in one? I do, and I think it may be a stabilizing influence for the very precarious and perilous business of democracy. Trump, Putin, and Hitler were all democratically elected, let's not forget. It seems to me extremists don't get elected as often in monarchies.
Also, "megagram" taken literally is a million grams, which is 1000 kg, which is exactly a TONNE.
Anyway, agree with you about the theme at least. Mildly amusing.
When I think of "Just Another Day" (104 down) I hear this classic 80s song which I just love. That Jon Secada thing, not so much.
[Spelling Bee: Sat currently -1, missing a 6er.]
Being pedantic it should have been ‘megagramme’ as the British overwhelmingly prefer ‘gramme’ over ‘gram’.
DeleteIt’s worth noting that Britain’s monarchist system produced Boris Johnson and Brexit around the same time that Trump was elected. So much for moderating influence.
DeleteThat’s definitely a better “Just Another Day!”
Delete@okanaganer 12:34 AM - I can't even. There is only one true "Just Another Day," and it is the one by Paul McCartney, "released as the A-side of a non-album single in February 1971. It was his debut single as a solo artist following the Beatles break-up in 1970" (Wikipedia).
Deletehttps://youtu.be/hFzEA7ZAfZQ?si=PYK4wDeQJKLLxsLL
Yeah, except that’s “Another Day”, not “Just Another Day.”
DeleteThere is nothing British about megagram. In fact, just the opposite. Most of the scientific world uses SI units; England is the exception. Tonne, is therefor most definitely NOT English, but French. And in standard SI units, megagram is not unusual for a million grams (or a thousand kilograms), which equals one tonne (a metric ton), which is different than an English/American ton (1 tonne = 1.10231 tons).
DeleteTrue about Boris and Brexit being a disastrous combination in British history. (The referendum-Brexit vote- was legally meaningless but the Conservatives committed to it mostly to settle divisions in their party, with most Conservatives in Parliament hoping it would lose)
DeleteHOWEVER the Conservatives did eventually dump Boris. The Republicans, well Trump controls the party,though he has been much much worse than Boris To be fair they are no longer comparable.
I am an American but I agree with Okanaganer. The problem is the Commander in Chief and one of the major symbols of our country, in addition to being a government leader. What the monarchy does is take all that symbolism and removes it from the political parties. It clearly limits the excesses that have occurred here with Nixon and Trump.
Boris was never in the position where he could do no wrong (or shoot someone on 5th Avenue as Trump said). Because he was very entertaining the British gave him a lot of leeway but he he lost it over one relatively minor misstep ( compared to Trump anyway).
Btw the British really regret Brexit.
This whole Brexit/Boris episode shows the strength of the British system compared to ours.
Clearly I DID enjoy the puzzle more than you did, Rex, thank you very much... and here's why:
ReplyDeleteFairly limited PPP
(and therefore) no naticks.
A clever theme that made each answer feel like a real punch line. An added bonus that some of the theme answers were vertical.
There is just nothing not to like about this puzzle. I unhesitatingly award it a full five stars!
Fairly limited PPP??? Maybe my definition of PPP is a bit over-broad, but: NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, ARMENIA, DUMA, ARCHIE, TV DAD Phil Dunphy, GALILEO GALILEI, "ADA Twist Scientist, ALDO Gucci, Godfather Part III, DAN Savage, DELHI, LAILA Ali, "FRIDAY I'm in Love," MEL Spice, TICOS, Sammy CAHN, SHIA, Laura DERN, Dwight D. "IKE" Eisenhower, TBS, OMAR Hassan, JON Rahm, King MIDAS, FREDO Corleone, UPI, SPINNER in the game of Life, NECCO wafers, RAPTOR names from "Jurassic World," ARIAL font, and Jon SECADA, unless you also want to count YANK and REB. Don't get me wrong; I knew most of these and enjoyed knowing them. But that does not make it fairly limited PPP.
DeleteYay. I agree. I really enjoyed it. I'm not an expert like most of the people who comment. I didn't have to "reveal letter " and I finished the whole thing
DeleteWell, I did this Sunday because I'm bored and I'm trying to get over whatever crud I have and while I'm not in AGONY I want to mention that I got some angst and agita with the title of "Startin" Somethin" and then getting DOWNWARD DOG and thinking this must be DE POSE a DOG will do when it's startin' somethin' we all know involves using a scooper. Is this a run-on sentence?
ReplyDeleteWell...it turns out that's not so.
My SCIATIC nerve just popped.
What I liked:
CLARO for 83D. Except I would always say PERO CLARO...Andale pies
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY...Doesn't everyone love Charlie D?
BEST BUDDY....Don't we all have one?
KILLS TIME but it ENDS WELL. I'm always killing time because I'm one of those pathetic humans that will get to an appointment about an hour early (just in case there's an accident) and always find that extra hour waiting to be called, a pleasure. I get caught up on Facebook and read the news and look at "The Dodo" to see animals being rescued. It ENDS WELL
What I didn't like:
The title...Didn't make sense to me.
@anonymous 12:06 am... TELL = Merriam Webster's first definition as a noun.
ReplyDelete@GILL I., the title... also didn't make sense to me.
I had trouble believing how obvious and awkward this puzzle was. Not a well-made thing.
ReplyDeleteEasy-medium. The theme was pretty obvious so this went reasonably smoothly.
ReplyDeletePEdi before PEEL and ENDupok before ENDWELL were my major time sucks.
A pleasant enough Sunday solve, liked it a bit more than @Rex did.
ReplyDeleteNICHOLAS NICKelBY at 24A
cBS before TBS for the network at 64D, leaving me with AcTA for the praise start at 63A. Tried
to "fix" it by changing IPAD to IPoD before getting it sorted out.
@jae PEdi before PEEL for the 76D spa treatment and END up ok before END WELL at 100A
@Rex AGRi before AGRO for the prefix at 112D
A rare day where I dislike the puzzle and yet also don’t like Rex’s write up.
ReplyDeleteTable tennis, manyfold, sieged are fine, yeesh!
Just a bit too easy for a Sunday. Once the theme showed up almost immediately at 24-A, every other theme entry fell with little resistance. Not enough oonph, overall, in the cluing. As for the title, maybe it gives a hint to the ESsen(c)e of the puzzle (with the homophone cheat.)
ReplyDeleteSorry to go off topic, but I can't find the answer list for today's Spelling Bee in the NYT Magazine. They just reproduce the rules. Does anyone know what's happening?
ReplyDeleteSame as above. I cannot find it either. If anyone can help, please do
DeleteWow. Easy there Rex. Your rant about QEII and “banish the monarchy” blah blah seems a bit grouchy (get off my lawn!). Otherwise, I agree with comments. I thought this puzzle was easy and enjoyable but I guess I’m in a good mood.
ReplyDeleteMove along - not much to see here. The initial theme stretched out for a Sunday sized grid - just too much of not a good thing. Well filled for the most part - liked JUNIPERS x NECCO and UNABATED.
ReplyDeleteGALILEO
Don’t understand the big guy’s take on megagram or MANYFOLD. Mega = 1,000,000 - 1,000,000 grams = 1 TONNE.
Seems to me this type of played theme should have been condensed into an early week puzzle.
LOW LIFE
Only issue with this puzzle is it didn't give enough resistance. Completed in about half my normal time for a Sunday. I prefer a bit more of a challenge.
ReplyDeleteI love when a constructor falls upon a language quirk, and then runs with it. Here, Rich came upon ENMESH, saw that its first syllable was a letter name (EN) and that a word that began with N – netting – was a synonym for the rest of the word (MESH). Good germ for a crossword theme.
ReplyDeleteBut no, that wasn’t enough, as Rich, with the help of his son, came up with not just one-word synonyms, but two-word phrases, both words beginning with the same letter – COMMON COLD for “seasickness”, POOL PLAYER for “peashooter”, and so on down the line. That’s going the extra mile. Bravo, sirs!
Notes:
• Two answers that start with the sound of R (ARFS and ARCHIE) echo the theme, as does one answer that IS a letter sound (BEE).
• Lovely how the first word of DOWNWARD DOG drops.
• Lovely freshness in the “Green Eggs and Ham” clue for I DO NOT, as that answer has never, in any of the major crossword venues, been clued like that. (It’s usually clued with something like “Emphatic denial”.)
• Uncovering KEGEL made me wonder if its opening syllable is kee or kay. (It’s the latter.)
Rich, you saw a quirk, didn’t shirk, and gifted me with pleasurable work. Thank you so much for this!
@Lewis: How interesting! I have heard KEGEL said many times, by doctors, nurses, and non-medical friends, and it has always been pronounced with a long E (which, therefore, is the way I too have pronounced it).
DeleteIt was a Sunday. The themer clues were on the clever side, eliciting cute groans. Not as painful as some. Rex sure doesn’t like the monarchy.
ReplyDeleteI like vocabulary, so absolutely I use manyfold in the manyfold ways that I appreciate crosswords. I think of manifold as a topological space. However, exponentially is an exaggeration and inaccurate and not a synonym.
ReplyDeleteI thought one million or mega was an interesting way to describe a British tonne which is a greater measure than an American ton and is exactly one million grams.
Agro- is absolutely an agricultural prefix as in "agro-industry" and "agroforestry.”
We’ve all forgotten the uptight morality of 1992 especially in Britain where the word propriety still had meaning and the Royal Family set the rigid perfect virginal fantasy that the people themselves gulped up voraciously. The only Queen we all have known during our lifetime was always concerned about keeping the mystique that keeps her family among the wealthiest in the world. An antiquated, burdensome bloat on modern society, yes. But 1992 exposed the monarchy for the first time so that it truly was horrible for the Queen who had spent her life hiding behind the curtain lest all be taken away.
Side note: I look at the theme last. No hints. More enjoyable when it hits you.
MEGAGRAM - the mega prefix is a million and a million grams is 1000 kg or a metric ton.
ReplyDeleteWell I loved it because it's stuff I knew. Agree with @Gill, August was Charles Dickens month for me. I love him. Read David Copperfield and streamed a so so version of Nicholas Nickleby.
ReplyDeleteLoved all the theme answers. But...
Nonhero is a made-up word, or antihero might be too difficult for the modern mind. Or I'm confused about the concept. An Unabated, Manyfold possibility. Always one thing on top of another.
Finally, chuckled when I threw down Pilaf and thought Edith. Easily amused. Just now chuckled again.
I was very excited for a Michael Jackson theme…… :(
ReplyDeleteWell, Rex, you seem aware of the evils of this world. Yes, neo Marxism is an important thing today.
ReplyDeleteLoved the puzzle, perhaps because it wasn't that easy to me. Loved the clues. And we got Dr. Seuss's best. Etc.
Tico? Never heard it, and I live in a heavily Latino area. Not saying it isn't a thing. Maybe I need to get out more!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a thing, but mostly in-country.
DeleteThx, Rich, for this terrific Sun. workout! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed+.
Just took my time on this one. No fat finger typos. A joyous romp all the way thru.
Didn't really pay attention to the theme, but had fun sussing it out post-solve.
Liked the adventure very much! :)
___
Lester Ruff's Sat. Stumper was prob the easiest I've ever come across (on par with an avg NYT Sat.). As always, an excellent production, tho. :)
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On to David Balton & Jane Stewart's NYT acrostic on xwordinfo.com
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
I got the theme quickly, like you, but felt so-so about the solve. Am I the only one who gets irritated about use of “atta”?
ReplyDeleteFH
ReplyDeleteNice puzzle; solved it without ever trying to understand the clever cluing. Average time. It's an odd thing to have so many strong yet predictable opinions. How long before someone fixes up a ChatBot does the NYT Xword?
Thought for a minute that bells PEEL and skin PEALED. D’oh and Duh!
ReplyDeleteANNUS HORRIBILIS sounds like a classy way of saying HemorrHoids! Hope Her Regal Royal didn’t also have those on The Throne; her year was already full of HORRORS.
Finished it with one error...I had "downward dot" and "ketel" instead of DOWNWARDDOG and KEGEL (I hope someone will tell me why DOWNWARDOG is a pose, because I've never seen anyone do it).
ReplyDeleteI made too much of theme. After I got NICHOLASNICKELBY, I assumed "entitle" somehow referred to Dickens, because the name Dickens includes "en" in the middle. But the answer was just a title...that's all, just a book title.
Anyway, a breezy Sunday, easier than most Sundays.
@Bob Mills "downward dog" is a common and popular yoga pose. :)
DeleteRex is pretty much spot on with his assessment today. The theme just seemed so . . . Boring. Pea shooter = POOL PLAYER, etc. ok, if you say so. Some the fill was off the wall as well as Rex mentioned. The theme itself wasn’t too difficult to discern, so hopefully there will be enough satisfied campers to keep this one afloat today.
ReplyDeleteChallenging here. Not the puzzle itself, but trying to read the numbers on my printout. It's really annoying how much a 5 looks like a 6 looks like an 8 looks like a 9. I'm afraid I'm going to have to bite the bullet and move to the large print edition, but then you're looking back and forth between two pieces of paper, and that seems wrong. Not solve on paper? HORRORS!
ReplyDeleteOtherwise an OK Sunday. Caught on at NICHOLASNICKLEBY, even though I had DOWNWARDDOG all filled in. Just never stopped to think about it. Side eye to NONHERO and TREADED. Of course, it was nice to see CLARO.
Enjoyable solve, RK. Really Kind of a tame Sunday, but a smooth ride. Thanks for a medium amount of Sunday fun.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteI thought this a neat and clever puz! Figured it out smack dab in the middle with BESTBUDDY. "Aha!", says I, "B-Friends!" Then went twisting the ole brain into wordplay mode.
93D, ooh, devious. Clue was "Eh? Eh?" (nudge, nudge), and naturally wrote in WINKWINK. A nods as good as a wink to a blind bat. AMIRIGHT? 😁
Had coBS/You cross holding me a touch under that made up word LIDDED. Finally, DAWNS dawned on me (har), and cleaned it up. Liked the Long Across in first two/last two ROWS. Tough to get clean fill with that much open space under/above Themers.
Saw LOWLIFES, coulda been a contender. Too bad couldn't get the symmetric to play nice. Clue can be ElCapos?
REGISTRAR is an unusual word. How many other words end in RAR? Thought I had something wrong there for a bit.
So Big UPS to the puz. Neat, good fill, some fun clues, not too taxing on the ole brain.
Rex forgot COMMONCOLD and POOLPLAYER in his initial Themer list, but did talk about POOLPLAYER in his write-up. I'm sure I'm not the first to point this out.
Anyway, have a great Sunday!
Five F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I've heard of antihero before but nonhero? Is that really a thing?
ReplyDeleteStruggled a lot with this, in particular with the themers, even knowing (part of) the theme. And struggled a whole lot with ATTA/TBS/IPAD. TBS could be PBS or CBS (or some other network I've never heard of). IPAD could be IPOD.
ReplyDelete(part of) because I did not notice until post-solve that both words in the themers start with the indicated letter.
Never been particularly fond of self-referential clues (ROWS, ODD). With the obvious exception of when self-referentialism is the theme.
Shouldn’t AT ALL have been clued as a themer?
Rex’s tirade against the British monarchy prompted me to conclude that 2023 might be considered the annus horribilis for the USA’s ruling classes. Makes me wonder if the people in Great Britain are sipping their tea and having the same thoughts about the current state of our republic.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed hunting down the theme entries. Otherwise an unnoteworthy outing.
ReplyDeleteMOTE was a WOE. I think it's been in another puzzle recently and beat me up then too. The M was the last letter since I didn't know DUMA either.
Uniclues:
1 Bolsheviks.
2 Why Imperialism is still a thing, dontcha think?
1 MANY FOLD TSAR HORRORS (~)
2 PALACE DELAY, AM I RIGHT?
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Summit of wiggly ones. JAZZ DANCE GALA.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
The clue for 93D is pretty damn bad. All I could think of was the Monty Python skit.
ReplyDeleteThis entry of mine in the NYT reimagined songs and poems contest will be in the physical newspaper tomorrow (Monday). For those who'd like an early preview, it's online now -- titled THE BALLAD OF SCOTUS, to be found on this link here.
ReplyDeleteCheers! Marvelous! Congrats!
DeleteI was led astray by "DOWNWARD DOG" because I think of the pose as "DOWNWARD FACING DOG" and thought the play was intentional, with DOWNWARD literally facing DOG.
ReplyDeleteIlhan Omar for neo-Marxism? Reading a bit too much Heritage Foundation pablum, methinks.
ReplyDeleteHaha. You thought Ilhan Omar. I thought Omar Hassan—which is almost as ridiculous a notion as Ilhan Omar. And then I looked at Rex's writeup and saw that's it's just a name-inside-the-clue clue. Yeesh!
DeletePersonal best time for a Sunday and that’s with edible on board (unclear whether that helped or hurt my time)
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle had me at NECCO Wafers. I basically liked the theme but what a stupid title. I don't even get what it's point is.
ReplyDeleteAGRO- is absolutely a prefix meaning field, earth, soil. SIEGED and MANYFOLD are uncommon, but they are words that mean what the clues say they mean. Sycophantery, OTOH, is a total non-word. Buy a dictionary.
TICOS!
HORRORS!
Speaking of of 'peas' and POOL, there's a variation of billiards called ('Pea (Kelly) POOL'.) I have a vague recollection of another version called 'Bottle POOL', but can't recall whether the object was to topple the bottle (or not) after contacting an object ball. I don't recall having played 'Pea POOL', but it sounds like fun.
ReplyDelete___
David Balton & Jane Stewart's NYT acrostic was a med solve with a very relevant theme. The dupe stood out; (hi @joe). Nice challenge! :)
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
A cute and enjoyable theme, but also very easy. However, after all my suffering yesterday, that was absolutely fine with me.
ReplyDelete@Nancy (10:44) -- Wow -- it's wonderful! Brava!
ReplyDelete@Teedmn from yesterday: Thanx. But please let @r.alph know that my problem is postin comments of any kind on his runtpuz blog. Whenever I try, it just says "Publishing" and hangs. I can still create and upload puzs just fine. Thanx.
ReplyDeleteM&A
Since many, including Rex, seem to think that TONNE is some weird British spelling of 'ton', allow me to disabuse you. It's a metric ton, i.e. a tonne, i.e. one million grams or a megagram.
ReplyDelete'Ton' in the UK is spelled the same as in the US, though the units are not equivalent (2240lbs against 2000).
Easy, especially given 18 letters for free. But STAT before SOON, IOTA before MOTE, PEDI before PEEL, MANIFOLD before MANYFOLD.
ReplyDelete@Nancy-Let me add another brava! Great stuff.
ReplyDelete(The other ones are pretty good too.)
Agree with Rex on the theme. It was sorta just there. Other than that, I thought this was a fairly easy and breezy puzzle that went well with my morning coffee. No complaints.
ReplyDeleteNot bad. But maybe I am just getting so used to the mediocrity served up on the Sunday NYT crossword that anything marginally passable seems pretty good now.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting challenge not as easy for me as for @Rex due to some proper names I had to Google. No OHENRY twists in this one…However, NECCO evoked a great memory. It was the candy of choice for me as a teenager and pre-teenager at at a small local movie house that was later burned down by an arsonist and not replaced due to costs to rebuild and insure.
ReplyDelete@Nancy (10:44) Since I have a puzzles only subscription to the NYT I am unable to get past the pay wall to the link you shared. The title alone is intriguing and I’d love to read it. Maybe you could post it here for everyone to see?
ReplyDeleteOh, yes, follow @Nancy's link to her THE BALLAD OF SCOTUS, sparkling with that effervescent Stark wit -- Starktacular -- with every syllable in sync with the song it is parodying, appropriately stinging barbs galore, and even a rhyme of one of the Justice's names. Great one, Nancy!
ReplyDelete@Nancy – terrific parody lyrics! I love:
ReplyDeleteWith the help of Sam Alito
Roe v. Wade is now finito
I looked at the round one entries too but I like the second group better. My faves besides yours are Both Sides Now and The 12 Days of Christmas.
When did they ask for submissions for this?
Well, yep … This is a pretty basic theme concept. Thought it was implemented in a clever way, tho. And nine themers -- quite brave, constructioneerin-wise.
ReplyDeleteNot quite the har-larity M&A prefers in his ginormous SunPuz solvequests, I'd grant.
staff weeject pick: ADA. It and its crossin CLARO were no-knows for m&e, altho I did guess correctly -- only becuz ADU just didn't sound likely.
fave stuff: REGISTRAR [had that -RAR endin in place, and was thinkin I had somethin wrong goin on]. ENDWELL. JUNIPERS. LOWLIFES.
fave Ow de Speration moments: READORN. LIDDED. Startin the rodeo off with noon in French. {Gee whiz} two-word theme clue outlier.
Thanx, Mr. Katz dude. It had some cool moments.
Masked & Anonym007Us
**gruntz**
@Nancy...Let me echo @Whatsername 12:29....Can you post your masterpiece here? The suspense is killing me!
ReplyDeleteFor whatever reason, it took me a while to figure out what the theme was doing (as in, I filled in three entries from crosses before it DAWNed on me) but once I did the rest of the puzzle was easy. I liked the theme - Sundays aren’t difficult for us pedantic sorts who come and read Rex’s rants. I think the editors aim for Wednesday difficult, just bigger. So that felt about right.
ReplyDeleteBut some of these answers were awkward indeed. NONHERO? Big UPS? READORN? TREADED? AGRO? All just felt .. . Clunky.
I did like the clue for TSAR.
p.s.
ReplyDelete@RP: Did U know that two themers are missin from yer blog's list? Namely …
* COMMON COLD (32A: Seasickness?)
* POOL PLAYER (105A: Peashooter?)
Just sayin.
@Teedmn: Be sure to check out my 11:37am comment here. Thanx again.
M&Also
Since people are asking, I don't think @Nancy will mind. Here's her wonderful revision of Oscar Hammerstein:
ReplyDeleteThe Ballad of SCOTUS (or Thomas’s Promises)
(to the tune of “June Is Busting Out All Over”)
Cash is pouring in all over,
The court is a great big money tree!
Lots of billionaires pursue me
And the gifts they offer to me
Are expensive and extensive as can be!
Yachts to take me to Bermuda!
Planes to whisk me off to France!
Though it may appear unseemly,
I will rule for you supremely,
Every time I have the glimmer of a chance.
Because it’s June! June! June!
Rulings come in June! June! June!
Decades of progress will be smashed,
Once all your checks are duly cashed!
Money’s pouring in all over!
Stare decisis is kaput.
With the help of Sam Alito
Roe v. Wade is now finito —
And I’ll soon be crushing Griswold underfoot!
Money’s pouring in all over!
I’ll be at your beck and call!
Ev’ry fabulous vacation
Makes me lower your taxation
To the point at which it won’t exist at all!
Because it’s June! June! June!
Rulings come in June! June! June!
Tossing aside with bad intent
Every last shred of precedent.
Perks are pouring in all over!
Travel’s more splendid than before.
With your money in my pocket
I’ll devote my shadow docket
To the N.R.A., Big Pharma and much more!
Cash is pouring in all over!
Ev’ry decision can be bent:
Though my rulings may be lawless,
Still my reasoning will be flawless
When I tell them what our founders really meant!
Because it’s June! June! June!
Rulings come in June! June! June! …
They’ll be coming Soon! Soon! Soon!!!
-- Nancy Stark
New York
For me it was one or two things - either my VERY EARLY walk (6:30 am which I NEVER do) around the track - or I was really into Rich's head - I whooshed through it.
ReplyDeleteSo for me it was a great Sunday - thanks, Rich.
waste of a great them 'title' and the them clues are not worthy of an all time classic track by the King of POP
ReplyDeletethis puzzle has no pop music magic that's for sure... some decent clues good for learning etc but that's it...
Dry as a bone.. no juiciness.. same old Sunday curse Mr. Shortz!
I found this way less easy than easy. There was a lot of PPP that I knew, but a lot of PPP that I did not know. I got it all from crosses, eventually. And that's always satisfying. So I'm not saying it was an unsatisfying puzzle, just not easy (for me, at least, or as they used to say in Ancient Greece, "emoige"). Also, the themers resulted in a lot of three-letter words throughout, and that was kind of a bummer from a construction perspective.
ReplyDeleteThe theme was great fun. I bypassed entitle, but caught on as downward dog came into view and from then on I enjoy trying to suss out the theme answers . There were other clever clues and answers, tho I'm forgetting now what I smiled at then as I was doing the puzzle about 11 pm. Did not finish then, picked it up again this morning - which it still is (morning I mean) here in AK.
ReplyDeleteSkimmed the comments hoping someone would have commented on 92 D "spinner" Did not find so will someone please explain what spinner has o do with getting ahead in life?
I sometimes worry for Rex's mental health. The anti-monarchy spiel was over the top but much worse was the hate for table tennis. Do we believe that all puzzle submitters have studied the life of the editor and know that he is a table tennis star? I do not.
Ever since my prostate adventure, medical people hock me to do my KEGEL exercises. I have always enjoyed pronouncing it "kugel," as in "potato kugel." It's the Yiddish for pudding.
ReplyDeleteLike @Anon 11:00 am, I was initially somewhat taken aback on seeing OMAR clued with neo-Marxism—whatever that is, it would seem to be pretty far off to the left, and while that seems a defensible characterization of the congressperson, it somehow didn’t fit the tenor of the Times for me. Only after reading @Rex did I see that the answer name was embedded in the clue. Still not sure if the political connection was intentional or not.
ReplyDeletewebwinger
It must be exhausting rooting for the NONHERO
ReplyDeleteHi Whatshername!
ReplyDeleteSaying hi & also - How do you get a "puzzles only subscription only" to the NYT?
Rex and SIRS, ATTA boy for the rant on the IDLE LOWLIFES of the monarchy, even if ARCHIE may disagree
ReplyDeleteEpee is not a sport. Fencing is the sport. Epee is the sword used.
ReplyDelete@Shaaron
ReplyDeleteThe L in Life is capitalized in the clue, so Google "Game od Life" and most all the images will feature the games SPINNER.
@Nancy: I knew you were a crackerjack crossword constructor and a preeminent poet but had no idea you were such an accomplished lyricist as well. I played the song on YouTube while following your text in order to get the full effect. All I can say is Brava my dear! Brava!
ReplyDeleteCompleted the entire puzzle without ever figuring out the theme. Liked it well enough, but the theme was pretty opaque to me.
ReplyDeleteI thought it was weird that the first three theme answers I got (all near the top of the puzzle--DOWNWARD DOG, NICHOLAS NICKELBY, COMMON COLD) featured the same two letters at the start of each two word phrase. That made the subsequent themers less accessible for a bit.
ReplyDeleteAlso, wanted bccS for 98A (Some unnamed addressees), but that was the biggest answer to clean up.
@jb129 (2:14) I have always purchased an on-line GAMES subscription to the Times which has cost $40 per year. I like having the choice of either solving on a device or printing a paper copy which is what I normally do. Here’s a link with more info.
ReplyDelete@Nancy....BRILLIANT! Oh I do hope the SCOTUS gang reads this little gem...
ReplyDelete@Joe D. Thanks for printing it.
Wonderful parody Nancy! I agree with @Joe Dipinto - the finito line is primo!
ReplyDeleteI also admire the shadow docket verse. Makes me want to see the parts that had to be omitted!
I thought the puzzle was okay. I didn’t recognize the title as a song lyric, and thought we were going to get a bunch of missing Gs.
The real theme was better than that.
@Nancy
ReplyDeleteJust terrific. Loved it.
@Nancy, I've been reading you in the past for quite a while here (going backwards on NYT Fridays now, previously on Saturdays) and appreciating you when I do. But now I'm doing the puzzle on the day itself and have to say: HUGE congratulations on SCOTUS, especially on pocket/shadow docket (!), and long live you. I hope that Randy Rainbow picks it up and uses it in his Presidential "campaign." It could tip the issue. Or I hope.
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle was full of sneakiness. Glad of it. CLARO; or, pues claro. Thanks, Mr. Katz.
Well done @Nancy - yet again your City elegance shines.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much to all of you -- @Lewis, @Liveprof, @pabloinnh, @GILL, @Whatsername, @beverly c, and @JC66. And thanks so much for posting it on the blog, @Joe D -- I'd completely forgotten about the NYT paywall.
ReplyDeleteTo @beverly -- Happily, this online version you're seeing is the full version, with nothing omitted. I was asked by the Times Editor to do some cutting for the paper version: She said she really wanted to run it there, but that available space was so limited and, after all, it really WAS pretty long...
Well, yes, "June is Busting Out All Over" is quite a long song and I had wanted to match every verse, chorus and bridge exactly. But I knew I was being unrealistic in submitting something so long for the paper and I told her cutting wouldn't be a problem at all.
What's the advice they tell writers? Oh, yes: "Kill your darlings."
But it's a better parody here, in its entirety, -- especially if you're going to do what @whatsername did and sing along to the original song on YouTube. This will dovetail perfectly with the original (so cool that you did that, @Whatsername!); whereas the one I shortened for tomorrow's paper won't.
But the paper edition is where it's most likely that some acquaintance of Clarence Thomas will say: "Did you see THIS???!!!!" and shove it unceremoniously in front of his face, whether he wants to know about it or not. At least that's how I'm imagining the scene. Which is why I really, really want it to appear there.
Thanks again everyone for your very nice words.
Ok, so before I read you all, just wanted to say that my puzzle solving brain tried to make this way, way harder than it was (or I thought the constructor was way, way cleverer than he turned out to be).
ReplyDeleteFirst themer I got was NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. Hearing it as a fourish word sentence, "Nicholas, Nick'll be", I thought, oh, so his "title" will be "Nick", that's what the clue "Entitle?" means.
Obviously this did. not. help.
Second I got DOWNWARD DOG. Again with the misparsing of the clue. De- indicating "down", and I guess it's a command? Because I think the pose is Downward *facing* dog... ??
And totally at sea with COMMON COLD for Seasickness? Are able seamen common?
But for some reason it clicked with BEST BUDDY. B friends. Oh, is that all? I get it. Done.
Oh, well. Looking for a little more crunch on Sunday.
If you want a job at an ice cream parlor, does it help if you went to Sundae School?
I'll see myself out and go read the commentariat now
personal best for a sunday today. would've liked it to last a little longer, and pretty bland overall, but yesterday's puzzle nearly did my head in so, i'll take it. like others, really wanted antihero and have never heard of NONHERO...seems a bit...made up.
ReplyDeletedid anyone stumble through getting PEALED by first putting in calLED, and then changing it to diALED, before the third time was the charm? sheesh. PEdi before PEEL also needed fixing on my part but wasn't as bad. see also: iOTa before MOTE.
@M&A, got it. I had that problem when I used my little laptop with no storage space left but no problem with my iPad or other laptop. No idea if that was the true cause.
ReplyDelete@Smith
ReplyDeleteThe puns are phonetic. C-sickness.
I found this puzzle overall a bit harder than most bloggers. More like my average. On the other hand, the theme was very easy.
ReplyDeleteThe theme pulled me out of some quagmires. I had no idea of the King’s grandson’s nickname. Nor Ada. (I did know Aldo the crossword fave) And Laila is always a spelling issue for me. Annoyed at myself I didn’t know CLARO. But Galileo and pool player helped a lot.
But while I liked the puzzle, the gimmick was too easy.
@Teedmn: Thanx. I checked, but have quite a bit of storage space left.
ReplyDeleteM&A
Most boring Sunday puzzle in memory.
ReplyDeleteSycophantery is my new favorite word!
ReplyDeleteHad low lives at first
ReplyDeleteRex,
ReplyDeleteI suggest you read the full text of The Queen's "Annus Horribilis" speeches. It might change your understanding of her use of the words (which, incidentally, she did not coin; they were first used in the 19th Century):
https://web.archive.org/web/20090302093837/http://www.royal.gov.uk/ImagesandBroadcasts/Historic%20speeches%20and%20broadcasts/Annushorribilisspeech24November1992.aspx
It is difficult to keep 21 ROWS of a Sunday puzzle from becoming a slog; today is a good example. Not that it was horribly tough; the theme entries showed themselves fairly straightforwardly. It was all those annoying little 3-4-5 words that were often clued on a tangent, and with so many, a few were bound to be unknown.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what JPY is, or a "megagram" either. I hit that natick with an N as a pure guess. AMIRIGHT? Yay, but it shouldn't come to that.
Easy-medium, I guess you'd SAY, but with little joy. Par.
Wordle birdie. Tomorrow will be my 500th; time for stats.
And finally, today we begin the quest for SBLVIII--right here at Allegiant Stadium! FLY, EAGLES, FLY!
I got quite a bit of this - including the "trick." But then, as @Spacey would say, the slog took over. Hey - I have Covid - whaddya want? Gonna go take some nasal spray. Again. bllgghhhh
ReplyDeleteDiana, Waiting for the end of Covid
@Lady DI: I feel ya. With me it's eye drops, 3 times a day. How I do hate it. Geez, are we Syndicats or Sick-de-cats?
ReplyDelete