Relative difficulty: Medium
Word of the Day: Barry LYNDON (50A: "Barry ___" (1975 Kubrick drama)) —
Barry Lyndon is a 1975 period drama film written, directed, and produced by Stanley Kubrick, based on the 1844 novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray. Starring Ryan O'Neal, Marisa Berenson, Patrick Magee, Leonard Rossiter, and Hardy Krüger, the film recounts the early exploits and later unravelling of an 18th-century Anglo-Irish rogue and golddigger who marries a rich widow to climb the social ladder and assume her late husband's aristocratic position. [...] The film's cinematography has been described as ground-breaking. Especially notable are the long double shots, usually ended with a slow backwards zoom, the scenes shot entirely in candlelight, and the settings based on William Hogarth paintings. The exteriors were filmed on location in England, Ireland, and West Germany, with the interiors shot mainly in London. The production had problems related to logistics, weather, and politics (Kubrick feared that he might be an IRA hostage target). // Barry Lyndon received seven nominations at the 48th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, winning four for Best Scoring: Original Song Score and Adaptation or Scoring: Adaptation, Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, and Best Costume Design. Although some critics took issue with the film's slow pace and restrained emotion, its reputation, like that of many of Kubrick's works, has grown over time. In the 2022 Sight & Sound Greatest Films of All Time poll, Barry Lyndon placed 12th in the directors' poll and 45th in the critics' poll.
• • •
The painful overreach for punniness comes back again with the clue on PATERNITY TESTS (44A: Things that can really make someone pop?). Obviously the "pop" here is reoriented toward the "father" meaning of the word, but I think at its surface level the clue wants to evoke fashion, somehow. And yet the "Things" part really ruins that. As does the "someone"–it's all so vague that the fashion specificity of the idea is horribly diluted. What is that clue on PHEW! even doing? (1D: Cry that accompanies relief ... or a reek). "A reek"? Who ... speaks/writes like that? Also, it's just wrong. "P-U" ("pee-yoo"???) is the phrase for when something reeks (or when something ... is a reek (?) ... you see how awkward that phrasing is). The addition of the ellipsis and "or a reek" takes a perfectly ordinary clue and absolutely drives it into the ground nose first. It's both off *and* unnecessary. No idea what the thought process was there. Not sure what "open-world video games" even are or whyyyy we had to go there for a simple word like MAP (5D: Feature of open-world video games). I liked the WEEK clue, but the use of "shorthand" there is dishonest; the MTWTFSS (more likely M T W Th F Sa Su) at the top of a calendar WEEK are abbreviations; "shorthand" is a very specific thing that stenos use to take dictation, as I understand it ... so boo). When something is "unbelievable" (55D: "Ugh, this is unbelievable!"), you tend to draw out the "come" in "come on!" (often adding an "oh" to the front); you don't shorten it to C'MON, which is only ever an encouragement to hurry up, or to come along. "?" clues work when the word play is dead on. [Big sister?] — dead on. The MOTHER SUPERIOR is indeed a big (important) sister (nun), and the phrase "big sister" is a solid stand-alone phrase; perfectly in-the-language, and thus a perfect misdirect. [Space scrap?] is less great, since the phrase itself is wonky—I think they want you to think of "the scrap (metal), i.e. junk, that floats around in space," but I'd call that "space junk" or "space debris" or I don't know what, but not "space scrap." Obviously, the "?" reorients the meaning of "scrap" (to "abort"), but you can see, hopefully, how [Big sister?] really hits the mark, while many of these other "?" clues ... don't.
My favorite part of the puzzle was the Ebert review of HOME ALONE, LOL, awesome (15A: 1990 film that Roger Ebert called "so implausible that it makes it hard for us to really care about the plight of the kid"). I still haven't seen that damn movie. Something about McCulkin Mania put me off it, hard, back in the '90s, and I haven't (yet) felt compelled to fill in that particular gap in my cinematic education. Oh, wait, isn't Joe Pesci in that? [...checks internet...] Oof, yes, so ... nevermind. Not interested. Did that *&$% ever apologize for what he did to Sinéad O'Connor? I've hated him since that SNL appearance in 1992, and hate him even more now (you can see him "joke" about hitting her, and hear the audience laugh and cheer, here). I have taken Sinéad's death harder than most celebrity deaths, for sure. Her first three albums were fixtures of my Gen-X youth. Courageous, fierce, original, beautiful. R.I.P. to one of the most daring musical artists of my generation.
See you tomorrow.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
P.S. "NO MÁS" is a [Non-English "Uncle"] Because "uncle!" here means "I give up" (and "NO MÁS" means "no more!")
P.P.S it seems some people have never heard of EL CAPITAN (17A: High point of a trip to California?). I grew up in the Central Valley, so this Yosemite rock formation is very familiar to me, but in case it's not familiar to you, here you go:
El Capitan (Spanish: El Capitán; "the Captain" or "the Chief") is a vertical rock formation in Yosemite National Park, on the north side of Yosemite Valley, near its western end. The granite monolith is about 3,000 feet (914 m) from base to summit along its tallest face and is a world-famous location for big wall climbing, including the disciplines of aid climbing, free climbing, and more recently for free solo climbing. wikipediaP.P.P.S. yes, I also think OOP is clued terribly, but am willing to defer to the more hoop-headed among us on this question (26A: Flashy hoops highlight, for short) (it's a shortened form of 'alley-oop,' but not a shortened form I've ever heard)
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Rex, it sure is great to have you back. Your take on cooommme on vs C’MON is spot-on. I kept sitting there saying it over and over and picturing the difference.
ReplyDeleteMan oh man was this one hard, mainly east of the Mississippi. Leading the charge for all my trouble was writing in “I’m no expert” for that advice lead-in. Also, I was parsing 13D wrong: _ _ TTOR RENT.
Rex I couldn’t disagree more with you on 44A. If I ever came up with a clue like the one for PATERNITY TESTS, I’d move heaven and earth to construct a puzzle around it. What a terrific misdirect!
ENAMOUR – OK, I’ve shared this story before, but that never stops me. Once when I was teaching in WV, on the first day of school, this student (famous for being really smart, boisterous, and funny) came to me after class wanting to flex a bit. Our conversation went something like this:
Carter: Ms. Smith, for some reason when I write, I have to add the U to words like “honor” and “color.”
Me: [Pausing to take his measure… squint my eyes, nod my head, raise one eyebrow] So basically what you’re telling me is that you’re an asshole.
Carter: [Totally *getting* my point and pleased] Yeah. Yeah, that’s exactly what I am.
For the rest of the semester, we muttered asshole to each other if one of us used a fancy word. I miss that guy. He showed me how to use the snipping tool, and my life has changed.
“Teacher’s directive” – wanted “shush” first. I have screamy sign directives everywhere in my room, each one resulting from a little dust-up. KEEP OUT from behind my desk. STAY AWAY FROM THIS WINDOW AND GO BACK TO YOUR SEAT (on door window), DO NOT KNOCK ON THIS DOOR AND INTERRUPT MY CLASS (on outside of my door). No one ever pays attention to that one. Someone’s always knocking and wanting things. Ms. Smith, can I have one of those lip balm things? Do you have any snacks? Can I hang out in here with you? Can I borrow a blanket? Do you have a Band-Aid? Can I have just one piece of grandma candy? (those goo-filled strawberry candies). If I have the class engaged and working, a knock on the door breaks the spell, and I just want to cry. You have to be very careful with directives, though. Last spring, a student, we’ll call her “Malia,” had a cheese stick, and someone across the room asked her for it. She held it up, ready to throw, and I made a serious misstep; I said, , Malia, don’t you throw that cheese stick. She looked at me, and never taking her eyes off mine, she winged it across the room. Damn. All the other kids got quiet and were looking at me like Whatcha gonna to now, teach? I walked over to her – our eyes still locked - looked up at her and said I’m so disappointed that you did that. You really hurt my feelings. Fanning my face, I said, I think I’m going to cry. She laughed and told me not to cry. I asked her if we should hug it out. No! I’m not hugging you! I made her promise not to throw things in my room, and she said she wouldn’t. Whew. She’s there for attacking a female teacher, and I should have never openly challenged her like that.
ON RYE – my go-to bread for sandwiches. Pumpernickel is my favorite rye. Thanks to Kory Stamper, who wrote Word by Word I know that “pumpernickel” is German for “fart goblin.” What a swell little factoid. I was at Walmart recently, and a man next to me grabbed a loaf of pumpernickel. I couldn’t help myself, Did you know that “pumpernickel” means “fart goblin” in German? He looked at me a minute and then was like No, I didn’t. But he said it not in a Happy-To-Know-This way, but rather in a Who-Is-This-Lunatic way as he slowly backed off. I need to learn to shut the %$#@ up.
Sorry , but your reply to Carter going over my head. How is his inserting “u” make him that ?
DeleteMust be a sharp kid, lucky to have you as his teacher
@Loren Muse Smith 6:27 AM
Delete+1
The day I realized "theatre" is how assholes spell "theater" was the day I stopped doing it too.
I had a prof who had studied in England and was an obvious Anglophile in dress and speech. In my final research paper I cynically threw in some English spellings and got a probably undeserved good grade.
DeleteUgh, terrible clueing, you’re so right. And I think “make someone pop” should have been Pop. Pop isn’t a generic term for dad, it’s a form of address. Also I too have never seen Home Alone & ditto on Pesci.
ReplyDeleteOh. I was hearing "pop" only as in "Watch out, she's gonna pop," which I hope no one actually says about a pregnant woman. Maybe I'm confused because of "Raising Arizona."
DeleteI don’t think pop is ONLY a form of address. I have seen it used referring to a father Anyway it is a Friday clue (a hint not a definition) and you admit pop can mean father So I think the clue is fine. I thought it was an easy one so maybe I am biased! Pop + Friday led to paternity then test.
DeleteI have been watching basketball for over five decades. Not once have I heard a sports commentator refer to an alley-oop as… an “oop.” I’m surprised Rex did not eviscerate this one!
ReplyDeleteOh I thought it was awful but haven’t been a consistent watcher of BB lately so I let it go. Glad to hear my “ick” instinct was good 😀—RP
DeleteMy career has been in professional sports and I worked with NBA players for decades. Never heard oop. It is not a thing.
DeleteWhen I was at notre dame a star of the basketball team (Laphonso Ellis) was nice enough to play on our intradorm team one game. I was dribbling on a fast break and he was running down the wing and I bounce passed it to him … but the defender knocked it away. He came up to me afterward and said: Thrally, why didn’t you oop it to me?
DeleteGot majorly hung up in the SE corner when I very confidently dropped in OPED for 57D, and then “confirmed” it with ALANMOORE. Took forever to unscramble that egg. Whoops.
ReplyDeleteMuch more pleasant experience than the big guy. Agree that it had a trivia slant but overall well filled. Mint is also where MONEY is made which is where I thought 1a was going. Liked WET NOODLES and CLERGYMEN.
ReplyDeleteHam ON RYE
Agree with @LMS on the “pop” clue. Didn’t know GISELLE or ELOISE. Nice to see the iconic PET SOUNDS.
Comfortable Friday solve.
Kasey Chambers
This week is turning into a disaster. Today we start off with one of the worst clues of the year for PLAY MONEY (Junior mint?) - yeah right. Hopefully there is some sort of an inside joke going on with high point and EL CAPITAN (when I googled it I got a beach in California). The entire southeast is just a trivia quiz with the member of the clergy, the novelist dude and The Beach Boys album from like 50-60 years ago. I really miss the crossword puzzles that the NYT used to run on a daily basis - they could certainly be stellar sometimes. It’s sad to see how far the mighty have fallen.
ReplyDeleteEasy Friday. One really nice clue (MOTHER SUPERIOR) and a lot of poor ones (NO DEAR, PLAY MONEY, EL CAPITAN, PATERNITY TESTS, JUNIOR MINT, GMO). Oh, I see I agree wholeheartedly with Rex today. Although my complaint on PATERNITY TESTS is that they don’t “make” you a Pop. You either are or are not a Pop before the test; it just confirms which.
ReplyDeleteHand up for Junior Mints as favorite movie candy. Our local independent theater keeps a supply in the freezer. Frozen Junior Mints are even better than room-temperature ones.
This, for me, was a tasty salad, a mix of old and new, hard and not-as-hard, conversational and niche, with many fields represented – movies, Bible, sports, music, electronics, books, geography, anthropology.
ReplyDeleteI did love the conversational phrases: WET NOODLES, IF I WERE YOU, YEAH WHY NOT, ON TIPPYTOE, and STINKER.
I also loved how Brandon took an everyday word, WEEK, and jazzed it up with that “two S’s and two T’s” clue, that is, transformed bland into special. I also was delightfully fooled by the SCOOP misdirect – [Exclusive] – which had me thinking adjective rather than noun.
My brain reveled, because it was given the kind of try-to-figure-out work it loves, without getting NO MAS overwhelmed. Also, the word-wonk in me liked the triple-double O-neighbors in the NE (SCOOP / OOP / NOODLE), as well as the four long O’s in row nine (IBO / NOGO / OWENS).
Simply put, a splendid Friday, a high-quality outing, for which I’m highly grateful, Brandon – thank you!
Thx, Brandon; just right for a Fri. puz! 😋
ReplyDeleteEasy-med (top 2/3 easy; bottom 1/3, a bit tougher).
Pretty much on B.K.'s wavelength except for the SE.
NOMAS was also a WOE, but got filled in with crosses. Finally, post-solve, I twigged on the quote marks, and grokked the wordplay. Great clue! It evoked this memory:
""No mas" is famously associated with the fight between Sugar Ray Leonard and Roberto Duran. The bout took place on November 25, 1980, and it was the second fight between the two boxers. In the eighth round of their rematch, Roberto Duran unexpectedly turned away from Leonard and said, "No mas," which means "no more" in Spanish. By saying this, Duran was indicating that he could no longer continue the fight.
The "No mas" incident became one of the most memorable moments in boxing history and has been widely discussed and analyzed over the years. It remains a significant part of the sport's lore." (ChatGPT)
Fun trip; liked it a lot! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity ~ & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Longtime reader, first comment - don’t miss Home Alone! (My favorite Christmas movie.) Your dislike of Pesci will make it even more enjoyable given some of the challenges his character faces…
ReplyDeleteAs I was solving it, I thought, “This is not for me.” Very sci fi-graphic novel-video game-kids movies … when I got to PET SOUNDS, I thought, “Finally, some pop culture I know.” (Speaking of “pop,” I am with @LMS on that PATERNITY TESTS clue. That moved the like-meter back into positive territory.)
ReplyDeleteLots of clues that I thought on first pass, “How am I supposed to know that?” But as cross letters came in, it was “I DO know that!” Rex mentioned the wicked clue for WEEK, which I liked when I got it. The track and field award was another - makes sense it would be named for OWENS.
In addition to the misdirect on PATERNITY TESTS, I liked the clues for ON TIPPY TOES (i was thinking something like “55th percentile”) and ATARI. Agree with Rex on the greatness of the clue for MOTHER SUPERIOR and the trying-too-hardness of the one for PLAY MONEY.
The NW was by far the hardest for me. I did not fall for putting in Bugs for the W-B rabbit, but I had Mt Whitney for the California high point, okay WHY NOT instead of YEAH WHY NOT, and glaMOUR instead of ENAMOUR, even though it didn’t sound right.
Agree with Rex and Loren about C’MON, and WET NOODLES also sounds a bit off to me. I think of WET NOODLES as people who are no fun, unwilling to try anything new, not ineffectual people. +1 on never having seen HOME ALONE because of the hype (I probably will be the same about the Barbie movie no matter how many people tell me it’s great) and +1 for missing Sinead tremendously. I hated Pesci from that moment, and I was furious at people for booing her AT A DYLAN TRIBUTE CONCERT. It was like they were at a Pat Boone tribute concert. She was vindicated many times over as the horrors of the Catholic Church came out.
This was a disaster for me, I gave up about halfway through, which I really hate to do. The clueing was awful, I agree with what Rex and others are saying. So many proper names that I only sort of knew, like MO- (27D) and STINKER was not going to come to me. The NE was a WASH, awful vague clues. Had faucet instead of SPIGOT, LiNDON not LYNDON, ugh.
ReplyDeleteBetter luck tomorrow?
OOP is not a thing. That NW corner was awful. Terrible cluing. PHEW to P HEW is just rubbish, bad cryptic style writing. Had SURE WHY NOT for a while and GLAMOUR which did not help. The elevation of EL CAPITAN is 7573 and it does not tower over Yosemite'. There are so many 'high points' in CA. Mt. Shasta and Mt. Whitney are over 14,000. Just sayin'.
ReplyDeleteThey did leave out “ The”. It is pretty high looking up at it. That was deliberate.
DeleteI'm going to rate this one as easy, despite the proper nouns. There were a lot of gimmes.
ReplyDeleteAnd while agree some of the clueing was subpar, I disagree with almost all of Rex's complaints. "Junior mint?" is great. For one thing, no one said it's not a big wad of fake cash -- I mean, what kind would play with a few dollars? Play money should be a mint. Throw around hundreds of that monopoly money.
Secondly, I'm pretty sure mint is used as a noun for any amount of money -- e.g. "That ATM just dispensed some 1992 mint." The dictionary doesn't seem to agree with me, though, and I'm not going to bother wading through Urban Dictionary.
PATERNITY TEST has a wonderful clue; not sure what Rex is even trying to complain about on that one.
PHEW is a perfectly normal way to onomatopoeiatize a reaction to stink.
"Space scrap" makes obvious enough sense to me.
Now, clues that actually do suck? "High point of a trip to California?" apparently wants us to go through every point of elevation in the state.
CLERGYMEN's clue is stupidly vague and arbitrary. Colonials? Englishmen? Bay Staters?
I don't usually see situations where ONES are the far-right column. Tenths or hundredths, yes. I was certain this was going to be OP ED, which is a much better answer to that clue.
OOP. Do basketball fans really say this? Like, do real live people actually say, out loud to other real live people, "Did you see that oop?!" Because there's some serious life reevaluation that needs to happen there.
LOLA was too obviously not going to be Bugs with that easy clue, although making it more obscure would probably anger people when they discover it's NOT Bugs. But to be fair, I still couldn't fill it right away because it also could've been Babs.
Final though: is TRIBAL NAME actually a real term used by ethnic groups? Because it feels like a generic combination of words made by white people to describe what could be just as easily called "name" or "tribe" or "clan".
This is an honest question -- I've never heard something like, "This area is the historic home of Native Americans whose tribal name is Ojibwe." Google seems to suggest it's not a real thing. It just seems like a term made up to fit in the puzzle. (Not that the concept isn't real, just that particular term)
Re: TRIBAL NAME, I teach American Indian Studies and this sounded like it was trying to be a PC version of "Indian name"--which is a stereotyed concept and sounds offensive to me. For the concept you're describing, it's more common to say something like "the Navajo people, or the Dine', as they call themselves," or "Muscogee, spelled Mvskoke in their language." It's best just to find the right name (i.e., in the peoples' own language) and use that.
Delete
ReplyDeleteStalled completely in the NW and didn't do much better in the NE, so I skipped down to the SE, managed to fill in the bottom, then rode WET NOODLES and BIT TORRENT back to the NE. Last thing entered was the P in square 1.
wHEW before PHEW at 1D
fell into the bugs-before-LOLA trap at 2D
odea before AMCS at 3D
NODEAl before NODEAR at 10D
draw before WASH at 19A
bean before TRIB at 33A (then I reread the clue and noticed the year)
Funny that you loved MOTHERSUPERIOR, that was the first significant answer I was able to get. good clues are so helpful. Too many proper nouns that I did not know. That was hard, because I can usually parse them from the other answers but this time i needed them to GET the other answers. Had PHEW and erased it a few times because it made no sense for a bad reek. Or whatever nonsense was in that clue. Anyway, thanks for calling it like it is!
ReplyDeleteWhat a complete boatload of trivia. I mean you really have to go so far out of your way as to clue a perfectly respectable people like the IBO via a movie? Or a perfectly good word like MAP via a bunch of video games? Weren't the eponym and the org and the Harvard guy and the princess and the bunny and the album and the graphic novelist and the CPLS and the fantasy franchise and the spaceport and the three other films enough for you?
ReplyDeleteAlso the cluing is off. "Sorry, Babe" doesn't quite mean NO DEAR. Heavily caffeinated doesn't mean STRONG. (STRONG is the ratio of the coffee to water or of coffee to milk. I can make that caffeinated coffee STRONG and I can also make it WEAK. Just watch me.)
What a truly peculiar clue for ON TIPPIETOE.
My biggest write-over was ODEA leading to DRAW instead of AMCS leading to WASH.
Two wonderful clues for MOTHER SUPERIOR and PATERNITY TESTS -- both of which I got almost immediately. Alas, they were the exceptions. Having to wrestle with a zillion names I couldn't care less about and won't remember by noon today made this a difficult and rather unpleasant experience for me.
Took forever to get into this one. Some of the clues were a bit tone deaf (OOP was an oops), but overall as the grid slowly filled in the answers became kinda funny “aha” moments—coupled with some outrageous good guesses on names like GISELLE and ELOISE. The reference to John Harvard reminded me of an early college paper I did on the post-revolutionary struggles of New England colleges to shift from a religious orientation to secular education. Also the puzzle generated some fun commentary from @LMS, so all in all a good start to an overcast Friday morning here in NY.
ReplyDeleteThis wasn't as tough as last week's puzzle but it did put up an above average fight. I did it on my phone last night and put in OOP last to get the congrats. That was one of the numerous clues that went right over my head. I was actually wondering if there was a One Off Play phrase. As long as the crosses are solid a win is a win but it was quite a doh moment when I saw where that one was actually going.
ReplyDeleteSun +Mon -0, Tuesday pg-3, Wed + Thu -0
Had the same objections to some of the clues as many here, so no need to repeat.
ReplyDeleteI filled in BITTORRENT entirely by crosses, and even with reading the clue, I still don't know what it is.
If you have seen "Free Solo" you will never forget ELCAPITAN. Not recommended for acrophobes.
Hello ALANMOORE. Can't say that we've ever met. On second thought, I have read "Watchmen", and even then I wasn't paying attention to the author.
You can have your Disney Princess GISELLE. For me, GISELLE will always be the lovely GISELLE MacKenzie of "Your Hit Parade", one of my first major crushes.
Took too long to remember OLIVER!, mostly because I wanted zip instead of VIM. I still walk around with a lot of those songs in my head. Great stuff.
I thought this was the Best Kind of Friday, BK, with just enough head scratching involved to make it worthwhile, and thanks for all the fun.
Even after all the commentary, I’m left with “week” as the only entry I got by crosswords. I still have no idea how four day letters gets you to week. No idea what’s clever, no aha at all.
ReplyDeleteI should be used to it by now, but somehow I am always amazed by how oblivious I am to proper-name-and-trivia fests. The reason is that I love both proper names and trivia, but it's also jarring -- in a good way -- to see that so many commenters that I respect (see, among others, @Nancy) feel completely differently. I do understand why.
ReplyDeleteAnyhoo...for me, this one is all about the superb corners and the two 14s. PLAYMONEY is clued badly, but it sits atop a pretty nifty stack. ALANMOORE was unknown to me, but he was gettable via crosses and the fairly straightforward CLERGYMAN and PETSOUNDS, the latter of which is exalted enough in pop music circles to warrant a place. I'm calling foul on OOP though -- no one says that. ENAMOUR is some major desperation too.
Cluing is definitely hit (UNCLE, MOTHERSUPERIOR, PATERNITYTESTS, WASH, SCOOP) and miss (PLAYMONEY, MAP, WEEK) so I get the criticism on that front.
Have a great weekend, all.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing it's BIT TORRENT. Never heard of that. Apparently I don't share anything with my peers. Had OLEaC/BaTTORRENT there for my one-letter DNF. Thought about the I, but the A making OLEAC just seemed righter. (I know it's more right, not righter! 😁)
Very odd clue on GMO. Last letter in (the M), and when I got the Almost There, figured that was wrong. But, it was correct.
YEN and YEARNS both clued similarly. Could've changed YEN clue to reference money. Just sayin'.
Broke down and had to Goog for LYNDON, also for GISELLE. Oh well, at least it was only two.
Nice FriPuz. Enjoy your day!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Tough for me, fun to wrangle with, satisfying to finish. As a Cheesehead, I'll liken my grid mid-solve to a two-part cheese board, with a solid chunk, say of cheddar, on the left side, next to a block of Swiss on the right - it took me a long time to fill up all the holes. I enjoyed the cluing, appreciated SHEBA x GALILEE.
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: wHEW; mt. something before EL CAPITAN; NO Dice before NO DEAl; PATERNITY suitS. Thank goodness for some easy ones: MOTHER SUPERIOR, PATERNITY TESTS. Happy to know: LYNDON. Happy to own: PET SOUNDS. Help from having a son who climbed it: EL CAPITAN. No idea: WWE, BIT TORRENT, ALAN MOORE, GISELLE.
Lebron James with the OOP! I think I hear that more than the now proper sounding alley-oop.
ReplyDelete@Iris - you never read Hop on POP? Unless there was some formal sense of the word that went over my 3 year old head...
I literally did a LOL with PATERNITYTEST
Hated this puzzle! Hated the cluing.
ReplyDeleteWanted to add that I hated the clue for El Capitan. I don't think of it as a high point of California! Sure, it's high for its immediate vicinity, but hike a bit out from it and you get much higher in the Sierras. There are so many higher points in the state. I was trying to make Mt. Whitney, which is the highest point of California, work. They should have clued it differently. I feel like it's known way more for its distinctive shape and as a climbing destination than as being "high."
DITTO
Delete@Pcrest Bob -- Carter's "U" makes him pretentious, right LMS?
ReplyDeleteRP -- That was quite a repulsive Pesci clip. I'll never be able to watch My Cousin Vinny again.
Loved this puzzle.
Puzzles with the balance so heavy on arcane (IMHO) trivia may be considered challenging but I tend to find them more frustrating than satisfying. There’s only so much I can do to guess at names etc. I just flat don’t know, so I’m left with the choice of looking it up or giving it up. Either way feels like a failure. Is that a constructor’s goal? To know that they’ve stumped the average solver? I wouldn’t think so. In an early week puzzle I can manage but on a Friday when the surrounding fill is more difficult by design, well it’s one of those I’m happy to be done with.
ReplyDeleteFor any long-term Apple Mac users, El Capitan should have been a gimme, as it was the name of the operating system released in 2015. In fact it was the last one released as an OS X release before they started calling it MacOS. All the recent operating systems names have been scenic places in California.
ReplyDeleteGood review; most of the comments are dead on. I knew few of the proper names but got them all from context (and was strongly misdirected on heavily caffeinated, thinking it was strung out. I guess I didn't have enough coffee). Never saw Home Alone until December 2022; I was forced to after watching the annual Soha-Priya gingerbread competition (NYT Cooking Video!), which challenged them to make the Home Alone house. WIth that, I had to watch the movie.
ReplyDeleteI was racking my brain trying to figure out why all these answers seemed so familiar, like I had just done this puzzle. I realized that I tried “easy mode” earlier this week to see what it was like. This is the easy mode puzzle I did but with more challenging clues. Ugh. Won’t do easy mode again.
ReplyDeleteTypical Friday, but a few answers made me smile. ON TIPPY TOE, PATERNITY TESTS, IF I WERE YOU, WET NOODLES are all wonderful. I do wonder why we see this much junk on a themeless. I thought that was the point of no-pressure fill.
ReplyDeleteMy main associations with BIT TORRENTS is they're great for pirating illegal downloads and getting the latest viruses. Just buy a real copy.
EL CAPITAN (very vague clue) went in with only two crosses but HOME ALONE (crystal clear clue) was my last entry after every cross. Brains are weird. My niece is working in Yosemite this summer and she's definitely winning.
Uniclues:
1 Those thinking crypto is going to make them rich.
2 Headline on negative review of itinerant preacher.
3 Leaders of the Holy Order of Pong.
4 That which leads to waking up in the alley.
5 Enchant Enchanted actress.
6 Ancient kingdom's sadness when it learns the antics of its billionaire queen will be its legacy.
7 Me, in my head on every conference call, and why I couldn't survive corporate work.
1 PLAY MONEY NEWBS
2 GALILEE STINKER (~)
3 ATARI CLERGYMEN
4 YEAH, WHY NOT DRAM
5 ENAMOUR GISELLE
6 SHEBA YEARNS
7 C'MON WET NOODLES (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Teen who sneaks out. ON TIP TOE PRO.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@Nancy - Things Fall Apart is a massively important novel by Chinua Achebe. I don't know (but doubt) if anyone made a movie from it, but that's irrelevant. I am unaware even of the concept of "open-world video games", but even not knowing what such a thing is, can a MAP not be a part of that? That's what makes the puzzle an actual puzzle.
ReplyDeleteAs a non biological father, what makes a Pop a Pop is definitely not a paternity test. You can go fuck yourself with that joke.
OOP is awful
ReplyDeleteRe: OOP (in support of @burtonkd (9:37 AM))
ReplyDelete"Look at this OOP from famous Youtuber Tristian Jass to former Los Angeles Baller Marquis Reed at NBA Con." (jba - on Instagram)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity ~ & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
As a young nerd, I had a weird connection to PET SOUNDS. You see, there is this series in Japan called JoJo's Bizarre Adventure that loves to use classic rock and musical references as names for the characters. For example, some of the early main characters are Robert E. O. Speedwagon, Dio, and Santana. When I got to that clue, I just cycled through Beach Boy references from that until I got it. Was it PET SHOP? No, doesn't fit, must have been his brother, PET SOUNDS. I'm probably in a very small selection of people who have that as the primary link, so I just thought it was interesting to share.
ReplyDeletePS Open world video games are games where you can roam anywhere you like with very little supervision, making a good MAP an essential tool in the genre
The clues were pretty tricky and it took a couple of passes to get little footholds throughout. But finally muscled my way through it in spite of not being sure of quite a few answers (GISELLE, MOS, OOP, ELOISE) so at least that was very satisfying.
ReplyDeleteI wanted NooBS instead of NEWBS, and STRuNG instead of STRONG (thinking of a highly caffeinated and high strung person perhaps), and only just now am noticing that NOT•I is not NOTI, some legalese word that I had never heard of before.
First Sinead and now Pee-Wee. It seems like the Universe is trying to make it personal lately.
Got everything except 13-DOWN. Can someone explain what a BITTORRENT is?
ReplyDeleteThis felt tricky to me - not a lot of whooshing. There weren’t any long clues that really allowed me to sink my teeth in. I also really wanted the California high point to be Mt Whitney, the actual highest point in the continental US.
ReplyDeleteyep. Been to (and stayed at) Yosemite. Very glad we visited there. Sooo … sure -- EL CAPITAN was a definite high point, in our overall visit to California.
ReplyDeleteMany puzclues today were kinda raised-by-wolves, I'd grant. Constructioneer's comments at xwordinfo.chen do indicate significant clue changes by the "editorial staff". Is the Shortzmeister turnin over the puz cluin to the wolf pups?
Did kinda get a chuckle out of the sneakier-than-snot PLAYMONEY clue, tho.
staff weeject pick: OOP. Poster wolf-child of weird cluin.
Some cool stuff included: SCOOP. SPIGOT. STINKER. WEEK clue. ELCAPITAN. WETNOODLES. YEAHWHYNOT. MOTHERSUPERIOR & its clue.
Thanx, Mr. Koppy dude. Not the easiest FriPuz solvequest, but hey, yeah why not -- bring it!
Masked & Anonymo2Us
slightly illustrated:
**gruntz**
Medium-tough. It took me a while to get a foothold. I stared at AMCS, NOTI, and YENS and got nowhere for more than a few nanoseconds. The bottom third was easier than the top. Nice to be challenged on Friday for a change. Smooth and solid with a fair amount of sparkle, liked it, but I agree with @Rex about some of the cluing and the excess trivia.
ReplyDeleteThe best track on “PET SOUNDS” is “God Only Knows”.
....speaking of summer reads, if you’ve read Colson Whitehead’s “Harlem Shuffle” then you probably know he’s followed it up with “Crook Manifesto” which recently came out. Loved the first and am very much looking forward to the second.
I enjoyed most of the long answers including PATERNITY TEST. Almost a dozen names I had no idea about but crosses made it solvable. Agree that MOTHER SUPERIOR is stellar.
ReplyDeleteUm, “High point” for EL CAPITAN doesn’t necessarily refer to elevation.
One early morning long ago I was standing at the edge of a stream below EL CAPITAN, when my friend called out from the trees “Don’t move, there’s a bear.” “Yeah, right (not C’MON).” But a glance over my shoulder revealed yes, indeed, a brown bear a few yards behind me…
So is SSTT Sat, Sun, Tues, Thurs?
@Loren Muse Smith - Thanks for explaining the LIE from yesterday. Cute pug today!
When I encounter a horribly clued puzzle like this, I always wonder if I should blame the constructor or the editor.
ReplyDeleteWhy either/or? It's a WASH.
DeleteSaw Barry Lyndon when it came out in 1975. Very disappointed. Thought it was going to be a documentary of the 1964 presidential election not some GOOPY rom-dram. LOLZ.
ReplyDeleteThis turned out to be not as bad as I thought. A Friday tough, but doable (although I didn't know Bitter Torrent & LOTR.
ReplyDeleteReally liked Mother Superior & Paternity tests.
@Pcrest Bob 9:45 @Liveprof 9:57
ReplyDeleteSince moving to Canada, SpellChecker adds a U to my words in the strangest of places.
Fugetaboutit
ReplyDeleteI tried dDe in at 34A first. He did lead the ETO during WWII, right? It did mees up my parsing 13D and 31D for a while.
ReplyDeleteI liked ON TIPPY-TOE as clued since I was going in the direction of height percentiles and we didn’t have to go that high.
It took me three tries to get NOTo, NOTe, NOTI. Thanks, VIM.
I wasn’t enamoured of the clue for 1A but I suppose one could say Junior has a made a mint via PLAY MONEY. And I had no problem with qD, my entry into the puzzle.
I'm sure glad I knew “PET SOUNDS” because that SE would have been a lot harder otherwise.
I was not saying C’MON this morning when my laptop decided to do an update for 45 minutes right when I wanted to sign in to do the daily hour of work that I committed to do while on my vacation this week. It was definitely COOOME ON!!
@beverly c 11:28a - completely agree with you. There is no superlative in the clue - EL CAPTAIN is at a relatively high elevation and if you’ve ever experienced it’s majesty would truly understand the “high point” misdirect reference. I thought a wonderful clue.
ReplyDelete@jae 11:10a - a wonderful song but my favorite is I Just Wasn’t Made for these Times. The hype is well deserved.
Wow Brandon that was a workout. Almost a multi personality grid with gimme fills like NO MAS, MOS & HOME ALONE, but then such evil smirk clueing that even the ? crutch doesn’t help much. Some real mind twisters indeed. HOME ALONE was a first entry that led nowhere even with AMCS & YEN in place. And then there was that ATARI & NO GO that truly left me in self-imposed space sucking breath in a vacuum.
ReplyDeleteI started with PHEW and I think I ended with it as well.
ReplyDeleteQue hard...
Well, I had the E from PHEW so I know EL CAPITAN when I see it. Strange way to clue it, though. Then I thought that the rest of the strange way to clue it would be my mantra today.
It was.
Boy did I stare at Junior mint?....It wasn't going to be some candy I love when I go to the movies, was it? No. I also knew Bugs wasn't going to be the Bunny. Go back to my youth mind and Saturday morning cartoons at my grandmothers' neighbor friend who had a TV. AHA...It was LOLA.
OK...so I had letters in place and words: PLAY MONEY????HOME ALONE and EL CAPITAN.
Dang...Why so many trivia things and names I don't know. BIT TORRENT? Good gravy... but maybe it's BITTOR RENT? Did I say NO MAS to myself?
I did.
I had a few cheats which I hate to do on a Friday. I give myself liberty on Saturday but I want to feel like "The Smartest Guys in the ROOM" on this day.
I wasn't
I managed to finish with name and trivia cheats. My last cheat was the GISELLE/ALEN MOORE crossing and I peeked to see if PET SOUNDS was a thing. Does that count?
My favorite was MOTHER SUPERIOR. My least favorite was the clue to King Charles and his ENAMOUR. I don't even know what that means to him.
Should I know what WWE means? Or shorthand for WEEK?
And so it went.
I'm quite put off by the vitriol today towards British spellings. I read a few British magazines and a lot of British fiction, so I'm as used to seeing them as I'm used to seeing miles/km, Fahrenheit/Celsius, etc. I'm often tempted to write with the extra U, or RE instead of ER, or a C instead of S (eg DEFENCE), or an S instead of Z (CIVILISE). It's not pretentious, it's just habit. Lighten up, y'all.
ReplyDeleteTypeovers: NO DEAL before NO DEAR, and OP-ED before ONES ("Column on the far right"... get it?).
[Spelling Bee: Thurs 0, last word this 5er.]
GOOP yesterday, OOP and SCOOP today, those Os are getting a workout.
ReplyDeleteSince the two long acrosses are both about parents, my guess is that this was submitted as a themed puzzle, but moved to Friday because the theme wasn't tight enough.
I wouldn't call Lord of the Rings a franchise -- to me that would imply that the franchise owners are putting out new novels, movies, or whatever set in the same imaginary universe, but as far as I know they are not--other works have been published by all derived from Tolkien's finished or unfinished manuscripts.
I have to admit I finished with an error -- I thought it was BARRY LaNDON, and never figured out why ON TIPPaTOE was wrong. I should remind myself to check crosses when something looks ridiculous.
I couldn't fit "The Original Writer" into 62 Across.
ReplyDeleteOOP doesn’t seem to be up anyone’s alley. Perhaps its use is Out of Place here, which is apparently how it is used on social media.
ReplyDeleteSince 1847 you’ve been able to see the TRIB as a TRIBALNAME.
Steer clear of any bathroom where someone emerges saying PHEW!!! STRONG STINKER LOGS.
I thought the cluing on this was difficult, but then I also thought that today is Friday. My bad. Thanks for a good workout, Brandon Koppy.
Can someone please explain the WEEK clue?
ReplyDeleteCompletely disagree about CMON. "c'moNNNN!" is definitely a way to express unbelievability.
ReplyDeletesome marvelous cluing mixed up with groaners... ok with trivia that encourages one to see Barry Lyndon as good as films gets in any generation... I could live with no more Disney entries as well... or nuclear war
ReplyDeleteNo, dear.
ReplyDeleteNo go.
¡No más!
Caroline, no!
Thank you for pointing this out! We're all just fine with a word appearing in 3 different answers? Really?
DeleteNevermind SEENTO and SEEME.
This repetition has been going on for quite some time now so
DeleteI didn’t even notice the ones you mentioned.
I think it is the “new normal “
If you want to do the Times puzzle ya gotta get used to it
OOP huh? One in a zillion clues that are just…in there so you don’t solve.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone publish real crosswords anymore?
@Bob Mills 10:45:
ReplyDeleteBitTorrent is a file-sharing platform that's been around since the early 2000s.
Are you familiar with Napster and LimeWire? Those allowed you to directly download a file that someone else was sharing. Almost like copy/paste.
BitTorrent uses a different approach, where a file is broken up into many small sections. Each section can be sent by anyone else on the network who also has that file. Doing this, you start to build the file bit by bit, but using multiple sources.
Likewise, as you progressively download different segments, you become a source for other people trying to get the same file. It becomes something like a big storm of little file bits -- a "bit torrent" if you will.
@Anonymous (2:16) Shorthand for days of the week: S M T W T F S
ReplyDeleteI'm usually more attuned to the plural of convenience (POC), especially when longer, marquee entries get some easy grid filling letter count boosts as happens today when WET NOODLE and PATERNITY TEST weren't up to the task of filling their slots. Maybe neither sinks to STINKER level, but they are demerits to the puzzle's overall quality in my book.
ReplyDeleteBut today I also noticed a singular of convenience (SOC) or two. OOP stands out as a prime example. At least clue it as such, maybe along the lines of "Expression after a teeny-tiny minor misstep".
The one that is a classic SOC to my mind is ON TIPPY TOE. The lengthy, trying to hard clue is a tell tale sign of that. Ever seen anyone standing ON one TIPPY TOE? Yeah, it's ON TIPPY TOES. Don't take my word for it. Here, let XG set the matter straight.
Those of us who know our geology and geography would have immediately penciled in MTWHITNEY for the California high point, which of course rendered that corner an absolute wreck.
ReplyDeleteOn a recent backpacking trip I brought in a bunch of 2005 puzzles, and in general they were WAY tougher than today's counterparts. But today, with all the proper nouns, felt like the old days.
Wow! This was almost impossible for me on spots. Actually a big “spot” - dang near the whole top half.
ReplyDeleteMOTHER SUPERIOR saved me, which in itself is pretty funny, since throughout my Catholic school years, she would have been the very last person who would likely have saved me. Well, in retrospect, maybe suffering through her various “corrective activities” might actually have kept me from going entirely off the rails but that’s another story for another day. Suffice it to say, plopping in that big grid spanner finally gave me something to get more than a baby sized toehold.
Like others, I found much of this so far outside my wheelhouse that I very nearly
threw in the proverbial towel. I found so much if this (as I mentioned, nearly the entire top half) so hard!!! And after I left the top after receiving the “big sister’s” divine intercession, the bottom of the puzzle wasn’t super easy, but it was doable and the answers were more familiar or at least not impossible to suss out. And the two wonderful wordplay grid spanners along with the bottom half made turned my frown upside down.
Me too about Sinead. Was comforted to see her mentioned here. <3
ReplyDelete12D: Had the last A and put in Nicaragua. Messed me up for awhile.
ReplyDeleteI had EE* for 60 down and really anted EEL as in “oh, no, there it is again!”
ReplyDeleteAppalling.
ReplyDeleteYeesh
ReplyDeleteVERY challenging. Even for a Friday. Cluing wasn’t always fair. The top half was really hard. The bottom half was medium, for a Friday. Was stuck in the NE forever because of OmEga before OLEIC. Like just about everyone, I too had bugs before LOLA. WWf before WWE and mEToO before DITTO = misdirects of not. Not bad, but a tad unfair in spots.
ReplyDeleteIBO, OOP, MOS, OSHA and AMCS should be enough to disqualify any puzzle from the NYT.
ReplyDeleteNot bad until I got to that darn NW...AGAIN! In some measure, I did it to myself with the glAMOUR ERR. Had the -WHYNOT of 4d, and couldn't make anything work. Tried WELL. tried SURE...NOGO. 1a was a mystery.
ReplyDeleteFinally hit on HOMEALONE, which straightened everything out. So "Junior mint?" turns out to be PLAYMONEY. That's quite a stretch. Gee, Brandon, thanks for the question mark; it was truly the least you could do.
Leaps of faith: wrote in MOTHERSUPERIOR just off the M of MOS, and needed only PAT to fill in PATERNITYTESTS. Bad pun there.
13d was a total WOE; all those letters went in on crosses, and even now I can't parse the result. Did I mention I hate tech?
Easy-medium but for the NW; so I guess medium overall. Par.
Wordle par.
Thanks to the Big Guy - no, not Senile Joe but OFL (Our Feckless Leader) - for the heads-up on the Pesci video which is instantly accessible on Youtube. 78 seconds of perfectly paced stand-up, chiding O'Connor for her stunt in tearing up a picture of the Pope during her appearance the previous week on SNL.
ReplyDeleteNo doubt Rex would hav excoriated the troubled Ms. O'Connor had she torn up a picture of Muhammad or The 'Reverend' Al Sharpton, or any other of the saints in his personal pantheon, but the Pope - spiritual leader of one and a half billion Catholics, is fair game and Sinead is to be lauded for her petulant display.
Sadly, it seems Ms. O'Connor was never able to overcome her mental health issues and her innate musical genius was never fully realized.
YEAH YEAH YEAH
ReplyDeleteOLIVER:
"C'MON, let's PLAY,
WE'RE HOMEALONE, PHEW!"
ELOISE:
"NODEAR, NO way,
NOT IFIWEREYOU!"
--- GISELLE MOORE
What about all the dupes? CMON ONRYE/ONTIPPYTOE (crossing); NODEAR NOGO NOMAS; YEAHWHYNOT NOTI. GISELLE, YEAH baby.
ReplyDeleteWordle par.
Just the kind of Friday I like. Seemed impossible, then a maybe-ish, then - tada!! Done! CMON - you too?
ReplyDeleteDiana, LIW