Three Stooges snicker sound / MON 8-28-23 / Boba Fett's occupation in "Star Wars" films / Palindromic tug boat sound

Monday, August 28, 2023

Constructor: Brian Callahan

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: UNCOUPLES (64A: Disconnects ... or what's found in the answers to the four starred clues?) — each theme answer features a "couple" of words, both of which contain the letter string "UN":

Theme answers:
  • RUN AROUND (16A: *Evasive treatment, with "the")
  • BOUNTY HUNTER (23A: *Boba Fett's occupation in "Star Wars" films)
  • AS DRUNK AS A SKUNK (39A: *Seriously hammered)
  • SUNDAY BRUNCH (52A: *Weekend occasion for avocado toast and mimosas)
Word of the Day: "OYE Como Va" (47D: "___ Como Va" (1971 Santana hit)) —

"Oye Cómo Va" is a 1962 cha-cha-chá by Tito Puente, originally released on El Rey Bravo (Tico Records). The song achieved worldwide popularity in 1970, when it was recorded by American rock group Santana for their album Abraxas. This version was released as a single in 1971, reaching number 13 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 11 on the Billboard Easy Listening survey, and number 32 on the R&B chart. The block chord ostinato pattern that repeats throughout the song was most likely borrowed by Puente from Cachao's 1957 mambo "Chanchullo", which was recorded by Puente in 1959.

The song has been praised by critics and inducted into the Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001 and the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002. Due to its multinational origins—Cuban, Puerto Rican and American—and its many versions by artists from all over the world, "Oye cómo va" has come to represent "the interconnectedness, hybridity and transnationality" of Latin music in the United States. (wikipedia)

• • •

A singularly uninspiring revealer. I actually thought the word was DECOUPLES. What's the difference? DECOUPLES would be a good ("good") revealer if you had theme answers like DOUBLE DOORS, DR. DEMENTO, DON DRAPER, stuff like that. But UNCOUPLES ... not a lot of fun there. There are certainly "UN"s in each of the two words in the theme answers, but with AROUND and BOUNTY the "UN" sound is submerged / hidden / changed, so you don't even get a nice rhyming thing going. Just ... the letters "UN." Since the revealer itself is not exciting at all, and "UN"-ness doesn't really have anything entertaining to offer, we're left with one nice themer (in an appropriately marquee position) (AS DRUNK AS A SKUNK), and that's pretty much it. The other themers are fine as standalone answers, but they don't add nearly enough color to the grid. Same goes for the long Downs. And then you've just got a lot of overfamiliar short stuff (SSNS and RPMS and ETAS and what not). The theme never really gets off the ground, and neither does the puzzle as a whole. But if you solve Downs-only, at least you got to feel ultra-powerful—there's almost nothing to hold you back from a quick solve today. I've got less than a half dozen potential sticking points written down here, and I don't think any of them is likely to prove fatal. So maybe you at least got a solving time record out of it. That's something. Take what you can get. 


The long Downs always threaten to be the trickiest part of a Downs-only solve, and today, that was half true. Well, half half true. A quarter true. That is to say, GO DOWNHILL was a snap (29D: Deteriorate ... as sledders do?), especially once you get those themers into place and get the "D" and the "N" But SPORTS NUTS ... well, the NUTS part definitely slowed me down a tiny bit, in that I wanted FANS, which seemed like a perfectly good answer for the clue (10D: Ones with season tickets to football, baseball and basketball games, perhaps). Mostly what I wanted for that answer was some term for "rich people." I know a lot of SPORTS NUTS, I don't know a single person who has season tickets to three different sports, my god. I was definitely a sports nut for much of my life, and I never had season tickets to anything. So I had FANS, but then GNAT made that impossible and I corrected to NUTS. I guess the insane three-sports season tickets were supposed to indicate that we were dealing with something more than mere fandom (even though "fan" already means "fanatic"). Fine. I also had trouble coming up with HYPER, a term I haven't heard much since the '80s (55D: On a sugar rush, say). Just couldn't come up with a good term. But eventually I surrounded the answer, and HYPER became undeniable. The hardest (though not very hard) part was the last part: specifically, SASSY (52D: Smart-alecky). I wasn't *terribly* certain about "US TOO" (53D: "We agree"), and then, faced with -TILE in one of the Acrosses, I went with the (to me) obvious UTILE! From there, just one Down away from puzzle completion, I took one look at S-U-- at 52D: Smart-alecky and wrote in SAUCY! And that's how it would've stayed, had not COLED stared back at me like "... Really? You're gonna go with me? COLED? Are you sure about that?" I was not. So I pulled all of it and regrouped. STILE got me over the hump. The end.


The one thing I didn't stumble on that I can imagine one *might* stumble on, from a Downs-only perspective, is "NYUK!" (25D: Three Stooges snicker sound). I think it's safe to say that general cultural awareness of the various sounds made by the various Stooges is, uh, on the wane. I wouldn't even know the sound is "NYUK" if I hadn't seen it in crosswords a number of times. I think you can reason your way to "NYUK!" if you have no Stooges knowledge at all, but it would take some educated guessing, and some patience. But those are basic crossword skills, so ... if you are a non-Stooges fan, or otherwise suffer from Stooges nonawareness, but still persevered, congrats. Treat yourself to a TAB Cola. I'll see you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

48 comments:

jae 12:17 AM  

Easy. A bit more whooshy than the typical Monday. A reasonably solid grid with uniformly unusual set of theme answers, liked it a bit more than @Rex did. Nice debut.

I suspect I’m not the only one who had no idea what the the theme was during the solve.


Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #836 was the easiest Croce I’ve ever done. Not quite a Robyn W. Friday, but close. Good luck!

Joe Dipinto 12:24 AM  

Of course "uncouple" is a word. Don't you remember when Gwyneth Paltrow "consciously uncoupled" from Chris Martin of Coldplay?

Yeah, this wasn't terribly scintillating, but there was nothing wrong with it, other than the totally unnecessary "Star Wars" clue.

A U-SHAPE becomes an n-shape if you turn it over. Like, for example, in this upside-down song title:

unpun

GILL I. 1:32 AM  

It would SEEM that AGUA would always RUN dry during the SUNDAY ROUND up of SKUNK NYUK on the RIO OYE. The air was RIPER that usual and smelled like PRYOR TOOT that some WAHOO left behind.

We had a SKUNK HUNTER named ASAP who wore a CAMO with the word COP on his FLAP. He was really an OBTUSE BUM who'd get DRUNK and pass OUT up on the HILL in the LEA. The RESULTS were GOSH awful. His SHOES smelled like a STY. They were SHAPED like an EMORY board in need of TONGS to remove SAP on the TREAD; he didn't care....He'd pass OUT in the ASH pit up by the ORAL B SPORTS bar and just get DRUNK again.

After the SKUNK NYUK ROUND up, folks would head over to the ORAL B for a little ROOS EGG omelette that was on the BRUNCH MENU. The FLAP jacks were SASSY as well...You'd hear an AMEN to that from the AGER group EAU couldn't miss. They all had PRYOR run-ins with a COP or two and the ACLU would like to ROUND them up

It never happened...They would eat in STILE. The RIPER the SKUNK NYUK air, the better to eat and get DRUNK, run up a TAB and sing "TOOT my GNAT." "It LYFTS you to the SKYY" ASAP would yell...."AMEN to that!" the SASSY BUM would sing...."US TOO!" chimed in the OUT COUPLES, SULU and PETE....

Long story short....The AGUA will always SEEM to RUN dry at the RIO OYE. The SKUNK HUNTER would remain DRUNK and the NYUK would still smell like a STY. The RESULTS of this HYPER SASSY FLAP?...You could RUN AROUND a BOUNTY HUNTER who was AS DRUNK AS A SKUNK eating a ROOS EGG omelette in an UN COUPLES SPORTS bar and never eat NUTS again.

AMEN to that!



Lewis 6:02 AM  

My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):

1. House of reps? (3)
2. A large one might have more sides (4)
3. Like something wicked and dark? (5)
4. Takeoff in pole position, perhaps? (10)
5. Way to get ahead in Life? (7)


GYM
MEAL
UNLIT
STRIPTEASE
SPINNER

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

Re NYUK: this belongs to Curly alone. I don’t believe I ever heard Moe, Larry or Shemp say NYUK,NYUK, NYUK!

Andy Freude 7:09 AM  

@jae: Hand up for not noticing the theme till I came here. Solving downs only, I did notice that there were an awful lot of u’s today.

mmorgan 7:26 AM  

This was an easier Downs-only solve than many, but with 8 or 10 squares left, I had to look at some Across clues. Someday, someday, I’ll complete a puzzle Downs-only.

NYUK was a gimme and I could not for the life of me discern a theme. But it was mostly a pleasant Downs-only solve, at least as far as I got with it that way.

Lewis 7:29 AM  

This is a puzzle I’d proudly give to someone just starting out in crosswords. The clues are beginner-friendly yet not insultingly easy; the whole clue set feels elegant to me. The theme is clear to see (many beginning solvers don’t know that crosswords can have themes). The theme answers have zing (all of them, save RUNAROUND, are NYT answer debuts), and the reveal introduces wordplay.

Thus, beginning solvers have a good chance of beaming at filling in this grid, they start to get familiar with crossword elements, and they start to experience some of the perks that puzzles bring.

Just a lovely Monday puzzle.

And it was also a lively experience for this experienced solver. I uncovered all the theme answers, but left the reveal blank and tried to guess it. I got as far as seeing that the theme answers each included a pair of U’s, and started thinking of phrases that included “to you” (playing off of 2-U). Even if I had seen the pair of UN’s, I still don’t think I would have gotten it. But my brain loved trying to crack this riddle.

It also enjoyed the rare-in-crosswords five-letter palindrome (SOLOS), not to mention the double-O quintet of TOOT / WAHOO / NOOKS / ROOS / USTOO.

Just a lovely Monday puzzle. Thank you, Brian, for making it!

Bob Mills 7:45 AM  

A bit harder than most Mondays. Never heard of YOLO or NYUK, and AGER is a semi-word (although it did fit the clue). MEDAYS must be Gen-X language, but it was easy to get with the crosses.

Didn't see the theme until I was finished. I agree with Rex that "decouples" is more correct than UNCOUPLES, but obviously it wouldn't work here.

bocamp 7:50 AM  

WAHOO, Brian! ; an UNdeniably fine Mon. offering! 😊

Med.

Slightly over avg time bc of the WAHOO / U SHAPED cross.

Still have to think about EMORY vs EMeRY.

Otherwise a very smooth solve.

Nice start to the puzzling week! :)

Thx, @jae; on it! 🤞
___
On to Croce's #836, with Anna Shechtman's Mon. New Yorker on tap for tm.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

pabloinnh 8:13 AM  

I'm on Team @Lewis this morning, as I found this to be a just-right Monday. Did notice lots of UNS but couldn't see the theme until I got to the revealer, which was surprising enough to be an aha!, and properly located, so all good.

FWIW, NYUK was a gimme. "Why I oughta...." would have been too.

@Roo-I was feeling good about seeing PAULO, and then almost instantly got hit with multiple ROOS. I'm never going to catch up.

Congrats on the debut, BC. Hope you'll Be Constructing lots more, and thanks for all the fun.


SouthsideJohnny 8:14 AM  

With SUNDAY BRUNCH and SKYY as guests, and Seriously Hammered as a clue, I was looking around the grid for some Bloody Mary’s or maybe a Mimosa or two, but no luck. Nice clean grid, the theme is fine (I’m nowhere near as picky as OFL on that score) with the only hiccup for me being WAHOO crossing U-SHAPED, both of which were just kind of hiding in their CAMO fatigues minding their own business and difficult for me to discern.

Twangster 8:15 AM  

This was the first time I was able to complete a Monday puzzle "downs only" after about half a dozen tries.

Son Volt 8:44 AM  

Cute - early week theme. Some OBTUSE fill here and there - AGER, RIPER, NYUK and NOOKS - but overall no issues. When I worked for NYCT - the yard guys would UNCOUPLE the cars - no problem with that.

Pleasant Monday morning solve.

Quality SHOE

Nancy 8:57 AM  

It belatedly occurred to me to look to see what the theme was when I was all the way down at SUNDAY BRUNCH. Until then, it was a splendidly unnoticeable theme: after all, who could possibly need it to solve this very easy puzzle? Once I did look, I saw the two "UN"s pretty quickly -- but couldn't figure out a revealer. I was sure it would have something to do with the United Nations -- but of course it doesn't.

The revealer, I thought, was splendidly okay.

I do applaud the themer choices for being so natural, so unforced, so completely in the language. It makes this a very smooth and professional puzzle. But a smooth puzzle is not necessarily a thrilling puzzle -- and, with the exception of the lovely AS DRUNK AS A SKUNK, I found this mostly a great big yawn to solve.

Lewis 9:00 AM  

Jeff Chen has announced that after ten years, this will be the last week that he’ll be blogging on XwordInfo. Oh, man, he’s been such a Crosslandia fixture and gift.

I’ve loved his self-deprecating humor, the snippets from his life, his expertise – those eagle eyes that spot construction pluses and minuses – and his kind, giving, and positive nature and voice. A class act.

Jeff, I will greatly miss turning to your words daily, and I know many others will as well. Thank you for all the effort, humor, and wisdom you threw into your blog, which enriched, enlightened, and entertained, and all the best to you up the road!

RooMonster 9:08 AM  

Hey All !
Silly brain. Didn't grok the theme until the RexPlanation. Some days...

UNCOUPLES is a big, normal word in the train world (real and model). When you drop off rail cars, you UNCOUPLE them.

The first AS of the center Themer threw me off, as I usually hear the phrase without it. I suppose it doesn't matter: " He was DRUNK AS A SKUNK last night!" / "He was AS DRUNK AS A SKUNK last night!" I like the non-first-AS better! 😁

Fun puz, And a standalone ROOS! Got another one @pablo! NYUK NYUK. (We do have PAULO - close!)

Monday, Monday, so good to me....

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

kitshef 9:25 AM  

Banner day for M&A.

I think I’m just getting a little tired of this theme type – the ‘letters appearing in words’ theme.

It seemed like the downs were much easier than the acrosses today – probably a good thing for downs-only solvers.

kitshef 9:30 AM  

Freeestyle 836 was definitely pretty easy, although I would not say easiest ever (that honor goes to 813)

Wanderlust 9:38 AM  

Just wanted to say how much I look forward to your list each week, @Lewis - and thinking about whether I agree.

Gary Jugert 10:15 AM  

Super fun. I do adore Mondays. It's like the ogre hiding under the crossword bridge finally falls to sleep after a drunken weekend rage. Many of you love the intoxicated beast's antics, but Mondays hearken me back to the pre-internet days when I kept paperback-style "Easy New York Times Crosswords" on the back of the toilet with a four color pen clipped to it. They were Monday and Tuesday puzzles and perfect for five-minute vacationing. When I'd get stuck on a name or the crosswordese I would peek at the answer in the back of the book trying with all my might not to peek at any of the surrounding answers. Sometimes something was new to me and I would make a mark on the clue and try to go learn about it. Then the world wide web arrived and it was easier to look up things making no sense, but it was also easier to be distracted by, uh, stuff, ya know.

GASP before GOSH. WOHOO before WAHOO.

And, {assumes the tirade stance} I like avocado toast too, but it's not brunch! Brunch is artery clogging murdered animals, sugar slathered carbohydrates, and black commercial grade restaurant coffee served from urns and tasting like you've licked your shoe soles. Brunch in my day meant something.

I feel like my AGER-FARE was RIPER.

I wonder if there will be a time when we need to be "openly" other things. My name is Gary, and I, gosh this is hard, have dedicated the last two decades to the ukulele, but, um, I really hate jazz and Broadway musicals. Okay, there.

Tee-Hee: They said TOOT. NYUK NYUK NYUK. Maybe their palindromic tugboat is really their BUM keister. So SASSY of them.

Uniclues:

1 Get in shape, but maybe not mentally.
2 Right wingers' favorite tunes celebrating clandestine ovary supervision.

1 RUN AROUND EMORY
2 EGG SPY SOLOS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Party pooper Gorman to friends. SAD AMANDA WETBLANKET.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Carola 10:34 AM  

Easy, except for trying to figure out the theme without the reveal: I never noticed the UN COUPLES. A nice "You got me!" moment. Star Wars NUT that I am, I enjoyed writing in BOUNTY HUNTER, but I thought that bit of trivia was arcane for a Monday. I loved its placement over SOLOS, since Han Solo is the guy Boba Fett is after.

Sir Hillary 10:41 AM  

A decent Monday offering, but the three extra words in ASDRUNKASASKUNK bother me for some reason.

I tried a Downs-only solve, but USHAPED still eluded me. Had to resort to Acrosses to finish.

I'm a SPORTSNUT, most recently demonstrated by my near-complete watching of the World Athletics (Track and Field) Championships on TV; they were very exciting. But I've never held season tickets to anything.

Yeah, NYUK is Curly's purview only.

I like Sao PAULO and RIO in the same row.

Before he became a so-so actor, Mark Wahlberg was a terrible rapper with his band Marky Mark and the ___ _____. (You can look it up.)

egsforbreakfast 10:57 AM  

I can’t recall, is “pound” abbreviated with a pd ORALB?

Possible compliment to J Lo and her BUM - She puts the ASS in SASSY!

Wanna do a Vietnamese SUNDAYBRUNCH? PHO sure!

I think North Carolina passed a bill that says “No person who SPORTSNUTS at birth shall be allowed to participate in women’s athletics.”

Sad to learn that Jeff Chen will UNCOUPLE from xwordinfo.com at the end of the week. Nothing about what will happen to the site is mentioned, but perhaps as this week goes along…..

Anyway, I thought this was an excellent Monday for the reasons cited by @Lewis. Congrats on a sweet debut, Brian Callahan.

jb129 11:06 AM  

Cute, typical Monday puzzle. Congrats on your debut, Brian.

Masked and Anonymous 11:09 AM  

Cool UN-theme. Really boosted the puz's U-count.

staff weeject picks: SPY, STY, SKYY. A little bit of a stutter, on that third one.

fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Like a yellow banana vis-a-vis a green one} = RIPER. M&A is a big (ripe) banana fan.

other fave stuff: ASDRUNKASASKUNK. GODOWNHILL. NYUK. SPORTSNUTS. USHAPED.

Thanx for the fun, Mr. Callahan dude. And congratz on yer primo debUt.

Masked & Anonymo13Us

p.s. Runtpuz is currently on holiday, pendin resolution of some technical issues.

Anonymous 11:17 AM  

I think it's safe to say that, uh, Mr. smart alec Sharp has never visted the Stoogeum. Yeah, that's right there's a museum devoted to The Stooges. It's in Ambler, Pa., and worth a visit.

Genr 11:33 AM  

Did it downs only on paper, and left 25D as NYAK. 😮‍💨

Anonymous 11:50 AM  

I was saddened to read Jeff Chen's announcement. I very much enjoyed his blog and learned a lot from it. Does anyone know whether someone else will continue the blog?

Visho 12:01 PM  

Nearly choked on your "sportsnuts" quip! Good one!

Anonymous 12:20 PM  

Great poem in the NY Times! You go girl!

Megafrim 12:29 PM  

NYUK is an established standard of the American lexicology, ironclad. And there is nothing wrong with describing it as a "Three Stooges" sound, despite that it is employed by Curly alone. "The Three Stooges", like QAnon, is a collective entity, and where they go one they go all.

Mark 1:02 PM  

Very fast downs-only solve, only to be done in by _something_ wrong. Which turned out to be me thinking SKYY was spelled SKYE. I had to look at the across clues to spot the error (STY, not STE).

burtonkd 1:28 PM  

@Wanderlust, it is interesting that of Lewis' 5 favorites, at least one is usually something I remember RP griping about. All part of the fun!

A fine Monday, must quote Nancy with her apt "splendidly okay".

Anonymous 1:30 PM  

I guess you or Ms don't wish to acknowledge your wonderful parody in today's NY Times.

okanaganer 1:38 PM  

Down clues only went pretty easy, except I ended up with NYAK crossing OAT so no happy pencil. Instead of looking at the 34 across clue I simply tried the other vowels. Then I read through all the across clues and #64 finally revealed the theme! Pretty decent Monday.

[Spelling Bee: Sun 0, final word this tricky 4er.]

RooMonster 5:08 PM  

@okanaganer (et al SBers)
I got 0 YesterBee!! I was down to one word, either a 6 or 7. Just. Could. Not. Find. It. The way I do the Bee, I don't look at Hints or anything, and when I get to Genius, I take that number and divide it by .7 - that gets me within 1-3 numbers of the QB score.

But being so achingly close, I did click on the Hints, starting counting the A starts I had, proceeding to the next letter, etc. until finding the missing word. It had turned out to be in the A's, a word I wouldn't have gotten without the prompt. (7-letter)

So I'm happy for my third QB in a month (which for me is a miracle!), but feel a touch guilty for the "cheat".

Anyway, if none can f this is of any importance, I apologize. 😁

RooMonster Spell It Out Guy

Anonymous 6:01 PM  

This old timer can’t pose

Old timer 6:05 PM  

Couldn’t anyhow. Let me say it was an easy Monday. And RUNAROUND always makes me think of Sue. Who goes out with all the guys

Anonymous 6:32 PM  

Make that “other guys”

Joe Dipinto 7:29 PM  

@Anon 11:50 – Jim Horne who started XWordInfo has continued to sub in for Jeff Chen on occasion, so he may take over the blog, at least temporarily.

okanaganer 7:50 PM  

@RooMonster, congratulations! I need to admit I do have a sort-of-minor-cheat of my own, in the form of a javascript that tells me the total number of words and pangrams, and how many words there are of each length (info you can also get from the main page of nytbee.com). I found it too difficult and un-fun doing it completely unaided, not even knowing how many words were left.

Anonymous 10:49 PM  

Thanks, Joe. I didn't realize that Jim Horne was the one who started XWordInfo. I hope he will keep it going.

Anonymous 2:14 AM  

You’re right!

spacecraft 10:52 AM  

Definitely not a fan of the current "downs only" fad, I nevertheless tried it today just for the helluvit. Happened to start out with a couple downs, so I just thought, Okay, one time. Just to see.

As I understand the "rule," you can infer across entries as you go, just can't look at the across clues. By that standard, I did it. Still not gonna make it a habit, but the box is checked.

UNCOUPLES is fine with me; it's railroad talk, and sometimes 18-wheeler talk as well. I'd have more trouble with DE-.

A great day for @M&A, U-wise. A novel experience. Birdie.

Wordle phew, evidence of wildly inconsistent play recently. Looking at YOU, Team USA Ryder Cup losers! Also you, Eagles who very nearly suffered an upset at the hands of the Washington Commanders for the second year in a row. 31 points to THEM?!? Sheesh, I must be one of them SPORTSNUTS.

Burma Shave 11:28 AM  

COP SHOES

A BOUNTYHUNTER is like A SPY,
some DAYS RESULTS ar found.
He'll TREAD OUT over HILL to SKYY,
BUMS give him A RUNAROUND.

--- PAULO PRYOR

Diana, LIW 11:38 AM  

Monday's allow your brain to slowly wake up to the fact that it's a new week.

Except...today I could NOT figure out what AGER was for a while. Har... and NYUK NYUK NYUK

Lady Di

rondo 9:06 PM  

Not UNfUN but not great.
Wordle bogey. Ugh.

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP