Relative difficulty: Medium
Word of the Day: ROBERT I (35D: Father of William the Conqueror) —
Robert I of Normandy (22 June 1000 – July 1035), also known as Robert the Magnificent and by other names, was a Norman noble of the House of Normandy who ruled as duke of Normandy from 1027 until his death in 1035. He was the son of Duke Richard II; the brother of Duke Richard III, against whom he unsuccessfully revolted; and the father of Duke William who became the first Norman king of England in 1066. During his reign, Robert quarrelled with the church—including his uncle Robert, archbishop of Rouen—and meddled in the disorder in Flanders. He finally reconciled with his uncle and the church, restoring some property and undertaking a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, during which he died. (wikipedia)
• • •
The highs weren't high enough today, and the lows were kinda low. In addition to the small simian who shall no longer be named, we had a bunch of olde-tymey crosswordese like EDE and STLEO and EDMEESE, then whoever ROBERT I is (there are so many ROBERT Is, it took some repeated googling to get the one I wanted), and then especially MOILS, oof, erp, uck, yuck (42A: Slaves away, old-style). I threw down TOILS and then thought "oh, no, that's not "old-style" enough, they're gonna try to perpetrate MOILS here, aren't they?" Indeed. (Sidenote: I'd keep "Slaves" out of my clues if it was at all possible, which it was). MOILS ended up being adjacent to what was, for me, the toughest part of the puzzle. It's bad enough that the puzzle keeps foisting "Star Wars" crap on me (second day in a row!), but please do not expect me to be able to spell these made-up names. I knew AMIDALA by sound ... but not be spelling, apparently, because AMADALA looked Just Fine. That apparently erroneous "A" corresponded Just Fine with the answer I had for 46A: Sounds of success. That answer: BANGS. "Hey, how was your daughter's wedding." "Oh great, it went off with a bang!" i.e. was very successful. This left me with BINOS for 46D: Cretaceous creatures, which ... well, I think (no, I know) I confused "Cretaceous" with "cetaceous," so I thought they were sea creatures, and I thought BINOS was just some cutesy name for a sea creature I couldn't think of. Some kind of bivalve? I don't know. BINOS looked wrong enough that I pulled it and stared ... and then pulled BANGS ... and then thought "... BINGS? PINGS? These all sound like 'success' to me." But it was DINGS, as in "ding ding ding, correct answer!" And DINOS, a stupid abbrev. no one says after age 8. All this because AMIDALA is spelled with an "I" and not an "A." What a dumb thing to trip on.
These tri-stacks are often unpleasant because the fill tends to suffer. Today's long answers are solid, but not exciting, except for ANTICOLONIALIST (54A: Like the writing of Chinua Achebe and Mahatma Gandhi), which I wanted to be ANTI-IMPERIALIST (it fit!) and then ANTICAPITALIST (it didn't). That was a good answer. CARBONATED WATER, less so, at least as clued (51A: Certain drink mixer). You use soda water or tonic water in mixed drinks. Yes, they're CARBONATED, but CARBONATED WATER is just not the term you'd use. Seltzer, maybe? Club soda? Answers should be appropriate to the context of the clue (and/or vice versa). The other 15s are shrugs. They fit. They're fine. They aren't remarkable. KONMARI is a fresh answer (named for its creator, Marie Kondo) (2D: Decluttering method featured on Netflix) . Also a harrowing answer, in that I forgot what it was called at first, and then remembered but wasn't sure, and so had to tiptoe through the crosses, praying that they were all indisputable (they were). Lots of mistakes today. TIRED for TRITE (4D: Banal). GIVE and then CAVE before CEDE (23A: Yield). AXE before BAN (6D: Deodorant brand).
[I know I used this video yesterday for LIPS but it's even more fitting today so sorry not sorry]
Got my start on this one the way I always get my start in puzzles with banks of long answers—I worked the short crosses. Only there weren't that many, so it took some work to get going. I got a few (ETAS, DARTH, TRIS), but the answer that really got me going was KEYLESS (15D: Like some ignition systems). Wasn't sure about it, but I crossed it with GIVE at 23A: Yield ... which was wrong, but it led me to look at the clue for 23D: Rooster for roasting, which I was 83% sure was CAPON, so ... change GIVE to CAVE (still wrong), but then get ISO- MUSES MAGES STUPORS TILLS BLENDER all IN ONE GO (fittingly, the answer I got next). Eventually pulled CAVE, wrote in CEDE, remembered that "C.C. RIDER" was a song, and bang (I mean, ding), I had my first grid-spanner:
[Sincerely thought "McTwist" was a McDonald's breakfast sandwich at first] [1A: McTwist, for one] |
ROBERT I??
ReplyDeleteWhy not 30s movie actress Lyda ROBERTI?
She would have **doubled** the number of women in this puzzle if nothing else!
So Parker deservedly went APELET-s**t on this one!
ReplyDelete🤣🤣🤣
Delete'I would keep SLAVES out of the puzzle' .... Ooh kay.
ReplyDeleteWhy?
DeleteStar Wars (Amidala) helped me get through "moils", which was new to me, as was Konmari (what is it? Some home organizing fad based on a Netflix show? Okay). Apelet is just horrible. Got through the puzzle in average time but didn't particularly enjoy it.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteOne cheat: I needed Wikipedia for the correct spelling of AMIDALA. I abandoned the Star Wars "Universe" after The Phantom Menace, which is about a quarter century old. So no apologies for cheating.
Hand up for axe before BAN at 6D, and my sounds of success (46A) were tadaS before (well before) they were DINGS. I don't associate dings with success, my thoughts are more along the lines of, "You're really going to ding me for that?!?"
Sometimes I get DINGED at work, in the modern vernacular. How could that be a sound of success? DING, DING, DING doesn’t cut it. DANG!
ReplyDeleteI, for one , have had it with Star Wars esoterica and to Natick (MOIL/TOIL, DING/DANG) it in is frustrating to say the least. Worked hard for my Googleless music but no joy.
I enjoyed "Bone breakers?" as a clue for STICKS AND STONES, but otherwise, yeah, I'm with OFL on this one. APELET? Really? Feh.
ReplyDeleteThere are two dangerous words today: KONMARI and AMIDALA. A lot of people (including me) will have no idea on either of those, which means the crosses have to be treated with great care. SMITS is probably the most challenging cross on KONMARI, and I think he’s pretty famous.
ReplyDeleteBut AMIDALA has CORRIDA, which isn’t so well known, and MOILS, which a ton of people will have at tOILS, and DINGS, which perhaps could be DoNGS, and you have the utterly baffling ONE TON right next door, so that could be a real mess.
I think Rex errs in not showing any love for STICKS AND STONES.
Spent a couple of weeks in BIG BEND and the nearby state park earlier this year, partially with Road Scholar and partially on our own. Amazing scenery. My favorite thing was hiking through these rocky, desert areas with just the cacti, and you come across a spring in the middle of nowhere, and it’s this miniature garden of Eden, with lush greenery and birds bathing and frogs jumping.
Went with Atidala & Toils, hey, worked for me. Konmari from crosses, never seen it or NYPD blue thank God
DeleteWith those triple-grid-crossers on top and below, it’s a spandwich!
ReplyDeleteI thought this one was just fine. I certainly didn't hate it as much as Rex. Most of the fill was pleasant enough -- the obvious exceptions being MOILS and the monumentally terrible APELET. Yes, that is bad. Really, really bad. But I moved on, occasionally pausing mid-puzzle to shake my head, chuckle and think "Haha APELET. Wow."
ReplyDeleteI liked all the long crosses, although CARBONATED WATER made me shake my head -- not because of the vagueness Rex mentioned -- but because carbonated water is almost always a terrible mixer. It's like a clue asking "A way to cross the Atlantic ocean" and the answer being "water skis." Yeah, it probably works, but it's not a great idea.
Only other things that I remember bothering me: C.C. RIDER, which is apparently a song, and one that sounds terrible just based on the title and single lyric.
Another music problem: it's called a B-side, not a SIDE B. The correct clue for that is "Where you could originally find We Will Rock You located."
Overall, easy, possibly easy-med for a Saturday. I'm happy with it.
I would counter that soda water is an invaluable ingredient to many mixed drinks / cocktails. It is a key ingredient in Palomas, Americanos, highballs, fizzes, etc.
DeleteAnd Scotch and soda and the standard way to make a Tom Collins
DeletePromising looking grid at the start - but the big guy nails it highlighting the rough stuff. CARBONATED WATER was my APELET. I like SKATEBOARD TRICKS and STICKS AND STONES and CARACAS x CORRIDA. Not much beyond that. Side eye to the “once” - ONE combo.
ReplyDeleteBORIS the Spider
Anna Stiga’s Stumper has a little more ELAN today.
Old Crow
The blank grid is gorgeous, calming to look at, without the noise created by scattershot black squares. My Libra sensibility, always seeking balance, filled with smiles when my eyes fell on it. Even the plus sign in the middle is balanced off by the two minus sides to its left and right, and those vertical and horizontal black squares across the middle are balanced by the four diagonal sashes.
ReplyDeleteAudacious to debut with a Saturday 66-worder. And, IMO, Robert delivered. All six spanners were interesting to me and brought DING after DING when I finally saw them. COURT APPEARANCE came first with maybe three crosses – a lovely aha moment. But the best was when I finally saw STICKS AND STONES, and the maddening clue for it, which stymied me for so long, finally made sense.
“McTwist” brought a lovely TIL, as for a while, I was thinking it was a fast food churro. I liked the fauna mini-theme with APELET, RAT, CAPON, IAMS, and DINOS. I loved the misdirect of [Teller, perhaps] for RAT. And there were two NYT debut answers: ANTICOLONIALIST and BIG BEND.
No hint of debut puzzle here, Robert. Veteran-esque grid design and stellar cluing. Wow! Don’t stop now, I ask of you! Thank you for a splendid outing, and for bringing your talent to Crosslandia!
Here's a great version of C.C. Rider c/o the good ol Grateful Dead:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTjWYLS-yKc
Someone will surely correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that a capon is technically not a rooster?
ReplyDeleteIt is, sans wedding tackle
DeleteI did not love the puzzle—forgot moils v toils and so took for ever to found my mistake. But for a NYT debut, kudos to Robert. We have had some terrible ones and this is so much better.
ReplyDeleteThx, Robert; what a great workout! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed+ (definitely MOILed away on this one! (whew & phew!!).
The NW only produced SMITS and ETAS.
Got DARTH and SLATS in the upper Midwest, and slowly, but surely moved down south to BIG BEND country, ending with AMIDALA (altho, I wanted AMaDALA), but DANG was not gonna have it; so, I DINGed for the win.
Muchly enjoyed this battle! :)
___
On to Anna Stiga's Sat. Stumper 🤞, with Mel Taub's Apr. 4, 2010 PandA on tap for tm.
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Had to MOIL thru this one a bit because MOILS should have been clued as archaic not old style. Made me go a little APELET. Sheesh is right - cant do better then @Rex on that one. Crossing RIDEOUT with OPTSOUT seemed a little lazy to me. But I guess I should DOETH my soul some goof and have mercy. Try to stay safe and dry east coast friends,
ReplyDeleteGlad it wasn't just me...saw apelet, took it out again because 'nah, can't be apelet'. Then made me think of applets and cotlets, which then got me craving some gummy bears. All of which was good, because it made me forget the existence of apelet, if only for a short while.
ReplyDeleteIf there were such a thing as a forensic laboratory to identify crossword puzzles (both real and counterfeit) I wonder what type of “fingerprints” or “genetic markers” they would use - I don’t know the answer to that one, but this puzzle has the NYT DNA all over it. Start right off the top with the “quasi-word” that OFL harped on (APELET) - certainly a NYT specialty. Add in the almost impossible to miss PPP cross of KONMARI and SMITS and there is no looking back . . .
ReplyDeleteYou’ve also got the “look at me, see how smart I am” (ISO) and another awful Star Wars trivial AMIDALA . . . crossing a CORRIDA (which hopefully is a wheelhouse thing so that a bunch of you may recognize that one). You’ve got your standard helping of trivia like ROBERT I and BIG BEND - and of course there is MAGES (which may even have a few the the lab assistants scratching their heads until they consult the list of arcane nonsense to make sure that the NYT checked that box as well).
This one was an NYT classic - a clinic even. It belongs in their hall-of-fame.
I liked this puzzle just fine. Even APELET, which M/W says is a real thing. But ...
ReplyDeleteI'm old and dealing with some serious health issues and find the constant negativity of this blog a depressing impact on my life which I don't need at this point. Therefore, I am taking a break from reading and posting here and will return if/when I get stronger.
Happy solving. Enjoy these puzzles for what they are - entertainment and exercise for the brain.
Hope to see you later.
I hope you heal quickly. I will miss your humor and hope to see it again soon.
DeleteSorry to hear about your health problems. Agree with you on the negativity. I chuckled at "applet." Thought it was clever. I do the puzzles for fun. If I don't know something, I don't blame the puzzle. That seems to be the pattern around here. I guess I'm more in the Lewis camp. There is good in every puzzle. Hope to see you back soon.
DeleteSending good vibes and best wishes to you Joaquin, and hope to see you later too.
DeleteJoaquin, wishing you strength and peace as you focus inward. Always have enjoyed your comments, sought them out in fact. Sorry you’re leaving, but understood. Be well.
DeleteSorry to hear you’re struggling. I wish you all the best ~RP
DeleteYou will be missed.
DeleteComes to us all sadly,
best wishes
As someone who was helped by the Times puzzle and this blog as I was recovering from a bone marrow transplant, I wish you a speedy recovery and return.
DeleteI will miss your humor. When I do come here, (which is hardly ever now) I read Rex’s rant, then scan comments until I find yours, then leave. Thank you for all the smiles and your good wit over these years. You will be missed. I’m not surprised I’m the only one saying so. Good luck friend.
DeleteLoved this puzzle from the start with SKATEBOARDTRICK. Respect to Rex for plopping that one down. ZERO (skateboard company) problems with apelet. Pig, piglet; ape, apelet. Why not? A better question is why not hippolet, or goatlet, or turtlet? Rare sub 10m Sat, enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteProbably the most consistently helpful solving strategy that I’ve learned from Rex is going downs first with a puzzle like this one. In this case though, that approach plus wheelhouse things (ie fairly quickly remembering that a McTwist was a SKATEBOARD TRICK) made me feel like today was actually easy, which is not what I want in my Saturday puzzle.
ReplyDeleteWhich has led to my realizing another one of my criteria for a later-week puzzle - the easier it is, the more clever or charming it has to be. This totally missed that brief. I’m joining my voice to the emerging chorus against the inclusion of CARBONATED WATER and APELET. And I fully agree with @Anon’s (5:56 am) broader point - the lack of women in this puzzle really grated given alllll the men. I imagine also that I’m not the only person my age or younger who Naticked on the EDE-ED MEESE cross. Two Star Wars clues and one Final Fantasy clue, in a puzzle with so few answers was a bit much.
I did like ONE TON for the pickup clue (I had been thinking audio equipment) and ITALO Calvino is a personal fave. Though between him, ST LEO and the Gandhi/Achebe clue, the bottom half was all a bit too “Things I learned in college for $800, Alex” for my taste.
@kitshef thanks for sharing your experience at BIG BEND; definitely adding it to the list now. As a dedicated aficionado of the lush forests of the Northeast, I used to think I didn’t particularly care for the desert. But then a flight delay gave me the occasion to drive through the Sonoran desert from Phoenix to Tucson in spring, and the wildflowers and cactuses and absolutely massive moody sky stole my heart. A fine day, like the one I hope you’ll all have.
“CC RIDER” is also known as “Easy Rider,” an iconic bit of America’s vast and beautiful musical legacy. Check out Lead Belly’s version.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the review. Really did lol. But fortunately, I also enjoyed the puzzle. Don't have to agree to laugh.
ReplyDeleteGot everything except the MAGES/INONEGO cross. Can someone explain what a "mage" is? Even after I cheated and looked up
ReplyDeleteFinal Fantasy, I can't find it.
It's just a wizard. Related to "magus/magi"
DeleteJoaquin - get well. Get your humor back here!
ReplyDeleteOmg, this puzzle is a big no. I knew CC Rider, (thank you Grateful Dead years) but MOILS? Star Wars answers are just as lost on me as they are on you, or probably more so. IN ONE GO had One in it which was very close to the clue and really irked me. But most of all, that same corner I started out in (and i even had CEDE) really did me in. MAGES? Did not know what on earth that was and I still don’t. CAPON is a word I ‘m familiar with but not so much. And mentioning Slave Labor bothered me. Agree 100% about using Karen as an insult, but not if you are clueing, say Karen Carpenter.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin (8:30). Get well soon. I agree that lately the bloggers are getting to be as negative as Rex.
ReplyDeleteHad to google to get the Star Wars answer. Not helped by TOILS being somewhat of an old-style word.
ReplyDeleteFor fans of the NYT's Connections who are on Reddit, some minor Rex-related content here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/NYTConnections/comments/16oewoq/terminology_needed/
(I posted it.)
If Rex doesn’t agree with Will’s verdict, he should make an APELET COURT APPEARANCE.
ReplyDeleteI had some reservations about INDIANTERRITORY… have always hated EDMEESEs to pieces (to paraphrase that noted mice-phobe toon, Mr. Jinx).
Aren’t BRUTE MAGES those butt ugly shoes OJ denied wearing? Didn’t Gandhi’s early writings include AMIDALAi Lama? (And why was he so ANTICOLON?)
I could go on but - ok, maybe just one or turMOIL!
Say, if you are a miner that can’t find ORE or CARBON - do you DEAL TIN?
😊👍
DeleteI read the Marie Kondo book, it's right here on my shelf. I also watched the Netflix series carefully (or so I thought). Marie herself calls it KONMARI? Or reviewers and recappers? I do not recall ever seeing or hearing KONMARI either in book or in show. I realized it was derived from Marie Kondo but huh?
ReplyDeleteThose who are not familiar with her made have heard someone quip: it doesn't "spark joy" so I threw it out. Ken Jennings, in fact, said to a contestant last week in the interview section on Jeopardy: I guess it didn't spark joy?
That's the Marie Kondo philosophy or I guess the Konmari method. When you are sorting through your crap, don't save anything that doesn't spark joy.
I'm not a star wars fan so I dnfed on Moils/toils too. Nice to see I'm not the only one.
On Netflix there is another declutter show called the Home Edit. But that didn't fit. Those hosts are kinda annoying. Marie Kondo is very sweet. Apparently, now that she's had a baby, she's let her house go.
I was going through my closet last week, and decided that my Hanes briefs didn’t spark joy, so I threw them out. Unfortunately, this sparked chafing and one unfortunate zipper issue. I’m going to need a different criterion for de-cluttering.
DeleteHilarious!
Delete@Joaquin, I am so sorry to hear about the health issues and I agree that exposing yourself to negativity can just make one feel worse. Like you, I was just fine with the puzzle overall. Hah! Got into a hotel bed in Montréal at 1 am due to a MUCH delayed flight and actually STARTED the puzzle then. I got halfway down (not halfway through) and thought “who am I kidding”? I finished this morning after a nice warm shower that cleared my head. Well. I got the “almost there/not quite” message and “checked puzzle” to see that I had CORRIDo and oMIDALA. No prob. I didn’t cry. Plus, by the time I finished, I had totally forgotten about APELET!
ReplyDeleteI also forgot to add that 91 year old ED MEESE was in the news this week, which is why his name came to me quickly. This scandal-laden Reagan stooge actually sent in an affidavit to try to save Jeffrey Clark from State Court in the Georgia RICO case, lmao.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteOpposite of a RexSolve today, as I found bottom half of puz easier than top half. After getting ETAS, I wrote in frozEn___, thinking s McTwist was a McDonald's ice cream treat. Ice cream, yum
Had gasLESS for KEYLESS messing up the ends of the top 15's. Also having RI_K at the end of 1A, naturally the ole brain went with some sort of skating RInK. What a devious clue, that. (At one point, flirted with StATEBOxingRIng.)
Thought puz impossible at first go through. But continued plodding along, getting one answer here, one answer there, until, lo and behold!, I had a section done. Took 41 minutes-ish, according to the ticking timer that sits there taunting you on the NYT app. Not too shabby, for me.
Fill okay by my standards. You'll have junky fill in the majority of puzs, embrace it to get neat stacks! Like ST LEO, which when I saw the Pope in the clue, wrote in LEO__, holding off to see if it was IV, VI, or IX. Har, no, it was ST LEO!
Neat grid design, triple triple stacker. Good kick-off to the weekend. Hope your (insert whatever Sports Team) win this weekend!
No F's (That DOETH put me in a STUPOR)
RooMonster
DarrinV
@Joaquin (8:30 AM)
ReplyDeleteWishing you all the best! 🙏
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Ah, ROBERTI! If the Mormon's ancestry database is to be believed, I am a direct descendent of ROBERTI, and through him half the historical kings and queens of England, Scotland, France, Spain, Portugal as well as G J Caesar and Cleopatra. If it is to be believed. I once told my nephew I was descended from William the Conqueror, and he started thinking. I asked what about, and he said he was wondering how many other alive today could say then same. Quick calculation, if each generation produced two children who produced two children, there would be about 2 to the 18th power of us. So, to any of my one hundred billion cousins, sup Cuz? Wanna get together next weekend? My treat.
ReplyDeleteHands up for bANGS/bINOS. Then realized DINOS was right, and DANGS was at least a word that maybe I could make sense of later, so I went looking for my error elsewhere before I circled back to the Star Wars princess.
ReplyDeleteHated APELET, but got over it and mostly enjoyed the puzzle.
My printer cut off the left margin and the newspaper version cut off the right margin, so a two-page solve today. Looked hopeless, but BIGGEND got me in and a pretty smooth solve after that. Technnical DNF on the AMIDLALA thing, TOILS looked acceptable and I didn't think of"the men who MOIL for gold" in time. Where have you gone, Sam McGee?
ReplyDeleteThought a McTwist might be something from McDonald's that I hadn't heard of, didn't think DARTH was a title, and never remember MAGE. KONMARI I got from crossses and everthing else was at least familiar.
Abree with OFL's assessment of la CORRIDA, but I thought his rnat would involve INDIANTERRITORY, which I guess is OK.
OK by me Saturday, RC. Really Cool for a debut, congratulations, and thanks for all the fun.
There are strange things done in the midnight Sun by the men who mail for gold...but I wrote "toil" anyway. Amidala???
Delete.
@Joaquin
ReplyDeleteI say a lot, "Don't let the bastards get you down!" Reading these comments requires just letting the negatives *whoosh* over your head. It's not the way you feel. Just say, "Ah, what a poopy pants!" and continue on.
But I understand. Take some time, take in the positivity of things, and hit that Zen where reading negative nabobs will get you chuckling rather than wincing.
RooMonster Pessimist, But Trying To Get The Optimist To Come Out Of Hiding Guy
Great advice and outlook on life. I echo these sentiments for @Joaquin
DeleteKONMARI is what made this a true Saturday level solve for me. I'm totally unfamiliar with it and with an I as its final letter it made me hesitant to put in RIDEOUT. On top of the mystery of that one answer I'd created a mini minefield of mistakes by typing CRAM in place of SATE supported by HOHUM in the TRITE slot. Until the word COURT was forced on me I read the 16A clue as "Arrangement." Which shows you how sloppy I can be.
ReplyDeleteThe rest of the puzzle was Friday level resistance. Grid spanners are difficult to pull off and almost always easy to solve.
Backfilling that top tier I still had HOHUM in the west end and I briefly tried to make it work with UTAHANTERRITORY at 17A. That didn't last long since 1A had to start with SKATE. I took out HOHUM and CRAM and just let KONMARI be whatever the crosses said it would be and the next thing I knew I was getting the congrats.
APELET is the kind of artistic license editors are willing to grant for pulling off a construction feat so otherwise cleanly accomplished. This was a perfectly enjoyable solve.
MOIL is an SB classic.
yd -0
No comments on today's puzzle but "Hear Hear" to the postcard sender! The New York Times should not be legitimizing this offensive term!
ReplyDeleteI suspect I know the name of that person who sent the postcard (they’re wrong, btw ❤️)
ReplyDeleteIt’s funny to see people consider the longer Star Wars answer to be “esoterica,” given the series’s immense popularity.
Love seeing the New Yorker magazine lurking behind the postcard!
ReplyDeleteThey keep upping the ante over at the NYT. A few days ago, a number of us were complaining about "Star Wars" clues in every single puzzle, so in this puzzle, there are TWO bleeping "Star War" clues.
ReplyDeleteI thought DARTH was a name, not a title. But I've seen it a zillion times in the NYTXW and I got it. Not so with AMIDALA lady. I cheated on you, honeybunch -- thinking you were either AtIDALA (TOILS/CORRIDA) or otIDALA (TOILS/CORRIDO). Imagine my surprise when the "slaving away" verb turned out to be MOILS, not TOILS. But I refused to let you you rain on my parade, honeybunch. Now, please go back quietly to that awful movie from whence you came.
Happiest happening in the puzzle. I thought of COURT APPEARANCE right off the bat, wouldn't write it in because it was a wild guess, and was delighted to watch as every crossing letter confirmed it.
But what on earth is "McTwist"? Here were my thoughts in the order in which I had them.
1) A kind of pasta -- the #1 pasta of Scotland.
2) A comic book villain of Scottish ancestry.
3) A Scottish epithet for the Devil.
Take away the AMIDALA lady, and I would have loved this deliciously crunchy puzzle to death. The long stacks at the top and the bottom were great.
@mack, I'm with you on BSIDE - at least it was an easy fix (with a groan)from BIGBEND. btw - I'm with you on everything today (except for easy-medium), not always the case:)
ReplyDeleteKONMARI was not based on a Netflix series. The Netflix series was based on her book, which was based on her personal organization business. Hi, @Camillita, I definitely remember her referring to her method, thinking it was strange to have a name for it. Funny about what kids will do to the best-intentioned of us...
I loved the look of this puzzle and the 15 stacks are solid, but there were way too many clues that left me thinking "Um, not really, but I suppose that might work."
BANGS, BINGS, BONGS, PINGS, GONGS, DONGS, SONGS of success - why not? PANGS, the pain of sweet success? RINGS, RUNGS on the ladder of success? TONGS of success at picking up a BBQ Rib started sounding plausible. WANGS, WENGS successful Chinese dynasties? soar on the WINGS of success? the Yen and YANGS of success? ZING sounds pretty successful. OOOOOHHHH DINGS!
Wasn't crazy about ____OUT x ____SOUT. waitOUT and faDEOUT > RIDEOUT
@Andy Freud - I tried ezRIDER, thanks for confirming that at least came from somewhere.
@Joaquin - best wishes to you. I come here bc it is a bit of a respite from some truly awful commentary on other comments sections across the web. Depending on the day, I can feel exactly as you do.
This one was very tough for me. A lot of erasing, including erasing right answers for wrong ones once or twice. I erased ETA because the only place I’d ever heard of McTwist (which took some time to dredge up) was from Shaun White’s Olympic wins. That made me so certain that the answer was snowBOARDTRICK that I didn’t even notice for several minutes that I’d spelled snowboard with two a’s, and it didn’t really fit.
ReplyDeleteOther major errors include casinos for RESORTS, which was confirmed by the s in IAMS and thinking the i would be the number of some pope, and thinking Merlin was a Demon, not a DRUID, which really made that whole section difficult, but was hard to correct because half the crossings were sportsing things.
@Joaquin -- So sorry to hear about your health issues. Keeping my fingers crossed that you'll be well again and back to the blog in no time flat.
ReplyDeleteThere are strange things done 'neath the midnight sun by the men who MOIL for gold"
ReplyDeleteThe Cremation of Sam McGee by Robert Service.
@Joaquin - get better and come back to us when and if you feel it's right.
ReplyDeleteI guess APELET was so horrible that no one was bothered by the "out" dupe on OPTSOUT and RIDEOUT. Thought that would have gotten mentioned for sure.
ReplyDeleteOn the easy side of medium for me, but it felt tougher. The top stack was tougher than the bottom although (like many others) the DINGS/DINOS/SIDE B/AMIDALA (I passed on Star Wars after the first three came out) area took some navigating.
ReplyDeleteLess whooshy than yesterday’s and not as much fun, but mostly OK (APELET?) with a bit of sparkle. Liked it more than @Rex did.
Easy, except for having to guess KONMARI x SMITS and a pause at Queen A-[vowel consonant salad]-A. I liked the crosses of CORRIDA and CARACAS, MUSES and MAGES.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin
ReplyDeleteSorry about your health but you should try to look on the bright side of Rex's world. He is often so right about dreck in the puzzle and doesn't sugarcoat things. But he always praises when warranted and also shares the positive side of his life: his wife, their adorable daughter. Once upon a time, his dogs and now his cats. And birds and travel. His love of puzzling, etc. etc. etc. He always has a sense of humour. e.g. todays postcard and his rants are mostly hilarious.
The comments are usually very informative and upbeat. If you need nicey-nicey, I guess Wordplay will cheer you up????
As someone who lost her immediate family to Covid and other illnesses within 6 short months, I say: "Don't let the real bastards get you down and stick with the good guys! Like the ones on this blog."
Get well soon.
Weird to get my start with BORIS and DRUID. I wasn't about to start at 1A because I assumed McTwist was a soft-serve ice cream cone at McDonalds but couldn't make it fit.
ReplyDeleteI stumbled around in the MOILS AMIDALA area because I didn't know BIG BEND (until I did) and had OXIDAte (meanwhile knowing that didn't match the clue) holding up my STICKS AND STONES. ANTI to OXIDANT eventually cleared up any confusion.
Yes, APELET got a very large eyebrow-raise, but it didn't ruin my enjoyment of the puzzle overall, so thanks, Robert Charlton and congrats on your debut!
@joaquin, sorry to hear about your troubles. I hope it passes soon - your comments often make me laugh out loud!
Surprised no one has mentioned the constructor's ego trip at 35D.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin
Hang in there.
@Joaquin, best wishes for a full recovery and speedy return to to the blog. You'll be missed. If you need a lift you could drop by just for @Lewis and @Roo - they always make me smile. -Mimi
ReplyDeleteWhat made it hard for me was writing in SpoTS confidently for 19A. APEpET made in a way more sense than APELET...
ReplyDeleteI dideth solve it with a huge dose of luck, correctly guessing AMIDALA and KONMARI, whatever or whomever the hell they are.
ReplyDeleteDIS and DINOS are not actually words - not without a qualifier like "in modern parlance" or "for short". And ST LEO needed an abbreviation of some sort in the clue.
A DISappointing Saturday puzzle.
Wide open spaces. Everywhere. And you start me with a McTwist. If you don't mind, I leave you for greener pastures. Desert, desert, everywhere. I'm not sure where I even started. I go back to the top because that's what I do.
ReplyDeleteOK, so McTwist sounds like a SCOT thing...or maybe IRISH. What do they twist? Maybe some bread I've never heard of. No....I had some down answers I was pretty sure of because I checked and they didn't help with my twist conundrum. COURT APPEARANCE at 16A. Bam...in you go. Help me out here. TERRITORY. I got your tail end now to go back to the start. Could it be SKATE BOARD TRICKS? It is....DINGS! Then INDIAN TERRITORY..another DINGS. Yay me. Three DINGS.
I began to MOILS away. Why, pray tell, is a Kick starter SCISSORS. (I had lots of huh's today)...I looked up KONMARI and checked if she was legit...She was. I won't get into APELET...
Since I'm pretty good at long answers, I jumped down to the other three ones. Out of just one answer (BIC) I got STICKS AND STONES. Loved doing that and loved the answer.
Knew CARACAS at 33D because we lived there and Simon Bolivar has a statue of himself in every cafeteria. Thank you CARACAS for getting me started on CARBONATED WATER. I left ANTICOLONIALIST for last.
The rest.....I'm not sure why but that N.L. West team ARI made me let out the loudest HUH. Aren't there some famous people named ARI. No Fleischer?
AMIDALA MOILS DINGS belong in Queen's SIDE B.
Well...I'd say this was certainly a Saturday I won't remember. Well, maybe KONMARI and APELET.
@Joaquin. I'm echoing here, but I certainly hope you get better and get back on this blog.
Like Lewis, I couldn’t help but admire the beautiful blank grid. It struck me as elegant if that word could be used to describe a crossword puzzle. I wasn’t sure I was even going to take time for the puzzle today until I saw all that beautiful empty space waiting to be filled. Really glad I did though because now I learned APELET and have thoughts of adorable little simian babies with fierce looking parental units. I also see (thanks @Lewis) this is Mr. Charlton’s NYT debut. Wow! Congratulations on that ROBERT, a very impressive work piece of work.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin (8:30) I’m sad that you will be temporarily MIA but understand your decision. There are times when you just have to retreat into your cocoon and take care of yourself. I feel certain I’m not alone in sending prayers, positive thoughts and good wishes for your full recovery.
I stopped listening to pop music in favor of jazz and classical about fifty years ago (I’m 80). I do not watch commercial television, am no fan of old movies, and I’m baffled by technology. I never watched Star Trek or Star Wars, never read Harry Potter, and am, in fact, totally ignorant of pop culture in general. I’d be screwed in my attempts to solve these puzzles but for my friend Google, which is only fruitful about half the time. Not too many whoosh whooshes here. Still I moil away on my daily exercise in masochistic self indulgence, then come here to read all the smart people’s comments, and to find my one misspelled entry so I can get the Congratulations and the music.
ReplyDeleteWith the majority loving yesterday's puzzle & me being not one of them, I was starting to doubt myself. But aside from MOILS (I had toils), I really finished this quickly (especially for a Saturday) & I liked it a lot.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Robert!
Wowzers -- a 66-worder debut puz. Didn't even need the Jaws of Themelessness to cut down on its long answer lengths.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject picks: ADE & EDE. Believe it or not, IDE, ODE, and even UDE have also appeared in Shortzmeister puzs. APELET *is* new for him, I'd grant. Sooo … honrable mentions to APE & LET.
Crossin of mystery: AMIDALA/MOILS. M&A went with "T" for them two.
Also starter-guessed real wrongly on 1-D's {Kick starter?}. Went with WHISTLE. Lost several precious nanoseconds.
COURTAPPEARANCE was a gimme, for anyone watchin the Trump news lately. Also really liked: STICKSANDSTONES. CCRIDER. INONEGO. BIGBEND [real pretty place]. BLENDER clue. SIDEB clue. TILLS clue.
Thanx for the puzmoils, Mr. Charlton dude. Heck of a debut construction. Yer central puzgrid art was a plus, btw.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
p.s. Miss yah already, @Joaquin darlin.
**gruntz**
… and a distant relative …
**gruntz**
42A could be clued Jewish clippers?
ReplyDelete@Juaquin….I will miss you and very much hope you return soon. I refer to your “Joaquín’s Priciple (rule? Doctrine? Precept?) that a clue is generally a suggestion, not a definition.
ReplyDeleteMy real hope is that folks focus more on the positive and what was enjoyable about the puzzle. And that you find some peace and healing.
super easy for a saturday but i really liked it. usually triple stacks give you a row of consecutive 3 letter words, which is not fun. this one has nice wide open corners which is the feature that makes fri/sat good and a feature that rex usually praises. yes, a few terrible words but there is often a price to pay for the good parts. i think everyone editing knew that APELET was bad so they bailed us out with the APP hint. one letter doesnt ruin a puzzle for me and they basically gave it to you. i did wince at the OUTs meeting at the T but overall i'll take this on a saturday and thank anyone who can create a puzzle like this.
ReplyDeletei always start wordle with a word from the puzzle so... CAPON it is!
I don't know what is meant by "originally" in the "We Will Rock You" clue. It was always the B-Side of the "We Are The Champions" single; it never switched to being the A-Side. Top 40 stations only played "We Are The Champions". (FM-rock stations started playing them together off the album, where they were programmed sequentially.)
ReplyDeleteAlso, the "C.C. Rider" lyric line is specifically from Elvis Presley's version, which was not a hit but is of course the lyric that shows up front and center on Google, with the "now" sung three times. Why not say "Classic blues song" and leave it at that, since artists sing it differently? The more detail the Times adds to clues, the more it mucks things up.
The puzzle was pretty charmless. Any puzzle with two Star Wars clues is going to grate. I had SPOTS for "Blind things" which gave me APE PET for the small simian. I figured, well if you're going to have an ape for a pet you'd want something small, so okay. And it looks like APPLET if you replace APPLET's fourth letter with a recurrence of the fifth letter and then move that to third position and split it into two words. I also put in AXE for the deodorant and ANTI-IMPERIALIST at first. And I had TOILS in there for a long time as well.
@Joaquin, take care of your health and check back in soon. I will miss your jokes.
♪ He put me through some changes, lord, sort of like a Waring blender ♪
@Joe Dipinto my take on the B-SIDE clue, is that it's always interesting if something starts out (originates) as "just" a b-side and then becomes a huge hit that persists through the ages.
DeleteI love most punctuation, but not the one composed of two dots. Call me ANTICOLONIALIST.
ReplyDeleteFor a drink that really rocks, STICKSANDSTONES in a glass and cover with CARBONATEDWATER. BTW, scientists have CARBONdATEDWATER to the Before Biden era. It’s that old.
For some reason, the fact that “once” appeared in the clue for (13D) INONEGO grated on me so much that I could have easily made a CARROTCAKE (dessert in which the main ingredient is grated).
I’ve often thought that, with regard to constructors, Rex has nailed ‘em, but never that Joaquin’s dictum. Hope your health issues resolve and that we see you back here soon, @Joaquin.
I enjoyed this puzzle a lot and wasn’t bothered by the little APELET. Thanks, Robert Charlton.
@madsymo
ReplyDeleteThat's usually spelled MOYEL.
@Joaquin (8:30) I was sorry to read your post. Get well soon.
ReplyDelete@Greendot (12:35). It's Joaquin's Dictum.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin - you will be missed. Hope to see you back here soon.
ReplyDeleteI am always surprised at the angst created by a Star Wars clue but the free pass given to pop culture references that are 50+ years old, like CCRIDER. Not a particular fan of Sci-Fi or Elvis, but I do appreciate references during my lifetime.
ReplyDeleteDidn’t know the name of the little simian, but got as far as APEL and just left it while I went on with the puzzle. After I received my congratulatory music, I looked back through the puzzle for the words that surprised me and saw that my APEL had turned into apelet. Only, I read it as APELet (a bit like epaulet) and was fine with it.
ReplyDeleteThen I arrived here to find it was really ape-let. So disappointed. Sometimes it’s okay to just remain ignorant of correct pronunciations.
I actually enjoyed that it was tougher than yesterday; took me about 20 minutes. I learned quite a few things too, like McTwist is a SKATEBOARD TRICK.
ReplyDeleteI had DAKOTA TERRITORY at first, MOONS before MUSES for Calliope and others, and of course B SIDE. And a double typeover with BOWS OUT then SITS OUT then OPTS OUT.
For the "Decluttering method" I was sure it was going to be Swedish Death Cleaning, which I couldn't remember the Swedish word* for. Then looking at KONMARI I thought that must be the Japanese equivalent.
[@Twangster, re Connections: yesterday I had that happen; had only the 4 in the hardest group left, and it turns out I have never heard of any of them!]
[Spelling Bee: Fri 0; last word this cheeky 6er.]
(* -- "Dostadning")
Maybe I'm just forgetful, but I thought it was a tad surprising the degree to which OFL railed on this. I wasn’t an APELET fan by any stretch, but hey, sometimes you just move on. Channel your inner Monty Python.
ReplyDeleteST. LEO, Queen AMIDALA, ROBERT I and ED MEESE walk into a bar in CARACAS and CCRIDER is playing....where's @GILL, I when we need her?
I DNF’d on ToLLS/oNO, so no NIL there. Though now that I see it, I really like the ISO clue. A lot. Clever MAGES/MUSES cross, though it doth add to the POC tally. Speaking of which, can you be in more than one STUPOR? I did get a chuckle out of Bone breakers sharing the grid with BBQ RIBS. Hand up for tOILS before MOILS. Then for some reason I briefly considered ANTICastesystem at 54A.
A couple of things got me thinking - @Joaquin’s difficulties and the recent heartbreaking loss of my Malamute alter ego. Today would have been her 10th birthday. Music (performing, teaching and listening) has always been my prime source of solace and renewal. So I turned to my old habit of looking up musicians’ birthdays to find something to share with y’all. Wow - A TON of DINGS! Coltrane, Ray Charles, Springsteen, Julio Iglesias, Roy Buchanan and more. By fun coincidence, both Alexander Arutiunian, composer known for his Trumpet concerto, and Rolf Smedvig, trumpet virtuoso, also have birthdays today. But I picked singer/songwriter and Buffalo native Ani DiFranco, who was born September 23, 1970. She wrote this song for her mother: Joyful Girl
I AM So glad to finally see why the dog food is called that. Glad too for the challenge of Robert’s debut grid & the shared humor and insight of commentariat.
ReplyDeleteSorry @Joaquin is feeling the need to OPT OUT for a bit, but perhaps our blog well wishes can brighten his day. I realize that by not doing early week puzzles, I’m also missing some great repartee, & I truly miss @LMS and @Evil Doug and others whose posts were delights when they shared……life is loss and all that zen stuff.
If on a Winter’s Night is on my top ten reads list, so ITALO made my morning! But CORRIDA, ED MEESE, & AMIDALA had me reaching for the Maalox jug. The puzzle was a MOIL, especially in that section as REX & many others have indicated. Still, it’s Saturday and the sun is shining & the Stumper awaits.
Hard puzzle for me! I got stuck by entering “cave” instead of cede which left me with the song “cc river”. ??? Never figured that out, had two letters wrong in the end.
ReplyDeleteHowever I did think it was a pretty awesome puzzled. Loved the long answers like “carbonated water”. Thought “apelet” was hysterical, and Queen of Naboo was an easy one once I stopped trying to fit in “padme”.
Enjoy reading commentary on this blog even when I disagree. Cheers to all.
There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold. The Arctic trails have their secret tales that will make your blood run cold.
ReplyDelete@Joaquin - I channel your dictum to the uninitiated often. Strength and aloha all around you.
ReplyDelete@A 1:39p - the under-appreciated Roy Buchanan used to kill on CC RIDER
@joaquin:
ReplyDeleteFrom one old-timer to another, two points:
1. Please come back when/if you feel up for our nonsense again.
2. Don't consent to a rectal MRI no matter what they tell you.
I actually found this rather whoosh-whoosh easy for a Saturday. Helped that I wrote in INDIAN TERRITORIES on a hunch with no crosses. I’m in the camp that found APELET mildly amusing. Thought of Marie Kondo at 2D but took a while to get the needed version.
ReplyDeleteJoin others in sending best wishes to @Joaquin. There is a fair amount of good cheer here along with the snark.
webwinger
APELET and KONMARI were awful. They didn’t keep me from a clean finish, but I actually cried “Foul!” as I filled it in when I finally figured out that the McTwist Is a SKATEBOARD TRICK.
ReplyDeleteI had BOARD TRICK early on and COURT APPEARANCE and the TERRITORY part of 17 A was easily dropped in. Two things really messed me up. First, lots is being written in business and legal publications about the massive top corporate layoffs at McDonalds. The term “Corporate McTwist” got picked up and I was certain that the BOARD TRICK” had to do with the McDonalds BOARD of Directors.
My misunderstanding was did not weaken because instead of ETAS foe the GPS guesses, I out in RTES. If O had read the whole clue instead of just GPS, I might not have done the autopilot answer. And it sat and sat because I already had COURT APPEARANCES, and had not yet figured out what TERRITORY fit below it. The E from RTES delayed my brain seeing INDIAN and was further delayed because SCISSOR and KONMARI were the two hardest answers for me today. Sheesh.
Other than the above, I think this was an OK Saturday. Had some good clues (Kick starter?) but some real clunkers too. My time was average Saturday. So done and dusted.
I was convinced a MCTWIST was a McDonald’s soft serve creation … made that solve difficult but ultimately got it on crosses.
ReplyDeleteI thought the double out as in RIDEOUT and OPTOUT violated some sort of NYTX rule?
Enjoyed the puzzle very much though. I usually need lots of “help” to finish a Saturday puzz but was able to get through this with perseverance…
@Trina i thought the exact same thing about mctwist for so long too, and also was surprised rex didn't mention the double OUT not only existing but abutting like that.
DeletePSA: The acrostics, which as of two weeks ago were not appearing on xwordinfo.com, are back. If you missed the 9/10 acrostic ANDOR want the 9/24 puzzle they are available.
ReplyDelete@Son Volt, thanks for the awesome Roy Buchanan video. You and @Joe D (and that song just from BLENDER!) are my musical continuing ed professors!
ReplyDelete@A – good to see you back, been wondering how you were doing.
Delete@A (1:39 PM)
ReplyDeleteAlways so good to see your upbeat soul when you have the chance to stop by. :)
Very sorry to hear of the passing of your beloved pal. 🙏
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Reallyyyy hated INDIANTERRITORY, and then a Reagan cabinet member? OOF. This puzzle lost me quick and just got worse, an absolutely joyless experience. APELET was the least of my gripes (a gripelet, if you will).
ReplyDeleteI also did a frowny face when APELET showed up but then recalled that "-LET" is a diminutive suffix found in lots of ordinary, in the language words such as "booklet", "gauntlet", "tablet" and, yes, even "applet". It sometimes gets appended to animals as in "owlet" and "piglet" (41 and 5 appearances, respectively, in the Shortz era). So why not APELET?
ReplyDeleteThe clue for 33D CARACAS, "Simón Bolívar" reminded me that for most of my life I had mispronounced his name. That accent mark over the "i" in Bolívar is hard to distinguish from the dot of unaccented "i". But it's bo lee var, not bo lee var, right?
I believe that it was 39D ED MEESE who proudly proclaimed at the end of his stint as U.S. Attorney General during the Reagan administration that "I remained unindicted".
eesh. i ground through this one practically one square at a time for long stretches. and actually? i don't mind a saturday like that. because i like being impressed with myself when i go from a blank "i have literally nothing to go on, i'll never make it" grid to a finished one. unfortunately today, the PPP was imho unfairly crossed (yes, even for a saturday) and i had to google. twice. and even *then* i still had no happy music so i had to come here.
ReplyDeletemy blanks? an old AG (a two word one at that, with one half being shorthand to boot) crossing a dutch city and a random pope and then throw the author crossing in that section too. none of those names were inferrable or guessable for me. just a really rotten corner. and then, after all that, i had tOILS - which i had resisted putting in for so long because it didn't seem particularly "old style" but finally at some point said f*** it, and of course it got "confirmed" every which way. AtIDALA seemed a fine enough star wars name. and i like star wars! but that name - whether my erroneous guess or the correct one - didn't ring a single bell.
i just prefer my errors to be forehead slappers or things that are interesting to learn. not random names i could care less about. oh well, on to the next!
Liked Rex's comment about corrida. Spent two years in Spain when i wasw in the Navy, and never went to a bull fight (corrida). Spain, the country that brought you The inquisition.
ReplyDeleteThanks to all for your good wishes. I'm giving it the good fight and (with any luck) will be back before you can miss me too much!
ReplyDeletepen and teller, but not Pen and Teller?!
ReplyDelete@kitshef (3:59 PM)
ReplyDeleteThx for the update! :)
Looks like I've got some catching up to do!
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
@A-Nice to see you again.
ReplyDeleteWanted to add that I just returned from a birthday party for the director of my choral group which just broke up after a thirty year run. We all ate and drank and traded stories, one of her sons prepared a game of Jen-pardy (for his mom, Jennifer), we sang a version of She Was Just 17,(She Was Just Seven-ty), the whole family did a rehearsed dance, and then her two sons sang "In My Life". Great fun.
If Carol Burnett knew a lot about choral directing and making every rehearsal a joy, she would be Jennifer. Boy do I miss that stuff.
@A (1:39) I’m so sorry for the loss of your friend and companion. I recently had to let my little poodle go when she got so feeble she couldn’t stand or sit on her own any more. It’s a pain that never really goes away and I think that’s because they each leave a unique paw-shaped hole in our hearts.
ReplyDeleteWhat about “OptsOUT” crossing “RideOUT”? Isn’t that against the rules?
ReplyDeleteFun and super tough for me. Researched plenty and will remember none of it. Lower half was much tougher than the upper.
ReplyDeleteINDIAN TERRITORY and [Slaves away] strike me as unfortunate. The other long acrosses are nice.
APELET. NoGoodLet. StopLet. Seriously, if that's what is necessary, just scrap it and start over.
Uniclues:
1 Nurse hangovers.
2 Put a stop to those Celtic mastodons.
3 It's cute, but it should have a digital clock by now.
4 Tents on the roadside.
1 RIDE OUT STUPORS
2 BAN DRUID DINOS
3 RE-RATES BIG BEND
4 KEYLESS RESORTS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Snaps yer fanny. USES BATH TOWEL.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@Whatsername - not sure if you'll get this.
ReplyDeleteI was sorry to read about your poodle. How are you doing? Feel free to email me. My thoughts are with you.
@A 1:39. I am sorry to read about the loss of your Malamute. I lost my Cinnamon (see pic) last year when we were hit by a car "who didn't see us." I'm broken & I miss her so much I sometimes wish I'd of been taken with her.
ReplyDeleteI'll keep you in my prayers.
It’s not so much the “slaves” MOILing in the INDIAN TERRITORIES nor the father of the largest COLONIAL conqueror legacy to eventually include “Ghandi’s” India nor the BRUTE-ishness of killing bulls for sport in the CORREDA that makes me want to DIS this puzzle, because STICKSANDSTONES…but words will never hurt me. What really left my AXONS in a STUPOR was too much niche trivia. That is, of course, unless you are a Final Fantasy playing skateboarder who listens to Elvis and reads ancient English and Roman history with a SIDE (b) of Italian fables. Ugh! My brain still hurts!
ReplyDeleteWe went away for the weekend, and came back to find that our "hold delivery" order for the NY Times and Boston Globe had not been honored, so I just solved the Saturday puzzle. I came here mainly to see if everyone was as horrified as I at the use of "once" to clue "at one go," which seems to me to be more of a duplicate than RIDE OUT/OPT OUT. But apparently no one noticed, or else no one cared. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteSince I'm here -- @Joaquin, get well soon and hurry back, we'll miss you!
We're recently back from two weeks in Sicily, which the Normans conquered shortly after England -- different Normans, but related. They didn't use that many first names, so if it started with R it was going to be ROger or ROBERT, and only the latter fit.
@Eddy, keep plugging away. I'm only 79 myself, but I stopped listening to pop, etc., about the same time you did -- but those names creep into the culture, and you'll find you know them as you get the crosses.
I had always assumed that C.C. Rider was a bowdlerization of Easy Rider, as the latter may have been considered too explicitly sexual for radio play. But I just checked Wiki, which suggests that the original was actually called "See See Rider," the name of an actual musician. Live and learn.
@Pablo, you went to a birthday party that just broke up after 30 years? Impressive!
Marie Kondo does mention her company in "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up," but only passing. I think she wanted a distinctive name for her business.
See you all tomorrow, when I'll have done the correct puzzle (or at least attempted it).
Boris Johnson's first name is actually Alexander. Boris is one of his middle names. Alexander Boris DePfeffel Johnson.
ReplyDeleteVerging on criminal!
ReplyDeleteSeattle Times runs the puzzle 5 weeks behind. Some editor messed up, because the second part of the clue for 14 down was labeled 15, and from then on, all the "down" clues were off by one - and the clue for the last down answer (63) was missing. I still don't know what the clue is for "DIS".
Now if this were a Thursday puzzle I might grudgingly accept this bit of misdirection - at least if there were a clue and answer cleverly pointing at it.
But ... no. I had to cheat by clicking on the "check grid" button a few times and it took literally hours before I figured this out. In my defense I never heard of the song "CC Rider Keyless." I doubt you have ever come across it either.
Grrrr!
I struggled with this too. Checked out the 'print replica' version which was correct. Might be a bug in the puzzle app.
DeleteDNF at the unfair crossing of AMIDALA-MOILS. Had AMItALA-tOILS. Archaic words like MOILS should not be used with crosses that provide zero help to the solver. Too much Star Wars trivia.
ReplyDeleteI don’t know if APELET is in the OED but it is in M-W.
ReplyDeleteFinished it off with only the teeniest bit of cheating. So...not too bad!
ReplyDeleteLady Di
Apelet is a real word in real dictionaries all over the real world.
ReplyDeleteGet over it!
I love WORDS!!!
Even the ones that I don't Iike.
I don't like dupes either, but a dupe double cross I find amusing.
For the second day in a row I used Y in a name incorrectly. I always thought her name was AMyDALA. I don't know...Y.
ReplyDeleteAll those spanners strain the grid to the breaking point. Another case of: I CAN do it--but SHOULD I? Probably not. That 2-down was a zinger: KONMARI???? I mean. all the other crosses made good sense, and then this. I shrugged and left it in. Indeed, our constructor RESORTS to some outlandish fill in this one--including two OUTs running into each other. One more and the inning is over. Bogey.
Wordle par.
I think Apelet works just fine. Apelet is defined in the dictionary as a small simian. Apelet is one letter away from Applet, which is a small computer program.
ReplyDelete@pet_henry 2:30 AM
ReplyDeleteThe pdf download for printing had the same numbering problem, but ended with a clue number "0" which was "Trash-talk." That was actually the clue for 53D, DIS.
How am I the ONLY idiot in this entire wordy comment section who doesn't understand this puzzle?? Why is not ONE person talking about how the Down clues are just randomnly strewn about? Why does KEYLESS go at 15D? What is the rhyme and/or reason to the clues differing from where you're supposed to answer them? I did this entire puzzle in 45 minutes, just completely baffled the entire time. Y'all complaining about APELET? Easy with that gimmee clue.... Yet I still don't even know where TILLS comes from. WHERE DOES TILLS COME FROM?
ReplyDeleteSo frustrating that not only am I the SINGLE moron who doesn't get it, I'm the only one who's even brought it up.
Now back to google to solve this *@*#@*^# enigma
@ Eric Sno 7:12 AM
ReplyDeleteYou aren't the only one. See @Pet_Henry 2:30 AM, and my anonymous reply 5:36 PM.
The problem is, clue 15D should have been just the last part of clue 14D. So every clue from there on should have had the number of the clue above it.