Saclike structures produced by fungi / WED 9-20-23 / Rowing machine informally / 2015 hit for little mix / 1986 hit for Steve Winwood / 1971 hit for the Carpenters / Footwear to knock around in / Slow rock song with an emotional vocal delivery / Onetime capital of Poland
Constructor: Gina Turner
Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: POWER BALLAD (38A: Slow rock song with an emotional vocal delivery ... whose start can follow each half of 17-, 31-, 44- and 63-Across) — themers are all two-word songs ("ballads," in the broadest definition of the term) where both words can precede "POWER" in familiar (or familiar-ish) phrases:
Theme answers:
"BLACK MAGIC" (17A: 2015 hit for Little Mix)
"SUPERSTAR" (31A: 1971 hit for the Carpenters)
"ROCKET MAN" (44A: 1972 hit for Elton John)
"HIGHER LOVE" (63A: 1986 hit for Steve Winwood (and a 2019 hit for Whitney Houston))
Word of the Day: Little Mix (17A) —
Little Mix are an English girl group, formed on the British version of The X Factor, and became the first group and only girl group to win the series. The line up consisted of Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Jade Thirlwall, Perrie Edwards, and previously Jesy Nelson, before her departure from the group in 2020. Regarded as the show's most successful winning act, their success lead [sic!] to a girl band renaissance in the UK. Little Mix are also recognised for their strong vocals, signature harmonies, and are ranked as one of the best vocal girl groups. In 2022, the group went on an indefinite hiatus, allowing its members to pursue solo projects.
Little Mix rose to prominence with their debut single "Wings" in 2012, eventually achieving five number-one singles, nineteen top ten enteries [sic!] and becoming the first girl band to spend over a 100 weeks inside the top ten of the UK Singles Chart. The group were launched into mainstream recognition following the release of "Black Magic", becoming the first song by girl group [sic!] since 2008 to spend multiple weeks at number one. It was ranked by Billboard as one of the "Greatest Girl Group Songs of All Time". On the UK Albums Chart, Little Mix became the first girl group to have six consecutive top five entries, with their fourth studio album Glory Days, breaking chart records, and becoming the longest charting album by a girl group inside the 40 of the UK Charts. They have been named by Debrett's as one of the most influential people in the UK with a net worth of £60 million. (wikipedia)
• • •
This theme type (where both "halves" of all the themers have to do ... something) is hard to pull off from start to finish, end to end, across the board, without some glitchy answer or some bit of strained fill. Today, the phrases themselves are all admirably tight and familiar, but once or twice the connection to the theme feels a little forced. Mostly, the answer "halves" do naturally precede the word "power." Black power, Superpower, Star power, great. I balked at "Magic power," which feels odd and slightly redundant and maybe not so great in the singular, and when you google it in quotation marks you get a forty-two-year-old rock song of no great repute, but ... ok, the more I look at it, the more normal it's seeming. Nevermind on that one. But "Love power"? What is ... "Love power"? I am familiar with "The Power of Love"—Huey Lewis and Michael J. Fox taught me about that back in the mid-80s. I know "Love Shack" and "Love Overboard" and a lotta love songs (including "Lotta Love" by Nicolette Larson), and a lotta love phrases (love potion, lovesick, love letter, etc.) but what is this "Love power" of which you speak? Hmm. I am getting an Idina Menzel song from "Disenchanted"? Question mark? That can't be it. What does the phrase mean? When I google [define "love power"], I get this, from Psychology Today:
Love of power is a compulsive need to control a significant other. The compulsion comes from deep-seated self-esteem issues, that won't let us believe that someone could just love us as-is. No, we have to make them stay, make them be faithful, make them love us, or they just won't.
I'm sure there's some explanation. I can imagine someone's saying "Love power" when they mean something roughly akin to "the power of love," but of all these eight song "halves," LOVE clanks the hardest, where its connection to POWER is concerned.
I also think "BLACK MAGIC" is a weird outlier here. Or ... just an outlier where my particular familiarity is concerned, because wow do I not know this song. It's hard to express the extent to which I don't know it. There are few songs I haven't known more than I don't know this one. Never heard of Little Mix before right now. This is a good example of the thing I was talking about the last time we had an all pop-song puzzle (so ... Sunday), where songs can be "hits" all they want, but if you didn't grow up with them or have them in your ears on a regular basis (harder for that to happen in today's highly culturally fragmented society), then they may as well not exist. This is all to say that I am way too old for that answer. I also don't really get bringing Whitney Houston back from the dead. She had a hit in 2019? After dying in 2012? That is ... some trick. Still don't get why she was added to that clue. [note: the song is credited primarily to somebody named KYGO, btw, so ... yeah, very confused here] Is the Whitney song more familiar to some people than the Steve Winwood song? Why wasn't Luther Vandross added to the clue for "SUPERSTAR"? He certainly had a discernible, real, famous hit with it. While living, even. Clearly there were lots of things to distract me today, lots of little things that didn't seem quite on the money ... which is what often happens with this theme type. Getting both halves of multiple familiar phrases to all do the same thing ... hard. Very hard. This puzzle does it reasonably well. I just ... have questions (see all of the above).
The NW corner was the hardest By Far, partly because it contained the heretofore unheard of Little Mix and their heretofore unheard of song "BLACK MAGIC," partly because the fill was repeatedly awful, and partly because I botched an answer very badly. Let's start with the last bit first—I ran into a completely unexpected kealoa* at 2D: Convinced about, where I had S---O- and confidently wrote in SUREOF. That's 50% of the puzzle's difficulty right there, just getting out of that stupid hole. SOLDON! It took way too much effort on my part to see that. Then there was ASCI, a piece of ollllld-time crosswordese that hasn't appeared in the NYTXW in nine years. That was a Saturday (and it was my Word of the Day—lotta good that did me) [OMG ASCI (well, "Ascus") was also my Word of the Day the time before that (also a Saturday!), in 2009. When will it stick!?!?]. When Shortz took over in the mid-'90s he largely quashed a lot of crosswordesey things you rarely see any more, and ASCI is one of those things.
[xwordinfo]
Another one of those things? OVIS:
[xwordinfo]
Both ASCI and OVIS have appeared only a small handful of times in the Shortz era. But before that ... like buffalo they roamed. OVIS I knew, but that doesn't mean I liked it any better than ASCI. Anyway, once I got (the hell) out of that NW corner, the puzzle got a lot easier. Normal Wednesday overall. See you tomorrow. Have a Love Power-ful day.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
*kealoa = a pair of words (normally short, common answers) that can be clued identically and that share at least one letter in common (in the same position). These are answers you can't just fill in quickly because two or more answers are viable, Even With One or More Letters In Place. From the classic [Mauna ___] KEA/LOA conundrum. See also, e.g. [Heaps] ATON/ALOT, ["Git!"] "SHOO"/"SCAT," etc.
I forgot "Thar' she blows" as a naval term, so I had to cheat to get the OVIS/SHE cross. I also misspelled POLENTA as "palenta," because I had "racketman" instead of ROCKETMAN.
This puzzle was probably a layup for the younger generation, with all the recent song titles. I'm of the Bing Crosby generation, so I needed the crosses to get most of them (except ROCKETMAN).
I had never heard of Little Mix but I knew the song "That Old Black Magic," and even though that's not the actual name it was enough for me to fill in the answer. Like OFL, I questioned 17A as a themer, but then I recalled a sign in a restaurant I frequent: "I make wine disappear. What's your MAGIC POWER?"
"Love Power"? That's all about "Sowing the Seeds of Love" by Tears for Fears :) Skip ahead to about 4:30, or just enjoy the whole thing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAtGOESO7W8
So there are humans who call a rowing machine an ERG? Anyone here know one of them? Short for ergometer I suppose, but most of them are pedaled, not rowed.
I really liked the puzzle overall though. NE was hardest for me for some reason, I stared at a lot of blank space for a while. Had gRr for the canine warning. Is an ARF really a warning? Seems more often a happy sound or "take me for a walk please!"
I never use the term erg(ometer) and never intend to - prefer rowing machine. But I have run into it. See the reply above. About pedals. Anything with pedals is called a bike. Perhaps you haven’t seen a rowing machine? Nothing like an exercise bike.
NYT Wordplay blog predictably loved this one more than life itself, as it does every single NYT crossword--seriously, have they ever *not* found a crossword utterly delightful?--which is another reason I come here. This one was just... a crossword. The theme felt forced and unnecessary, when it could have just been a regular ol' puzzle.
"Love Power" is also a reggae song by Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers. I know it best from Muppet Treasure Island, though I'm not clear if it was made for that movie or just used in it.
This one was probably a little unfortunate in that it ran so soon after the recent popular song based theme which was so well received. There was a lot of speculation that day regarding what a “younger” or other take on a similar theme might look like - most predicted an likely flirtation with mediocrity, which probably turned out to be prescient.
To be fair, I think this one ended up a notch above mediocre, but the bar was pretty high for reasons stated above. LOVE POWER is easily the weakest of the group, and it is flirting with WoE (or even WtF?) status. Rex pointed out some of the questionable fill like ASCI and OVIS - which look like they good have easily checked the Latin trivia box for today (seriously, isn’t there at least one foreign language that they mean something in ?). Sorry guys, but fungi sacs just don’t cut it.
On the plus side, I finally realized what a SHAM is (I think). For about 40 years now, I’ve always thought it was some kind of a blanket or other type of furniture covering (seriously) and that the other thing was a pillow case.
@ Lewis. Always in awe of how you manage to find so many connections in a puzzle to make it far more interesting than I thought possible. Thanks as always.
“Love Power” was such a common hippie saying in the 1960s!! Everyone here must be so young! You would hold up two fingers to say goodbye and you would say either “Peace” (most frequently) but “Flower Power” and “Love Power” were up there. It is also the title of several 60s song, it’s still on hippie Facebook pages, articles, list of sayings, etc.
I felt this puzzle to be fairly easy and the song titles were familiar except Black Magic but after getting Magic, Black seemed to fit when I thought of Fleetwood Mac.
I enjoyed today. Not so keen on ASCI or OVIS either, but having created crosswords before, sometimes there just isn’t much choice.
I did not like this from the very start with it's stupid 1A name of a random whoever. It hardly let up from there. I can forgive pop culture trivia in a well-devised theme (and this one was reasonably good), but if you need those themers to be relatively obscure names in order to make it work, then I better not see any other titles, names, or proper nouns anywhere else in the grid. And this was full of them. I don't care if half were gimmes for me -- it just means they probably weren't for many other people. The bad taste I got from ISSA just kept getting worse as I went on. Even the clue about the Oscars (which, again, I knew) was not nice to see.
Running into TECH early on, with it's absurdly arbitrary and vague clue, didn't help. Ultimately, the whole thing was very easy ( any themers I didn't know -- which was all but ROCKETMAN -- were inferable), but it was a grumpy easy.
Strangely enough, ASCI was my favorite part. If you regularly teach genetics, this becomes a very familiar word.
Pretty much breezed thru this one, but had to rely on the themer to get the HIGHER / GIA cross, and just in the KNICK of time to best my Wednes. avg.
Great start in the NW, altho had to count on all the crosses for ASCI. Moved steadily down, ending on HIGHER LOVE (definitely a good place to be). π₯°
Our Little League All-star team chose the nickname of BLACK MAGIC (having red & BLACK) uni's).
Speaking of baseball, had ASH in another xword yd, as a 'baseball bat' clue.
'Litigious' is right in line with the series I'm currently watching, the 'Painkiller' mini series on Netflix (hat tip to @Gary from Sat. :)
LOVEd the HIGHER POWER idea today! π ___ Elizebeth Gorski's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 x NYT Sat.). Always seem to be on her wavelength. :) ___ Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds just as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
So OFL hadn't heard of BLACKMAGIC or Little Mix? Welcome to the world of many of us. No real complaint here, as BLACKMAGIC was obvious after half the letters went in. Benefits from Acrostics.
I didn't think this was particularly hard, although I made some friends. Nice to meet you RENEE, ENID, and GIA. ISSA keeps popping up so she's familiar. I could include SUE, but that's a different clue.
Haven't thought of KRAKOW since The Trumpeter of KRAKOW in my eighth grade reader, OVIS I knew but if ASCI is old-time crosswordese, it has faded from memory. Sorry ASCI.
Very nice Wednesdecito, GT. Should be the Good Time that was had by all, but some may disagree. Thanks for all the fun.
Cute - but agree with the big guy that the theme is so restrictive that we end up with some unfortunate fill. I have no issue with LOVE POWER. Always had the hots for Karen Carpenter. Liked the NOSH ON x STEAMER cross.
Longer fill was generally splashy - POLENTA, SUNBEAM, PACIFIER etc. Rex highlights the crosswardese and the boatload of 3s and 4s in the center of this grid kill the flow.
@ Bulgie 6:29 ERG is a very common term for rowing machines, at least among serious athletes.
Any puzzle that references the Carpenter's SUPERSTAR is going to be a winner for me. My only nit was starting off with ISSA RAE's Insecure. A great show, but oh so niche. I'm guessing only about a third of the folks here ever watched it.
Hey All ! Har, thar SHE blows. Last square filled. Got the Happy Music, stared at it for about three more seconds, then the ole brain finally let me in on the fun. Gave me a chuckle after figuring it out.
Neat puz. I agree with Rex on the odd sounding POWER LOVE. Or LOVE POWER. I guess when in LOVE, anything is possible? Is that the POWER? Alas, it's been a minute here...
Off topic: saw a neat video on YouTube about Zipf's Law. Fascinating stuff. Neat to watch for word nerds. Or Google it. It applies to everything. Language, and a bunch of stuff that now, of course, I don't remember. π Someone needs to make a themed puz out of it!
Nice WedsPuz. Some tricky cluing where you have to think for a sec about. Also, easy clues thrown in to keep you moving. Well balanced puz.
One other Themer possibility, Bojack HORSEMAN (I know, it's supposed to be the first word, but hey, best I can drum up on short notice.) π
Pretty much breezed thru this one, but had to rely on the themer to get the HIGHER / GIA cross, and just in the KNICK of time to best my Wednes. avg.
Great start in the NW, altho had to count on all the crosses for ASCI. Moved steadily down, ending on HIGHER LOVE (definitely a good place to be). π₯°
Our Little League All-star team chose the nickname of BLACK MAGIC (having red & BLACK) uni's).
Speaking of baseball, had ASH in another xword yd, as a 'baseball bat' clue.
'Litigious' is right in line with the series I'm currently watching, the 'Painkiller' mini series on Netflix (hat tip to @Gary from Sat. :)
LOVEd the HIGHER POWER idea today! π ___ Elizebeth Gorski's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 x NYT Sat.). Always seem to be on her wavelength. :) ___ Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
Who Blows Thar? This clue. But that aside. Theme-wise this was pretty impressive.
Wondering if all puzzles featuring songs of a certain era are cleared from the NYT hopper. I doubt it, but listen millennials and others of your youthful ilk, don't hate. Some of these songs are so old a Boomer (I) or others in the vicinity may not be able to recall them. Or hearing things like a high pitched sound on the black and white TV and then hearing the words, "This is a test of the emergency broadcast system."
The theme songs might just as well have been unclued, for all the help they provided me (read "none"), but I solved this anyway. But with a lot of difficulty in the NE, caused by 10D -- where I had GRR.
I mean what kind of a "canine warning" is an ARF? Some of the friendliest, most loving dogs I have ever known will ARF their tails off. If you're afraid of an ARF, I say you're afraid of life.
So now I had to find a tiny 4-letter pest beginning with R -- and I couldn't.
I had to find a 4-letter something-or-other with "tiny orbits" beginning with G -- and I couldn't.
I was ready to march to the front of the stage and sing "What Kind of Fool Am I?" -- a POWER BALLAD from 1962 from the Broadway musical "Stop the World, I Want to Get Off". You should know that the POWER BALLAD existed long before the heyday of rock music. It was a staple of a great many theater scores and often appeared as what was known as "the 11 o'clock number".
Of course I know pretty much ALL those songs and many, many more. It's just the ones in today's puzzle I didn't know.
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
Average Wednesday time for me - interesting, since it felt really slow. Can't complain about this too much. My knowledge of pop music is sorely lacking. Knew ROCKETMAN and that was it. Took waaaay too long to figure out the SHE clue, but clever enough. Writeovers: wanted GNAT before FLEA, which blocked the whole NE of the grid for a bit. Otherwise, solid themer that wasn't on my wavelength, but that's life. On to Thursday!
An extra STAR today, we get a trivia TEST within our crossword puzzle. Around 45% of it by my very rough estimate. Where’s @Z when I need him? Really liked the theme though, even while agreeing with Rex about LOVE POWER not being all that familiar. Nor was POWER BALLAD for that matter, or ERG.
Like most people, I entered GRR at 10D but ARF would be a warning as a way of sounding an ALARM to danger, say if there’s a stranger at the door. In fact, at my house there would be many enthusiastic ARFs in that scenario.
From the possibly useless advice department, I read that if you’re making a jack-o’-lantern, you should cut the pumpkin off at the bottom instead of at the top, leaving the STEM intact. Then instead of trying to balance a candle on the inside, you set it on a flat surface and put the pumpkin over the top of it. Follow me for more fascinating decorating tips.
Have a friend in the hospital so I couldn't jump in on the coffee conversation yesterday, but some of you are living with some highly suspicious taste buds. I weep for you.
Uniclues:
1 Dark lord of the circus. 2 Patrick Ewing 3 $55 million. 4 Crosswordese. 5 Those who are the first to go home on "Chopped." 6 "Your mom is coming," and, "our boss is coming." 7 British stutterer.
1 BLACK MAGIC FLEA 2 KNICK SUPERSTAR 3 ROCKETMAN FARES 4 ENID HIGHER LOVE 5 SOLD ON POLENTA 6 HIDE RUM ALARMS (~) 7 ERR LIFTER
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: The sound every one of my cars made until I was in my 40s. TUT TUT TUT KAPUT.
Post has disappeared twice. Gonna keep trying, though…
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
Not my theme day: I wasn't familiar with any of the songs. POWER BALLAD is nice across the center and I'm an ADMIRER of this type of theme. Otherwise, MEAGER fare for me today. Do-overs: cRAcOW, ADIeu. No idea: Besides the song titles, ASCI, RENEE and GIA.
I thought this puzzle was a lot of fun. Most of the songs I knew and were quickly filled in through crosses. I DID learn today that I have had NO clue as to what to designate as a BALLAD, let alone a POWERBALLAD.
I looked at the music video for BLACKMAGIC. First, I will say I hung in with it and decided I would’ve LOVED the song if I heard/saw it in 6th or 7th grade due to its “Revenge of the Nerds” type video presentation. Second, I STILL don’t see how it’s a BALLAD but whatever!
Hah, hand up for GRR before ARF but to @Nancy, I had a friend who was bitten on the ankle by a Chihuahua while taking a walk and I think ARF was what she heard before the chomp. However, from what I hear, people who have been bitten by dogs (and just minding their own business) hear neither Grr or ARF before the bite.
@Pablo…hahaha…when I first looked at your comment I thought it said the Trumpster of Krakow. Brief thought was that this was oddly specific!
Since I’m not familiar with a lot of the folks referred to in this grid, I found it a bit challenging, but managed to almost solve it anyway. My downfall was model Carangi crossing the Steve Winwood song which ended up being HITHER LOVE. I assumed this was about getting closer to romance or something. When I came here and realized the song was actually HIGHER LOVE, which I know well, I ended up feeling a little PEA-brained despite the fact that I had filled in all of the other boxes correctly.
Lots of downright dumb cluing for the short fill, but it didn't STRESS me out too much. Never will COP to being a KNICKs ADMIRER, but those 3 answers made the NW easy. Never will like the kealoa *MS. IMS, DMS, PMS --- what else, BMS? But overall, a very easy Wednesday.
OK, I know ASCI because I collect mushrooms, but I realize that not everyone does. But OVIS? Even if you don't know it, you need about 3 nanoseconds to recall that sheep are ovine, and deduce the answer by analogy with canine/canis.
As for ISSA Rae, not only is she a big star, but she enabled puzzles to move away from the truly obnoxious former member of Congress, Darrell ISSA.
As for ERG, I hadn't noticed it, but now that I do -- I think rowers call them ERGs, while those who use them for exercise call them rowing machines. My daughter rowed in college, and every December the whole crew would come up to Boston for the ERG races at Harvard. (Formally called the CRASH-B Sprints, for some reason). I did think it was a strange term the first time I heard it.
My one big disappointment in this puzzle was that the secret Roman ingredient in concrete was not an ASp.
And to close on a pedantic note: ATOMs don't have orbits, they have orbitals. I'll let someone else explain the difference.
This theme clanks a little. Since the theme entries are all actual songs, they should be actual POWER BALLADS if you're going to have that as the revealer. Or at least just ballads. BLACK MAGIC (which I just listened to a bIt of) and HIGHER LOVE are medium- to up-tempo. SUPERSTAR and ROCKET MAN don't have the requisite Power Ballad bombast.
Power Ballads didn't really come into their own until the 1980's, when Journey and Heart and Foreigner and their ilk starting churning them out. This one has it all – melodramatic vocal, loud thudding drums, searing guitar solo, stupid video – my candidate for: The Worst Power Ballad of All Time
Always good to face the music, in xword themes. Didn't know 50% of the theme songs, but they were gettable -- even extra gettable, due to the POWERBALLAD verification plan.
Biggest solvequest prob were a coupla pesky weeject answers. Namely, ARF [I went with GRR] and SIN [I went with SEA]. FLEA went gooder with ARF, and LIFTER went gooder with SIN, I'd grant. Sure lost precious nanoseconds, tho.
other faves: OVEREAT. SCAMPI. SUNBEAM [with its ray of U-ness]. The rare-ish pair of Jaws of Themedness.
Thanx for the power-solvequest, Ms. Turner darlin. And congratz on a nice debut effort … Bravely done, as I see that yer puzgrid-fillin work was not entirely STRESS-free.
ARF? ERG? Ay Dios mΓo... And then...the songs! I knew one: ROCKET MAN...Does that count? I tried to think where I might've been residing when these songs came out. Was I living here? I listened to songs all the time while living in the States. In Spain all we had was Disco music delivered from England. Easy to dance to as long as you wore thigh high white boots and danced in a cage. For some strange reason I looked at 33D clue for ever. Who in the world is catadromous? Maybe it's OREO. Oh, wait...another clever way to clue an EEL. Much better than the clues for sushi topping. Anyway. After reading @Rex, I guess I feel somewhat better. I wasn't sure what to do with my POWER or why. I finished the puzzle without help or errors. I didn't understand it but that's why I come here. I liked the clue for STEAMER and its clam and trunk. I started sings that Stanley STEAMER commercial that drove me nuts. Like @Whatsername I wondered about COP being an own up. I've heard of COP a feel. Isn't that what Boebert's little friend did to her while watching Beetlejuice? Interesting puzzle...MOCS and all.
I'm in the process of reducing expenses, so I'll not be renewing my NYT games sub.
I'll miss y'all, but will keep you in my thots and prayers. π ___ Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
@Moderators - the below post has been spiked three times now. If there is a problem with it, can you let me know what?
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
@bocamp 12:19 - I hear you, girl (re: expenses). I'm going to change my NYT subscription from All-Access to Games Only soon (they don't deliver the paper on a consistent basis anyway). Guess I'll REALLY have to get used to doing the puzzle on-line now!
I enjoyed your posts. Wishing you the best of luck. Maybe we'll see you again :)
Checking my answers after finishing, I had a brief moment of confusion trying to figure out what the heck a POWERBALL AD had to do with a slow rock song.
That clue for SHE was inspired!
Lots of Kealoa-ish typeovers: "scant" was MEASLY before MEAGER, sea creatures KELP* before EELS, pillow SLIP before SHAM, "so long" ADIEU before ADIOS.
(* -- okay now I know KELP aren't actually creatures, in fact Wiki says they're not even plants!)
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0; only a couple of goofy words.]
Want to echo the post above: Love Power was a major hippie chant in the 60s. An art teacher I had in high school even named a painting of his after it. You may be too young to know it, but it's definitely legit.
As for Superstar -- Karen Carpenter's version was a big hit in 1971, but it had previously been recorded by Delaney and Bonnie. If anyone else merited citation here, it was them.
RE: the secret meaning of yesterday's puzzle. Antidisestablishmentabli were a late 19th century political cult who rejected then embraced then both rejected and embraced a charismatic leader known as Don Aldo il Perfecto, so named for his perfection of the renaissance prose form "verbi di insalata." Shmentarianism was founded by Reb Isak Jakob Shmenta of Krakow, coincidentaly also of the late 19th century, who intended to place pilotless aircraft above his neighbor's home to listen in on their conversations. For this he was dubbed "Shmenta the yenta." His greatest known accomplishment was placing capsules into outer space designed to control earth's climate and eventually recreating The Garden of Eden in lower Manhattan, on the East side. On a bagel search in Queens NY Shmetna and Don Aldo ran into each other and after a long silence Shmetna said "Nu?" upon which Don Aldo replied "I did it. I didn't do it" Don Aldo was later encountered by Jack the Dragon Slayer who made quick work of the situation.
This theme clanks a little. Since the theme entries are all actual songs, they should be actual POWER BALLADS if you're going to have that as the revealer. Or at least just ballads. BLACK MAGIC (which I just listened to a bIt of) and HIGHER LOVE are medium- to up-tempo. SUPERSTAR and ROCKET MAN don't have the requisite Power Ballad bombast. Power Ballads didn't really come into their own until the 1980's, when Journey and Heart and Foreigner and their ilk starting churning them out.
This one has it all: melodramatic vocal, loud thudding drums, searing guitar solo, stupid video — my candidate for: the Worst Power Ballad of All Time
@bocamp (12:19) A completely understandable decision but darn it, also one that will be our loss. Priorities often change as time goes by. Whatever yours are, be happy and enjoy! You’ll be missed.
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE: in this case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Do not know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I would like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your swoles and on totes and give us some real words. But Rex points to a real downside of the Maleska era; the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over for thirty years with essentially identical clues.
Ok, I cry uncle!; I'll cough up the do-re-mi and make cuts elsewhere, as per @Roo's directive. π
Thx to those who posted such caring comments. Much appreciated! π₯° ___ Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all π π
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCl and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your swoles and toteses and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCl and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues
For me it was a normal Tuesday puzzle with a NE corner taken from a hard Saturday that completely mystified me. Had GRR for forever and that made everything harder. What dog warns by saying ARF??? ERG? I got RAVE and OVEREAT quickly, but the rest was tough.
Well, drag out some very old crosswordese! ASCI - whew! It was one I knew I had back in the way way way back dusty stacks. My little librarian had a heck of a time getting close. I finally got ASCI but didn’t trust it because of its similarity to the tech term ASCII which appears with some regularity. Since the downs confirmed its likelihood, I just left it and trusted.
Same with OVIS which we don’t see often, as opposed to different form ovine, but what the heck, put in OVIS and hoped for the best.
The remainder of the fill wasn’t too troublesome, but the theme took me a minute to get. Sure, it is a very well used theme type, but when I mentally put POWER with each word in the song titles, not all of the results felt “real” for want of a better word. Bu then, though the puzzle was completed. On to Thursday.
I'd never heard the term ERG either -- until a bit earlier this year when I read an absolutely fantastic novel called "Lessons in Chemistry." Since rowing and the ERG play a central role in the story and since the novel was a major bestseller -- deservedly so -- I'm surprised no one here has mentioned it. I can't recommend the book more highly -- it reads like the wind, I couldn't put it down, and it's wonderfully written as well.
An atom does not have orbits it has orbitals. An orbit is 2 dimensional like an ellipse. An orbital is a 3 dimensional shape. The Bohr model of an atom had orbits, but this is incorrect and was was replaced by a model that assigns a probability for the position of each electron.
Excellent debut puzzle so bravo to Gina Turner. At first I thought the gimmick applied only to the first word of the songs. But after re-reading the clue for 38A I see that it applies to both halves of the gimmicks. Too bad. Because the theme worked well for the first half of the song titles but for the second half, not so much. Overetending an already good gimmick is never a good idea.
I was a little natick'ed by the RAMONA STEAMER cross.
I'd never heard of Ramona Quimby and don't know who Beverly Cleary is (although there's a very vague sense of: "I may have seen that name once in my life").
STEAMER I eventually guessed, but hated the clue. I've never heard the term "steamer clam", although I've cooked many clams by steaming them. Steamer Trunk? Couldn't make any sense out of that. Absolutely no familiarity there with me.
Challenging for a Wednesday, thanks largely to one terrible clue: "Canine warning." A canine warning is GRR, NOT ARF! ARF is friendly! There's no "warning" there! I had GRR inked in there as obvious, and it almost cost me the whole puzzle. The clue is just plain WRONG.
ASCI and OVIS didn't help either, but at least their crosses were fair. Ms. TOMEI lingers onstage to receive another DOD sash. Par.
To anonymous above: Soft-shell clams are called steamers. Steamer trunks are the big suitcase thingies you see on top of stagecoaches in old Westerns. Also used by passengers on extended voyages on steamships. The big stand up ones are called portmanteaus.
The Universal xword may have been beeter today, but OK. There's MIST in the corners. Wikipedia says that GIA Carangi was the first supermodel, but there are numerous claims to that honor. Yeah baby. Wordle par.
I forgot "Thar' she blows" as a naval term, so I had to cheat to get the OVIS/SHE cross. I also misspelled POLENTA as "palenta," because I had "racketman" instead of ROCKETMAN.
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle was probably a layup for the younger generation, with all the recent song titles. I'm of the Bing Crosby generation, so I needed the crosses to get most of them (except ROCKETMAN).
Ah, now I get the "thar" clue...
DeleteI solved using down clues only!
Delete
ReplyDeleteI had never heard of Little Mix but I knew the song "That Old Black Magic," and even though that's not the actual name it was enough for me to fill in the answer. Like OFL, I questioned 17A as a themer, but then I recalled a sign in a restaurant I frequent: "I make wine disappear. What's your MAGIC POWER?"
"Love Power"? That's all about "Sowing the Seeds of Love" by Tears for Fears :) Skip ahead to about 4:30, or just enjoy the whole thing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAtGOESO7W8
ReplyDeleteSo there are humans who call a rowing machine an ERG? Anyone here know one of them? Short for ergometer I suppose, but most of them are pedaled, not rowed.
ReplyDeleteI really liked the puzzle overall though. NE was hardest for me for some reason, I stared at a lot of blank space for a while. Had gRr for the canine warning. Is an ARF really a warning? Seems more often a happy sound or "take me for a walk please!"
Erg is very common among the rising community.
DeleteI own a Concept2 rowing machine and immediately knew this answer. Not an easy one if you’re not a rower but a gimmee if you are.
DeleteI never use the term erg(ometer) and never intend to - prefer rowing machine. But I have run into it. See the reply above. About pedals. Anything with pedals is called a bike. Perhaps you haven’t seen a rowing machine? Nothing like an exercise bike.
DeleteOnce again I completely miss a component of the theme! “Ok, I guess you could class these all as power ballads. I’m no musicologist.”
ReplyDeleteAt no point did I make the connection between the word POWER and the words in the song titles.
That is why I read this blog.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BkYBJId7WZs
ReplyDeleteNYT Wordplay blog predictably loved this one more than life itself, as it does every single NYT crossword--seriously, have they ever *not* found a crossword utterly delightful?--which is another reason I come here.
ReplyDeleteThis one was just... a crossword. The theme felt forced and unnecessary, when it could have just been a regular ol' puzzle.
It’s “Higher Power”
ReplyDeleteYes. But it’s also “love power.” Read the revealer clue. “Each half.”
Delete"Love Power" is also a reggae song by Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers. I know it best from Muppet Treasure Island, though I'm not clear if it was made for that movie or just used in it.
ReplyDelete“Love Power” - also a Bacharach tune sung by Dionne Warwick/Jeffrey Osborne.
ReplyDeleteThat's the one I immediately think of.
DeleteI mean, Love Power by Lorenzo St Dubois comes immediately to mind::
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/BkYBJId7WZs?si=_vG25-u3qWpPc0jY
Some random thoughts:
ReplyDelete• This is a lovely palate cleanser to yesterday’s puzzle, balancing yesterday’s super-long-word theme with a grid that has none. Yet there are a couple of echoes: ASH was in yesterday’s grid, and GIA is the name of yesterday’s constructor.
• Speaking of echoes, I like having LIFTER, a word that goes with POWER, in the grid.
• Nice little NBA mini-theme with KNICK, MAGIC, ROCKET, and SUN.
• I smiled at having I’M BACK as an answer in a debut puzzle.
• Sweet PuzzPair© of A TEST and a backward GRE.
• This is a standard theme genre – words that follow other words – but it feels like a while since it’s shown up, and I liked meeting it again.
• Totally charmed by the silliness of [Who blows thar?] for SHE.
Gina, congratulations on your debut. This was a solid and most enjoyable outing. Thank you for creating it!
This one was probably a little unfortunate in that it ran so soon after the recent popular song based theme which was so well received. There was a lot of speculation that day regarding what a “younger” or other take on a similar theme might look like - most predicted an likely flirtation with mediocrity, which probably turned out to be prescient.
ReplyDeleteTo be fair, I think this one ended up a notch above mediocre, but the bar was pretty high for reasons stated above. LOVE POWER is easily the weakest of the group, and it is flirting with WoE (or even WtF?) status. Rex pointed out some of the questionable fill like ASCI and OVIS - which look like they good have easily checked the Latin trivia box for today (seriously, isn’t there at least one foreign language that they mean something in ?). Sorry guys, but fungi sacs just don’t cut it.
On the plus side, I finally realized what a SHAM is (I think). For about 40 years now, I’ve always thought it was some kind of a blanket or other type of furniture covering (seriously) and that the other thing was a pillow case.
@ Lewis. Always in awe of how you manage to find so many connections in a puzzle to make it far more interesting than I thought possible. Thanks as always.
ReplyDeleteAgree. — SoCal CP
Delete“Love Power” was such a common hippie saying in the 1960s!! Everyone here must be so young! You would hold up two fingers to say goodbye and you would say either “Peace” (most frequently) but “Flower Power” and “Love Power” were up there. It is also the title of several 60s song, it’s still on hippie Facebook pages, articles, list of sayings, etc.
ReplyDeleteI felt this puzzle to be fairly easy and the song titles were familiar except Black Magic but after getting Magic, Black seemed to fit when I thought of Fleetwood Mac.
I enjoyed today. Not so keen on ASCI or OVIS either, but having created crosswords before, sometimes there just isn’t much choice.
I did not like this from the very start with it's stupid 1A name of a random whoever. It hardly let up from there. I can forgive pop culture trivia in a well-devised theme (and this one was reasonably good), but if you need those themers to be relatively obscure names in order to make it work, then I better not see any other titles, names, or proper nouns anywhere else in the grid. And this was full of them. I don't care if half were gimmes for me -- it just means they probably weren't for many other people. The bad taste I got from ISSA just kept getting worse as I went on.
ReplyDeleteEven the clue about the Oscars (which, again, I knew) was not nice to see.
Running into TECH early on, with it's absurdly arbitrary and vague clue, didn't help.
Ultimately, the whole thing was very easy ( any themers I didn't know -- which was all but ROCKETMAN -- were inferable), but it was a grumpy easy.
Strangely enough, ASCI was my favorite part. If you regularly teach genetics, this becomes a very familiar word.
Thx, Gina; I'm an ADMIRER of your work! π
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Pretty much breezed thru this one, but had to rely on the themer to get the HIGHER / GIA cross, and just in the KNICK of time to best my Wednes. avg.
Great start in the NW, altho had to count on all the crosses for ASCI. Moved steadily down, ending on HIGHER LOVE (definitely a good place to be). π₯°
Our Little League All-star team chose the nickname of BLACK MAGIC (having red & BLACK) uni's).
Speaking of baseball, had ASH in another xword yd, as a 'baseball bat' clue.
'Litigious' is right in line with the series I'm currently watching, the 'Painkiller' mini series on Netflix (hat tip to @Gary from Sat. :)
LOVEd the HIGHER POWER idea today! π
___
Elizebeth Gorski's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 x NYT Sat.). Always seem to be on her wavelength. :)
___
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds just as good.
ReplyDeleteASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
Love power is the power of a little flower
ReplyDeleteWas a song in the movie the producers I seem to remember
DeleteSo OFL hadn't heard of BLACKMAGIC or Little Mix? Welcome to the world of many of us. No real complaint here, as BLACKMAGIC was obvious after half the letters went in. Benefits from Acrostics.
ReplyDeleteI didn't think this was particularly hard, although I made some friends. Nice to meet you RENEE, ENID, and GIA. ISSA keeps popping up so she's familiar. I could include SUE, but that's a different clue.
Haven't thought of KRAKOW since The Trumpeter of KRAKOW in my eighth grade reader, OVIS I knew but if ASCI is old-time crosswordese, it has faded from memory. Sorry ASCI.
Very nice Wednesdecito, GT. Should be the Good Time that was had by all, but some may disagree. Thanks for all the fun.
Cute - but agree with the big guy that the theme is so restrictive that we end up with some unfortunate fill. I have no issue with LOVE POWER. Always had the hots for Karen Carpenter. Liked the NOSH ON x STEAMER cross.
ReplyDeleteLonger fill was generally splashy - POLENTA, SUNBEAM, PACIFIER etc. Rex highlights the crosswardese and the boatload of 3s and 4s in the center of this grid kill the flow.
Pleasant enough Wednesday morning solve.
The ELEVEN
ASCI
ReplyDeleteCouldn’t the clue have referred to computer code
That's ASCII
Delete@ Bulgie 6:29 ERG is a very common term for rowing machines, at least among serious athletes.
ReplyDeleteAny puzzle that references the Carpenter's SUPERSTAR is going to be a winner for me. My only nit was starting off with ISSA RAE's Insecure. A great show, but oh so niche. I'm guessing only about a third of the folks here ever watched it.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteHar, thar SHE blows. Last square filled. Got the Happy Music, stared at it for about three more seconds, then the ole brain finally let me in on the fun. Gave me a chuckle after figuring it out.
Neat puz. I agree with Rex on the odd sounding POWER LOVE. Or LOVE POWER. I guess when in LOVE, anything is possible? Is that the POWER? Alas, it's been a minute here...
Off topic: saw a neat video on YouTube about Zipf's Law. Fascinating stuff. Neat to watch for word nerds. Or Google it. It applies to everything. Language, and a bunch of stuff that now, of course, I don't remember. π Someone needs to make a themed puz out of it!
Nice WedsPuz. Some tricky cluing where you have to think for a sec about. Also, easy clues thrown in to keep you moving. Well balanced puz.
One other Themer possibility, Bojack HORSEMAN (I know, it's supposed to be the first word, but hey, best I can drum up on short notice.) π
Hope y'all have a great day!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
“Love Power” by Luther VanDross
ReplyDeleteThx, Gina; I'm an ADMIRER of your work! π
ReplyDeleteEasy-med.
Pretty much breezed thru this one, but had to rely on the themer to get the HIGHER / GIA cross, and just in the KNICK of time to best my Wednes. avg.
Great start in the NW, altho had to count on all the crosses for ASCI. Moved steadily down, ending on HIGHER LOVE (definitely a good place to be). π₯°
Our Little League All-star team chose the nickname of BLACK MAGIC (having red & BLACK) uni's).
Speaking of baseball, had ASH in another xword yd, as a 'baseball bat' clue.
'Litigious' is right in line with the series I'm currently watching, the 'Painkiller' mini series on Netflix (hat tip to @Gary from Sat. :)
LOVEd the HIGHER POWER idea today! π
___
Elizebeth Gorski's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 x NYT Sat.). Always seem to be on her wavelength. :)
___
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
Dude, it's "higher power," not "love power."
ReplyDeleteDude, think before you comment
DeleteWho Blows Thar? This clue. But that aside. Theme-wise this was pretty impressive.
ReplyDeleteWondering if all puzzles featuring songs of a certain era are cleared from the NYT hopper. I doubt it, but listen millennials and others of your youthful ilk, don't hate. Some of these songs are so old a Boomer (I) or others in the vicinity may not be able to recall them. Or hearing things like a high pitched sound on the black and white TV and then hearing the words, "This is a test of the emergency broadcast system."
Do people still Cop to things?
“Arf” is not a canine warning. It is a canine “hello.” “Grr” is a canine warning. Lots of unnecessary difficulty/trivia on 3/4 letter words here.
ReplyDeleteAfter yesterday’s SuperPOW!, i can only echo Power Balladeer Maureen McGovern:
ReplyDeleteThere’s got to be a Morning After.
Arf? MY dog says Grr!
ReplyDeleteHa!
DeleteThe theme songs might just as well have been unclued, for all the help they provided me (read "none"), but I solved this anyway. But with a lot of difficulty in the NE, caused by 10D -- where I had GRR.
ReplyDeleteI mean what kind of a "canine warning" is an ARF? Some of the friendliest, most loving dogs I have ever known will ARF their tails off. If you're afraid of an ARF, I say you're afraid of life.
So now I had to find a tiny 4-letter pest beginning with R -- and I couldn't.
I had to find a 4-letter something-or-other with "tiny orbits" beginning with G -- and I couldn't.
I was ready to march to the front of the stage and sing "What Kind of Fool Am I?" -- a POWER BALLAD from 1962 from the Broadway musical "Stop the World, I Want to Get Off". You should know that the POWER BALLAD existed long before the heyday of rock music. It was a staple of a great many theater scores and often appeared as what was known as "the 11 o'clock number".
Of course I know pretty much ALL those songs and many, many more. It's just the ones in today's puzzle I didn't know.
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ReplyDeleteASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
Average Wednesday time for me - interesting, since it felt really slow. Can't complain about this too much. My knowledge of pop music is sorely lacking. Knew ROCKETMAN and that was it. Took waaaay too long to figure out the SHE clue, but clever enough. Writeovers: wanted GNAT before FLEA, which blocked the whole NE of the grid for a bit. Otherwise, solid themer that wasn't on my wavelength, but that's life. On to Thursday!
ReplyDeleteAn extra STAR today, we get a trivia TEST within our crossword puzzle. Around 45% of it by my very rough estimate. Where’s @Z when I need him? Really liked the theme though, even while agreeing with Rex about LOVE POWER not being all that familiar. Nor was POWER BALLAD for that matter, or ERG.
ReplyDeleteLike most people, I entered GRR at 10D but ARF would be a warning as a way of sounding an ALARM to danger, say if there’s a stranger at the door. In fact, at my house there would be many enthusiastic ARFs in that scenario.
From the possibly useless advice department, I read that if you’re making a jack-o’-lantern, you should cut the pumpkin off at the bottom instead of at the top, leaving the STEM intact. Then instead of trying to balance a candle on the inside, you set it on a flat surface and put the pumpkin over the top of it. Follow me for more fascinating decorating tips.
So are you seriously saying that you’ve not heard of The Carpenters’ SUPERSTAR? That’s on you, Rex.
ReplyDelete[He is not seriously saying that. Or saying that at all. Seriously]
DeleteHm. Wheelhouse solve for me. Seemed fine.
ReplyDeleteHave a friend in the hospital so I couldn't jump in on the coffee conversation yesterday, but some of you are living with some highly suspicious taste buds. I weep for you.
Uniclues:
1 Dark lord of the circus.
2 Patrick Ewing
3 $55 million.
4 Crosswordese.
5 Those who are the first to go home on "Chopped."
6 "Your mom is coming," and, "our boss is coming."
7 British stutterer.
1 BLACK MAGIC FLEA
2 KNICK SUPERSTAR
3 ROCKETMAN FARES
4 ENID HIGHER LOVE
5 SOLD ON POLENTA
6 HIDE RUM ALARMS (~)
7 ERR LIFTER
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: The sound every one of my cars made until I was in my 40s. TUT TUT TUT KAPUT.
¯\_(γ)_/¯
Post has disappeared twice. Gonna keep trying, though…
ReplyDeleteIt always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
Not my theme day: I wasn't familiar with any of the songs. POWER BALLAD is nice across the center and I'm an ADMIRER of this type of theme. Otherwise, MEAGER fare for me today.
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: cRAcOW, ADIeu. No idea: Besides the song titles, ASCI, RENEE and GIA.
I thought this puzzle was a lot of fun. Most of the songs I knew and were quickly filled in through crosses. I DID learn today that I have had NO clue as to what to designate as a BALLAD, let alone a POWERBALLAD.
ReplyDeleteI looked at the music video for BLACKMAGIC. First, I will say I hung in with it and decided I would’ve LOVED the song if I heard/saw it in 6th or 7th grade due to its “Revenge of the Nerds” type video presentation. Second, I STILL don’t see how it’s a BALLAD but whatever!
Hah, hand up for GRR before ARF but to @Nancy, I had a friend who was bitten on the ankle by a Chihuahua while taking a walk and I think ARF was what she heard before the chomp. However, from what I hear, people who have been bitten by dogs (and just minding their own business) hear neither Grr or ARF before the bite.
@Pablo…hahaha…when I first looked at your comment I thought it said the Trumpster of Krakow. Brief thought was that this was oddly specific!
Since I’m not familiar with a lot of the folks referred to in this grid, I found it a bit challenging, but managed to almost solve it anyway. My downfall was model Carangi crossing the Steve Winwood song which ended up being HITHER LOVE. I assumed this was about getting closer to romance or something. When I came here and realized the song was actually HIGHER LOVE, which I know well, I ended up feeling a little PEA-brained despite the fact that I had filled in all of the other boxes correctly.
ReplyDeleteLots of downright dumb cluing for the short fill, but it didn't STRESS me out too much.
ReplyDeleteNever will COP to being a KNICKs ADMIRER, but those 3 answers made the NW easy.
Never will like the kealoa *MS. IMS, DMS, PMS --- what else, BMS?
But overall, a very easy Wednesday.
Rex, it isn’t “Love Power,” it’s “Higher Power,” as in God.
ReplyDeleteYou don’t understand the theme. BOTH words in the song titles are said to go with “POWER.” 38A clue says “each half.”
DeleteEasy. A familiar theme reasonably well executed. Liked it.
ReplyDeleteDid not know Little Mix (or their song) (Hi @Rex) and RENEE as clued.
OK, I know ASCI because I collect mushrooms, but I realize that not everyone does. But OVIS? Even if you don't know it, you need about 3 nanoseconds to recall that sheep are ovine, and deduce the answer by analogy with canine/canis.
ReplyDeleteAs for ISSA Rae, not only is she a big star, but she enabled puzzles to move away from the truly obnoxious former member of Congress, Darrell ISSA.
As for ERG, I hadn't noticed it, but now that I do -- I think rowers call them ERGs, while those who use them for exercise call them rowing machines. My daughter rowed in college, and every December the whole crew would come up to Boston for the ERG races at Harvard. (Formally called the CRASH-B Sprints, for some reason). I did think it was a strange term the first time I heard it.
My one big disappointment in this puzzle was that the secret Roman ingredient in concrete was not an ASp.
And to close on a pedantic note: ATOMs don't have orbits, they have orbitals. I'll let someone else explain the difference.
This theme clanks a little. Since the theme entries are all actual songs, they should be actual POWER BALLADS if you're going to have that as the revealer. Or at least just ballads. BLACK MAGIC (which I just listened to a bIt of) and HIGHER LOVE are medium- to up-tempo. SUPERSTAR and ROCKET MAN don't have the requisite Power Ballad bombast.
ReplyDeletePower Ballads didn't really come into their own until the 1980's, when Journey and Heart and Foreigner and their ilk starting churning them out. This one has it all – melodramatic vocal, loud thudding drums, searing guitar solo, stupid video – my candidate for:
The Worst Power Ballad of All Time
Always good to face the music, in xword themes. Didn't know 50% of the theme songs, but they were gettable -- even extra gettable, due to the POWERBALLAD verification plan.
ReplyDeleteBiggest solvequest prob were a coupla pesky weeject answers. Namely, ARF [I went with GRR] and SIN [I went with SEA]. FLEA went gooder with ARF, and LIFTER went gooder with SIN, I'd grant. Sure lost precious nanoseconds, tho.
staff weeject pick, other than ARF & SIN: SHE. Cool {Who blows thar?} clue.
Nice LOB-NEE-PET & PAC-SUE-SIN weeject rowin, btw.
other faves: OVEREAT. SCAMPI. SUNBEAM [with its ray of U-ness]. The rare-ish pair of Jaws of Themedness.
Thanx for the power-solvequest, Ms. Turner darlin. And congratz on a nice debut effort … Bravely done, as I see that yer puzgrid-fillin work was not entirely STRESS-free.
Masked & Anonymo2Us
**gruntz**
bonus [am attic-cleanin]:
**gruntz**
ARF? ERG? Ay Dios mΓo...
ReplyDeleteAnd then...the songs!
I knew one: ROCKET MAN...Does that count?
I tried to think where I might've been residing when these songs came out. Was I living here? I listened to songs all the time while living in the States. In Spain all we had was Disco music delivered from England. Easy to dance to as long as you wore thigh high white boots and danced in a cage.
For some strange reason I looked at 33D clue for ever. Who in the world is catadromous? Maybe it's OREO. Oh, wait...another clever way to clue an EEL. Much better than the clues for sushi topping.
Anyway. After reading @Rex, I guess I feel somewhat better. I wasn't sure what to do with my POWER or why.
I finished the puzzle without help or errors. I didn't understand it but that's why I come here.
I liked the clue for STEAMER and its clam and trunk. I started sings that Stanley STEAMER commercial that drove me nuts.
Like @Whatsername I wondered about COP being an own up. I've heard of COP a feel. Isn't that what Boebert's little friend did to her while watching Beetlejuice?
Interesting puzzle...MOCS and all.
it's Magic Powers and Power of Love usage wise but still you can't fault this is a debut - kinks and all..
ReplyDeleteThx Gina, a LOVEly puz! π₯°
ReplyDeleteVery much enjoyed this one! :)
I'm in the process of reducing expenses, so I'll not be renewing my NYT games sub.
I'll miss y'all, but will keep you in my thots and prayers. π
___
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude ~ Serendipity & a DAP to all π π
@bocamp 12:19 PM
Deleteπ’
Dang, @bocamp, that's surely a small expense you can factor in? Get rid of something else! π
DeleteWe'll miss ya, bud!
RooMonster I Told Myself Not To Cry Guy
Please allow me to gift you a subscription. Email rexparker at iCloud dot com
Deleteand Rocket Powered rather than.... Power...
ReplyDelete@Moderators - the below post has been spiked three times now. If there is a problem with it, can you let me know what?
ReplyDeleteIt always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your ‘bae’s and ‘on fleek’s and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues.
ARF is not a warning!
ReplyDeleteSunday's song-related theme/puzzle was much more fun & rewarding.
I'm sorry (Gina) but this one for me was a GRR. But congrats on your debut!
no complaints about the 49D clue? terrible.
ReplyDeleteThere is a Sonic Youth cover of Super Star that out power ballads all power ballads; hadn't thought about it in years until doing this puzzle.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?&q=youtube%20sonic%20youth%20super%20star&mid=579993166D6AB0A74C55579993166D6AB0A74C55&ajaxhist=0
"We've got love
ReplyDelete[love]
Power
[power]
It's the greatest power of them all! Hey, hey, hey!
"We've got love
[love]
Power
[power]
And together we can't fall!
Sung by the Sandpebbles, 1968.
And Superstar might be my favorite showcase (although there may be too many to choose from) of that Karen Carpenter voice!
GIA Carangi was an obscure one. I suppose she was well known (as models go), but that was a long time ago.
ReplyDelete@bocamp 12:19 - I hear you, girl (re: expenses). I'm going to change my NYT subscription from All-Access to Games Only soon (they don't deliver the paper on a consistent basis anyway). Guess I'll REALLY have to get used to doing the puzzle on-line now!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your posts. Wishing you the best of luck. Maybe we'll see you again :)
@bocamp
ReplyDeleteSay it ain't so!
Checking my answers after finishing, I had a brief moment of confusion trying to figure out what the heck a POWERBALL AD had to do with a slow rock song.
ReplyDeleteThat clue for SHE was inspired!
Lots of Kealoa-ish typeovers: "scant" was MEASLY before MEAGER, sea creatures KELP* before EELS, pillow SLIP before SHAM, "so long" ADIEU before ADIOS.
(* -- okay now I know KELP aren't actually creatures, in fact Wiki says they're not even plants!)
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0; only a couple of goofy words.]
Want to echo the post above: Love Power was a major hippie chant in the 60s. An art teacher I had in high school even named a painting of his after it. You may be too young to know it, but it's definitely legit.
ReplyDeleteAs for Superstar -- Karen Carpenter's version was a big hit in 1971, but it had previously been recorded by Delaney and Bonnie. If anyone else merited citation here, it was them.
RE: the secret meaning of yesterday's puzzle. Antidisestablishmentabli were a late 19th century political cult who rejected then embraced then both rejected and embraced a charismatic leader known as Don Aldo il Perfecto, so named for his perfection of the renaissance prose form "verbi di insalata." Shmentarianism was founded by Reb Isak Jakob Shmenta of Krakow, coincidentaly also of the late 19th century, who intended to place pilotless aircraft above his neighbor's home to listen in on their conversations. For this he was dubbed "Shmenta the yenta." His greatest known accomplishment was placing capsules into outer space designed to control earth's climate and eventually recreating The Garden of Eden in lower Manhattan, on the East side. On a bagel search in Queens NY Shmetna and Don Aldo ran into each other and after a long silence Shmetna said "Nu?" upon which Don Aldo replied "I did it. I didn't do it" Don Aldo was later encountered by Jack the Dragon Slayer who made quick work of the situation.
ReplyDelete@bocamp
ReplyDeletePLEASE DON'T GO!
Posted this hours ago but it nevet showed up...
ReplyDeleteThis theme clanks a little. Since the theme entries are all actual songs, they should be actual POWER BALLADS if you're going to have that as the revealer. Or at least just ballads. BLACK MAGIC (which I just listened to a bIt of) and HIGHER LOVE are medium- to up-tempo. SUPERSTAR and ROCKET MAN don't have the requisite Power Ballad bombast. Power Ballads didn't really come into their own until the 1980's, when Journey and Heart and Foreigner and their ilk starting churning them out.
This one has it all: melodramatic vocal, loud thudding drums, searing guitar solo, stupid video — my candidate for:
the Worst Power Ballad of All Time
I understand but we will all miss your positive vibes @bocamp!
ReplyDeleteVery sorry to hear this, @bocamp.
ReplyDelete@bocamp (12:19) A completely understandable decision but darn it, also one that will be our loss. Priorities often change as time goes by. Whatever yours are, be happy and enjoy! You’ll be missed.
ReplyDeleteIt always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE: in this case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Do not know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ReplyDeleteASCI and OVIS are the kinds of things I would like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your swoles and on totes and give us some real words. But Rex points to a real downside of the Maleska era; the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCI and OVIS were clued over and over for thirty years with essentially identical clues.
@bocamp - I posted a comment to your web site (which was not particularly easy BTW). Hope you get it.
ReplyDeleteThe State Lottery Commission recently aired a new POWERBALLAD.
ReplyDeleteLiked the puzzle.Gotta run!
Neil Young and Crazy Horse wrote Lotta Love, although Nicolette Larson's version made pop radio.
ReplyDeleteOk, I cry uncle!; I'll cough up the do-re-mi and make cuts elsewhere, as per @Roo's directive. π
ReplyDeleteThx to those who posted such caring comments. Much appreciated! π₯°
___
Peace π πΊπ¦ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all π π
π
DeleteBRAVO @bocamp
ReplyDelete@bocamp-
ReplyDeleteYeah!
Well done you.
It always leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied when a theme element is a WoE; in today’s case, both BLACK MAGIC and LOVE POWER. Don’t know the first song, and never heard LOVE POWER as a stand-alone phrase. POLENTA POWER sounds as good.
ReplyDeleteASCl and OVIS are the kinds of things I’d like to see more of in puzzles, not less. Get rid of your swoles and toteses and give us some real words. But Rex’s post points to a real downside of the Maleska era, the lack of variation in cluing. Each of ASCl and OVIS were clued over and over with essentially identical clues
@bocamp 5:44pm - thUmbsUp, to the best news I've heard all day! Thanx for keepin us in yer heart and in yer budget.
ReplyDeleteA xword puzpal,
M&A
@Joe D & @kitchef
ReplyDeleteIt must be Blogger. I haven't trashed any of your comments.
They were marked spam. It’s quite possible you meant to approve and hit spam. Or there was a glitch. No idea. —RP
DeleteYet. π
ReplyDeleteFor me it was a normal Tuesday puzzle with a NE corner taken from a hard Saturday that completely mystified me. Had GRR for forever and that made everything harder. What dog warns by saying ARF??? ERG? I got RAVE and OVEREAT quickly, but the rest was tough.
ReplyDeleteWell, drag out some very old crosswordese! ASCI - whew! It was one I knew I had back in the way way way back dusty stacks. My little librarian had a heck of a time getting close. I finally got ASCI but didn’t trust it because of its similarity to the tech term ASCII which appears with some regularity. Since the downs confirmed its likelihood, I just left it and trusted.
ReplyDeleteSame with OVIS which we don’t see often, as opposed to different form ovine, but what the heck, put in OVIS and hoped for the best.
The remainder of the fill wasn’t too troublesome, but the theme took me a minute to get. Sure, it is a very well used theme type, but when I mentally put POWER with each word in the song titles, not all of the results felt “real” for want of a better word. Bu then, though the puzzle was completed. On to Thursday.
Hey Bo -was gonna start a GuFundMe for you, but you came to your senses.
ReplyDeleteI'd never heard the term ERG either -- until a bit earlier this year when I read an absolutely fantastic novel called "Lessons in Chemistry." Since rowing and the ERG play a central role in the story and since the novel was a major bestseller -- deservedly so -- I'm surprised no one here has mentioned it. I can't recommend the book more highly -- it reads like the wind, I couldn't put it down, and it's wonderfully written as well.
ReplyDeleteAn atom does not have orbits it has orbitals. An orbit is 2 dimensional like an ellipse. An orbital is a 3 dimensional shape. The Bohr model of an atom had orbits, but this is incorrect and was was replaced by a model that assigns a probability for the position of each electron.
ReplyDeleteExcellent debut puzzle so bravo to Gina Turner. At first I thought the gimmick applied only to the first word of the songs. But after re-reading the clue for 38A I see that it applies to both halves of the gimmicks. Too bad. Because the theme worked well for the first half of the song titles but for the second half, not so much. Overetending an already good gimmick is never a good idea.
ReplyDeleteI was a little natick'ed by the RAMONA STEAMER cross.
ReplyDeleteI'd never heard of Ramona Quimby and don't know who Beverly Cleary is (although there's a very vague sense of: "I may have seen that name once in my life").
STEAMER I eventually guessed, but hated the clue. I've never heard the term "steamer clam", although I've cooked many clams by steaming them. Steamer Trunk? Couldn't make any sense out of that. Absolutely no familiarity there with me.
Challenging for a Wednesday, thanks largely to one terrible clue: "Canine warning." A canine warning is GRR, NOT ARF! ARF is friendly! There's no "warning" there! I had GRR inked in there as obvious, and it almost cost me the whole puzzle. The clue is just plain WRONG.
ReplyDeleteASCI and OVIS didn't help either, but at least their crosses were fair. Ms. TOMEI lingers onstage to receive another DOD sash. Par.
Wordle par.
SUNBEAM SIN
ReplyDeleteRAMONA is A SUPERSTAR,
the RAREST TALENT ONE could TEST,
SHE and ROCKETMAN go far,
up there HIGHERLOVE is BEST.
--- RENEE TOMEI
GRR
ReplyDeleteOnce again I agree with @Spacey, and that's why the NE corner was the last to fill. But fill it did. Woof!
But the puzzle was fine - not a dog.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
To anonymous above:
ReplyDeleteSoft-shell clams are called steamers.
Steamer trunks are the big suitcase thingies you see on top of stagecoaches in old Westerns. Also used by passengers on extended voyages on steamships. The big stand up ones are called portmanteaus.
The Universal xword may have been beeter today, but OK. There's MIST in the corners. Wikipedia says that GIA Carangi was the first supermodel, but there are numerous claims to that honor. Yeah baby.
ReplyDeleteWordle par.