"Groom and board" locale / WED 10-18-23 / Unit of doubt, so to speak / Vegetarian's demand / Name seen going down the drain?
Constructor: Joseph Gangi
Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: "Watch me pull a RABBIT out of my hat!" (15D: Visual representation of this puzzle's trick (go to 38-Down) [38D: "Presto!" ("IT'S MAGIC!")] — visual representation is a RABBIT (upside-down) being pulled out of a hat (represented by the black squares at the center of the grid); there's also a whole magician's spiel:
Theme answers:
"FOR THE FIRST TIME!" (17A: "Ladies and gentlemen, you are about to witness something extraordinary that has never been seen or attempted before!" (go to 34-Down))
"BE AMAZED!" (34D: "You will experience a great and unexpected surprise!" (go to 48-Across))
"ABRACADABRA!" (48A: "The spell is cast! Don't blink or you'll miss it!" (go to 15-Down))
Word of the Day: Patrick EWING (36A: Patrick on the 1992 Dream Team) —
Patrick Aloysius Ewing Sr. (born August 5, 1962) is a Jamaican-American basketball coach and former professional player who last coached for the Georgetown University men's team. He played most of his career as the starting center for the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association (NBA) before ending his playing career with brief stints with the Seattle SuperSonics and Orlando Magic. Ewing is regarded as one of the greatest centers of all time, playing a dominant role in the New York Knicks 1990s success.
Highly recruited out of Cambridge, Massachusetts, Ewing played center for Georgetown for four years—in three of which the team reached the NCAA Championship Game. ESPN in 2008 designated him the 16th-greatest college basketball player of all time. He had a seventeen-year NBA career, predominantly playing for the New York Knicks, where he was an eleven-time all-star and named to seven All-NBA teams. The Knicks appeared in the NBA Finals twice (1994 and 1999) during his tenure. He won Olympic gold medals as a member of the 1984 and 1992 United States men's Olympic basketball teams. Ewing was selected as one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996 and as one of the 75 Greatest Players in NBA History in 2021. He is a two-time inductee into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts (in 2008 for his individual career and in 2010 as a member of the 1992 Olympic team). Additionally he was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame as a member of the "Dream Team" in 2009. His number 33 was retired by the Knicks in 2003. (wikipedia)
• • •
The visual gag here is great, but the patter is All Wrong, starting from the awkward first claim: "FOR THE FIRST TIME!" That phrase does not stand alone well at all. It does not lead well into the other phrases. And it is an absurdly hyperbolic claim for what ends up being the most hackneyed trick in the book. Again, I *love* the trick as it is represented in the grid—the upside-down TIBBAR, mwah, nice—but the magician talk here is just clutter. Nobody would say These things, in This order, before pulling a mere rabbit out of a hat, let alone follow it up with the completely unnecessary explanation, "IT'S MAGIC!" Everything that sits dead center in this grid—the TIBBAR, the hat, "ABRACADABRA!"—that all works great. Tight, neat, perfect. The rest, blargh. Also, blargh to the theme clues *telling* me where to go next. "Go here, go there!" No, I will not. That is not how I solve crossword puzzles. You go here and there. I'm gonna solve my own way and check the theme out on my own time, thanks. And to boss me around like that for a bunch of weak-ass cliché magician talk. No. Shoulda kept your mouth shut and done the trick with the one flourish: "ABRACADABRA!" That bit is solid. If you want to go on and on, you could at least do some more tricks. Guess my card or saw a LA/DY in half or something.
The grid is fairly thematically demanding, so I should probably give the weak fill a break. ANI ARIANA ASANA is everyday stuff, but somehow, heaped in one corner, with an IDEATE on top, it felt lazy. UnTIDY. And REDEAR, wtf is that? I'll tell you what it is, it's something you learned about while constructing, because it has very favorable letters and some constructor had used it before and it fit in that space so sure, Presto! RED EAR! Then there's ILLER ALIA, which is also not good. Great sophomore album title, if you're a rapper named ALIA, but otherwise, nah. But I think the grid holds up OK, and as I say, the theme is overwhelmingly The Thing today, so the grid just has to stand there and not fall over. The SW and SE corners probably could've been a lot brighter if they hadn't had those implausible and purely decorative theme answers in them. But you get what you get.
The cluing irked me a bunch, especially around biblical issues. First of all, the clue on PARTED (3D: Like some hair and seas). I'm no bible-ologist, or sea-ologist, but what are these seas, plural, that are being PARTED, besides the obvious (i.e. the Red)? Is "part the seas" a general metaphor for sailing? That clue felt very forced, as did the clue on BIBLE (32A: Kind of belt). Something about it feels cheap. Is this kind of "belt" really its own category? [checks internet] Oh ... OK, wow, I spoke too soon. Or rather, I asked the right question, one I was *not* prepared for the answer to. I could've told you there's a Bible Belt, Rust Belt, Sun Belt ... at that point, I'm pretty much out of belts. But it turns out there are so many more belts. So Many. I have to believe some of these are just alleged or regional, but my god, there's a Jell-O Belt around Utah (also known as the Mormon Belt), and a Pretzel Belt in Pennsylvania, and a Stroke Belt in the southeast, where apparently there is an unusually high incidence of cardiovascular disease, and on and on. So I take it back. There's a whole damn menu of belts. Their "B"s are all capitalized, but I guess as a general category, "belt" wouldn't be, so the uncapitalized "belt" in the clue is fine.. Alrighty, then. Blog and learn!
Hardest thing for me today was parsing PETSPA (45A: "Groom and board" locale). Pets!? That was not my first frame of reference for "groom." Thought this clue had something to do with your fiancé still living at home with his mother. I was like "there's a term for that?" But no, there isn't. There should be, but there isn't. See you tomorrow.
Easy side of Medium for a Wednesday. 15D, TIBBAR, was the only thing that gave me pause was TIBBAR, which made no sense at first and caused me to check all the crosses. "It was E.B. White who wrote 'Charlotte's Web', right?" I got the SPA part of 45A right away, but I wanted daySPA before I read the clue.
So many belts! I grew up in the Bible Belt, lived for a while in the Unchurched Belt (there’s a story), and now live in the Banana Belt of Vermont, which is merely the part of the state with marginally milder winters.
Ditto Rex on clues that try to coerce your movement through the grid. Cue “My Way.”
Otherwise, a very pleasing Wednesday offering. Thanks, Mr. Gangi!
Am I the only idiot who filled in “Tib Bar” and had a moment thinking this puzzle was an ode to the dude who invented $129 strength and conditioning equipment?
It seemed like they started out with the idea for the visual with the hat graphic and the rabbit but just couldn’t come up with a theme that worked and is coherent. I definitely agree with OFL that the themers just fall flat and lack any cohesiveness. This one should be playing triple-A ball until it can hone its skills until it is ready for a big league at bat. It had potential, but just not yet ready for prime time.
I don’t believe I have ever heard or seen the word (or phrase) NOMNOM - is it a regional thing (or maybe it’s a foreign phrase?). Doesn’t sound French (to my untrained ear at least) - maybe one of our Canadian friends would like to claim ownership?
@SouthsideJohnny - 6:49 AM I've been mystified by "nom nom" for years, but thanks to this puzzle, I now get it. I entered NUMMIE at first, which in my experience has sometimes been cutesy-poo for "yummy." But then crosses indicated in was NOM NOM, and the big lightbulb went off over my cartoon head. "Oh, so *that's* what nom nom means!"
I am too old to have watched Sesame Street, but the common pronunciation is "numb" and, I suspect that the cookie monster or whatever just pronounces it
Regarding the magician’s patter, they all talk like that. Having watched a lot of Penn and Teller Fool Us while recovering from covid, I can attest that it’s true.
I would say that this adds another dimension to the term "stunt puzzle", but that would be a tad groanworthy, so I won't, except now it's too late.
Noticed what was going on with Mr. TIBBAR which led me to see the hat, har! Agree with OFL that the patter part of the puzz sounded clunky. I have never heard anyone say ILLER but I suppose it's technically correct, and I should know DESI by now as something other than Sr. Arnaz's first name, but it always takes a while. Thanks to @Anon 7:08 for the explanation of NOMNOM. It may already be old school but it's news to me. Sounded like annoying baby talk, but so does "delish!".
Nice enough Wednesday, JG. Just Good enough to get by, and agree with @Souothside that this was more of a pop up than a line drive, but thanks for a fair amount of fun.
This is Joseph’s second NYT puzzle, and his first forever won me over. Do you want to feel happy all day? Look at this image of his 3/16/22 puzzle: https://www.nytimes.com/crosswords/game/daily/2022/03/16 .
I like how RAISE echoes the lifting-the-rabbit theme, how NOM EAT echoes NOM NOM, and how KNOT can echo the abutting ASANA. I also like how the top row (RIP / AHI / FEE / ANI) is a rhyming (if meaningless) poem.
Seeing REFUSE reminds me of how I, who adore language quirks, love heteronyms, word pairs spelled the same but which have different pronunciations and meanings. Words like minute, buffet, desert, axes, moderate, wound, entrance, and putting.
Lovely sing-song quality to 48A backwards: ARBA DA CARBA.
The fill-in went faster than usual – Presto! – for me today, but gazing at the grid afterward and having these serendipities pop out brought great pleasure, Joseph. Thank you for a lilting feel-good outing!
Yeah, some creaky fill but nothing I can’t overlook in service of a lovely theme. Had a brain fart on the Charlotte’s Web monogram - I guess I mixed e. e. Cummings and E. B. White and came up with EeW. That made 15D a TIe BAR, which made no sense but I figured maybe it would become clear later.
A sweet, happy puzzle that reminds me of the magic show my son put together for his sister and me one summer when he was five. Top hat, Abracadabra and whatever stuffed animal he pulled out of it.
This isn't the first Nom we've seen. Cookie Monster (Sesame Street) says it when he tears into a cookie, and eventually it became a wider thing. Politically, the Bible Belt is extremely important belt but the term hasn't been used much lately. Think Mississippi, Georgia, the Carolinas, etc. Look it up. Things like the Pretzel Belt are essentially meaningless to the wider world.
The most fun was when I figured out that the magician wasn't pulling a Tie Bar out the hat. Wanted the Miller to produce flour and the Oneida to be Druids. The crosses killed those urges.
Dutiful solver that I am, from the clue at 17A I read the chain of "Go here next" clues until I reached the one for 15D, about the visual representation. Presto! Assisted by the T of CONTORT, I wrote in the rest of the upside-down RABBIT emerging from the hat. The magician patter phrases had to wait for crosses. Very cute. I'm trying to decide if the parentheses shapes of the black squares above the hat are bunny ears.
Do-overs: tax before FEE, NuM-NuM. Thought about it: BEAM me up - Star Trek meets magic? ABRACADABRA saved me there.
TIBBAR / EBW. Wow. Another puzzle down to one single square and the meaning of the puzzle hanging in the balance. It's been an interesting couple of days.
IDEATE is horrible and ILLER is beyond horrible. And we're all clear it's the meat 'n' murder lovers who are the demanding ones, right?
I might have a wee crush on ARIANA. Whenever I see her, IT'S MAGIC.
Uniclues:
1 Patrick, thou shalt dunk. 2 One dressed as a fork. 3 🙄 4 Nickname for pyromaniac bivalve mollusk. 5 Feature of Lucille Ball.
Med (took forever to get TIBBAR; didn't know EBW, or at least the 'B' part).
I usually don't pay attention to the black squares, but finally noticing the upside down hat did the trick. 🎩
Otherwise, pretty much on the right wavelength all the way.
Was an avid 'foosballer' back in the day.
Liked this one a lot! :) ___
K.A.C's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 NYT Sat.). Only scary part was 33A, which needed all the crosses. ___ Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
I saw the upside down TIBBAR and immediately visualized a rabbit being pulled out of the hat by its cottontail, like a leporine breech delivery. Now I can’t erase this cruel image from my mind!
Someone explain to me why the rabbit is upside-down? Magicians traditionally pull rabbits out of hats right side up. Is the joke that he messed up, or that he’s doing something novel, or what?
Not who you responded to, but I still don't see it. The rabbit is pulled up out of the hat by the ears... visually the rabbit is right side up above the top hat...
Hey All ! Welp, unsure how to feel about this puz. I thought Rex would thoroughly stomp on this until it was just a speck of REFUSE. But he liked one part, didn't like the rest.
When I first saw the grid, I thought it was rather funky looking, with what looks like a T-shirt in the center. Once I started getting the "magic" phrases, I knew it was a HAT, and that a RABBIT would be coming out of it. However, my RABBIT wasn't working. "What comes out of a magician's HAT that starts with T?" says I. Stupidly, it took me until having TIB_AR to finally see it. I actually had a thought it might be a TIE BAR, whatever that is. "Who pulls a TIE BAR out of a HAT?" Har, silly brain.
RABBITs come out of HATs ears first, ergo upright, no? You don't pull one out feet first. So to me, the TIBBAR is weird. Or is it because ITS MAGIC?
Has anyone, ever, said "NOMNOM!" after eating something? Is a TIBBAR a real thing, or is simply "rabbit" spelled backward? Are we supposed to turn the puzzle upside-down to realize the rabbit effect?
Very confusing puzzle, quite easy in places but not in the top half.
Had yuMYum, then settled on NuMNum, paying no attention to the RuD and KNuT crosses. Thought my problem was TIBBAR, maybe they wanted TImBAR or TIeBAR? Maybe it was EE White after all!
Eventually achieved the right guesses but still had no idea about a TIBBAR. Googled it to find a metal bar exercise piece. Came here and learned of the backwards bunny.
Thought this was fresh and fun - NOMNOM!
Liked clues for EDDY and BIBLE, TL/DR is one texting set of initials I actually know and even - God help me - knew Rex would TSK TSK (or is it TUT TUT) at using the plural for PARTED seas. Neither the puzzle nor Rex would disappoint!
When FOR THE FIRST TIME ever I went to a crossword blog, I was surely as baffled as I was just now by today's NE corner. It must have, back then, also been something I had to know that very minute -- something I could not possibly wait until the next day to find out.
So I *knew* that the football apparatus was paD. But I also knew that ARIANA Grande was not APIANA Grande. And I *knew* that none of the R-things: RAD, ROD, RED, RUD, RYD was a football apparatus.
I certainly didn't know the Skywalker nickname nor the "so delish" expression.
What did I do? I left it unsolved and came here.
And now my indignation. I watch a lot of football and I'm sure I have never seen hide nor hair of a ROD. And I've heard of YUM YUM, but what in the name of everything holy is NOM NOM???? If I cooked a delish meal for you* and you said NOM NOM to me, I'd yank away your plate and kick you out of the house.
Oh, yes -- the upside-down RABBIT part of the puzzle. I liked it and I actually saw it. I even noticed the upside-down hat! BE AMAZED, all who know observationally-challenged me.
Clever cluing made this puzzle very enjoyable. A nice Wednesday.
Fussball is the original (German) name which means soccer. I guess foosball is a common spelling in the US. (Autocorrect doesn’t like it) I remember being in Europe in the early’70’s and Fussball was already widely popular there yet I had never seen it before.
Happy World Okapi Day! (Not "RABBIT," but Okapis are endangered, RABBITs not so much.)
I'd like to echo the points made by @alexscott68 and @Rob. The reversed TIBBAR bothered me as soon as I filled it in. RABBITS emerge from hats right-side up, usually held by the scruff of the neck. One of the stranger editing fails?
Easy side of medium. Briefly confused by EBW - remembering Charlotte weaving *words* into her web... wondering if she... signed one of them, and I forgot? After all, it's been a minute. Then, click! Also, like @Rex, I don't go here and there when the clues tell me to!
took me far too long to figure out what a TIBBAR was - I thought it was some kind of bar graph at first. Real AHA moment for me. BUT ILLER??? cmon, thats not a word. And NOMNOM? thats not a thing either. I googled it and seems like it is some kind of pet food. I was trying to some how make yuMyuM work. Someone above said it was some kind of internet-speak. Well this made-up crap that random posters throw out there shouldn’t be in the puzzle. “Groom and Board locale” at first I was thinking groom as in someone getting married. mEnSPA? Anyhow, good puzzle outside of ILLER and NOMNOM... cringe.
Couldn't remember E.B White's middle initial, so the upside-down TIBBAR was the last to fall for me, which probably soured my take on this as a whole. Always funny to see what is easy for some vs. others: PETSPA came right away with maybe one cross, as did NOMNOM.
Penn & Teller had a bit a few years ago, noting that pulling a rabbit out of a hat, for all that it's a cliche, is not actually a magic trick that any magician past or present was known to do. They then proceeded to actually do a version which is pretty nifty. If you watch it more than once, you can clearly see how it's done, but that almost makes it more impressive (at least to me).
Give the puzzle credit for its self-awareness! All that build-up for literally the oldest trick in the book is exactly the point — a send-up of an over-the-top magician (or perhaps of over-the-top puzzle gimmicks). And yet done in such a way that the “mundane” trick still gets an aha out of the solver. I found the grid easy-ish overall (REDEAR and REORDER briefly tripped me up). But the TIBBAR reveal was a delight.
Medium? C’mon! Very, very easy. Tuna type, James of Jazz, Grande of pop, yoga posture, relating to city life, drum type, etc. Typical everyday crosswordese. Rabbit (tibbar) filled itself. Abracadabra was the only word after two letters of crosses.
I might have enjoyed it more if it didn’t seem very familiar. The magic theme has been done before.
I could criticize ONEIDA, but that would be hitting below the belt.
Sneering Villain: So what are wearing under your shirt, Missy? Heroine: ABRA,CAD,ABRA
I liked Hell of a Poem" as a clue for INFERNO. I can almost hear W saying "Hell of a Poem, Dantie" if Dante had been his Poet Laureate.
@Nancy. By the time my comment appears you may already have learned from others some of the key differences between football and foosball. If not, try Google.
I'm with @Rex all the way on this. No way was I chasing around the grid per instructions until I finished. But it was a different sort of puzzle, and I like different. Thanks, Joseph Gangi
I love love loved this puzzle. It was "whoosh whoosh" easy, as y'all like to say, but it was witty and very emotionally satisfying. That's the perfect combination in my book. I do not look at crosswords in terms of easy-medium-difficult; rather, I look at them in terms of witty and satisfying versus stupid and boring.
I have never cared for lookee lookee themes which tell me to go from one clue to another; this was no exception. And the grid art? I could see what appeared to be a hat but what also looks like a fat “T” so my first answer at 15D was TEE BAR which didn’t make much sense but it was early. Then when I got the “I” in 17A, I thought maybe those four black blocks on each side were supposed to indicate TIE BARS which were once popular, and the center was a necktie. So because my upside down 15 Down read RABEIT, the RABBIT never made an appearance. Which worked out well since I didn’t have a hat either.
The problem is a proper name/monogram right smack in the middle of it. Charlotte‘s Web is pretty commonly known but it’s not at all obvious to me what a monogram would entail. Would that be the author (unknown to me)? Or would it be something to do with the story? I was so curious that I googled it and all I got was a list of answers to this crossword clue. Oh, and a monogramming store in Chattanooga. I get that not much else would work - ABA was all I could think of - but it might’ve made the trick more obvious.
ok, sooo … this magic trick is bein attempted FORTHEFIRSTIME, in the sense that the RABBIT is bein pulled out of the hat backwards? Kinda neat that the TIBBAR was accompanied by FORWARD, CONTORT, and REORDER, then.
staff weeject pick: EBW. Stands, in this case, for EXTRACTBUNNYWRONGLY.
Nice E/W puzgrid symmetry, to build the top hat.
fave other thing: TLDR. [I reckon that means Too Long Didn't Read, or somesuch.] Was an apt theme add-on, in honor of some of them longer-than-snot themer clues.
Thanx, Mr. Gangi dude. A tricky solvequest that was pretty easy ... forthefirsttime.
The puzzle was a “just okay” in my book for solving purposes but I give the constructor credit for the bright idea. Yes, I can see how one would struggle with the NE if they misread “foosball” and saw “football” (hi @Nancy) and had never had the “pleasure” of sitting with tots watching Sesame Street (hi @Southside). We used to have a foosball table in our basement. I reluctantly put in ROD cuz I couldn’t wrap my brain around why it is “apparatus” other than the fact that the balls are the only thing really “separate” from the table. Ah well.
Seems like the term PETSPA has really become a “thing.” Some “big box” pet supply stores offer both boarding AND grooming but I’d hardly call them “spa like.” I mean, do people really think that their pets would call boarding and grooming SPA DAY? Our recently departed dear pup always looked quite perky and happy (with her complimentary kerchief) when I picked her up, but I don’t think she probably felt that way when getting shampooed, combed out, and clipped while held tight in a harness. Also, I don’t think they ever put cucumber slices over her eyes during this process.
Honestly expected a complete pan... and this was one of the relatively rare times I would have agreed. Pretty atrocious cluing, overly strained fill, and tiny 1-square chokepoints, all for a hackneyed theme.
I very rarely DNF, even more rarely on a Wednesday, but I got down to one remaining square, the first B in TIBBAR, and just couldn't care enough to run the alphabet to learn what new word I didn't know. Rabbits do not come out of hats upside down... maybe this is a bad or very new magician fumbling through his first performance. But if that's the actual intent, it makes the theme even more hackneyed IMO.
That said, NOMNOM is very much a thing. It's primarily meme-speak, but non-internet-natives pretending that doesn't exist is like me pretending 60s pop stars or "famous" NYC delis don't exist.
I liked the silliness of this thing. Having the "magical" phrases strewn around the grid with directional arrows was cheerfully goofy. FOR THE FIRST TIME seems a bit anachronistic but the rest is fine with me.
I liked the puzzle... but the biggest issue here is that the rabbit is never pulled out of the hat upside-down. Google "pull rabbit from hat" and check every image that comes up. Upright rabbit. Never a TIBBAR being hauled up by its haunches.
Like @Nancy, I had not noticed until coming here that the clue said 'foosball,' not 'football.' I had rationalized that the apparatus in question consisted of two RODs connected by a 10-yard chain, but I think those are actually called 'poles.'
Am I the only one who noticed that the top hat in the grid is framed by Fred ASTAIRE, clued by the eponymous movie, on the left, and APPAREL clued by a description of the outfit with which one would wear a top hat on the right? I thought that was the best thing in the puzzle.
The worst thing in the puzzle was that we were directed very precisely to the theme clues in a particular order, but there was no logic to the order; except for the final TIBBAR, you could say them in any order you like.
Incidentally, for those asking, a TIe BAR is the same as a tie clip -- i.e., a clip on bar that holds the two ends of the tie together. I think they've gone out of style.
REDEAR is a wheelhouse thing; pretty well-known among anglers, which I guess Rex is not.
For those incensed by the topsy-turvy rabbit, the visual is supposed to suggest the rabbit being pulled upward, i.e. it starts inside the hat and then ends up outside of it. It's not that it's coming out feet first.
No magic. Much ILLER than necessary. Now, I RIP a piece off the paper I printed the puzzle on and use it to grab the stink bug that just landed on my NAPE. Eww!
From my daily Chirpbooks email: 'Putting the Rabbit in the Hat' by Brian Cox. Checked out the audiobook at my library.
"The incredible rags-to-riches story of acclaimed actor Brian Cox, best known as Succession’s Logan Roy, from a troubled, working-class upbringing in Scotland to a prolific career across theatre, film and television." (Goodreads) ___ Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
My favorite use of the word "ILLER" occurred in the 1946 film version of W. Somerset Maugham's "The Razor's Edge," directed by Edmund Goulding (don't bother with the ridiculous 1984 remake, starring a badly miscast Bill Murray). Near the end of the film, American expat socialite Elliott Templeton (Clifton Webb in one of his best performances), in bed and gravely ill from a heart condition, cries bitter tears and complains for 10 minutes about not being invited to a soirée being given by another American expat socialite whom Elliott helped introduce to European high society and whom he insulted (he revealed that she was carrying on with her chauffeur). Maugham (Herbert Marshall), calms Elliott and tells him "I'm afraid you're much ILLER than you realize." Elliott immediately calms down and says "Do you mean I'm going to die?" He then placidly begins planning for his imminent demise, calling for the priest to give him last rites, etc. Elliott cries and whines like a baby at length about being snubbed at an invitation for a party, but takes the news of his impending death with equanimity and courage. Great scene. If only they made movies like that now.
Yes, a great movie. Greatest cast ever in an American film. Doesn’t he want Maugham to send an RSVP: “I have an appointment with my Maker.”” The remake was a terrible attempt at a drama.
Probably from being new to this, but here's another puzzle where the theme was great and came together for me right away, but then I got done in by a random section. Today it was the center-west bit.
Rust Belt actually crossed my mind, how I blanked on its possibly more famous sibling already having "BL" I have no idea. My mind would not stop saying TABLE. Like a belt for a table saw? I don't know.
Then INTO seemed way too simple for that spot. And finally, BOSN. I am familiar with the term boatswain, but have never seen it shortened to BOSN, which is apparently common, from a quick google search. Oh well. Overall quite fun.
@JD You're in for a treat. Tyrone Power as Larry Darrell, WWI veteran and spiritual seeker, is the protagonist; the cast also includes Gene Tierney, beautiful and alluring as always as the scheming Isabel; Lucille Watson as Isabel's good-humored mother (and Elliott's much more down-to-earth sister); John Payne as the good-natured but emotionally fragile Gray; Elsa ("Bride of Frankenstein"/Mrs. Charles Laughton) Lanchester as an old Scottish pal of Larry; and Anne Baxter, in a performance that won her the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, as the hard-luck, ill (iller?)-starred Sophie. An unbeatable cast. Tierney and Webb had of course appeared together in the noir classic "Laura" two years earlier, directed by Otto Preminger.
@jberg 11:21, thanks for that timely aperçu viz. ASTAIRE and APPAREL flanking the top hat.
@Joe D 11:22, my incensedness is more of a smolder than an INFERNO but no matter how I IDEATE about it, that TIBBAR is upside down. It's coming out of the hat feet FORWARD. By the way, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) conscious magicians pull their RABBITs out of hats by the NAPE of the neck, not by the ears.
There's a mini NOM NOM theme lurking in the grid, what with the likes of AHI, SEED, ONEIDA (tableware and cutlery), NO MEAT, LITE BEER, CLAM and KIWI (the fruit).
Today's clues seem to be extra misleading. "Rent in the garment district": all I could think of was the play Rent, which might be... Off Broadway? "Unit of doubt"... say what? "Name going down a drain": looking at E--Y it had to be either EBAY or ETSY which was... going bankrupt?
In non puzzle news, the baseball playoffs are boring. I would really like to see some close games, not like last night's blowout.
FOR THE FIRST TIME ever I saw your face.....you pull a TIBBAR from a hat. ITS MAGIC . Now I want to sing. ARIANA NOM NOM could perhaps do the honors. I want to seriously IDEATE with ILLER. I read it as football as well. Where does ROD come in. A device I do not see. R.I.P. Interesting visual puzzle. It didn't give me heart palpitations, but... it's hump day. Who invented the word ABRA CADABRA and why? Just curious.
When I was a kid there were two rods with a ten yard length of chain to determine when a new first down was achieved! Dunno how it's done today!! Numnum!!
ghostofelectricity, Wow! The Razor's Edge is an awful bore. Goulding and Zanuck botched the material very badly. They removed nearly all the religious aspect of Darrell's search and all the audience is left with is vague drivel. And of course, Power is too old for the role. One last opinion, besides the hospital scene which Baxter herself considered the best work she ever did, her performance in All About Eve is far superior. Academy Award be damned. Glad it tickles your fancy. One note--fact not opinion--the wedding gown Tierney wears was the actual wedding gown her husband--the designer Oleg Cassini--made for her. But they eloped and the film is the only time she wore it.
Anon 1:05, Not even close. Off the top of my head the ensemble cast of Murder on the Orient Express smokes it: Albert Finney, Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Bacall, Sean Connery, Vanessa Redgrave, John Gielgud, Wendy Hiller, Richard Widmark, Martin Balsam.
A lot more Academy awards ( and noms, not nom noms) than Razor's Edge.
People, people, it's fooSball, not fooTball Foosball Tables are standalone games that have RODs (about 8-10?) that have the heads and torsos of players (they resemble Lego people) attached to those RODs, wherein you slide them back and forth whilst spinning them to get the figures to "kick" the ball into your opponent "net" (a hole in the table at the end). Nothing to do with football, more like a soccer table game.
@Roo…today was the GREAT “misread the clue” day. Hahaha…I’m thankful I didn’t misread AND had a foosball table!
I don’t know if I said it before (and I really don’t know secret of rabbit/hat trick) but doesn’t it seem cruel to lift ANY animal by its ears!? I NOW would like to think that there was an invisible hand lifting up the rabbit’s behind until the magician could GRAB the behind…
@dgd-You struck a chord. I was in Spain in the late 60's and some kids asked me if I liked foosball, and since I played college soccer I tried to explain how great futbol is but that wasn't it. Had never seen the table version before.
Played like a Monday. Matched my best Wednesday time ever. In other words, I found this very, very, easy despite the only OK fill. Not a single fun in the language answer like hate reading. Also, I like grid art … way less than the NYT puzzle editors seem to. In 90% or grid art cases, all it means is that the “cleverness” is in designing the grid, and not in the cluing, or theme, or answers. And I maintain that clever grids may be a fun challenge for creators, but rarely improve the solving experience.
"Foosball … arrived on American shores thanks to Lawrence Patterson, who was stationed in West Germany with the U.S. military in the early 1960s. Seeing that table football was very popular in Europe, Patterson seized the opportunity and contracted a manufacturer in Bavaria to construct a machine to his specification to export to the US. The first table landed on American soil in 1962, and Patterson immediately trademarked the name “Foosball” in America and Canada, giving the name “Foosball Match” to his table." (Smithsonian Magazine)
My FOOSBALL experience started in Portland, OR in '66 and ended in Munich, 69'. ___ Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Whoa!!! I was on some other plane tonight because I got so confused. But I promise if you read this you will laugh (or possibly never read another word I write).
Actually, I think I regressed back to the concrete-operational stage of development. I wanted the “top hat” of the grid to be “the trick” referenced at 15D. When my answers gave me TIBBAR without any solving difficulty, I just went on about my business and finished the puzzle and received my happy music. What the beck was all the “magician spiel” stuff in this puzzle if the “top hat” is really the frequently seen T-Bar of crossword fame? I actually just shrugged my shoulders and thought, “Ok, I guess the trick is that we expected a magic theme and it “magically turned into a construction site? It gets worse. I was so certain I’d been “had” for expecting a rabbit and getting some construction material that I went back and talked myself into ‘TIBBAR’ being some truly “alternate” (probably as in alternate universe) spelling of T-Bar to force that square peg into the round top hat. I really decided this was “it” folks. Really. No. Really, really.
I did out the dang thing down in disgust thinking the constructor had gone way, way, way too far and planned to say so in my post. My betted self told me to wait and look at the grid again. So I did - several meetings and din er time for my cat and me later.
On the late examination did I get RABBIT? I’d love to say yes, but I did vet “a” rabbit. I stared and stared at the grid and decided that the black squares right before 21, 24 and 28, and before 22, 26, and 29 kind of made a curved shape that if I squinted, looked sort of like rabbit ears. Yep, there’s my ears for the top hat.
Did I go farther to explain the mysterious TIBBAR? Nope. I decided to come here and learn a new word. Nope. I got embarrassed big time! I still can’t believe it. After doing this puzzle for 60 years, I cannot recall a day when I so completely muffed it - especially on a day when the answers weren’t that tough! I’m chalking it up to fatigue. Going to get some extra 😴 tonight.
There are two words in this grid that I am really tired of seeing, because they don't exist outside of crossword grids. One is IDEATE and the other is ILLER. Stop with these, please.
I visualize an eight-year-old with his first magic kit, putting on a show for Mom and Dad. In that sense, I guess it's cute, but for putting up with junk fill...nah. Bogey.
The magician pulled the rabbit out of the hat hindquarters first, because it was his last show of the evening, and the rabbit's ears were hurting . 🐰 See how red they are?!
Meh at best. The top and bottom are hardly connected, even though not necessary. Save the funny stuff for Thursdays, if they must appear at all. Wordle par.
ReplyDeleteEasy side of Medium for a Wednesday. 15D, TIBBAR, was the only thing that gave me pause was TIBBAR, which made no sense at first and caused me to check all the crosses. "It was E.B. White who wrote 'Charlotte's Web', right?" I got the SPA part of 45A right away, but I wanted daySPA before I read the clue.
So many belts! I grew up in the Bible Belt, lived for a while in the Unchurched Belt (there’s a story), and now live in the Banana Belt of Vermont, which is merely the part of the state with marginally milder winters.
ReplyDeleteDitto Rex on clues that try to coerce your movement through the grid. Cue “My Way.”
Otherwise, a very pleasing Wednesday offering. Thanks, Mr. Gangi!
Am I the only idiot who filled in “Tib Bar” and had a moment thinking this puzzle was an ode to the dude who invented $129 strength and conditioning equipment?
ReplyDeleteNo you’re not! Tie bar made sense to me - doh!
DeleteI also loved the upside-down rabbit! Nice aha moment when I realized it had to be flipped.
ReplyDeleteIt seemed like they started out with the idea for the visual with the hat graphic and the rabbit but just couldn’t come up with a theme that worked and is coherent. I definitely agree with OFL that the themers just fall flat and lack any cohesiveness. This one should be playing triple-A ball until it can hone its skills until it is ready for a big league at bat. It had potential, but just not yet ready for prime time.
ReplyDeleteI don’t believe I have ever heard or seen the word (or phrase) NOMNOM - is it a regional thing (or maybe it’s a foreign phrase?). Doesn’t sound French (to my untrained ear at least) - maybe one of our Canadian friends would like to claim ownership?
Cookie Monster
Delete@SouthsideJohnny - 6:49 AM I've been mystified by "nom nom" for years, but thanks to this puzzle, I now get it. I entered NUMMIE at first, which in my experience has sometimes been cutesy-poo for "yummy." But then crosses indicated in was NOM NOM, and the big lightbulb went off over my cartoon head. "Oh, so *that's* what nom nom means!"
DeleteI am too old to have watched Sesame Street, but the common pronunciation is "numb" and, I suspect that the cookie monster or whatever just pronounces it
DeleteRegarding the magician’s patter, they all talk like that. Having watched a lot of Penn and Teller Fool Us while recovering from covid, I can attest that it’s true.
ReplyDeleteNOMNOM is from old school (now) internet-speak along the lines of “I can haz cheeseburger” and other early netizen memes.
ReplyDeleteILLER: wow
ReplyDeleteNot so sure the MAGIC dynamic was worth the strained overall fill. Not a NOM NOM for me.
ReplyDeleteSummer, summer, summer
I would say that this adds another dimension to the term "stunt puzzle", but that would be a tad groanworthy, so I won't, except now it's too late.
ReplyDeleteNoticed what was going on with Mr. TIBBAR which led me to see the hat, har! Agree with OFL that the patter part of the puzz sounded clunky. I have never heard anyone say ILLER but I suppose it's technically correct, and I should know DESI by now as something other than Sr. Arnaz's first name, but it always takes a while. Thanks to @Anon 7:08 for the explanation of NOMNOM. It may already be old school but it's news to me. Sounded like annoying baby talk, but so does "delish!".
Nice enough Wednesday, JG. Just Good enough to get by, and agree with @Souothside that this was more of a pop up than a line drive, but thanks for a fair amount of fun.
This is Joseph’s second NYT puzzle, and his first forever won me over. Do you want to feel happy all day? Look at this image of his 3/16/22 puzzle: https://www.nytimes.com/crosswords/game/daily/2022/03/16 .
ReplyDeleteI like how RAISE echoes the lifting-the-rabbit theme, how NOM EAT echoes NOM NOM, and how KNOT can echo the abutting ASANA. I also like how the top row (RIP / AHI / FEE / ANI) is a rhyming (if meaningless) poem.
Seeing REFUSE reminds me of how I, who adore language quirks, love heteronyms, word pairs spelled the same but which have different pronunciations and meanings. Words like minute, buffet, desert, axes, moderate, wound, entrance, and putting.
Lovely sing-song quality to 48A backwards: ARBA DA CARBA.
The fill-in went faster than usual – Presto! – for me today, but gazing at the grid afterward and having these serendipities pop out brought great pleasure, Joseph. Thank you for a lilting feel-good outing!
Yeah, some creaky fill but nothing I can’t overlook in service of a lovely theme. Had a brain fart on the Charlotte’s Web monogram - I guess I mixed e. e. Cummings and E. B. White and came up with EeW. That made 15D a TIe BAR, which made no sense but I figured maybe it would become clear later.
ReplyDeleteThank goodness for @Rex because I had no clue what the TIBBAR clue was supposed to be.
ReplyDeleteA sweet, happy puzzle that reminds me of the magic show my son put together for his sister and me one summer when he was five. Top hat, Abracadabra and whatever stuffed animal he pulled out of it.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't the first Nom we've seen. Cookie Monster (Sesame Street) says it when he tears into a cookie, and eventually it became a wider thing. Politically, the Bible Belt is extremely important belt but the term hasn't been used much lately. Think Mississippi, Georgia, the Carolinas, etc. Look it up. Things like the Pretzel Belt are essentially meaningless to the wider world.
The most fun was when I figured out that the magician wasn't pulling a Tie Bar out the hat. Wanted the Miller to produce flour and the Oneida to be Druids. The crosses killed those urges.
Clever Monday puzzle.
ReplyDeleteDutiful solver that I am, from the clue at 17A I read the chain of "Go here next" clues until I reached the one for 15D, about the visual representation. Presto! Assisted by the T of CONTORT, I wrote in the rest of the upside-down RABBIT emerging from the hat. The magician patter phrases had to wait for crosses. Very cute. I'm trying to decide if the parentheses shapes of the black squares above the hat are bunny ears.
ReplyDeleteDo-overs: tax before FEE, NuM-NuM. Thought about it: BEAM me up - Star Trek meets magic? ABRACADABRA saved me there.
TIBBAR / EBW. Wow. Another puzzle down to one single square and the meaning of the puzzle hanging in the balance. It's been an interesting couple of days.
ReplyDeleteIDEATE is horrible and ILLER is beyond horrible. And we're all clear it's the meat 'n' murder lovers who are the demanding ones, right?
I might have a wee crush on ARIANA. Whenever I see her, IT'S MAGIC.
Uniclues:
1 Patrick, thou shalt dunk.
2 One dressed as a fork.
3 🙄
4 Nickname for pyromaniac bivalve mollusk.
5 Feature of Lucille Ball.
1 EWING BIBLE (~)
2 ONEIDA AVATAR
3 TL;DR EMAIL ICON
4 INFERNO CLAM
5 DESI FORWARD (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Every male baby boomer according to every male baby boomer. GO BALD GOD.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Thx, Joseph; cool MAGIC puz; very clever! 😋
ReplyDeleteMed (took forever to get TIBBAR; didn't know EBW, or at least the 'B' part).
I usually don't pay attention to the black squares, but finally noticing the upside down hat did the trick. 🎩
Otherwise, pretty much on the right wavelength all the way.
Was an avid 'foosballer' back in the day.
Liked this one a lot! :)
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K.A.C's Mon. New Yorker was relatively easy (1 NYT Sat.). Only scary part was 33A, which needed all the crosses.
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
From memory the only other body of water ‘parted’ in the Bible is the Jordan River. So agreed on inaccurate ‘pluralism’.
ReplyDeleteI saw the upside down TIBBAR and immediately visualized a rabbit being pulled out of the hat by its cottontail, like a leporine breech delivery. Now I can’t erase this cruel image from my mind!
ReplyDeleteWhy is the TIBBAR upside down? I’ve seen a lot of rabbits pulled from a lot of hats, and never once have I seen it come out upside down. Just sayin’.
ReplyDeleteSomeone explain to me why the rabbit is upside-down? Magicians traditionally pull rabbits out of hats right side up. Is the joke that he messed up, or that he’s doing something novel, or what?
ReplyDeleteBecause it comes up out of the hat —starts at bottom and goes up. Nothing to do with rabbit position—just direction of reveal. Hope that helps.
DeleteNot who you responded to, but I still don't see it. The rabbit is pulled up out of the hat by the ears... visually the rabbit is right side up above the top hat...
DeleteSome odd clueing to be sure, but nothing as egregiously wrong as the clueing for “kilt” in yesterday’s puzzle.
ReplyDeleteHey, right! I didn’t catch that at first; looks like NO ONE else did either. It was the plaid that was outlawed. —Your friend in Nerd-dom
DeleteI have lived in the heart of the Pretzel Belt for 55 years but I have never heard that term before. I'm not sure it's a thing.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteWelp, unsure how to feel about this puz. I thought Rex would thoroughly stomp on this until it was just a speck of REFUSE. But he liked one part, didn't like the rest.
When I first saw the grid, I thought it was rather funky looking, with what looks like a T-shirt in the center. Once I started getting the "magic" phrases, I knew it was a HAT, and that a RABBIT would be coming out of it. However, my RABBIT wasn't working. "What comes out of a magician's HAT that starts with T?" says I. Stupidly, it took me until having TIB_AR to finally see it. I actually had a thought it might be a TIE BAR, whatever that is. "Who pulls a TIE BAR out of a HAT?" Har, silly brain.
RABBITs come out of HATs ears first, ergo upright, no? You don't pull one out feet first. So to me, the TIBBAR is weird. Or is it because ITS MAGIC?
It's missing a TADA somewhere...
Anyway, Happy Hump Day.
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Has anyone, ever, said "NOMNOM!" after eating something? Is a TIBBAR a real thing, or is simply "rabbit" spelled backward? Are we supposed to turn the puzzle upside-down to realize the rabbit effect?
ReplyDeleteVery confusing puzzle, quite easy in places but not in the top half.
Yes. Rabbit spelled backwards. No.
DeleteHad yuMYum, then settled on NuMNum, paying no attention to the RuD and KNuT crosses. Thought my problem was TIBBAR, maybe they wanted TImBAR or TIeBAR? Maybe it was EE White after all!
ReplyDeleteEventually achieved the right guesses but still had no idea about a TIBBAR. Googled it to find a metal bar exercise piece. Came here and learned of the backwards bunny.
Thought this was fresh and fun - NOMNOM!
Liked clues for EDDY and BIBLE, TL/DR is one texting set of initials I actually know and even - God help me - knew Rex would TSK TSK (or is it TUT TUT) at using the plural for PARTED seas. Neither the puzzle nor Rex would disappoint!
When FOR THE FIRST TIME ever I went to a crossword blog, I was surely as baffled as I was just now by today's NE corner. It must have, back then, also been something I had to know that very minute -- something I could not possibly wait until the next day to find out.
ReplyDeleteSo I *knew* that the football apparatus was paD. But I also knew that ARIANA Grande was not APIANA Grande. And I *knew* that none of the R-things: RAD, ROD, RED, RUD, RYD was a football apparatus.
I certainly didn't know the Skywalker nickname nor the "so delish" expression.
What did I do? I left it unsolved and came here.
And now my indignation. I watch a lot of football and I'm sure I have never seen hide nor hair of a ROD. And I've heard of YUM YUM, but what in the name of everything holy is NOM NOM???? If I cooked a delish meal for you* and you said NOM NOM to me, I'd yank away your plate and kick you out of the house.
Oh, yes -- the upside-down RABBIT part of the puzzle. I liked it and I actually saw it. I even noticed the upside-down hat! BE AMAZED, all who know observationally-challenged me.
Clever cluing made this puzzle very enjoyable. A nice Wednesday.
*A wee, inside joke. I don't cook.
It's not football, it's Foosball. The table game with the fake players attached to RODs.
DeleteFusball (Foos for fans) is the table game with "players" attached to movable rods... No spinning!
DeleteFussball is the original (German) name which means soccer. I guess foosball is a common spelling in the US. (Autocorrect doesn’t like it)
DeleteI remember being in Europe in the early’70’s and Fussball was already widely popular there yet I had never seen it before.
I would bet that ALIA has appeared as many times as OREO on nytxwd puzzles.
ReplyDeleteI guess ILLER is one of of those words that people never use.
Happy World Okapi Day! (Not "RABBIT," but Okapis are endangered, RABBITs not so much.)
ReplyDeleteI'd like to echo the points made by @alexscott68 and @Rob. The reversed TIBBAR bothered me as soon as I filled it in. RABBITS emerge from hats right-side up, usually held by the scruff of the neck. One of the stranger editing fails?
Easy side of medium. Briefly confused by EBW - remembering Charlotte weaving *words* into her web... wondering if she... signed one of them, and I forgot? After all, it's been a minute. Then, click! Also, like @Rex, I don't go here and there when the clues tell me to!
ReplyDeleteBut it was a fun start to Wednesday.
took me far too long to figure out what a TIBBAR was - I thought it was some kind of bar graph at first. Real AHA moment for me. BUT ILLER??? cmon, thats not a word. And NOMNOM? thats not a thing either. I googled it and seems like it is some kind of pet food. I was trying to some how make yuMyuM work. Someone above said it was some kind of internet-speak. Well this made-up crap that random posters throw out there shouldn’t be in the puzzle. “Groom and Board locale” at first I was thinking groom as in someone getting married. mEnSPA? Anyhow, good puzzle outside of ILLER and NOMNOM... cringe.
ReplyDeleteCouldn't remember E.B White's middle initial, so the upside-down TIBBAR was the last to fall for me, which probably soured my take on this as a whole. Always funny to see what is easy for some vs. others: PETSPA came right away with maybe one cross, as did NOMNOM.
ReplyDeletePenn & Teller had a bit a few years ago, noting that pulling a rabbit out of a hat, for all that it's a cliche, is not actually a magic trick that any magician past or present was known to do. They then proceeded to actually do a version which is pretty nifty. If you watch it more than once, you can clearly see how it's done, but that almost makes it more impressive (at least to me).
Give the puzzle credit for its self-awareness! All that build-up for literally the oldest trick in the book is exactly the point — a send-up of an over-the-top magician (or perhaps of over-the-top puzzle gimmicks). And yet done in such a way that the “mundane” trick still gets an aha out of the solver. I found the grid easy-ish overall (REDEAR and REORDER briefly tripped me up). But the TIBBAR reveal was a delight.
ReplyDeleteMedium? C’mon! Very, very easy. Tuna type, James of Jazz, Grande of pop, yoga posture, relating to city life, drum type, etc. Typical everyday crosswordese. Rabbit (tibbar) filled itself. Abracadabra was the only word after two letters of crosses.
ReplyDeleteI might have enjoyed it more if it didn’t seem very familiar. The magic theme has been done before.
Foosball is an arcade game with figurines attached to rods which the players manipulate to “kick” a ball.
ReplyDeleteILLER? I don't even know her!!!
ReplyDeleteI could criticize ONEIDA, but that would be hitting below the belt.
ReplyDeleteSneering Villain: So what are wearing under your shirt, Missy?
Heroine: ABRA,CAD,ABRA
I liked Hell of a Poem" as a clue for INFERNO. I can almost hear W saying "Hell of a Poem, Dantie" if Dante had been his Poet Laureate.
@Nancy. By the time my comment appears you may already have learned from others some of the key differences between football and foosball. If not, try Google.
I'm with @Rex all the way on this. No way was I chasing around the grid per instructions until I finished. But it was a different sort of puzzle, and I like different. Thanks, Joseph Gangi
I literally laughed out loud at 55A [Pepper and others: Abbr.] SGTS. It was way more than 20 years ago today!
ReplyDeleteI love love loved this puzzle. It was "whoosh whoosh" easy, as y'all like to say, but it was witty and very emotionally satisfying. That's the perfect combination in my book. I do not look at crosswords in terms of easy-medium-difficult; rather, I look at them in terms of witty and satisfying versus stupid and boring.
ReplyDeleteI have never cared for lookee lookee themes which tell me to go from one clue to another; this was no exception. And the grid art? I could see what appeared to be a hat but what also looks like a fat “T” so my first answer at 15D was TEE BAR which didn’t make much sense but it was early. Then when I got the “I” in 17A, I thought maybe those four black blocks on each side were supposed to indicate TIE BARS which were once popular, and the center was a necktie. So because my upside down 15 Down read RABEIT, the RABBIT never made an appearance. Which worked out well since I didn’t have a hat either.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is a proper name/monogram right smack in the middle of it. Charlotte‘s Web is pretty commonly known but it’s not at all obvious to me what a monogram would entail. Would that be the author (unknown to me)? Or would it be something to do with the story? I was so curious that I googled it and all I got was a list of answers to this crossword clue. Oh, and a monogramming store in Chattanooga. I get that not much else would work - ABA was all I could think of - but it might’ve made the trick more obvious.
For the longest time I thought the hat was a T-shirt.
ReplyDeleteok, sooo … this magic trick is bein attempted FORTHEFIRSTIME, in the sense that the RABBIT is bein pulled out of the hat backwards? Kinda neat that the TIBBAR was accompanied by FORWARD, CONTORT, and REORDER, then.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick: EBW. Stands, in this case, for EXTRACTBUNNYWRONGLY.
Nice E/W puzgrid symmetry, to build the top hat.
fave other thing: TLDR. [I reckon that means Too Long Didn't Read, or somesuch.] Was an apt theme add-on, in honor of some of them longer-than-snot themer clues.
Thanx, Mr. Gangi dude. A tricky solvequest that was pretty easy ... forthefirsttime.
Masked & Anonymo2Us
**gruntz**
The puzzle was a “just okay” in my book for solving purposes but I give the constructor credit for the bright idea.
ReplyDeleteYes, I can see how one would struggle with the NE if they misread “foosball” and saw “football” (hi @Nancy) and had never had the “pleasure” of sitting with tots watching Sesame Street (hi @Southside). We used to have a foosball table in our basement. I reluctantly put in ROD cuz I couldn’t wrap my brain around why it is “apparatus” other than the fact that the balls are the only thing really “separate” from the table. Ah well.
Seems like the term PETSPA has really become a “thing.” Some “big box” pet supply stores offer both boarding AND grooming but I’d hardly call them “spa like.” I mean, do people really think that their pets would call boarding and grooming SPA DAY? Our recently departed dear pup always looked quite perky and happy (with her complimentary kerchief) when I picked her up, but I don’t think she probably felt that way when getting shampooed, combed out, and clipped while held tight in a harness. Also, I don’t think they ever put cucumber slices over her eyes during this process.
True about pet spas but the marketing isn’t aimed at pets but at the owners!
DeleteHonestly expected a complete pan... and this was one of the relatively rare times I would have agreed. Pretty atrocious cluing, overly strained fill, and tiny 1-square chokepoints, all for a hackneyed theme.
ReplyDeleteI very rarely DNF, even more rarely on a Wednesday, but I got down to one remaining square, the first B in TIBBAR, and just couldn't care enough to run the alphabet to learn what new word I didn't know. Rabbits do not come out of hats upside down... maybe this is a bad or very new magician fumbling through his first performance. But if that's the actual intent, it makes the theme even more hackneyed IMO.
That said, NOMNOM is very much a thing. It's primarily meme-speak, but non-internet-natives pretending that doesn't exist is like me pretending 60s pop stars or "famous" NYC delis don't exist.
What's TIBBAR?
ReplyDeleteOtherwise, I thought it was cute. Easy. I liked PETSPA & glad Fred Astaire, who has appeared twice I think in one week, finally got a mention.
Looked at the puzzle again - Oh, RABBIT.
ReplyDeleteEasy. Here’s the medium-tough Tuesday puzzle. No erasures and REDEAR was my only WOE.
ReplyDeleteAmusing, clever and cute liked it, but I’m with @Rex on being bossed.
What, you never heard of the Borscht Belt? Oy.
ReplyDeleteI liked the silliness of this thing. Having the "magical" phrases strewn around the grid with directional arrows was cheerfully goofy. FOR THE FIRST TIME seems a bit anachronistic but the rest is fine with me.
October 1965: do you believe?
58 years. Wow!
DeleteI thought the song appeared a few years later for some reason.
Of course Borscht Belt.
Bit of history that Rex is apparently not aware of?
In his own state no less.
For the first time, Be amazed by the lamest theme of all time, Abracadabra!!
ReplyDeleteTibbar? Really?
I liked the puzzle... but the biggest issue here is that the rabbit is never pulled out of the hat upside-down. Google "pull rabbit from hat" and check every image that comes up. Upright rabbit. Never a TIBBAR being hauled up by its haunches.
ReplyDeleteLike @Nancy, I had not noticed until coming here that the clue said 'foosball,' not 'football.' I had rationalized that the apparatus in question consisted of two RODs connected by a 10-yard chain, but I think those are actually called 'poles.'
ReplyDeleteAm I the only one who noticed that the top hat in the grid is framed by Fred ASTAIRE, clued by the eponymous movie, on the left, and APPAREL clued by a description of the outfit with which one would wear a top hat on the right? I thought that was the best thing in the puzzle.
The worst thing in the puzzle was that we were directed very precisely to the theme clues in a particular order, but there was no logic to the order; except for the final TIBBAR, you could say them in any order you like.
Incidentally, for those asking, a TIe BAR is the same as a tie clip -- i.e., a clip on bar that holds the two ends of the tie together. I think they've gone out of style.
REDEAR is a wheelhouse thing; pretty well-known among anglers, which I guess Rex is not.
For those incensed by the topsy-turvy rabbit, the visual is supposed to suggest the rabbit being pulled upward, i.e. it starts inside the hat and then ends up outside of it. It's not that it's coming out feet first.
ReplyDeleteNo magic. Much ILLER than necessary.
ReplyDeleteNow, I RIP a piece off the paper I printed the puzzle on and use it to grab the stink bug that just landed on my NAPE. Eww!
Fun coincidence re: TIBBAR:
ReplyDeleteFrom my daily Chirpbooks email: 'Putting the Rabbit in the Hat' by Brian Cox. Checked out the audiobook at my library.
"The incredible rags-to-riches story of acclaimed actor Brian Cox, best known as Succession’s Logan Roy, from a troubled, working-class upbringing in Scotland to a prolific career across theatre, film and television." (Goodreads)
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
My favorite use of the word "ILLER" occurred in the 1946 film version of W. Somerset Maugham's "The Razor's Edge," directed by Edmund Goulding (don't bother with the ridiculous 1984 remake, starring a badly miscast Bill Murray). Near the end of the film, American expat socialite Elliott Templeton (Clifton Webb in one of his best performances), in bed and gravely ill from a heart condition, cries bitter tears and complains for 10 minutes about not being invited to a soirée being given by another American expat socialite whom Elliott helped introduce to European high society and whom he insulted (he revealed that she was carrying on with her chauffeur). Maugham (Herbert Marshall), calms Elliott and tells him "I'm afraid you're much ILLER than you realize." Elliott immediately calms down and says "Do you mean I'm going to die?" He then placidly begins planning for his imminent demise, calling for the priest to give him last rites, etc. Elliott cries and whines like a baby at length about being snubbed at an invitation for a party, but takes the news of his impending death with equanimity and courage. Great scene. If only they made movies like that now.
ReplyDelete@ghostoflectricity, It's on Amazon prime! I'll watch it this evening. I already like Iller better than I did before you posted.
ReplyDeleteYes, a great movie. Greatest cast ever in an American film. Doesn’t he want Maugham to send an RSVP: “I have an appointment with my Maker.”” The remake was a terrible attempt at a drama.
ReplyDeleteProbably from being new to this, but here's another puzzle where the theme was great and came together for me right away, but then I got done in by a random section. Today it was the center-west bit.
ReplyDeleteRust Belt actually crossed my mind, how I blanked on its possibly more famous sibling already having "BL" I have no idea. My mind would not stop saying TABLE. Like a belt for a table saw? I don't know.
Then INTO seemed way too simple for that spot. And finally, BOSN. I am familiar with the term boatswain, but have never seen it shortened to BOSN, which is apparently common, from a quick google search. Oh well. Overall quite fun.
@JD You're in for a treat. Tyrone Power as Larry Darrell, WWI veteran and spiritual seeker, is the protagonist; the cast also includes Gene Tierney, beautiful and alluring as always as the scheming Isabel; Lucille Watson as Isabel's good-humored mother (and Elliott's much more down-to-earth sister); John Payne as the good-natured but emotionally fragile Gray; Elsa ("Bride of Frankenstein"/Mrs. Charles Laughton) Lanchester as an old Scottish pal of Larry; and Anne Baxter, in a performance that won her the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, as the hard-luck, ill (iller?)-starred Sophie. An unbeatable cast. Tierney and Webb had of course appeared together in the noir classic "Laura" two years earlier, directed by Otto Preminger.
ReplyDelete@jberg 11:21, thanks for that timely aperçu viz. ASTAIRE and APPAREL flanking the top hat.
ReplyDelete@Joe D 11:22, my incensedness is more of a smolder than an INFERNO but no matter how I IDEATE about it, that TIBBAR is upside down. It's coming out of the hat feet FORWARD. By the way, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) conscious magicians pull their RABBITs out of hats by the NAPE of the neck, not by the ears.
There's a mini NOM NOM theme lurking in the grid, what with the likes of AHI, SEED, ONEIDA (tableware and cutlery), NO MEAT, LITE BEER, CLAM and KIWI (the fruit).
If the rabbit him (or her) self does not sense that he or she is upside down, it doesn't trouble me. But that may be hard to discern.
ReplyDeleteToday's clues seem to be extra misleading. "Rent in the garment district": all I could think of was the play Rent, which might be... Off Broadway? "Unit of doubt"... say what? "Name going down a drain": looking at E--Y it had to be either EBAY or ETSY which was... going bankrupt?
ReplyDeleteIn non puzzle news, the baseball playoffs are boring. I would really like to see some close games, not like last night's blowout.
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0. Mon -1, missed this 8er, dunno why.]
FOR THE FIRST TIME ever I saw your face.....you pull a TIBBAR from a hat. ITS MAGIC . Now I want to sing.
ReplyDeleteARIANA NOM NOM could perhaps do the honors.
I want to seriously IDEATE with ILLER.
I read it as football as well. Where does ROD come in. A device I do not see. R.I.P.
Interesting visual puzzle. It didn't give me heart palpitations, but... it's hump day.
Who invented the word ABRA CADABRA and why? Just curious.
When I was a kid there were two rods with a ten yard length of chain to determine when a new first down was achieved! Dunno how it's done today!! Numnum!!
ReplyDeleteghostofelectricity,
ReplyDeleteWow! The Razor's Edge is an awful bore. Goulding and Zanuck botched the material very badly. They removed nearly all the religious aspect of Darrell's search and all the audience is left with is vague drivel. And of course, Power is too old for the role. One last opinion, besides the hospital scene which Baxter herself considered the best work she ever did, her performance in All About Eve is far superior. Academy Award be damned.
Glad it tickles your fancy. One note--fact not opinion--the wedding gown Tierney wears was the actual wedding gown her husband--the designer Oleg Cassini--made for her. But they eloped and the film is the only time she wore it.
Anon 1:05,
ReplyDeleteNot even close. Off the top of my head the ensemble cast of Murder on the Orient Express smokes it:
Albert Finney, Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Bacall, Sean Connery, Vanessa Redgrave, John Gielgud, Wendy Hiller, Richard Widmark, Martin Balsam.
A lot more Academy awards ( and noms, not nom noms) than Razor's Edge.
@JD you will enjoy La Danse Apache scene with Anne Baxter and a professional dancer. One if the most memorable scenes in the film.
ReplyDeletePeople, people, it's
ReplyDeletefooSball, not fooTball
Foosball Tables are standalone games that have RODs (about 8-10?) that have the heads and torsos of players (they resemble Lego people) attached to those RODs, wherein you slide them back and forth whilst spinning them to get the figures to "kick" the ball into your opponent "net" (a hole in the table at the end). Nothing to do with football, more like a soccer table game.
RooMonster Was Never Good At Foosball Guy
@Roo…today was the GREAT “misread the clue” day. Hahaha…I’m thankful I didn’t misread AND had a foosball table!
ReplyDeleteI don’t know if I said it before (and I really don’t know secret of rabbit/hat trick) but doesn’t it seem cruel to lift ANY animal by its ears!? I NOW would like to think that there was an invisible hand lifting up the rabbit’s behind until the magician could GRAB the behind…
@dgd-You struck a chord. I was in Spain in the late 60's and some kids asked me if I liked foosball, and since I played college soccer I tried to explain how great futbol is but that wasn't it. Had never seen the table version before.
ReplyDeletePlayed like a Monday. Matched my best Wednesday time ever. In other words, I found this very, very, easy despite the only OK fill. Not a single fun in the language answer like hate reading.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I like grid art … way less than the NYT puzzle editors seem to. In 90% or grid art cases, all it means is that the “cleverness” is in designing the grid, and not in the cluing, or theme, or answers. And I maintain that clever grids may be a fun challenge for creators, but rarely improve the solving experience.
FOOSBALL (table football):
ReplyDelete"Foosball … arrived on American shores thanks to Lawrence Patterson, who was stationed in West Germany with the U.S. military in the early 1960s. Seeing that table football was very popular in Europe, Patterson seized the opportunity and contracted a manufacturer in Bavaria to construct a machine to his specification to export to the US. The first table landed on American soil in 1962, and Patterson immediately trademarked the name “Foosball” in America and Canada, giving the name “Foosball Match” to his table." (Smithsonian Magazine)
My FOOSBALL experience started in Portland, OR in '66 and ended in Munich, 69'.
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Whoa!!! I was on some other plane tonight because I got so confused. But I promise if you read this you will laugh (or possibly never read another word I write).
ReplyDeleteActually, I think I regressed back to the concrete-operational stage of development. I wanted the “top hat” of the grid to be “the trick” referenced at 15D. When my answers gave me TIBBAR without any solving difficulty, I just went on about my business and finished the puzzle and received my happy music. What the beck was all the “magician spiel” stuff in this puzzle if the “top hat” is really the frequently seen T-Bar of crossword fame? I actually just shrugged my shoulders and thought, “Ok, I guess the trick is that we expected a magic theme and it “magically turned into a construction site? It gets worse. I was so certain I’d been “had” for expecting a rabbit and getting some construction material that I went back and talked myself into ‘TIBBAR’ being some truly “alternate” (probably as in alternate universe) spelling of T-Bar to force that square peg into the round top hat. I really decided this was “it” folks. Really. No. Really, really.
I did out the dang thing down in disgust thinking the constructor had gone way, way, way too far and planned to say so in my post. My betted self told me to wait and look at the grid again. So I did - several meetings and din er time for my cat and me later.
On the late examination did I get RABBIT? I’d love to say yes, but I did vet “a” rabbit. I stared and stared at the grid and decided that the black squares right before 21, 24 and 28, and before 22, 26, and 29 kind of made a curved shape that if I squinted, looked sort of like rabbit ears. Yep, there’s my ears for the top hat.
Did I go farther to explain the mysterious TIBBAR? Nope. I decided to come here and learn a new word. Nope. I got embarrassed big time! I still can’t believe it. After doing this puzzle for 60 years, I cannot recall a day when I so completely muffed it - especially on a day when the answers weren’t that tough! I’m chalking it up to fatigue. Going to get some extra 😴 tonight.
I’m going to go whip up some TIBBAR stew.
I thought Rex would absolutely hate this! The fill was reeeeeally pushing it in many places. TIBBAR!!! lmao
ReplyDeleteVery easy. Cute idea. Themers could have been better, as pointed out by Rex. But I'll take it for the cuteness.
ReplyDeleteI thought it was an anvil. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteThere are two words in this grid that I am really tired of seeing, because they don't exist outside of crossword grids. One is IDEATE and the other is ILLER. Stop with these, please.
I visualize an eight-year-old with his first magic kit, putting on a show for Mom and Dad. In that sense, I guess it's cute, but for putting up with junk fill...nah. Bogey.
Wordle birdie.
Had TI_BAR for the longest time. Thought maybe something was wrong and that the answer was TophAt or maybe TIpBAR? Then the light clicked on. Tricky!
ReplyDeleteFORWARD HOE
ReplyDeleteARIANA STATES, "I won't REFUSE IT,
IT'SMAGIC to SNARE THE sublime,
I'll BEAMAZED at how you USE IT,
when IT'S SIN FORTHEFIRSTTIME."
--- SGT. EDDY ROD EWING
The magician pulled the rabbit out of the hat hindquarters first, because it was his last show of the evening, and the rabbit's ears were hurting . 🐰
ReplyDeleteSee how red they are?!
I was amazed at how many people on this blog were unfamiliar with the Saint Iller family!
ReplyDeleteThere's Jerry St. Iller, and Ben St. Iller!
Meh at best. The top and bottom are hardly connected, even though not necessary. Save the funny stuff for Thursdays, if they must appear at all.
ReplyDeleteWordle par.
Yeah. Right. A rabbit. If you say so.
ReplyDeleteOTOH, other than looking up the Charlotte's Web initials, I got all the rest. And enjoyed the long answers.
But it wasn't magic - not by a long shot.
Diana, LIW