Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Word of the Day: The 1521 Edict of Worms (39A: One subject to a religious ban from the 1521 Edict of Worms) —
The Edict of Worms was a decree issued on 25 May 1521 by Emperor Charles V. Its contents proscribed Luther's writings, declaring him a heretic and an enemy of the state, even permitting anyone to kill Luther without legal consequence. Though it was never enforced, (the movement for reform and protection from Protestant supporters acted in his favour) Roman Catholic rulers sought to suppress Luther and his followers, and Luther's travels were restricted for the rest of his life.It was the culmination of an ongoing struggle between Martin Luther and the Catholic Church over reform, especially concerning the practice of donations for indulgences. However, there were other deeper issues that revolved around both theological concerns:
- On a theological level, Luther had challenged the absolute authority of the Pope over the Church by maintaining that the doctrine of indulgences, as authorized and taught by the Pope, was wrong.
- Luther maintained that salvation was by faith alone (sola fide) without reference to good works, alms, penance, or the Church's sacraments. Luther maintained that the sacraments were a "means of grace", meaning that while grace was imparted through the sacraments, the credit for the action belonged to God and not to the individual. (wikipedia)
• • •
However much I love writing this blog (and I do, a lot), it is, in fact, a job. This blog has covered the NYTXW every day, without fail, for 17 years, and except for two days a month (when my regular stand-ins Mali and Clare write for me), and an occasional vacation or sick day (when I hire substitutes to write for me), it's me who's doing the writing. Every day. At very ... let's say, inconvenient hours (my alarm goes off most mornings at 3:45am). Over the years, I have received all kinds of advice about "monetizing" the blog, invitations to turn it into a subscription-type deal à la Substack or Patreon. But that sort of thing has never felt right for me. I like being out here on Main, on this super old-school blogging platform, just giving it away for free and relying on conscientious addicts like yourselves to pay me what you think the blog's worth. It's just nicer that way.
How much should you give? Whatever you think the blog is worth to you on a yearly basis. Whatever that amount is is fantastic. Some people refuse to pay for what they can get for free. Others just don't have money to spare. All are welcome to read the blog—the site will always be open and free. But if you are able to express your appreciation monetarily, here are three options. First, a Paypal button (which you can also find in the blog sidebar on the homepage):
Second, a mailing address (checks can be made out to "Michael Sharp" or "Rex Parker"):
Rex Parker c/o Michael Sharp
54 Matthews St
Binghamton, NY 13905
Rex Parker c/o Michael Sharp
54 Matthews St
Binghamton, NY 13905
The third, increasingly popular option is Venmo; if that's your preferred way of moving money around, my handle is @MichaelDavidSharp (the last four digits of my phone are 4878, in case Venmo asks you, which I guess it does sometimes, when it's not trying to push crypto on you, what the hell?!)
• • •
My main problem with THRUPLES was the damn spelling. I always want it to be THROUPLE, which fit perfectly. THRUPLE always seems like it should rhyme with ... uh ... Mott the Hoople, I guess (are there really no other "-OOPLE" terms in the world!?). Oh, Quadruple! That's the rhyme I was looking for. It's not "quadrupple," it's "quadroople," and so "thruple" always looks to me like it should be pronounced "throople," so I don't spell it "thruple." Well, I don't spell it at all, or think about it much, if I don't have to. But if I have to, "throuple" is what I want. Plus, today's clue just said "Portmanteau," no indication of singular or plural, so I fell into my own THROUPLE trap (you wouldn't like it there—uncomfortably crowded). So we get plural THRUPLES, one of a barrage of plurals that started to feel a bit conspicuous as I moved through that thick middle. AXONS SURE SIGNS THRUPLES CAR SALES RIPTIDES GROUP DATES FLAT SODAS COPSES NGOS — that's a corner-to-corner run of the plurals (though there are several more S-ending words). Kinda leaning hard on those "S"s there. FLAT SODA is a great answer, but somehow in the plural it loses its fizz ... huh ... I guess that's apt ... nah, still don't like it.
I liked CRIME RING and (oddly) WEE LASS. I got into that corner pretty easy off the (to me) absolutely transparent 1A: Place with dressing options (SALAD BAR). And so:
That just left the SE, where I managed to come up with SCOUT MOTTO off just the SC-, but I wasn't entirely sure of it (43A: "Be prepared"). I think I wanted the apostrophe-S, SCOUT'S MOTTO. But no. It's "SCOUT'S HONOR!," but SCOUT MOTTO. Wanted EAR MUFFS at 46A: Winter accessory but instead got a single EAR WARMER (for both ears? I guess if you've got one of them single-piece headband dealies, and not a unit with distinct ear pieces, it's a singular WARMER, and not WARMERS). And that was that. Finished with MTN. That's either climactic ("I climbed the mountain!") or anticlimactic ("oh boy, a 3-letter abbrev"), depending on how you look at it.
Question mark clues!:
- 28A: Events offering a whole lot to choose from? (CAR SALES) — the "lot" is a car lot
- 36A: Crushes that have lost their sparkle? (FLAT SODAS) — the "Crushes" are sodas, as in the brand—best known for "Orange Crush"
- 5D: Time piece? (DECADE) — oof. So "piece" is just "some random amount of"? Er, OK.
Hey, just noticed that this puzzle is 16 wide. Why? Bizarre. Usually when you break form, there's a clear reason. Apparently "just 'cause" is a reason now. Huh. Wish the results had been more scintillating, but again, they're fine. It's a very acceptable, reasonably smooth Saturday grid. No low notes. Just not enough high notes for my taste.
Speaking of high notes: Your Holiday Pet Pics keep rolling in, and I'm going to do my best to get them all posted by year's end (yes, there are that many). Here we go—six more! Three kitties with their trees!
[Autumn! (thanks, Rob)] |
[Brady! (thanks, Kenneth)] |
[Dipper! (thanks, Virg & Dave)] |
[Cash! (thanks, Emily)] |
[Sam, with his adoring human, Hannah! (thanks, Kit)] |
[And finally ... Chloe, who is not a moose, why would you say that!?] [Thanks, Leroy!] |
Your feelings were much more generous than mine. I hated this so much.
ReplyDeleteWhat is OPTICAL ART and why is it in motion?
What is formal about COMITY? It’s just a word.
Has anyone ever been recorded saying REAL NEAT with enthusiasm?
How is BRASS audacious self-assurance? Like above, is that a euphemism popular from 1934-37 that has never been used since?
And on what planet is SCOUT MOTTO not plural or possessive?
Your criticism is downright flawed. Have you never heard of OpArt? Comity is certainly on the formal side. As a former Scout, I know that Scout motto is exactly right - here on earth. Real neat is fairly weak, it’s true. Brassy as in brassy blond or you have a lot of brass is definitely a well known turn of phrase. Your nits do not merit picking.
DeleteI fell into the thruple trap too but was saved by the Capulets.
ReplyDeleteA Google of THRoUPLE turns up upwards of eight million results, and THRUPLE turns up a measly 240,000 (and two of the first three spell it THRoUPLE). The NYT dropped the ball on this one.
ReplyDeleteGuessed HATFIELD in isolation, and soon found that didn't work at all, but CAMPBELL did, at first and so I held onto it far, far too long.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThe feuders at 24A had to be CAPULETS when Hatfields, McCoys and Montagues didn't fit.
CORReroS before CORRIDAS at 24D
Fell into the "Whole lot" trap at 28A; wanted something real estate-related.
In keeping with the sex theme, wanted xxx RATED for the asterisks at 32A, but
by the time I got to the clue I had too much of TOP in place.
RATROD was a WOE
On the easy side for a Saturday.
A poor puzzle, agree about the juvenile undercurrents, NYT Saturday should be better than this.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of a RATROD but got it from the crosses. THRoUPLE for me as well, along with LITERAte. Not a lot of resistance, but also not all that much fun. Meh, as it were.
ReplyDeleteWrite up is great as always but LOVE all the holiday pet pix!
ReplyDeleteSome good toeholds in this one--ARPEGGIO,FLANK, CORRIDAS, and CAPULETS among them, which led to an easier-than-usual Saturday. Hand up for never having heard of a RATROD, which could have been a Henry Gregor Felson book. THRUPLE also an unknown.
ReplyDeleteIt's cold around here and I've heard of handwarmers and footwarmers, but an EARWARMER? Really?
Nice enough Saturdecito, GC. Leaves me some extra time for the Stumper, and thanks for all the fun.
Funky - Tetris inspired grid. That daunting - wide open center section ended up being the smoothest part of the puzzle for me. Eliminates any complaints about too much short glue.
ReplyDeleteThe clueing voice here is really screaming for help. It works for FLAT SODAS, WEE LASS and SALSA DANCE - but fails in other areas - I’m looking at you COMITY, COPSES, RAT ROD, OPTICAL ART, IRREGS, THRUPLES etc. That SE stack of WAR-TORN and FATWA is definitely DISMAL. I though SALAD BARS ended with Beefsteak Charlie’s? No issue with PORNO.
Promising grid layout - rough fill. You’ll find a lot more 3s and 4s in the Stumper today.
That’s NEAT - That’s Nice
I agree optical art clanks because 3 minutes after the term was invented in the’’60’s it became op art.
DeleteI guess you don’t like the formal words like comity and copses but I see nothing wrong with them. War torn seems very appropriate now.
I like them a lot better than thruples ( autocorrect wanted thrills BTW). and rat rod! Oh I can’t leave out the abbreviated plural irregs.
Not a bad puzzle overall, but hard for me, like yesterday
Any time you have a puzzle with a half dozen or so entries where you end up thinking “this could possibly be a real word” it pretty much has the NYT’s DNA all over it. Today we have a boatload of stuff like COPSES, THRUPLES, ARPEGGIO, AGATE, CORRIDAS, RATROD . . . Yes, it’s definitely an NYT grid.
ReplyDeleteFor those keeping track of the juvy humor, don’t leave out ASS and PASTIES . . . Which you may find at a certain type of BAR (that doesn’t generally serve SALAD).
agree, except for ARPEGGIO. every musician knows what they are, and there’s even a song about them at the beginning of the movie The Aristocats
DeleteI don’t know if I’ve ever seen it in print, but “throuple” is how I’ve always thought of it. In addition to the ribaldry Rex mentions, we had the coarseness of ASS clued with reference to anatomy. I know the Old Gray Lady needs to let her hair down once in a while, but sheesh…
ReplyDeleteAn experience very similar to Rex’s today — happily, after a week of struggling through puzzles Rex found easy.
ReplyDeleteWas that band named Mott the Hoople so you wouldn’t confuse them with Mott the Applesauce?
And thanks, Rex, for posting one of Schubert’s most beautiful compositions, written for the arpeggione, an instrument that went out of fashion even faster than Betamax. Fortunately, the sonata works well on the cello.
Or clarinet!
DeleteA tri-puzz -- three midi puzzles for the price of one! Some random thoughts:
ReplyDelete• I loved [“Be prepared”], which misdirected me into trying to come up with something people say that means “You’d better watch out”.
• Permit me to say how lovely PERMIT ME is.
• Just a reminder that Garret graduated high school last year and in less than a year and a half has had five NYT puzzles.
• A sweet Crosslandia factoid: One of Garret’s puzzles was co-written with Andrew Kingsley (20 NYT puzzles), who was his high school English teacher.
• The grid is popping with freshness. If you consider a fresh answer as one that has appeared less than five times in the NYT’s 80 years, then three quarters of the squares with letters belong to answers that are fresh (calculated from a graphic on XwordInfo).
• Of those fresh answers, 11 are NYT answer debuts.
• For me, this filled in slowly but steadily. Slowly, because of sweet resistance.
Garrett, I remember the young David Steinberg’s puzzles, which were also filled with pop, and were fun to solve, like yours. As he got older, his excellent puzzles even got more excellent, and may your puzzle career follow a similar arc! Thank you for a terrific solving experience today!
Did anyone else think how proud Garrett’s parents must be or is it merely the fact that I am approaching 70 and think more about these things than I did when I was a youngster of 50?
DeleteLoved everything about the puzzle even though dnf.
DeleteFun workout and thanks, Lewis, for putting into words an appreciation of this young puzzle maker! I had a great solving experience, including learning a few new things (always welcome).
DeleteThanx for the context, Lewis. That info is not in Wordplay so you brought us something that wasn’t available to most folks. I too loved this puzzle and relished the struggle. Garrett was just a name on a page ‘til you fleshed him out a bit. He surely deserves that.
DeleteFor me this puzzle was wonderfully resistant but fair and I enjoyed every minute.
DeleteFirst had BALLS for 6D. That’s the correct answer!
ReplyDeleteOverall Saturday enough for me. Where I struggled is 1) Also committed to Hatfield early. 2) With only a half a cup of coffee - flipped ARI for IRA. But once I recovered from those two there wasn’t much there. Favorite answers today were RIPTIDE and ARPEGGIO. Way to old to take up surfing but may be inspired to take piano lessons.
ReplyDeleteThree puzzles in one. The SE was last to fall and least enjoyable.
ReplyDeleteOk, I’ll admit it, I’m here for the pet pics! Keep em rolling. I can’t be too mad at a puzzle that has my daughter’s favorite band in the middle of it, COLDPLAY! We took her to see them in September and it was actually.. amazing!!!! Anyhoo, I agree completely otherwise. Too much “porn, orgy, I’m trying to be modern” vibe but not horrible.
ReplyDeleteOnce again, the puzzle caters to the non-native NY accent. No native NYer would say "Dare-in." Darin rhymes with Karen, and I don't mean "care-in"!
ReplyDeleteDitto from this Rhode Islander
Delete(Darin rhymes with Karen
Per Anonymous 8:43. )
Much easier than yesterday’s. 1A went right in, then five of the crossing downs and it was off to the races. Just a small amount of trouble in the SE with WARlike before WARTORN and Suss before SORT.
ReplyDeleteDid not notice it was was extra-wide, so that makes it even easier, relatively speaking.
Not TOP RATED, but still REAL NEAT puzzle if you can get past the hyperpluralization.
And no unknown proper names today, which is always appreciated.
We had THROUPLE, with the U, back on July 28. NYTXW has never been accused of consistency.
ReplyDeleteNice easy Saturday with fresh sounding phrases/terms. Large diagonal down the middle (is there a term for that in constructorese?) filled in rapidly. Small stumble in SW with RATROD and FLANK. Somehow felt RATROD would be the word of the day; I could take a picture of one any evening zipping down the main drag in our town
ReplyDeleteAlso noted mild raciness which would have been appropriate (actually tame) language for a bro in my dorm back in the day
That felt way too easy for a Saturday.
ReplyDeleteNever knew that 'arpeggio' is based on the word for 'harp'. That's a great piece of information. Makes perfect sense. I thought it was a fine Saturday puzzle and a fine Saturday write-up. On we go.
ReplyDeleteNow I see the arpeggio/ harp connection. Italians usually drop h’s so ARPeggio
DeleteNever knew that either.
OK I guess I'm being too literal, but Pam IS cooking oil. It is basically canola oil?
ReplyDeleteI liked this more than Rex and thought it was a fun solve, but for RAT ROD which I’ve never heard of and didn’t know, and having hot ROD created all kinds of havoc.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteWell, son of a gun. Had a DNF at, of all places, my namesake! Just could not come up with DARIN. Really? That was (according to my mom) the inspiration for my name. Unbelievable. 😁 Ended up with DARes. That sounded more "brave" than DARIN. Fit with MTs, although the ANeSETEA was suspect. Heck, could've been an alternative spelling.
That Wow aside, did notice right away puz was 16 wide. I asked "Why?" myself, maybe to fit the Blocker pattern? I will say that much open criss-crossing madness in the center is extremely tough to fill. Nice job on that.
Noticed the PORNO vibe, as I'm sure y'all did. We also have FIRMS ASS. Har. I need @egs take on this one! (YesterComment was awesome, btw @egs!)
Finished (FWE) in 40 minutes. Still mad at missing DARIN!
Dang, @pablo, I'm getting in the puz in all kinds of ways!
Happy weekend!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Not enough of a rough ride for a Saturday puzzle, though it made me want to build a RATROD and take it for a spin 😊
ReplyDeleteTook me too long to get SCOW/CRIMERING/WEE, which means I had quite some time when my grid was full of PORNO/ASS/?LASS/B?ASS.
ReplyDeleteWhere are you @GILL? This puzzle is a treasure trove of words you -- and only you!! -- could weave into the most hilarious Monday (even though it's Saturday) comment. What I'd love you to use are:
ReplyDeletePORNO
THRUPLES
GROUP DATES
AM I LATE?
WEE LASS
PERMIT ME
POSE AS
CAPTOR
OH COME ON!
PASTIES (not in the sense it's used here, though)
I'd do it myself, but it wouldn't be as good. And, besides, it might be banned in Boston.
There's something about this puzzle that's a little IRREGS -- wouldn't you say?
With a word like THROUPLE, I don't know if dictionaries get to decide the spelling -- but Dictionary.com says that's correct, no hits for thruples at all. So fixing that was tough.
ReplyDeleteAnd what on earth is an EAR WARMER? Hand warmers, body warmers, and the like are sources of heat, not just insulation. I don't think you'd try that with your ears -- so I had EAR muffs for far too long.
It's OP ART by the way, but I guess OPTICAL is an obscure variant.
The clue for 9-A works for ARI, as well, so that held me up.
I think if you want that central stairstep of 8s, it has to be 16-wide; otherwise the central row would have 2-letter answers on the ends. I guess you could have cheater squares instead, though.
I did enjoy my solving struggle, I was just annoyed by some of the answers.
The feature of the puzzle is the number of longs. The most I've seen. Every row has one and half the columns, 24 altogether. Happily, they crowded out the threes. Only seven of those little pests.
ReplyDeleteI desperately wanted 6D to be BALLS. It would have fit with the whole snickering vibe of the puzzle.
ReplyDeleteThat is absolutely NOT how you spell “throuple.” What I just did is the correct spelling. I’m poly, I should know. The NYT really screwed that one up.
ReplyDeleteIm poly and more flexible on how things are spelled. Didn’t mind thruple for the sake of the puzzle and that’s how we roll. Not “correct” but who’s conventional?
Delete35-A embodies my frustration with phonetic clues and puzzles, which Will Shortz often features on the NPR Sunday Puzzle. They are usually based on regional pronunciations of words.
ReplyDeleteFor example, in some regions of the country, 'Mary', 'marry', and 'merry' are pronounced the same. In other regions, they are not.
Hence, my issue with 35-A. I realize that many people pronounce 'Darin' as "Dare-in," but many people (including me) do not. Only after filling in some of the down clues was I able to figure out the answer.
This issue came up at an American Crossword Puzzle Tournament several years ago. The puzzle included a Spoonerism -- 'ketch' and 'ferry' became 'fetch' and 'carry'. There was much discussion over whether that was a true Spoonerism because 'ferry' and 'carry' are considered to be rhyming words depending on regional pronunciations.
In any event, I love Rex's suggestion for revising the clue!
Anybody have a working link to today's Saturday Stumper? I keep getting an error message on my usual link.
ReplyDeleteHTTPS://WWW.BRAINSONLY.COM/GLOBAL/NEWSDAY/CROSSWORD
DeleteThanks anyway but that link seems to be broken.
DeleteBut Pilgrim from Crossword Fiend posted: I was able to get it from the Washington Post website (apparently no subscription needed, but you have to watch an ad)
https://games.washingtonpost.com/games/stans-daily-crossword
Started off zipping through this one but eventually got held up in several places. Ended up struggling in the SE corner. Had Suss before SORT. Knew it was EAR something but couldn't imagine what. Had Dreary before DISMAL. meaTIES before PASTIES. Got MTN easily enough because I knew DARIN but couldn't figure out a cooking fat that ended in M for a long time. Eventually got there but 48 mins for me, longer than a typical Saturday
ReplyDeleteOver all a pretty breezy puzzle for a Saturday that almost Wooshed. Just enough resistance not to be a total Friday(this week) romp in the park.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree with Rex about the suspicious number of s-plurals, so much so that I BRASSily put in SUSS for "figure(out)". Also, noting the "dalliancentricity", my "crushes that have lost their sparkle" were OLDFLAMES, before FLATSODAS.
I couldn't figure out what ***** was supposed to be. It looked like redacTED, rather than some kind of rating stars.
Pets are cute and all, but I'm really fascinated by the backgrounds in the pics. There are actual people in actual lovely residences on this blog, who knew???
@Nancy...I'd sure have some fun...A lot more than solving this puzzle.....Hmm. I'd start:
ReplyDeleteThe THRUPLES, IRA, PAM AND DARIN WENT To a TOP RATED PLAY to see PORNO ART....It was REAL NEAT!.....PAM, the WEE LASS from the town of DISMAL, didn't like these GROUP DATES, instead, she wanted.....To be continued on Monday!
Thoughts on the puzzle...GOOD GRAVY! Easy, hard...easy, hard. No idea...to AHA....The No Ideas won.
Hatfield...you got me good. It isn't you? Why would you name your band COLD PLAY? Who are you?
CELLED is a word? No EAR muffs? Aren't PASTIES those things you wear around your teat?... Oh,it's food from the UK.
This just didn't tickle my fancy. I had to work too hard in so many areas (here's looking at you CAPULETS) that it ended up being tedious. Sorry!
Thx Garrett; an excellent word SALAD with lots to chew on! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed.
Relatively smooth solve, but needed all the crosses for CAPULETS.
REAL NEAT Sat. adventure! :)
___
On to Lester Ruffs' Sat. Stumper. 🤞 with Balton & Stewart's NYT acrostic on tap for tm.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
I’m big into the @Lewis camp today. While there may have been some vibes from THRUPLE, PORNO, ASS, etc, the only (to me) proper names that might have given problems were COLDPLAY and DARIN but I’m old enough that I can go through my inventory of Bobby’s…Rydell, Vinton, Darin…so no problem there. Hand up for ALWAYS thinking first of Hatfield/McCoys with feuds, but CAPULETS went in after a couple of crosses.
ReplyDeleteI guess the rhyming thing (DARIN) irks some people. I guess I’ve been exposed to the “standardized” pronunciation that you tend to hear on national news that it doesn’t really bother me.
Interesting responses to an interesting (if somewhat juvenile) midi puzzle collection…sorta like a RAT ROD I thought as I read comments above. If you’re not enjoying the pet pix parade as much as others seem to, here’s a Motor Trend hodgepodge of cars with disdain for COMITY. OH, COME ON a little automotive concours PORNO won’t offend.
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle can go right into the toilet for that idiotic Bobby DARIN clue alone, never mind answers like REAL NEAT, FLAT SODAS, CAR SALES...
ReplyDeleteFrom the Wimp Rock archives, here's Randy Van EARWARMER to sing his 1979 hit. (Who dreamt up that choreography?)
Very easy even with an oversized grid. I put in SALAD BAR with no crosses and just kept going. ARPEGGIO and ANISE TEA were minor bumps in the road.
ReplyDeleteLight on junk, slightly risqué, a WEEK bit of sparkle, liked it.
Very tough for me. Even on Saturday.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know COMITY. And although I knew FLANK, I don't get "I KID."
The clues that had question marks after them - CRIME ART, FLAT SODAS, CAR SALES were cute.
On to Sunday :)
Based on my own experience, I immediately threw down octUPLES for poly relationships. And I certainly participated in my share of GRopeDATES. But I always got a cold bottom, or BRASS as I came to think of it. Guess I needed a rEARWARMER.
ReplyDeleteSal Mineo was a good actor, but his friends would always say that, in private, SALSADANCE fanatic.
Given the salaciousness of this puzzle, what's surprising is not the ASS he's put in, but the TITHES left out.
We don't often see PORNOn Saturday, so thanks Garrett Chalfin.
FLAT SODAS seems rather "green paint," found it hard to swallow.
ReplyDeleteRATROD? "If you say so…"
I hope the pet pics become an annual tradition! Hanukkah ran out of days before I could even attempt to pose four cats with a menorah
ReplyDeleteI recall some comic had a bit about a guy who awakens from a 30 year coma. A nurse shows him her smart phone and says "you can look up any fact; watch movies; listen to any song you want". The guy says "That's amazing! What are you looking at right now?" She replies: "Cat pictures."
ReplyDeleteThe puzzle was way easier than yesterday; 13 minutes instead of 30 for me. Funny how that goes! I liked it except for the orgy/porno vibe Rex mentioned. I don't remember any typeovers except for DREARY before DISMAL.
I knew TUPLE from programming (basically an ordered multiple set) but THRUPLE and THROUPLE are new to me.
[Spelling Bee: Fri 0; streak at 13!]
THANK YOU Andy F for commenting on the Debussy sonata which I had not noticed in skimming the write up I'm listening to it now and yes Beautiful
ReplyDeleteI' thinking of asking Zuill Bailey to include it in a Sitka Music Festival concert. Would love to hear it live.
A little above average Saturday resistance. A good part of that was the extreme SW corner. The exclamation mark in the clue for KID is a misdirect. WIN calls for it, not KID. Even with FLANK, AIRES and NGOS in place my lack of familiarity with RATROD caused delay on KID. Once it was in place all doubt vanished.
ReplyDeleteyd -0
Rex, the pet photo link isn't working. Tried on three different laptops, three different browsers, and on the Iphone. I have the world's most beautiful Calico spirit-animal girl. Would like to share her holiday pic with you.
ReplyDeleteThere is no “pet photo link”; people just send me emails
ReplyDeleteOnce I got the last two letters of 26A, I confidently plunked in GREEN DAY.
ReplyDeleteThe only time I’ve heard someone use the term BRASS was when Bill Clinton used it in his speech at the 2012 Democratic Convention to describe some criticism Mitt Romney had made of President Obama.
ReplyDeleteI was going to say that this the best Friday I've done in a while, but then out of sheer late-night boredom I did one from the archives, a Friday from 2016 - MAS & George Baranay (?? whatever), complete with a quad stack of 15s. My time on that one was 1.5 times my time for todays.
ReplyDelete@Anon 5:20 - I know it's just a rant, but if you really cared you could look each of them up online, and find the answers to those that were mere questions, and dis-proof of all those that were really assertions.
@Rex - You don't have your email on the mobile version of the site.
@All the rest - Get on an actual PC, @Rex's email is there.
Oh for heaven's sake, Rex's email is -- from the web version -- quote:
ReplyDeleterexparker [at] icloud [dot] com
There is no link to click and obviously you have to put in the symbols.
Is it just me, or does the clue for WEE LASS seem a bit off? In my mental Venn diagram, "Young woman" and WEE LASS do not intersect.
ReplyDeleteQuite pleasant and challenging. Three separate mini puzzles, and quite fair. BUT, I'd be okay with never hearing about bull fighting ever. Murder a wounded animal while wearing a dress from Liberace's closet. Nice. Referring to it with a pretty sounding Spanish word doesn't make it any less pathetic. Take it out of your word list.
ReplyDeleteTee-Hee: Salacious Saturday. I need to shower or maybe use a grinder to get all this dirt off. PORNO. PASTIES (OH COME ON, you're going to clue them as something British?). ASS. GROUP DATES. THRUPLES. Gah.
Yesterday was the one-year anniversary of "that" guest reviewer's review.
Uniclues:
1 Retirement plan for Pizza Hut fan.
2 Do what it takes to become a Friday night made-for-TV movie.
3 Stop lying sweetheart.
4 Cousin of a Catholic school girl outfit.
5 Nickname for young superhero often duct taped to a flagpole.
6 Guitar playing plumber.
7 Christine.
8 My bed frame when I just can't face the day.
1 SALAD BAR IRA
2 CRIME RING CRUX
3 "OH COME ON, WEE LASS" (~)
4 LUTHERAN PASTIES
5 KID REAL NEAT
6 ARPEGGIO LUIGI
7 LITERARY RAT ROD
8 BRASS CAPTOR
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: When the costumes you're wearing don't manifest in a bacchanalia. BAD JUJU TOGAS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Vincent Van Gogh disagrees over EARWARMER
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, my sidekick, Pip, shelter sister to my avatar, the dearly departed OC deserves to introduce herself to the neighborhood, but I don’t have an email address for OFL. Any help?
ReplyDeleteAs for the puzzle, I was so thankful for some really fair crosses and some equally good guesses. The C for both CAPToR and COLD PLAY wasn’t a total guess. I just had no idea about the band on Spotify and thought rOLl PLAY was a better band name than COLD PLAY, but that would have made Hades a rAPTOR. Possible, but obviously not.
Down in the little SE “puzzlet” I was having a bit of trouble because after my quick scan, the only sure one was NGOS. This left FLANK or rouNd as the choice for London Broil. FLANK to me is the meat of choice. A very close second is a hangar steak but too many letters.
Would have been simple but for the fact that a dear friend and I have a running disagreement: FLANK or Round for the London Broil. Both of us are foodies, both excellent (or better) cooks and BBQers (if I do say so myself). I’ve eaten his London Broil after I fed his family mine (both to the enjoyment of all).
Chris did not tell me he used round and I would have licked my plate but for setting such a bad example for the two boys. So, while round can become (and there are recipes out there in the web-o-verse touting its sublimity for the Broil) a delicious Broil, I prefer the FLANK and suggest that unless the cook is pretty exceptional, round is likely going to produce a dry, tough dinner.
Another little challenge for me was hoping against hope (and being wrong) that the “costume designer” clue was not going to be about PORNO. So I thought of animation and used ANIME. I was going great guns with the acrosses at that point and of course quickly fixed it when checking the downs and getting AXON, from CRUX. Alas. Overall, I felt much the same as @Rex about our constructor trying too hard with the sexual references. And I spell the word THROUPLE. Simply because it references its etymology- COUPLE. Oh well.
That is the highlight for me of the puzzle. I got very tired of plurals, especially through the diagonal section. It felt like the constructor wished he’d have chosen a different grid design and was stuck needing all those plurals.
Once more, I appreciate help getting an email for OFL to send a pet holiday picture. I am enjoying all of them!!!
Perhaps one could consider "thrupence" for the model for thruple; three pence is a thrupence and three partners are a thruple.
DeleteOops! Posted before reading everyone’s words of wisdom today. Thank you @okanaganer!
ReplyDeleteWasn't sure if 9A would be IRA or ARI since both fit the clue "Name found forward and backward in 'Miranda rights'". IRREGS and AXONS were SURE SIGNS it would be IRA.
ReplyDeleteThose three Downs were part of a passel of POCs (plural of convenience) liberally sprinkled throughout the grid. Some balance was achieved when a single EAR WARMER showed up.
Like @CyC 9:07 I thought that 29A PAM was a cooking oil rather than an "Alternative to cooking oil", as clued. A quick check confirmed that it is mostly canola oil but with some added ingredients like dimethyl silicone with propane or butane added as an accelerant.
Did a double take when 34A "Surfing hazards" was RIP TIDES. I know they are dangerous for swimmers but thought they would be helpful to surfers since they would help them get away from shore and out to the waves.
Failed this one. I had a reasonable enough LUTHEReN. Since I got CORRIDeS only from crosses it seemed reasonable as well.
ReplyDeleteWeird when the Friday puzzle is harder than the Saturday. I personally prefer Saturday to be in the challenging category. Or at least medium.
ReplyDeleteAlso “pasties” and a couple of asses side by side (I can’t unsee “weel ass” 😆 Strange “theme” overall and
ReplyDeleteAmazin crossword fill. Slow-goin, due to it bein served up as almost 3 separate puzs.
ReplyDeleteThe no-knows weren't a big issue, with only: RATROD [but like]. COMITY. THRUPLES [but halfway-inferrable]. Hardly produced a comity of errors, in my solvequest.
Instantly thought exactly of what @RP did, on that there DARIN clue: really requires that "soundin'" correction, to be extra-primo.
some faves included: REALNEAT. COLDPLAY. PERMITM&E. OHCOMEON. AXONS clue. DARIN clue, if suitably adjusted. IRA/ARI clue.
Interestin sets of Jaws of Themelessness variations, in the puzgrid.
staff weeject pick, of only 8 choices: MTN. It was clearly the weeject highpoint, today.
Thanx, Mr. Chalfin dude. Nice constructioneerin job.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s. fave pet pic = Chloe the moosemeister.
**gruntz**
Everyone changes my name to Darrel, so it's irrelevant how it's really pronounced. 😁
ReplyDeleteRooMonster Just Don't Call Me Late To Dinner Guy
Worst puzzle in a long while. Got hung up on the spelling of “thruple” (throuple is much more common) and just downhill from there. Oof.
ReplyDeletePAM is cooking oil smh
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle was my undoing and brought my 68 day streak to an end after more than an hour trying to untangle it. My answer of AUCTIONS rather than CARSALES did me in. And to add salt to the wound I think my choice was a better one
ReplyDeleteRex has accurately sunmed up the cons of tgis puzzle, but on the pri side, the puzzle had a relatvlow PPO count hencecno naticks... I'll take any natick-free puzzle over any puzzle with a natck (no matter how cleverly it executes its theme) any day of the week and twice on Sunday!
ReplyDeleteLUTHERAN LASS
ReplyDeleteOHCOMEON don't KID ME PAM,
get WARMER AS WEE say,
AS FIRM ON DATES AS I AM,
it's DISMAL this COLDPLAY.
--- LUIGI CAPULET
This one was a bit tougher than the usual Saturday for me.It’s a TOPRATED theneless so hats off to Garrett Chalpin.
ReplyDeleteEights wild in this one; had to be hard to build. Props for that.
ReplyDeleteThought I was looking at an M. C. Escher stairwell at first. Wouldn't like to climb those lower steps while that anvil is hanging over my head.
Three puzzles indeed: NW, SE and the SW/NE CORRIDAS. Did the former first, broke into the NE and then descended slowly into the SW. Saturday hard. "Complete" = PURE: stretching it out there, quite a bit.
Paper was REALNEAT when done; no writeovers for a change. Still rated at least medium for the day. Some of my puzzles look WARTORN. Birdie.
Wordle birdie.
I had the same issues as OFL with the spelling of SCOW and THRUPLES, I think I've even seen THRouple in a puzzle before. Also had bLAde before FLANK and hedgES before COPSES. Noticed: OHCOMEON/RUNON crossing ON the ON.
ReplyDeleteWordle par.
Slow start, faster finish. Haven't heard COLDPLAY in quite a while. Hmmm
ReplyDeleteDiana, LIW
Awful puzzle…didn’t even finish. It’s THROUPLES btw…look it up. #Bleccch
ReplyDelete