Relative difficulty: Medium (normal Tues.)
Theme answers:
- CLOTHES PUN (17A: "This cardboard belt is a waist of paper," for example?)
- PECTORAL FUN (24A: Good times doing bench presses?)
- MOZZARELLA STUCK (37A: Why the pizza oven is so hard to clean?)
- GROCERY LUST (48A: Desire in the dessert aisle?)
Niall James Horan (/ˈnaɪəl ˈhɔːrən/ NY-uhl HOR-ruhn; born 13 September 1993) is an Irish singer-songwriter. He rose to prominence as a member of the boy band One Direction, formed in 2010 on the singing competition The X Factor. The group released five albums and went on to become one of the best-selling boy bands of all time.
Following the band's hiatus in 2016, Horan signed a recording deal as a solo artist with Capitol Records and has since released three albums: Flicker (2017), Heartbreak Weather (2020) and The Show (2023). Flicker debuted at number one in Ireland and the US, and reached the top three in Australia and the UK. The album's first two singles, "This Town" and "Slow Hands", reached the top twenty in several countries. Heartbreak Weather was released in March 2020, and debuted at number one in the UK, Ireland and Mexico, and at number four in the US.
Horan's third studio album, titled The Show, was released in June 2023. It was preceded by the singles "Heaven" and "Meltdown", which were released in February and April 2023, respectively.
• • •
The fill on this was a little disappointing, particularly in the corners, where a little more polish would've been nice. SSNS ALKA OAKEN (SW) and ANO CAPOS ATARI ISH (NW) are a lot of repeaters to take in such a small space. And RIP IT followed by ATE IT felt like too much IT. Not sure why you don't go for EVEN over EXED. You can't want the "X" (or GRIDS) that badly. Nice smooth word like EVEN beats awkwardness like EXED every time. EKE and ADE and INOIL ... there's too great a tolerance for this short gunk today. RAZOR CLAMS, though, that's very nice. APOLOGIZE is fine, OUTSTAYED kinda sags a little ... and then there's ON A PLATTER, which ... wow, normally a prepositional phrase *this* long is gonna grate. Hard. But if any looooong prepositional phrase can stand on its own, it's probably ON A PLATTER. My mind is kind of torn in half by that one, actually. My reaction was something like "No! Wait, yes! Er ..." As of now, I think that answer stands alone just fine.
[Salome with the Head of John the Baptist by Caravaggio, National Gallery, London, c. 1607–1610] |
Do not see anything specifically "turn"-y about "LET ME!" (43A: "I want a turn!"), so that was one of the harder clues to decipher today. Almost all of the "difficulty" today was in figuring out the puns. No tough proper nouns today. RITA Ora you should definitely have tucked away by now (26D: Singer Ora). NIALL Horan ... well, if you didn't know him, I understand. Still, he's pretty famous, as pop music figures go (just be grateful you didn't get HORAN as an answer). The LUDWIG clue was cute / interesting (46D: "Black Panther" composer Göransson, who shares his first name with another famous composer). Nice way to introduce you to a new name—by getting you there via an older, much much more familiar name.
That's all. Here are some more Holiday Pet Pics to brighten your darkest days of the year. First, the kitties. Here's Rikki playing with her present, which, as you can clearly see, is a ... a ... wow, I have no idea. A festive narwhal pillow, let's say! Rikki is 18. She has earned her narwhal pillow. Rikki, don’t lose that narwhal! It’s the only one you own!
[Thanks, Angie] |
Here's Sweetness (!!!), who died last October, peering out from under the Tablecloth of Christmas Past:
[thanks, and condolences, Yat] |
[Thanks, Michael] |
Here are Momo and Woogie, two rescue greyhounds, showing off their incredible patience. "Must you?" they sigh. Yes, we must! Dogs must be Santa-fied!
[Thanks, other Rex] |
Nice puzzle, just hard enough to be an enjoyable solve. I got IFIWEREYOU right away off the clue, which made the theme answers easy. The revealer helped solve it, which is as it should be. One nit to pick...the clue for OSHA seemed misleading.
ReplyDeleteWould a guy who had moistened too many Christmas card envelopes with his tongue finally be OUTOFLUCK?
🤪
Delete
ReplyDeleteTwo overwrites, both before reading the respective clues: the non-punny PECTORAL FiN at 24A and -- assuming a different clue -- RAZORbackS at 28D. I dislike EXED (18D) as much as @Rex does.
I like the meta-ness of two of the themers, where CLOTHES PUN is a pun about clothing, and PECTORAL FUN is having fun with PECTORAL.
ReplyDeleteThere is also a tightness to the theme in that the themers are all two-word phrases, where the transformation occurs only in the second, one-syllable word. So, no 'cherry-picker' to 'cherry-pucker', or 'aint misbehavin' to 'aunt misbehavin' (though that could have been a fun one), or 'reduce to a simmer' to 'reduce to a summer'.
This may have been done before, but I don't care. I could see the I=U gimmick after two themers, but IFIWEREYOU still struck me as an ingenious revealer, so fine with me.
ReplyDeleteFinally know RITA Ora, learned about NIALL and the other LUDWIG, and that was about it for slowdowns today.
Reading OFL's review today made me wonder if he grades student papers with comments like "This is pretty good but I could have done it a lot better.". Hope not.
Hey, Rikki is 18 and still playing with stuff? Our Theo is 19 and will jump up on a chair and then sit to get a treat, but that's about it. I think Rikki is a showoff.
Very nice Tuesday indeed, SW. Seemed Worthy of a better critique, and thanks for all the fun.
PECTORAL FUN just wasn’t worth the effort - it just felt forced and flat. Too many of the clues and answers were at least abutting trivia test territory. Not a fan of a semi-cryptic theme along with sections laden with stuff like OSHA, SERIF, HAIKU, ARDEN . . . and some really “iffy” clues like the jeans and tee shirts for BASICS - I just don’t imagine one would encounter something like that in the wild. Nothing terrible or wrong with the grid, it just didn’t land for me today - hopefully others will enjoy the punny theme.
ReplyDeleteI thought the revealer was better than the theme answers today.
ReplyDeleteSimple - but cute trick - apt revealer. Liked the oddballness of GROCERY LUST. RAZOR CLAMS and ON A PLATTER are nice longs.
ReplyDeleteI APOLOGIZE
Some gluey shorts - Rex highlight the culprits. TCM is pretty solid this time of year - watched It Happened on 5th Ave last weekend and The Shop Around the Corner looks like it’s on Friday. LUDWIG clue was fun.
Pleasant Tuesday morning solve. Now onto some sprouted OATs.
Brian Fallon
I had some mixed feelings about the puzzle (how is that a Clothes Pun?) but then, the pet pics! who even cares after that!!! Adorable.
ReplyDelete“Waist”
DeleteA fun Tuesday with a nice little theme.
ReplyDeleteI disagree with Rex that themes have to be challenging and restrictive in order to have maximum value. A simple letter swap with a clean revealer and nice little fun theme answers? Good.
The CLOTHESPUN clue was tortured, though. Just... that needed more work. The rest were very nice.
IF I WERE YOU is fertile territory for a theme, as it is a delightful pun and produces many lovely answers. It’s been done twice before, and two lovely former answers have been WORKING THE SOUL [Ministering?] and YOYO DUET [Piece for cellist Ma and a friend?].
ReplyDeleteSeth added three delightful answers to the oeuvre (CLOTHES PUN was previously done), and presented a puzzle with some sweet bite in clue and answer, making for a delectable Tuesday outing.
Not to mention some sweet serendipities:
• GNATS abutting RILE.
• PuzzPair© of PITA and BRED.
• SPIKE and a backward LEE.
• Homophones (ADE and AIDE), palindromes (EKE and LOL), and even a rare-in-crossword five-letter semordnilap (SERIF).
• Theme echo with RILES, which, by following the I-to-U formula, becomes another bona fide word RULES.
Intended and unintended pleasures throughout this puzzle. Thank you for making it, Seth, and congratulations on your promising debut!
Administrative note: I will be away for some family time Out West, and I expect to return to posting a week from Saturday. I think I’ll be able to sneak in my clues list next week on Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteLiked it! For me, solving it was a nice progression from the dawn of understanding - seeing the waist-waste PUN - to getting the reveal with no crosses. In between, I had to stare at PECTORAL FUN for a minute before I saw the hidden FIN and got the theme idea; then MOZZARELLA...STUCK immediately, while GROCERY LUST was a great payoff. After ON A PLATTER was followed by IN OIL, I was reminded of Dr. Seuss's Green Eggs and Ham ("I would not like them...").
ReplyDeleteTo flesh out my comment, the two previous instances of this theme were 8/12/18 (NYT, Ross Trudeau) and 10/4/22 (Universal Crossword, Michele Govier).
ReplyDeleteMy dear dear NYTXW -
ReplyDeleteSunday was great. We were building BRIDGES, never once getting BOGged down. LAKEd U so much!
Today I am just not into U. Sorry…
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteFun little puz here
Did not take me too much time
Caused this Him to Hum!
A little HAIKU to start your day. 😁
Neat punified puz. It's been a season of U's so far this week. Hi @M&A!
Smooth solve, didn't get STUCK anywhere. A FUN time.
GROCERY LUST story (but not as juicy as you'd think...)
Worked at a grocery store in CT for many years, a movie decided to shoot a scene there where the lead female star likes a male checker, and it switches to a fantasy scene where the checker grabs her, puts her on the belt, and starts making out (or snogging, if your British). Not a big movie company, or a big movie. Came out sometime in the 90's. It was called "The Things A Girl Would Do", which was actually a shortened title, losing "For Her Volvo". Saw it once years ago. Kind of an odd movie, if I remember (but of course, my memory is shot, so...)
Thanks for a bit more fun than BASICS, Beth.
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Safe travels Lewis. Who's going to balance out OFL in your absence?
ReplyDeleteRe: Rex grading student papers: On the first paper I handed in in college, the prof wrote: An utterly illiterate work.
Ouch.
Seth, you had me at the CLOTHES PUN pun. It seems like it's completely original and it's very funny.
ReplyDeleteI also chuckled at GROCERY LUST.
And you nailed the landing. IF I WERE YOU is the perfect revealer. I didn't see it coming, even though I should have.
I suppose PECTORAL FIN is a Thing? A Thing on a Fish? I've only heard of just plain fins.
I love the way you've tried to be interesting and amusing in places other than the themers. Un-Tuesdayish and very nice clues for DELI, BRED, RAM, RAZOR CLAMS, PISA and especially BASICS.
This was FUN, Seth. Please keep them coming.
Why is 51D Laila?
ReplyDeleteBecause that's what Muhammad Ali named his daughter, who became a professional boxer? Just a guess.
Deletei’ve taken to trying tuesdays as down only, and it _feels_ like the nyt tuesday down clues are easier than the mondays. generally themes just get in the way of the initial solve for me. today’s puzzle was easier than the usual tuesday—and many mondays—as most of the answers fell on first read.
ReplyDeletei’m really enjoying the furry family photos. thank you, rex, for including them and especially readers for submitting them!
Well I liked it. Yes, the theme was simple but really just fine for a Tuesday. If this was Thursday I would’ve said “Is that all there is?” But for today it was smooth, clever and a pleasure to solve. And it was even challenging for me until I got to the revealer. I had the MOZARRELLA STUCK in the center and wondered what on earth that was portending. Loved GROCERY LUST. Who among us hasn’t stood in the cookie aisle and drooled over the possibilities? Except for the Oreos. You can keep the Oreos. Anyway, great debut Seth! I see a future of more crosswords with your name on them.
ReplyDeleteThe fur babies are all so beautiful today! The dogs all just melted my heart. I love my rescue kitties but I am a dog person first and foremost.
I will be off the blog for the next week but will look in at the rest of the critters. Wishing all of you safe travels and a blessed, peaceful Christmas.
Very funny reveal. IF I WERE YOU. Love it. I like MOZZARELLA STÜCK and GROCERY LUST (tee-hee).
ReplyDeleteI made a mess of the north central putting in UNDIES for the t-shirt clue -- blue jeans be damned -- and by the time I redacted all the other wrong words it spawned I felt like I was in an alternate puzzle universe.
Uniclues:
1 Crosswords in the Mediterranean.
2 Enjoyed novels.
3 Gratuity for pole dancer in the produce section.
4 even on TV / popcorn with butter-like goo / makes bad movies fine
1 PITA GRIDS (~)
2 READ LIARS
3 GROCERY LUST TIP
4 TCM IN OIL HAIKU (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: The injury-claims lawyer on my TV seventeen times a night. ABC SPOT PEST.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Thoroughly enjoyed it. What a clever revealer!
ReplyDeleteI liked the pun at 17A. Waist of paper.
Thx Seth, for the FUNny PUNny GRID fill! 😊
ReplyDeleteEasy-med (downs-only); no major STUCKing points.
Actually, there was one semi-STiCKing point at the composer name, which was quickly rectified when I grokked the theme. Changing LiST to LUST got me LUDWIG for the win.
Loved the crossing of IF I WERE YOU 🐑 with RAM! 🐏
A grand adventure; liked it muchly! :)
My condolences Yat, along with those of @Rex, for the passing of your Sweetness. 🙏 😿
___
Croce's 868 was tough (over 7 NYT Sat.). Dnf'd at the crosses of the 'author' / 'city' and the 'multimillionaria' / 'fabric'. On to Husic & Wagner's holiday puz. 🤞
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
I got the fronts of all the themers before I got any of their back ends; I could see there were puns involved, but just couldn't come up with any of them. So I needed the revealer to solve it. Nice experience.
ReplyDeleteA bit of geography today with the forest and the desert. Only when filling it in today did I realize that the Forest of Arden was really Ardennes. Doh!
Ah EERO and ASTA. I know Mr. Saarinen, but couldn't remember if the latter was Nick and Nora's dog or FDR's--no wait, that was FALA, wasn't it?
As an octogenarian, I did bridle at the suggestion that shabby=OLD. But maybe it's true; I don't even own either a white tee or blue jeans.
I don't think GNATS nip, though; and while old buckets that hung in the well may be OAKEN, wine barrels are oak.
@anonymous @9:42am: Laila Ali is Muhammad Ali’s daughter, also a professional boxer.
ReplyDeleteA fun & clever puzzle. I liked it a lot. Nice debut, Seth & thank you :)
ReplyDeleteThink deeply about the Sergeant on a Beatles album?
ReplyDeleteQuestionable assertions by your internist?
Beating the crap out of your long-time nemesis?
I didn't make an appearance yesterday because I was knocked flatter than a pancake by Covid. I've had all the boosters, but man oh man was I out. I couldn't bring myself to pick up the iPad. Feeling better today, but like I'd been run over by a truck.
I'm not sure I get 61D (One that a ewe can count on?) for RAM. Is that like cluing BOYFRIEND as (One that a human female can count on?)? I mean, I get that it's a 3 letter throw-away answer, but let me know if I'm missing something.
I like puns. I liked this. Thanks, Seth Weitberg
PEPPERMULL
DOCTORSBULL
PRIORITYMAUL
Thank you again @egs you never fail! Brilliant clues and answers!
DeleteGot the long downs pretty easily. but LETME flummoxed that part. I had METOO. Duh. And I took longer than usual to finish the SW. The three-letter words didn't come easily.
ReplyDeleteThere is a lengthy article in the New Yorker written by Natan Last about crosswords. It is purportedly about inclusion, but really delves into the history and trends. Foreign words and phrases are way down from their peak in the 60's.
ReplyDelete@anon 9:42 Laila Ali, is Mohammed's daughter and has a better record:)
Laila Ali
ReplyDeleteShe showed up a few weeks ago (on a Thursday, maybe?) Didn't know her then. Did today. Yay! (Same with Rita Ora).
What? WHAT!? The clue and answer for MOZZARELLASTUCK don’t agree and nobody has boo to say about it? “Why the pizza oven IS so hard to clean?” because MOZZARELLASTiCKs. The pun answer is fine but the clue needs to be “…WAS so hard to clean”. Shame on all of you for letting this slide.
ReplyDeleteDepends on how you look at it.
DeleteThe pizza is already stuck in the oven. Now, in the present tense, you have to clean it
Close enough for crosswords
Ugh. This is the kind of lazy excusing that will lead to madness. This one is so easy to fix by changing one word in the clue. More evidence that Mr. Shortz is not actually doing this task himself anymore and has not been for some time. I suppose he was waiting for his big milestone year to step down… must be coming in early 2024.
DeleteADE is a suffix. A show of hands, please, from any of you who have ever referred to any beverage ever (a wintertime, autumnal, springtime, or “summertime quaff”) as an “ade.” As in: We’ll have two Cokes and an ade. As in: I’m hankering for a lemon-flavored noncarbonated drink. Do you have ade? The frequent use of ADE in NYT crosswords is unfortunate.
ReplyDeleteOn the tough side for me. Did not know NIALL and LUDWIG (although if I’d read the entire clue it might have helped)…mOodY before POUTY…RAZOR CLAMS didn’t come easily…the theme clues required careful reading…a bit tough.
ReplyDeleteAmusing Tuesday appropriate theme with some fine long downs, liked it. A nice debut.
yep. Primo TuesPuz thème with a superb reveal.
ReplyDeleteTop puz half solvequest was pretty easy goin, with bottom half bein just slightly feistier. M&A blames NIALL & LUDWIG.
Per @RP's request:
COWLUCK?
HALFPUNT?
MAGICTRUCK?
MUSTERBUG?
FROZENSTUFF?
… Hey, just be relieved they didn't go with TOTALLYSHUT.
staff weeject puck: ISH. Converts best, in this case to USH. Do also kinda like the look of XUU, tho…
Thanx for the fun, pectoral and otherwise, Mr. Weitberg dude. Very nice debut.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s. Excellent pet gallery pics, btw.
**gruntz**
I smiled a lot with this puzzle. And I disagree with Rex on EXED - the clue for GRIDS made that a keeper, in my opinion.
ReplyDeleteNIALL has my last name so I take umbrage at the idea that we should be grateful to not have seen HORAN in the grid. :-)
Rex did make me laugh at his borrowing the Steely Dan lyrics for Rikki!
Thanks, Seth Weitberg, for an unusually entertaining Tuesday puzzle.
@bocamp inspired me to try solving down clues only on days other than Monday. It worked! The technique did make it harder to get the theme, because as I recognized each theme phrase I deleted each crossing word that had U instead of I. Then when I got the theme I had to put them all back in. Still fun!
ReplyDelete(Note: in late yesterday's comments, @ghostofelectricity wrote a very nice short essay about It's a Wonderful Life and Jimmy Stewart.)
[Spelling Bee: Sun and Mon both -1. Streak over!]
@egs
ReplyDeleteWishing you a speedy and full recovery! 🙏
@okanaganer (1:01 PM) 👍
___
Husic & Wagner's Mon. puz was not really a holiday puz, but will be published in the Dec. 25 print edition of the New Yorker. Nevertheless, it was unique, clever, fun and comparatively easy for a Mon. New Yorker.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
@Anon 12:42. Is agreement really needed there? The oven is hard to clean (today) because the mozz stuck (last week when we made pizza). Or is there an XW "rule" that's being violated?
ReplyDeleteHad MOODY before POUTY which made TIP and ATEIT a struggle.
ReplyDeletep.s.
ReplyDelete@roo: Agree … it's a been a mighty U-ful week of xwords, so far. These debut constructioneers seem to be into respectfulness for the most seldom-used of vowels. The New Year looks bright.
@kitshef & other sufferers: I posted up an explanation of the runtpuz, if that'll help heal yer wounds.
Speakin of wounds … M&A skidded down a ladder leadin to the attic a while back, after a slip. Got a leg bruise bigger than snot. [Showin it to my doc, tomorrow, even tho it's started to fade a bit.] Fortunately, it don't hurt much to walk with it … just sittin on it that's a real pain in the ass.
Butt, was still able to go shoppin today for a "steamin pile" of ten schlock DVDs to gift to the bro-in-law for Christmas. Courtesy of the Wal-Mart bargain bin.
Is "Nope" a suitably schlocky flick? Weren't real sure.
Surprised there haven't been any submissions of pet bird Christmas pics turn up, yet. Our pet budgies and cockies used to like to land in the Christmas tree, on occasion. On the other hand, don't recall takin too many pics on such occasions. We'd always just look at em and say "Well there's yer problem!"
M&Also
About Nope , M & A. Peele, the director did a horror movie with a twist Get Out an d he did the same thing with Nope this time science fiction genre. I found Nope much more enjoyable.
DeleteHe uses many of the gimmicks of standard 1950’s sci-fi , with a bit of Close Encounters thrown in, He is very good at scaring me anyway. It goes from whimsical to tense on a dime
I wouldn’t use the word schlock though He is a very good director and knows exactly what he is doing. There is little unintended laughter here! And it is well acted.
He also has some serious things to say in a subtle way. Like he did in Get Out. I liked that aspect of the story also YMMV.
To me a good movie but not a schlockfest!
No Time for Sergeants today @egs but wish you a speedy CoVid recovery!
ReplyDeleteHope you get this.
@Anonymous (12:42) I see your point but don’t really agree on this particular clue/answer set. The way I interpreted it was: I’m cleaning the oven today and it IS hard to clean because the last time we had pizza the MOZZARELLA STUCK. Seems fine to me.
ReplyDeleteHarumph, I say. The best I’ll give it is “excusable” but why waste your excuses when they aren’t needed?
DeleteI think the full title of the column was “Ask” Ann Landers.
ReplyDeleteI don't care how many people were made unhappy by PECTORALFIN. I really liked fish when I was a kid and could name all the fins on a fish when I was five years old. It's the first time I've ever seen it in a crossword, and I love it. Thank you, Seth.
ReplyDeleteOkay puzzle. Surprised to learn the NYT has had three puzzles with identical themes as this one in 2023 alone. I thought the editor(s) would automatically disqualify a puzzle for theme duplication.
ReplyDeleteRichie Ashburn at the plate: "Curses, fouled again!"
ReplyDeleteYa hadda be there. Anyway, a cute theme that really didn't stick the landing. And we paid for it with plenty of yucky fill. EKE costs a stroke, and EXED comes close to another. Really bad. I second @G. Weissman's opinion of ADE: it is NOT a WORD. And the clue writer shouldn't mind the word "suffix;" he uses it elsewhere. Even suffixed, though, ADE is tiresome.
LAILA and RITA fight over the DOD title; guess who wins that one!
34d: OUTlasted is in-the-language; you blew it by puttimg "lasted" in the clue! I don't know if I've ever heard "OUTSTAYED." Overstayed one's welcome, sure, but not out. Bogey.
Wordle bogey.
Oh oh oh - now I get the trick. It seems to take me a while. Of course, I enjoy the puzzle anyway. As I've often said, constructors are more clever by half, and I am in awe of all of them.
ReplyDeleteWhen was the last time you served anything on a platter? Hope there's some MOZZARELLA, STUCK or not.
Love a FUN PUN.
Diana, LIW
STUCK ON YOU
ReplyDeleteRITA would APOLOGIZE,
only the BASICS she had READ,
IFI could SEE LUST IN her eyes,
LETME say IT's ODD when WE get BRED.
--- LUDWIG ARDEN