Sunday, December 10, 2023

Neophyte, informally / SUN 12-10-23 / The Coyotes, on N.H.L. scoreboards / Beverage brand with antioxidants / Foe in the Elder Scrolls video game / Fifth-brightest star in the night sky / Insurance giant acquired by CVS in 2019 / Event that might have "mutton busting" / Inner self in Jungian philosophy

Constructor: Zachary David Levy and Jeff Chen

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: "Political Pun-Ditry" — political ... puns (related to various non-political professions, god knows why):

Theme answers:
  • ALONG PARTY LINES (21A: The club's bouncer earned a living ...)
  • HOT BUTTON ISSUES (30A: The fashion magazine editor focused on fasteners in her ...)
  • LAME-DUCK BILLS (40A: The veterinarian specialized in mending ...)
  • SPEAKERS OF THE HOUSE (62A: The sound engineer was obsessed with the ...)
  • GRASS ROOTS MOVEMENT (71A: The groundskeeper spent years studying ...)
  • CAMPAIGN CHAIR (94A: The weary general sat in his ...)
  • CABINET POSITION (105A: The carpenter measured twice for the ideal ...)
  • AN ACT OF CONGRESS (120A: The paid escort was fined for ...)
Word of the Day: BAI (31D: Beverage brand with antioxidants) —
a yellow mist occurring in eastern China and Japan during the spring and fall, caused by dust from the interior of China (collinsdictionary.com)

Also 

Bai Brands is a beverage company founded in 2009 in Princeton, New Jersey, by entrepreneur Ben Weiss. Weiss started Bai after he learned about the coffeefruit – the fruit that surrounds the outside of the coffee bean — and decided to use it to create a new brand of beverages. The company offers a line of low-calorie soft drinks (including sodas, bottled water, iced tea, and non-carbonated fruit-flavored drinks) sweetened with erythritol and rebaudioside A (stevia leaf extract), ascorbic acid, and extract from coffea fruit harvested in Indonesia; its flavors typically are identified by the name of an exotic locale along with the natural fruit flavor used. Its flagship product is Bai Antioxidant Infusions. In 2015, it launched a brand of bottled water called Bai Antiwater.

By 2015, Bai was named one of “America’s Most Promising Companies” by Forbes. In 2016, entertainer Justin Timberlake invested in Bai and became the brand’s “chief flavor officer.” On November 22, 2016, it was announced that Dr Pepper Snapple Bottling Group had made a cash purchase of Bai Brands for $1.7 billion. (wikipedia)

• • •

This is the kind of puzzle that makes me rethink my position (decidedly negative) on themeless Sundays. Because though I think themeless Sundays are a waste of time, there's no doubt that last Sunday's offering was decidedly more interesting to solve than this exercise in groanolatry. Political puns ... yep, that's what these are. Why are we getting them delivered in this way, as if they were specialties of other, non-political professions? Who knows? I don't. So ... "party" is not political party but woohoo party, "issues" are not political issues but magazine issues, "speakers" are not ... well, you get the picture. It goes on like this. For eight long answers. There's a bunch of non-thematic fill in there too, most of it short, too much of it stale. I think the final themer, AN ACT OF CONGRESS, is supposed to be the real punchline, the coup de grace, the kicker at the end, but the clue on that one just feels creepy, frankly (120A: The paid escort was fined for ...). Punishing sex workers ... for your humorous finale? ... ha ha? Yes, you did your little "Congress" pun, congrats on that, yes yes, "sexual congress," good one. But still, the cluing, yuck. The whole concept here is very last-century remedial. Total 180 from yesterday, when every other answer was knocking my socks off. Today ... absolute blah.


BAI CLIC SOPOR USONE MUDCAT ... this was the kind of gunk yesterday didn't have and today has in spades. There is So Much 3-4-5-letter fill in this thing, and when you do occasionally get a 7+ non-theme answer, it ends up being something like ON A STAR or OBOE SOLO. Or a PIANO SEAT (not the PIANO BENCH, as you might (reasonably) expect). I don't dislike DROP NAMES or VENTURED OUT or even RACING BIKES, but none of them have enough sizzle to make up for the dreariness of the theme. So many 3s. So many 4s. So many 5s. This isn't even bad in interesting ways. It's just dull. Some weak puns and a lot of filler. Hard even to know what to write about. I got so annoyed that SPEAKERS OF THE HOUSE was in the plural (???) that I just gave up at that point and hurried to the end so I could go downstairs and have whisky and my dinner ASAP. What are you supposed to say about OAT OLE TEL EEL ELI ELOI MRI ANIMA OMANI MONAMI CST CRU TEE ISTO ONTO ICEPOP CAY OSHA IVE IRE ISP RBI AETNA NONOS and on and on??? I like SAWBUCK, insofar as I like olde-timey slang you might see in crime stories, or in the prose of hardboiled newspaper writers of old (19A: Ten-spot). But beyond that, there are no real high points for me. And no fantastic lows. No particularly tough parts. Just a 21x21 slog through punville. There's just not enough coherence, or sass, or contemporary relevance, or anything to make the theme pop. Dutiful, straightforward puns, imagined as the activities of non-politicians for god knows why. It's a little dispiriting, honestly.


I had one moment of uncertainty while solving. I guess I've seen BAI before, but I can never remember it because who drinks that junk? Also, if I think of 3-letter drinks with dubious "antioxidant" claims, I think of POM. After that, shrug. So I had to get every cross to get BAI, which was not that easy where ARI was concerned (38A: The Coyotes, on N.H.L. scoreboards). Still not used to the idea that they have ice hockey in Phoenix, frankly. If it never freezes in your city, you should not be allowed to have a hockey team. No beach volleyball in Winnipeg, no ice hockey in Phoenix, these are my demands.


I gotta let this one go. The more I think about it, the more it's taking me out of the Christmas spirit. We got a tree and put lights in our outdoor bushes and everything, for once (we're usually pretty lazy about such things). Gonna decorate the tree now, I think, if the cats let us. Does this look like the face of someone who will let us?


See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. Grand CRU (98D: Grand finale?) is a wine classification, indicating the good stuff

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

105 comments:

  1. Easy. A very whooshy solve. I needed to briefly stare at the BAI/ARI cross because what @Rex said.

    This was kinda meh for me. The puns weren’t bad enough to be “good“. Didn’t hate it but @Rex makes some valid points. FWIW, I personally would like to see more themeless puzzles on Sunday.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:47 AM

      Yes more themeless Sundays! They're the sweet spot.

      Delete
  2. Alice Pollard12:53 AM

    Finished no errors. For the life of me I can’t understand this one: Grand finale? CRU. Can someone help?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:57 AM

      It’s a wine designation https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cru_(wine)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:57 AM

      Rex addressed CRU in his original post. See the explanation in his P.S.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous7:27 PM

      I enjoy wine and “cru” did not come to mind as the answer to 98D

      Delete
  3. I have to agree the theme was pretty unexciting. The "best"? might be LAME DUCK BILLS.

    The clues were sometimes more exciting than the answers, like "Went trekking" for VENTURED OUT. The answer suggests a chronic agoraphobe felt adventurous and actually left their house: "Okay, I made it to the corner; thank God that's over with!" But the clue suggests: "Next stop Nepal!"

    I'm not a fan of "Name hidden in ___" clues, and for 36 down 'smell a rat' I had ELLA.

    [Spelling Bee: Sat 0, for a 7 day streak, so Sun to Sat: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0! Compared to the week before, which was a much less impressive -1 0 0 -1 0 -1 -1!]

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Druid7:11 AM

      But there really aren’t lame duck bills. There are lame ducks: politicians who have lost clout since they will be out of office soon.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:52 AM

      A lame duck bill is one considered in a lame duck session, between an election and the end of the legislators’ terms. Not a common term, but a real one.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous6:52 PM

      The timing could not be worse. Regardless of your politics , you are likely feeling at least somewhat taken aback by the politics of today when a President of a University can be forced to resign over a sound bite. I was a practicing lawyer for many years and I have always been vain about the necessary function we play in society. But when we start attacking academics for trying to let the universities do what they are supposed to do—encourage safe debate on vital issues , I for the first time have serious doubts about our Country’s futures. The crossword and this blog are my escape. I stopped a quarter of the way through the puzzle.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous4:44 AM

    ARZ instead of ARI was there for a bit. As a person that does watch hockey most use the Z. Got it but annoying. Liked MRI.

    ReplyDelete

  5. Wanted catfish for 1A but it didn't fit, leading me to consider (briefly) the possibility of a Sunday rebus. Paused (also briefly) at the 7D CAY/keY kealoa. Aside from that, no major hangups.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:35 AM

      CAY-KEY-KEALOA! ❤️ ~RP

      Delete
  6. Tom F6:37 AM

    I thought I’d poke fun at how OFL loved Doug’s xw and disliked Jeff’s, but this is just a weak puzzle.
    I don’t need reminders on Sunday of how much I hate politics, thanks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:39 AM

      Thank you for your restraint 😀❤️🙏 ~RP

      Delete
    2. Anonymous6:47 AM

      PS I know Jeff Chen. I like Jeff Chen. I have promoted Jeff Chen’s various writing endeavors on this blog numerous times. The idea that I have personal beef w/ Jeff Chen is one of the odder comments-section conspiracy theories. But I’m not mad. It’s kinda funny. “I’ll get you, Jeff Chen!” 🔪 🩸 💀 ~RP

      Delete
  7. Druid7:12 AM

    I liked Omani mon ami…

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thx, Zachary & Jeff, for the PUNny puz! 😊

    Med.

    Other than a fat-finger typo at RHi / HiT BUTTON, most of the rest went fairly smoothly; well, except for BAI/ARI & CRU/UZI. lol

    The theme was definitely a help in the solve.

    Fun adventure! :)
    ___
    Brad Wilber's Sat. Stumper was (over 5x NYT Sat.). Dnf'd at 5 cells (3 unknowns), now knowns. Good fight, but no cigar. 😔
    ___
    Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

    ReplyDelete
  9. Is there actually some group out there telling the NYT that they want more clues like ‘Name hidden in “I smell a rat”’? Everybody I know hates those clues, but they are popping up with increasing frequency.

    Mostly a very easy Sunday, with a real struggle to finish off the NEcorner. MESAS in particular crossed the line from tricky to wrong. The tops of MESAS are flat, but MESAS are by definition hills.

    Not convinced that LAME DUCK BILLS is an actual standalone phrase.

    Lake Winnipeg has some gorgeous sandy beaches.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:22 AM

      I objected to the Winnipeg slander as well. 😉

      Delete
    2. @kitshef 7:21 AM - Moreover, "I smell a rat" includes Isme, Ella, and Lara, so at least one cross was required to choose the right option. Which may be a feature rather than a bug. And Isme may only have occurred to Salinger fans.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous3:04 PM

      Also Mara and Meara

      Delete
    4. Anonymous12:05 AM

      Reading the comments particularly because I swear they’ve been more numerous. Thanks for confirming.

      Delete
  10. Bottom 2/3 was super-zoomy, and went in very quickly and effortlessly. Struggled a bit in the top 1/3 which I actually appreciated. I was hoping the “puns” would have some clever wordplay in them, but nope. I strangely enjoyed the solve itself, but felt the puzzle deserves some kind of Meh Award. I hope Rex enjoyed his whisky.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Full disclosure: Zachary David Levy is my parole officer. (Apologies to @egs.)

    RP, Love the photo!

    New Yorker cartoon -- A lawyer is asking the jury: "Ladies and gentlemen, does this look like the face of an embezzler?" And, on the witness stand, his client is hiding his face behind his hands.

    Re: "an act of congress." Decades ago, a friend spent a few years as an attorney in a high-powered NYC law firm before returning to the planet. He said one of the attorneys there, let's call him Ted, was about to be denied partnership and let go when Congress passed ERISA -- major legislation governing pension plans. Ted was the only one at the firm familiar with the law so the firm reversed course and made him a partner. After that the line was "It took an act of Congress to make Ted a partner."

    On the puzzle - I'm a sucker for puns, the worse the better, so I'm giving it a thumbs up.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Definitely some disinterest in the theme - not sure who sits around thinking it would be exciting to push a punny politics idea. The overall fill I thought was smooth and slick - not sure I hesitated once from top to bottom. The non-theme downs were cool - MARINERS, VENTURED OUT etc.

    Marlene

    The big guy highlights the load of 3s and 4s this grid produces. Easy enough but wearing. Learned OBOE SOLO. Not sure I equate KOOK with eccentric.

    I don’t see a lot of nepotism in Rex’s daily critiques - he likes what he likes. Today’s assessment is spot on.

    GRASS ROOTS

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  13. Best part for me was trying to figure out the theme answers with as few crosses as possible, which drew a few fist pumps, and thank you for that, J&Z!

    I did like that between NOOB (110D) and KOOK (42D), you can make NOOK, which perfectly pairs with CRANNY (104A).

    The final themer, AN ACT OF CONGRESS, triggered two responses:
    • A suggestion about the CONGRESS pun. This is the fourth time in a year-and-a-half in which it’s been used in a Times puzzle. The other three were [Sessions of congress?] for TRYSTS, [What might prompt a run for congress?] for LIBIDO, and [Summons before congress?] for BOOTY CALL. It’s a terrific pun, IMO, and my suggestion is to table it for a while, so it doesn’t die from overuse.
    • The image of a huge sign at Congress’s front door saying: ASSEMBLY REQUIRED.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:24 AM

      @Lewis – I thought the same thing about the CONGRESS double entendre: it's showing up too often and is now predictable. It needs a rest.

      Delete
    2. Interesting point about the overuse of the Congress/ congress puns I had forgotten them.

      Delete
  14. "Groanolatry," LOL.

    Easy, pleasant puzzle. Agree this was not necessarily inspiring, but I found this to be a relaxing, Monday-Tuesday level Sunday solve. In the NE corner, I had BRIT for "Tube traveler?", ININE for the highway (a poor guess, since I'm well-familiar with USONE, which I've lived close to all my life), and VENTUREDOFF, which held up the corner for a short time.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:00 PM

      Had Brit too!!! Quickly got wiped out. Bit it SHIULD HAVE BEEN Brit

      Delete
  15. Andy Freude8:09 AM

    Today’s puzzle was a lot like the first movement of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony: the high point was the OBOE SOLO.
    The rest was meh. Agree with Rex about the ickiness of the last themer.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Too many theme entries - cull out the ones that don’t work. LAME DUCK BILLS doesn’t even mean anything, in or out of politics. And CAMPAIGN CHAIR (as clued) should not have made the cut either. You could have had a nice, pleasant themed Sunday with the punny theme entries enclosed in an actual crossword puzzle. Instead, you insisted on cramming as much stuff as you possibly could into the grid (constructors trying too hard to show off?) - and we ended up with an entire grid that Rex absolutely obliterated. It’s even more sad because Jeff Chen could do so much better than this.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Didn’t think there was anything wrong with campaign chair. As a political term is now standard, at least among Democrats, because campaign chairman is considered sexist. All campaigns have campaign chair- s/-men in case you didn’t know.

      Delete
  17. I don't know. Political phrases repurposed as apolitical things. Seems fine, and sorta works. Thought HOTBUTTONISSUES was a little weak, enjoyed some of them. Agree there's way too much short fill. Agree with @okanaganer on the difference between venturing out and trekking. Had every possible meaning for niche in my head except the one that places it among nooks and crannies, but CRU finally gave it to me. Perfectly serviceable Sunday, at least here.

    ReplyDelete
  18. I sailed through this in 10 minutes, which annoys me asI Iook forward to spending time on the NYT Sunday crossword with a nice cup of tea. I agree that Act of Congress was creepy and and the Arizona having a hockey team is puzzling (i'm too old I guess!)
    Grand cru (French for 'great growth') is a regional wine classification that designates a vineyard known for its favorable reputation in producing wine.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:40 PM

      Thank you for the cru explanation!

      Delete
  19. Totally agree on the last “sexual congress” pun. And I actually like puns. Very poor taste especially in this Me Too era.

    ReplyDelete
  20. @kitshef - I'm with you on the hidden names, but at least this one had an
    ELLA/LARAloa

    ReplyDelete
  21. Hey All !
    I'm going outside for my pro choice to be a tree hugger.
    (That's all I got, Politicial pun-ditry [or pun-dirty?])

    Thought this a good SunPuz. Reworking political-ese into other meanings. Actually got a chuckle out of AN ACT OF CONGRESS. Fitting, really, as it seems the stuff Congress does is designed to screw you. Talk about a meta answer...

    I'm not clear on CAMPAIGN CHAIR, though. Why is the General weary? How about, The crafty General, or The planning General? Odd.

    Got 41 Threes, 15 in the Acrosses, 26 in the Downs. On the high side for Threes. Just an observation, not a rooftop yelling. Har.

    Anyway, enjoy your Sunday. Watch your SportsBall. Play your OBOE SOLO.

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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  22. I think you missed “Grass roots movement” as a theme answer.

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  26. Got up early to tackle this one before wrestling with the Christmas tree. It took about as long to do the puzzle as it took to get the tree straight in its stand. and this after visiting five or six different "cut your own places" before we could find the right tree. I mean, really.

    Nothing much to see here, even though I like puns. Had LAMEDUCKB______S too long before BILLS appeared. The "vet" in the clue had me thinking about LAMEDUCKBONES, but that was dumb, although not much worse than the actual answer.

    Well, it's Sunday, the puzzle is done, the tree is up and another small town Christmas Pageant is on tap for the afternoon, so things are proceeding as they should.

    OK Sunday, ZDL and JC. Zoomed Doing Lots of it and Just Cruised through the rest. Thanks for a half hour's respite from all the hoopla.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous10:00 AM

    Although I didn’t love either 3-word answer, I thought it was clever to put the cluing to 51D and 52D together.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Hmm...Anonymous 8:24 was me posting in response to Lewis. Just got a new phone, let's see if a thread response shows my name. Looks like it will...

    ReplyDelete
  29. “… and though it’s been said many times, many ways” a puzzle full of cleverish very long puns just creates too much space for dozens of fills of 3, 4 or 5 letters that are not words. Sigh.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Niallhost10:29 AM

    The whole LAMEDUCKBILLS section was bad. Firstly, the phrase most often associated with congress is LAMEDUCKsession. I had never heard of BAI, or the Coyotes, and the clue should have indicated that it was a contraction for TIL. Thought it might have been URL but wasn't convinced enough to put it in, and even if I did, I don't think it would have helped. The rest was pretty wooshy for me. Had Brat before BOOR, and ellA before LARA which slowed things down around there. Otherwise pretty easy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:58 PM

      At least for weekends, there is no strict rule about clueing a shortening of a word in the Times. This happens A LOT. There are many complaints in this blog about it but they continue to publish them weekend after weekend.
      I see nothing wrong with that.
      Anyway til is very common. Nothing obscure about it. On the other hand that BAI ARI cross was a tough one.
      Bills are introduced in the lame duck session, sometimes criticized for that reason.
      As noted above, it is a thing, but barely.

      Delete
  31. Anonymous10:40 AM

    As usual…if Rex hated it I loved it ! This is a puzzle that was fun and contrary to what Rex believes the average person likes to enjoy a puzzle…well done guys…

    ReplyDelete
  32. Easy breezy relaxing Sunday puzzle. Thumbs up!

    ReplyDelete
  33. BTW, very impressive construction on a Sunday puzzle to have eight long theme answers, ten letters or more. Last time this happened was four months ago (8/13). Bravo, Zachary and Jeff, on that!

    @Rex -- I love the cat picture. Its starkness brings all the attention to the cat's face, which is truly indicating, "Don't you dare!"

    ReplyDelete
  34. I thought this was a very enjoyable Sunday (I FLEW through it, maybe that's why). It was fun & fast. The only thing I didn't like was PIANO SEAT - it's not a seat, it's a BENCH.

    Thanks to Zachary & Jeff 😊

    ReplyDelete
  35. I'm a cold ass on most things, but a HOTBUTTONISSUES that matter to me. Of course, an ACTOFCONGRESS would be another way to get that Hot Butt in hand. Especially if consummated in the CABINETPOSITION.

    I've often been disturbed by what I've ingested,but not since I learned what my friend and PALATE - - MUDCATS, HENS, GOO. You name it.

    Congrats to @Roo for the bottom up following he's inspired for the Wasteland poet .... GRASSROOTSMOVEMENT.

    If you've got to use the hideous "name within a phrase" type of clue, this one at least should have been "I smell a raider of tombs."

    Bill Clinton, when asked to explain the Goddess at the footof King Tut's coffin, replied "It depends on what the definition of ISIS is."

    I thought this was a fast pleasant solve. I don't think any constructor needs to justify the basis of their puzzle. Rex wasn't asking about last Wednesday's puzzle, "Why have phrases that follow a double H pattern on a grid that contains a large double H as grid art? Why not double O? Or triple H?" Today's puzzle was built around "Political puns ... yep, that's what these are. Why are we getting them delivered in this way, as if they were specialties of other, non-political professions? Who knows? I don't." And somehow, not knowing why the puzzle utilizes a certain approach to punny phrases wrecks this for Rex. It kinda reminds me of the time a few years ago when Rex criticized a puzzle because there wasn't enough character development. Anyway, I liked the puzzle fine. Thanks, Zachary David Levy and Jeff Chen.

    ReplyDelete
  36. @Rex made a lot of valid points about the puzzle, but I probably liked it more than him…LOVE GROANOLATRY as a word!
    Also. Do we REALLY know whether Jabba the Hut was obese? I know nothing about healthy BMI for Huts.

    @Mike in Bed-Stuy, your ISME reminds me that when I was a young child I pronounced my great aunt’s name ISME instead of ESME.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:01 PM

      Had exactly the same thought about Hutts. What do we know about them!

      Delete
    2. "... healthy BMI for Huts". lololol

      Delete
  37. Mildly diverting. I think the word POLITICAL in the title gives too much away. I would have preferred the "Aha Moment" -- a very weak one, to be sure, but still -- of saying to myself: "Aha! All these puns are political!" A mild sense of discovery is always better than no sense of discovery.

    I really don't have much to say about this puzzle at all. On to the Diagramless. I haven't seen one of these in a dog's age. It promises to be a lot crunchier and I hope I'll be able to solve it. My track record isn't exactly great.

    ReplyDelete
  38. I've played piano since I was four and I've never heard PIANO SEAT. It's either piano bench, which may or may not store music, or piano stool, which does not.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Alice Pollard11:36 AM

    jb129. I agree, as a piano player that irritated me. I have never heard of a “piano seat”. It’s not a thing

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  40. Anonymous11:45 AM

    Nice cat.

    ReplyDelete
  41. deedeebus11:59 AM

    Absolutely loathed this puzzle. OBESE clued as Jabba the Hutt is unforgivable. As if we don't vilify fat people enough.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:44 PM

      OBESE should probably just be nixed in general.

      Delete
  42. Anonymous12:02 PM

    As a cyclist, the answer to 68D is a bit off. While not wrong in the most general sense, it's a bit off. Cyclists don't use the term RACINGBIKES, really, as it's too imprecise. There are races on velodrome (and outdoor) tracks, on roads, and off-road races. Each have their own special type of bike.

    Velodrome cycles are called track bikes, and there are several sub-variants to these, depending on the type of event. But the biggest differences between a track bike and most other types is that they are fixed (single) gear and there are no brakes and no freewheel. There are other differences in engineering and construction as well, owing to the type of event and the need to cycle on a steeply banked track.

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    Replies
    1. All true about racing bikes but what matters that those track bikes are used in races and are called racing bikes by the general public. What people in the field call them is irrelevant.

      Delete
  43. Sheez. Dreadful. Stared like M&A at CRU/UZO cross forever. Just trust and add U. So many short answers in service of a lamentable theme.

    With @Beezer ... you do not know if Jabba is obese. Maybe his species is shaped that way. Are orcas obese?

    Oh well, tomorrow is Monday.

    Uniclues:

    1 All attempts to put the Constitution first.
    2 Lace in your cleavage.
    3 Dreaded moments during the compositional process.

    1 ALONG PARTY LINES NONOS
    2 BRA CRANNY GROOVES (~)
    3 ON TO OBOE SOLO HAZARDS (~)

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Has an excellent prom. HEAVE-HOS CLASP.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  44. I almost didn't even leave port on this one. That stormy sea of black squares chopping the grid up into wave after wave of three and four letter fill was foreboding. But I lashed myself to the helm and cried "Damn the gunky glue, full speed ahead!" (Okay, I'll stop.)

    I ended up more firmly than ever thinking that a Sunday themeless is the way to go. Compare this grid to last week's wide open extravaganza. (Click on the "Compulsory payments of old / SUN 12-3-23 / Stuff in ..." under Rex's "Blog Archive".) It had lots and lots of open space with interesting words crossing one another all over the place, a proper crossword puzzle if y'all ask me.

    And yes, I did notice a few of the themers needed some POC (plural of convenience) help to do their jobs, to wit HOT BUTTON ISSUE, LAME DUCK BILL, and SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE. Kind of brazen, that last one, right? Plus we get another gratuitous article "AN" to enable ACT OF CONGRESS to fill it slot. Sigh.

    Alrighty, I think I'll go fix myself some 11D ICE POP now.

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  45. EasyEd12:31 PM

    I think the political puns were fine, nothing groundbreaking but relatively easy to figure out and maybe provide a small chuckle. Seems to me the weakness in this puzzle was the plethora of short answers that probably made the constructor’s job easier while annoying solvers and actually reducing the challenge.

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  46. @RP: har. That stoic cat makes a cool Christmas dec. Hang a little wreath on kitty and it's Miller time.
    The tree is kinda runty, so I can see why it's on a tall stand to help out its look. Wish we had that much empty space in any of the rooms at our house, btw.

    The SunPuz …
    Well, politics is certainly an eternally ripe target for humor. Just wish the downside in our politics hadn't got so grim, lately. The puz did a heckuva job at tryin to inject some humor [via a whoppinly impressive 8 themers!] into this challengin subject.

    ANACTOFCONGRESS, tho? Do they still do that "actin" stuff?

    Nice side-theme startup, with OBOESOLO & PIANOSEAT. Always good to try to get politicians to face the music, IM&AO.

    staff weeject pick: LUC. Always luv m&e any clue that mentions "The Fifth Element", one of M&A's all-time fave schlock flicks.
    Did register quite a precious nanosecond drain in the BAI/ARI region of mystery, btw.

    Thanx for the many pun-dit tries, Chenmeister & Levy dudes. And for the many U's. And for the absence of PEWITs.

    Masked & Anonymo12Us


    **gruntz**

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  47. @kitshef and others, agree there are great beaches near Winnipeg. It has brutal winters, but the summers are hot and sunny. We spent many a blissful day at Grand Beach.

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  48. Kate Esq1:03 PM

    This wasn’t hard, and I didn’t mind the puns as much as RP did, but the rest of the fill was so choppy. Just so many 3 and 4 word clues, which made it feel like a slog to solve. I get there was a lot of theme content, but the theme wasn’t clever enough to justify the rest of the fill.

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  49. Concur with Rex's assessment, especially about the gunky fill. Took forever to get traction on this puzzle, and ended up naticked by the dreadful ARI/BAI crossing.

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  50. Bob Mills1:20 PM

    As usual, Rex Parker disliked a puzzle I found enjoyable. I'll call a press conference if we ever agree, even once.

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  51. SharonAK3:28 PM

    AGREE with this who complained about piano seat. Have never heard that said and it seems particularly inapt when clued as a place to store music.
    Quite liked the puns and trying to figure them out as the crosses filed in. But in the end found the puzzle a little blah.

    (Did not see what Rex saw in the Saturday puzzle)




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  52. Anonymous3:54 PM

    Wrote it last week and again I’d rather a nice themeless Sunday than soul-crushing Dad jokes

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  53. Anonymous4:02 PM

    Orc as a "FOE" in the elder scrolls video games!?!? Way to stereotype Tamriel's diverse, noble Orsimer based off of negative LotR and DnD stereotypes!! I am highly offended by the xword creators' BLATANT ignorance - TRIGGERED! 🤣

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  54. Glenn Gould4:07 PM

    I, pretty famously, had a PIANOSEAT.

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    Replies
    1. Yes, you did, but you couldn't store music in it.

      Delete
  55. Anonymous4:26 PM

    @RunsonDunkin...what happened to Loren?? As in I hope she's ok and just taking a break.
    Puzzle was meh. Was hoping for more from Jeff. But some of the clues were challenging, or at least clever to make up for the junkie fill.

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  56. When even @Lewis pens a tepid review, well.. not a good Sunday!

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  57. Anonymous5:02 PM

    How do we know Jabba was obese? We don’t have information on his species to know the BMI range.

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  58. Jeff Chen - take your skill elsewhere

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  59. Too much short stuff. Not crazy about being reminded of politics, especially SPEAKERS OF THE HOUSE, in puzzworld.
    Get off my lawn... oh, nope, no lawn here.

    Oh, well, time to try the diagramless and be reminded of how much I am a lesser puzzler than my mother was, knockin' off those diagramlesses (??) in... ink. Sigh.

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  60. Anonymous6:22 PM

    Y'all know that a seat is merely something purpose built to sit on, right? Chairs, stools, benches, pews, wood stump are all equally seats.

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  61. What bothers me about CAMPAIGN CHAIR is that it is actually a thing that (presumably) some bygone generals sat in when on campaigns. They're pretty common to make in woodworking, since they're easier then some other chairs. So there isn't any misdirection or wordplay in this answer.

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  62. Exactly.
    A bench is a type of seat.
    It is a clue not a definition!

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  63. Anonymous11:32 PM

    Did this puzzle also break a crossword rule? By only having one z? Hazard crossed by uzo. Am I missing the second z?

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  64. Totally agree that NHL franchises should only be allowed in Canada or northern US cities. But there’s more money down South and out West than in the Rust Belt or Quebec City and other Canadian cities. It stinks!

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  65. I'm surprised that no one has commented on the fact that the modern bra wasn't invented until 1914. Who knew???

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  66. Anonymous1:21 PM

    Surprised my take was at odds with many. I almost always find Sundays a boring slog, but not today. The answers seemed fair and unforced, and while I’m not a fan of puns, each of these was a pleasure. Thank you Zachary and Jeff.

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  67. Canon Chasuble4:41 PM

    My wife's seventh and eighth great grandfathers, along with various of their siblings,
    fought just near the end of King Phillip's war, that is from 1676 to 1678. Her grandfathers are recorded to have "manned a garrison" [somewhere in southeastern Massachusetts].

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  68. Christopher12:17 AM

    At least it wasn't a Tom Swifty theme.

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  69. I always enjoy a good pun. Thankfully, GRASSROOTSMOVEMENT didn't go another way. It was a toughish Sunday, with the Chenmeister writing the clues. It's like Dr. SEUSS said...anyway, birdie.

    Every time I crow, this happens. After the Wordle birdie string, here comes a *Phew!* six--after a second guess of GGGBG! Almost had to say goodnight Grace!

    A merry Christmas to all!



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  70. Geome2:57 PM

    "deedeebus 11:59 AM
    Absolutely loathed this puzzle. OBESE clued as Jabba the Hutt is unforgivable. As if we don't vilify fat people enough."

    "Anonymous 8:44 PM
    OBESE should probably just be nixed in general."

    Seriously?

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  71. Burma Shave7:10 PM

    USEME ASAP

    Her HOT BOD I'd DO anywhere,
    for ANACTOFCONGRESS IF she'd wanna,
    I'll CAMPAIGN for THE CHAIR,
    or AWL POSITIONs preferred by OKSANA.

    --- PASTOR BRUNO SEUSS

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  72. rondo7:50 PM

    Not wacky enough IMO. Very doable puz, but some of the fill . . . ANIMA MONAMI OMANI, who EDITED this?
    Only a wordle par even with a BGGBG start.

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  73. Diana, LIW8:53 PM

    Looks like the tech monsters ate my comment just now.

    Cool puz - but of all the cats I've known, MUDCAT was not one of them.

    And I noted that NORAD identified a flying object near the North Pole. Happens every year!

    Merry to all!

    Diana, LIW

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  74. TorontoTom3:23 PM

    Actually, beach volleyball in Manitoba makes much more sense than ice hockey in Arizona. Beautiful beaches on Lake Winnipeg (not much smaller than Lake Ontario) -- and summers there are hot!

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  75. Just a note to @TorontoTom re the lake comparison- Winnipeg is larger in area than Ontario by about 2000sq. mi.
    The puzzle needed help. Too blah.

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  76. Just a note to @TorontoTom re the lake comparison- Winnipeg is larger in area than Ontario by about 2000sq. mi.
    The puzzle needed help. Too blah.

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  77. Cross@words2:43 PM

    Just as an aside — BMI is intended as a measurement for groups; it should not be applied to individuals.

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