Sandwich made with a telera roll / SAT 12-23-23 / Home of the Kingdom of Dahomey, today / Modern-day scrapbooks, of a sort / Piña colada topper / Literary domain of Peter the Magnificent and Susan the Gentle / One whose distance may be measured by the yard? / Capital on the Gulf of Finland

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Constructor: Will Nediger

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: The Kingdom of Dahomey (18A: Home of the Kingdom of Dahomey, today => BENIN) —

[The Kingdom of Dahomey, 1894]
The Kingdom of Dahomey (/dəˈhmi/) was a West African kingdom located within present-day Benin that existed from approximately 1600 until 1904. Dahomey developed on the Abomey Plateau amongst the Fon people in the early 17th century and became a regional power in the 18th century by expanding south to conquer key cities like Whydah belonging to the Kingdom of Whydah on the Atlantic coast which granted it unhindered access to the tricontinental triangular trade.

For much of the middle 19th century, the Kingdom of Dahomey became a key regional state, after eventually ending tributary status to the Oyo Empire. European visitors extensively documented the kingdom, and it became one of the most familiar African nations known to Europeans. The Kingdom of Dahomey was an important regional power that had an organized domestic economy built on conquest and slave labor, significant international trade and diplomatic relations with Europeans, a centralized administration, taxation systems, and an organized military. Notable in the kingdom were significant artwork, an all-female military unit called the Dahomey Amazons by European observers, and the elaborate religious practices of Vodun.

The growth of Dahomey coincided with the growth of the Atlantic slave trade, and it became known to Europeans as a major supplier of slaves. Dahomey was a highly militaristic society constantly organised for warfare; it engaged in wars and raids against neighboring nations and sold captives into the Atlantic slave trade in exchange for European goods such as riflesgunpowderfabricscowrie shellstobaccopipes, and alcohol. Other captives became slaves in Dahomey, where they worked on royal plantations or were killed in human sacrifices during the festival celebrations known as the Annual Customs of Dahomey. The Annual Customs of Dahomey involved significant collection and distribution of gifts and tribute, religious Vodun ceremonies, military parades, and discussions by dignitaries about the future for the kingdom.

In the 1840s, Dahomey began to face decline with British pressure to abolish the slave trade, which included the British Royal Navy imposing a naval blockade against the kingdom and enforcing anti-slavery patrols near its coast. Dahomey was also weakened after failing to invade and capture slaves in Abeokuta, a Yoruba city-state which was founded by the Oyo Empire refugees migrating southwards.Dahomey later began experiencing territorial disputes with France which led to the First Franco-Dahomean War in 1890, resulting in French victory. The kingdom finally fell in 1894 when the last king, Béhanzin, was defeated by France in the Second Franco-Dahomean War, leading to the country being annexed into French West Africa as the colony of French Dahomey, later gaining independence in 1960 as the Republic of Dahomey, which would later rename itself Benin in 1975.

• • •

As expected, this was way easier than yesterday's allegedly "Friday" offering. Triple stacks of 15s look impressive, and I'm sure they are hard to make out come out smoothly, but the answers they contain are generally LESS THAN STELLAR, topping out around "pretty good" (as some of these are) and they are typically very easy to solve because they are inevitably crossed by yards and yards of short stuff, at least some of which will be easy to get. Once you've got a few of the short crosses in place, you can frequently decode even the most recalcitrant long Acrosses, and once you get one of those, the entire bank of 15s will tend to fall pretty fast. Unsurprisingly, it was in the space between the top and bottom of this puzzle that I had my only trouble, the trouble in both cases involving proper nouns that I couldn't *quite* manage to put together. I was wholly convinced it was McCoy TYNAR (26A: Five-time Grammy-winning jazz pianist McCoy ___), which gave me SCHEMAS for 8D: Rhyming arrangements, e.g., which ... yeah, why not? I mean, I teach this stuff every semester, and the term is in fact "rhyme SCHEME(S)," but this seemed like precisely the kind of thing that the NYTXW would botch—using the defensible SCHEMAS instead of the more apt SCHEMES. So I weirdly argued my way into an error, in the one answer in the puzzle that is smack dab in the middle of my area of expertise. Fun! The other proper noun I kinda/sorta knew but flubbed (with much less disastrous results), was TALLINN, which I knew started with "T" and ended with "N" and had an "L" or two in the middle somewhere, but ... yeah, I was spelling it all kinds of ways as I went along, just hoping the crosses would sort me out (which they did) (35D: Capital on the Gulf of Finland). It's the capital of Latvia, right? No, that's Riga. Ooh, it's Estonia! That's it, isn't it??? Yes! Hurray for my C+ knowledge of world geography!


The only other difficulty I had with this puzzle came, familiarly, right up front (when I have the least amount of letters in the grid to work off of). First step was a big miss: KENNEL for PET BED (1D: Place to let sleeping dogs lie). I then "confirmed" that with E-IN Morgenstern (couldn't remember if she was an ERIN or maybe an ELIN???) (21A: ___ Morgenstern, author of "The Night Circus"). And then promptly put the Kingdom of Dahomey in modern-day ... NEPAL. Did I mention my C+ knowledge of world geography!? Eventually saw that KENNEL had to be PET BED, and things flowed eastward pretty smoothly from there. Got Fire-engine RED and TREVOR Noah and Amanda BYNES no sweat, and then in went PINTEREST BOARDS, and the entire top, and east, was done in a flash. Took me a few beats to remember AC DELCO—puzzle would've been a lot harder if I hadn't had that answer in me (30A: Auto parts brand owned by GM). Also would've been a lot harder if I hadn't known that HINDS were female deer, i.e. does (28A: Does). "Whoso list to hunt, I know where is an hind..." is the opening line of a Wyatt sonnet I teach every term, and part of the thing I teach is "Look Up The Damn Word, How In The Hell Can You Know What The Poem Is About If You Don't Know The Words That Are In It!?" See also the title to Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning." Anyway, yeah, HINDS, a big poetic win for me (as opposed to the earlier poetic loss with SCHEMAS).


Didn't like the "BAA BAA" clue until I did, which is to say I went from "how the *&$% am I supposed to know that, I barely know what the clue is asking for, on a basic grammatical level!?" to "Oh, hey yeah, that part of "BAA BAA, Black Sheep" does rhyme with the 'twinkle' in 'Twinkle Twinkle, Little Star,' cool" (37D: Words sung on the same notes as "twinkle," in a different nursery rhyme). Had HOOT before HONK at 33D: Loud bird sound. Had no idea what a "telera roll" was, but with "-TA" at the end and "Sandwich" in the clue, I just guessed TORTA and was rewarded! Had BIRCH before BEECH (42D: Wood for smoking andouille sausage). And of course (golf) HOLE before MOLE, which barely makes sense for the clue, even with that "?" (64D: One whose distance may be measured by the yard?). I guess the MOLE is making a path in ("by"??) your (back) yard. I assume it's the rodent type of mole and not some black-OPS type deal. 


Explainers:
  • 1A: Modern-day scrapbooks, of a sort (PINTEREST BOARDS) — Pinterest is a website / app where you can "pin" things you like. I think. I have never used it.
  • 7D: Hearing monitor, for short (ENT) — needed every cross. Was looking for some org. that monitors trials (?), or an actual device that monitors your hearing. But no, it's just your regular-old neighborhood ENT, grid denizen extraordinaire.
  • 47A: Academic who works with many different schools, maybe (MARINE BIOLOGIST) — the "schools" are fish; you probably knew that.
  • 26D: Piña colada topper (TILDE) — the mark "topping" the "n" in "Piña"; for once, I saw right through this little trick. OK, my brain did initially flash on "cocktail umbrella," but then: TILDE!
More Holiday Pet Pics now! Yesterday we had five cats and a dog. Today, five dogs and a cat! And a hat! Here's Darleen, who seems to be establishing an entire cat colony in this tree

[Thanks, Bill & Margo]

And now, holiday pups!

[Here's Bailey, ready to star in the Christmas ballet, his forelegs already in First Paws-ition! (thanks, Barbara)]

[Buddha happily observes the holidays of all religions! (thanks, Robin)]

[Stop this cruelty at once! Secret Agent Hurley Booboo Bear does not deserve this! (thanks, Pamela)]

[Again, some of you are just ignoring the "holiday" part of the brief, but we'll just say that Luca here has angel ears; that'll do (thanks, Dan)]

["It's my Menorah Moose. No, you may not. Wait, do you have treats? Let's negotiate"; smart girl, Olive! (thanks, Mark)]

See you tomorrow, I hope!

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

101 comments:

Hal9000 5:47 AM  

Saw McCoy Tyner live several times during his long and great career, so that was a nice reference. I hate the word SUMOS – they're Sumo WRESTLERS, fercripesake.

But this was a nice Saturday: I got the middle first and then things went quickly in a spiral from the SW to the SW to the NE and ending in the NW, where it all began. No complaints aside from sumos.

L. David 6:12 AM  

Don't marine biologists dabble in architecture, as well?

Conrad 6:20 AM  


As @Rex noted, we got Friday on Saturday to compensate for yesterday's Saturday on Friday. My solving experience was similar to OFL's.

I abandoned the NW after getting I'M HERE (2D) and NARNIA (3D) and worked on the North Central and NE. That led me to believe that the latter part of 16A might have something to do with a preSCRiPTION. But then I realized that the first part pretty much had to be EMAIL and that unlocked the entire North.

I listen to jazz so I know of McCoy TYNER (26A), but somehow my brain came up with TYlER, which made UNDO (23D) hard to see until it became inevitable, which than gave me the center middle.

I'm not as sandwich-aware as @Rex but TORTA (35A) was crossed fairly.

NACRE (36A) is old-time crosswordese, but luckily I'm an old-time crossword solver.

Balsa(?) before BEECH for the smoking wood at 42D.

Took a few tries (and ultimately needed Sergey & Larry) to get the correct spelling of HEGEL (43D).


Anonymous 6:25 AM  

Marine biologist also had a stint with the Yankees.

SouthsideJohnny 7:21 AM  

I don’t think I’ve struggled this bad on a puzzle in years. I don’t know what a PINTEREST BOARD is. Never heard of Dahomey, “The Night Circus”, “Breaking Bad”, DOLOROUS, TYNER the Jazz Dude, Nelson Mandels’s clan, ACDELCO, AMERICAN PALE ALE, TALLINN, NCISLA or even a MANTA Ray. I think I need to get out more often. Hopefully I’ll remember what DOLOROUS means the next time I encounter it.

Anonymous 7:28 AM  

Latex as well

Anonymous 7:40 AM  

Guessed “CUT and ran” for 12D; took me forever to see ATE. Alas.

Anonymous 7:57 AM  

You’ve never heard of a manta ray?

Anonymous 8:11 AM  

Agree with RP: 5 minutes faster today , no problem getting 15s. Great construction

Wanted BYNER and TALININ but eventually figured it out

SsJ, appreciate the honesty, but you do need to get out more! And watch that eggnog!

The pix just get better and better!

SouthsideJohnny 8:22 AM  

Sting Ray, yes. Manta Ray, nope. I guess I’ve led a sheltered life.

kitshef 8:27 AM  

Much, much easier than yesterday's puzzle. Other than ERIN and TYNER, hard to see even what was supposed to be hard today. And I guess dogBED before PETBED.

Never saw the clue for MOLE, but that's pretty terrible.

Anonymous 8:36 AM  

General import / export businesses

Andy Freude 8:44 AM  

As Pogo used to say, “Friday (the thirteenth), come on a Saturday.”
Like Rex, I started down the SCHEMa path, but remembered that the plural of schema is schemata, and that wouldn’t fit.
Anyone else consider that a MiLE can also be measured by the yard?

Son Volt 9:00 AM  

Wonderful puzzle - love the huge stacks and wide open grid. THREAD THE NEEDLE - LESS THAN STELLAR are fantastic spanners but the long downs really shine here - DOLOROUS, CLAN NAME, RIDDANCE etc.

NCIS LA and DOA were unfortunate. Some of the trivia fell flat for me - TREVOR, ERIN etc. but most of the fill was slick.

I love the Sierra Nevada green cans but this time of year their Celebration Ale is STELLAR.

Highly enjoyable Saturday morning solve. Stan brings the heat with his own tri-stacks today.

New Riders

pabloinnh 9:12 AM  

One of those puzzles that I looked at, said "Oh oh", and proceeded to finish much faster than I thought I was going to. Never have used or seen a PINTERESTBOARD, and EMAILENCNCRYPTION was evident only because of the ENCRYPTION part,but THREADTHENEEDLE became obvious after a few dwons.

Ms. BYNES and Ms.Morgenstern the only unknown proper names today so a good if rare occurrence there. Got MARINEBIIOLOGIST off the ST. Woohoo.

BAABAA as "Twinkle Twinkle" was a gimme. See also "The Alphabet Song".

Pleasant Saturday, WN. What Now? The Stumnper, if I can print a good copy. Thanks for all the fun.

Justin 9:15 AM  

While I blew through most of the grid, I had to look up McCoy and Gulf of Finland before blanking the southwest corner.

I finished yesterday's "challenging" 4 minutes faster than my average time and couldn't finish today's.

Bob Mills 9:15 AM  

Couldn't finish it even after cheating. The clue for MOLE absolutely fits (golf) "hole," but does not fit MOLE, as Rex Parker made clear. And how are "watercolor" and "clay" MEDIA words?

I had "Emma" instead of ERIN (Morgenstern), crossing with "I'm home" instead of IMHERE. So I had no chance to finish the solve.

Anonymous 9:18 AM  

As a fan, that McCoy Tyner plays piano on “Dahomey Dance” on the album Olé Coltrane made this puzzle especially fun.

Marty 9:31 AM  

Good god…. I love how I come across a puzzle that was easily the most unsolvable mess in my memory and, as usual, it’s “easy-medium”. At least I knew my streak was coming to an end so I just googled to see if there would be at least one facepalm (which I somehow enjoy and give props to the constructor). Alas, nothing but a tedious slog.

Anonymous 9:34 AM  

A medium is a material an artist works in

Joe Dipinto 9:34 AM  

I liked this much better than yesterday's parade of utterly unscintillating longish answers. It was also much more of a Saturday-level challenge than yesterday's was for a Friday.

@Andy Freude – yes I put in MILE, not realizing it screwed up the spelling of MARINE BIOLOGIST which I already in place. Then it took me ten minutes to find my error.

Two-fer musical selection:
Dahomey Dance (Mr. Tyner on keys)

RooMonster 9:35 AM  

Hey All !
Well, The Alphabet Song also gets sung like "Twinkle Twinkle". Wanted to put ABCDEF in that spot.

Tough at first, but started getting things little by little, until smacking into the Piña Colada misdirect. Crossed by Does, which I didn't know as HINDS, even if I read it as plural female deer (which I didn't.) Got down to needing two letters, the TI of TILDE, and not being able to think of anything that tops a Piña Colada ending in LDE (was thinking some sort of fruit, or salt, or little umbrella), decided to go to Goog for a PPP lookup of TYNER (not knowing the name, it could've been any letter of the alphabet.)

Once I got the T, the lightbulb switched on, and I saw TILDE. I let out a grunt, albeit a "You got me good on that one" grunt. Came here to find out how HINDS=Does, and see it's Doe-s, not does. So close to an error free, Goog-free puz. But, a one-letter look up for a name I don't know has become to me to not be considered a DNF. So there.

Writeovers, cpApro-SKATER, cedeS-BALKS, cEdar-BEECH, 1A PIcTuRE___-PINTEREST.
My early guesses of MANTA and MEDIA turned out correct! Wanted lAAlAA for BAABAA, which lined up nicely with lANDS for BANDS. Didn't put it in, though.

Alright, enough gibberish out of me. Happy Saturday!

No F's (LESS THAN STELLAR) 😁
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 9:36 AM  

Phew, because completing this puzzle tied my streak. learned a different tune to Baa Baa Black Sheep, but I remembered my kids learned the Twinkle Twinkle. I really lucked out on the TYNER clue, because I forget all names. But recently I made a crossword for my jazz-loving kid, and included TYNER (clued as “The real McCoy,” which I knew would be gettable for him).

Sam 9:45 AM  

I have never heard of AC DELCO or McCoy TYNER so that was indeed the most challenging area of the puzzle. Sussed out the CO ending and managed to piece the rest together.

Pete 9:50 AM  

Any andouille makers out there? I have a great big BEECH tree right in front of my house, you're welcome to take it down and cart it away. You get that messy tree out of my yard and I'll buy all the andouille you make from it. Reputable sources claim that the seeds are beloved by any number of critters, many of which frequent my yard, but I've never seen any sign of their eating the nuts. Ever if they come in the darkness of night to feast on the seeds (which they don't, as attested by the sheer tonnage of seeds on the ground in the morning), they still leave the hard, pointed seed casings behind.

I just went to verify that LESSTHANSTELLAR was in fact a litotes, only to remind myself that I don't understand the nuances of litotes vs antenantiosis vs meiosis. A brief treatise on this would be appreciated, no ChatGPT allowed. My global ignorance was further highlighted by the fact that the only IPA I understand is of the American Pale Ale variety, not the International Phonetic Alphabet variety - honestly, I've never seen such gibberish in my life. I didn't know how to actually pronounce litotes, and a half hour looking up the IPA pronunciation I still don't, but now I need an IPA of the America Pale Ale variety to calm my nerves. That's even though I haven't had a drink in 32 years, 6 months and 4 days, if the fact that I count tells you anything about my past.

My sister teaches at multiple schools - Columbia, Yale, Brown, Cornell, possibly others. She teaches obscurities that only 4 or 5 people at any one school take at any given time, so all but Columbia students Zoom into the classes. Maybe two weeks ago she said she only had to grade the final exams/papers left for the year. I asked if she actually had to look at them, or did everyone get a "gentleman's B" (I thought that was sufficient grade inflation from the gentleman's C of my youth) with a few standouts getting an A, to which she laughed, saying that everyone gets an A. You had to really piss her off to get an A-. Just so people know, you can get into an Ivy without actually deserving it, then you don't actually have to do much of anything to get an A average over your time there, and you get whatever job you want afterwards because you had an A average at an Ivy League school. What could be more fair?

burtonkd 9:58 AM  

I always like the triple 15's because they look daunting, but then come out in the wash. Slow-going in the middle for a while, but steady progress to a slightly quicker solve than yesterday.

@Roo, only AB would qualify for the song.

I guessed correctly with a "T", but that is a classic Natick if I've ever seen one: foreign sandwich crossed with obscure foreign capital (sorry, Estonia) that isn't even familiar after seeing it.

If ever on Big Island, you can swim with Manta rays at night just offshore of one of the big hotels because they are attracted to a big light on the beach path. Pretty awesome sight!

hands up for kennel>dogBED>PETBED. Begin the BENIN straightened that out.

My 5 letter Amanda will always be PEETE

mathgent 10:02 AM  

It was way beyond me. 17 entries I did not know, another 16 I had only a vague notion of. Hats off to all of you who solved it easily.

I despise the clue for MOLE and I don't see how "Handy trick" is HACK. Explain, please.

CyC 10:12 AM  

I loved this one! Took me a while and I would have been hopelessly stuck if I hadn't remembered "ACDELCO" (even though I've never owned a GM vehicle). The moment of remembering that Asia, America, and Europe are all rock bands made me lol.

CyC 10:13 AM  

@mathgent I didn't like MOLE either, though I liked the puzzle overall. A Hack is a shortcut to solving a problem. Like a 'life hack'

Anonymous 10:19 AM  

Grade inflation is not confined to Ivies. My public uni engineering student will earn only cum laude at 3.91 GPA - cutoffs for Summa and Magna are 3.98 and 3.93 - in engineering!

Niallhost 10:21 AM  

Confidently put in socialmediaapps as my first answer thinking I was going to kill this puzzle, especially after getting THREADTHENEEDLE right away. It all went to hell from there until I knew TREVOR was right. Had LApLand for a long time which screwed up that section. I know Sierra Nevada makes an IndiaPALEALE but had no idea there was an AMERICAN one. I had in my mind that a procedural was some kind of procedure that the police had to stop doing, like stop and frisk, so I delayed myself way too long in that section. I had nickNAME for the Mandela clue. Thought maybe the Tudor King might have been Peter. Struggled in the TORTA section and the HINDS section for a while but finally finished the puzzle only to have a mistake that I couldn't find. Eventually discovered BYNES was spelled with a "Y" and not an "I". Finished in 32, which is about average for a Saturday. Enjoyed it.

Anonymous 10:30 AM  

Bands????

Anonymous 10:41 AM  

Can someone please explain why 37A is Bands?

puzzlehoarder 10:46 AM  

I did this on my phone last night and it was much easier to fill than yesterday's. I did not get the congrats and had to change some sloppy mistakes. PINTERESThOARDS was the worst of them. I know nothing of Pinterest and I am partial to hoards.

Much better luck with the SB.

yd -0, 14 days!

pabloinnh 10:49 AM  

@mathgent "Life HACK" is what used to be called a "Hint from Heloise".

egsforbreakfast 10:53 AM  

My oh my, that was a lot of white squares. I'm not sure I've seen that many white squares since my Harvard Business School orientation in 1979! Sure, there were a lot of the legacy kids with the same CLANNAMES who are trying to force out President Claudine Gay today. But I ignored them, and, when they asked "What's your blood type? Is it AB Positive? AB Negative?" I said "ABNORMAL. IMHERE and that should be enough for you. "

This puzzle was fine. It was somewhat time-consuming. It was medium-difficult. But it was boring. Little zest in the clues. Little surprise in the answers.

Nancy 11:13 AM  

Impressive in its four long stacks and abundance of white space. I love white space. I looked at the grid and thought: "Boy, am I going to have fun."

Not so fast. I hadn't yet seen all the names I didn't know -- names that turned out to be ERIN, TYNER, BYNES and ACDELCO. Also the geographic ones I should have known but didn't: BENIN and TALLINN.

There were times I felt despair but, hey, it's my sometime collaborator Will Nediger, and I'm nothing if not loyal, so I soldiered on. And was rewarded with a clean solve against all odds.

I knew that the crosses of 1A would eventually reveal to me if we were talking about a TIK TOK or an INSTAGRAM-something-or-other. But, whaddaya know, it's a PINTEREST something-or-other. (All these sites sound exactly the same to me and I can't go and take a quick peek to see how they differ because you have to join before they let you peek.)

Join???!!! That'll be the day.

I did have to get BOARDS without the help of BYNES, but luckily I had ?OARDS.

Biggest writeover: I had MOvE for the thing that's measured by the yard -- but I wouldn't let AMERICAN PAvEALE go. And someone will tell me why a MOLE is measured by the yard -- yes?

Favorite clues: the one for BAA BAA (it made me sing) and the one for SNEAKERS. For the "athletic items never purchased individually", I wanted GOLF TEES.

A puzzle that proved very tough for me.

R Duke 11:27 AM  

@burtonkd - your 5 letter Calvin can be Peete. Amanda is a 4 letter Peet.

Carola 11:31 AM  

Easy, all thanks to the helpful line up of Downs at the top: I'M HERE, NARNIA, ELAN, RED, TREVOR, enough to get me the three grid-spanning answers. I followed RIDDANCE et.al. to the bottom, and then went back up via ABNORMAL and its two neighbors. Last in AC DELCO x CLAN NAME. I was lucky that I always had a critical mass of crosses to get me the next word I needed.

Do-overs: peete before BYNES, cut before ATE. No idea: ERIN, TYNER. Favorite misdirect: TILDE. Can't fool me: HIND. Time wasted due to refusal to believe: TALLINN has two Ns.

@Rex and @pet owners, thank you for the treat of the photos. Because of allergies (cats) and fear (dogs: terrifying experience with a German shepherd), there are no pets in our home, but meeting them here is a pleasure.

Jwaan 11:32 AM  

Didn’t love the MOLE clue either. Pedantic taxonomy note, though: moles aren’t rodents.

Art V. 11:33 AM  

L. David...For the record, I was a sales rep for Latex products prior to earning my degree in Marine Biology.

Ride the Reading 11:34 AM  

I'm with those who think Friday and Saturday were reversed. Did the puzzled nine hours ago, so going on memory. Had I'M HERE, SCHEMES, ATE and incorrect mournful at 14D, after first pass at top-row downs; not enough for me to see crosses.

SUMOS, TYNER, ACDELCO were gimmes, so was able to build out from there. MEDIA and RNS and RADI.. helped in the SE. Had PALE ALE at the end of 51A, but took a while and crosses to see AMERICAN.

Didn't dig MOLE, but that was the only real complaint.

jae 11:36 AM  

This was easy and easier than yesterday’s for me too. I finished in the SE where HACK, HEGEL, and STELLAR were a tad elusive. Did not know TYNER and TALLINN. I thought the 15 stacks were much better than “pretty good”, liked it.

Masked and Anonymous 11:46 AM  

Standard hard SatPuz, at our house. Several no-knows helped eat the precious nanoseconds: PINTERESTBOARDS. ELAN. BYNES. ERIN. TYNER. TORTA. TALLINN. HEGEL. AMERICANPALEALE.

staff weeject pick: OPS. With its nice, tortuous, wide-open clue: {Black ___}.

fave stuff included: THREADTHENEEDLE (a relatively easy get). RIDDANCE. ABNORMAL. weird MOLE clue. Other mercifully easy gets, like ACDELCO & HOSTESS & IMHERE.

Thanx, Mr. Nediger dude.

Masked & Anonymo2Us

p.s. Luved the Santa-esque cap on the Booboo Bear doggie.

**gruntz**

Newboy 11:52 AM  

Had to HACK my way through today’s grid. Resorted to uncle G for Estonian city spelling though I had done some reading about the Estonian digital passport…..they appear to be miles ahead of us on the digital drive into the cyber future. Progress today certainly seemed LESS THAN STELLAR. Many BALKS and false starts before closure at the TILDE/HINDS multiple misdirection section. Not easy at all, but that’s what I expect with Will’s constructions.

AnonymousSteve 11:57 AM  

Pretty easy for a Saturday.

Surprised no one has mentioned the LAT & NCISLA dupe, and so close together. LAT could have easily been clued as something else.

jb129 12:05 PM  

Yes, it was easier than yesterday (which was a horror) but I found this hard too. I had to come here to see where & why I was lost (ENT for HEARING MONITOR of all things, I'm embarrassed to say). So obviously a DNF.

We have Sunday thought, right???

Still. loving the XMAS pet pics ❤️

Joe Dipinto 12:08 PM  

@Anon 10:41– look at the videos @Rex posted.

Anonymous 12:10 PM  

Someone should let Mr. Nediger know that para-athletes have been able to purchase single sneakers from Zappos since 2020.

Anonymous 12:11 PM  

A sumo wrestler is called a rikishi. Or a sumo wrestler. Never a sumo.

Anonymous 12:13 PM  

These are the names of 3 rock bands.

Anonymous 12:20 PM  

Saw Tyner in the 1970s...he stopped mid-song when someone coughed...and berated the audience. Never cared for him much after his rant.

jberg 12:24 PM  

I liked the 15s more than Rex did, and loved LESS THAN STELLAR. Like many here, I found it easier than it looked.

OK, the MOLE thing. Moles dig around just under the surface of a lawn, feasing on little critters among the roots of the grass. Often their activity raises a ridge in the lawn so that you can see where it has been, i.e. "measure its progress" by looking at the yard. I kind of liked it after I finally figured it out.

As for BANDS, whoever asked, if you look at what Rex posted it has three different songs embedded, one from each of the eponymous BANDS. I didn't know that either.

Smith 12:25 PM  

More like medium? All that white space is intimidating at first. Somehow THREADTHENEEDLE just popped, maybe because I've been thinking I have regained *almost* enough dexterity to finish a quilt that's been sitting there since fracture day.
cEdar before BEECH, either one is news to me. PIcTuRE... before PINTERE...
@Nancy a HACK for seeing PINTERESTBOARDS is to Google for an image of something because it's guaranteed that someone will have pinned one to their board!

Craig C. Shelton 12:31 PM  

Strangely, I found yesterday’s puzzle way easier than today’s.
I had a tough time in today’s NE corner. whereas yesterday was a near personal record.
Go figure?
—Craig

okanaganer 1:03 PM  

A nice looking grid which scared me a bit, but turned out to go pretty smoothly. One typeover was NICKNAME before CLAN NAME for Nelson Mandela.

I actually knew TALLINN but not that there were two Ns as well as two Ls.

[Spelling Bee: Fri 0; my last word was one which didn't used to be accepted. I wasn't even going to try it, then I did.]

Anonymous 1:06 PM  

HINDS and MOLE were sticking points for me, too, as was NCISLA. Seemed like a west coast vibe here, maybe.

Chance2travel 1:08 PM  

Well this puzzle was a delight for me. It didn't hurt that we're planning our wedding and so PINTEREST BOARDS have played a big role. We also love TREVOR Noah and miss him dearly from the Daily Show.

But then - BENIN! That's where I served in the Peace Corps, teaching math in the former kingdom of Dahomey.

Third - we did a night snorkel with MANTA rays last Christmas in Kona. We easily saw more than 20 of them over the course of 45 minutes, just doing barrel roll after barrel roll.

Fourth - I live in the Bay Area and have a 12 pack of Sierra Nevada American Pale Ale in the fridge.

("Does" as deer did not cross my mind, nor did the grammatical mark for "Pina colada topper" - so that cost me a minute or so)

Now I want a TORTA for lunch...

Anonymous 1:16 PM  

I agree with Joe dipinto. Mile made much more sense than mole. You can measure it in yards. But my faith in my spelling of biologist saved me. Also, I blew through yesterday’s puzzle, and took twice as long to work through today’s. I detest corporate trivia like acdelco.

Made in Japan 1:21 PM  

I agree with Hal9000, SUMOS is an ugly answer as clued. There may be some people who refer to SUMO wrestlers as SUMOS, but I wouldn't expect the NYT to spread such ignorance.

Tommy Lasorda 1:44 PM  

I was surprised that Rex didn't comment on LA appearing twice in the grid, both times meaning Los Angeles.

DigitalDan 1:56 PM  

TORTA/TALINN was a NATICK for me. Otherwise, as usual, the Downs provided enough context to deal with the lengthy acrosses.

Anonymous 2:01 PM  

Love those Costanza allusions… :)

MetroGnome 2:08 PM  

What the hell does NCISLA mean/stand for/represent??!!

Voyajer 2:39 PM  

A heck of a lot harder than yesterday when working downs and putting Good GRACIOUS instead of riddance and MOURNFUL instead of dolorous especially when you don’t know that Pinterest uses boards. Had NORELCO instead of ACDELCO. Birch for BEECH. MILE for measured in yards. Enough of these messes and you work yourself into a hole.

Enjoyable difficulty.

egsforbreakfast 3:00 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous 3:11 PM  

The correct name is rikishi.

Ben 3:14 PM  

Huh I had the opposite experience -- my time for today's was about twice my time for yesterday's

kitshef 4:09 PM  

We have subscribed for many years to a UK-based travel magazine called Wanderlust. Twenty-seven years, now that I think about it. TALLINN in recent years consistently makes the list of "most desirable cities to visit", somewhere between #2 and #7.

My sister attended an Old Norse symposium in TALLINN last year, and she was very complimentary about the city.

@MetroGnome 2:08 - Naval Criminal Investigative Service: Los Angeles. Although the TV show was just called NCIS: Los Angeles.

Georgia 4:13 PM  

NCIS is a military/police TV series franchise. This one is in Los Angeles, hence the LA tacked on.

Georgia 4:14 PM  

Me too! And in the same corner!

Anoa Bob 4:36 PM  

When I saw all that open space---only 23 lack squares---I knew this would be a fun solve. I enjoy the process OFL alludes to of solving the short crossing stuff until enough letters are in place for pattern recognition to kick in and longs like THREAD THE NEEDLE, my favorite, emerge. There's the tension of trying to make sense out of the incomplete pattern and then the satisfying, tension-relieving STELLAR moment of closure when it all falls into place.

I've seen a few 24D MANTA rays while scuba diving but now I have to put the Kona night snorkel MANTA ray fest on my bucket list. Wow!

My least favorite, no, make that most detested neologism---and there are many that come close---is 43A HACK for the already perfectly serviceable "hint". With so many other meanings of HACK out there, why try to add another. And "Life HACK' sounds to me like a nasty cough that just won't go away.

Gary Jugert 4:44 PM  

Hardly a Saturday except for the excruciatingly obscure proper nouns we love from constructors trying to make things thick.

Uniclues:

1 Bottom line agreement.
2 The cute girl at the auto parts counter.
3 Makes a Mexican sandwich smoothie.
4 Christmas tree.
5 Vans for rolling.

1 HINDS CONCUR
2 AC DELCO HOSTESS
3 BLENDS TORTA
4 ABNORMAL PET BED (~)
5 SKATER SNEAKERS (~)

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclues Keepsake from Last Year:

1 That single dude at the tapas party asking too many questions about your personal life, maybe. FIESTA CANNIBAL

2 The party where everything tastes like chicken, spicy chicken, but very chicken-y nonetheless. CANNIBAL FIESTA.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

bocamp 5:12 PM  

Thx Will; an excellent puz this wuz! 😊

Downs-o (just N. of 3 hrs) so can only guess that this would have been a med. conventional solve, error free.

Mixed feelings about this effort. In checking @Rex's photo to see if I had everything but 22D (SYNCS) correct, I once again made the mistake of seeing what I shouldn't've: the 'S' in BYNES.

I feel good about coming this close, but am once again disappointed that I didn't consider looking more closely at BYNES. I didn't like SUMOr, but do know SUMer of ancient Mesopotamia. But, that would have changed TREVOR to TREVeR.

So, sadly, I'll never know if I'd've made the necessary adjustment. 😔 Will keep working on trying to remember to make notes on the unknowns/doubtables as I solve, and get back to them before filling in the last cell. 😊

The TYNER I know, is Thomas from Aloha H.S., near Beaverton. One of Oregon's greatest h.s. athletes in football and Track & Field.

My PINTEREST BOARDS.

Great adventure and workout! :)
___
On to Stanley Newman's Sat. Stumper
(btw, it can be solved at this site or printed out to a very nice size; hi @pablo). Michael Lieberman's NYT PandA on tap for tm.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Anonymous 5:40 PM  

Sumos is to sumo wrestlers as baseballs is baseball players. Super inferable but a really off clue.

Moles do their thing "in the yard", unless the clue is suggesting you only assess their tunneling progress while standing off to the side of the yard and not actually in it. Guess they wanted "by the yard" in the clue as a cute misdirect really badly. There seem to be a lot of off kilter clues of this sort recently. They want a "turn of phrase" and are satisfied if only one word is actually relevant.

But overall a fun easy Saturday.

Smith 6:08 PM  

I just sent in my answer to the Super Mega xword plus post solve puzzle. Didn't see it until I did. And it's a good one!

Hope they will publish how many thousands of correct entries they received so I don't feel too bad when I don't win the "selected at random from correct entries" prize...

Joe Dipinto 7:44 PM  

The band at the beach on the Bight of Benin
Was led by a singer that to my dismay
Forgot all the words to "Begin The Beguine"
—She'd done it just fine on the Bay of Biscay.

Anonymous 8:17 PM  

About Anonymous who said that “rikishi “ is correct.
My response is this is an English language blog, and sumo wrestler is correct in English. It would have been better for you to say “FYI the Japanese term is rikishi.”
The purpose of language is to communicate after all.

Sumos on the other hand is a bit of a stretch but the Times pluralizes all sorts of words all the time that are stretches so I didn’t even notice it while doing the puzzle!

dgd 8:21 PM  

Conrad, happy I wasn’t the only one to put in Balsa first. I also briefly thought about BirCH!
You are right that NACRE is an old friend.

JC66 8:22 PM  

@Joe D

I wish I knew as much about anything, as you know about music,

dgd 8:29 PM  

Anonymous 7:40
I did get ATE fairly quickly but if AnoaBob dislikes plurals of convenience this one is an annoying past tense of convenience. 99% of the time it is eat and run. My guess is your mind refused to accept the weird past tense! They should have used another clue.

dgd 8:47 PM  

Mathgent

Hack is a term which arose among computer people : A computer hacker (it has both negative AND positive connotations BTW) Hack is the noun. It has gone over to general usage to mean a way of say simplifying a problem or a short cut for some chores you have to do. Often used in advice columns.

Anonymous 8:48 PM  

Rock bands

Anonymous 8:56 PM  

I don’t think Shortz is bothered by NCIS and LAT dupe or others like it. Rex sometimes points them out when they are close together like here but maybe he just didn’t notice it

Nessa 10:29 PM  

Ugghh Japanese doesn't add S to make things plural. The plural of "sumo" is "sumo" and the wrestlers are called "rikishi."

Unknown 8:58 AM  

Some are failed bra salesmen

Made in Japan 12:47 PM  

Nessa 10:29 PM is correct to point out that the Japanese term for a sumo wrestler is "rikishi" and Anonymous 8:17 PM is correct that the English term is "sumo wrestler". My objection to pluralizing sumo as "sumos" is not so much that that is not the correct Japanese pluralization, but that it is a word that doesn't even have a plural, like "hockey" or "golf" or "chess".

Anonymous 3:29 PM  

As both a Trevor, Bynes and Pinterest girlie - the puzzle was great for me today :D

Scott in Chicago 4:39 PM  

My biggest nitpick here is that Sierra Nevada does not call its signature beer an American pale ale, it's just called Pale Ale and nowhere on their website do they refer to it as the style American Pale Ale.

https://sierranevada.com/brews/pale-ale

Angelica 8:45 PM  

What does “the low, low, price of”/only mean?

Anonymous 4:59 AM  

To all the solvers who said that this puzzle wasn't of proper Saturday toughness...
May I suggest that any crossword that includes multiple clever misleads that stump you, and prevent you from hearing the 'Happy Music'...
is indeed a Saturday level puzzle.

Anonymous 5:37 AM  

To all the solvers commenting that this (and other recent NYT crosswords) seemed out of order, posted on the wrong day…

We’re at the tail end of a Retrograde Mercury period,which Impacts all things related to communication…including electronics, mail, travel, interpersonal exchanges…and apparently crosswords.

Among other frustrating aspects (astrological pun intended), it causes more than the usual forgetfulness and mental fogness.

You don’t have to believe in astrology to gain respect for Retrograde Mercury (which occurs approximately three times a year).
Just monitor the period and what’s happening in your life…
and draw your own conclusions.

spacecraft 9:38 AM  

EASY-MEDIUM??? You have GOT to be kidding. No way. Without ANY help? No. I don't believe it. Me? I couldn't even get started. The DNFest DNF that I have ever DNFed.

Wordle par.

Burma Shave 3:25 PM  

SCHEME D.O.A.

EVEN though ERIN DECLARES,
"THE COST'S LESS." BAA, how I hate her!
THE BEECH can't TIEIN to THE wear:
she bought SNEAKERS for THE SKATERs.

--- HENRY HEGEL

rondo 3:52 PM  

This is perhaps the neatest, prettiest completed Saturday grid ever for me. Perfect draftsman lettering with no write-overs. Belongs in a frame. STELLAR. Might be the result of combo engineering and liberal arts degree with a year of law school to boot.
Tried the gridspanner clues first with no luck and am glad to not have put in virusprotecTION for 16a, which would have fit and made a total inkfest. Got enough of the shorter ones to fill in all of the blanks.
Amanda BYNES, yeah baby. Time to celebrate with an AMERICANPALEALE or something similar.
Wordle par.

Diana, LIW 4:37 PM  

dnf

nope, nope, nope

My wheelhouse simply forgot to show up!

Lady Di

Anonymous 4:38 PM  

As someone else stated, I too had mile, because as everyone knows there are 1760 yards in a mile. But, alas, I did not change it to mole. So I misspelled BIOLiGIST!
And to think that I was a grade school spelling champion!!!

Diana, LIW 4:41 PM  

OTOH - TILDE has to be the best/worst answer ever. Bad puzzle - naughty puzzle.

Diana, see above

Aviatrix 12:23 AM  

I had no problem with the capital of Estonia, but resorted to reading the entire Wikipedia article on the Sierra Nevada mountain range in an attempt to learn what AMERICAN thing it could offer. Too long for eagle or river. Too short for gold rush. I gave up and eventually pried it loose from crosses. Also my local computer security expert complained that while email encryption is widely available, that it actually quite uncommon.

Don Byas 7:54 PM  

McCoy TYNER played piano on DAHOMEY Dance. A tune one the album Old Coltrane. TYNER was amazing. I like his playing on Coltrane Plays the Blues. If you haven't listened to A Love Supreme start now.

Don Byas 2:35 AM  

comment above should read: A tune on the album Olé Coltrane.

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