Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Home of Bach Ma Temple / WED 1-3-2024 / Musical instrument also called a chac-chac / Letters that are fittingly part of "f_mily _ _ i _"

Constructor: Jared Goudsmit

Relative difficulty: Medium (12:32)


THEME: "RE" "FUSE" — The letter string RE is "fused" between two words

Theme answers:
  • [Was worth another mention] for BO[RE]PEATING
  • [Travel discount] for FA[RE]DUCTION
  • [Not inflammatory?] for FI[RE]SISTANT
  • [Sanctuary like Yellowstone] for NATU[RE]SERVE

Word of the Day: MII (Customizable Nintendo avatar) —
A Mii is a customizable avatar used on several Nintendo video game consoles and mobile apps. The name Mii is a portmanteau of "Wii" and "me", referring to them typically being avatars of the players. Miis were first introduced on the Wii console in 2006 and later appeared on the DS, 3DS, the Wii U, the Switch, and various apps for smart devices such as Miitomo. Miis can be created using different body, facial and clothing features. [wiki]
• • •

Hey friends, and welcome back to Malaika MWednesday! First and foremost, happy new year! This is my second-favorite holiday of the year. I do not typically like "resolutions" but I like to set goals. This year, my goals are to become a notary, get my Canadian passport renewed (easier said than done for dual citizens), make at least one data visualization using R Shiny, and attend thirty yoga classes. Please let me know your goals or resolutions below!

This played easy for me, until I got to the six boxes in the upper right of the puzzle, B-L-A alongside B-O-X. The corner is not the cleanest fill that's possible up there, but it's totally fine and it's clear the constructor wanted this puzzle to have every letter in the alphabet (Puzzle Heads call this a "pangram"), so he needed the X and the Q. It was the clues that struck me as extremely unnecessarily hard-- I spent over four minutes on those six squares alone, before ultimately resorting to "check puzzle."  Referencing AXE as a verb is tough, and "informally" to me (in the clue for BBQ) is a really subtle indicator for an abbreviation-- NYT sometimes uses it to mean slang.

When I Google the term "The Lou" nothing really comes up for St Louis but the constructor is from there so I trust him

I like this style of theme! I've seen it often with add-a-letter ("attach" "e") or drop-a-letter puzzles, and this one seemed like a slightly cuter and more interesting version. The downside is perhaps that the long theme answers weren't super zingy (BORE REPEATING especially felt a little blah to me). Actually, in this puzzle, the mid-length answers, like MACBETH, BREYERS, MCJOB, and MARACA were some of my favorites. And while there weren't a ton of question mark clues (I thought [Resting place?] for SEAT didn't need one at all tbh), I liked the references to "The Good Place" (DEREK is Janet's boyfriend) and "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" ("TIS but a scratch!").

Rex if this is too risque for this blog please delete it

Bullets:
  • [Eartha who sang "I Want to Be Evil"] for KITT — I wanted a "Santa Baby" reference! But I guess Christmas is over.
  • [Rural shindig] for BARN DANCE — Had a rewrite here; initially I put "barn raise" 
  • [Sort of poem not usually pluralized by adding an -s] for HAIKU — This is a cute way of the NYT saying oops for using the entry "haikus" thrice in the past.... although once was as recently as 2022
  • ["___ que sรญ!" (Spanish "Of course!")] for CLARO — Claro is one of my favorite Special Occasion Restaurants in NYC, although I will say they did the thing where they became popular and raised their prices by 20%. Please tell me y'all's favorites as I have a couple of Special Occasions coming up soon!
xoxo Malaika

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

94 comments:

  1. Medium except for the (me too @Malaika) NE which took a bit of. staring. Getting BBQ took longer than it should have. I’m with @Malaika, cute idea, liked it.

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  2. Hi Malaika. Unlike you, I don't set New Years goals. I'm a puresolution guy. This year, mine is to treat people with morespect and patience. I know that everything I write in these comments is an attempt at humor, and often it's crude and borderline cruel. I don't intend to change that, but I'm 100% serious about improving my actual person-to-person style.

    Something that was worth saying only once BORE PEATING.
    A ticket charge that is at its normal price represents a FARE DUCTION.
    Something that is burnable is FIRE SISTANT.
    Land not really set aside for preservation is a NATURE SERVE.

    What's the difference between a command that your bratty sibling scram ASAP and a"Cool place in a hot place? One's Away, Sis! and the other is OASIS.

    A touch easy for a Wednesday, but pretty fun. Thanks, Jared Goudsmit.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous1:01 AM

    Got totally flummoxed at the cross of CLARO and MCJOB. Don’t know Spanish and I still don’t really understand why being an MC is a bad job? If that’s what it means? Very confusing and had to run through every letter of the alphabet before it finally gave me the congratulations screen with that C. Otherwise, fun puzzle!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:20 AM

      The phrase refers to a McDonalds job.

      Delete
    2. McJob as in McDonalds

      Delete
    3. Emily B6:51 AM

      It’s not that being an MC is a bad job. It’s a term related to working at a certain fast-food establishment and therefore a menial one…a McJob. I hate it.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous7:19 AM

      Mc is also often added to anything overly generic, shabbily-made, or mass-produced. McMansion for those generic, large houses in the burbs that get built in like a week. So a McJob can also refer to a mundane office job that could be done by anyone

      Delete
    5. Anonymous12:18 PM

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McWord has a good rundown on the Mc- prefix with examples.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous1:02 AM

      @Emily B calling something a MCJOB has *nothing* to do with a job working at McDonalds. It is a play on the rote mass production of McDonalds food, has nothing to do with its employees or anyone who works in fast food. It could be any job (actually usually refers to white collar work) that feels cookie cutter, cranked out where anyone can fill a cubicle. It was not a term contrived to insult McDonalds workers.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous10:28 AM

      I was curious about the white collar statement and some googling doesn't prove this out. Seems the gist is menial, low paying, often service industry work. So a McDonald's job seems (obviously) the perfect example of a McJob. This was kinda the way that I had come to understand it, purely through context and crosswords

      Delete
  4. Hi Malaika! Didn't realize you were Canadian (half?); congratulations!

    Inspired by bocamp, I tried this one with down clues only and... succeeded! First time ever on a Wednesday. Unlike yesterday, I fully got the theme before finishing. (I got the revealer last because the F in REFUSED was one of my last corrections since I had LIE for 38 d "Curses on thee".) 'RE' FUSED... clever! And indeed a clever theme.

    Much aspiring to greatness in the lower center clues: "Tours de force", "Having legendary status", and "Epic".

    [Spelling Bee: Tues 0; that non pangram 8er was my last word, and not for the first time.]

    ReplyDelete
  5. @eggs - If you are 100% serious you might enjoy David Foster Wallace’s 2005 commencement address at Kenyon College.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous5:24 AM

    Yeah I was up in that NE section early in the solve and thought “ah, Scrabble-f***ing, are we?” Pangrams are always unworthy goals. But it’s not like the fill here was worse than, say, yesterday’s, so no real harm done. Theme idea was clever, but I probably liked it mostly because I *first* thought it was just a RE-removal puzzle, which seemed awful. I was low key mad BORE PEATING didn’t have a wacky scotch clue. So REFUSED did give me an aha, if just a small, relieved one. Thanks for the write-up, M. Secretly Canadian is one of my fav record labels ๐Ÿ˜€ ~RP

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  7. Hal90005:48 AM

    Yep, the NE is the bugger in this one. Good to see I wasn’t the only one.

    ReplyDelete
  8. My nine favorite original clues of 2023
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Only human, briefly (4)
    2. It's a mouthful, frankly (3)(3)(3)
    3. One who's out and about (11)
    4. ( and ) (4)
    5. Illegal product that's still made? (9)
    6. Ones doing some heavy lifting before retirement? (5)
    7. Acute ... or the opposite of acute (5)
    8. Walk in place? (5)(8)
    9. Telenovela profession (2)(3)


    ADAM (Alex Rosen)
    HOT DOG BUN (Ada Nicolle)
    SLEEPWALKER (Robyn Weintraub)
    ARCS (Erik Agard)
    MOONSHINE (Malaika Handa)
    JACKS (John Nagamichi Cho)
    GRAVE (David P. Williams)
    FRONT ENRANCE (Tracy Bennett)
    TE AMO (Brooke Husic and Brendan Emmet Quigley)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wanderlust6:31 AM

      I’ve been looking forward to this! The only one I could guess was the last one, probably because it’s the most fresh. Nice that Malaika gets a shout-out on a MWednesday. (But @Lewis, I wish your list was longer - you could easily do 25.)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:51 AM

      Thank you! Very fun indeed! Since several were unfamiliar to me, I must not have solved (or tried to) as often as I thought. Do you keep a running list and winnow it down at the end if the year??

      Delete
  9. The NE. I'm thinking Cousin Of A Picnic was tough because a BBQ isn't necessarily a picnic and a picnic isn't necessarily a BBQ. But there you have it, awkwardly clever. And The Lou? Do people say, "I'm going to The Lou?" Will zaniness ensue if it's in a conversation with a Brit? And then Pen In, Hem In? Box In was great.

    Fun Wednesday.

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  10. Bob Mills6:23 AM

    Caught on to the theme early (albeit not the FUSED part) that Rex cited, but had trouble in the SW. After verifying that CLARO was the correct Spanish word, I was still not getting the happy music. Then I realized I had a stray letter elsewhere in the puzzle. Dumb me.

    I had trouble logging in today. Did anyone else have this problem?

    ReplyDelete
  11. @Malaika, it depends how special the occasion.

    Gabriel Kreuther on 42nd Street.
    Estela on Houston Street (it has a Michelin star and is a little more casual)
    Red Rooster in Harlem
    Il Mulino or, if you can get a table, Raos (as much for the experience)
    Sakagura in midtown--just finding it is an experience, and the food is excellent
    La Esquina on Kenmare street. You want to book in the downstairs restaurant, not upstairs. Again, it's an experience and the Mexican food is good--but it's more for the experience. Maybe this one is better just for fun than for a special occasion.
    The Fulton in the Seaport
    Riverpark on East 29th Street

    These are just in Manhattan; there are good restaurants all over. Enjoy!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous6:42 AM

    Thanks for the memories, @Lewis. #6 was my favorite
    Thanks, @egs for the wordplay
    Thanks @malaika for usual fresh review
    My resolution for this year is to be more thankful for the gifts of others

    ReplyDelete

  13. Oops! I got an error the first time I tried to post. Here's the same again:


    @Malaika: My approach to resolutions/goals is similar to this guy's.

    @Rex/Anon5:24: I agree. Really good fill for a pangram.

    I never heard of The Lou as a nickname for St. Louis, but that was the only real problem for me in the NE. BBQ came to mind right away, then the Q gave me QUEST and since I already had OASIS and FLUENT, BLASE and AXE were quick to fall.

    Didn't know MII (29D), but I've encountered enough Nintendo Wii derivatives in other puzzles that it was inferable.

    My Resting place (59D) was Sofa before it was SEAT.

    Another kealoa at 64A: aHa before OHO

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Almost exactly the same experience you (Conrad)had.
      Also enjoyed Rex’s post even though he didn’t blog.
      Someone noted the constructor is from St Louis so Lou is a thing. Learn something new every day!

      Delete
  14. This was a nice, clean puzzle. Just an EENY bit of crossword-ese. The theme is solid and any PPP was crossed fairly. Well done.

    I ran the alphabet twice in the NE just to find an X with AXE to grind there. I guess I'm still too daft to recognize when the puzzle's author wants to slip off to a quiet corner and get to know the alphabet better.

    I got pretty frustrated when my brain choked on CLARO que si and couldn't cough it up. It's one of my favorite bits of Spanish--something like "clearly yes." English speakers are stuck with the brutish, rote, "of course."

    Side note: I've never seen anyone cover Santa Baby who didn't understand the song is implicitly searching out a Santa Daddy.





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  15. Fortunately the NE dropped in pretty easily for me (the BBQ jumped out at me and then it was easy). My trouble spots were the usual suspects (like Nintendo avatars for example). I thought the ALPHA as leader of the Argos was a cute, tricky attempt at a misdirection. Unfortunately it was crossed with today’s Spanish test which kind of took all of the wind out of the sails on that one.

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  16. Nice puzzle overall, with a consistent theme and apt revealer. But … some of the worst clues I’ve ever seen. Apple ___, Customizable Nintendo avatar, and that convoluted clue for the awful LOU, for starters.

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  17. If you want a yacht, get on your knees and beg for one. (Saved!)

    Nice puz. Seems the pangram was to compensate for the large number of short words. It's a nice touch, like a bow on a present. No problems here.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous7:38 AM

    McJob ruined this entire puzzle for me. The top right corner was also trash, and I've been playing D&D for years. And Apple Inc? Terrible fill.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:13 PM

      Interesting about the extreme distaste for the well known term McJob. Perhaps Anonymous 7:38 thinks it is intended as an insult to the people who do those jobs I didn’t have the reaction at all. The term is really a social comment aimed at EMPLOYERS who provide so many low paid usually part time and always boring jobs where the employees have few rights and are subject to many restrictions. It is the job compared to a McDonalds hamburger not the person!
      It is just like the term McMansion refers to bland large houses churned out with no real architecture , on a mass scale.

      Delete
  19. Anonymous7:39 AM

    If you're using "oho" then you've already failed as a constructor.

    ReplyDelete
  20. "RE" FUSED - very clever! Enough, for me, to overcome the somewhat bland theme phrases. And we had BARN DANCE, IRON HORSE, MARACA, MACBETH, and GIGOLO to pep things up. Medium for me, too - I blanked on HANOI and LOU, went wrong on ALARM (ALert), ZIP (vIm), and CHEST (torSo), and didn't know DEREK, MII, or CLARO.

    @Lewis, thank you for the "greats" list. I only remembered two of the answers, so it was fun to be delighted by the wordplay all over again.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Carola has shown me that the clue for zip was another kealoa. I put in pep first. Didn’t even think of vim.
      I did like the cross FIE. Obsolete but to my ears amusing.

      Delete
  21. The original il Mulino. Endlessly entertaining.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Some issues with the clueing: HAIKU is *often* plural with an S in my experience, and MCJOB for "Mundane" instead of "Generic" employment seems a little off. Neither was a big problem but nonetheless mildly irritating in an otherwise decent Wednesday.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:25 PM

      A comment that mundane for MCJOB is a little off, misses the point that CLUES, which are hints, are routinely a little off. That is part of why crosswalks are called puzzles, not vocabulary exercises.
      McJob is certainly close enough for crosswords.

      Delete
  23. Hah! What a fresh theme with a lovely revealer. One splendid result of the Times bringing on so many new constructors is that the chances of sparkling theme ideas like this coming to the editors’ desks are greater.

    And what a junk-free grid. In Jared’s notes on his last puzzle (a NYT debut), he stressed that creating a spotless grid was a very high priority. This puzzle is so clean that when I gaze at it, it calms my mind.

    Plus [Cool place in a hot place], a terrific clue for OASIS, which has appeared nearly 300 times in the major outlets, but never with a clue like this. And lovely answers HAIKU, IRON HORSE, and QUEST, not to mention classing up the answer set with MACBETH and KITT.

    Fresh, clean and pleasing. Thank you so much for this, Jared, and I’m filing you in my memory for FUTUREFERENCE.

    ReplyDelete
  24. I think having a gaming family helped me a lot with QUEST. I hear that word way more than I should. After that, it was not too bad to fill in that corner.
    I’ve always been intrigued by becoming a notary. Good luck with that one! Seems like a great gig or side gig.

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  25. Caught on at BOREREPEATING, no problems in the NE (except for LOU, really?), and had a nice smooth sail through this one. Have never heard of Janet, her friend, or "A Good Place", but the crosses were fair. And is there anyone else named "Eartha"?

    AXE was a given because of BOX(ed)IN, which I know well from "Bad Man's Blunder". Old songs are still way handy. And if you live in a part of the country where BARNS have multiple uses, BARNDANCE is a gimme.

    MII? OK fine. Now I know one Nintendo avatar.

    Thought this was a clever theme with a solid revealer. Nice work, JG, Jolly Good, and thanks for all the fun.

    @dgd from yesterday-Interesting observation about Latin and the double negatives. Made me wonder how Spanish came to see multiple negatives as part of the language, e. g. "He never doesn't say nothing to nobody" is not only acceptable but required.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pabloinnh
      My guess is that sometimes a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Education spread beyond the elites and the Church much quicker in Northern Europe than in Southern Europe. That of course is a good thing. But it created a bigger group looking for things to study. And as I said those who were pontificating on the English language rules just didn’t know what they were writing about. The Spanish had a smaller educated elite who realized Spanish is not Latin! They didn’t make that mistake. The Spanish did develop a very sensible system of spelling.
      Sadly, the English rule makers did very little to make English spelling easier. Now that would have made sense!



      speakers used these “double negatives “ and when it was standardized, double negatives were of course part of the language.
      (I remember hearing the expression no se nada de nada- don’t know if it’s correct but it stuck in my mind).
      Elizabethan English was not standardized. And educated people had no hesitation about using double negatives. It made for a very lively language. . But over the centuries since, those academics who didn’t understand what they were writing about, imposed what I

      Delete
  26. Stuart8:17 AM

    I was born in STL and lived in the area for many years. Never once did I hear it called “the Lou.” And referring to St. Louis as Missouri’s second largest city threw me for a moment. But if you realize that the city proper is just a small part of the entire metropolitan area, it makes sense.

    As for new year’s “resolutions,” I don’t make them. I just list a few casual suggestions to myself that create no legally enforceable obligation to fulfill. ๐Ÿ˜

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wanderlust11:30 AM

      I grew up there and we never called it that, but my nieces and nephews who live there do - it’s a newer thing. Kind of grates on me, like calling SF “Frisco.” And yes, the city of Kansas City is more populous than St. Louis but the StL metro area is bigger than the KC metro area.

      Delete
  27. @jae, read that speech, DFW sounds like he’s talking about meditation! Loved it, thanks for posting.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anthony In TX8:24 AM

    I didn't know how to spell broccoli RABE (RAAB? RABB?) and have never heard of Edy's, so that NW corner gave me some trouble. As a Texan, I'm familiar with "¡CLARO que sรญ!" and the rest of the SW fill took care of MCJOB for me, thankfully. I thought the "REFUSED" trick was fun for a Wednesday and gave a nice little "aha!" (or "OHO!") moment.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:07 PM

      Anthony in Tx
      Rabe as spelled is from Italian Americans in the last Century who melded various Italian dialects to create word’s everyone could understand. These are different, from but cousins of formal Italian.
      The pronunciation does vary a bit because no one ever codified anything, so the spelling does too. I usually something like robbie. .
      As an Italian American I have seen rabe spelling most often
      Broccoli di rape is the full formal Italian name which is only seen in expensive restaurants!

      Delete
  29. Donal Bain8:46 AM

    Things to be depressed about in 2023:

    -The continued and exasperating degradation of the term ICONIC into silliness and meaninglessness.
    -The utterly irrational degradation of the Gateway to the West into a homophone for a British toilet.
    -The needless degradation of human beings trying to eke out a living in their MCJOBs.

    And all this while tempting fate by recklessly and gratuitously evoking the curse of The Scottish Play.

    How can one be BLASร‰ about such things? I CARE. CLARO?

    ReplyDelete
  30. I think the mathematical term for the double "RE"s is "congruent" -- right, @mathgent?

    The non-mathematical term might be "overlapping"?

    In any case, while I thought about the fact that there were two of them, I didn't actually DO anything about it. I just wrote them into the puzzle once. I'm working with pen and paper and I know what I really mean, even if a casual peruser of my handiwork would have no idea.

    I wonder what you would have to do when solving on a gadget?

    I expect I'll find out when reading today's comments. In any event, it wasn't any problem for me.

    An easy Wednesday, made easier rather than harder by the theme. The theme answers are nicely chosen, but I would have enjoyed a little more resistance from the rest of the puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Anonymous8:59 AM

    I’m a St. Louis native and I have *never* ever heard or used ‘the Lou’ as a nickname for my hometown. That’s ridiculous. The common nickname is the ‘Gateway to the West.’

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:51 PM

      Re Lou and St. Louis
      As noted in the blog the constructor is from St. Louis. Lou is used by young people. If you are a St. Louis native a while ago it might not have been in common use then. Things change and so does slang. But Gateway to the West is not a nickname. A nickname is like NOLA, LA, the Hub and many more Gateway etc is a name probably invented by those selling the city like the Chamber of Commerce , more like an epithet Nicknames are shorter than the city name! Like Chi Town vs the City of Big Shoulders.

      Delete
  32. Hey All !
    Yelling Ms. Derek's name over and over? BO REPEATING
    Do Re Mi Sol La Ti Do? FA REDUCTION
    Pyro, in slang? FIRE 'SISTANT
    Getting punked by the forest? NATURE SERVE

    Nice little puz. I can imagine the foofaraw if the "RE"s were shaded squares. Thankfully, it's just a straightforward puz. Easy to figure out for me after grokking the first Themer. I said Aha, not OHO.

    Nice Little WedsPuz
    The theme was easy and fun
    Good start to the day.
    (My HAIKU to the puz)

    Good puz. Pangram. Agree with Clare about the NE corner to get that Pangram. Still, fill good, theme good, what more could we want?

    Four F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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    Replies
    1. Har, it's @Malaika! Sorry for calling you Clare! That's an example of, what I refer to as, Chronic Short Term Memory Loss. Forgetting who wrote the write-up 10 seconds after reading it.

      My bad.

      RooMonster What Was I Saying? Guy

      Delete
  33. NYT Wordplay and Malaika didn't help me understand the revealer. RE's being fused. But Diary of a Crossword Fiend did. I saw that RE's got repeated, but I didn't see any fusion. Aha. If you overlay one of the two words on the other, like BORE and REPEATING, the two RE's sit on top of each other and fuse into one. (At least that makes sense to me.)

    I love the clue for AUNT at 22D. The NYT cryptic sometimes has clues like that.

    Clever gimmick, some good sparkle. Thumbs up!

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  34. New Wednesday pr (1:38 per nyt app) Liked it, too, not much gunk. Redeemed after Sunday's dnf!

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  35. The Lou is an inside name

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  36. That was fun. Again, not much theme, but it's fine. CLARO made the southwest a bugger.

    Happy new year Malaika! I love making resolutions, but following them is a bit of a challenge. Thanks to some disappointing news from a recent MRI, I really do hafta go to the gym now. Sigh. So that's what I am resolved to do. Expect me to be oiled up in the local beefcake competition this fall.

    Uniclues:

    1 Percussion pedagogue.
    2 Bathing beauty frolicking in the waves.
    3 Hate the hoedown.
    4 What makes me cry.
    5 Pet name for mom's sister with a Napoleon complex.
    6 Little train that was pretty sure he couldn't.
    7 Kichen table chair near the Paas.

    1 MARACA COACH
    2 OHO IMAGE AT SEA
    3 RAG ON BARN DANCE (~)
    4 BREYER'S AFAR
    5 AUNT MACBETH
    6 BLASร‰ IRON HORSE
    7 EGG QUEST SEAT

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Nickname for a short emotional person. STORMIN' ITSY.

    ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  37. Anonymous9:59 AM

    @PH Malaika wasn't saying get on your knees and beg...she was saying get on your knees and perform fellatio. On Santa Claus. And then, you can get a yacht.

    These are the kind of high class, extraordinary crossword tips you get from Malaika Handa.

    Why Rex continues to use her as a guest blogger (when he has SEVERAL other smart, COMPETENT guest bloggers) boggles the mind.

    Rex is smart, witty and on point.

    Malaika is the opposite.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Anonymous10:00 AM

    To quote Country Grammar, Nelly’s iconic St. Louis anthem: “Say it loud, I’m from the Lou and I’m proud!”.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Liked this a lot. Very clever. However I was totally AT SEA until I figured out the trick. “Aha,” said I … then quickly changed it to OHO. Filled in the REally nifty theme answers and the missing fill AMONG them, and voila! My MCJOB was done.

    I first thought the clue for 15A was wrong but if ranking restricted to city limits, St. Louis does come in second to Kansas City in population. However if you look at the entire metropolitan area, St. Louis is significantly larger and has always been thought of as Missouri’s “biggest city.” However, as a native born citizen who spent most of my life in the state, I have never once heard it referred to as The LOU.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Anonymous11:03 AM

    The Lou is a Natick. And I don't think of RAG ON as harsh criticism, but as persistent nagging. I thought the puzzle was easy for a Wednesday.

    ReplyDelete
  41. @JD (6:09) “Do people say, I'm going to The Lou?" I’ve lived in Missouri most of my life and never heard anyone say that. Maybe people who live in St. Louis say it? No, not according to @Stuart. The only thing I hear it called is St. Louis, St. Louie or San Louie.


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:56 PM

      Apparently recent slang. Or maybe popular among Black Americans and recently spread to white young peopled?
      Someone above noted it appeared in a song by Nelly.

      Delete
  42. Another fine example of how witty, charming and smart a puzzle can be. Thank you Jared.

    ReplyDelete
  43. RE-recyclin. Like.

    staff weeject pick: MII. It's sorta like "me" in WII-ese, I reckon? honrable mention to LOU, as clued.

    Leader of Argos/___ que si gobbled up some precious nanoseconds, at our house. Most of the RE-st was pretty smooth solvequest sailin.

    pangrammer. That there NE corner fought real hard to help get it. [X and Q-wise]

    Thanx for the cool theme and revealer, Mr. Goudsmit dude. And thanx for the primo sub-job, Malaika darlin.

    Masked & Anonymo5Us

    p.s. Yesterday's runtpuz had a clue typo [tanon instead of the intended tenon]. Thought I'd fixed it, but somehow managed to screw that correction up, too. Apologies to all yer nanoseconds.

    p.p.s.s. @Malaika: M&A's CORESOLUTION: To only use RE once in each phrase I write here. [doh … !]


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  44. Gary J -- I've been reading this blog for ages, and thought it was time to say that your hilarious uniclues are the best part of the Sacred Daily Crossword Ritual.

    My sympathy re the gym and its sadistic machines. And good luck!

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  45. I know just enough Spanish that I have only been taught "por supuesto que sรญ", but luckily I have run into "claro". Like Malaika, I ended up in the upper right. Did not realize I was in pangram territory though. Really enjoyed the them and the revealer.

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  46. Frank Ryan died Monday at 87. He led the Cleveland Browns to an NFL championship in 1964 as their quarterback. He also had a Ph.D. in mathematics from Rice, a top mathematics university. What a guy!

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  47. Pondie11:50 AM

    I think "The Lou" was coined by a gossip columnist for the city's 3rd-rate local newspaper, the once-mighty St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

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  48. Skip to my LOU? I did. And of course my mind went to the WC.
    My first: FA[RE]DUCTION. And right above it D{ER}EK. So I looked at this and thought we were going to have a RE ER thingie. But then I went back upstairs and saw that BO[RE]PEATING didn't have an ER sitting above its head unless you spell ALARM al[er]m. Can "alerm" be a word like LOU? Another one I don't understand.
    FI[RE]SISTANT has EZRA coming down on it. OHO, look carefully, there's an ER to meet up with RE. Same with NATU[RE]SERVE and the REAR RE. Good gravy, I'm reading way too much into this. Still it's interesting that where Jared has fused his RE, there are also ER's floating down each answer.
    I need coffee.
    Anyway, I enjoyed this. I like MCJOB. I'm a MCMAHON. I'm mundane.....Pero CLARO que si.

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  49. Thx Jared, re: RE: REally liked this one! ๐Ÿ˜Š

    Hi my fellow US/Canadian Malaika; good to see you again, and as always, thx for your comments. No New Year's reso's here, just live minute to minute, trying to keep my eye on the goal, making small adjustments and improvements as I go.

    Downs-o (1 hr) with success; I'm with you @okanaganer! ๐Ÿ‘

    Grokking the REpeating RE idea very early on was a big boost to the solve.

    Thx, @Rex for the RE FUSE parsing; missed that! makes more sense now, and am even more impressed by the theme! :)

    Dropped in RABE at the get-go (learned from SB). Eat lots of broccoli, but haven't tried RABE (yet). In fact, I doubled my broccoli order on todays delivery order, and may try some RABE on the next one.

    Very much on J.G.'s wavelength; no guesses necessary td.

    Fun trip! :)
    ___
    Brooke Husic's Mon. New Yorker was med.(2 1/2 x NYT Sat.), with no major issues.

    On to Paolo Pasco's New Yorker cryptic.
    ___
    Peace ๐Ÿ•Š ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all ๐Ÿ‘Š ๐Ÿ™

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  50. Minor nit: I was a bit put off by the fact that both BORE/PEATING and FARE/DUCTION featured an R above the E at the point of "fusion" (from the BREYERS and REAR crosses). I assumed that's where the extra RE was coming from, but then that pattern disappeared on the final two theme answers. Didn't care for the inconsistency.

    I tend to think NATURE pRESERVE.

    MII was a WoE

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  51. Anonymous12:21 PM

    Is it not cheating to clue "fluent" with "speaking naturally?" They are different parts of speech. Shouldn't it be "ability to speak freely?" Maybe it's petty, but constructors get away with all kinds of trickery as long as the parts of speech in the clue and answer are exactly equivalent. Seems cheap to just fudge the difference here.

    Also, we need to ban the use of oho.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:02 PM

      Fluent is an adjective and speaking naturally is an adjective phrase as used here. Nothing wrong with it.

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  52. Anonymous12:23 PM

    “Ability” is a noun; “fluent” is an adjective. “Speaking naturally” is an adjectival phrase. The clue is fine as is.

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    1. Anonymous12:50 PM

      Sorry, I meant "able to speak freely." "I am not speaking freely in english" doesn't seem exactly interchangeable with "i am not fluent in english", no?

      Delete
  53. Anonymous12:29 PM

    “TIS but a scratch” called back to Mercutio’s death in Romeo & Juliet, where he says, when asked if he is hurt, “[A] scratch, a scratch, but marry, ‘tis enough.” Along with MACBETH and the very Shakespearean FIE, that made for a nice little set in the puzzle.

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  54. Lots of McMansion around here

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  55. Hi Malaika,

    Not related to the crossword, but for renewing your Cdn. passport I've never had to do anything different than the normal process and I'm also a naturalized dual citizen! You only have to provide the guarantor/proof of citizenship stuff for the first one, unless you have a special circumstance I don't know about. The last one got done in 3 days!

    At least you'll get the cool new passport I'm stuck with the old one.

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  56. Looks like LOU is gettin all the debate it deserves. I propose that folks in San Francisco start callin it "Franc" for short. Or folks in St. Paul could maybe go with "Pa"? M&A once lived near Pa, btw.

    M&Also

    **gruntz**

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  57. Silly Malaika...Christmas isn't over! Happy lords-a-leaping day to all who celebrate.

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  58. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  59. (Oh, and a good puzzle overall, but "the Lou" was atrocious. And was the second-largest-city part an intentional bit of misdirection there? You get a different answer if you're talking MSA or CSA.)

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  60. My brother-in-law was a Queens native who ofter used a phrase which has the form of a double negative. "Not fer nothin'." But he used it to mean, "No big deal, but ..."

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  61. My plop in the NE had to do with pork: picnic, HAM, bacon, etc. Ultimately, there was my confidant NATIONAL PARK, totally forgetting the theme and blowing my entire solve.
    Good puzzle, bad brain.

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  62. @dgd-No se nada de nada is just fine, though I suspect neither of us can put the accent over the "se" where it belongs. I don't now nothing about nothing, that's what they say. I have to say I can see the logic of not using double negatives--if I don't know nothing then I do know something, at least in English. Interesting how things developed.

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  63. Anonymous11:04 PM

    Hi @pabloinnh. You can tyoe sรจ by pressing and holding the e key down. Select the e with the accent you want, type it .,




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  64. Tennessee12:45 AM

    @mathgent ... it was nice to see your tribute to Dr. Frank Ryan who led the Cleveland Browns to the NFL championship in 1964. The Browns have never played in a Super Bowl because that championship game was inaugurated in the 1966 year.Place your bets right now at 3500 to 1 for them to win the Super Bowl this season right now. By the way, in 1964, their opponent was the favored-Baltimore Colts. The game was tied 0 to 0 at halftime but it was 27 to 0 at the end! P.S. The Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame was not down by the lake then.

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  65. Anonymous4:29 AM

    Yest

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  66. Anonymous4:31 AM

    Regarding 63D [___ fly (R.B.I.-earning play)] for SAC:
    That clue seems misleading/inaccurate to me. A sac (or sacrifice) fly is only an RBI-earning play if the baserunner advances from third base to home and thus scores a run on the play, but a sac fly can also advance a runner first to second, or second to third, and then it doesn’t earn an RBI since no run scores.

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  67. Lewis: excellent collection. I remember chuckling at every single one of those -- well done.

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  68. DNF. What is this nonsense in the SW? I have no IDEA.

    Wordle birdie.

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  69. Anonymous11:41 AM

    Three good themers and one clunker. BOREPEATING is the one that should have been weeded out or REFUSED. AMI being too picky?

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  70. Burma Shave12:53 PM

    NON-BLASร‰ NATURE

    IT BORE SOME REPEATING when AUNT LOU cried, “OHO!”
    She REFUSED RESERVE SEATing, “That BOY’S a GIGOLO!”

    --- RABBI EZRA BREYER

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  71. rondo1:44 PM

    I had a bunch of small scattered inkfest situations, nothing serious. Anyone who has portrayed Catwoman, like Ms. KITT, on any screen is always welcome.
    Wordle birdie.

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  72. Just by way of warning, on the Seattle Times site, there's a problem with the down clues. Part of the clue for 22-Down is numbered as 24-down, which causes every clue after that to be the wrong number. Basically you have to look at the clue below the correct number. The clue for the last down (63-Down) is completely missing.

    I don't know whether this error is unique to the Seattle Times website or appears in other syndicated versions, but be warned. If 24-down is clued nonsensically as __i_" with just the one quotation mark, the above applies.

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