Saturday, January 27, 2024

Pioneer in IQ testing / SAT 1-27-24 / Life phases, in social media lingo / Large wine cask / ___ bug (long-limbed predatory insect) / Muralist who was a colleague of Dali / Series that begins on the ice planet Pagodon / Disavowed MI6 agent in the "Mission": Impossible" franchise

Constructor: Grace Warrington and Greg Warrington

Relative difficulty: Medium (7:32)


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Alfred BINET (49A: Pioneer in I.Q. testing) —
[there's also a BONET]
Alfred Binet
 (French: [binɛ]; 8 July 1857 – 18 October 1911), born Alfredo Binetti, was a French psychologist who invented the first practical IQ test, the Binet–Simon test. In 1904, the French Ministry of Education asked psychologist Alfred Binet to devise a method that would determine which students did not learn effectively from regular classroom instruction so they could be given remedial work. Along with his collaborator Théodore Simon, Binet published revisions of his test in 1908 and 1911, the last of which appeared just before his death. (wikipedia) 

 Relatedly: 

Stephen Vincent Benét (/bəˈn/ bə-NAY; July 22, 1898 – March 13, 1943) was an American poet, short story writer, and novelist. He wrote a book-length narrative poem of the American Civil War, John Brown's Body, published in 1928, for which he received the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, and for the short stories "The Devil and Daniel Webster", published in 1936, and "By the Waters of Babylon", published in 1937. // In 2009, Library of America selected his story "The King of the Cats", published in 1929, for inclusion in its two-century retrospective of American Fantastic Tales, edited by Peter Straub.
• • •

So I have mentioned several times that I finish the puzzle and then print it out so that I can annotate it before writing about it. And I've mentioned that I do that annotation in green pen, and that, in general, wherever there's green ink, there's trouble. The more green ink, the more trouble. It's a bit like a difficulty heat map. Also, potentially, a crap map, since garbage gets green-inked as well as difficulty, but generally, green is evidence of struggle. And so I give you ... what my puzzle print-out looks like right now:


It's all southeast. I don't really remember the rest of the puzzle, which seemed pleasant enough, and which played pretty easy. But once I dropped into the SE, things went off the rails there for a bit. The main problem was me, which is to say, I should've just dropped GLORIOUSLY, even though I didn't really like it as an answer to that awkward clue (28D: How one might emerge with a victory). So, actually, I like GLORIOUSLY fine, but that clue, bah. Anyway, if I had just committed to it, then the EARL / ANDY / SEA part might've come together sooner. But that's not really where the main problem was down there. The main problem ... well, I suppose if you have to pick one, you'd pick, "OH, ME!" (43A: "Alas!"). I've spent years complaining about the only-in-crosswords weaponized quaintness that is the alleged expression "AH, ME!" (51 appearances in the Shortz Era). Well, it turns out there's an off-brand version of "AH, ME!" and it's "OH, ME!" (19 appearances in the Shortz Era), and apparently I've seen it before, a bunch, but sanity has apparently caused me to suppress all memory thereof. Annnnnnyway, that "O" (which I had securely as an "A"—"AH, ME" being clued frequently as ["Alas!"] as well) was in "HOP IN!," an answer I couldn't get from its vague clue (40D: Pickup line—I was like "ooh, it's probably not about picking someone up in a bar ... probably about pickup trucks!" ugh). And then "HOP IN!," in turn, ended up having its own vowel ambiguity problem, i.e. it could just as easily have been "HOP ON!" (in fact, I've forgotten and reforgotten which one is actually in the grid several times just since I've started writing this post!). 


And then the "I" in "HOP IN!" crosses yet another answer where, again, the vowel seemed ambiguous. I guess I should've just known the BINET guy. He's been in crosswords before, a bunch. And I did remember him. But I thought he spelled it like the BENET guy (who's a writer/poet ... see both Words of the Day, above). Crosswords teach you lots of names ... and then those names get all smashed up in your head and you try to untangle them midsolve and end up falling on your face. Sometimes. So "OH, ME!" / "HOP IN!" / BINET really knifed me today. Making things worse was DAMSEL bug (never heard of it) and the HEAD part of HOG'S HEAD (wasn't sure ... I know BOAR'S HEAD, but I think that's just a brand of meats and cheeses) (39A: Large wine cask). And then there was the "?" clue on SEASON PASS (45A: Big ticket purchase?), which wasn't helping. No idea how I sorted out that corner when I was staring at HA-EN for 40D: Pickup line for so long (two wrong letters!). But I got there. As I say, there were other parts to this puzzle, but my memory of what they were had faded considerably by the time I wrestled the SE to the ground. 


The marquee answers didn't seem very ... marquee. They also just weren't my thing (i.e. golf, recent Star Wars content, gaming). The puzzle seemed to PLAY IT SAFE with the fill, overall. BOSS BATTLE may be new to some of you, but it was in the puzzle four years back (that's how I learned it). The MANDALORIAN has been referenced in the grid many times before. Seen ERAS clued this way a lot now (T-Swift's tour helped popularize the term beyond "social media lingo") (10A: Life phases, in social media lingo). Many of the longer answers in this one are quite solid, but there's not a ton of sizzle. The fill is mostly clean, despite the occasional "OH, ME!" or SERT (a gimme for crossword old-timers, probably not so much of a gimme for others) (50A: Muralist who was a colleague of Dali). My favorite part of the grid was probably CULT CLASSIC (29A: "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," e.g.). Enjoy the answer, enjoy remembering the movie. Double enjoy. 


No idea what a "double albatross" is, so PAR FIVE was hardish (33A: Possible (but extremely unlikely) setting for a double albatross). It looks like an "albatross" is three under par???? And so double is, what, four under? These are mythical feats, right? Isn't there enough actual dumb golf terminology to know without forcing this nonsense on us? Apparently not. Also no idea about the disavowed agent in the "Mission Impossible" franchise, sigh, why, why yet another tired franchise? You're already leaning into one with MANDALORIAN, come on (20A: Disavowed MI6 agent in the "Mission": Impossible" franchise = ILSA). ON RICE is an iffy prepositional phrase (reminds me of when I encounter the term ININK in the puzzle, which has happened way more than zero times—mild cringe every time). I think TOOK LEAVE is a good phrase but my ears want it to be WENT ON LEAVE (it's maternity leave, in case that wasn't obvious) (18D: Experienced a pregnant pause?). I had to think about how [Secret lover?] was CONFIDANT. I guess you tell a CONFIDANT your secrets. I'm not sure where the "lover" comes in. I don't think of CONFIDANTs as particularly thirsty for secrets. But maybe. The "international chain" at 15A: International chain whose name can be a prefix is the Official Hotel of Crossworld": the OMNI! It's frequently clued as a "luxury" hotel chain, though friends who have stayed there dispute the aptness of this description (no SHADE, OMNI! I don't work for Hyatt! Just saying "luxury" as perhaps lost all meaning in this hyper-hyperbolized commercial world). 


Wanted BONK before BEAN (42D: Hit on the noggin). Let's see, is that all? That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

124 comments:

  1. Anonymous5:55 AM

    I knew HOGSHEAD from the Beatles’ “Being for the benefit of Mr. Kite”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:21 AM

      “My car gets forty rods to the hogshead, and that's the way I like it!" - Grandpa Simpson

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:48 AM

      Can anyone explain 51 across? Dy is not a word in Spanish.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:29 AM

      But “y” is.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous11:32 AM

      And in Spanish is y

      Delete
    5. Anonymous11:36 AM

      ANDY = AND + Y. took me a while to get it.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous11:37 AM

      “And” + “y”

      Delete
    7. Anonymous11:43 AM

      “And” is “y” in Spanish.

      Delete
    8. Anonymous11:47 AM

      And + y : y is Spanish for and

      Delete
    9. Anonymous11:51 AM

      I was confused too. It’s “and” and “y”

      Delete
    10. Anonymous11:52 AM

      And translates to y in Spanish.

      Delete
    11. Anonymous12:22 PM

      Y is AND in English

      Delete
    12. Anonymous12:47 PM

      51 Across:
      2 words "and" & "y".
      ("Y" meaning "and" in spanish, together forming the name Andy)

      Delete
    13. Anonymous2:30 PM

      I knew HOGSHEAD from the opening number of The Music Man ("gone with the hogshead cask and demijohn").

      Delete

  2. Medium for me too. Overwrites:

    10D: oLDEST SON before ELDEST
    19A: Deal before DICE
    30D: hum before COO
    39D: amass before HOARD
    42A: ammo before BOUT, thinking a different type of rounds

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bob Mills6:18 AM

    Finished it without a cheat, even though I had no idea who Dali's contemporary was. Maybe the first time I've finished a Saturday puzzle before breakfast.

    I also had to guess on HBOSSBATTLE, because I was slow to pick up on BAIL (out. A satisfying morning for this old guy.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It seems that I had the exact same solving experience as Rex up to the point that I fearlessly committed to GLORIOUSLY, based on the first four letters, where he balked. Then the SE fell as quickly as the rest, so my overall experience was like a medium-difficulty, whoosh-whooshy Friday.

    ReplyDelete
  5. First born before ELDEST SON made the NE much harder for me. I had HaP IN with aH ME and realized it had to be an O. Otherwise not a bad Saturday--it played easy-medium for a Saturday for me. CULT picture fit but I quickly took it out. Not much else gave me trouble.

    ReplyDelete

  6. stuck on borrow right- oh me damsel

    ReplyDelete
  7. This was surprisingly easy for me on a Saturday thanks to Katey Sagal and Osso. Most difficult part was SW corner but that broke with Posies.

    Guessed Boss Battle because of the now defunct, "Adulting like a Boss and assuming it started with gaming.

    Same as Anon@5:55, with enough letters to parse out Hogshead. Lennon based the song on an antique circus poster that says word for word, "Trampoline Leaps and Somersets! Over men and horses, hoops and garters, lastly through a hogshead of real fire!" Genius to see music in something like that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:46 AM

      “Gone with the hogshead, cask, and demijohn”—The Music Man

      Delete
  8. Birdie is one under PAR on a golf hole.
    Eagle is two under.
    Albatross is three under.
    Double albatross is four under.

    Given that gold pars range from 3 to 5, a DA is ONLY possible on a PARFIVE (i.e., a hole in one). Shooting an ace on a 500+ yard hole is not bloody likely for an average duffer.

    This puzzle started off super easy then got to the point I was about to quit when things started coming together. Don’t know what a Doodle Bug is but I committed to it early which cost me dearly.

    Nice Saturday challenge to wake up to!


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:00 PM

      A 500 yard hole with two right (or left) dog legs might allow a big hitter to take a direct line to the pin. Haven't looked it up but I guess it's possible to get a hole in one on a par 5.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous2:46 PM

      The double albatross clue isn’t quite accurate. Although a double albatross— four under par! — is extremely unlikely, it’s ONLY possible on a par five. A par five is actually an extremely LIKELY setting for a double albatross.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous5:59 PM

      Don’t follow the argument. Anonymous 2:46 PM. about par five.
      A double albatross IS possible but extremely unlikely on a par five
      Nothing wrong with that statement. Just because it can’t happen on a 3 or 4 par hole doesn’t make it wrong.

      Delete
  9. David E7:23 AM

    The SE corner was my graveyard, too. One of the many problems was that I kept writing and then erasing DAMSEL because I knew of Damselflies but had no idea there's also a Damsel Bug. That put me in distress.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Nice puzzle - nothing too difficult but clean and slick cluing all around. The center tri-stack was a gimme. JAUNDICE is a little ugly but liked HOT SOAKS and especially GLORIOUSLY.

    Frankie Ford

    I’ve been in far too many MANHOLEs in my life. BEAN was not first guess either. The IQ stuff lately is getting tired. A double albatross is nearly impossible. Love the clue for ANGLE. Didn’t really know BOSS but crosses were easy enough.

    Enjoyable Saturday morning solve. The two big corners in the Stumper today will provide more of a test for those looking for something tougher.

    The POSIES

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:18 PM

      can you please explain TAKE --> ANGLE to me? that clue took me from personal best all the way to below average on the puzzle, and I still don't get it

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:56 PM

      One's "take" on a situation can be the angle, or way, you look at something.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous1:56 PM

      That’s your TAKE on the clue, but from my ANGLE it was easy.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous3:00 PM

      Might as well start adding famous phrenologists to the puzzle too if we’re going all-in on IQ tests.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous6:09 PM

      Anonymous 3:00 PM
      About I Q tests and Binet
      I think the problem with the Binet test is not what he and partner designed it for. It is what “IQ test has come to mean.
      I found the clue very interesting because it reminded me that they were asked to design a test to discover which students needed extra help, not to rate their innate intelligence, which unfortunately is what I Q test has come to mean
      That’s a huge difference

      Delete
  11. The highlight for me was HOGS HEAD. I haven’t looked it up yet, so I have no clue what it is or what it looks like, but it has a cool name. I was hoping we might get some PIGS FEET to go along with it, but then I realized that the NYT would screw that all up by giving us some quasi-Italian clue for a pigs jowl and force us to parse together GUANCIALE.

    Never heard of ELON Phoenix, so absent the clue, I would not have known if they were a hoops team or someone who costarred opposite Jennifer Anniston sometime.

    I enjoyed the Rocky Horror CULT CLASSIC, although another of a bit of a missed opportunity to include EARL from the saga of Maryann and Wanda who were best of friends all through their high school days.

    I’ll concede the planet POGODON and the MI6 agent as a fair trade off since Rex has to live with an albatross in aisle five (oh sorry, that’s an albatross on a PAR FIVE).

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous7:42 AM

    First , thank you for publishing your time. It’s always fun to think about how quickly some folks on this blog can finish a puzzle that I was thrilled to complete in about 50 minutes. I plan to attend one of the puzzle solving contests just to watch. This puzzle played super easy for me initially and then I hit the gloriously wall and it was all down hill from there. Thanks again for publishing the time and the Saturday morning smile when I saw it.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Double albatross is just wrong, it doesn't exist. An albatross is a two on a par five, also known as a double eagle. It's three under par on one hole. Four under par on a par five would be a hole in one. So that supposedly clever clue is flat wrong.

    And as a solver, I don't enjoy the clue for ANDY, which feels like an editorial insert, as it is totally out of character with the tone of the rest of the puzzle. Too cute, too 'Saturday morning NPR puzzle guy' shtick. No thanks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Rich Glauber
      About ANDY clue.
      The odds are high that the clue came from the editorial team. Shortz just loves that kind of clue.
      So you are probably correct.
      (I happen to like this type but of course that is a matter of taste).

      Delete
  14. Anonymous7:57 AM

    Boar’s Head is meats around here. In England the Boar’s Head is a good name for a pub. It’ s also an old dish at Christmas with a carol written for it. Don’t know if OFL is a golfer but he may be familiar with Birdie and Eagle as under par scores. An Eagle is called an Albatross across the pond.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:28 PM

      Nope, an eagle is still an eagle over the pond. A double eagle is sometimes called an albatross.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous7:57 AM

    Took me a while to get away from HOPON/BONET…

    ReplyDelete
  16. Yea, medium, but third day in a row with near personal best. Surely would be my best ever same-week Thu-Sat time

    Only slowed by the area same area as Rex, but more with SEA/ANDY/ BEAN. I think my brain was just set on a 2 letter Eng word combined with a 2 letter Spa. word for the boys name. But I don’t know any “oksi”s. But I too, really liked Bonk over BEAN, so I just didn’t trust anything down there. Finally, just got over it, accepted SEA and closed it out.

    Side note: I really don’t like that type of “name” clue, and all of its variants - like a name within a word spelled backwards. Groan city every time, and this one gets the English Spanish treatment. Cant wait to read @SouthsideJohnny’s view on this clue.

    Besides that, it was an ok puzzle, pretty much agree with Rex. Long answers don’t really sparkle. LEASINGTO is just plain boring and sharing the L with the LOSTTO cross, is just plain bad, imo.

    I play golf, am def from the BOSS era heyday of gaming, and know my sushi, so had some fairly easy gimmes. I didn’t know DAMSEL, BINET, SERT and ILSA (as clued). Put a lot of faith in that E in the DAMSEL/BINET cross.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Oh, the freshness of this grid! By fresh I mean answers we have never seen in the Times or have hardly ever seen, meaning that we are not only brushing against newness in answer, but in clue as well. It’s like going someplace you’ve never been before – your interest is immediately magnified.

    There are ten NYT debut answers here, nine of them bigs (eight letters or more). But it goes beyond that. They are bunched at the heart of the grid, the center stacks. Not just the gorgeous triple horizontal middle stack, but also the stack that begins with RAIL THIN and heads southwest to GLORIOUSLY, and the one starting at BOSS BATTLE, cascading down to CONFIDANT. Every single answer in these three big stacks are either debuts or have appeared only once before in the NYT puzzle!

    OMG, that is remarkable! That is the opposite of stale. And this group is not ho-hum – my favorite debuts including CULT CLASSIC, HOT SOAKS, JAUNDICE, RUSH JOBS, and TOOK LEAVE. And the one-timers include CONFIDANT, BOSS BATTLE, and NONE TO SOON.

    So, a highly entertaining solve for me, this grid pulsing with originality. Layer on top of that that this is a debut puzzle (on a Saturday!), made by a father who clued the puzzle, and daughter, a sophomore in high school who designed and filled the grid – and I’m feeling very good about the world and Crosslandia.

    Thank you, G&G, for knocking my socks off in addition to a most splendid solve. Keep at it – please!

    ReplyDelete
  18. NBA concerned with traveling…..funny

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:06 AM

      But I don’t get Elon for Phoenix of the NBA. HELP

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:05 PM

      The Elon University mascot is the mythical bird “Phoenix”

      Delete
    3. Anonymous2:48 PM

      Phoenix of the NCAA

      Delete
  19. Got hogshead from the opening number in The Music Man.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous8:39 AM

    I thought I remembered and committed to HOGSHEAD and that helped avoid Rex’s problems in the SE. I found it on the easy side of medium.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:32 AM

      Cash for hogshead, cask and demijohn!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous11:59 AM

      GONE with the hogshead, cask, and demijohn…

      Delete
  21. The whole top half was a breeze, took my no time at all and then the bottom half took me the whole time I spent on this puzzle. Very uneven.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Easy puzzle overall, and did not run into Rex's problems in the SE.

    There have been few hole-in-ones on par fives. And there are a smattering of par-six holes out there, and there has been a case of someone shooting two on a par six. Double albatrosses (aka condors) are rare, but they are out there.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Mike F.9:00 AM

    I'm a Star Wars fan and I still didn't grok MANDALORIAN... Clued off a totally forgettable planet? And not THEMANDALORIAN?

    I also got killed in the SE, wanting AHME instead of OHME, which I guess is a new kealoa.

    ReplyDelete
  24. My first cheat since I was too stupid to figure out the single rebus square on 1/11. Frustrating when there's so many proper names you aren't familiar with. Had to do a ton of googling and finally just checked the puzzle at least three times (AAA before TSA before FAA before NBA. Sigh.) CONK before BONK before BEAN . ERAS vs ORAS was a total guess and didn't have a clue what it was talking about until reading this (and still just have to take your word for it.) Deleted LOSTTO at least twice. Once to fill in RENTINGTO, then erased that because of your renting to somebody, you're not GIVING quarters, are you? Same logic says LEASINGTO can't be right. Second Erasing of LOSTTO is just because it's a terrible answer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:29 PM

      FWIW Justin 9:06 AM
      Giving quarters is used as a clue because it sounds like the opposite of giving no quarter ( but isn’t, of course) A lot of clues are like that especially towards the end of the week. The are called clues after all. They are hints in a puzzle, not definitions
      Also a lessor does give quarters, a place to live, for a year or more, in exchange for rent. Close enough for crosswords v

      Delete
  25. My solve went NW (zoom!)>nothing>SE (easy)>everything else, pretty whooshy. I knew BINET from my years in education and HOSGHEAD, maybe from SHAKESPEARE. What I didn't know were the usual pop/tech/gaming entries, like BOSSBATTLE and MADALORIAN and ERAS as clued. DAMSEL is none of those but that was new as well. I like college nicknames but the ELON Phoenix was another unknown.

    I'm apologizing to any other skiers here in the NE, as at the end of last season my wife and I both bought a SEASONPASS at a reduced rate which carried over to this season. That pretty much guaranteed no snow. She has been skiing exactly once with our granddaughter and I have not been at all. Rain and more rain and an eternal mud season. A friend came up with the term "pointless weather", which nicely sums it up.

    I enjoyed your Saturday entry very much, GW's. Stqrted out Going Well, then it Got Weird, but in the end a Glorious Win. Thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Great debut puzzle!

    Normal rant.

    ReplyDelete
  27. In the NW we have AGASSI crossing SAGAL and ILSA, so that corner gave me trouble.
    I went all in for GLORIOUSLY, but first entered o woe for OHME.

    Overall the puzzle was easier for me than most Saturdays, and Pick up line? For HOPIN was my favorite clue/answer pair.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Rich Glauber 7:47

    As an ANDY who took 4 years of HS Spanish and never made this connection during that endless boredom, I kinda liked the clue.

    And since I hear Double Eagle from golf commentators in lieu of Albatross, wondered if the term was pure Crosswordese. But no - from Merriam Webster.

    “chiefly British, golf : a score of three under par made on a hole : DOUBLE EAGLE
    The first play-off at Augusta followed the most famous single stroke in Masters history, Sarazen's albatross, or double eagle as the Americans prefer to describe such accidents of fortune, at the 15th.”

    While I disagree that this impossibly lengthy hole in one being additionally (and weirdly) described this way is “flat wrong” (is “ten to one” wrong for 12:50?), it’s an unnecessarily clunky clue for PARFIVE. Subpar. A shank. No cliffs, sands or putts about it!

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous9:26 AM

    Someone please explain ANDY as an answer to that clue. I finished the puzzle and see the comments above deriding it, but I still don’t get it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. y = and in Spanish. And + y = Andy

      Delete
  30. @M, Traveling in the NBA, as if.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Difficult for me, but only in the SE. Took 12 mins to finish the rest of the puzzle then another eight of staring and scratching my head before I was able to fill the SE. Not familiar with BINET or DAMSEL bug, and just couldn’t see PASS for some reason. I don’t know the hymn in question but I know enough Latin to parse AD ESTE. Satisfying solve in the end.

    ReplyDelete
  32. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Oh also - wrote the above comment before reading RP’s write-up

    ReplyDelete
  34. Hey All !
    Yikes! That SE corner nearly did me in. Took a large portion of time to ferret out everything down there. Had the PASS of SEASON PASS in and out about four times. Wanted HOGStEin, throwing me off the Downs. ADESTE is just cruel! Wanted (off having just the A) AWAY IN for that. You know, the Start of a Christmas song.

    Was finally able to see that DAMSEL might be correct, so put that in. Which got me ANGLE, and the rest fell. (Wanted BONER for the IQ guy. Isn't BONER some sort of doctor?) But ... Almost There! Argh! GET THIS, I almost LOST TO this puz. Thought my Streak* was going to end, but put forth a concerted effort to find the wrongness. Didn't look farther than that SE, seeing my HOP oN could be HOP IN. Put in the I, and ... Happy Music! Huzzah!

    Rest of puz was tough, but gettable. Just right (for me) for a SatPuz, not an easy rush through, but not an impossible (or impassable) dam.

    So thanks for the non-RUSH JOB BOSS BATTLE Warrington²! 😁

    Happy Saturday.

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  35. The SE corner was my bane as well. One funny note. My first pass at 32 down, "Way down below?" was Manhood. Because, you know, your manhood is down below, lol.

    ReplyDelete
  36. The NW corner came in so effortlessly for me that I expected this to be an easy puzzle. But it ended up being a "keep-the-faith" solve that I was sure at times I wouldn't finish without cheats. There was challenge-a-plenty and I really enjoyed it.

    I thought I was home free when CULT CLASSIC and then the wonderful NONE TOO SOON came in. But not so fast. I hadn't yet contended with the crossings of the wonderfully-clued CONFIDANT (my last answer in; it looked DOOK-y and I couldn't see it), ELON (I knew the SUNS were in a more professional league, so I avoided writing them in, but I didn't know ELON at all) and the completely baffling double albatross clue. I've played golf, if you want to call my hacking "playing", but no one ever told me about the double albatross. Because probably they took one look at my game and thought: "Poor thing -- that's terminology she will NEVER have any need for!"

    A word about the peculiar cluing of ERAS (10A). Boy, does that ever represent the narcissistic, self-involved age we live in! We used to have things like the Depression Era and the World War II Era and the Civil Rights Era -- and now we have...what? My Kindergarten "Era"? Your Getting Your First Car "Era"? Good grief.

    My faux "rant" aside, I loved this puzzle -- finding it challenging, well-clued and involving.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Johnny Laguna9:47 AM

    So…you’re posting your (depressingly fast) solve times again. Bummer.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Visho9:48 AM

    Wow! Thrilled to see Rex thought it was medium as I whooshed through it in what has to be record speed, though I don't time myself. Knew SAGAL, HOGSHEAD, BINET, play golf and loved "Rocky Horror " so that pretty much opened up everthing. Also, no problem giving up AH ME for OH ME as I've learned constructors often do "strange" things to make their puzzles work. All in all, lots of fun even if it was over too fast for a Saturday.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Anonymous10:16 AM

    @Dr.A Same experience here. Top half…5 minutes. Bottom half…12 minutes.
    @Anon 9:26 The Spanish translation of “and” is “y”

    ReplyDelete
  40. My problem came in the polar opposite to Rex--that NW where I drew blank after blank after blank. Had _ _ _ H JOBS for "They're done on the fly" and thought it had top do with zippers! Finally took a wild stab at AGASSI (which helped me get EPI-gram, then BALL UP and shortly thereafter, HAPPY MUSIC.

    I in the really liked the AND-Y clue and answer!

    Very fine Saturday puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  41. @Andrew (or should I call you AND-Y?) at 9:20:

    What a truly inspired last line pun! Loved it!!

    Also -- I liked the ANDY clue too. But of course I've seldom met a Cryptic-style clue that I didn't like.

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  42. It's not I'm anti-social
    I'm only anti-work
    Glorioski, that's why I'm a jerk!


    The ANDY clue exemplifies everything that is currently wrong with the NYTimes puzzle. The editor needs to be bonk-bonked on the head.

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  43. @pablo 9:06a - a total of once early on this season at Stowe on primarily man made snow. It’s been 40 and rainy all winter.

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  44. Very nice puzzle. Not a lot of sparkle but 17 meaty longs, facilitated by only single-digit threes.

    HOGSHEAD reminded me of Pee-Chee Portfolios. They were popular in the fifties when I was in high school. They were orange folders with pockets to hold sheets of paper. I preferred them to binders. On the inside were conversion tables for units of length, weight, and volume. Volume began "2 cups equals one pint" and ended with the number of gallons in a HOGSHEAD. I often saw that word when I consulted those tables then but hadn't heard of it since.

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  45. OH ME! The last couple Saturdays I felt like I'd gotten a free PASS but no such luck today. Finding an ANGLE to even GET THIS started was next to a Mission Impossible for one who doesn't play golf, doesn't eat sushi, didn't see any of the MI films and never watched a single episode of Married With Children or The MANDALORIAN. I'm thinking I might need to get out more.

    The clue for PAR FIVE might as well have been written in Arabic for all the good it did me. I knew there were birdies in golf but an albatross? The most likely setting was in a poem by Edgar Allen Poe but with PA to start and five more letters, PACIFIC made perfect sense. AH well, I'll take my LEAVE while HOPING for better luck next week.

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  46. Anonymous10:51 AM

    Good Saturday, easy medium for me , knew Lewis would like this one - some clever and interesting answers and clues. Some good challenges that gave way with a little work.

    Usually when NW is easy, you know there's a gridlock coming soon For me it was NE, which I finished last. Wanted TIEDUP before LOSTTO. Also had OKSI for ANDY, till EARL got me HOARD, then all was well

    More like this one, although wouldn't mind a little tougher

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  47. Want to publish a NYTXW puzzle on a Saturday? Well, it needs to be tough, unpleasantly so, undoable for most, otherwise those who've been doing it for decades will weep and call it a Tuesday. Wouldn't want that would ya? So how to make a tough puzzle? Make challenging clues using catchy phrases and fascinating words? Oh no, don't be daft. You'll be accused of writing groaners and being too clever by half. No, it's best to go with a series of C-list celebrities.

    SAGAL: Ever try to watch an episode of Married with Children? Go ahead, try.

    ILSA: Ever try to watch Tom Cruise act. Go ahead, try.

    HELEN: She's pretty famous, but her siblings? Let's just say they weren't pretty enough to move armies.

    ELON: You know, that school that's six blocks from a Home Depot and eight from a Dairy Queen.

    BINET: We're in an IQ testing frenzy this month, ya know, because elitism matters, amirite? As long as as you're on the right side of the bell curve -- which is where we all are, yeah?

    SERT: Let's clue a not famous artist by saying he's not this other famous one.

    AGASSI: Last meaningful win in a sport only PBS watchers care about was more than two decades ago.

    Add in some foreignisms, initialisms, an obligatory ELI, and OH ME (what?!) and ya got yourself a publishable Saturday for the Times.

    Half of this puzzle was a joy, so it's too bad the other half ruined it. I think the MANHOLE clue was epic.

    I did watch one season of the Mandalorian. It should have been titled: Wanna See a Fist Fight Again This Week?

    Uniclues:

    1 Make fun of your brother-in-law for those times you had to get him out of jail.
    2 What Godzilla does to play catch.
    3 Homer, probably, based on the era anyone last cared about men's tennis.
    4 That cute hygienist with the brown eyes.
    5 The final hammer swing up against the final head of the final troll.
    6 Feed the pigeons.
    7 A nun, or one swiping left too often.

    1 ABASE BAIL ERAS
    2 BALL UP MANHOLE
    3 AGASSI NARRATOR
    4 SAY AH CONFIDANT
    5 BOSS BATTLE BEAN
    6 AMASS COO HOARD
    7 ASCETIC DAMSEL

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Your beer with a hair in it. CHUNKY CREAM ALE.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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  48. Well, at last the hours wasted on Duolingo pay off. ANDY was a brilliant clue and one that I maybe will remember forever, though my inability to retain simple Spanish vocabulary calls that prospect unlikely. Another engaging grid to bring the week to a close; Thursday, Friday and today have all provided reason enough to renew my SEASON PASS for the NYT’s app.

    Any time is fine to revisit Rocky Horror clips, but without a squirt gun and stale toast some of the CULT CLASSIC magic is lost.

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  49. A CONFIDANT is a lover of secrets.

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  50. Very easy for a Saturday, but I first left 2 blanks in the NE, not knowing the SAGAL woman or the "Open" writer. Then Andre tapped me on the shoulder.
    I also stalled in the SE, forgetting BINET is not BENET, and AH ME, so HAPEN? It took a couple minutes to HOP IN.

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  51. Anonymous11:18 AM

    Any lover of Irish music will recall the Clancy Brothers and the lyric from "Rosin the Bow" - "...bring down a HOGSHEAD of whiskey...."

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  52. Niallhost11:19 AM

    The top of this puzzle was a piece of cake. The bottom was brutal. Usually finish in 30. This one took me over an hour.

    clue before idea before Deal before DICE
    ELDEST bOy before SON
    meNsa before BINET (and what the hell is Binet)
    conk and Bonk before BEAN
    I was pretty sure ADESTE was correct but didn't fit with Mensa, so a struggle there
    could not figure out what a pregnant woman TOOK
    HOT pOols before SOAKS
    LEASING what?!
    Thought "way down below" wanted what streets are called in Australia or hell
    Horde before HOARD
    had NBA but changed to tsA and faA a couple of times

    Rough

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  53. Anonymous11:21 AM

    Three under par is an albatross, and four under par (which can occur on a par six or par seven hole) is called a condor. These incredibly long holes exist on golf courses in the midwest.

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  54. Anonymous11:24 AM

    Had several variations of FINAL BOSS, LEVEL BOSS, BOSS FIGHT etc. don’t think I’ve ever heard a gamer say BOSS BATTLE.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:21 PM

      Agreed! I actually went to Google Analytics, it grated on me so much. It is a valid usage, but way less popular than boss fight.

      Delete
  55. Easy. No real problems with this one. Did not know DAMSEL or ILSA (as clued) and Deal before DICE was it for erasures. The center stack went in with minimal crosses…so easy.

    No problems for me in the SE but BINET was a gimme.

    Extremely smooth with more than a hint of sparkle, liked it.

    @Nancy - I know you are a wee bit tech challenged but for around $40 (Best Buy, Target, Amazon) you can buy a Roku stick (google it) which plugs in to an HDMI port on your TV. It gives you access to all the streaming options including the free ones. We are currently streaming the Newhart series set in Vermont on You Tube with no commercials. Your handyman may be able to help you set it up. If you’re in no hurry both my grandkids will be in NYC for extended periods soon and I know they would be more than pleased to help you.

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  56. Anonymous11:32 AM

    Had OH MY in the SE, and I’d never heard of the hymn, so that took a while to clear up. Some nits to pick: some narrators are seen (e.g. in “Our Town,” “Ferris Bueller,”), not all confidants appreciate hearing the secrets that they hear!

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  57. The Fab Faux is a musical tribute band performing the works of the Beatles...The band is committed to performing live what they feel would be an accurate reproduction of The Beatles' repertoire...[They are] often accompanied by a horn section (known as the Hogshead Horns) and a string section (known as the Creme Tangerine Strings) to achieve the proper sound. – Wikipedia

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  58. So an Albatros can be called a double eagle I. e. 2 under doubled..why wouldn't a double Albatros be 6 under? Asking for a friend!!

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  59. Well, pretty much samesies. All was good until the SE, when I got naticked by the HOPON/HOPIN BONET/BINET.

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  60. I enjoyed this one a lot - just-right tough and with so many pleasures: NARRATOR, CONFIDANT, RUSH JOBS + NONE TOO SOON, HOGSHEAD, GLORIOUSLY, RAIL THIN next to ASCETIC, MANHOLE as clued...wow! Overall, a "medium" for me, too. I was lucky to know almost all of the names - whether from being on the planet for so long or from previous puzzles; I was more slowed down by areas beyond my ken, where there are new ERAS and BOSS BATTLEs, and by hard-to-see-through clues (CONFIDANT).

    Do-over: aH ME. Help from previous puzzles: SAGAL, AGASSI as clued, SERT. Help from having a grandchild who's a fan: MANDALORIAN. No idea: ILSA, ELON.

    @Anonymous 5:55, @JD 7:10, @scottie 8:37 - Thank you for pointing out the musical HOGSHEADs in Sergeant Pepper and The Music Man. About the latter, the line is "Cash for the hogshead, cask and demijohn" - demijohn was going to be my first guess at that answer :)

    @Tom T 10:19 - Thank you for AND + Y - I couldn't parse it!

    @Sun Volt 7:29 - It was the NE corner of the Stumper that almost sank me.

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  61. Pretty easy for a Saturday. "This Binet guy," as Rex calls him, created standardized intelligence tests which other psychologists, most prominently and notoriously Lewis Terman in the U.S., used for eugenicist and racist agendas. For perspective on Terman, I suggest you read the lengthy exchange he had with the prominent 20th century journalist and public intellectual Walter Lippman, who thought that Binet's claims about certain racial and ethnic groups being intellectually "superior" based on what many believed were Terman's biased tests were in fact insidious and evil hogwash. Binet himself never spoke out one way or the other, so it is unclear how much he agreed with these despicable uses of his tests. Still, his presence in the puzzle is problematic, to say the least.

    My only other cavil with this puzzle is "OHME." Oh my, is this a thing? Oh my, or ah me, but hot "oh me."

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  62. Anonymous12:28 PM

    ANDY! Aha! Thank you, Justin!

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  63. Sometimes ignorance pays. I just assumed that a DAMSEL bug is the same as a damselfly, and put it right in. Now I've learned something, at least. Well, nd I learned who Ms. Swift called it the ERAS tour--I had thought it was songs from different periods of history.

    And, OK, I'm 80 years old -- but while I've never actually seen a HOGSHEAD, they make so many appearance in literature that that was a gimme. I guess people read different stuff these days.

    Since a couple folks seem not to know it, ADESTE Fideles is just "Oh Come All Ye Faithful," in Latin (I think it was originally written in that language). Some hymnals will take you through the first verse in Latin before breaking into English.

    I'll finish with Lonnie Donegan demonstrating the use of OH ME.

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  64. 11:06 Phoenix is the team that plays for Elon University in North Carolina (so safety Google, I had no idea)... pretty desperate to avoid invoking Musk.

    TOOK LEAVE could be old style British for departed, if you're out for maternity/paternity it would be took A leave.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:50 PM

      Bass 12:43 pm
      I read your comment about ELON clue as saying they were being overly woke
      But this is Saturday. Musk is way too well known. The team was chosen because it’s obscure enough for a Saturday.
      Some people can be a pain by being self righteous but it also can be annoying to see politics where there isn’t any.

      Delete
  65. I prefer my Monday puzzles on Mondays...

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  66. This was a good puzzle by Grace/Greg; but the clues were so much in my wheelhouse it was over way too fast at 13 minutes. That's like a Wednesday time.

    The only typeover I remember from last night's solve is DOODLE before DAMSEL bug. But that was because I just finished a Brad Taylor novel where the hero calls his adopted daughter that.

    I love golf as much as Rex hates it. On PAR FIVE holes, the really good pros expect to get a birdie and hope for an eagle. I'm happy if I can do it in single digits; 500 yards is a long way!

    [Spelling Bee: Fri 0. My only -1 so far this week was Wed.]

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  67. Katey SAGAL was in the puzzle just two Thursdays ago, Jan. 18, clued similarly. She just turned 70. Her godfather was Norman Lear.

    There's some interesting material on her in Wikipedia. Her mom was Amish and died young from heart disease (in '75). Two years later, her dad, a director, married dancer/actress Marge Champion. But he died in an accident in 1981 on the set of the mini-series World War 3. (He is, to date, the only casualty of WW3.)  He was partially decapitated by walking into the tail rotor blades of a helicopter. He turned the wrong way after exiting the helicopter. Let’s all keep that in mind for the next time we’re on a copter: Walk towards the front. He directed episodes of "Columbo" and "The Man from UNCLE." There is a directing fellowship in his name at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in MA.

    Katey began her career as a singer/songwriter. She was a backup singer for Bob Dylan, Etta James, and Tanya Tucker, and was a member of the Harlettes, Bette Midler’s backup singers.

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  68. IQ tests are racist, classist, and born out of a desire justify sending very young children to asylums. BINET should never be in another puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:06 PM

      Hill
      Binet apparently never was part of the eugenics movement. According to the clue , he and his partner devised a test to discover which students needed help.
      From what I understand, it was the eugenics movement that used these tests for their racist agenda
      I think it is very unfair to equate him with that cabal.
      At least from what I have read.

      Delete
  69. About the same time as yesterday's. Like a number of other people the SE was probably the toughest section. I'm off of my usual schedule. I did this on paper today as we had to get our 2 year old grandson to sleep last night. I didn't finish the SB either. He was overnight with us as our second grandchild was born very early this morning. Mom and dad don't come home until tomorrow so it will be his first two night sleep over.


    yd pg-2

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  70. ELON is a xword staple. College in NC. Not as popular as it used to be, I wonder if their admissions are down as a result.

    I usually hate the word found in the name, type clues, but the one today was quite good. I refused to see it as anything other than 2+2 on the breakdown for a long time, but then had a wonderful a-ha when it just had to be Andy.

    Take or angle can both be used as synonyms for personal opinion.


    So there is a damsel fly, so a damsel bug? Why not?

    I really thought I would not finish this, but then put it away for a half an hour. It is amazing how fresh eyes will allow you to see things differently, and the solve was lickety-split on what what presumably be the hardest clues for me, because I didn’t get them the first time.

    Having first born in the Northeast didn’t help. I then went with eldest boy, probably because I remember the end of the show succession where the actor spit out the lines,"but I’m the eldest boy", when he was passed over for ownership of the company.



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  71. Shane Lowry just made an albatross at PGA torney. -- a"2" on a par 5

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  72. This is what I knew from playing Salesman #3. in The Music Man. From “Rock Island”: Cash for the hogshead, cask and demijohn. Cash for the crackers and the pickles and the flypaper..

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  73. Daddy & daughter collaboration. And debuts for both, too boot. Congratz.

    A 66-worder rodeo. Ergo, lotsa long rides on tap.
    Some faves: MANDALORIAN. NONETOOSOON. And most of all, PLAYITSAFE [which was a real rare 10-letter first-of-all-words-in, for my solvequest today … BINET woulda been astonished].

    Four ?-marker clues, but none of em were overly impressive. I reckon the MANHOLE one was the pick of the litter, IMA&O.

    staff weeject picks: ELI & LIE. Nice weeject anagrammatic(al) cross-referencin.

    BOSSBATTLE? M&A don't speak videogame, so that was a definite no-know.
    Also learned somethin new, on DAMSEL bug. About the only hard thing in the SE, tho, at our house.
    Overalls, I'd rate this an average SATPUZBATTLE.

    Thanx for gangin up on us, Warrington folks. And MJT!* Bravo!

    Masked & Anonymo3Us

    * = More Jaws of Themelessness.

    **gruntz**

    ReplyDelete
  74. @Newboy

    I just emailed you my Embedding Cheat Sheet. Hope it helps.

    ReplyDelete
  75. Please explain rival /shade

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Shade is a subtle, sneering expression of contempt for or disgust with someone—sometimes verbal, and sometimes not."

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:08 PM

      Shade is contemporary slang for insult.

      Delete
  76. Two in a row dnf. This time I didn’t realize that the term Eras used by Taylor Swift originated in social media, which I am never on. (Yesterday it was gaming)
    Oldest son works. Oras should have warned me. I am on a reverse roll.
    Otherwise it was average for me also.

    ReplyDelete
  77. Thx Grace & Greg, for the challenge! 😊

    Downs-o is going to be the work of many days, I suspect.

    All the long downs are daunting, with 10D the only one I've got so far (I think).

    Sun.'s will be up soon, so hoping for better luck on it. 🤞
    ___
    Lester Ruff's Sat. Stumper has been a bear, with a very tough NE yet to fall.

    David Balton & Jane Stewart's NYT acrostic is in the wings.
    ___
    Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

    ReplyDelete
  78. @jae -- You're sure this Roku stick will bypass/overcome the feud between Samsung and YouTube, assuming that's the cause of my inability to get YouTube directly?

    I don't think my handyman mentioned Roku as an option when he came back to see why the YouTube connection that he'd set up onn my TV was no longer working. But I'd spend a lot more than a 1-time $40 price to get YouTube on my TV and without ads.

    I'll mention Roku to my handyman and see what he says. But I bet your grandkids know even more about the latest tech than he does. I'll also talk to a couple of other people who are tech-savvy. But I may well take you up on your extremely kind and gracious offer of your grandkids' help. I assume that, if they were coming over, I should already have the Roku stick in my house?

    ReplyDelete
  79. I always thought it was a SEASON’S PASS, as in Season’s Tickets, like Season’s Greetings. Can anyone back me up on this? Please

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  80. @Nancy - The Roku stick is completely independent from your TV other than sending output to your screen. It gets its input through your Wi-fi, hence streaming. Yes, you should get the Roku before enlisting any help. If you get it through Amazon it’s very easy to return if things don’t work out. My granddaughter’s NYC eta is sometime this spring if everything goes right. My grandson has a summer internship in the City starting late June. He’s a Comp Sci. major at UCLA going into his senior year. He’s the one who got the Mcafee program removed from my desktop after I spent about a month trying to delete it so I could install newer protection. Again, good luck!

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  81. Anonymous11:11 AM

    I will give my 401k and all the rest of my savings and my house if somebody can show me a real life example of anybody ever saying, "Oh me!".

    ReplyDelete
  82. Anonymous10:12 AM

    Got bogged down in the bottom half mainly because of the unfair cluing for ANDY. This is supposed to be an English-language puzzle. Knowing Spanish should not be a prerequisite to solving. I solved it via the crosses but did not understand the clue until I came here. Other than that, it was an okay puzzle.

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  83. @anon 11:11: In the lyrics of "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor on the Bedpost Overnight?", Lonnie Donegan wails "OHME oh my oh you, whatever shall I do?"

    Hand up for the natick at #10; ELDEST/oLDEST is another kealoa, so the cross had better be fair. I do not do social media, but I guessed that ERAS might be a better choice than oRAS (Rita's family?).

    No problem anywhere else. Shortzie has softened up in his old (?) age. Haven't had a good tussle all week.

    DAMSEL of the day: Katy SAGAL.

    My son ANDY gets a shout-out today, so birdie for that. Congrats to Shane Lowry for his recent albatross.

    Wordle birdie.

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  84. Diana, LIW1:09 PM

    Not sure why the south gave me so much trouble (esp. the SE) but it did.

    The rest was another bit-by-bit workout. Now I feel "hit on the noggin."

    Di, LIW

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  85. @anon 11.11: In addition to @spacey's reference, there was another UK hit from the same ERA by Herman's Hermits called I'M LEANING ON A LAMPPOST including the now non-PC lyrics "Oh me, oh my! I hope the little lady comes by".

    Don't think I'll ever see a Double Albatross (AKA a condor) on a golf course but I was once witness to a not-quite-so-rare hole-in-one on a PAR 4. My best effort after almost 60 years of golf (or flog) is an eagle (a few times).

    Was there a special on A words today? ABASE, AKA, ANDY, ANGLE, ASPIRE, AGASSI, AMASS, ASCETIC, ADESTE, plus SAY AH. Not to mention (guess I am) Alfred BINET, noted for his association with the Stanford-BINET IQ Test which, years ago, a school board I worked for routinely administered to all students as a Standardized Test.



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  86. Burma Shave8:43 PM

    BALLUP, SAY

    ANDY TOOK ABASE or TOO,
    and NONETOOSOON he'd make A PASS,
    when ILSA made A CLASSIC COO,
    "THIS SEASON is your LAST."

    --- HELEN BEAN

    ReplyDelete
  87. rondo8:57 PM

    Another clean Saturday grid. Is the NYT dumbing things down? Not sure the general editing is getting any better either. This puz was nice but not much of a BATTLE.
    Wordle birdie.

    ReplyDelete