Pioneering synthesizer brand / TUE 1-23-24 / A wing for a prayer / Headgear designed to block psychic intrusions / Hay-collecting machine / Hip-hop dance move of the 2010s / Bad match on tinder? / Game show co-host who could be called a "woman of letters," familiarly

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Constructor: Patrick Maher

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: ELEMENTS OF STYLE (38A: Principles for good prose in a classic writing guide by Strunk & White ... or a hint to the wardrobe assembled at 17-, 25-, 47- and 57-Across) — themers follow an [element + article of clothing] pattern (except the last themer, which sneaks FOIL in there):

Theme answers:
  • OXYGEN MASK (17A: Breathing aid demonstrated by a flight attendant)
  • LEAD APRON (25A: Protective drape for an X-ray)
  • GOLD GLOVE (47A: Major-league award for fielding prowess)
  • TIN FOIL HAT (57A: Headgear designed to block psychic intrusions)
Word of the Day: VANNA White (50D: Game show co-host who could be called a "woman of letters," familiarly) —

Vanna Marie White (née Rosich; born February 18, 1957) is an American television personality and game-show hostess, best known as the co-host of the game show Wheel of Fortune, a position she has held since 1982. She began her career as a model while studying fashion, competing in Miss Georgia USA in 1978. In addition to her work on Wheel of Fortune, she has played minor characters or appeared as herself in many films and television series, and is the author of the 1987 autobiography Vanna Speaks. She also participates in real-estate investment, owns the yarn brand Vanna's Choice, and is a patron of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. (wikipedia)
• • •

This theme has something, some core idea that is interesting, but I don't know if ELEMENTS OF STYLE really brings it all together that well. Or maybe it's the theme answer set that isn't quite up to expressing the revealer. I quite like the revealer—an interesting repurposing of a famous book title (one that used to have some currency in the teaching world, but linguists and cultural critics have since had at it, and it doesn't hold the same status academically as it once did; here's my alma mater's explanation of what its perceived strengths and limitations are). But I don't think MASK and especially APRON really evoke "style," not the way gloves and a hat might. I guess at very fancy Halloween parties or maybe masquerade balls if you get invited to those somehow, you might show off style with your MASK, but APRON? That's for the kitchen (or other workplace), and doesn't really belong in the same universe as the other "clothing" items. Further, the addition of FOIL to the last themer kind of feels like a cheat. You've got a nice [element + clothing item] pattern there, and then FOIL comes barging in there at the end to spoil consistency. It's a minor point. All the answers still start with an element and end with an article of clothing, so ... OK. Sometimes the clothing consists of the element (LEAD APRON) and sometimes it's metaphorical (GOLD GLOVE) and sometimes the article of "clothing" conveys the element to your face (OXYGEN MASK), but I actually like that the uses of elements/clothing are all over the map there. It means there's no glaring outlier. Overall, the theme kinda sorta works for me, though I think I like the concept more than the execution here.


As for the fill, er, things get much worse in that department. Lots of overfamiliar short stuff, some of it quite creaky, from AMO in the NW to IWO in the south and many points in between, this is a 20th-century short fill extravaganza. Even ITPRO (decidedly 21st century) feels like it belongs to the category of crosswordese now (see also, NAE NAE). Isao AOKI is in the World Golf Hall of Fame but is probably best known to veteran crossword solvers for his ambi-nominal grid prowess (ISAO actually appears much more often than AOKI, which is not surprising—what with "K"s being less common than all the other letters involved in either name part). His name(s) still appear every once in a while, but they always feel like throwbacks. I'm editing a crossword right now and one of my only notes on the (otherwise excellent) grid was "please get rid of DAH, no one wants to endure Morse Code-speak if they don't have to" (35A: Dit's counterpart in Morse code). ATAN/ONTOE is a particularly unpleasant crossing. Fun ("fun") fact—I change my Wordle starter word every week, moving through the dictionary one five-letter word (with no repeat letters) at a time. I'm up to BARON. Anyway, that's not the "fun" fact. The "fun" fact is that I actually noticed that the dictionary skipped BALER. It's my wife's dictionary, a smallish desk dictionary her father bought her when she was a teenager in '80s New Zealand, and apparently they didn't think BALER worthy of inclusion, but my that didn't stop my absolutely crossword-addled brain from going "Hey ...what about BALER?! Isn't that a thing?" It is. Somewhat. I went ahead and played BALER because just knowing it existed and that I had skipped it would've bugged me. It's actually a pretty good Wordle starter word. But it remains kinda sorta crosswordese.


The puzzle started out at its hardest, with a high and tight fastball for the clue on the very first word (also crosswordese!): APSE (1A: A wing for a prayer). It's kinda sorta a pun on the phrase "on a wing and a prayer." Tough! Nothing else about this puzzle was tough. Unless you are young and have no idea who VANNA White is. I was stunned to discover both that "Wheel of Fortune" still existed and that VANNA was still a part of it. Hey, kids, did you know there was a pop song about her in the '80s? It was a Weird Al-esque parody of "The Letter" by the Box Tops (ask your grandparents!). I don't know how high "Vanna, Pick Me a Letter" got on the charts, or if it charted at all, but the song definitely had radio presence in my corner of California in 1987 (the "voice" of the song seems like it belongs to Cheech Marin (of Cheech & Chong fame), but it's just someone called Dr. Dave ... I think today we would call this whole endeavor "problematic" ... it was the '80s! (my only explanation for much of what happened in the '80s)):


See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

75 comments:

Anonymous 6:19 AM  

I didn’t know ELLA and had ELsA/AsLES at one point. Luckily I did know ARLES or at least that it was a French town, but I could see folk getting stuck there if they didn’t.

Bob Mills 6:40 AM  

Never understood the theme, but liked the puzzle anyway. Found it easy, except I needed trial-and-error for the DJSET/JAMAL cross.

Andy Freude 6:44 AM  

Smiled at the APSE pin, but calling an apse a wing is a bit of a stretch architecturally.
Thought for a moment that the articles of clothing might add up to some sort of costume, wondering who was wearing a MASK and an APRON. Turned out to be somebody in a TIN FOIL HAT. Figures.

Anonymous 6:50 AM  

ELLA Fitzgerald is kinda like the Babe Ruth of baseball or the Messi of Soccer. Most should know her.

SouthsideJohnny 6:57 AM  

Fortunately I knew Isao AOKI, or I really would have struggled with NAE NAE. GDAŃSK has the weird letter pattern, but it at least “looked familiar “ so I took that one on faith.

I thought the theme was pretty cool - OFL is almost always going to have more nits than I will about the theme (unless it’s overly gimmicky - then he might admire where I will frequently despise, lol).

Is VANNA WHITE still on the show - that would be some run. How about that other Sayjak(?) dude? I wonder if they are recycling answers at this point (or just showing replays of old shows and hoping no one notices).

JJK 6:58 AM  

It seems Monday and Tuesday changed places.

kitshef 7:11 AM  

Really nice puzzle. Theme, revealer and execution are all pluses.

SHARp before SHARK (bet there are a million of us today).

GDyNia before GDANSK (and a million more for that one).

For the record, TIN FOIL HATS only work against some frequencies, and actually amplify mind control and mind reading power at other frequencies, as the government well knows and as demonstrated at M.I.T.

Son Volt 7:32 AM  

Cute them - simply but well filled. The revealer shines - I like that it spans proud in the center. GOLD GLOVE and TINFOIL HAT are neat.

Classic MOOG

The letter strings in the adjacent LLAMA - GDAŃSK stack are top notch. LUPINE, THE BELLS, INLAY all solid. No EGG or CREAM but definitely U-Bet syrup.

Pleasant Tuesday morning solve.

more MOOG

Anonymous 7:38 AM  

I remember Ella from the Memorex ads of my youth. Is it live or is it…

Iris 7:41 AM  

I will never not love Strunk and White. Especially White.

Lewis 7:41 AM  

Random thoughts:

• How do you pronounce MOOG – does it start with the cow sound or does it rhyme with “vogue”? The latter, it turns out, according to Robert Moog himself.
• I like LOGO BRAVO IWO, and try saying that fast a number of times.
• Lovely long downs EGG CREAM and THE BELLS!
• Spent a few moments shaking my head in awe of this theme, where Patrick thought of ELEMENTS OF STYLE in the first place, then made the leap to coming up with in-the-language answers that combined chemical elements with articles of clothing. Bravo, sir!
• I like the theme echoes of CLOAK and PANTS.
• G’day! Just to let those who don’t know that there’s a sizeable city near GDANSK that starts with the same two letters – Gdynia, which hosts the Polish Film Festival, and in 2013 was voted Poland’s best city to live in.
• I love the balancing PuzzPair© of DAH and NAE NAE.

Patrick, you had me at the gorgeous spanner ELEMENTS OF STYLE, and further charmed me by all the above-mentioned pings. The wit in your theme has me itching to see what you come up with next.

Congratulations on your debut, and thank you for a splendid outing!

BritSolvesNYT 7:51 AM  

Interesting theme idea that didn't quite land. Found it tricky for a Tuesday! Never heard of MOOB or VANNA, nor EGG CREAM: at least that was inferable but sounds horrible!

pabloinnh 8:23 AM  

How fast can you make your pencil go? Some fun stuff but absolutely no challenge.

BALER reminds me that the hay bales we used to see in fields around here--yes there are still dairy farms--have been replaced by those big white plastic wrapped cylinders. I used to tell my kids that that was where marshmallows came from. If you've seen one you know what I mean.

Interesting idea, PM. Pretty Much solved itself, but it was worth it to see TINFOILHAT. Thanks for some speedy fun.

Joe R. 8:28 AM  

I got very confused to hear Rex refer to a Weird Al-esque song about Vanna White. “Why would you refer to a song by Weird Al as Weird Al-esque?” I wondered. I never knew there was another song about her. I’m only familiar with Stuck in a Closet with Vanna White. (Not one of his best, I’d say, but still there.)

mmorgan 8:32 AM  

Clever concept. Easy puzzle. I still think Strunk and White have many useful points to follow. Agree that the themers don’t quite all fit in terms of “style,” and there’s that darn FOIL in there, but this was a good effort and a pleasant solve.

Anonymous 8:32 AM  

Starts with cow sound...moooog 🐮🎹

RooMonster 8:48 AM  

Hey All !
Nice TuesPuz. Easy, went faster for me than YesterPuz.

Nice ELEMENTS. Har, just realized that statement has a two-way meaning.

Short and sweet today. Good to get spared my inane ramblings!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 8:50 AM  

I am slightly less intelligent after listening to "Vanna Pick Me a Letter". The woman makes $3 Million a year for 48 days work; she deserves a better song.

efrex 8:51 AM  

Seconding the "Monday & Tuesday switched places this week" motion - knocked this one out 10 seconds slower than my fastest Monday time. Missed some of the weaker fill, and was happy with the theme - "element" + "article of clothing" = good enough for me. Took an extra few seconds on the NOMS/LLAMA cross: not at all familiar with that plural noun, although NOMNOM has been a part of my idiolect for many year.

A nice, quick, and easy solve with a small chuckle at the theme, and no headshakes at the fill: can't ask for more on a Tuesday.

PaulyD 8:53 AM  

Came here today for the completely predictable anti-prescriptivist rant against Strunk and White. Apparently, Rex is now outsourcing.

thfenn 8:59 AM  

Thought the theme worked just fine. Here's an element, here's something stylish to wear (sorta), put 'em together and you've got ELEMENTSOFSTYLE. Not perfect, but fun, even worthy. All things EB White related are great, including Roger Angel, Maine's Blue Hill peninsula, baseball, children's books, and boats. I thought ELEMENTSOFSTYLE was too - that and Edwin Newman's Strictly Speaking both being books that stuck.

Joe R. 9:19 AM  

Huh. Apparently I don't know how to insert links into comments here. It's not with an a href tag? Anyway, the link to the Weird Al song (should anyone want it) is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gocPZA0HLA.

bocamp 9:21 AM  

Thx Patrick; I LIKEd it! 😊

Downs-o was relatively easy td.

Got part of the theme fairly early on, so was on the lookout for clothing items. The ELEMENTS part didn't register, so that made OXYGEN tough to suss out.

As for the post-solve grok of the theme, I was picturing some kind Frankenstein wannabe in the lab working on a new idea. lol

The NW was the only tough area, apart from a correct guess at JAMAL ('A' over ('e').

Had iceCREAM, which made the NW tricky; also, had ill & wOe before POX.

Another fun downs-only adventure. :)
___
Croce's 878 was med. Some very unusual stuff, but all intuitable from crosses. The NW was last to fall. On to Natan Last's Mon. New Yorker

Finally nailed the remaining long down in last Fri's downs-o. Was elated! Sat's was finished with the aid of many crosses, and an intuitive guess at the cross of 'Rap pioneers' / 'Plant-based protein brand'. Was way off the constructor's wavelength on this one all the way around (downs and crosses), so felt fortunate to get it right in the end. Finished the week with an unusual 6/7 success rate on downs-only. :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Sgreennyc 9:21 AM  

Elements of Style is still the best book on writing. I have recommended it for years and seen immediate improvements by those who have read it. But not surprised that Rex has disparaged it. There’s probably a pronoun or two that he objects to.

Nancy 9:22 AM  

I really liked the pun on the word ELEMENTS and thought the theme was cute, clever and original. The revealer sparked real curiosity in me as by then I had OXYGEN MASK and LEAD APRON and was wondering how either one of them could make me a better writer.

So I was a bit disappointed when the revealer turned out to be not a life-changing principle of great prose-writing but a title. A title I was so familiar with that I got it off just the "M" and the "OFS".

Every time you think no one can come up with a theme you haven't seen some version of before, someone does. A really nice early week puzzle for the second day in a row.

gfrpeace 9:24 AM  

Hey, I got my newspaper delivered this morning for the first time in 5 days! And a darn good thing I did, since I had an eye doctor appointment. In the course of which I got to read the while times, do the puzzle AND the kenkens, and go back and read about the wooly mammoths in the science section.
About the puzzle: I had to wait to fill in three letters of GDANSK, because I also know GDyNia. There's a kealoa many of you may not know about!

JD 9:26 AM  

@Iris, Thank you. Strunk and White, especially White (and I just re-subscribed to the New Yorker, mostly for access to the archives). Happy to see the good 'ol blue book used today. I'm not ashamed of my love.

Crossword Newbs/Noobs, Ella is a long-time and still not infrequently used name in crosswords. Monthly? Seems like it, but maybe not.

Anonymous 9:41 AM  

Nice construction, easy solve, meh

After first two themers I was looking for revealer like "hospital fashion" so it was nice surprise.

RP mention of '80s brought back memories of Lech Walesa in GDANSK defying the Soviets with his union , foreshadowing the breakup of the Evil Empire. VANNA was young then, too.

Anonymous 9:50 AM  

Agree completely with Rex. APSE, VANNA and perhaps NOMS were highlights as was the shout out to Strunk and White, but the significance of the revealer was apparent only in retrospect. Otherwise there was McFill and McCluing here which I suspect of having been computer-generated.

Liveprof 9:51 AM  

Ask your grandparents!!?? Ouch -- that's cold, RP.

In Poland, it's traditional for the young man at his prom to ask his date to save the last GDANSK for him.

@SouthsideJohnny: I don't watch the show, but Vanna White is still on Wheel of Fortune, according to Wikipedia. She started in 1982. She's turning 67 next month.

Whatsername 9:55 AM  

I normally skip Mondays but didn't seem like it this week. Agree with Rex that the ELEMENT OF the theme was loosely applied. A bit of a stretch to include MASK and APRON under that umbrella, the former being more of a costume component and the latter a utilitarian garment worn to cover and protect the stylish one underneath. GOLD GLOVE threw me for a foul as I've always heard it called GOLDEN but I did love TINFOIL HAT, so popular in the STYLE of our current political red carpet.

I skimmed comments and didn't notice any mention of EGG CREAM which was a completely unknown term to me. Google showed multiple references to NYC but I've never seen such a concoction at any soda fountain I've ever visited. It sounds tasty though and I plan to try my hand at making one at home . . . as soon as I can locate a LEAD CLOAK to minimize the mess I'll no doubt manage to SPEW all over the kitchen. TSK TSK.

Anonymous 10:08 AM  

More like what a surgeon would wear (MASK, APRON, HAT) Haven't really seen anyone styling in an APRON these days or ever.

When does Will Shortz retire?

Gary Jugert 10:29 AM  

I love a good TIN FOIL HAT especially on Saturdays. I'm wearing my weekday one this morning.

Uniclues:

1 Sidler with COPD
2 "It's not a freaking cape."
3 One ready, willing and able to punch a baby.
4 What one wears to protect from chemtrail contamination and mind altering radio waves while fashionably matching ones ecru pantyhose.
5 "Good morning athlete's foot."
6 Oh noble creature / No one could beat you / Until I decided to eat stew.
7 Evil villain's yearly kitten acquisition.
8 Stop complaining about the racket that church makes every hour.
9 Misplaced enthusiasm for plastic surgery.

1 OXYGEN MASK CLAM
2 CLOAK PEEVE
3 GOLD GLOVE OB/GYN
4 A TAN TIN FOIL HAT
5 HELLO POX ON TOE (~)
6 ELKS ELEGY
7 DR. NO ANNUAL TOM
8 ACCEPT THE BELLS
9 BRAVO! ALLAY AGE!

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Caveman explains tithing. HELL MEAN GIVE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

bocamp 10:39 AM  

Whence EGG CREAM?

"The term "egg cream" is a bit of a misnomer because, contrary to what the name suggests, egg creams do not contain any eggs or cream.

The origin of the name is somewhat unclear, but it is likely a linguistic evolution of earlier terms or a marketing play. The classic egg cream is a beverage that originated in Jewish communities in New York City in the late 19th century.

The traditional egg cream recipe typically includes three main ingredients:

• Milk
• Seltzer water
• Chocolate syrup

To make an egg cream, the syrup and milk are mixed together, and then the seltzer water is added to create a frothy, effervescent drink. Despite its name, there's no egg or cream involved in the preparation.

Theories about the name's origin include the possibility that it was once made with eggs or that the "egg" is a corruption of the Yiddish word "echt," meaning genuine or real.

Regardless of its name's origins, the egg cream has become a classic and beloved beverage in certain New York City neighborhoods and beyond, known for its simple yet refreshing combination of flavors and effervescence." (ChatGPT)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

johnk 10:41 AM  

Elementary, my dear Watson.

JC66 10:41 AM  

@Kitshef

Pool SHARK

Card SHARp

jberg 10:46 AM  

"Vigorous writing is concise." Had they found a way to apply that to the clue for 38-A, the puzzle would have been even better. As it was, it was pretty good -- I didn't notice the elements in the theme answers until I was 2/3 finished; and then I thought that GOLD GLOVE should really be "GOLDen" (confusion with the Golden Globes, I guess). I figured the style items were part of a sexy French maid costume for a Halloween party.

I agree the FOIL was a distraction, as was the freestanding CLOAK and PANTS. Still, it was a good idea, needing a little more polish (but I can't think of any better answers).

GILL I. 10:53 AM  

Speaking of ELEMENTS OF STYLE....Yesterday I posted my own made up Monday puzzle grammar spiel. I thought it was chucklesome. I guess it was never posted because the titter gods didn't think it worthy.
SO....On to Tuesday.
I liked this fun, grown up party puzzle. I did stare at MASK and APRON and wondered what STYLE you might be emulating.....A MASK at a ball perhaps, but APRON? I think back to pictures of mom's making breakfast for her important husband. There she is, all coiffed and made up, wearing a pretty pink and white dress with the required pearls around her neck, smiling while she hands her husband (who is reading the paper and ignoring her) some bacon and scrambled eggs.....A peck on the cheek and off he goes to work. Mom cleans up and then vacuums.
My spelling woes ensued. GDANSK and DYING of all things. I knew MOOG....but do you have a U somewhere? You'd think by now I should know better. English is a tough language to write.
Anyways....I liked the animals today. SNAKE, SHARK, a LLAMA guarding sheep and a LUPINE hiding in the woods ready to pounce.
MOANA....Terrific movie!

Paul Rippey 10:56 AM  

My Wordle-starter-word strategy is to take them first five letter words from the day’s NY Times X-word puzzle that could conceivably be a Wordle answer (starting with the crosswords at the upper left). Some puzzles have almost no qualifying words, but I always find something. I’m well below par in Wordle, so it’s not as batty as it seems.

egsforbreakfast 11:01 AM  

Loved that the puzzle included the four most common elements:
Oxygen
Lead
Gold
Tin foil

Would you rather work for a boss who screams and hollers, or one who RANTS and PANTS? What if his PANTS were RENT?

Tasty treats in wartime are NOMS de guerre, often consisting of only a GIANT CLAM.

Being very conscious of kealoas, I'm never sure if I should say "VANNA I wanna buy a vowel" or "VANNA I wanna buy a veral".

I quite liked this despite the Mendeleevian faux pas. Thanks, Patrick Maher.

Ben 11:24 AM  

I start my Wordle each day with the previous day's word. It adds a pleasing continuity to the solving process, and creates an additional challenge.

Alice Pollard 11:31 AM  

ELLA s/b common knowledge. VANNA too. I remember back in the day topless pictures of Vanna in her youth emerged. Yummy. And still at almost 67 she is a fine looking woman

CT2Napa 11:37 AM  

Just in Time for Thanksgiving, an Ode to the Fashionable Apron

Vogue November 23, 2023

jae 11:48 AM  

Easy and easier than yesterday’s. No erasures and no WOEs.

Cute/clever theme plus some old timey crosswordese…AOKI, ASPE…liked it.

James Graves 11:54 AM  

Had the same thought

Anonymous 12:10 PM  

I'm obsessed with how negative this blog always is. Zero positive comments and no congratulations for the debut puzzle for this author. BRAVO to say the least :)

Whatsername 12:20 PM  


@bocamp (10:41) Thanks for the tips on the egg cream prep. Good info.

@Joe R (9:19) Once upon a time, @JC66 created a handy dandy little cheat sheet that’s helpful for posting links. If you will email me, I’ll be glad to share it with you.

Masked and Anonymous 12:35 PM  

Great OXYGEN, LEAD, GOLD, TIN(FOIL) elements -- plus of course The Fifth Element: MASK. Neat theme. Uses a theme trick that's a definite cousin of yesterday's puztheme, no?

staff weeject pick: TSK. @RP bemoans all the "overfamiliar short stuff". He should work more runtpuzs -- we take pride in continuously inventin unfamiliar short stuff. We look forward to the day when every 3-letter combo gets used in at least one NYTPuz. Help us get to this, texters! Primo weeject stacks in the NW & SE, btw.

And more Jaws of Themelessness black square structures! MJT!

some fave stuff: APSE clue. VANNA. GDANSK. NAENAE. Also, gotta enjoy the Ow de Speration of ITPRO.

Thanx, Mr. Maher dude. And congratz on a neat debut.

Masked & Anonymo1U


**gruntz**

… and for those partial to a T-O-N of illustrations:
**gruntz**

Dan Sachs 1:04 PM  

I would have said this if you hadn't already.

Teedmn 1:16 PM  

The second day in a row that the revealer brought a smile to my face; I consider that a win. I'll agree with Rex that, upon examining the theme answers I had to wonder about the stylishness of MASK and APRON, but it didn't put me off the puzzle in the least.

Wow, what a great entry clue at 1A! I hadn't the slightest what they were looking for, some sort of metaphor? APSE filled in quickly and it made me appreciate the old crosswordese that APSE is.

GOLD GLOVE feels truncated but I suppose GOLDen GLOVE is reserved for boxing.

Thanks, Patrick Maher, nice Tuesday!

Peter P 1:47 PM  

@Sgreennyc - The Elements of Style has been pretty heavily criticized for quite some time now (and for good reason, in my opinion, though I think there is perhaps some utility in it). If you Google "Elements of Style Critique," you'll find a number of articles explaining why (Professor Geoffrey K. Pullum's essay probably being the best-known. That was published in 2010, but even back in my English major days in the 90s, Strunk & White were regarded with some skepticism, depending on the professor, so this isn't some new-fangled criticism.)

Does anyone have a good mnemonic or way to remember both halves of Isao AOKI? It just won't stick to my brain. I was the same with Mauna Kea and Loa until Rex (or was it a commentator) coined the term "kealoa", and now I will remember those for all eternity. It's frustrating as there is so much little crosswordese that I do remember, but a few that stay out of reach, no matter how often I see them. You know how long it took me to finally commit Asta and Oona to memory? And I feel like I haven't seen them for years! I'm sure once I finally commit the two Saarinens to memory, I'll never see them again, either.

I enjoyed the puzzle and the theme. Ran a little faster than most Tuesdays, but enjoyable all the way. And I always enjoy seeing Polish places like GDANSK show up in the grid (I had totally forgotten about GDyNia being a possibility.)


CT2Napa 2:37 PM  

@Peter P 1:47

If you can remember that the full name starts and ends with "I"

Then say IS "AO" A-OK

Carola 2:56 PM  

I thought it was really clever. What a great play on ELEMENTS! As for the STYLE part, I'm going to leap to the defense of MASK. I have some KF94s with patterns and colors that I will dare to describe as "cute" and at least try to lend some STYLE to a - for me -always necessary "accessory." Not sure what I can do for APRON, though, frilly and gussied up with witty sayings as some are.

Help from previous puzzles: AOKI, NAENAE. Help from growing up in a farm town: BALER. Help from being old: MOOG (we own the 1969 LP "Switched-On Bach" - Wendy Carlos playing the synthesizer). Help from the reveal: GOLD.

Anonymous 4:04 PM  

Point taken, but I only know Messi because he’s been a crossword answer.

bocamp 4:27 PM  

@Whatsername (12:20 PM) yw 😊

@Peter P (1:47 PM)

I've had the same thot re: Isao AOKI, but never got around to mnemonicizing it. Fortunately for us, @CT2Napa (2:37 PM) has come up with a very useful idea!
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

jae 4:44 PM  

I ran across a kealoa in an archive puzzle. The clue was Cartesian conclusion. "I am" and "sum" both work.

@Peter P. The last 2 letters of his first name are the first 2 letters of his last name.

Anonymous 4:54 PM  

Both still there though Vanna never speaks!

Ronnie Schwartz 5:04 PM  

No. It rhymes with vogue, according to the man himself.

dgd 5:42 PM  

Anonymous 6:19 AM
FWIW
ELLA has been in the Times puzzle often
For long term solvers it is easy crosswordese. About the level of what number comes after one, at least for me. However ELLA has appeared less often of late, and I now see she is not so automatic for younger people But she was a famous singer (jazz and popular songs) for decades. Perhaps you should look her up. You might like her music. Anyway, she will appear again!

Anonymous 5:48 PM  

Anonymous 4:04
Well ELLA has been in the Times much more than Messi. It is even more crosswordese.

Anonymous 5:52 PM  

Southside Johnny
I just saw Vanna White and Pat Sajak last night on the show. He just announced his retirement. Don’t know about her plans.
But they still have new shows

Anonymous 5:58 PM  

Britsolver
About egg creams. Neither have most Americans. It is a specifically New York area “fountain drink” I know of it only because I have been reading the Times for 50 years. Never had it, but to be fair, it has neither egg nor cream in it as the clue said!

Anonymous 6:05 PM  

I met Mr. Moog shortly before he passed and can confirm it’s pronounced like vogue.

Anonymous 6:11 PM  

PaulyD

I don’t agree at all that what Rex said was a rant He said some linguists and cultural critics have had at it and that S & W has lost some cultural currency. Then he linked. I read most of the linked material and while frequently critical everyone said the S & W was still useful. Hardly rants For Rex what he said was in no way a rant. Perhaps your expectations lead you to see a rant that wasn’t there.


Anonymous 6:14 PM  

Bocamp Downs only solver extraordinaire!
6 out of 7 wow!

Anonymous 6:20 PM  

Sgreennyc
Rex criticized Strunk & White. Said it was less important than it used to be. Then linked to critics who all said it was still useful. That to me doesn’t = disparagement. Are you saying as& W is above criticism? Or that criticism is the same as disparagement?

dgf 6:30 PM  

Whatsername
I only know egg creams from reading the Times for 50 years.
I commented above when Britsolver said it sounded awful.
I noted that it was a NYC regional concoction and term and had no egg or cream in it. Never had it myself.

OhioGabe 7:11 PM  

He’s misinformed.

Also: dit dah? No. dot dash.

Anonymous 7:15 PM  

LOL I actually like Strunk & White. Commenters above saying I went off on a “rant” against it … man “anti-woke” is truly a virus, seek help. ☮️ ~RP

bocamp 7:59 PM  

@Anonymous (6:14 PM) 😊

Thx! It was an exceptional week. 3 or 4 / 7 would be more likely. In any event, it sure adds an extra element of challenge and fun. :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏

Counterpoint 12:07 AM  

As a music theorist, I was both pleased to see MOOG early on and had a chuckle at the revealer.

Overall, I had a good enough time that I forgot the puzzle threw AMO at us in the very first square.

Anonymous 9:53 AM  

A nice tribute to a great little book.

spacecraft 10:52 AM  

Monday-easy. A bit on the high-Scrabble-count side, which is interesting, yet no pangramming effort. Like.

The Vegas Golden (!) Knights occasionally wear very shiny gold helmets, which we've dubbed TINFOILHATS. They haven't worn them in a while--and they haven't WON in a while. Maybe break those blinders out, guys.

DOD stage is crowded today. Two classics are ELLA and VANNA, and then there's ABBY. Most admired, though hardly a "damsel," is Mother TERESA.

The corners highlight the TWAY family of golfers.

Good theme & revealer; some rough fill spots. Par.

Wordle par. (Interesting take on starters from OFNP; I use a word that appeared in that day's puzzle.)

Burma Shave 12:38 PM  

POX ON ANNUAL GEAR

Dear ABBY, DO you CARE
if ON STYLE someone RANTS?

VANNA, ACCEPT IT as fair,
then lose THEBELL bottom PANTS!

--- DR. TERESA HILL

Diana, LIW 6:11 PM  

I was wearing a LEADAPRON this morning at the dentist, but I really like the idea of a costume with all of those STYLE ELEMENTS. The TINFOILHAT would be the topper - in more ways than one. And GOLD GLOVEs. Fancy, fancy.

No wonder one would need the OXYGENMASK - it's a breath-taking fashion statement.

Needless to say, I completed the puz.

Lady Di

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