Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- FAS[T / T]RACK (1A: Accelerated path of advancement)
- SPLI[T T]ICKET (5A: Ballot with votes for multiple parties)
- HOL[D / D]EAR (10A: Cherish)
- GRAS[S / S]KIRT (35A: Bit of traditional Polynesian attire)
- TEASE[R / R]ATE (28A: Promotion for a new credit account, maybe)
- PE[P / P]ILL (32A: Stimulating drug, informally)
- BULLE[T / T]RAINS (47A: Ultra-rapid transit options)
- STRI[P / P]OKER (53A / 57D): Game that everyone but one person barely loses?) ("barely" here = "nakedly")
Sanka is a brand of instant decaffeinated coffee, sold around the world, and was one of the earliest decaffeinated varieties. Sanka is distributed in the United States by Kraft Heinz. // Decaffeinated coffee was developed in 1903 by a team of researchers led by Ludwig Roselius in Bremen, Germany. It was first sold in Germany and many other European countries in 1905–1906 under the name Kaffee HAG (short for Kaffee Handels-Aktien-Gesellschaft, or Coffee Trading Public Company). In France, the brand name became Sanka, derived from the French words sans caféine ("without caffeine"). The brand came to the United States in 1909–1910, where it was first marketed under the name "Dekafa" or "Dekofa" by an American sales agent. // In 1914, Roselius founded his own company, Kaffee Hag Corporation, in New York. When Kaffee Hag was confiscated by the Alien Property Custodian during World War I and sold to an American firm, Roselius lost not only his company, but also the American trademark rights to the name. To re-establish his product, he began to use the Sanka brand name in America. [...] The intensive American advertising campaigns included the 1927 broadcasts of Sanka After-Dinner Hour (or Sanka Music, Sanka After-Dinner Music, Sanka Music Hour, and Sanka After-Dinner Coffee Hour), heard at 6:30 pm Tuesdays on New York's WEAF. Sanka was a sponsor of I Love Lucy, The Twilight Zone, and The Andy Griffith Show during their respective runs on CBS television in the 1950s and early 1960s. The Andy Griffith Show Sanka sponsor spots featured the cast members. It was also a sponsor of The Goldbergs (1920s to about 1960 on radio and television, unrelated to the U.S. 2013 ABC television series) where, on many episodes, Mrs. Goldberg (Gertrude Berg) would address the camera and talk to the TV audience and tell them about Sanka coffee. After the sales pitch, she would walk away, usually from the window, and start the show. // With such promotion, Sanka became a nationwide sales success, with General Foods Corporation taking over distribution in 1928 as a defensive measure, since Sanka directly competed with its noncaffeine coffee substitute Postum. The bright orange label that made Sanka easily identifiable to consumers found its way into coffee shops around the country in the form of the decaf coffee pot. Coffee pots with a bright orange handle are a direct result of the American public's association of the color orange with Sanka, no matter which brand of coffee is actually served. Businesses that serve rival Folgers decaffeinated coffee usually have green-handled pots. (wikipedia) (my emphasis)
• • •
[THE CYRKLE! Put that in your grid and smoke it!]
Further, the fill is mostly stale, from the era when people drank SANKA and called uppers "PEP / PILLS." Some of it is solid, adequate, innocuous stuff (ASK AFTER, KEPT FIT), but it's hard to get excited about plural LEGATOS or the oddly formal, not-quite-a-square-dance-move "DO AS I DO" or the mid-century befuddled-by-abstract-expressionism query "IS IT ART?" That clue says [Question often preceded by "But ..."] but "often" is doing a lot of work there, since no one who is not in a New Yorker cartoon has asked that question since 1970. Sigh. The fill is not terrible, but it's not good either. Lots and lots of the short familiar stuff. A real A-ONE ODIE grid. I liked the colloquiparadoxical "YEAH, NO," but sadly, "YEAH, NO" is pretty much how I felt about the puzzle as a whole.
The theme was easy to pick up. Here I am, picking it up:
- 39D: Bend the truth, say (TELL A FIB) — I frequently TELL A FIB right after I EAT A SANDWICH. It's a weird tic I have (seriously, why wasn't this TELL A LIE, which at least has some claim to standalone status?)
- 67A: Silently acknowledge (NOD AT) — I think a better clue here would have been [Possible response to a dis?]
- 18A: Potter's area of expertise (MAGIC) — classic "hide-the-capital-letter" trick (put the capitalized word first and it doesn't register as a proper noun)
- 15A: Pre-nursing homes? (UTERI) — because babies (who frequently "nurse") have their "homes" in UTERI ... before they are born ... so, "pre-nursing." Stop me if this gets too recondite for you.
- 50A: Orcinus ___ (marine species) (ORCA) — cannot decide if this is stupid or brilliant. The clue basically gives you 75% of ORCA in the first clue word, making you (me) think ... "well, there's no way it's gonna be ORCA then." Stupid/brilliant!
- 8A: Kind of terrier (IRISH) — had the "H," wrote in WELSH. Weird that both my wrong terrier and the correct terrier were nationalities of the British Isles.
[sad, omitted WELSH terrier] |
- 64D: Kilmer of Batman fame (VAL) — maybe to you, but to me he will always be [Kilmer of "Real Genius" fame]
[1985, d. Martha Coolidge! Filmed largely on location at Pomona College, chirp chirp!]
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Picked up the 90-degree angle trick quickly, so it became easy, except for wanting "acelatrains" instead of BULLETRAINS and "telltale" instead of TELLAFIB. Enjoyable puzzle.
ReplyDeletezONK out before CONK out, and I figured maybe Chipotle had a deal with TAzO tea and had a TAzOS section on the menu. I had the whole grid filled in and had to go back. But other than that this one gave me little trouble and, I agree with @Rex, little payoff. Meh.
ReplyDelete+1 for ZONK - took forever to find
DeleteMore of a workout than Wednesdays usually provide, so I suppose I should be happy. But mostly, it was “meh.”
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteDefinitely on the Easy side for a Wednesday.
Overwrites:
39D: TELL A lIe before FIB
61A: Had YE____ and entered "YEs but" before realizing that "but" was in the clue
62A: LOll before LOAF
IS IT ART with “often” in the clue just sounds like it’s from another planet or something. Where would that be said - MOMA ? How many millions of visitors do they have each year (okay, maybe hundreds of thousands) - How many of them actually say that? And that’s at MOMA. I’m sure it’s uttered much more frequently at MSG or Grand Central on a daily basis. Nice job having it cross KANGA (as atrocious a clue/answer combo as we have had this year). Promising grid done in by an editor asleep at the wheel.
ReplyDeleteI liked the Kanga clue and answer
DeleteFor some of us he’ll always be Val Kilmer of Bob Dylan’s movie “Masked and Anonymous.” Eh, M&A?
ReplyDeleteShould have run on Thursday. DNF for me as I went with zONK instead of CONK, figuring Chipotle (a place I avoid due to un-user-friendly organization) served TAzOS – as in the teas.
ReplyDeleteTo me, he’ll always be “Kilmer of Top Secret fame”.
Took me a while to get the southeast corner. Otherwise not a lot of resistance. The trick was fine but would have benefited from a good revealer.
ReplyDeleteFH
ReplyDeletePretty fair Wednesday puzzle. Stop yer grouching. Also, if this exact puzzle had been by a woman, it wouldn't have been criticized.....
Anonymous 7:39 AM
DeleteInteresting.
The last review of a woman constructor’s puzzle that I remember here , Rex trashed it. And I remember many from last year that Rex criticized. Yet, despite the fact that there have been very few lately by women to review, you confidently say he would go easy on a woman constructor.
Perhaps it isn’t Rex who has the political agenda.
I felt like the whole of the puzzle was an "eat a sandwich" grid. Even - yeah, no.
ReplyDeleteWe’re 4.6% into this leap year and RP is bemoaning the rampant sexism at NYTXW not knowing a) how many women submit puzzles, b) the quality of said submissions and c) the chosen gender - if any - of the constructors (how can we tell without designated pronouns? Come on, progressive logic needs some consistency!)
ReplyDeleteAfter Tuesday WELD, was hoping for a Wednesday ADDAMS but alas, YEAH, NO lass.
Not a Hall of Fame puzzle but not rePUGSLEY either. Congrats to him/her/them ETC on being published!
@andrew 7:44 AM
Delete🦖 didn't "bemoan the rampant sexism at the NYTXW." He said 14-0 is "very weird." I know these discussions predictability trigger you, but tossing a strawman argument out from your pile of bumper stickers does little to encourage curiosity about the subject. It IS weird they've gone 14-0. Since they don't publish info on rejections we are left wondering. It's a fascinating topic worthy of discussion.
Thank you Gary!
DeleteI’m not sure it’s a fascinating topic or worthy of discussion at this point. It seems clear, though I don’t have numbers, that female constructors have been much better represented in the NYT xword of late. I believe it reflects various things, including perhaps more numerous submissions by women, and increased attention by WS and company to ensuring their representation at a fair level.
DeleteHow to account for the very recent relative dearth? Who knows? But it’s hard to believe it mainly or significantly reflects backsliding on the part of the editorial team.
I relished this theme because it took me a while to figure it out, gratifying my riddle-loving brain, then once I did, things fell quickly, bringing a glorious and extended “Whee!” What a sweet combination!
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed the drink mini-theme: SANKA, SODA, STOLI, PIBB, and ALE.
Morton, I am uplifted by your persistence, continuing to submit puzzles to the Times even through five years of rejections, after having three puzzles published there in less than three years (according to your notes). Thank you for the inspiration, and for a fun ride today!
Lewis
DeleteGood catch on the five separate types of beverages included in the answers. Coffee brand, a mixer, a soft drink brand, a vodka brand and a beer category.
I liked the puzzle too
I got the theme very quickly and found the entire puzzle to be pretty easy except for the SE. STRIPPOKER was not a game that came to mind until I had several letters. Then there was the INNIE/outie kealoa, and I do not know the Chipotle menu at all or anything about Chipotle, where I have never been.
ReplyDeleteLEGATOS is not said by anyone who plays music ever. Maybe LEGATO sections, or phrases.
Agree about LEGATOS. Not a thing.
DeleteHated hated hated this. First, a trick without a revealer is, in my opinion, a pointless thing. Of course I say this having never understood what the heck was going on in this puzzle. I got TRACK and TICKET and TRAINS from crosses, so I was thinking “maybe it has something to do with rail travel? Or the letter T?” So then guessed tOKER for the last one, I suppose wondering “maybe that’s the guy that puts the coal in a train?” It was all just a mess. DNF
ReplyDeleteAlso who the heck is ODIE? ::grumble grumble::
On the Tuesday Weld discussion from yesterday:
ReplyDeleteShe was born on a Friday. She is 80 now, living in Manhattan. Her name was Susan, but a cousin of hers, when little, couldn't pronounce it, and it came out "Tu-Tu." That's where Tuesday came from. She changed her name legally when she was 16.
She's been married three times, the last two were Dudley Moore and Pinchas Zuckerman, and she has two children. Apparently, Dobie Gillis and I weren't the only ones to fall in love with her back in the day -- according to Wikipedia, apart from her marriages she went out with Al Pacino, David Steinberg, Mikhail Baryshnikov (whose previous girlfriend, Jessica Lange, had been Weld’s best friend), Omar Sharif, Richard Gere, and Ryan O’Neal.
She dumped Sharif when she found the Siberian winters too harsh. (Yes, another cheap Dr. Zhivago crack. Hard to resist.)
She is fourth cousin to Bill Weld, former governor of Massachusetts.
Thank you @Lewis, for bringing her up yesterday and causing me to learn all of that and unearth some good TV memories. Did you know the G in Maynard G. Krebs stood for Fred?
From Wikipedia "Maynard's middle name is pronounced "Walter", named for his aunt. The "G" is silent, he would explain." Which is just as funny!
DeleteI see a lot more women constructors elsewhere, it’s so true. The New Yorker puzzle, and the AVCX puzzles all have frequent women constructors and they are awesome. So it makes no sense. Unless of course they are sexist (gasp)
ReplyDeleteOk, and LEGATOS? No. Legato is an adjective. It is not a title or a noun. It’s a direction. Bad bad answer.
I thought the themers were all going to be something to do with speeding, or leaving, or something, after FAST, SPLIT, PEP, and BULLET, but…. alas, no.
ReplyDeleteLiked the puzzle . Finished in less time than it took me yesterday. Couldn’t care less about the immutable characteristics of the constructor.
ReplyDeleteBack in action after a brief but violent fling with a stomach bug yesterday. I was out of bed for about twenty minutes, did the 1L stunt puzzle, fed the cat and fell down again. Not recommended.
ReplyDeleteEasy enough after I caught on to the trick, and having seen the - ploy before that didn't take long. Everything was familiar enough although I am really starting to hate clues like _____Island. Not a lot of help there.
Unlike @Southside I was delighted to be able to remember KANGA. KANGA and Roo what else? (Sorry @Roo, not close enough today.)
A Mostly Medium Wednesday for me, MM. Thanks for a minimal amount of fun.
Pabloinnh
DeleteI can see your point about _____
Island type of clues. I live in Rhode Island and I still needed a few letters!
It was a fun 20 minutes.
ReplyDeleteYesterday was all Ls and today we have upside down Ls or maybe right-side up 7s for no apparent reason. A pleasant solve with straightforward cluing.
ReplyDeleteHARRY POTTER IS #1 in magic. But you already know that.
Tee-Hee: So let's go over the probabilities any of our Ivy League NYTXW editors ever even one time played STRIP POKER. Let's go with "approaching zero." At the state school everyone [barely wins every time], so maybe our puzzle leadership team has been watching PBS to learn about upside-down pineapples prior to writing the clue. Nice job squishing the game up with a bellybutton, CONKing someone out, all while getting confusing consent with YEAH-NO.
Uniclues:
1 French girlfriend with surrogates.
2 Asset of a gossip.
3 Any open flame in 64 AD.
4 How a killer whale gets extra.
5 Cowgirl on the pole.
6 Get caught.
7 Stuff you need for a virtual trip to Nepal.
8 College.
9 The saddest time of day.
1 UTERI USER AMIE (~)
2 ASK AFTER KNACKS (~)
3 NERO TEASER
4 ORCA BULLET (~)
5 LARIAT STRIP
6 TELL A FIB FASTTRACK (~)
7 YETI TICKET, ETC. (~)
8 ALE PHASE
9 HALF PAST TACOS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Command to over-zealous walking partner. AMBLE, DAGNABBIT.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I also and the ZONK for CONK error!
ReplyDeleteFirst of all legato is an adjective, not a noun. Second, the plural would be legati.
ReplyDeleteAs a professional musician for over 50 years, I have never seen legato used as a noun.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteInteresting. Saw all the "-"s, wondering why. Figured it out at BULLET TRAINS. Aha, says I, Themers going Across, then heading Down at the "-"s, sharing a letter. Neat. But, nothing else. Was 2D clue a quasi-Revealer? 2D-Downward dog in yoga, e.g. Or did Morton want us to DO AS I DO? I GIVE.
YET I solved it. The O/E kealoa of HOLD/OMIT HeLD/eMIT was frustrating. YEAH, NO.
IT HELPS coming here and reading y'all after doing the puzs.
Good puz, we needed a TURN DOWN Revealer, or something. Something with a shared letter.
Happy Wednesday.
Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
ReplyDeleteThe day after Tuesday: One of Donald Fagen’s best solo songs, featuring a jazz-loving stalker eagerly anticipating a post-nuclear annihilation world if it means he can spend time underground with his Tuesday Weld lookalike…
Introduce me to that big blonde, she’s got a touch of Tuesday Weld
A Steely Dan/Fagen reference is never a bad thing!
DeleteLight fare for mid week, enjoyed it while noting the theme was minor part of it
ReplyDeleteAlthough I'm not a constructor, I'm impressed one can get a decent puzzle without any arcane words or phrases, and minimal crosswordese. Thanks, guy
As to the subject of guys vs gals, can't imagine the submissions to NYT are 10:1 male. Would be interested to know if there is research regarding differences in construction styles/trends between men and women? Or extend that to LGBTQs? Perhaps NYT looking for a certain style?
So you have a novice solver who's been honing her teeth on early week, straightforward puzzles. And you want to train her to think outside the box in the event of a late-week "trick" puzzle -- but with a puzzle that makes her feel smart rather than intimidated.
ReplyDeleteI'd give her this one. I thought the trick answers were sort of blinking their presence in neon once you got the first one. And the first one, FAST TRACK, was clued with such dead-on accuracy that it was pretty obvious. Also, there is no 4-letter answer that comes close to fitting the clue. So what did a veteran solver like me think?
It didn't present enough resistance for me to love it all that much. But I did admire it and think that -- with the exception of such fill as YEAH NO and I GIVE (no one said that ever) -- it's a very smoothly executed puzzle.
Beg to differ, Nancy. I GIVE was used in our family all the time in response to a trick question or riddle.
DeleteLoved this but I got completely naticked in the middle west section. Did not know the soft drink and never heard of BULLET TRAIN although it’s a pretty obvious term. But what really flummoxed me was the oddly (IMHO) clued IS IT ART. I just drew a complete blank there. But the trickery was the kind of non-theme I find appealing, and I appreciate there were more than just three or four sets of tricks. Other than the one frustrating area, enjoyed it immensely.
ReplyDeleteAppears we’re doing favorite VAL Kilmer roles so I’ll throw out mine - Ice Man in Top Gun. To me, he’ll be forever be young ace Navy pilot playing beach volleyball in the sand.
Whatsername 9:36 AM
DeleteI am pretty bad about remembering who starred in what movie, but somehow, Val Kilmer stuck in my mind as Jim Morrison in the Doors, over 30 years ago.
Right church wrong pew again for a nanosecond wombs before UTERI debating adds or SUMS clarified that. Like others got the trick early, kinda liked it, but felt a payoff of some sort was missing. Like, idk, a revealer? Because while it's fairly obvious to a long time solver I think it would *not be* to a newbie.
ReplyDeleteCan't imagine how @Rex missed the theme!
ReplyDeleteIf you take each "shared" letter in order, you get the acronym TTD-RP-STP which famously stands for
Color me shocked that a libertarian misogynist would also be just the kind of guy who really gets on board with that first level of misanthropic irony Steely Dan provide without finding another layer.
ReplyDeleteFAST TRACKed it. Now I'm noticing other, more subtle drop downs that will make great future NYTXW fill once they are adopted into Gen-whatever Newspeak, like SPLEGATOS, SPLIRISH, STRINNIE and STACOS.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure TEA SOFA is probably already a thing. Then we could drop up and obtain SANK CART, MAGIRI (plural of MAGIRUS) and so many more. But IS IT ART?
Your leading point about gender is excellent. NYT - get on that! Embarrassing.
ReplyDeleteCount me among the "Kilmer of Top Secret! fame" crowd.
ReplyDeleteThere is sauerkraut in my lederhosen.
Val Kilmer had the ability to “BE” the roles he played - utterly disappearing as he “became” Doc Holliday and Jim Morrison. He had many memorable roles in addition to the ones already mentioned including Mad Mardigan in Willow and Simon Templar in The Saint.
ReplyDeleteI think @Nancy summed up the puzzle very nicely. This was one of those days I raced through the puzzle and figured out the conceit early which actually made the solve quicker.
ReplyDeleteWhen someone figures out the reason for the male to female ratio with respect to the NYT puzzle publication, please wake me up. Until then, I agree with @Andrew. @Gary Jugert…this isn’t meant as a criticism of your comment, but Will Shortz went to a state university…(Indiana…CHEAP!) so I kind of doubt whether an Ivy League degree would be on HIS list of requirements.
MY VAL Kilmer was his role as Doc Holliday in Tombstone….”I’m your huckleberry.”
@Beezer 10:25 AM
DeleteHaha! You are absolutely right, but what are the chances a photo of Will will surface of him playing STRIP POKER in an Indiana dorm room? 14-0 against, probably ... hopefully. I find it amusing to accuse his staff members of being Ivory Tower sorts, especially when they're making such awkward efforts to ensure we get plenty of gridded drugs and nudity every other morning. We're 10-7 in favor of tee-hee puzzles on the year.
Hands too shaky to play your violin smoothly? Try SANKA. ITHELP your LEGATOS.
ReplyDeleteLet's see. What is Garfunkel's first name? Is it Al? YEAHNO. Is it Bill? NODAT sounds wrong. ISITART?
Maybe the clue for ASANA (Downward dog in yoga e.g.) was a microrevealer. Look downward, dog. I don't think so, but I sure did want a revealer in this puzzle.
Got so bored just filling in stuff (got the trick on the first row), missed the PEP/PILL. Wrote in PEdfor the stimulating never saw the dash clue, ended up with dILL from the acrosses.
ReplyDeleteI’m mad at me for going back and correcting.
@Liveprof: As a fellow fan of DOBIE GILLIS, I thought that Maynard's "G" stood for Walter. Wiki tells me I'm right, and that the "G" is silent.
ReplyDeleteI didn't get 1-A, saw that 5-A was SPLIT, and thought maybe the theme would be an implied "ticket" after each theme answer. But eventually worked my way back up into the NW, saw FAST TRACK, and knew what was going on. It did have a nice feature, that there was a downturn in every place that there could possibly bee one. That is, if the last letter of an across coincided with the first letter of a down, it was a theme answer.
ReplyDeleteI'm only an amateur musician, but I have heard LEGATO as a noun, as in "let's work on the legato first," said by a teacher to a student. It's more problematic in the plural but I could imagine it, as in "the legatos in Beethoven are beautiful" (trite, but I'm just illustrating). However, I think any given puzzle should bee consistent, not use the Latin plural for UTERI but the English one for LEGATOS. Somewhat similarly, one only says ASANA if one is using the Sanskrit name; otherwise it's a pose.
I also doubt very much if "many" people live in the Sahara, as 58-A implies.
@Nancy, a common scene in my first grade experience was a bully holding me flat on my back and kneeling painfully on my shoulders until I yelled "I GIVE!" Maybe that's just a Midwestern thing.
i did like the children's literature motif, with Harry Potter, KANGA, and Batman.
I guess maybe it's a niche thing, but the world of artists and art critics was convulsed in the last couple decades of the 20th Century by the question, 'IS IT ART?' for example which Damien Hirst preserved a shark in formaldehyde, enclosed it in a glass case, and exhibited it. Arthur Danto, who at that time had a weekly column in The Nation, devoted a column to the conclusion that art was anything a person known to be an artist declared was art. My friend Miriam Shenitzer created a pop-up book parody titled "I don't know what I like, but I know what' art." It was a hot topic at the time.
For whoever asked, ODIE is the pet dog of Jon Arbuckle, whose pet cat is the somewhat better known Garfield. I didn't know he was yellow, myself.
jberg 10:58 AM
DeleteI didn’t know about Odie fur color either. I think you have to read the Sunday comics or see a (video) cartoon to know that. By coincidence, my local paper just dropped Garfield this week ( since it is VERY popular I assume the Gannett paper did it to save money)
As to Nancy’s comment about I GIVE. Maybe it was a boy’s thing and girls didn’t use the the term at all, at least when Nancy was a kid.
I had no problem remembering it!
I agree also that Is it Art is a real expression and issue Still comes up even now.
DOASIDO was a DOOK for me.
ReplyDeleteHad trouble getting started with this one so it felt hard but my time said otherwise. That said, I, too, was waiting for the revealer that would tie this theme together. Waiting in vain, as it turns out. Made the whole thing feel terribly anticlimactic.
ReplyDeleteHe/she/them/our house liked Morton’s grid just fine though we/she/they took it with a grain of salt. And since we are grappling with pronouns as our grandchild transitions from male to female gender, it is a matter that really shouldn’t matter at all!
ReplyDeleteBut the puzzle, YEAH NO. Easy enough except where it wasn’t…..kONK (there’s a Chipotle in town, but never visited), wrong Potter (hidden by cap clue) and UTERI (pre-nursing site). Spots like that slowed me a bit, but amused me when they slotted into place with fair crosses. Gotta agree with @Dr A that the early week New Yorker is the place to be — plus the cartoons & they have decent gender balance…….tee hee. Sorry, but that dead horse……
@mbr (10:53). Thank you! I based my comment solely on my memory, which often deceives me. I have a vague image in there of Maynard once telling someone the G was for Fred. Wikipedia also notes he was named Walter "for his aunt."
ReplyDeleteGood stuff!
P.S. Just a heads up that Aimee has OUTIE in her grid today to give Morton’s INNIE balance. Wednesday puzzles tend to be MEH, but today’s both are pretty decent.
ReplyDeleteDifferences between the sexes manifest in ways obvious and subtle. Sure, some women may gravitate more toward that trash-collector job than some of her male peers, and some men may want to teach kindergarten more than than some women do, but if opportunity and access are provided to all without favor, that leaves you with culture and biology.
ReplyDeleteConsider that only certain (higher status) jobs are expected to try for equity, and never lower status jobs or pursuits. I'm all for making crosswords as interesting and enjoyable as possible for the average thinking person (and not just the average thinking solver, which may skew male). Sports, popular music, and film stars are of little interest to me generally, but I appreciate that I can be exposed to some of the current zeitgeist I may otherwise miss. This goes for encountering female perspectives as well, but I think of it like I do affirmative action--it's great if it's a scale-tipper to give an underrepresented demographic a leg up, but if it doesn't immediately result in the representation you are looking for, then other explanations should be examined.
My point is that I doubt the NYT has it out for female constructors, and there are probably just far fewer of them in the pool to choose from. Why--who knows? As far as I can tell, there are more efforts to bring women into the poorly-paid but (in some circles) esteemed world of crossword constructing than the opposite. Personally, I can't tell the difference between a grid constructed by either sex, so it just doesn't seem like the grids are dripping with testosterone which could potentially be off-putting to gender-conformist women.
Also, Sweden leads when it comes to gender equality, encouraging any sex to pursue whatever they wish. This has resulted with more men adopting roles like stay-at-home dad for child-rearing, but it also does nothing to dismantle some of the other stereotypical gender norms, and the types of jobs men and women choose for themselves. By all means, give people the opportunity and the encouragement, but trying to indoctrinate people early to ultimately accept jobs they may naturally have less interest in would probably be counterproductive for society, provide less satisfaction for the worker, and be more than a little bit selfish on the imposer's part (regardless of noble intent).
@andrew 9:14 – Great minds, etc, etc: I was almost gonna post a link to that song yesterday. SPRAWL was also in the puzzle, coincidentally contained in "Maxine" from the same album:
ReplyDelete♪ Try to make sense of the suburban sprawl ♪
Val Kilmer was a pretty good Jim Morrison as I remember.
I haven't sent Rex a check yet and today's nonsense doesn't help.
ReplyDeleteThank you @Liveprof for the info on Tuesday Weld - no, I meant that seriously!! Who knew? That she dated Mikhail Barsnihikov and Al Pacino (among others) - what an interesting & "varied" dating life she had!
ReplyDeleteThis puzzle had me going for far too long & couldn't decide whether It was INNIE or OUTIE for the longest time. Also had WELSH Terrier.
To sum up, I finished it but had to come here to get what was going on.
Easy-medium. This was pretty easy to figure out. ASK About before AFTER was it for erasures and, like yesterday, no WOEs.
ReplyDeleteSmooth grid, but I spent a fair amount of time looking for something that tied it all together. Alas, no luck there, so I’m with @Rex on this one.
Well...today I'm going to use one of my Mehs. I have several pet peeves and today it was one of those - things that I find annoying.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read the comments yet, but I'm guessing that if you haven't done one of those - thingies before, you might say "cool beans."
FASTTRACK...you were my first "Oh rats...one of THOSE puzzles!"....
I found it pretty easy but it was a bit oldy moldy in parts. LEGATOS ORCA LARIAT and then ye gads at STOLI. Back so soon?
This was a NO DAT wasn't so much fun day.....
Real blegh of a puzzle. I was also left wondering what the point of it all was but decided that whatever answer I'd get would be about as interesting receiving IT HELP. I had WHITE LIE before TELL A FIB which I feel is a much more fun answer. When I rewrote to the correct answer I looked at my wife next to me and said "rex is gonna hate this one". Forgettable all around
ReplyDeleteI liked it. First off, call me a novice but I still get a kick out of immediately catching on to the trick, which happened in the NW and then helped me solve. Love that "I get it" feeling. Fully agree there was no reward tho, which I missed. This was just begging for a clever reveal to tie 5he themers together.
ReplyDeleteOn TELLAlie, sure, went with that first but didn't like it because to me telling a lie isn't bending the truth, it's breaking it. Thought TELLAFIB was much better. First just don't seem as bad as lies, IMHO.
Fun Wednesday.
Well, hmm. I reckon the 2-Down or 39-Down clue coulda somehow been adapted to give a revealer hint. Really needed a separate RUNTROLL revealer answer, tho.
ReplyDelete@Andy Freude dude: yep. Best VAL flick title, by far. [VAL = staff weeject pick, ergo]
As I recall, HOLD/DEAR was the one that gave away the runt-roll theme mcguffin, at our house. M&A actually kinda likes sneaky themes with no reveals sometimes, just to keep us on our toes. Better to place such critters in a ThursPuz slot, tho.
Speakin of gal constructioneers, I'm really startin to dearly miss Liz Gorski. And LMS darlin, of course. Two cool one-L puzmakers. And also Lynn Lempel, if U lift the one-L restriction.
fave stuff included: KNACKS. IS I TART. DOASIDO. STRIP/POKER clue.
Thanx for bendin the downward dogs on us, Mr. Mendelson dude. Liked its twisted feel.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
**gruntz**
Will Shortz was quoted in a 2021 article stating that only 20% of all NYT crossword SUBMISSIONS come from women. In 2020-2021, 30% of PUBLISHED puzzles were by women. Meaning men make up 80% of submissions but only 70% of publications...
ReplyDelete"In terms of gender, last year 30 percent of the Times Crosswords were made by people who identify as women — which is the highest percentage since I started. The figure is 31 percent so far this year. (Even so, only 20 percent or so of submissions come from women.)" https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/07/crosswords/crosswords-puzzles-shortz.html
Disparities exist EVERYWHERE - the assumption that they are all driven by some "ism" is flat out lazy thinking. Unfortunately, it is far too common these days.
PEP PILL? What??? Not to mention KEPT FIT. Yuck.
ReplyDeletePep pill
DeleteSam 1:31 PM
Assuming you are not joking, your reaction is another indicator of how old I am. Rex did note it is an oldie
I now know that younger generations are much less likely to know the term. VERY common term once.
Still valid for crosswords though because of its history.
Us old folks don’t know things like yeet and babymoon so fair is fair
Medium for me, and I enjoyed it. I got the right-turn idea right away in the NW and followed it across the top row, but then, solving my way along, I kept forgetting about it, so I had the repeated fun of re-discovery (e.g., TEASER [R]ATE, PEP [P]ILL), I did hope for a reveal.
ReplyDelete@Nancy, @jberg - When my kids were growing up, I heard I GIVE! all the time.
Appreciate you standing up for the ladies.
ReplyDelete@M&A
ReplyDeleteI miss LMS, too, but don't recall her ever constructing puzzles. Have an example?
@JC66, I wasn't sure so I just checked at xwordinfo.com which says Loren had 3 puzzles published.
ReplyDeleteKilmer of Real Genius fame, or Kilmer of Tombstone fame, yes. Kilmer of Batman fame, no.
ReplyDeleteTo me he’ll always be Kilmer of Top Gun!!
ReplyDelete@okanaganer
ReplyDeleteWow! Thanks.
@JC66 - yep. LMS had three puzs published in the NYT. All collaborations.
ReplyDeleteThe puz dates: 4 May 2017. 2 Nov 2015. 28 Nov 2013.
She also published some runtpuzs, but I don't believe they are available anymore. We were gonna collab on some runtz, but that kinda fell through, when she landed a full-time teachin job.
She's one clever gal.
M&A Historical Records Dept.
I enjoyed it
ReplyDeletePEP PILL and IS IT ART is a turd crossing.
ReplyDeleteI already had a lengthy "I GIVE" discussion over on Wordplay hours ago. But I'll say the same thing I said over there:
ReplyDeleteWhatever happened to "I give UP"? That's the way I've always heard it said and it's certainly the only way I've ever said it. There was some discussion over there about it being perhaps a generational thing -- and heaven knows that the younger generation is always looking to shorten words and phrases in both speech and texting to what seems to me a srsly ridiculous degree. Now, @Carola's talking about her kids, but but @jberg is my generation more or less and he's talking about himself back in grade school. So I guess it's not generational.
But to my ear, "I GIVE" seems both ungrammatical and incomplete in the context of conceding. It's what I'd expect a building to say just before it collapses. Or maybe what you'd say as you place a $5 bill into a street musician's hat.
Nancy 5:30 PM
DeletePicture 2 boys fighting in a school yard.or on the streets for that matter in most of the 20th Century anyway. Do you really expect a formal discourse when one is telling the other he is admitting defeat?
Really I give is a stereotypical expression.
As I said above, maybe it’s a boy thing, so that is why it escaped you.
That this blog is authored by a straight cis gendered-white male offends me.
ReplyDeleteSee? I, too, can virtue signal with the best of them.
jk
Guessing that this post will never make it past the mods.
Loved the puz
5:46 BSS
DeleteWell your post made it.
Thx Morton; fun challenge! 😊
ReplyDeleteJust checking in.
Downs-o (4 hrs in).
Upper right quad is not cooperating.
Got 4/7 of the '-'s, but see no real theme, so far.
On with the battle! 🤞
___
Lily Geller's New Yorker cryptic was on the easy side, but worthwhile, nevertheless! :)
NYT 'Connections' was a real challenge td. Got it with no miscues, but took forever to grok.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
I love Rex's use of "recondite".
ReplyDelete@bocamp, I was going to try this downs only but abandoned that plan as soon as I saw all the dashes. Good luck!
ReplyDeleteRe Connections... today wasn't too bad, but that purple category yesterday! I had those four words left and stared for ages with not the slightest idea what their category was. When I finally gave up and clicked submit, I was a bit angry at first but then thought... that is too crazy, but kinda inspired!
Concur that I GIVE was completely normal growing up (and I was born in the mid-70s.) I also find myself learning of completely normal phrases and vocab that apparently everybody but me knows, so I get being confused when it's not part of your vocabulary for whatever reason. But I GIVE is perfectly cromulent.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this puzzle. Ran on the easy side for a Wednesday. My main complaint is that ugly LEGATOS. I did find a dictionary (Collins) that both has a definition for LEGATO as a noun and gives the plural -TOS, so I concede that it's fair game, I suppose. I mean, easy enough to suss out, but a little on the unfamiliar side to me being used in that manner. Oh, and PEP PILL felt a little dated to me.
Yay! got it! (5 hrs)
ReplyDeleteGetting SOFA was huge; HALF PAST more or less clinched it.
What a blast! 💥
Now to try to grok the deal 🤞, then read @Rex and the blog.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Sorry if this point has already been made. File under: a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. The word TOON refers to a character from an animated cartoon, not a character from a newspaper comic strip. Odie, the dog in “Garfield,” is not a TOON. Sloppy, sloppy, New York Times crossword.
ReplyDeleteAlmost all terriers are “from” the British Isles. Thanks for your write up today as always!
ReplyDeleteAlthough unlikely anyone is still reading this late in the day Rex's review made meant to say
ReplyDeleteFUN PUZZLE. The themes er fun and a few other answers. I smiled big sussing "strip poke" from "Game that ...barely loses? All the better that it was also a theme answer.
And Once I got anti from a cross or two I laughed at myself for trying so hard to come up with a "prefix with thesis".
Wanted to post when I finished but the blog was up yet for Wed. and I needed to get back to bed.
@G Weissman - before criticizing the NY Times crossword as being "sloppy" you could have looked up the fact that Garfield has over 200 animated episodes over (at least) three different series. Plus an animated movie. I grew up in the heyday of Garfield and Friends, so Garfield was first an animated series to me, then a comic strip. Also why I immediately recalled the color of Odie's fur, and why that was not an unfair detail, since the clue was referring to the cartoon, not the strip.
ReplyDeletePep Pill? Go away. This puzzle sucked.
ReplyDeleteWait a minute - is this Wed or Thurs? These answers are falling all over each other. Once I got the "hang" of it, the rest was not too hard at all.
ReplyDeleteLady Di, Waiting for Crosswords
DO TELL
ReplyDeleteAFTER EDITH's POKER went FAST,
I ASK, "DOes ITHELP appease her?"
ART said, "YEAH,NO, her KNACK from the PAST
IS that she's A STRIP TEASER."
--- AMIE LIMA
Who cares sums it up perfectly Rex. Yet another mediocre puzzle brought to you by the editors who will print just about anything.
ReplyDeleteSo, Sierra Nevada is a...an ALE?? There's a Saturday clue on a Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteWith all the dashes in just the downs, I felt pretty sure this was a "Right turn, Clyde!" theme. But no revealer came forth. I guess you don't really need one, but it woulda been nice.
Nothing too terribly exciting here; it fills the slot. That's about it. Par.
Wordle birdie.
The puzzle would have been way better if the corner letters in the two-word answers spelled out an appropriate word or phrase to tie it all together. The eight letters could spell out DUAL DUTY - or something like that. It would be more difficult to construct of course but this puzzle is really lacking a snappy revealer.
ReplyDeletePS - DUAL DUTY is a brand of high-tenacity thread by Coats.
Took some time to get into the flow, but then a very enjoyable puzzle. Nice job.
ReplyDeleteHOLD on thar, not so FAST. This today, what tomorrow? No write-overs, but ISITART? Or what? This was pretty . . . meh. Sometimes the Universal xword seems better.
ReplyDeleteWordle birdie.