Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
Nilanjana Sudeshna "Jhumpa" Lahiri (born July 11, 1967) is a British-American author known for her short stories, novels, and essays in English and, more recently, in Italian.
Her debut collection of short-stories Interpreter of Maladies (1999) won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the PEN/Hemingway Award, and her first novel, The Namesake (2003), was adapted into the popular film of the same name.
The Namesake was a New York Times Notable Book, a Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist and was made into a major motion picture. Unaccustomed Earth (2008) won the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, while her second novel, The Lowland (2013), was a finalist for both the Man Booker Prize and the National Book Award for Fiction. (wikipedia)
• • •
- 18A: Asymmetrical crustacean*
- 24A: Creature whose scientific name translates to "ice-lover from Greenland"*
- 34A: North America's heaviest flying bird*
- 51A: Zazu from "The Lion King," e.g.*
Now *those* would've provided a proper Thursday challenge. As it was, I read the note in my software that said there were picture clues, and so I dutifully switched over and solved on the NYTXW website, where (as promised) I got the picture clues and ... yeah, I just filled in all the theme answers with hardly any thought at all (as hardly any was required):
In retrospect, I would've preferred the written-out clues. But there's at least one substantive reason to prefer the pictures to the written clues. The picture of a bird playing a horn kind of masks or distracts from the anomalousness of HORNBILL. It's the only answer that doesn't have an animal in its name. That is, you have CRAB playing a fiddle, a SEAL playing a harp, a SWAN playing a trumpet, but you do not have a BILL playing a horn. BILL is only a part of the animal playing the horn. A HORNBILL is a real bird, for sure, but you have to fudge the specific instrument (or instrument player) + animal wordplay of the theme to make it work. It's fine. All the answers are animals with instruments (or instrument players) in their names, and that's sufficiently coherent. But HORNBILL is, structurally, a bit of an odd-man-out.
The fill on this one is average to slightly below. ESO PIA TSETSE AARE AGEE ÉTÉ ATA AVIA AWW have this one feeling pretty crosswordesey, and IN A TUB ... well, you know how awful I think that is, since we Just Had It In A Puzzle Last Week. And then there's COR, which is not only crosswordese, but also adds an extraneous instrument to an already instrument-themed puzzle. For elegance's sake, all instruments should be banished from the non-theme answers, especially ones that are clued Using Words That Are Actually In The Theme Answers (30D: ___ anglais (English horn) / HORNBILL). There's a doubling of "IT" ("I SWEAR IT" / "NAILED IT"), which is not that big a deal, and yet I noticed ... it. ZAATAR is pretty spicy, I like that (12D: Mideast spice blend). Seems conspicuously, if not gruesomely, understated to clue GAZA as simply a "site of conflict" right now. I mean, true, and yet ... kinda euphemistic. There are ways to clue GAZA that don't point straight at violence ([Largest city of Palestine], [Historic Mideast city where Samson died], etc.). Maybe one of those would've been preferable here. But maybe the clue doesn't matter because the very name GAZA is going to evoke images of violence right now, no matter how you clue it.
Notes and explanations:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
- 26A: Game island represented by hexagonal tiles (CATAN) — I had trouble understanding what a "game island" even was. Like, what category of thing is that? Here, it's the title island in the game "Settlers of CATAN" (which is apparently now just called "CATAN")
- 19D: Pause to play? (RECESS) — I'm not sure what the surface-meaning is supposed to be here (why would you hit "pause" in order to "play" something?), but the clue ultimately wants you to understand the answer as a pause (from school during which children often go outside) to play, i.e. RECESS
- 1A: Line just above "total," maybe (TIP) — I had TAX, which had me wondering what kind of [Energizing snack] started with an "X"—maybe an XXTRA BAR ("20 Times The Protein Of Our Regular Bar!") (3D: Energizing snack = POWER BAR)
- 62A: Jhumpa ___, Pulitzer-winning author of "Interpreter of Maladies" (LAHIRI) — the only thing that really slowed me up today, and it was my own dumb fault—I misremembered her name as LAHARI and never bothered to check the cross, which should be HIT, but when you've got HAT in the grid, well, HAT doesn't exactly scream "Error!" at you, so ... I had to hunt my error after I was done, and didn't discover it until I'd checked every answer in the puzzle (since LAHARI didn't register as wrong, I didn't see my error til I got to HIT, which is the very last answer in the grid, 59D: Popular song).
- 33D: More quickly? (ETC.) —the idea being that if you want to indicate that there are "more" things in your list, but you want to do so economically (without enumerating every single item), then you use the abbreviation ETC. It indicates "more" ... quickly (i.e. in a short abbr.)
- 42D: Place for soap? (MELROSE) — kind of a deep cut: this is a reference to the '90s primetime soap opera MELROSE Place.
Please enjoy the rest of your Leap Day.
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
I'm embarrassed how long it took me to understand Deicer salt was not some fancy table salt I'd never heard of. Played like a Tue/Wed until I got to the southeast corner and I was stuck there for a while.
ReplyDeleteFancy table salt, haha!
DeleteIt tripped me up too
DeleteEasy. No erasures. Looks like easy week continues. I did not know LAHIRI the Pulitzer winner but I would have know Mindy from “The Mindy Project”. I also didn’t know SUTRA and HELEN as clued.
ReplyDeletePretty smooth grid, fun graphics in the app, breezy solve, liked it.
@Rex - The text-only clues would have definitely made this much tougher.
Our old friend DOORDIE is back! Maybe having a SAMOSA INATUB while enjoying the ORBITAL SCENERY.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, this was soooooo easy I thought I must have been wrong about today being Thursday. Yes, @Rex, those word clues would have made it way more challenging, but some people will be happy because, well, that's what a rebus *is*: pix for words.
It's 9:55 here (so 4:55 Eastern) and I see no comments. Probably waiting on the mods.
Happy Leap Day to all!
ReplyDeleteMedium-Challenging for me. The picture clues were all very easy (except for misremembering HORNBILL as HORNBeak), but the fill was a bit arcane. I've seen CATAN (26A) in clues for "ore", but it took a bit to connect it to a game island. ZAATAR (12D) and LAHIRI (62A) were WOEs, and I had to come here to connect MELROSE (42D) with the "soap" clue.
Does a toddler in a ONESIE (48A) enter a room through a DOORDIE (46A)?
I “❤️ ily” agree. Too easy with the picture gimmicks. Wudda been fine on a Wednesday (or Tuesday, even) but the Thursday challenge is AWOL this week.
ReplyDeleteSettlers of Catan was renamed several years ago, and the game is now just called Catan.
ReplyDeleteUnless that bird's name is BILL, HORNBILL is wildly poorly clued and it really threw me (as did LAHIRI, whom I didn't know before today). I'm surprised @Rex wasn't more put off by the asymmetry of the last theme clue. Or is it the the BILL of the bird is playing the HORN? Weak in either case. Otherwise a *lot* of crosswordese (I threw in AARE right away, but that's only because I've been solving since the 1980s). Misspelled ZAATAR as ZAtaAR at first, which threw me, but FIDDLER CRAB set me straight fairly quickly. Meh.
ReplyDeleteI did not care for the picture clues at all. I skipped right over them and then went on to solve the rest of the puzzle. For 34A, I did smile for a moment thinking it would be a children's book theme (Trumpet of the Swan was one of my favorites when I was a kid), which would at least justify the pictures, but I was wrong.
ReplyDeleteI didn’t solve on the app, so I had no pictures, and still it played wildly easy for a Thursday; more Tuesday-ish. This is really not what I expect from a Thursday puzzle, which usually provides (should provide?) a bit of crunch and asks your brain to hum a bit. I mean, sure, the pictures are cute, but this is a crossWORD puzzle — should we not concentrate on wordplay? There are other places on the web for pictures puzzles.
ReplyDeleteI thought zaatar crossing Catan was awfully naticky.. I printed out the puzzle and did it in pen and ink and so the pictures were fine but the left hand numbers were not printed
ReplyDeleteI m surprised that there were no pictures of our friends the.....
Emu
I thought the hieroglyphics were kind of cute, and thankfully much easier than the regular text clues Rex dug up. Hopefully the technique will remain a novelty - and the NYT won’t fall into their usual habit of “a little is good, so let’s bludgeon people to death with it” (keep in mind that Shortz alleges that foreign words and phrases have to be “common usage” to merit inclusion - recently we had a couple of foreign words in the same grid where even people fluent in the language at hand were arguing about what the words meant in English). So - please, please, please constructors - don’t start cluing your puzzles with crayons.
ReplyDeleteI’m sure quite a few of us will agree with Rex that the clue for GAZA was at best tone-deaf and ill-advised. Editors - that’s on you guys as I’m sure the puzzle was created/submitted some time ago.
The GAZA clue was in poor taste. I became nauseous and put the puzzle down.
Deletelol.
DeleteCharming! Delightful! Whimsical! A real bon bon ...
ReplyDeletePicture clues were cute but should have been a Tuesday. Not the constructors fault when it runs. HORNBILL gave me some trouble for the reasons Rex mentions: going by the logic of the other picture clues it should be ALPENHORNPARROT, which doesn’t fit and also isn’t a thing.
ReplyDeleteThe fill killed me today. Had AAA for “discount” and never heard of ZAATAR so *shrug*?
Very easy Thursday, continuing a very, very easy week. Liked most of the themers, but HONRBILL doesn’t really work and the revealer is weak. And the pictures seem to add nothing to the experience. Would have preferred this with no pictures and no revealer.
ReplyDeleteZAATAR and LAHIRI felt like huge outliers, familiarity-wise, though fair on a Thursday. Unfortunately, both also have one possibly unfair cross (CATAN, HECHE). I knew both of those, but I’d be surprised if there are not some grids with e.g. zaatur out there today.
Something about the HARP SEAL reminded me of a James Thurber cartoon, so that was nice, but otherwise it didn’t do much for me.
ReplyDeleteSimilar to Rex waiting for his splashy Fridays - it’s Thursdays I look forward to. So - when we get grade school sketches and inane fill it’s a bit of a let down.
ReplyDeleteMy friends from Kerala and Chennai don’t eat SAMOSAS with chutney.
This was Highlights level fare.
Noisy cats are we
Kid stuff. Where’s my happy meal?
ReplyDeleteTwo things I loved about this puzzle.
ReplyDeleteOne, it had pop. Turns out that 16 of the answers have been used less than 10 times in the 80 years of NYT puzzles, and five of those answers are NYT answer debuts. One of those debuts, ZA’ATAR, I may have unknowingly tasted in Middle Eastern restaurants, but after rabbit-holing it online – a journey filled with lauds about its flavor -- I’d now like to knowingly give it a try.
Two, the revealer. While I was solving this, pretty much dashing through it, at one point I thought that man, this is a lightweight Thursday; what it needs to make it satisfying is a great revealer. And Esha came through! Fabulous wordplay, reparsing the baseball term “wild pitch” in a most wacky and wonderful way.
After seeing the text clues to the theme answers in Rex's column, well, I would have preferred having them as the theme clues, delightful and charming as the drawings were. The text clues were end-of-the-week tough and, IMO, would have been more Thursday-appropriate.
But the puzzle’s pop and revealer shined so brightly that I still left the grid thinking, “Excellent one!” Great theme and great spark in this one, Esha – thank you so much for making it!
Smooth and easy except that I didn’t know HECHE, AGRE or LAHARI and they all crossed, so if it wasn’t for being told when I was right it would have been a DNF.
ReplyDeleteAgreed that HORNBILL was off. I also didn’t like ONESIE because to me that’s a baby outfit, toddlers are put into other clothes.
Way too easy. Also I have a gripe about these weird formatting puzzles. My mom is 85 loves the Xword (hence my “habit”) and I print them out for her in Large Print daily. When they make any kind of visual element, the puzzle cannot be printed in Large Print and she can’t see any of it without a magnifying glass.
ReplyDeleteI know it’s a personal problem but every time I see this stuff I’m already disappointed, hah.
Well put together, cute theme with animal pix. The revealer was a bit flat.
ReplyDeleteEasy medium for me, stumbled in SE : MELROSE by itself didn't ring a bell until I put it with PLACE. Living in PA in February, you'd think I would have gotten DEICER right away, but have only used our rock salt a handful of times all winter
Overall 👍
No pictures in AcrossLite, just those nasty descriptions, so the themers took some work.
ReplyDeleteThe cross of ZAATAR and CATAN was a total Natick for me. CATAN is one thing (games = huh? to me), but how could I have never heard of ZAATAR?
Easy enough as it turned out. However....if you want to toughen it up print it out so that the left column of numbers disappears, then solve by looking at those clues on a laptop and the other ones on your print version, all while trying to make the pictures into something because you're alternating between needing reading glasses and not needing them. That should do it. (I know some nice folks have offered helpful hints on how to get the print version right, but so far I've had no luck. Thanks anyway.)
ReplyDeleteOtherwise a smooth sail except for Ms. LAHIRI. Agree with @Smith's assessment of DOORDIE. Har.
But today's Classic Crosswordese really made my morning, viz. the return of the TSETSE fly in toto, as we usually are getting just TSE these days, and especially the sine qua non of crossword rivers, the AARE. Welcome back! It's ben too long!
Kind of a fun gimmick, ED, but not Exactly Daunting. Would have loved to see a barking spider somewhere, but these may only exist in my imagination. Thanks for some visual fun.
A muse not related to today’s puzzle…
ReplyDeleteDavid Steinberg, I miss you! Yes, In December you retired from making puzzles, but I miss you already. Your puzzles had such wit, class, and craft. They were exemplars of the art of constructing. Consistently so, through your huge output of 111 in the Times.
I hunger for your puzzles. Sometimes a tv series ends, and ends at just the right time, and I’m glad it didn’t run longer. But I don’t feel that way about your puzzles. I want them to continue.
I want to respect your life and needs, so how about a compromise, say, one or two puzzles a year, somehow squeezed into your busy life. Those theme ideas still come to your fertile brain, don’t they? And I’m guessing you write those ideas down. Just one or two puzzles a year. Yes?
Think about it. Please? Pretty please?
Presumably this kind of gimcrackery is why NYTXW in its wisdom decided to create its own puzzle software. Gotta keep up with the kids and their video games! Or something. Which I wouldn't mind so much but the actual solving interface remains infuriating to this desktop user, after--how long has it been? coupla years? No matter what preferences I set it won't behave like .puz and it continually trips me up into making typos and getting slower times just because it's so dang clunky and awkward. But hey, nifty little cartoons that make me feel like I've wandered into an elementary school classroom. Like, one from the 70s with all those musty xwordese clues. And stupid easy for a Thursday.
ReplyDeleteBut cute.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteHappy Leap Day!
Was hoping for a Leap Day/Year type theme, alas, maybe in four years.
Got the picture clues. Nice drawings, Daniel Savage (name was in the Note, in case you didn't read it.)
Crossword stalwart AARE, although it's been a while. TSETSE, too. Got the DOOK DOORDIE! It's what you exclaim after you've stubbed your toe one too many times on a door. Die, DOOR! DIE!
Have they ever Not been fighting in GAZA?
Very Name-y in South Center. AGEE/HECHE/LAHIRI. Figured out HECHE from __C_E, which begat AGEE, another famous crossword name, and that let me get unknown-to-me LAHIRI.
I always think SAMOSAS are MIMOSAS first. Har. I suppose you can have a MIMOSA with your SAMOSA. Invite along Sammy SOSA.
Enjoy your extra day today. My mom has a friend whose Birthday is today. She says she is turning 19! (She's 76) Eight more years and she'll be legal drinking age! 😁
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I often find puzzles harder than other folks, but this was very easy to me WITHOUT the pictures, which I couldn't access on the site I was using. I didn't put together that all the animals were musical, but I did know all their names, and mostly got them from crosses without reading the clues. I figured the note was going to tell me that they were all endangered or something, since it wasn't necessary to solve the puzzle at all. I will say the pictures are pretty cute!
ReplyDeleteMy time landed right between my Monday average and Tuesday average. So yeah, easy. But MELROSE required every cross, as I only know it as an apple variety, and never followed soap operas. Still, finished without an error, and without a single look-up which is unusual for me for a Thursday.
ReplyDeleteI laughed out loud when I read Rex's first sentence about the child’s placemat. That was precisely my reaction in a nutshell. I felt like I was doing a “puzzle-fun” crossword with a kiddie meal at a pancake house. In fact, I’m on board with RP 100% today, from that to the HORNBILL issue to not knowing what a game island was. The text clues are solid and would’ve made it a proper Thursday but as is, I would’ve liked it a lot better yesterday or even Tuesday. Not the constructor’s fault though, and it was a perfectly nice puzzle otherwise.
ReplyDeleteCan someone explain the revealer, WILD PITCHES? Is it just that they are animals (presumably wild ones), and they're playing instruments so presumably making pitches? Is that it?
ReplyDelete12D/26A was the worst Natick I ever recall seeing in an NYT puzzle. ZAATAR? CATAN? Crossing them? *Huh*? The strained and impenetrable gimmick (I still don't understand it even after OFL's explanation) only made things worse.
ReplyDeleteI can make out all the critters, but where are the bleepin' instruments?
ReplyDeleteI needed the exquisite touch of Leonardo and you gave me Picasso. Late Picasso, not early Picasso.
Actually, late Picasso in need of a refresher art class.
Look, I'm a word person, not a picture person, and I need all the help I can get. And the drawings here were...not helpful.
Good cluing though. "Place for soap" is great and it's the best clue for ETC (33D) I've ever seen.
The less said about the cross of ZAATAR and CATAN, the better. I thought it might be an "A", but I left it blank so I wouldn't forget to point out how awful it was in my comment.
Bottom line: Better drawings would have made for a much better puzzle.
Well said Lewis, I agree!
ReplyDeleteI don't get it. Theme would suggest a Tuesday puzzle, but lots of junk to make it more difficult: AARE, CATAN, DEICER, ETE, LAHIRI, ZAATAR, etc.,
ReplyDeleteYuck.
These have been so breezy so far this week I've had extra time to stare sadly into the future. They better toughen 'em up before I become morose. Maybe pick up another hobby? Bird watching? I live in the city, and seems like sparrows and finches are the main group by a large margin. Maybe I'll stick with learning this accordion.
ReplyDeleteThe reveal sure isn't getting the job done. ANIMAL INSTRUMENT clued as [Muppet drummer's set] is less cute but more accurate.
When I was a kid, the first protest my dad took me to was a harp seal event. We got a plastic window cling and dad put it on the front window of his house. Forty years later when I needed to take him out of his house, the remnants of the cling were still there.
I like the little drawings. I like the Seinfeld episode when Jerry failed a polygraph for lying about watching Melrose Place. The cop he unsuccessfully wooed ended up as an evil mother doppelganger dating Charlie Harper in Two and a Half Men. I gotta turn that TV off.
Tee-Hee: SPEEDO. Pop quiz ... which 🦖blog commenter do you want to see in a SPEEDO? Which NYTXW editor? Which constructor?
Uniclues:
1 Keep rowing until you make it to Italy.
2 Cute cranky concertmaster.
3 Life saving Indian pastries.
4 Have the hots for a Bucerotidae.
5 Run a Bucerotidae over with a car.
6 The little scrum on the pitching mound while the next guy trots in from the bullpen.
7 Stand across the street and watch the house burn.
1 GAZA TIP IN A TUB (~)
2 AWW CRAB FIDDLER (~)
3 DO OR DIE SAMOSAS (~)
4 HORNBILL CRUSH (~)
5 CRUSH HORNBILL
6 WILD PITCHES ADO
7 INFEST MISHAP
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: It's leap day, so there is no same-day last year, so how about a Stackable Clue from today? Jhumpa jumper. LAHIRI TSETSE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I play in a really ugly jazz band. The tenor sax has acne, the keyboardist is flushed and the TRUMPETERSWAN.
ReplyDeleteThe DoorDash motto: At DoorDash we DOORDIE.
Testify = DEPOSE? I don't think so. I'm going to testify at a trial. I'm going to depose at a trial? I mean, right?
I can't speak harshly enough about the Weekly Reader illustrated clues. I filled in all of them instantly before reading a single syllable of any written clue. That means that 21% of the white squares were filled before starting the puzzle. In reading the constructor's notes, I think that the illustrations were an editorial decision. It's always interesting to try something new, and it's only a crossword puzzle. I don't mean to be a CRAB, but this instrument of torture was for the birds and does not get my SEAL of approval.
Naticked at HECHE, AGEE, and LAHIRI. Have never heard of those names before, and all three crossed. Could've done with better editing in that section.
ReplyDeleteInstead of a WILDPITCH, the nyt tossed us another softball. Only real guess was the final square filled in--the A in that Naticky ZAATAR/CATAN cross.
ReplyDeleteLiked the cross that might be uni-clued, "Climactic commands"--DO OR DIE ORDERS
Well you can draw all day long on my puzzle. My favorite was staring at that little CRAB playing his FIDDLE. I'm also betting someone trained that SEAL to strum the HARP.
ReplyDeleteI had some DOORDIE mistakes. Tax...>TIP. Infuse...>INFEST and the one that had me use white out...Mashup instead of MISHAP. I'm not so hot when it comes to slang words but I promise that I will never say FIERCE for a boldly draped dude. I had FaERCE. Then since I had the U in my mash up, that pulitzer winning person was URIS. Just so you know and not even care, I fixed it.
ZAATAR! you better taste good on top of some manoushe and kale chips. I don't use you. I'll ask LAHIRI if she sprinkles some on top of her eggs.
Other than a few UHS, I found it pleasantly easy. I'm not sure I understand the reveal: WILD PITCHES or why you've drawn some clever little animals playing instruments to arrive at your reveal. So the animals are WILD and they follow PITCHES. Is the pitching the sounds? I believe there are 7 PITCHES in music and it also refers to the quality of sound or maybe I'm reading too much into this. Perhaps our friend @Joe D can shed some light?
Nice, @Lewis. I agree.
Tsk!
ReplyDeleteWasted Thursday for reasons Rex noted.
@egs (10:33) I was happy to see you used the “Weekly Reader” as a descriptor for the simplified clues. That crossed my mind too, and I almost said so but didn’t know how many other people here would even be familiar with it. I have fond memories of that august publication from the past.
ReplyDeleteCute, nice groan-worthy reveal. Super easy, too, as luck of the draw provided me with all the names. Top-notch clues for ETC and MELROSE.
ReplyDeleteYears ago, a book club selection introduced me to Jhumpa LAHIRI, and more recently I was interested in what seemed to me like a very bold career move - moving to Rome to learn Italian (ah...if only...!) and then to publish her next novels and stories not in English but Italian.
@anon 6:53 If you go into print options and choose "Fit to Printable Area" you should get the numbers on the left side of the page. Worked for me.
ReplyDeleteCompletely agree that the GAZA clue was in poor taste.
ReplyDeleteHow has nobody mentioned the absolutely odious, abominable, non-word that is SCHWAS? Whatever that is shouldn't appear in any puzzle, ever.
ReplyDeletePITCHes in music are the frequencies of the notes being played. A above middle C is a note that vibrates 440 times per second (hertz). If someone has perfect pitch, they can name a note out of the blue without any other reference point. Our hearing range is on average 20-20,000 hertz. Each frequency out of that is a separate pitch, so there are many. We divide those through a system of mathematical relationships in the scales we use in Western music (on octave doubles the frequency, for example).
ReplyDeleteThe theme is just WILD animals playing PITCHes on instruments.
Can someone explain how “Most common vowel sounds in English” is SCHWAS? Do I have to be a native speaker to get it? I’m afraid I’m missing something obvious here…
ReplyDeleteJust Google SCHWA and voila!
DeleteI just saw Rex's enlargements of the drawings. Wow -- I can actually see the instruments now!
ReplyDeleteHere's what I thought I saw, sort of, in the paper:
A crab poking a stick between a pair of front wheels (18A)
A seal next to a singing cat (24A)
A duck [sic] looking through a telescope (34A)
A bird tugging on a long, coiled-up worm (51A)
(Don't ask.)
Don’t mind the concept of pictograms but they seem “too on the nose” (unimaginative; over-literal; lacking nuance) to be considered clever.
ReplyDeleteMake it more like the old Concentration TV game show rebuses using the simple artwork available.
Say a drawing of ant and a tick with the clue of “caper” (ANTIC).
Show a stinging insect and a guy sewing and you get the ever popular answer, BEETAYLOR.
Just depicting a harp next to a seal isn’t clever enough. And the alt answers for those still running Windows 95 are impossible!
Gaza was inappropriate.
ReplyDeleteI found the picture clues to be annoying. SEEDED TOURNAMENT? What is Doordie? Place for soap was cute (when I finally got it). The only clue I liked was ETC for "more quickly." On the other hand, I'm happy it wasn't a REBUS Thursday :)
Oh - 'DO OR DIE' (embarrassed)
ReplyDelete@RP: Maybe HORNTOAD, then? It's kinda a local phrasin we have for horned lizards, tho.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely luv the illustrated puz angle. Have done that with several runtpuzs, in the past. Altho M&A's fave illustrated runtpuz featured identifyin which animal took each pictured poop -- not a likely NYTPuz theme. Have also had some runtz with primitive M&A drawins in em, fwiw.
Was really into this puz's cluin, right outta the chute. TIP/TEASHOP gets U off to a nice, subtly-clued start.
Also enjoyed fillins such as: POWERBAR. NOIDEA. ORBITAL. SCENERY. NAILEDIT. FIERCE. DOOR-DIE. And, great RECESS clue.
no-knows included: ZAATAR/CATAN. LAHIRI. COR. PIA.
staff weeject pick could be lotsa different stuff. The 3-letter no-knows above, f'rinstance. Or TIP. Or ATA or ETE. But M&A'll go with ETC, on account of its funky ?-marker clue.
Thanx for the fun with pics, Ms. Datta darlin. Good job. Those were really superb drawins … did U do these, or did a NYT artist end up doin em? Anyhoo, keep up the illustrations … we can always argue about which puzday they should land on. [ad infinitum]
Masked & Anonymo3Us
**gruntz**
LAHIRI crossing AGEE and HECHE is just ugly. I’m not familiar with any of these three people. Guessed the second E in AGEE because I know that’s a last name, and took basically a shot in the dark with the H in LAHIRI/HECHE, because H just seemed the likeliest letter. Thankfully escaped a DNF. Really unpleasant way to finish a solve, though. Tsk tsk.
ReplyDeleteHo-hum. Another silly game Thursday that belongs on the comics page along with Jumble and Boggle. NO DICE IN A TUB on the AARE.
ReplyDeleteI'm with Lewis re the theme and revealer.
ReplyDeleteThe reveal can be taken at least two ways: They were wild animals and the pitches of the notes they produced may have been wild.
I liked seeing "cor" Anglais. for me it's always a nice extra when there are other answers related to the theme.
"More quickly" made me smile when I realized the answer.
I felt foolish for taking so long to to fill in deicer since deicer is something I've been using a lot of this winter- and every winter.
Never heard of zaatar, nor of Catan so had to google to be sure I had that right.
I had teabags before teashop but orbital told me it had to change.
Liked the pictures
Like th picture clues and did not find them too easy as I'd forgotten about harp seals and fiddler crabs so needed some crosses to get them. Only trumpeter swan came immediately.
I understand Rex's questioning of the clue for RECESS and yet that was my favorite clue/answer pair in the puzzle. After I smiled at the answer, I looked at the clue again and tried to get a meaning beyond the puzzle answer and couldn’t. Perhaps the delight was just in the juxtaposition of play and pause. In any case, I decided to take my enjoyment where I could and moved on.
ReplyDeleteI was glad to be able to make sense of the pictures today; I often fail to see tiny drawings like that for what they represent but these today were very clear. I did note the oddness of HORNBILL compared to the others but, shrug.
Thanks, Esha Datta.
Just read Nancy's comments and I"m astonished. Were there two different versions of the drawings.?
ReplyDeleteThey were clear and attractive in my puzzle, both online and printed out..
Too easy for a Thursday, except for the ZAATAR/CATAN crossing. Everything else fell thanks to fair crossings.
ReplyDeleteThis is the third day in a row we've had "ANEW"...
ReplyDeleteThis PITCH was way outside and in the dirt for me. I was reminded of this directive from Submit Your Crossword Puzzles to The New York Times guidelines: "Themes should be fresh, interesting, narrowly defined and consistently applied throughout the puzzle. For example, if the theme includes a particular kind of pun, then all the puns should be of that kind." [emphasis mine].
ReplyDeleteSeems like these themers dropped the ball in that context. Rex mentions most of these but the ones that really clanked off the back of the rim (if I may mix my metaphors) for me were the two instruments vs two instrument players; one specific vs one generic instrument (HARP vs HORN); and the MISHAP de résistance, CRAB, SEAL, SWAN and then....BILL?! Yeah, this one rated a NO DICE in my book.
Was an opportunity missed to cross clue SPEEDO with ONESIE?
I like the Lyre Seal.
ReplyDeleteEasy aside from ZAATAR which I've never heard of. Had the entire puzzle solved other than the T and just started plugging in letters until it worked. I was looking for an organizational acronym for ___ discount. I even googled "ATA discount" after I finished because I had no idea who/what ATA was. Then I realised it read at a discount. Dumb of me, but even a dumber clue.
ReplyDeleteThere were too many you can't even guess at if you don't know: aare, zaatar, agee, lahiri. Seems like there we either those or ones like bam, aww, hit, at a, hrs, etc.
ReplyDeleteZero payoff anywhere. Puzzles like these make me not want to do crosswords anymore.
Sorry I'm so late, but could PITCHES be a mispronunciation of Pictures?
ReplyDeleteWhat a total waste of Leap Day falling on a Thursday. Going into this I was giddy for a whacko bizarre-o clever-as-hell break-all-the-rules Thursday-level Leap Day theme. And we got animal pictograms. Just astonishingly bad. Rethink-my-subscription bad.
ReplyDeleteThis is what "state of decline" looks like.
@Lewis - I was sure you would comment on SCHWA, your favorite vowel sound ;-)
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this puzzle - in my wheelhouse, I guess. And nice to have actual rebuses on Rebus Thursday :-) And I was glad no one PITCHEd a fit about NODICE crossing NOIDEA!
Just watched a scene in a movie where kids were excited to see CATAN on the board game shelf - all these serendipitous moments in life help with crossword solving ;-)
For those of you who haven’t read interpreter of maladies, it is a wonderful collection of short stories. Highly recommend.
ReplyDeleteThis leap year baby was hoping for a Leap Year-themed puzzle! On a Thursday of all days! Alas, maybe in 2028, when it will fall on a (much less promising) Tuesday.
ReplyDeleteI want to thank you @Lewis - not only do I so enjoy the positivity of your comments every day, but they’re also the only reason I knew SCHWAS, so thank you!
ReplyDelete12D Zaatar crossing with 26A Catan: Classic Natick! Who’s on board?
ReplyDeletebtw, Thank you, Rex, for the delightful Lang Lang recording of Saint Saëns! Beautiful! Now I want that CD!
ReplyDeleteCrossing Gaza, where a population is being deliberately starved to death, with Zaatar is pretty gross but definitely on point for the Times.
ReplyDeleteI don’t understand how Rex could call this easy when it was a DNF for him. I found the NE part of the puzzle very hard. Had no idea how to spell ZAATAR (words that successively repeat vowels are always tough for me) even though I’m a of Syrian Jewish descent, took me forever to parse out ALBANY for some reason, and never heard of CATAN. But I completed it without a DNF!
ReplyDeleteIt’s days later and I’m still annoyed about the cluing for DEPOSE. To DEPOSE someone is to *require them to testify*; the one who testifies is DESPOSEd. It’s like cluing “HAIL A CAB” with “transport passengers by car.” It’s evocative - but completely backwards! Gah!
ReplyDeleteThis one should not have gotten the green light. HORNBILL does not follow the animal-instrument pattern. What happened to the NYT crossword standards?
ReplyDeleteAlternative to HORNBILL. BASSDRUM
ReplyDeleteOf course, in my paper there were no drawings. I had the worded clues listed by OFNP. And I didn't think it was so hard. True, 12 d was a Huh?!, but the crosses were forced. I didn't know about the hexagonal island, but with CAT_N already in...well, I HAVE heard of CATAN, even though I never played it.
ReplyDeleteA Thursday with no rebi, no kind of subtle trickery, seems almost like a vacation. A theme, WILD animals making musical PITCHES, and four examples of such. Fine. Just doesn't belong in this slot. A few "?" clues to add some...ZAATAR, but nothing too deep. NAILEDIT. Par.
Wordle par.
TIP: ANEW DEPOSE
ReplyDeleteU IN A SPEEDO? NODICE.
ISWEAR that ORDER'S the rub:
U ARRIVE to FIDDLER nice,
'TIS DOORDIE INATUB.
--- HORNBILL HECHE
I first heard of CATAN on yesterday's local news; apparently a number of MN Twins players are into it. Today's the home opener, if they lose the opener how can they serve BEER?
ReplyDeleteWordle birdie.
Easy week continues. Probably should have ran on a Tuesday. I enjoyed the cute little pictograms, but they definitely made the puzzle a lot easier to do. My only complete unknowns were the author Lahiri, but all the crosses were gimmes, at least for me, and zaatar , which
ReplyDeleteWant to simply repost @BlueStater's comment from back on Feb. 29th: "12D/26A was the worst Natick I ever recall seeing in an NYT puzzle. ZAATAR? CATAN?"
ReplyDeleteAs a result, a DNF of what was otherwise an easy Thursday effort - and my paper was even kind enough to print the drawings.
The pictures worked out just right for me: I solved the puzzle with words only, and then came here to see the cute pictures.
ReplyDeleteOur paper runs the NYT puzzles 6 weeks late, no theme in the title, no pictures, so I was one of those who solved the theme on words alone. Didn’t know Lahiri at all. It was a fun puzzle even though not a true Thursday.
ReplyDelete