Friday, March 15, 2024

Swing-era bandleader ___ Cates / FRI 3-15-24 / Dom maker / Region of Italy that lends its name to a pepper / Words from a paper pusher? / Bill originating in Texas / Vegetable whose name comes from Igbo / Bacteriologist Walter who conducted Yellow Fever research / Fish named for a weapon / Opposite of rubicund

Constructor: Daniel Grinberg

Relative difficulty: Medium if you knew PHILLIS WHEATLEY, Challenging if (like me) you didn't


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: PHILLIS WHEATLEY (17A: "On Being Brought From Africa to America" writer, 1768) —

Phillis Wheatley Peters, also spelled Phyllis and Wheatly (c. 1753 – December 5, 1784) was an American author who is considered the first African-American author of a published book of poetry. Born in West Africa, she was kidnapped and subsequently sold into slavery at the age of seven or eight and transported to North America, where she was bought by the Wheatley family of Boston. After she learned to read and write, they encouraged her poetry when they saw her talent.

On a 1773 trip to London with the Wheatleys' son, seeking publication of her work, Wheatley met prominent people who became her patrons. The publication in London of her Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral on September 1, 1773, brought her fame both in England and the American colonies. Prominent figures, such as George Washington, praised her work. A few years later, African-American poet Jupiter Hammon praised her work in a poem of his own. (wikipedia)

• • •

[Where my brain went when asked
for an Italian pepper]
This is a solid grid, but the editing felt off. The biggest issue for me (in fact the only answer I really remember now) was the way the puzzle handled PHILLIS WHEATLEY. She's a worthy answer, but when you have a name that a lot of people are simply not going to know, you have to be careful how you cross it. My main gripe with crossword editors, across the board, is that they aren't careful enough with their proper nouns. No matter what sphere or time period they come from, names that are not universally famous can be dangerous—they're gimmes for some and total blanks for others, and so already have the potential to create a very divided solving experience. So it's crucial that the less famous, and the more unconventionally spelled, the name is, the more you have to ensure that every cross is fair. To be clear, I think it's great to put names in puzzles that have never been there before, names that maybe aren't household, but that are of clear historical and artistic significance, which definitely applies to PHILLIS WHEATLEY. And I have no way of knowing exactly how many people know her name, but if I, who have spent my whole life around teachers of poetry, have only a dim recollection of her name, then it seems reasonable to think that some significant number of solvers won't know her at all, and so ... crossing her with a "Swing-era bandleader" who's even *more* obscure than she is? I do not understand that decision (5D: Swing-era bandleader ___ Cates). I also don't understand putting PHILLIS WHEATLEY right next to the answer describing what she is, but giving us nothing but a crossreference clue for help (15A: 17-Across, for one). If I don't know PHILLIS WHEATLEY, then I sure as hell don't know she's a POET (I can tell she's a writer from her clue, but POET, no). Her name also crosses a region of Italy / pepper I've barely heard of (11D: Region of Italy that lends its name to a pepper), an absolutely brutal clue for AT HOME (8D: Familiar (with)), and a flat-out incorrect clue for ESP (19D: Unlikely gift)—that "gift" is not "unlikely," it's nonexistent, please stop cluing ESP like it's real. There's also the OLE / RAH dilemma up there (12D: Scream for a team), and then a clue on ROSTRA (ugly word) that had me writing in RISERS (21A: Campaign platforms, perhaps). That whole area from OPIE to CALABRIA was a Saturday+-level hornet's nest. The rest of the puzzle was pretty standard, difficulty-wise.  So you can add "unevenness" to the problems created by not handling PHILLIS WHEATLEY crosses skillfully. 


The worst editorial decision was the absolute lie of a clue on CARELESS MISTAKE (32A: Forgetting to finish this clue, for examp). The attempted cuteness is absolutely murdered by the dishonesty. Nobody "Forgot" To Finish This Clue, It Is Unfinished By Design, There Is No Mistake At All, Let Alone A Careless One. Honestly, if you'd just changed "this" to "a," or went with something like [Forgetting to proofread a crossword clue, for exmpale?], you'd have something. But because you said "this" clue, boo, no. There are no CARELESS MISTAKEs in "this" clue. "This" clue knows exactly what it's doing, which makes the clue disingenuous, which makes it cutesy, as opposed to cute.


The grid itself has a lot of sparkle. Not big on three EXTRAs in a row (two is the gold standard, three seems excessive) (10D: Words from a paper pusher?), and ESPRESSO MARTINIs are an abomination, but REWRITES HISTORY, HALFTIME REPORTS, those have some pop. As usual, bizspeak and commercial stuff don't do for me what they apparently do for other people, so HITRATE (27A: Proportion of customers that make a purchase, in business-speak) and UBERED (36A: Got taken for a ride, in a way) were more EWW! than OLE! for me. The clue on TAX TIP has kind of grown on me, though, in the past half hour or however long it's been since I finished solving (47A: Bit of deductive reasoning?). And I'd totally forgotten about LIV TYLER's existence, so even though I think the "LOTR" franchise is a bloated self-important mess, I enjoyed seeing her name pop up (18D: "The Lord of the Rings" actress). 


Non-PHILLIS WHEATLEY-related trouble spots:
  • 47D: Common additive to white rice (TALC) — wow, you got me there. I had SALT. Why is there TALC in the rice? To make it whiter? Hang on ... huh. I guess it was (and in some places still is) used in processing the rice, as a preservative, though a 1981 NYT article on the subject says that "While processors say that talc helps preserve rice, consumer groups argue that the coating is merely cosmetic" (TALC + glucose somehow makes the rice look shiny). Looks like TALC is no longer a "common" additive in US rice, but some imported rices still contain it. There were health concerns about TALC as a possible risk factor for stomach cancer, but studies don't seem to have borne that out.
  • 56A: iPhone command (SYNC) — totally legit, but because of the TALC fiasco ... I wanted SEND, but then I had SALT instead of TALC, so I went with SENT (!?!), which is not a "command," so I just had holes down there for a while: S-N- for SYNC and -AL- for TALC.
  • 49D: *grimaces, sticks out tongue* ("EWW!") — tried recreating this face as I was solving, in hopes that it would lead me to some kind of feeling, but it didn't help. Also, I had MELTS instead of WILTS (52A: Can't stand the heat, say), so my first thought for this "grimace" was OMG, which seemed (and WAS) wrong.
  • 22A: Ground rule? (NO TV)JEEZ, that is a stttrreettcchh, and absurdly hard to boot (I guess the idea is that when you are "grounded" you might be subject to the "rule" "NO TV!"). If you want to put a "?" clue on otherwise bad short fill, it's really gotta land.
  • 29A: More trifling (MERER) — how would you even use this "word"? A comparative adjective? No. I got a bunch of crosses and then considered this "word" but then laughed at the idea because of how much of a non-word MERER is. Then it ended up being correct. MERER MERER on the wall, what's the dumbest answer of all? MERER ERSE is not a place I'd willingly revisit.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. from the OED’s June 2021 update:
Our earliest example of to do a person dirty, meaning to treat someone unfairly or badly, comes from evidence given in a court case heard in Texas in 1879, while to put the blast on someone (referring to criticism or reprimand) is first recorded in a story by Damon Runyon published in 1929, with the now more familiar to put someone on blast popularized by Eminem in his 2000 song The Real Slim Shady.
P.P.S. another editing issue


[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

152 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:28 AM

    Had PHILLIP for 17-across like I assume most people did, Decks & Floors as KOP or KOS makes no sense either way to me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:28 AM

      KOs = knock-outs (when you deck and floor someone)

      Delete
  2. I was surprised @Rex wasn't harsher on MERER, which is emphatically not a word. The right half of the puzzle, and particularly the SE, was extremely tough for me. I also didn't know PHILLIS WHEATLEY, but thankfully OPIE didn't cross the first I, or I would have thought it was OPYE (as a last name, probably just as reasonable) and likely wouldn't have finished.

    Odor before REEK and Siri (technically it could be a command because you say, "Siri") to start it--whatever. I figured it out when I realized it wasn't "my STORY" but "HISTORY" that was rewritten. Overall I agree with @Rex--it was challenging and not a ton of fun for me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous6:51 AM

    difficult, even after googling PHILLISWHEATLEY. too many non words.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Deck or Floor = knock out as in boxing or to wow someone. Thus KOS.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Unfortunately, the early indicators point to the new interim editor relying heavily on trivia (and arcana) to toughen up the grids. In addition to the tough grid-spanning poet that even Rex wasn’t familiar with we get lgbo (no shit!), OPIE Cates, SHILOH Tennessee, whatever laphroaig is that is apparently flavored with peat (sounds delicious), ROSTRA and ERSE - note that all of that was served up before we even got down to the equator. It’s a very small sample size, so nothing conclusive at this point, but there is an early indication that the late week puzzles may be pretty brutal for a while.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:15 AM

      Laphroaig is a pretty famous scotch

      Delete
    2. Laphroig is 26D ERSE...a whiskey. It's an aquired taste... To me, it tastes like a wet ashtray. My whiskey palate is obviously not refined enough.

      Delete
    3. My Name9:48 AM

      That extreme in peatiness of its taste smells as pure carbolic acid to me. Disinfecting yourself may be one of the functions of a strong drink, but making the experience smelling realistically is a bit over the board

      Delete
    4. Anonymous7:57 AM

      Laphroaig is a whisky, not a whiskey. From the Gaelic “uisge” for water.

      Delete
  6. Looks like Joel Fagliano is the interim editor while Shortz is on medical leave. I agree with Rex about the obscure OPIE clue/crossing. NW was a complete blank, and OPIE (Mayberry boy) would have been a big help. Slightly annoying, but I'm willing to cut Joel some slack. Enjoyed the rest of the puzzle, anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Had fun with this - agree that the POET was obscure but it is late week. I use CALABRIAn chiil paste on my pizzas - brings the heat. EXTRA is truly unfortunate in an otherwise clean grid. To eat up that much real estate with such an inane entry is rough. I liked the misdirect for NO TV.

    Goin’ out WEST

    SHILOH, RED APPLE, MASON JAR are all solid. MERER is off - took me all the crosses just to get that.

    Playfully cluing - well filled for an enjoyable Friday morning solve.

    Vehicle

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sun. Volt
      About merer
      (BTW autocorrect wanted meter just now)
      When I realized rarer made no sense, I thought, this is the Times puzzle. How about merer. I hated it as much as everyone else though.
      Otherwise, liked the puzzle.

      Delete
  8. I'll add another editing gaffe to the mix...
    "Proportion of customers that make a purchase..."
    Answer should be ALLOFTHEM. You're only a customer if you make a purchase.

    Otherwise, enjoyed the puzzle. Like Rex, the NE was really tough.
    Happy to learn the story of Phillis Wheatley. It's a good day when i can learn something interesting and relevant.
    Thank Mr. Grinberg.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Scenario: you work in retail. Every person who walks through the door may reasonably be referred to as a customer. Don’t be obtuse.

      Delete
    2. Also unfamiliar with PHILLIS WHEATLEY and OPIE Cates. This was a challenging Friday, and I *do* know CALABRIA, Laphroaig, and the slang term BOPS. Was worried about a DNF due to trouble in the NW when the rest of the grid was filled out. Thankfully, BOPS -> BASH -> HALFTIME -> OSHA got me enough to parse the name PHILLIS. Phew.

      Delete
  9. Anonymous7:40 AM

    I also found it weird that the ABLE as clued is absolutely not a homophone of ABEL. I’m all for pun clues, but no one ever uses “ground” for that sort of punishment—or at least, I can’t think of a usage like that at the moment. It’s “grounded,” as in “My parents grounded me,” “You’re grounded,” “She got grounded.” All of those would sound a like a far more unpleasant punishment if you used the word “ground” for “grounded.”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:10 PM

      Anonymous 7:40 AM
      About Abel & Able
      To be okay, it is not required that ALL English speakers pronounce these words the same, just that a lot do It most assuredly it is the case here.
      To me both are long a followed by a schwa.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous4:33 PM

      I don't love that clue either, but "ground" sounds pretty natural to me in many contexts: "I'll ground you if you stay out late again!" "Do you want me to ground you?" "Did your parents ground you?"

      Delete
  10. Anonymous7:42 AM

    Also, I knew PHILLIS WHEATLEY and finishing still took me 30 minutes.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Brutal for me - I’m not crossword expert, but been doing them long enough that I rarely seek help via the NYT app cheats and even more rarely give up and ask it to fill in the puzzle for me. After a long time staring at this thing, I had 5 answers. Was surprised to find that my 5 were right, but was fully stumped and, after using assistance to try to work my way through, I was tired of constantly running the alphabet on unknown squares so I threw in the towel.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tough for me too, @Burghman 7:46 AM, and I have been solving for 60+ years! My issue today was that I could not seem to get on our constructors’ wavelengths. I knew PHILLIS WHEATLEY but misspelled her name and the NW nearly did me in. I finally understood the clue for 1A by inferring (a kind of) “put on blast” - head smack. About at PECOS Bill, I warmed up and went down the W side and back up.

      Delete
  12. Having solved two crosses and thus confident in the middle two letters of 15a, I confidently solved "Boer" since that would comport with an African themed clue, right? Sheesh.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:07 AM

      I mean, only vaguely, tbh? The Boers were white colonists. This writer was implied black from the clue.

      Delete
  13. Anonymous7:58 AM

    Not at all a fan of this one. Too much obscure stuff. At the very least it should be a Saturday, but even then, it‘d be a no from me, dawg.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Andy Freude7:58 AM

    Well, I guess I’m in the minority who knew Phillis Wheatley right away, though I had trouble spelling her name correctly, and the problem vowel was crossing an unbelievably obscure bandleader. Opie Cates is someone I never heard of, and I’m a historian of American music, so I’d love to hear from people familiar with him/her/them. Why, oh why, did this seem like the time not to go with the standard Mayberry clue? An unforced Natick, for sure.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:18 PM

      Andy Freud
      About Opie/ Phillis cross. Didn’t know Opie. I happened to know how to spell her name. Think I read something about her recently.
      But I think you and Rex have a point that is arguably a natick.

      Delete
  15. Wanderlust8:06 AM

    I remembered PHILLIS WHEATLEY from the African American History museum in DC, although I thought it was the more conventional “Y” spelling. But SHILOH was a gimme. My problem in that region was the BASH / BOPS crossing. I had to run the alphabet (passing B, obviously). I don’t think of a “BOP” as a catchy tune, I think of it as a verb meaning dance in a sort of up-and-down way (or hit on the head). And I still don’t get the clue “put on blast” for BASH. Any help?

    OTOH, some wonderful clues for SELFIE, TAX TIP, KOS and EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA (though I agree with Rex that it’s usually just two - why doesn’t “read all about it” fit after the two EXTRAs?). Wondering which will be in Lewis’ best-of on Monday.

    Also agree with the criticism of MERER, and I thought the same as your follower on ABLE and ABEL, but gave it a pass after thinking about it. ABLE as clued is pronounced “uh-ble,” but the ABEL clue refers to the answer, not the clue, and if you look at the word ABLE, you would pronounce it “ay-ble” not “uh-ble.” I did think it a little odd to clue ABEL as just a name rather than specifically the mythical victim in Genesis. Can’t think of anyone with that name, other than in Spanish, but someone will surely supply one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. For both BASH and BOP, I imagine it's helpful if you are under 40 or live on social media (I'm well over 40 but I have an 18yo daughter and I work at a university, so...). If you put someone on blast, you're criticizing them pretty harshly – like a scathing Yelp review – so you're BASHing them. I've heard The Kids say a good song is a BOP for a while now, so that wasn't too bad.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:12 AM

      +1. Not immediate drop-ins, but easy with some crosses, for me (45yo with 9yo kids)

      Delete
  16. If and when Will Shortz returns, will never use “Eat My Shortz” as a Bart catchphrase again.

    Maybe “Shut your PI, Joel”. Yesterday’s was too easy/obvious/derivative a Thursday; today’s was way too obscure in answers and cluing.

    Who knew crossword editing was important? JEEZ, MYEYEs hurt - this REEKs!

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anonymous8:13 AM

    Thought the clue for OPIE was a creative new way to clue OBOE, so got hopelessly lost in that intersection. No help from the other crosses for the reasons already indicated.

    Is the 2x WRITE considered a dupe? Once in REWRITEHISTORY and once in the clue for PW...I would have avoided it.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Yeah, definitely tough, which is fine, but some really obscure fill, combined with some wonky cluing and unfair crosses, didn’t lend itself to a very enjoyable solve.

    Bottom half easier for me, mainly because the coffee cocktail went right in, unlike the poet up top.

    Agree with @SouthsideJohnny on the interim editing as something to keep an eye on.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Tough, tough puzzle.

    The number of times I put in and took back out LIV TYLER is humbling (put in five, took out four). I also put in and took back out at least once HIT RATE, SHILOH, OSHA, and the 'MARTINI' portion of ESPRESSO MARTINI.

    I don't understand 'Put on blast' for BASH.

    MERER is a valid Scrabble word, but I agree it's hard to imagine it every being used. Meanwhile they still refuse to acknowledge REAIRED.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous8:36 AM

    Had lIMP and lAYS instead of the W and I still think it works as much as some of the other clues did. Ah well.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I feel like PHILLIS WHEATLEY is really having a moment right now. I had never heard of her until a few months ago, when my son's fourth grade class did a unit on her, and then took a field trip to see a new play about her ("Phillis in Boston," at the Old South Meeting House in Boston, MA). But yeah, the crosses on that were brutal. I'm sure we all can think of two fairer clues for OPIE right off the top of our heads.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous8:40 AM

    Strange… I see Phillis Wheatley’s name constantly these days and assumed she was now common knowledge. I wasn’t sure it was her by the clue, but a couple crosses and it fell into place. I must read completely different English lit than OFL. That said, I agree the Opie cross was unfair, and god help the person who didn’t know Wheatley or Shiloh. Also, “rubicund”???

    ReplyDelete
  23. That whole north side was brutal because of Phillis. I managed to cross up WHEATLEY at least, but I had POSTGAME Report instead of HALFTIME Report, so that was a problem.

    But the SE was utterly broken. JEEZ. High scrabble value on that, plus veeeeeeeeeeeery vague cluing, meant it could not fall. I got ARSE, but the rest was a disaster.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Anonymous8:42 AM

    Trouble everywhere for me. Wanted ___thestory, post game reports, risers, salt, etc. I also think Phillis and Shiloh crossing was a little unfair because of the ambiguity with ‘y’. Hardest Friday in memory for me.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous8:42 AM

    Had the OE and the cross-reference to someone from Africa and wrote in BOER. Seemed reasonable and OBIE could have been a bandleader but was death to the solve.

    ReplyDelete

  26. Challenging for me, because as @Rex predicted PHILLIS WHEATLEY (20A) was a WOE. I had to check my calendar to make sure it was Friday and not Saturday.

    Overwrites:
    1D: pOPS before BOPS
    4D: coLor commEntary -- and very proud of that -- before HALFTIME REPORT
    90D: malT before PEAT
    12D: rah before OLE
    30A: o YEah before MY EYE
    47A: TAX cut before TAX TIP
    52A: meLTS before WILTS

    47D: If they really put talc in white rice I'd never eat sushi again

    @Tita: Bravo for catching ALL OF THEM!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sue is a verb7:28 PM

      Talc is used in short grain to polish it. My Japanese MIL taught me to rinse the rice before cooking, many times until the rinse water was clear. In sushi shops, washing rice is the first job of new chefs. You can eat that sushi! Probably doesn’t hurt to give all rice a swish before cooking…

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:16 AM

      HighlIghtsreelS, for me

      Delete
  27. Not much going on at first but Acrostic experience had me try REPORTS and MISTAKE as partials and boy did that help. Also sort of knew CALABRIA, that plus STY stirred the memory somehow and up popped PHILLISWHEATLEY, which took some spelling tinkering and turned out to be right. I knew LIVTYLER instantly but thought it couldn't be right because it led to something ending in V, NOTV, har.

    Hand up for MERER getting a big EWW.

    @Wanderlust-There's a local car dealer named ABEL who makes (too) frequent appearances on our local station. Can make you wish for NOTV.

    Nice chewy Friday DG. Dug Grokking some of the more sideways clues, and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Everything Rex wrote is 100% on target, and he didn’t even mention Phillis Wheatley crossing Liv Tyler, neither of whom i have heard. Nonetheless, I loved the puzzle. The reason is the almost complete absence of crosswordese. Recent Times puzzles I have done have had corners filled with the stuff (Rex complained about it too). With the exception of OLE and EWW, there is none here. It was so refreshing to solve. And despite some obscure names, not a bear for me to solve once I got a foothold. Congratulations to the constructor for avoiding junk. More constructors should try as hard as he did to do this.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous9:00 AM

    Ground it out and enjoyed it! Crosses for the poet were tough, but in the end were the only ones that made sense (Although I kept drifting toward PHYLLISSCHAFLEY , whose name surely induces hives in OFL). Clued more for Saturday, as discussed above Double digit time, and only the EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA gimme saved me from worse
    Besides learning a new poet, I was startled to discover VIETNAM is such a big coffee producer. Amazing country

    ReplyDelete
  30. “Put on blast” means “bash”? In what universe? Ditto for catchy tunes being “bops.” Worst corner for me.

    I could get all the other weird fill but these answers could not reasonably be substituted for the clues in any conversation I can imagine having.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:18 AM

      In slang for at least 25 years?

      Delete
  31. Anonymous9:10 AM

    I had an eerie feeling that Rex would not like the clue for ESP.

    ReplyDelete
  32. I knew PH(Y)LLIS WHEATLEY immediately. This was still absolutely brutal. 19:58 with the husband. And I'll join the chorus of laments about OPIE Cates --- not only have I never heard of him, neither has RateYourMusic. Wiki tells me that he was the namesake for the OPIE we've all heard of --- that could've been worked into the clue with a minimum of effort, no?

    I also went for COLOR COMMENTARY before HALFTIME REPORTS. And SMYRNA before SHILOH, because I spelled PHILLIS with a Y and some of my family is from Smyrna, TN.

    The reason you haven't heard of VIETNAM as a coffee producer is probably that 97% of its output is Coffea robusta, as opposed to Coffea arabica, which is usually the species your local coffee shop serves, and the one that is usually found in bags with country names on them.

    The ROSTRA was a sort of pulpit in Roman times, I guess? Add it to the list.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:32 PM

      Rostrum is a singular raised platform, ROSTRA is the Latin plural.

      Delete
  33. The BASH/BOP cross was my downfall. I've never heard either used as clued. Finagled the rest together but took a stab at Pops/Pash. Wrong.

    That corner - the only thing that fit was Phyllis, but I didn’t know her, and then it was a different spelling. SELFIE and NOTV were clever, but I didn’t know the location of SHILOH, so Tennessee didn’t help me. Sorry TN. Took a guess on OPIE.

    TALC? No wonder recipes recommend you wash rice!

    ReplyDelete
  34. Hey All !
    Nigh impossible here without cheating. My goodness, as two of the clues stated

    Hopefully all the "I wish the puzs were more difficult" people got what they wanted.

    Stuck everywhere, resorted to Goog and Check Puzzle feature. Also, flat out Reveal Word on a couple of the threes. JEEZ.

    Good Themeless overall, just the ole brain said, "Nah, not today." Silly brain.

    Wondering how many had REWRITEtHeSTORY first. (Me me!)

    Made it to Friday. Now just to get through the day. Har.

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinNOTV 😁

    ReplyDelete
  35. This was an extremely difficult solve. I've never heard of PHILLISWHEATLEY and while CALABRIA is familiar to me the eponymous peppers are not. I don't mind difficulty like that. What gets under my skin is the clued by a Martian obscurity used for BASH and where but in a crossword does anyone refer to a "catchy tune" as a BOP. I had to hold my nose to fill those two in because of the REEK.

    You could say this puzzle was EXTRAEXTRAEXTRA hard. With only scattered answers and much frustration I checked the time and I was at 38 minutes. Normally that would be a difficult completion time. When I got te congrats iI was at 1:16 so it did start to move but very slowly.

    yd -0. QB6

    ReplyDelete
  36. Anonymous9:40 AM

    Phillis Wheatley: no problem. Talc on rice? BIG problem

    ReplyDelete
  37. MERER my beloathed, hopefully never see that again (I probably will). Clean finish, but had a tough time breaking this one in: stubbornly empty grids like the one I stared at this morning reliably induce a kind of "I'm going to fail this test" panic familiar from college.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Anonymous9:46 AM

    First name that came to mind was PHYLLIS SCHLAFLY which would have undoubtedly triggered Rex!

    ReplyDelete
  39. Seems that if it’s someone (or something) Rex doesn’t know, e.g. Phillis Wheatley, then it’s “too obscure.”

    ReplyDelete
  40. I had a vague memory of WHEATLEY but for some reason it was Whillis Wheatley in my head, I guess cuz of the alliteration, and the BASH/BOPS thing did nothing to help.Figured "Put on blast" was some kind of slang but it meant nothing to me and BOPS as a term for "Catchy tunes" is way dated--if only I'd remembered the Ramones tune "Blitzkrieg Bop," but of course they were being deliberately retro with the word even back then--so that corner had me stuck at the end. Not technically a Natick but pretty close. Poo.

    Mostly I enjoyed the puzzle though. Love these ones that you just can't get a toe-hold in anywhere and then one clue unlocks the whole thing--or almost does anyway. By the end of my first pass I had a floating cloud of "maybes" and very little fill (42D was a gimme but not a lot else) until 35D MOET popped the champagne cork and the misty maybes condensed out and rained to earth all over the grid. Fun! Except that dang NW corner.

    ReplyDelete
  41. I am among the “very tough” ranks this morning. Names especially were a struggle, starting of course, with the unknown POET. Really LIV TYLER was the only one I felt right AT HOME with.

    High spots: Sharp cleverness of the hints for SELFIE, WEST, NO TV and the three long downs. Lows: Duplicate clues, METIER, ZINES, REEK clued as a noun, and MERER, a cruciverbal abomination.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Ride the Reading10:02 AM

    Level of difficulty seemed a return to more difficult Friday levels of a few years ago. Partly, I'm guessing, down to editing decisions by Joel Fagliano, partly to my not knowing Phillis Wheatley, and partly to the hour at which I solve (around 2a).

    Starting with downs, think only SHILOH, KOS, and maybe STY entered after first pass. Was leaning to RAH for 12D, but didn't enter. So mostly empty space up there - no help on puzzling out 17A.

    South went a bit better, and eventually worked my way back up, though I had REvisitsHISTORY for a while. And balked at MERER, even though four of the letters were in place. Taxis, to my eyes, not TAXIES - though dictionary lists both.

    BOPS and BASH were WOE to me, as clued. Interested to see what Saturday brings.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Am I the only one who learned of the word METIER today, and how to pronounce it? I put it in solely from crosses and was sure it was wrong. Never heard anyone use that ever, and don't recall ever reading it anywhere.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:35 AM

      That word was also new to me. I filled it in from crosses but then looked it up because I assumed something was wrong.

      Delete
  44. Anonymous10:10 AM

    Yesterday played like a Tuesday. Today played like a Saturday. We should start a petition to have OFL appointed Shortz interim replacement. I know , he already has several jobs. But with his energy , it should not be an issue.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:33 AM

      Editing is hard as hell and I am not currently qualified, but thanks ~RP

      Delete
  45. Anonymous10:12 AM

    This one was challenging for me, primarily (as Rex notes) because I didn't know PHILLISWHEATLEY. It ended up feeling like a Friday puzzle from the late 1990s or early 2000s, and that's perfectly okay by me. Sometimes it's nice to have one that you need another cup of coffee for and need to stare at for some time before things start falling into place. That's doubly true when you have the day off!

    ReplyDelete
  46. Whatsername’s comment of the unknown POET made me think Chuck Barris missed an opportunity on The Gong Show.

    the unknown COMIC

    HURRY BACK, WILL! (Even with my newfound strategy of using Autocheck from the start to minimize frustration/time drain, couldn’t crack this ode to obscurity…)

    ReplyDelete
  47. Nice to have a proper challenge again! NW last to fall, and I was half surprised to get the happy music. I remember BOPS from a previous puzzle used this way. (Be)Bop is a jazz style to me. Interestingly, I am way more likely to have a one letter careless mistake earlier in the week.

    A real faithsolve ala Lewis. Very few solid answers starting with acrosses, then downs. SW came into focus first and spread back up and over. Minimal junk & -ese; clues are all a stretch, but ultimately fair.

    Retellsthestory>REWRITESHISTORY.
    sidelineREPORTS were on my broadcast.

    I think ROSTRA is more attractive than ROSTRUM.

    Learned today about TALC on rice, and that ERSE can refer to Scottish as well as Irish, also PHILLISWHEATLEY and OPIE Cates, both of whom I've run across but didn't remember.

    Maybe "this" instead of "a" was an intentional part of the carelessness of the clue.

    JEEZ! For those already complaining about Joel's editing, there is no way we can even have a sense after 2 puzzles of his hand at work. Between constructor, editing team and head editor, that is way too many variables to be able to have an informed opinion. Even if it was demonstrably bad, he's filling in under difficult circumstances, so some benefit of the doubt would be in order.

    Good catch with -ABLE as clued not rhyming with ABEL. Lawyerly defense in that it is 24A as printed that rhymes. That said, rhyming clues should die a quick death - they don't provide enough entertainment to justify the consistent problems with regionalisms, etc.

    A southern acquaintance's dog was named Shiloh. Unless there's some other connection, odd to name it for bloodiest civil war battle. Also, might not go over too well with neighbors since the Union won and turned the tide.

    ReplyDelete
  48. ROSTRA plural of ROSTRUM has a pretty fascinating history. It's from the Latin for "Beak," like a proboscis, which would seem to have nothing to do with the practice of public oratory--why is climbing up on a podium to make a speech expressed as, literally, "Mounting the beak"?--until you find out that the platform you mounted to make a speech in the Roman Senate was ornamented with the ramming prows--the ships' "beaks"--trophies from the defeated navy in the battle at Antium in 338 BC. Nice example of how weird the trail is from modern words back to their original origins can be. Love that stuff....

    ReplyDelete
  49. @Sasha, you reminded me of an article I read (NYer?) about farmers trying to make robusta more palateable for the upscale market. It is much higher in caffeine and is not so environmentally destructive to grow. Kicking Horse is one brand incorporating robusta beans. Also used for most instant coffee brands.

    ReplyDelete
  50. @Casarussell - METIER is one of those words I learned in French, then have since run across in English. Simple pronunciation guide: Meh-tyeh

    ReplyDelete
  51. Anonymous10:31 AM

    Am I the only person who had no idea what PECOS was? I’ve never heard of that or Laphroaig or CALABRIA, so the NW corner was brutal.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:07 PM

      Growing up in Texas you hear a lot about Pecos Bill as a kid. A state legend about a cowboy who lassoed and rode a tornado! Wrote a paper about him in 5th grade. Kind of a Paul Bunyan type figure.

      Delete
  52. Anonymous10:32 AM


    My best wishes to Mr. Fagliano: it's a big job and it obviously takes time to develop a consistent style.

    Mr. Shortz's absence is clearly felt, though. An editor's job (in crosswords as in other types of publishing) is to allow the author's own voice to come through clearly. Similar to the information technology business -- if you don't think about them, they're doing a great job. I'm reminded of Clarence's observation in It's a Wonderful Life:

    "Strange, isn't it? Each man's life touches so many other lives. When he isn't around he leaves an awful hole, doesn't he?"

    Get well, Will. I'll omit the oft-used "soon," though. Take as long as you want. We'll appreciate your return and understand if you'd rather take it easy.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Anonymous10:38 AM

    I miss Will and I hope he recovers and returns soon. He is in my prayers

    ReplyDelete
  54. Anonymous10:43 AM

    90% of my trouble with this puzzle came from confidently writing in sidelInEREPORTS and leaving it there for way too long. I agree the clue for OPIE is unnecessarily obscure, but I think I would’ve got there a lot quicker if I hadn’t botched 4D

    ReplyDelete
  55. R Duke10:53 AM

    Tough one today, especially the top half. I dropped in LIVTYLER but erased it because I didn’t like the V as the last letter (unless it’s a king of Norway). Had “sideline” instead of HALFTIME for my sports broadcast report.

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  56. Anonymous11:03 AM

    I guess I’m super dense, but I still don’t understand MERER? What does MER mean? I tried googling but I only find it as a prefix for mermaid, etc. Trifling is obviously insignificant, I just don’t see how it relates to the sea?

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  57. Anonymous11:05 AM

    Phillip Wheatley is not the name of a diet. Learned something new today.

    ReplyDelete
  58. I agree with some of the criticisms, but I still liked it, was different and challenging at least.

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  59. As I put this one in the rear view mirror, I had to side eye MERER as an entry that exuded ARSE REEK, not to mention ERSE LEEK.

    When my parents wanted to punish me, they'd make me watch only the channel dedicated exclusively to ancient Japanese dance-dramas. I can still hear my dad sternly saying "OK, that does it, Buddy. Noh TV for you."

    That ESPRESSOMARTINI sounds pretty good. I think I'll try one, but hold the espresso, please.

    Wasn't it Cain who said, "ABLE was I ere I saw ABEL"?

    Liked the puzzle. Thanks, Daniel Grinberg.

    P.S. I say lay off Joel Fagliano. He's been asked to step up, probably on short notice. I think he's doing just fine and will get better if this assignment continues.

    ReplyDelete
  60. Tough. This played like a medium-tough Saturday for me. I initially got nowhere in the NW where BASH and BOPS were pretty obscure given their clues. @Rex et. al. PHILLIS, OPIE, and CALABRIA were WOEs for me too and I also had RiSers before ROSTRA plus postgaME before HALFTIME, cLAP before SLAP, ErecT before EXALT…tough!

    MERER just looks weird.

    Nice to have a non whooshy Friday, liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  61. Ugh, this puzzle infuriated me. Not because of difficult clues/words, but just flat-out WRONG.

    "Milquetoast" cannot be WIMP, it would have to be WIMPY because "milquetoast" is an adjective and "wimp" is a noun.

    "More trifling" cannot be MERER because "mere" is a non-comparable adjective. It's like saying "pregnanter" or "marrieder". Either something is "mere" or not.

    "Bit of deductive reasoning" cannot be TAX TIP, because a "tip" is not a form of "reasoning", it's a form of information. Reasoning is an activity, while a tip is not.

    I don't mind a difficult puzzle. I do mind when clues are just flat-out wrong, though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:54 PM

      Teleiotes
      Look it up.
      Milquetoast IS used as a noun
      And usage is the crossword standard. Nothing wrong with that clue.

      Delete
  62. Brutal.
    Hardest Friday for me in a long time. Struggled everywhere but ultimately figured it out. Took almost an hour!

    ReplyDelete
  63. Nice. Learned about talc in rice, the Igbo in Nigeria, Phillis Wheatley, Opie Cates, and Walter Reed. Really fine long answers.

    Calabrian peppers were on Bobby Flay last night while I was struggling to find a foothold on this. Serendipity.

    My dog and I stopped in Pecos, New Mexico, a few weeks ago. Three gas stations. We visited all three since the first two were out of order. And Bailey had a nice poo there. They have a Dairy Queen, but it was 9 am, and vanilla malts are an afternoon-only concoction.

    Speaking of drinking, anytime I see anything related to MARTINI in the puzzle, I know the blog will bring out the smug alcoholics and their "wisdom" ... shaken vs. stirred, gin vs. vodka ... make mine a shot of Everclear in lemon-flavored instant iced tea. We called it a Marist martini in Poughkeepsie in 1985.

    ❤️: [Ground rule?] = NO TV. I adore the phrase MY EYE. Fun dupe: TAXIES TAX TIP.

    😫: [Put on blast] = BASH? MERER. I prefer REEK as a verb and the clue reversed [Smell foul].

    Tee-Hee: [Slush pile editor's favored Irish booty.] ERSE ARSE.

    Uniclues:

    1 The edge of the Grand Canyon on a windy day according to tragic (and unfortunately comical) news reports.
    2 Sent trophy via rental car to crossword-solving mathematicians surviving Rex's critique of the PI DAY puzzle with a modicum of decorum.
    3 "Fer gawd's sake will somebody get that mosquito off Mae."
    4 Don't worry, you'll never make any money doing this.
    5 Step by step procedure for hitting your head on the car door, uttering an expletive, and seeing blood drip down your temple in the rear view mirror.
    6 Elf stalker.
    7 One eschewing espresso martinis preferring to get drunk alone in the basement on cheap champagne.

    1 SELFIE ROSTRA
    2 UBERED HONOR
    3 SLAP WEST! JEEZ!
    4 POP ART TAX TIP
    5 BOPS. CUSS. EWW.
    6 LIV TYLER PEST
    7 AT HOME MOET MAN

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Force xi to giggle and guffaw rather than gyrate and gesticulate. PARE SOFT G USER.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  64. Kate Esq.11:23 AM

    I had to Google three times in the first three rows, which is not usual for a Friday. In addition to Cates and Wheatley I got stuck on Civil War Battles because No TV absolutely made no sense to me until I read the RP write up, and Hit Rate was not in my vocabulary at all. (Rostra also looked wrong and Merer is not a word. Autocorrect doesn’t even recognize it). Felt like a Saturday to me. I’m pretty good at trivia but this was beyond.

    ReplyDelete
  65. Anonymous11:34 AM

    I thought the Ground Rule clue was totally legit. Whenever my siblings and I had friends over, my parents would lay down the ground rules, i.e., “No throwing balls in the house”. Their most favorite ground rule of all was: “No TV until you finished your homework!”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:50 PM

      That … is not how “?” clues work. The clue is not literal, and would not work literally. It’s punning on the idea of being “grounded.”

      Delete
  66. @Anonymous 10:31: Pecos Bill is the name of a fictional cowboy.

    ReplyDelete
  67. Not sure which is MERER, ERSE or ARSE.

    I'll add another plea to Rex's "Please stop using ESP like it's real". Please stop using Freudian clues (stage, fixation, personality, etc.) for 53a ORAL like they're real. Ditto for ANAL. Unless you are trying to REWRITE HISTORY and pretend that Freud's mythology wasn't jettison by mainstream psychiatry and psychology long ago in the previous century.

    ReplyDelete
  68. EasyEd11:39 AM

    EXTRAEXTRAEXTRA toughtoughtough. Wow. Some unusual cluing and words via a new editor. But alternatively MERER could have been clued as Egyptian official who chronicled last days of Khufu, so who am I to complain...I felt the effort of working through this challenge was worth it because of introduction (for me) to PHILLISWHEATLEY.

    ReplyDelete
  69. Uh oh. Probs ahead in our crossword future. This, for those solvers who've criticized Will Shortz, falls into the "Be careful what you wish for" category.

    The OPIE/LIV TYLER/PHILLIS (dig that spelling) WHEATLEY crosses were unforgiveable. But I actually didn't have to cheat on those names, though I thought I might have to. (I did check the meaning of "rubicund" to make sure it meant what I thought it meant, and it did.)

    No, I Naticked on the BASH/BOPS cross. What kind of clue is "put on blast" for BASH? Don't get it at all. I had hASH/hOPS for my answers -- which makes just about as much sense. Those HOPping tunes can be so catchy!

    Come back soon, Will. Please!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great catch @Nancy. I have griped about sloppy editing several times and would have DNFd unless after staring at 1A for a long time, giving up, finishing the puzzle all but BASH, BOP, and OSHA, getting ready to cheat when all of a sudden, I looked once more at the dreadful, no unforgivable clue “put on blast” and thought “a” put on blast or put on “a” blast and got it. My real side eye though was MERER. Nobody says “my ti y share was MERER than yours!” But Joe F. deserves some slack. We’ve all been working out on Will for a very long time!

      Delete
  70. Anonymous11:56 AM

    Bah. Saturday puzzle with way too many too cute clues and obscure proper names. Pass.

    ReplyDelete
  71. I haven't read the comments yet but I promise I will later. I hope I won't repeat what everyone has aid:

    OOF....My first comment. You start me with a BASH and a BOBS. You add in a primo name that I sorta knew from my days of not liking any kind of poetry. Plus how to spell the name....I left that whole area ad went to greener pastures. MOET MASON JAR. Smile...maybe there's hope in this Saturday level puzzle. POP ART CARELESS MISTAKE...Ok, so I'm moving along. Can I do this? Hit and miss? Should I try the puzzle without any help? No. I needed help.

    My slap on my back was getting HALF TIME REPORTS EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA and that god-awful ESPRESSO MARTINI. Good for me.

    VIETNAM and CALABRIA were woes. I wonder if my favorite Peet's coffee come from Vietnam. Calabria I know you...so now you should be known for a pepper? What else is obscure?

    PEAT? does Laphroaig taste peaty?. I don't even know what that is...I know you as a single malt scotch, I know that my brother-in-law likes it. To me it tastes oaky rich smokey. I'll. take my favorite Talisker. At least I can spell that one.


    Well, in conclusion....If you care...I cheated 5 times. I guess I'm getting better at this because I remember not being able to do squat. This felt Saturday difficult and there were parts I really liked. I won't forget PHILLIS or that she's a poet. So there's that.....

    ABLE/ABEL? What is that...

    ReplyDelete
  72. I can't remember disliking a Friday puzzle this much.

    Tough is one thing - not a joy to "try to solve" is another :(

    ReplyDelete
  73. ... and that's putting it nicely

    ReplyDelete
  74. Last semester teaching AmLit is 30 years in the rear view mirror, so while I could recall the book cover image of WHEATLEY….the associated name took a while to surface. Even with that leg up today’s grid BASHed me big time. Not thankfully a true KO, but an abundance of false starts, CARELESS MISTAKES, etc. etc. I was expecting a full pangram from Daniel in this Friday effort since his previous puzzles have tended toward early week grids; good to see him stretching his construction chops and making solver’s lives….umm….challenging?

    ReplyDelete
  75. Bob Mills12:13 PM

    Yuck. Never heard of ESPRESSOMARTINI and tried to fit "Read all about it" into the EXTRAEXTRAEXTRA squares without success. A total bust.

    ReplyDelete
  76. Anonymous12:13 PM

    A better clue for MERER would have been “Like a medical facility that’s part fish & part human, for short”

    ReplyDelete
  77. @Anonymous 10:10 - "We should start a petition to have OFL appointed Shortz interim replacement". I'd say YES YES YES. But then we'd lose his blog (?) Plus I just read his post that he's currently not qualified & editing is hard as hell. Oh well.

    ReplyDelete
  78. I struggled mightly and got through most of the puzzle only to crash and burned in the NE. Thanks for those comments explaining why I couldn't recognize BOPS/BASH as possible solutions (I'm 61).

    ReplyDelete
  79. @Teleiotes (11:14)-- I'm from a generation that heard "milquetoast" used a lot back in the day and it's a noun. "He's a real milquetoast" is how it was used.

    For it to be an adjective, someone would have to be milquetoasty or milquetoastish -- and those words don't exist.

    ReplyDelete
  80. Anonymous12:26 PM

    Funny that mere and merest are obviously cromulent but MERER is just not a thing.

    ReplyDelete
  81. Anonymous12:27 PM

    Some imported rice has talc which often has asbestos. That is why the directions often say to rinse the rice.

    ReplyDelete
  82. BASH and "blast" are slang terms for party, which is said to get "put on". Sooo … ok clue, but dang cruel way to start out yer FriPuz.

    The puzgrid-spannin answers were my friend, today. Got HALFTIMEREPORTS, REWRITESHISTORY, and EXTRAEXTRAEXTRA offa about 2-3 letters each. Not real familiar with PHILLISWHEATLEY, but had definitely bumped into her name before, somewheres out there in my long-ish existence.

    staff weeject pick (of a mererest 8 choices): SIR. Hard to pass up recognizin a self-incriminatin "groaner" clue.

    fave stuff: Jaws of Themelessness. SELFIE & its clue. TAXTIP & its clue. TALC in rice warnin [ptooie]. The JEEZ/TAXTIP pangrammerish uprisin [alas, ultimately missin a Q and a G].

    Thanx for the challenge, Mr. Grinberg dude. Either U have started to write harder than snot clues, or we need our Shortzmeister back. or somesuch. But, in either case, Fani Willis can keep on prosecutin her case.

    Masked & Anonymo1U


    **gruntz**

    ReplyDelete
  83. Y'all don't know who Phillis Wheatley is??
    She should be a more prominent historical figure, even though so many people haven't heard of her, and I'm glad to see her take her place.

    "NoTV" on the other hand, I still don't get, even with Rex's explanation.
    I liked Seder. As a non-Jew, this was an opportunity for me to look up something I vaguely had heard of, and learn about it.

    ReplyDelete
  84. Anonymous12:36 PM

    I think I'm in sync with the think-it-stinks link (wink, wink).

    ReplyDelete
  85. @Casarussell 10:09 – I first heard métier in this exchange in the movie "Chinatown" (Jack Nicholson pronounces it "mee-tee-ay"):

    Gittes: Mrs. Mulwray. I think you're hiding something.
    Evelyn: Well, I suppose I am. Actually, I knew about the affair.
    Gittes: How did you find out?
    Evelyn: My husband.
    Gittes: He told you? [She nods yes] And you weren't the least bit upset?
    Evelyn: I was grateful.
    Gittes: Mrs. Mulwray, you'll have to explain that.
    Evelyn: Why?
    Gittes: Look. I do matrimonial work. It's my métier. When a wife tells me that she's happy that her husband is cheating on her, it runs contrary to my experience.
    Evelyn: Unless what?
    Gittes: She was cheating on him. Were you?

    ReplyDelete
  86. OPIE, the boy in the Andy Griffith show, was named for OPIE Cates. Andy was a fan of his. (wiki)

    ReplyDelete
  87. First of all, it's much too early to be choosing Will Shortz's replacement -- interim or otherwise.

    Second, it's also much too early to be throwing Joel F. under the bus. I thought there were some real problems with this puzzle, but I've thought that about some of WS's puzzles too. Joel has studied at the master's knee, and I'm sure his editing will get better in time. After all, this is only one puzzle!

    But I do have a nominee for that job in what will hopefully be the very, very, very distant future. I've submitted puzzles to Universal and had them accepted and David Steinberg is a joy to work with. He really respects constructors; his editing is minimal but also very smart and helpful when he does suggest changes; and he gets back to you on your submissions with warp speed. I happen to know that Lewis thinks highly of him too.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:53 PM

      David would be a fantastic successor to Will (someday in the future when Will leaves on his own terms) ~ RP

      Delete
  88. Ach, a two-mistake Friday. gEEZ and PHyLLIS. gEEZ is on me but the community center in Minneapolis is called PHyLLIS WHEATLEY so I ignored how weird SHyLOH looked and went with what I "knew".

    I stared and stared at MASONgAR and couldn't see the JAR, rats. And we have lots of them at home though they're more likely the Bell brand than Mason.

    Nice challenge for a Friday, thanks Daniel Grinberg!

    ReplyDelete
  89. Anonymous1:02 PM

    Moet actually does rhyme with poet! Ughhhh! It is commonly thought to be pronounced as
    Mo-ay, but it’s actually not. It’s pronounced, in French, as mo-et. To rhyme with po-et. A simple google search would have informed the creator.

    ReplyDelete
  90. Anonymous1:06 PM

    I understand taking over Will Shortz's job is no easy task, and that we have to be patient, but man, I HATED this puzzle, and yesterday's was way too easy.

    ReplyDelete
  91. One of those days that I completely agree with Rex. But DNF, due to the ugly NW, where BASH was simply ___H for me, ASHEN was __HE_, and because I had PHYLLIS, SHILOH was __YL__.
    BTW, Wheatley's name was alternately spelled with a Y and an I.
    I got MERER right away, but my opinion mirrors that of Rex and others here.

    ReplyDelete
  92. TALC? In white rice? Remind me to only eat brown rice from here on in.

    The whole NW corner was brutal. The cluing for 1A and 1D just didn't work for me.

    And writing SIMP instead of WIMP didn't help either.

    A real toughie, and not a whole lot of fun for me.

    ReplyDelete
  93. Completely agree with your take on MERER. How would this even be used?

    "He's just a mere child."

    "Oh yeah? Well she's a merer child."

    "...say what?!"

    ReplyDelete
  94. @johnk Not sure if you were making a pun with "mirror", but it gave me a chuckle.

    ReplyDelete
  95. other David2:01 PM

    "Merer" is the kind of idiocy you only find on the internet and in Xword "word" lists. It doesn't exist outside of these places.

    Sync is a function, not a command.

    A big bug-a-boo of mine is the cheap and dishonest use of proper and improper plurals to fill out a puzzle; maybe as big as using "GI" in 2024 (or any of the previous 49 years). Besides that, "rostra" is just ugly.

    Didn't know Wheatley, but "poet" was absolutely inferable from the two across clues. And, it made "Opie" a decent guess for that forgotten person's name.

    Taxied and Ubered in the same puzzle? Huh. Of course, I hate turning nouns into verbs, especially corporate monikers, and I view Uber, and the entire gig economy, as just another sign of the apocalypse and our return to feudalism, but that's me.

    "Extra, extra! Read all about it!" Is the normal cry of ye olde times, according to just about every movie made back then which had a newsboy in it...

    As you can see, this puzzle was a pretty joyless slog for me, starting with "bops" being "catchy tunes." All that said, I finished it far more quickly than my normal Friday time; maybe my ire was fire.

    ReplyDelete
  96. Wow tough cluing; it had me off balance at 1 across, and after almost 40 grueling minutes I finished with an error there, having not the slightest idea what "Put on blast" meant. The only thing I could think of was to turn the volume way up, so CRANK might have worked. As it was I had POPS for the catchy tunes.

    Ditto for pretty much everything Rex said. PHILLIS crossing OPIE, LIV, and SHILOH, yikes.

    According to Google ngram, TAXIS is used 100x as often as TAXIES. I'm not sure I've ever seen TAXIES!

    [SB yd -2, in a real slump.]

    ReplyDelete
  97. DNF. SHYLOH looked too good to question and just have never seen Phyllis with an ‘i’

    ReplyDelete
  98. Thanks to a Black Poetry seminar I was honored to take in 1970, I knew PHILLIS WHEATLEY, and I still misspelled PHyLLIS the first pass through. Shame, shame, shame - which deserves a threepeat whereas the three EXTRAs were at least one too many. The more common phrase is “EXTRA! EXTRA! Read all about it!” Oh well.

    This still played tough-medium with a dash of brutal for me. I could not connect with the constructors today. Which makes this a pretty good Friday. Lots of resistance. I had the same trouble at SYNC with Sent (ugh) and wanted mint instead of TALC to make it work because I often add green herbs to white rice because it is so bland. OK, so I’m a brown rice hippie girl.

    Overall, I enjoyed this themeless puzzle. I enjoyed the long ones mainly because the constructors did not use proper names more than once. The remaining spanners were of the language and fun. Sure, three EXTRAs was one too many but fair under the circumstances. Nice Friday with just the right amount of crunch.



    ReplyDelete
  99. Anonymous3:22 PM

    Loved your postscript. I just finished reading “Yhe Professor and the Madman” by Simon Winchester that describes the creation of the OED. Fun to see 17th and 19th century references, having learned how they were found. Also a tragic story of one of its most significant writers, Dr. Minor., an American housed in a lunatic asylum.

    ReplyDelete
  100. Anonymous3:35 PM

    Definitely on the tough side even for a Friday… But Calabria was a gimme for me. And I had never heard Ms. Wheatley until now.

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  101. Brutal. Almost twice my average time. Ditto on the complaints of others.

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  102. I must be getting old. I was able to justify BASH as the correct response by thinking that one might put on or host a bash (party) that was a blast.

    ReplyDelete
  103. I'll second @Nancy's lauding of David Steinberg. First puzzle I sold, David was the editor, and he used a very light touch, making only a few changes to the clues that he felt would make the puzzle more consistent. Second puzzle I sold was to a different editor who, I exaggerate not, changed 85% of the clues.

    Regarding today's puzzle, as I noted I thought it was very tough - Saturday+ level. But I liked it. If this is typical of what we can expect of themeless puzzles during Will Shortz's recovery, I'll be more than satisfied.

    ReplyDelete
  104. BlueStater5:19 PM

    Yup, this was a stinkerissimo, as OFL has demonstrated at length and in detail. I'm getting tired of saying a particular puzzle is the Worst Evah, precisely because an increasing number of them are, as the years go by. Just full of unpardonable mistakes -- misdefinitions, nonwords. For forty bucks a year, or whatever it is now, we deserve a lot better than rubbish like this.

    ReplyDelete
  105. David Grenier5:55 PM

    Three proper names crossing PHILLIS WHEATLY and I knew none of them. MERER, METIER, and VERSOS are all words I e never heard. This some of the longer stuff was fun but overall I just hated this puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  106. Went to Wheatley High school named after her so there you go…

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  107. A toughie for sure and I was relieved to make it through. Also, this is about the most Rex Parker thing I've ever seen: "Not big on three EXTRAs in a row (two is the gold standard, three seems excessive)". Not saying I disagree though.

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  108. Anonymous10:24 PM

    I feel like LIMP and LAYS are arguably legitimate fills for the milquetoast (if used as an adjective) and courses (like the lay of the land) clues

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  109. I didn't even try to solve more than half of the crosses before I turned on autocheck. I consider myself a medium experience crossword solver (I've been doing the Simon and Schuster books for about 4 or 5 years and signed up for the New York Times almost a year ago now). There was absolutely no way in hell I could get even 30% of these clues without autocheck. Naticks and absurd cluing/crosswordese galore. The absense of Will Shortz is being well and duly felt these past few days.

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  110. Technical DNF. Like a TKO for a DNF. I am willing to spend only so much time on an xword before I need to move on with my life, given another 30 minute, I might have been able to finish, but I simply was not willing.

    I worked my way out of every corner except the "B" in BOPS/BASH (knew BOPS, just had to get out of my "is it HITS or TOPS" box) and middle abutments and crosses of PHYLLIS Wheatley. I had most of the right answers, but couldn't figure out the right combination among KOS (or KOP.. some wacky variation on KP, kitchen patrol?) , REWRITES- (or something weird), ESP (clueless), WIMP (or WUSS), ATHOME (or ATEASE). Couldn't hang my hat on any of them.

    Not. Fun.

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  111. Scott in Chicago10:29 AM

    I don't have many gripes with this puzzle; I finished it, thought it was fun. Had SIDELINEREPORT for a long time before figuring out HALFTIME, got 3 of the other 4 spanners pretty quickly, so was feeling frisky, that I might have a chance to finish a Friday without any "check grid" assistance. Had LIMP for milquetoast for the longest time, that was my final square to solve, W for L.

    But I do have gripes many of y'all commenters, where to start ...

    Ground rules are not about punishing, they are about guilde lines, establishing boundaries, in many cases, around babysitting: dinner at 5pm, no snacks after 7pm, NOTV until homework is finished, bedtime at 9pm, etc., etc.

    Bops and bash really got a lot of you olds, and you are all WRONG to gripe about this. Go talk to your grandkids, put on a podcast, read the Arts and Style section of this very newspaper once in a while. It's a net good when the xword skews young. Bops is such a fun word to use, please add it to your vocab. As for "put on blast" it's obvious that none of you listen to hip-hop #xwordsolverssowhite

    This 50+ year old finished this puzzle without even knowing Ms. Wheatley, so there!

    @Mark 9am and others...
    Liv Tyler starred in one the highest grossing film series ever, starred in another blockbuster, Armageddon, was the lead in the great Empire Records and is also the famous daughter of Steven Tyler, the lead singer of the one of the highest grossing bands ever, Aerosmith. Absolutely fair game in a xword

    @Bob Mills 12:13pm
    Imagine never hearing of an espresso martini, some of things you commenters write, lol. And Rex, espresso martinis are NOT an abomination, take that back!

    @masked and anonymous @12:28pm
    bash/blast are definitely not about partying, OFL noted the etymology of "put on blast" in his first p.s.

    @other David 2:01pm and others
    Inferring POET from the clue 17A as it relates to the clue on 15A, essentially a type of writer, isn't that hard once you get cross or two. I didn't know Wheatley but took an educated guess once I got the O and E.

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  112. Anonymous10:43 AM

    Fun(?) fact … 3/15 is National Espresso Martini Day which is probably why it was in the grid. I continue to be baffled by their popularity.

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    Replies
    1. Scott in Chicago11:45 AM

      They are delicious!

      Delete
  113. Anonymous5:24 PM

    Shirley you jest: bash, bops, rostra, merer, myeye, lichensteinskigraboswski, wheatley..... Hole garbage is nothing but google lookups, and errors by computer that created it, and new editor.... Cmon give us some Crosswords.... La times much better
    Rasputin

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  114. Anonymous11:46 AM

    REDAPPLE = green paint.

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  115. Diana, LIW1:46 PM

    First go-thru I had about 11 answers and a lot of blanks.

    I had MOUNTAIN before I checked and saw REDAPPLE.

    Then the bit-by-bit routine started in.

    Finally, I had to look up rubicund. I mean...

    Lots and lots of unknown words instead of unknown names today!

    Diana, LIW

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  116. A tough one for sure; tons of triumph points earned by guessing what goes in Square One. BOPS via the clue is new to me, and I didn't even understand the clue to 1-across. But after running the alphabet, B seemed most likely.

    The other major hangup was 15-across; as the clue referenced the African author, and Africa includes South Africa, I wrote BOER. Well, the O and the E fit.

    End-of-week clues, and words (?) like MERER, amped up the difficulty. DOD is LIVTYLER. Uneven puzzle; par.

    Wordle par.

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  117. Burma Shave6:23 PM

    CARELESS WAYS

    We HONOR her ORAL REPORTS,
    LIVTYLER WAS NO WIMP on the ROSTRA,
    but ATHOME a MISTAKE of sorts
    made our POET after MOET CUSS EXTRA.

    --- SIR MASON REED

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  118. rondo6:39 PM

    This one took plenty of contemplation and I did have MilIEu before METIER, but I WAS ABLE to get it. Agree that REDAPPLE = green paint. Clean up those WEBS in the corners. LIVTYLER, JEEZ.
    Wordle eagle!!! woo hoo 39th in 620 attempts

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  119. Anonymous2:53 PM

    I was one 32a away from solving this. Early on I used the clue for 17a to determine that the title referred to either a poem or a book. I had the O in place, and when I eventually confirmed the E with REWRITE HISTORY I was off and running. My CARELESS MISTAKE was writing POEm instead of POET, which messed me all up. Also, I know better than to give up but I gave up anyway. First DNF in ages for me.

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  120. Anonymous10:21 PM

    Also had NC who Phyllis Wheatley was but it didn’t matter…clueing was very tough for me today…and it’s two extras not 3 #Fail

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  121. I didn't know the poet, but took a correct flying guess at the old timey bandleader name once I had OP, remembered the LOTR actress once I had the LER, and had heard of the battle, but spelled it SHyLOH because who knows how AMerican towns are named, and I've only met people named PHyLLIS with a Y. I was tired by then, so didn't search for the error, just hit the "check" button to find it.

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  122. Anonymous1:22 AM

    Totally unpleasant. Hated it, bailed after 30 minutes. Just awful cluing.

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  123. Don Byas10:06 AM

    Knew Wheatley, but not how to spell her first name.
    Her name shows up frequently in a lot of places


    OPIE? IMHO There are three Swing-Era clarinetists that are fair game for crosswords :
    Benny Goodman
    Artie Shaw
    Woody Herman
    (apologies to Sidney Bechet and Jimmy Hamilton)

    this puzzle was tough

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