TV surname at 742 Evergreen Terrace / THU 3-21-24 / Apt key for a musical prodigy? / Radius of a unit circle / Repeated sound that can be "cured" / Opera that premiered in Cairo / Longtime Los Angeles sports venue / Iconic painting housed at Oslo's Nasjonalmuseet

Thursday, March 21, 2024

Constructor: Joe Marquez

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: ESCAPE ROOM (54A: Puzzling activity, as seen four times in this puzzle?) — a rebus puzzle with "ESC" (from the "escape" key) found inside four different boxes ("rooms") in the grid:

Theme answers:
  • MIDDLE SCHOOL (17A: Awkward period, for many) 
    • "TRÈS CHIC!" (6D: "Ooh-la-la!")
  • CHASE SCENE (28A: Action movie highlight)
    • STAPLES CENTER (10D: Longtime Los Angeles sports venue)
  • "WE'RE SCREWED!" (38A: "It's so over for us!")
    • "THREE'S COMPANY" (25D: 1970s-'80s sitcom about a trio of zany roommates)
  • PRESCRIBE (44A: Allow to take, perhaps)
    • THE SCREAM (40D: Iconic painting housed at Oslo's Nasjonalmuseet)
Word of the Day: STAPLES CENTER (10D) —

Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center) is a multi-purpose indoor arena in Downtown Los Angeles. Opened on October 17, 1999, it is located next to the Los Angeles Convention Center complex along Figueroa Street, and has since been considered a part of L.A. Live. Owned and operated by Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), it is currently the home venue of the Los Angeles Lakers of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL)—which are both owned in part by AEG's founder Philip Anschutz, as well as the Los Angeles Clippers of the NBA and the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks.

It is the only arena in the NBA shared by two teams, as well as one of only three North American professional sports venues (alongside SoFi Stadium in nearby Inglewood, and New Jersey's MetLife Stadium) to currently host two teams from the same league. The venue is also frequently used for major concerts, and has been the most frequent host of the Grammy Awards ceremony since its opening.

Crypto.com Arena will host the basketball competition during the 2028 Summer Olympics. In 2024, the Clippers are scheduled to leave Crypto.com Arena for their own arena, Intuit Dome. (wikipedia)

• • •

I knew the STAPLES CENTER was called something stupid now, but I had no idea how stupid. Crypto.com Arena!? LOL. Congrats, you win Most Embarrassing Arena or Stadium Rebrand. Yikes. If nothing else, this puzzle made me laugh by teaching me about the existence of Crypto Dot Com Arena. Actually, this puzzle had other pleasures, though in general it was way too straightforward. It's about as basic as rebuses get and the revealer isn't exactly a revelation. I mean, you've got all those ESCs staring at you, so ESCAPE's being in the revealer is kind of a given. And then ROOM ... OK, you wanna call the boxes "rooms," that's fine, that works. But the concept is a bit ho-hum. You've got a four-square rebus, where all rebus squares are the same (and very easy to pick up). The puzzle's not doing anything particularly interesting with the rebus form, but it does what it does in a solid, workmanlike way. "WE'RE SCREWED!" at least gives us some attitude and energy—always nice when, in addition to fulfilling the requirements of the theme, the theme answers have personality. That "WE'RE SCREWED!" / "THREE'S COMPANY" crossing was the thematic highlight, for me. The other "ESC" answers were somewhat more ordinary, but they're solid. Two anomalies in the theme today. First, PRESCRIBE, which is the only answer that fails to break "ESC" across two words, which is the optimal way to "hide" an embedded word (you can tell it's optimal because this puzzle does it with the other 7 answers). That PRESCRIBE rebus square is anomalous in another way as well, which is that it has no symmetrical equivalent. It's just shoehorned in here to give us a fourth (bonus?) rebus. The other "ESC" square all appear in the longest answers, which are symmetrical—well, STAPLES CENTER and "THREE'S COMPANY" are symmetrical, and then MIDDLE SCHOOL is symmetrical with the revealer, ESCAPE ROOM, leaving no room for the fourth "ESC" within the established symmetrical pattern. So it's in a kind of no man's land. I wouldn't mind if the four "ESC" squares were randomly strewn about, but to establish symmetry and then shove another square in just ... because? ... that seems inelegant. [Update: I think this puzzle would've been Next Level if the rebus squares had been ESC in the Acrosses and APE in the Downs]


The fill today is notably bad, especially toward the bottom, so once again I'm asking everyone involved in the making of these puzzles to Try Harder. EENY EIRE GRAN SSN TSKS (plural?) TYR TTOP EWS (plural?) EMMAS (plural?), NEAP ... it's a lot to take. ARTE Johnson! Wow, haven't seen him in a while. No, I take that back. I did see him recently, but not in the puzzle. I've been watching old Love Boat episodes, and he shows up on that show a lot. The segment I saw him in was from Season 1, Episode 12. It was called "The Painters" ("Inept painters (Arte JohnsonPat Morita) make a shambles of the Captain's cabin"). But back to the puzzle. Crossing AMINO with AMINOR would generally be a no-no. Letter strings that long usually don't repeat *anywhere* in the grid, let alone *cross* one another. I enjoyed the PELICANS and the AIR JORDANs, but the short stuff was way worse than it ought to be in a modern puzzle. 


As for difficulty: bizarrely, HUED was probably the hardest thing in the grid for me to get. Had the "HU-" and still no idea. It fits the clue [Tinged], but only as the back end of a hyphenated term with a color at the front end. "Purple-HUED," say. You'd never just say HUED (unless you were writing bad poetry). Whereas you would just say [Tinged]. Hence my confusion. I also spelled CHE wrong, opting for the more familiar (to me) Spanish spelling, QUE. But obviously we're not dealing with Spanish. The clues says that explicitly. Anyway, it wasn't too hard to fix. I also had NOSE-something before figuring out NOSTRIL (24A: Part of your body that smells the most?). I know TYR from crosswords Of Extreme Yore (and from an embedded-word puzzle I once made using Norse gods—I hid TYR inside BETTYRUBBLE). If you didn't know TYR, don't feel bad. Aesir aficionados and old-timers like me have the advantage there. Maybe you didn't know BOOLE, but you could probably infer BOOLE from "Boolean" (as I did), and anyway his crosses are all fair.


I know there are some people who hate rebuses. I'm not sure why, but they do. As rebuses go, this one should have been pretty easy to pick up and work through, so I hope that even if you'd rather not see this puzzle type, you were at least able to work through it successfully today. See you later.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. I'll be reminding you all week that These Puzzles Fund Abortion 4 is now available. Here is my description of the details (from this past Sunday's write-up):
These Puzzles Fund Abortion 4 (four!) just dropped this past week—over 20 original puzzles from top constructors and editors—and you can get the collection now (right now) for a minimum donation of $20 (donations split evenly among five different abortion funds—details here). You can check out a detailed description of the collection and a list of all the talent involved here. I not only guest-edited a puzzle, I also test-solved puzzles. I have now seen the finished collection, and it's really lovely, across the board. General editors Rachel Fabi and Brooke Husic and C.L. Rimkus put in a tremendous amount of work ensuring that it would be. The attention to detail—test-solving, fact-checking, etc.—was really impressive. Anyway, donate generously (assuming you are able) and enjoy the puzzle bounty!
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

85 comments:

Conrad 6:13 AM  


I am one of those people who hate rebodes, but as OFL predicted, this one was pretty easy for me, and "even though I'd rather not see this puzzle type," I didn't mind today as much as I usually do.

My overwrites included SCAr before SCAB at 10A and debT before MUST at 23D, plus @Rex NOSe(something) before NOSTRIL at 24A, although I'm not sure I actually typed in the incorrect e.

Really wanted "get scREWED!" for "It's so over for us!" (picturing a breakup) at 38A

Georgia 6:21 AM  

Wonderful solve, perplexing until the rebus became clear and I had to lose "We're toast!"

G. Mikan 6:51 AM  

Just for once, can't it be HYDROX instead of OREO? Is that asking too much?

And as for Crypto.com, just do what I do and call it what it is: Crypto Con. I guarantee you'll feel much better.

SouthsideJohnny 6:59 AM  

I thought it was mildly interesting that most people will recognize ESC from the obvious escape key relationship, yet none of the theme answers or the revealer have anything to do with computer or keyboard terminology.

I was wondering if Rex might use the opportunity to go off on Nike, Michael, Lebron et al for raking in millions by selling way overpriced sneakers that are produced in what are essentially Chinese labor camps.

I have no clue what RUNE is referring to, and oh my gosh what a rabbit hole I found when I googled it. Apparently it’s a letter (or letters), but then there is this entire ecosystem of “mystery” about it. Unfortunately I don’t have enough research time to do it justice today - if anyone can bumper sticker a reasonable definition/description, please feel free to enlighten me.

Anonymous 7:10 AM  

George Boole did not work on logic gates. Logic gates are digital circuits that were developed long after his death. His Boolean arithmetic was absolutely the inspiration behind logic gates but he never lived to see them

Anonymous 7:41 AM  

Great missed opportunity to feature SNL’s Michael CHE

kitshef 7:48 AM  

I will dispute in the strongest possible terms that a CHASE SCENE is a 'highlight'. Other than the one in Foul Play (which is a comedy, not an action film), all chase scenes are dull; really you're just waiting for it to be over so they can get back to the film.

The best man at my wedding once dated a woman who herself had previously dated one of The Mighty Mighty BossToneS. She was probably the coolest person I’ve ever met.

Lobster11 7:58 AM  

In my book, any puzzle that crosses ERIE with OREO gets an F.

Anonymous 8:01 AM  

Enjoyable puzzle todsy

Dr.A 8:15 AM  

I did think the fill was lousy but the theme was fun! I did not know Solaris, only Gravity as a George Clooney space film so that threw me off, very badly but otherwise, ok, not bad! I did actually use the revealer to help me do the Rebus because I knew it was there, but I didn’t know which letters of THE SCREAM were rebus or THREES COMPANY. I guess if i was smarter I could have held those up to each other and found the common three letters. Oh well. I’m not that smart!

Pop Eye 8:15 AM  

@ KITSHEF (7:28) Do you include in that assessment the chase scene in "The French Connection?" If you do, I would venture to guess that you are the only person in the universe to hold that view. ;)

Anonymous 8:34 AM  

an OREO is not a sandwich...

Bob Mills 8:44 AM  

ESCAPEROOM and TRESCHIC were fairly easy to come uo with. WERESCREWED and THREESCOMPANY a bit harder. Overall, I thought the puzzle was on the easy side for a rebus design, because of easy fill.

Now, we can get back to "normal" on Friday.

mmorgan 8:47 AM  

I could tell it was a rebus (um, Thursday), but I couldn’t quite put my finger on what it was. Then I got the revealer, and bam, the themers became instantly clear. I do always like a puzzle where the revealer actually helps me get the themers (as opposed to a puzzle that I finish and can’t tell what the hell the revealer means).

Anonymous 8:57 AM  

Caught on slowly, then liked it, then just wanted to finish by the time I hit bottom Overall meh

Started slowly with ASHARP and wanted GRAVITY for 5D.

Seems like most of the rebus have to fill in with lots of crosswordese

Bring on Friday!

RooMonster 9:01 AM  

Hey All !
Knew today's puz was a Rebus, as my first know of THREES COMPANY didn't fit the spot. Aha, says I. I'll just wait until I can confirm which square is Rebied. Actually figured it out on the other side of the grid with CHASE SCENE. Looked down at the Revealer, and had _SC____, and thought of ESCAPE ROOM right away, not thinking ROOM would be correct, but at least it confirmed my ESC Rebus.

Forgot Martin Sheen's real name. Used to know it. Crosses fair. RAMON Estevez, hence his two kids (one took Estevez, one took Sheen) Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen. Neat, huh?

Came in as an easy ThursPuz, as I SAUNTERED through the grid. Oh shoot, just checked my stats, set a record for time today! It says 9:50. Dang, I didn't think it was that fast. Kicking buttocks. Har. I definitely know I'm not getting smarter...

Happy Thursday!

No F's (MOM! There's no F's!)
RooMonster
DarrinV

SouthsideJohnny 9:05 AM  

BULLIT had a pretty significant chase scene as well - I believe the vehicle involved lost like seven hub caps in total, which is often fun to count when I occasionally stumble upon it on a movie channel rerun. Modern chase scenes are just stupid - with people hanging onto cars with one arm and sliding back and forth at super high speeds and such. No chance that anything like that would occur IRL - they would all be dead in about 15 seconds.

Anonymous 9:15 AM  

I don’t think this is about the ESCape key on the computer - it’s about the Escape Room experience where you get locked in a room and have to solve some series of challenges to get out - to escape the room.

Smith 9:19 AM  

"I danced with a man who danced with a girl who danced with the Prince of Wales."

Gary Jugert 9:20 AM  

That was a fun SOJOURN. Remember the scandal over RARES last week? Today RAREST comes with a really dumb clue. Next up should be [Eating warm murder.] RARING.

Had to look up CHE. The CAR STEREO in my new car hooks up to my phone automatically. It's all quite creepy, but people sound like they're sitting in the car with you when they call.

unless you were writing bad poetry
you'd never just say HUED
did you say bad poetry? then I'm THE DUDE
with the English language, I'm in a fued
I'm alone with a keyboard, WE'RE SCREWED
don't do it yourself as I offer "freedom
from involuntary servitude"
RhymeZone's choice for eleven syllable 'tude.
oh, and tee-hee, seclude yer MERER nude
(please)

Thank you to everyone straightening me out on CHICA yesterday. I came to loathe the word when I taught gang kids back in the day in New Mexico, but now that I think about it, everything out of their mouths was horrible so I shouldn't have singled CHICA out as an unforgivable slur. You should've seen the staff debriefs after sex ed classes. Phew. @GILL I. Is there a mechanism where we can nominate you for retroactive Latinhood? I'll start a petition.

Uniclues:

1 Effete tweens' papier mâché.
2 Sect devoted to hairy schnozzolas.
3 Drunken foot race in an episode of Cops.
4 The bathroom after so so many overwrought Ethiopian rhymes.
5 Turn off Suzanne Somers.
6 When the ghosts are wearing haute couture.
7 Their faces ... where fish go to die.

1 MIDDLE SCHOOL ARTE
2 NOSTRIL CULT
3 HIC CHASE SCENE
4 AIDA ESCAPE ROOM
5 END THREE'S COMPANY
6 TRÈS CHIC EERINESS
7 PELICANS' CRYPTS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Underestimating the power of the median to grab your tires and flip you onto your roof. SWERVE SNAFU.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Smith 9:26 AM  

Easy for a rebus for the reasons @Rex said. Never saw the show 3s Company but "...trio..." made it obvious. TYR is the name on my swim cap, but still I had ToR, thinking it was a variation of Thor, but CRoPTS wasn't anything. Most idiotic typo that SCREWED things up: b for N in RAMON, which I somehow knew, and I wanted NOSEsomething for the smeller but gee, starts with a b?? Did find it and overall way under avg time for Thurs. But I think that's because it was a very easy rebus.

Anonymous 9:32 AM  

Really enjoyed this one! I normally get frustrated with rebus puzzles cause my brain has a hard time computing them, but both THREES COMPANY and STAPLES CENTER being for sure answers, and with not enough room for them, I knew what we were dealing with.

Only complaint is I wish they’d clued SOLARIS as the original Soviet Tarkovsky film rather than its American remake. The remake is actually not bad, but doesn’t hold a candle to Tarkovsky’s original. Squandered great opportunity to intro people to a classic!

pabloinnh 9:42 AM  

Easy rebus fer sure, and I caught on at THREESCOMPANY (hi @Roo) which made the themers especially easy. Knew CHE in Italian as Italian uses a ch before an e to indicate a hard C. Spanish uses a QU, or course, and English uses a C or a K or a CH, so good luck with all that.

I inferred Mr. BOOLE from Boolean logic, seems like we just had a discussion about that. SOLARIS was in the memory bank somewhere and appeared after a few letters, and had ADO going the wrong way, remedied by ODE and ZOOS. Otherwise no real slow downs, except I forgot the SIMPSONs address.

Hi @Roo again, a plural EMMAS, which I'm counting as a partial.

Nice enough Thursdecito, JM. Mostly Jet Mode, and thanks for all the fun.

Anonymous 9:46 AM  

I like rebi in general but my problem here was that the revealer was a type of puzzle, so I was expecting the puzzle to somehow incorporate or have the feel of an actual escape room. But instead the theme clues are entirely based just on the words “escape room” so the fact that escape rooms are actually puzzles to be solved (like crosswords) ends up being entirely irrelevant.

kitshef 9:51 AM  

@Pop Eye: Yes, I definitely include The French Connection. That scene just goes on and on and on.

I did expect some lobbying for Bullitt (hi, @SouthsideJohnny), which like Foul Play has a chase scene on the streets of San Francisco, which adds a lot of visual interest. But it's still just a chase scent.

But not that I think about it more, there is a good one in Raiders of the Lost Ark, also.

David Grenier 9:58 AM  

I like rebus puzzles. It feels like it’s been a while since we’ve had one, so I enjoyed it. Like good rebus puzzles this had one clue that was easy to know the one-and-only-one possible right answer, but that answer Does Not Fit. So you know you’re dealing with some kind of architectural trickiness, you just have to work out exactly what.

For me STAPLES CENTER and THREES COMPANY were those answers. But it took a decent amount of work before I stumbled on the ESCape clause.

I would have enjoyed this a bit more if there were some variety among the rebuses, maybe keys on a keyboard (INS ALT DEL ESC) but I still liked it.

Alice Pollard 10:01 AM  

Lobster11, thats very funny. my first run through I had a lot of holes. And I said WTH? I knew something Thursdayish was apparent. Then I misplaced an ESC or 2 and had to unwind a bit. But it all fell into place. Shout out to ARTE Johnson, c'mon! , he was a riot on Laugh-In - playing the Germans soldier and the dirty old man that Ruth Buzzi was constantly smacking with her pocketbook.

Tom T 10:05 AM  

Two chase scenes I am fond of off the top of my head: E. T., with kids on bikes and grownups in hot pursuit; and Electric Horseman, with Redford on horseback.

JonnyZ 10:16 AM  

@kitshef and Pop Eye the chase scene in the Barbra Streisand comedy What’s Up Doc is a lot of fun too. I’ve never laughed so much during one of those sequences! Not an action movie though!

SusanA 10:16 AM  

HUE is not much of a synonym for “Tinged” — HUE is the essentially name of the color, e.g. orange, magenta, lime. Just saying. TINT (Any color mixed with white) could be a synonym for “Tinged”

Now that I read the comments, i understand why I was able to finish this puzzle without hints - a bit of a Thursday rarity for me. I thought, ‘hey, I’m really getting better at this!’ Perhaps not, but it was fun. The connection I made was that puzzles are an escape from other dreariness in one’s life, plus an escape room itself is a puzzle, and of course the ESC key itself to escape from whatever. And that was enough.

Nancy 10:22 AM  

I find that the unusual rebus letter combination of ESC has produced really interesting theme answers here. Answers which, btw, I was ridiculously slow in seeing.

I wanted TRES CHIC. But I couldn't get to TRES CHIC. I should have picked up the rebus at TRES CHIC. But I didn't.

I had no idea what an "awkward period" was that didn't have either TEEN or TERRIBLE TWOS in it. And I was much too sure of CAR CHASE for the action movie highlight -- and which fit the space, no rebus required -- to pick up the trick there.

I knew I needed the revealer and I skipped down to it, immediately seeing ESCAPE. At that point, I picked up the rebus at WE'RE SCREWED.

Beautiful theme entries, beautifully crissed and crossed. Crunchy and challenging for me. My only nit? Someone will tell me why "tinged" = RUED. (RUED is the right answer, yes? I forgot to look.) Other than that, I think this is a terrific rebus puzzle -- a credit to the genre.

Nancy 10:28 AM  

For anyone who has a subscription to the NYT, I have a Letter to the Editor in today's paper. If they don't put up a paywall to block you, you can also find it online.

Teleiotes 10:30 AM  

@Anonymous "an OREO is not a sandwich..."

It's a sandwich cookie. So "Round sandwich" seems like an acceptable clue to me.

mathgent 10:31 AM  

Wonderful puzzle!

Well-designed rebus. Sparkly, smart cluing. Nice to see mathematician BOOLE in the grid even if the clue is incorrect. EWS is the only junky entry. A new way to clue our constant companion, OREO.

I learned the definition of SOJOURN. I thought it was the trip, not the stay.

gfrpeace 10:33 AM  

Like logs for a fireplace -- SAWN???? An axe is the traditional tool. A hatchet for splitting.

Whatsername 10:35 AM  

Rex echoed my thoughts exactly of well it’s not anything fancy but it’s a good solid Thursday. The puzzle overall was easy* and the theme pretty obvious from the beginning. However, I don’t see how ESCAPE ROOM is a “puzzling” activity. Not looking for explanations, just saying that seemed strange to me.

*Easy until I got to the SE corner which gave me fits. A themer surrounded by/crossed with an Italian word, a Norse God, a Roman slate, an actress proper name, a mathematician proper name, and a painting which admittedly is well known but clued with yet another proper name - Norwegian and unpronounceable - which made it more difficult to parse IMO. I liked the puzzle just fine otherwise but that area – EW.

JC66 10:37 AM  

Here's @Nancy's letter:

To the Editor:

Re “Passing Years Cloud Memory of Trump Term” (front page, March 6):

I can’t decide if I’m more shocked, more alarmed or more depressed by the “collective amnesia” that Americans are said to be experiencing about the sheer awfulness of Donald Trump’s presidency. I mean it’s not as if we’re talking about, say, 1950. We’re talking about just a few short years ago.

But it does bring to mind two famous quotations. One is “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” The other is “Every nation gets the government it deserves.”

I truly hope that, when the chips are down, the American people will prove smarter than this. A lot smarter than this!

Nancy Stark
New York

Anonymous 10:58 AM  

It's a sandwich cookie

x 10:58 AM  

Easy for me as usual, but then I'm extremely smart, but not smart enough not to fart arty barf here, I fear.

Whatsername 11:04 AM  

@Tom T (10:05) I would never have thought to call the ET bicycle odyssey a CHASE SCENE but of course it is, and if you think about it, is also an ESCAPE. Anyway, thanks for bringing it up. I love the movie and especially that particular segment.

@Nancy (10:28) As always, your letter is spot on. The continuing defense of all that’s been said and done is mind boggling.

@JC (10:37) Thanks so much for posting!

Nancy 11:04 AM  

Very much appreciated, @JC66 (10:37). Thanks so much!

Re rUED: Someone on Wordplay corrected my error, and I reproduce my Apologia here:

Oops. I had CRASH SCENE. What makes that even worse is that the rebus doesn't even work with that answer. Blush.

As an excuse, I cite the fact that I wrote (in very dark ink) my original CAR CHASE answer in the SAUNTERED space, then wrote my wrong CAR CHASE answer over it in darker ink, and then couldn't really see what any of the blotchy dark letters were when it came to making yet again a third change. If I had seen those letters clearly, I absolutely wouldn't have made that mistake. So I've decided not to regard this as a DNF when it's much more about lousy eyesight.

jae 11:06 AM  

Easy-medium. I caught the rebus early and mostly breezed through this one. tiNY before EENY was it for erasures. Workman like is a good description, didn’t hate it.

A 11:19 AM  

I like a rebus every now and then so I enjoyed puzzling It all out. I did get off to a very rough start with b sharp and high SCHOOL in the NW, so that took some cleaning up.

Hand up for WE’RE toast, and to being tipped off to the theme by THREESCOMPANY. Also tried ToR (which is how Raj pronounces it on Big Bang Theory) before TYR. CRYPTS was fun to see (once I got rid of CRoPTS), as were SERPENT, SOJOURNS, PELICANS and the SIMPSONS/CULT pair. Boo to AIRJORDANS.

There was too much PPP for my taste, as well as some tired fill. Although it was kind of NEAT seeing ERIE, EIRE and EERINESS together in one grid.

Some CHASE SCENES that I consider highlights don’t involve cars, like the flying monkey chase in The Wizard of Oz, or that Star Wars scene where the Ewok steals the air-jet-ski thingy as a distraction - ok I see it’s The Empire Strikes Back and the air-jet-ski is called a speeder bike. If you want to see funny little furry creature on a flying jet-ski, someone put it on YouTube. Wow, Carrie Fisher was young then.

Today is composer Modest Mussorgsky’s birthday. His “Night on Bald Mountain” would be good music for a CHASE SCENE.

egsforbreakfast 11:22 AM  

It's always great to see a European Society of Cardiology tribute puzzle, and this one had a lot of heart.

A firewood cutter who took a leisurely walk would, presumably have SAWNTERED.

The Twilight Zone episode about the terminus of the Detroit River is known for its ERIENESS.

I remember the first time I had sex. Ahh, to be young. We screwed and WERESCREWED.and RESCREWED.

Thanks for providing an escapist diversion, Joe Marquez.

Made in Japan 11:24 AM  

I'm not a fan of the clue for A MINOR (14-A). I assume that the implication here is that a prodigy is young, and hence A MINOR. Though the word prodigy is usually applied to a young person, youth is not a necessary condition to be a prodigy. If that were the case, the term "child prodigy" would be redundant. A better clue might be "Apt key for a precocious musician", or better yet, simply "Apt key for a young musician".

A 11:26 AM  

Thanks, @JC66! @Nancy, AMEN.

Newboy 11:34 AM  

A MINOR was my highlight. Rebii were easy and fun. Gotta say OFL was too kind for the EENY fill.

Thanks to @Nancy for staying engaged and to @JC66 for sharing her thoughts in this echo chamber. Like many others, I feel trapped in an ESCAPE ROOM with no easily seen exit. The truth of those two famous but oft ignored quotes is irrefutable.

Andy Freude 11:36 AM  

Favorite “CHASE” SCENE: Jimmy Stewart crawling through SF city traffic, trailing Kim Novak’s car in Vertigo. The slowest chase in film history, molto adagio.

Anonymous 11:41 AM  

Give the three’s company reference I think the only chase scene worth talking about is the one in the John Ritter movie from 1989 called “Skin Deep”. Not a great movie but the single best chase scene in all movies.

hello jamie: 11:44 AM  

It's just an added bonus that Mac keyboard shortcut to open the rebus square is the ESC key.

Anonymous 11:47 AM  

AMINO crossing AMINOR...yeah, oof.

Also, ERIE and EERINESS and EIRE in the same quadrant? Oof.

B$ 11:47 AM  

I thought this was skewing hard until I figured out the ESC theme, and then it fell into place very quickly.
CRYPT was clever.

Funniest line from today's blog: "I've been watching old Love Boat episodes." That made me laugh out loud.

And now I don't feel so bad for watch Vanderpump Rules.

Liveprof 12:01 PM  

Are fans of Edvard Munch -- Munchies?

GILL I. 12:05 PM  

Oh, thank you @JC. @Nancy, I hope beyond hope that the American people will prove smarter.

@Gary J. Oh, yes...be my guest!

ON to the puzzle. A rebus and I figured the ESC quickly. THREES COMPANY. Probably the silliest, most inane series I think I watched twice. Now that I've matured, I prefer to watch a CHASE SCENE sitting in a T TOP car with 007. Maybe somewhere in Nice.

I rather enjoyed this. We've got some fancy words here. I'm looking at a NOSTRIL here, some SOJOURNS there, a PRESCRIBE and PELICANS.

I'm not sure I understand WE'RE SCREWED and "It's so over for us" clue. Well, maybe I do but it rings funny in my ear. I suppose if you can't get out of an ESCAPE ROOM, you're screwed.

Anyway, I finished this without blowing my top off. It was fun.

kitshef 12:07 PM  

@JohnnyZ - I did not recall the What's Up, Doc? scene (and I love that movie!), but once again, San Francisco!

Carola 12:27 PM  

Me, too, for: 1) being confident about STAPLES CENTER and trusting my NOSTRILs that a rebus was afoot, just not sure yet where it would settle; 2) being confident about "gravity" and writing it in without checking crosses. Later on, THE SCREAM revealed the ESC trick, and much later MIDDLE SCHOOL got me to SOLARIS.

Opera fan that I am, I liked the conjunction of AIDA, ESCAPE ROOM, and CRYPTS: at the end of the opera the lovers are immured in a vault beneath a temple and sing a farewell to earthly life, the only escape being heavenward: "For us heaven opens and our souls fly to the light of eternal day"). If you have time for 4 minutes of loveliness: "O terra, addio" with Luciano Pavarotti

Anonymous 1:03 PM  

@kitsheff The Blues Brothers?

Anonymous 1:14 PM  

Rex, which is the most cringeworthy: Crypto.com Arena (LA), Guaranteed Rate Stadium (Chicago), or Climate Pledge Arena (Seattle)?

Masked and Anonymous 1:15 PM  

Fairly easy-ish, for a ThursPuz, at our house. Took a few extra nanoseconds to nail MIDDL(ESC)HOOL, but we're always on the lookout for the rebus, on a Thursday. Then the ESCs could no longer escape attention. And the revealer was pretty much a gimme; got er offa nuthin but its clue.

staff weeject pick: CHE. An Italian clue seemed kinda … I dunno … disperato?

some faves: AIRJORDAN. PELICANS. CRYPTS & EERINESS. NOSTRIL & its clue. AMINOR clue.
Clue that smells the most [aka The Nostril Award]: {Housing projects?} = EAVES. har. A bloodbath of parts of speech gone rogue.

Also admired: SOLARIS. Schlock flick meat. [Last Fri-Nite schlockfest at M&A's house featured: "Tender Dracula" and "The Lost Skeleton Returns Again", btw.]

Thanx for the friendly escapism, Mr. Marquez dude. Fun stuff -- and looks like it really came to @RP's R(*)UE.

Masked & Anonymo4Us

p.s. * = ESC.

**gruntz**

Teedmn 1:24 PM  

I had my first and only ESCAPE ROOM experience about a month ago. We were given an hour to save the world from nuclear holocaust because the countdown had started and we needed to solve the riddles and puzzles to find the 4 keys to turn off the clock. I found it to be an exhilarating experience. My friends and I all did our part in solving, no one sat back and watched, we all dug into the mysteries. We found a second room, we had to use a phone, we solved a jigsaw that gave us clues, we found a mysterious tool in a drawer that I figured out could be used to turn a 45 RPM record in a box to pop open another drawer, etc. etc. I was buzzed with excitement for a couple of days after we did it - we succeeded with a number of hints from the staff and 30 seconds left before Armageddon. Woohoo! (The woman who gave us instructions, pre-solve, told us that only 33% were successful and those who failed were the ones who refused to ask for clues. We were not proud.)

So I had fun with this puzzle. At first, I thought the rebus was SCH so I had one SCH in MIDDLE[SCH]OOL and another going down in TRE[SCH]IC. I didn't find my error until THRE[ESC]OMPANY made SCH not viable.

Thanks, Joe Marquez, nice Thursday!

Shandra Dykman 1:32 PM  

Hearing (for the first time!) Rupert Holmes’ “Answering Machine” is the highlight of my week (so far) ❤️❤️❤️

IthacaJoe 1:32 PM  

I've just begun Anna Shechtman's book, and last night read of Margaret Farrar's history with the word "scab". Then this today. Hum...

Anonymous 1:42 PM  

Also had WE’RE TOAST at first

CDilly52 1:49 PM  

@Georgia 6:21 AM Love CryptoCon!!!

okanaganer 2:07 PM  

I'm just fine with rebuses, especially on Thurs. I got the ESC early on at STAPLES CENTER but thought it would have something to do with the computer key.

One of my favorite CHASE SCENEs is where the chasing is being done by... a tiny toy radio controlled truck with a bomb on it. They're running for their lives, and it's funny. Can't remember which movie... anyone?

(I had CAR CHASE for a while and the first and last letters were correct.)

[Spelling Bee: Wed 0; QB streak 6 days!]

jberg 2:46 PM  

I got the rebus with TRESCHIC, and was hoping for a computer-keys puzzle (Hi, @David Grenier), with TAB, ALT, and DEL, but no luck. As it is, the revealer doesn't quite work -- no one calls it an ESC ROOM. Rex's APE for the down rebuses would have fixed that.

I understand why a business would want to pay to have its name on a popular building. What I don't understand is why the rest of us, who are not being paid, use the new name too--especially as those new names are prone to change. I get along fine just saying "Boston Garden," a name which was originally conferred on the arena by the god TYR.

@Southside, RUNES are the characters in which the Scandinavian languages were first written. They consist of straight lines in various arrangements, so they are easier to carve into stone than our Roman letters. When I was growing up in Wisconsin, a lot of people -- mostly Scandinavian-Americans -- believed that a farmer in Minnesota had discovered a stone with runes on it that had been carved and left by the Vikings. The scientific consensus is that it's a forgery, and you shouldn't inject yourself with it.

@Nancy, loved your letter. There are lots of columnists on Substack promoting move favorable views of public awareness, and criticizing the NYT for its negativity--see Robert Hubbell, Simon Rosenberg, and Heather Cox Richardson in particular.

Nancy 3:09 PM  

What a fascinating and nail-biting ESCAPE ROOM experience, @Teedmn! It sounds like you and your friends performed brilliantly under great pressure! Thirty seconds to spare before Armageddon!!! Wow!!! Just Wow!!!

How lucky the world is, though, that I wasn't in your little ESCAPE ROOM group. I would no doubt have run around in circles not knowing where the hell I was in the ROOM or where I was supposed to go in the ROOM or what I was supposed to do to get out of the ROOM. In the meantime, the world would have been blown to smithereens.

@jberg -- Thanks for your nice comment. I'll try to find those articles.

Anonymous 3:26 PM  

That song is in the regular rotation on Sirius XM's Yacht Rock Radio. It's a BOP.

Anonymous 3:37 PM  

There sii ho ould be a ban on OREO.

newbie 3:46 PM  

High five to Rex for the Rupert Holmes links - three of my favorite songs of all time. I once went down a rabbit hole trying to find out who made them, realizing on my own that two of them were by the same person! Wonderful talent.
And thanks, Roo, for the Coolaroo info - that may come in handy. Oh! You are Roo who is cool! Btw, the puzzle was pretty good.

Anonymous 4:44 PM  

THREE’S COMPANY / WE’RE SCREWED was the first rebus I unlocked, so my first thought was that they’d all be different keys on a keyboard. Was looking forward to tab, alt, enter, et al, so I agree with Rex that I was disappointed when they were all, simply, ESC.

In fact, the ESC— of the revealer was the Theme Component I filled in next, before going back to find the other rebuses, so that was an even bigger let-down, to just be explicitly told what all the rebuses would be. Certainly made it easier.

That said, the theme answers (with the exception of the revealer) were all enjoyable. I actually literally exclaimed, “THE SCREAM!” when I figured that one out, ha. Gave me a nice laugh. Happy Thursday.

Anonymous 5:24 PM  

Never knew that RUNE was a Fantasy Character (39 down). In Norse mythology? Is character a reference to Norse written character or an actual folklore character?

G. Mikan 5:35 PM  

@cdilly52 (1:49 pm)

Thanks. But my name is not Georgia But the girl behind me might be ;)

RooMonster 5:50 PM  

Late to the CHASE SCENE, um scene, but. although Bullitt is good, there are a couple of times they used the same scene. If it hasn't been mentioned yet, a great CHASE SCENE is in Ronin. It's like 14 minutes or somesuch. Good movie, too.

RooMonster Don't Run From The Cops Guy
😁

PS @pablo
I meant to mention EMMAS, but forgot!

Anonymous 5:58 PM  

Thanks for the link to the fundraiser! I will order several!

Teedmn 6:09 PM  

@Nancy, I found your letter online (on my iPad, it was under letters dated yesterday) and I agree wholeheartedly. How anyone could have forgotten the daily horrors of a few years ago is beyond me.

Anonymous 7:09 PM  

Another stupid Thursday puzzle, sigh.

Anonymous 10:08 AM  

YES! I had HEWN at first, and I stand by it as the better answer to the clue.

Aviatrix 7:04 PM  

When I first started doing crosswords, the mental letdown of "oh, I thought that was a really good answer, but it doesn't fit," was permanent where rebuses were concerned. I didn't know about them, and I guess I never saw the next day's paper to find out the right answers. I was used to getting only 20% of the puzzle boldly and maybe another 50% lightly and uncertainly sketched, with contradicting crosses, so it didn't dawn on me that I was missing something more. So now that I know about them, and finally figured how to get my app to do them, I'm really stoked to find them.

spacecraft 11:06 AM  

Thank goodness I didn't start in the NW, when I certainly would have written GRAVITY for the Clooney space movie, and not thought it could possibly be wrong. SOLARIS is probably his RAREST, publicity-wise.

Easier than yesterday's, by a long shot. I spotted the revealer clue, so that's where I started. It did NOT stick the landing. ESC leaves "APE" just hanging there, to form a familiar phrase to fit the first part of the clue. I like OFNP's idea of making APE the rebus in one direction; then the whole thing would've been super-elegant. This just didn't do it for me.

Also agreed that the WERESCREWED crossing was by far the highlight. All the rest of the long stuff is ho-hum. Plus your RMK, plus the dreaded TTOP...bogey.

Wordle birdie.

Anonymous 11:23 AM  

A good themed puzzle. More like this please.

Burma Shave 12:12 PM  

SOLARIS TALE

EMMA SAUNTERED in THE sun,
she MUST have BEEN in THE nude,
"A COMPANY me, you're THE ONE,
TRESCHIC until WE'RESCREWED."

--- RAMON JORDAN SIMPSON

rondo 12:41 PM  

ONE big inkfest replacing bsharp with AMINOR, hard to ESCAPE there. Apparently I've been using SOJOURN incorrectly all of my life, I thought it meant 'trip' or 'journey'. Huh.
Wordle Eagle!!! Number 40/626.

Waxy in Montreal 2:04 PM  

Once the theme became clear, thought 17A might be some variant of adolESCence but was quickly disabused of this notion by the crossing gimme (at least to my generation) threESCompany. (Anyone else remember the really funny English program Man about the House that Three's Company was based on?

Also originally had AMP ere ZAP at 7A crossing an errant ADO at 7D. And SCAR ere SCAB at 10A. All in all, AMINOR triumph in my opinion. OK, IMOUTta here.

Diana, LIW 7:29 PM  

I enjoyed the pun in the revealer clue after learning the puzzle's secret.

I was sure a rebus was afoot, and even knew some (most) of the ESC answers. Just could not (did not care enuf to want to) figure it out.

Ah Thursday...

Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

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