Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
Word of the Day: OMNI (38A: Onetime magazine that covered science fiction) —
Omni was a science and science fiction magazine published for domestic American and UK markets. It contained articles on science, parapsychology, and short works of science fiction and fantasy. It was published as a print version between October 1978 and 1995. The first Omni e-magazine was published on CompuServe in 1986 and the magazine switched to a purely online presence in 1996. It ceased publication abruptly in late 1997, following the death of co-founder Kathy Keeton; activity on the magazine's website ended the following April. // Omni was founded by Kathy Keeton and her long-time collaborator and future husband Bob Guccione, the publisher of Penthouse magazine. The initial concept came from Keeton, who wanted a magazine "that explored all realms of science and the paranormal, that delved into all corners of the unknown and projected some of those discoveries into fiction". (wikipedia)
• • •
Fridays continue to play like Saturdays for me. This one just did not have enough marquee answers to make the squeeze worth the juice. I count two proper marquee answers. Two? That's at least four too few. VIBRAPHONE and ANIMATIONS are long(ish), and they're fine, but they are not what I would call "marquee"—you need to be splashy, original, fun, some combination of those, to qualify as a "marquee" answer, and today there's just "I DON'T HAVE ALL DAY" and "SOMETHING CAME UP," with only the latter of those two really landing (my one Whoosh moment of the solve). "I DON'T HAVE ALL DAY" really wants to be "I HAVEN'T GOT ALL DAY" (at least that's the expression my brain was shouting at me when I got the ALL DAY part). The version in the puzzle is fine, just ... formal. So that's two marquee answers, only one of which really hit the mark for me. The rest of the grid is solid enough, for sure, but between the lack of long flashy answers and the insistence on leaning so heavily into pop culture trivia (including for ordinary words like SADNESS, DOGMA, OMNI), this one just didn't resonate with me the way late-week puzzles often do (and the way Fridays used to—I miss fun Fridays; Saturday has taken over as my favorite day of the week this year, pretty solidly).
I loved seeing SOJU (it's been 12 years since its last NYTXW appearance) (51D: Korea's national drink) and I appreciate the effort to be current with HUNDO (49D: Bill with Ben Franklin on it, slangily*), and that clue on UNIT. I didn't know Sadie Hawkins dances were called SADIES, but that was easy to infer. The part of the grid that was hardest for me was the NW. AHAB was a gimme, but after that ... oof. Don't think of ADVIL as a hangover "remedy," no idea who the HEIDI is, "?" clue on ABBOT so no way, and then ... well, I had the "B" at 4D: Cutting insult so obviously that was gonna be BARB ... sigh. I am a big fan of Lionel Hampton and Milt "Bags" Jackson—got a Lionel Hampton CD in the car right now—and I still didn't get VIBRAPHONE right away. I think I got "marimba" confused with "maraca." And then DEBUG ... well, I might've got that, but BARB seemed unimpeachable, so ... train wreck up there. I went clear across the grid without getting any real traction until I finally hit on good ol' EDEN Prairie, Minnesota (25D). EDEN IDEA BEST PLEBE EASE etc. and finally I was off and running. Well, walking, anyway. Sometimes jogging, but mostly walking.
Bullet points:
- 29D: "Alas!" ("AH, ME!") — this remains execrable, one of the stupidest and worst non-things you can put in your grid. I judge it extremely hard. It should be deleted from all wordlists everywhere. Just awful (and the last thing I got today—not what you'd call a fabulous finish).
- 14A: Shell company? (CREW) — the complement of people (company) in a racing shell. I briefly thought this was short for J. CREW, and that they had somehow added a shell to their logo (??).
- 15A: Concept in holistic medicine (AURA) — this is goofy. Does anyone with the word "medicine" anywhere near their names sincerely talk about AURAs? Come on.
- 26D: Choice (BEST) — "Choice" is being used adjectivally here. Think meat. Or think something else, if you prefer. Actually, don't think meat, since the BEST meat is actually "Prime," not "Choice."
- 35D: Surprise, F.B.I.-style (BUST IN ON) — boo to police violence in my puzzle. There are nicer, funnier ways to clue this that don't involve the cops.
Enjoy your Friday. See you tomorrow.
*re: 49D: Bill with Ben Franklin on it, slangily (HUNDO) — why "Ben"? no need for "Ben" here; "Franklin" is enough. You don't need "Ben" for the shortening or slang part of the answer either, since "slangily" has you covered. Now if you'd just opted for [Benjamin], that would've been completely acceptable—much harder, probably, but still correct, as "Benjamin" is in fact slang for a $100 bill
ReplyDeleteChallenging for me, mostly due to the pop culture trivia. Least enjoyable Friday in a while.
Overwrites:
4D: @Rex BaRb before BURN
5A: bkS (books) before PGS
21A: bIo before LIT
28A: mosquE before PALACE
39A: Sew before SUM
51D: Sake(?) before SOJU
Lots of WOEs today (which I guess was by design):
9D: LUND, Sweden (geography isn't my strong point)
11D: KATY Tur
13D: GATTACA (needed Sergey and Larry for that one)
18A: Absolute UNIT
23A: CASSIO (My memory of the Othello cast is limited to the title character, Iago and Desdemona)
44A: SADIES (inferrable)
45D: DOGMA movie (got it from crosses)
49D: HUNDO (also inferrable)
How does Olav become a shape?
DeleteOval
DeleteI was also pretty confused by PGS. Thanks for clearing that up.
ReplyDeleteI had an equally difficult time (proportionally), but with different clues. DOGMA, SADNESS, HEIDI were all (pretty much) gimmes for me, but CASSIO I needed most crosses for, etc.
Completely agree on AH ME. It kills crosswords and I mentally check out when I see it. I've only reluctantly made space for it in my brain for crossword purposes, and it always elicits some wearily muttered swear words..
ReplyDeleteVery happy to finish this one without cheating. The SOJU/JETE cross was a trial-and-error effort, and I had "tsk" instead of TUT for a long while. I also had "cadet" instead of PLEBE for almost as long. I never heard of BURN as an insult, but "barb" didn't work.
ReplyDeleteMy breakthrough came with IDONTHAVEALLDAY, which filled in several holes. My only question of the constructor (and editor) is with IDEA for "gist." I had "core" at first. IDEA doesn't seem right to me.
“Gist” is not generally interchangeable with IDEA, but as long as there is one context where they can be substituted, the clue works. One such example is “you get the gist”/“you get the idea.”
DeleteBarb before BURN as well; in fact, BURN was the last thing I put in the grid. I also thought TUT could be "tsk" and didn't put it in until I got the back part of TAPIOCA and figured out the last letter had to be T. I abbreviate "page" as "pg" and confirmed with crosses. Overall I found the puzzle both more rewarding and less challenging than @Rex. My wife watches SNL and HEIDE Gardner is our favorite newer cast member, and I know I've heard of (if never seen) KATY Tur. I enjoyed both long answers, and who doesn't love a TATER TOT? Or ANIMATIONS? Like @Rex I had the most trouble in the NW, but the central north part of the puzzle was the penultimate section to fall. In any event, one of the easier Fridays in a long time for me; I quite enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI’m still confused at ABBOT? Can anyone explain that one to me?
ReplyDeleteAs in the religious title.
DeleteAn abbot is the superior at sn abbey. The underlings are monks.
DeleteCrazy! I didn't think of that until I read this. I assumed it was because Bud Abbot was always smarter than Lou!
DeleteOof. Challenging NW and NE. Didn't know HEIDI or KATY, but they're both current, so that's fine. I know Ilsa LUND was played by Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman, but not the city. Rest of the puzzle was in my wheelhouse, so that FELTGOOD.
ReplyDeleteLoved seeing SEOUL and SOJU. I don't particularly like soju, but the bottles come in many flavors. Green plum is the best I've tried so far. Also loved HUNDO and absolute UNIT (and the pic of the chonky ram).
Liked this one ALOT. Thank you, Kate!
Agree…nice, chewy, no-Googling 40-minute solve.
DeleteI found it really easy today for some reason. One of my fastest Friday’s but it wasn’t a great puzzle.
ReplyDeleteAbbot = Father Superior, Leader in an Abbey.
ReplyDeleteThe juice worth the squeeze…”malinversion” instead of malaprop? LOL
ReplyDeleteWell, any time Rex begins his post with “A triviafest that was way out of my wheelhouse”, you know that I am going to be burnt beyond recognition. I would add a bunch to the ones that Rex delineated - LUND, Bizet, Alhambra, Sol/LUNA, Estadio, MILA Kunis, PUENTE, LHASA . . . Omg - best wishes to all of you who are actually familiar with most of those terms, items, people. I’m off to have my fire extinguisher refilled. Torched, simply torched today.
ReplyDeleteMr. Simpson was not worthy of Squeeze.
ReplyDeleteCool for Cats
Thought KATY would be a gimme for DJT detesters (NBC’s Tur had many run ins with the Orange one, and he gave FLAK right back). Same with HEIDI Gardner of the Trump-obsessed SNL (after bizarrely having him host).
After THECRETANBULLsh*t we got yesterday, thought this was an enjoyable puzzle.
Ok, DONTHAVEALLDAY, gotta JETE!
This was a Saturday level(i.e. excellent) Friday. Not as hard as some of the over the top Friday's we've had this year but still solidly Saturday.
ReplyDeleteTough to start. In the NW HEIDI sat unsupported. In the middle it was just GENEROUS and TUT. As for the NE if I couldn't make OSLO work then I was screwed and I was.
LOP and PLEBE were the real start once PUENTE and TAPIOCA went in it was steady unbroken solving from then on. All was filled or backfilled.
My final letter was the A of VIBRAPHONE and GATTACA. That movie's box office must have been dystopian too because I've never heard of it. Today I learned that I have no idea what a marimba is. I don't really know what a VIBRAPHONE is either so it didn't matter. All you have to do is recognize the puzzle pieces to put them in. No rocket science whatsoever.
yd -0 QB5
The correct phrase, per Marcia Brady, is "Something SUDDENLY came up"
ReplyDeleteTough Friday. I do like that Friday and Saturday puzzles have gotten harder, although I could do without all "in modern slang" clues.
ReplyDeleteAnd without SNL alums and TV journalists and Korean drinks.
I really don't understand the hatred for AH, ME, which sees like a perfectly ordinary phrase; certainly more common than e.g. BUST IN ON or 'absolute UNIT'.
DOGMA was a terrific movie.
Fits and spurts for me today. An answer would come, followed by a mini begat-fest, then stuckness, tumbleweeds, and “Hello?” echoing in a large empty room. Then suddenly another answer would come, followed by same.
ReplyDeleteIf this solve was a car, my tires would be worn out by the end, from all the starts and stops.
Oh, when those answers filled in, it FELT mighty GOOD. And so many were pleasurable. RHUBARB is a gorgeous word to me, and elicits images of the vegetable and of old-timey film fights. TATERTOT brings that heavenly crunch feel to my mouth, followed by its explosion of taste.
VIBRAPHONE fills my head with its velvety sound. GATTACA just sounds cool; it will be an earworm today. ARIA may guest puzzles to a fault, but when I think of the word, my imagination becomes an opera house, and a clear, sublime voice rings out in it.
To bring me back to earth were the relatable colloquial I DON’T HAVE ALL DAY and SOMETHING CAME UP (with its maybe-that-something-is-this DUE DATE cross). And to satisfy my wordplay fix was the big make-me-smile clue in [Bound for the big stage?] for JETÉ.
ALOT of roses to smell today, Kate, to complement the satisfaction of ALOT of the riddle-cracking work my brain loves. Thank you for this splendid outing!
Easy side of medium for me — two and a half minutes faster than my average. However that SOJU/JETE cross left me typing random letters until the J worked.
ReplyDeleteMy man cave tv only gets sports and MSNBC, so at least I knew KATY Tur. which was helpful in deciphering UNIT which was a WTF for me as clued. And people say HUNDO? Really?
ReplyDeleteHello BARB crowd. I'm with ya.
Haven't seen SOJU on the shelves around here, but I haven't been looking for it either. Nice to learn something, as always.
The long answers were particularly helpful today. Had to change BOLTINON and my "challenging item for a mover" was a SAFE before it was a SOFA, but I really wanted PIANO, which was the biggest challenge for our movers. Maybe @Gary J can weigh in on this one.
Tough but fair Friday, KH. Kept Hacking away at it until victory was achieved. Thanks for a nice helping of fun and reminding me of my visits to the Alhambra, which is amazing.
@pabloinnh 7:36 AM
DeleteHere's what I know about PIANO-ipodes. My neighbor who recently turned 97 needed to move to nursing care. Mind you, she's just a neighbor, and we ended up being in charge of her because she's outlived all of her family. You probably don't want to live into your late 90s, so I'd recommend the day you turn 90, start eating bacon. She owns an 1890s vintage upright Steinway. It sounds like an 1890s ragtime piano (i.e., not great) and we tried to find somebody to take it. Nobody would. It's a Steinway! Our Steinway dealer here in Denver is going out of business because nobody wants pianos anymore. Sad sad sad. We did get the piano moved into her room where she's in nursing care and she was delighted, but times are tough for pianos. If you must choose between a sofa and a piano, go for the sofa. And buy an ukulele.
I only know of the phrase “absolute UNIT” being applied to chonky cats. 😄😄
ReplyDeletePuzzle played nicely for me except the corners, which were brutal (well, southeast was fine). Adding to the trivia/name issue was a typo preventing me from getting GATTACA (which is vaguely heard of but never seen) and no idea on FLAK, LUND or KATY. I though it was spelled FLACK and even then it wasn’t coming to mind.
Rest of the puzzle was wooshy and fun with one answer always leading to at least one more.
very challenging..... had to cheat a bit..... thought it was ladies (excuse me)... never heard of Sadies.
ReplyDeleteLil Abner
DeleteNaticked at soju/jete. Enjoyed it overall.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely trivia filled - and with another obscure Pixar film that nobody watched the vibe is flat. That said - I liked it more than the big guy. The longs were cute and I found it splashy throughout.
ReplyDeleteIt’s a far gone lullaby
Liked VIBRAPHONE, RHUBARB and PHASERS. I had HUNDy for awhile. Knew things like GATTACA and PUENTE - that helped with some of the other oddball stuff. Learned TAPIOCA.
Pleasant Friday morning solve.
The SADIES
Inside Out was critically acclaimed and won the Best Animated Feature Oscar (and was nominated for screenplay). Pixar has definitely fallen off, but Inside Out wasn’t an example of that.
DeleteHUNDO? What? It's a CNOTE or CSPOT.
ReplyDelete@Son Volt -- yeah, no one saw "Inside Out" at all, totally obscure: "After finishing its theatrical run on December 10, 2015, Inside Out had grossed $356.9 million in the U.S. and Canada as the fourth-highest-grossing film of the year." (Box Office Mojo)
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, @pabloinnh people really do say HUNDO.
I, for one, learned the word chinwag today, the s in that clue (and its Othello cross, it's been awhile for me and Othello...) was my last letter
I suck at anagrams, to my shame, which turned SOJU/OLAV into a bit of a NATICK, though the obv. OLAV gave me the solve. But I still couldn't get the "shape" anagram. SO for all you other anagram idiots, here 'tis:
ReplyDeleteOVAL
I mean, it's only four letters, how many combinations could there be. Just couldn't get the synapses to line up.
Fun puzzle for me though. My set-point is 15 minutes for Friday/Saturday and I got this one in just shy of 12. VIBRAPHONE was a big help, CASSIO also a gimme (used to teach that stuff), remembered seeing GATTACA (at the time it came out my wife was working at the MIT/Whitehead Human Genome project and I was doing web stuff for a company that made DNA cookers). PUENTE also a gimme (hey, I'm a jazzer, what can I say). UNIT was a new slang term for me--appreciate that.
SO not as hard for me as for Rex for once. Lotta fun!
Thanks couldn’t get oval either
DeleteLoved the puzzle KH :-) nice to see your distant relative SADIE again!
ReplyDeleteWe were out eating pie and potatoes and drinking last night. The results weren't pretty.
ReplyDeleteEgs: AHME, I may have had too much SOJU to drink.
Mrs. Egs: Why? Did you puke?
Egs: Yeah, SOMETHINGCAMEUP.
Mrs Egs: ANY RHUBARB?
Egs: ALOT! Plus a TATERTOT.
Mrs. Egs: Bet that FELTGOOD. You've gone and got your tummy UPSET. Better take an ADVIL.
In Bolivia, tin is such an important export that they'll do about anything to get it from the mines to the shipping terminals. To them, a highway is mostly something to BUSTINON.
We wine snobs say "Drink a merlot in health and a CABINFEVER."
Pretty easy for a Friday, but lots of fun. Thanks, Kate (and SADIE) Hawkins.
I thought PLEBE was a non-ruling class type as in “plebeian”. Never heard of it used for a newcomer student. And unlike Rex, I was not overjoyed by the presence of SOJU. I had METE (remember “metes and bounds”) instead of JETE (not fairly clued for a cross with SOJU imho).
ReplyDeleteLike others, I am tired of these trivia tests. I like a puzzle to challenge my vocabulary, general knowledge and wits. These are just head scratching exercises in, “well, I have no idea who that is.” This seems to be an increasing trend.
@JonnyZ the first year students at the Naval Academy are called Plebes.
DeleteAbout plebes
DeleteJohnny Z
Common term from West Point.
Remember just because a word , like in my case soju, is completely unknown to me does NOT mean it is obscure
Plebe is most definitely not obscure You just didn’t happen to know it. Nothing wrong with that but don’t criticize the puzzle about plebes. (Your complaint about a trivia fest is certainly valid because of all the names).
Another good challenge today. Clever cluing meant to mislead, great fill with just enough gimmes. The long answers were a bit flat, but welcome fill-ins in a sea of blank spaces on my grid! Nice one.
ReplyDeleteI remember reading OMNI as a youngster and feeling unsettled and angsty when I finished; there always seemed to be a doom machine or alien presence featured
I had a lot of smiles from this one.
ReplyDeleteLiked the long answers, despite having my brain insist on ‘Xylophone’ too many times to count, and getting really stuck up there, even though I have a lot of Jazz recordings. And ‘Hair of the dog’ despite it’s obvious unsuitability for that small, ADVIL sized space.
Baked a RHUBARB pie just last week, with the early spring RHUBARB. Plus TATERTOTs! Another fun word. CABINFEVER is something I’m experiencing right now, with all the rain we’ve had, even though the spring flowers love it, I don’t.
Loved this puzzle. Lots of fun.
First time I ever had an easier time than Rex!
ReplyDeletePoor old Southside. How do you ever finish a puzzle?
ReplyDeleteSo much I didn't like about this puzzle.
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, I only realized that I had a DNF when I came here to discover that it wasn't DEBUt/tATTACA after all. I didn't like DEBUT before a launch because once you've debuted you've already launched, right? But I never thought of DEBUG. And as for GATTACA -- can we please lose the dystopian films in puzzles? All of them. There's enough dystopia in real life right now, thank you very much, and you're not going to make me watch any of these movies.
SUM for "put together" is ugly, ugly, ugly.
What kind of way to clue UNIT (18A) is that? Can you please postpone all the modern slang that seems to have been invented yesterday morning until those millions of us who never heard of it have died off? We will, eventually, you know. Of course by the time we do, coinages like "absolute unit" will probably have long since died off too. It doesn't seem to have "legs", if you ask me.
Can we only use slang that does have legs? Slang such as "has legs" for example, which has lasted, like, forever?
HUNDO for a hundred-dollar bill? Ugly, ugly, ugly. Can we lose sloppy, infantile slang like HUNDO?
And I'm not even going to mention SOJU.
There were very good things in this puzzle such as I DON'T HAVE ALL DAY and SOMETHING CAME UP, but they were completely overshadowed by the bad stuff. A struggle that was mostly irritating.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteNother toughie. Had to run to Goog a few times. Mostly in the North. AH ME.
Did a Reveal Square for the J of SOJU/JETE, because even though I tried a J there during an alphabet run, I had wrong CiSSIO in. Oops.
Nice FriPuz. Enjoy your Friday.
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I'm with ncmathsadist: who was the first or last person you know who said "hundo"? Much less had one in their hands?
ReplyDeleteUpper half of the puzzle much tougher than the lower half. Felt like an easy-ish Saturday to me.
ReplyDeleteLots of flow and fun for me until the NW corner brought everything to a dead stop. What? xylophone didn’t fit. I had GATTICA and eventually BURN. The rest? Finally gave up and searched for xylophone-like instruments. (Also to rule out Haydn).
ReplyDeleteI use PGS but I'm not a professional…. Never heard that use of UNIT, or HUNDO.
GATTACA/TATTACA?
ReplyDeleteDEBUT/TATTACA seemed fine to me.
Nancy agrees with you Anonymous 9:15 AM
Deleteabout tATTACCA and DEBUt
I was fortunate to have seen the movie.
Instead of ABSOLUTE UNIT I had ABSOLUTE CHAD, another modern colloquialism which means (afaik) roughly the same thing: if "CHAD" hasn't yet appeared in the Times in this colloquial sense consider yourself warned ;)
ReplyDeleteAgree about the OH MEs, AH MEs, which are as gross as the AAAAHs and OOOOHs which can be made to mean pretty much whatever the constructor wants.
But Rex, what if the FBI is BUSTing IN ON a group of RWers plotting an insurrection??
ReplyDeleteSadie Hawkins dances are not called "Sadies." They're just not. The puzzlemaker made that up for this puzzle. I saw right away that that was probably the answer and refused to write it in until I absolutely had to. Because it's not a thing, it's made up. The clue should be "Dances for which girls do the asking, in a novel informal abbreviation."
ReplyDeleteIt was fun to pull Dogma and Gattaca from my long-ago memory. I remember liking Dogma a lot. We watched Gattaca in my 7th and 8th grade math class sometimes because my math teacher really liked it.
This puzzle was hard for a Friday. Lots of names.
I thought this one was pretty easy for me, especially for a Friday. I usually can't finish. Heavy pop culture puzzles are the only ones I can solve easily. Maybe I should hit the books more.
ReplyDeleteFor some reason, VIBRAPHONE was my first total gimme. I've been to LUND but didn't know about the university there. The attraction for me was the amazing astronomical clock there, still memorable 40+ years later. Hand up for DEBUt before DEBUG (it's on the paper version I did before coming online to type it in). oHME/AHME KeaLoa didn't keep me from seeing RHUBARB, fortunately.
ReplyDeleteConstructor’s last name is Hawkins and she fit a “Sadie’s” clue in there.
ReplyDeleteSadie Hawkins. Kate Hawkins.
ReplyDeleteWow, got home about 1 after a fantastic Springsteen concert and needed to wind down before sleep so I figured I’d start the puzzle. Twenty minutes later I was done, so found it unusually easy.
ReplyDeleteHaven't heard "absolute unit." Do know "Big Unit," the nickname for Randy Johnson, the great pitcher. He was 6'10" and is second in career strikeouts (after Nolan Ryan).
ReplyDeleteHad to cheat a bit (SOJU/JETE) but that didn't spoil the fun.
Why would anyone say HUNDO when they could say "C Note"?
ReplyDeleteOne of the *Ice (see yesterday’s puzzle) things about NYTXW is it reminds me of classic songs.
*Acre reminded me of this Roxy Music (featuring Brian ENO) nugget:
MOTHEROFPEARL
Today’s “challenging item for a mover” evoked Frank Zappa:
SOFA #2
50 years later, even found out the English translation of the German lines…
I am the heaven
I am the water
I am the dirt under your rollers…
I am here
And you are my sofa...
That Zappa was a true ROMANTIC!
Well if you take TWENTY (20!) proper nouns, two aren't even clued, and cross an Asian drink with a ballet move, add BUST IN ON (gawd) after cluing it with an initialism, and wrap it up with two unspecified amounts, well, what ya got here is a stinker. It would've FELT GOOD to see this wad hit @Nancy's wall.
ReplyDeleteTapioca pudding is the best. I ate tater tots on Tuesday, and we're reaching strawberry-rhubarb pie season, so those FELT GOOD.
Tee-Hee: SOMETHING CAME UP and it FELT GOOD.
Uniclues:
1 The feeling among the alpha writers that the beta writers were a bunch of noobs.
2 Tone bar.
3 Spicy spud.
4 "Hey, let's bury all the good stuff."
5 The aura on the day the last slice hits my belly.
6 An overwhelmingly pro-arson urge in the forest.
7 Benevolent bitch.
8 The number one song about rolling phat.
1 DEBUG CREW AURA
2 VIBRAPHONE UNIT
3 LIT TATER TOT
4 TUT PALACE IDEA (~)
5 RHUBARB SADNESS
6 BURN CABIN FEVER
7 GENEROUS DOG MA
8 BEST HUNDO ARIA (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: [Those among whom listening and thinking are under developed skills.] CLUES "USA MALES."
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I enjoyed this immensely but it was definitely challenging. It came in about triple my normal Friday time, double my normal Saturday.
ReplyDeleteHEIDI Gardner is awesome. That is all.
ReplyDeleteOH ME, what a slog. When multiple names are the first thing you see with just a casual glance at the printed puzzle, you know SOMETHING is UP, but at least it was a learning experience: Absolute UNIT, VIBRAPHONE, SOJU, and lions dance to celebrate TET. But HUNDO? I paid for my $50 worth of plants at the greenhouse yesterday with a Ben Franklin and had no idea. My FAULT I suppose.
ReplyDeleteWhile the USDA does grade Prime as the highest quality, my dad who knew his beef cattle always advised me to buy Choice as being the general BEST value.
Tough but fair. Loved it!
ReplyDeleteAs I solved, my rating went from "impossible" to "hm, maybe doable after all,," to "this is fun!" In the top third of the grid I had only ARIA, but then I was thrown a lifeline by CASSIO x CABIN FEVER x SOMETHING CAME UP, and I was able to puzzle out the lower tier and work my way up to PALACE, buoyed by the fun of RHUBARB and TAPIOCA. PHASERS and FAULTLINES gave me my entry into the top, with ABBOT x DEBUG my last cross. I agree that there was plenty of you-know-it-or-you-don't trivia, but I thought the vexations were outweighed by the pleasures. A really satisfying Friday, I thought.
ReplyDeleteHelp from previous puzzles: PUENTE. Help from my son's making me watch it: GATTACA. No idea: HEIDI, KATY, UNIT, HUNDO, SUJO.
SOJU revived memories of a year spent in Korea, mostly well outside SEOUL. SOJU is something like a Korean equivalent of sake, served hot or cold depending on the season and used to a great extent in party gatherings. It is part of essentially a triumvirate of Korean alcoholic beverages and the most refined. Various names apply depending on regions and local customs, but the other two are yakju, a well refined white wine, and makgeolli, a milky unrefined wine. In Korea's stifling high-humidity summers in the countryside these wines were traditionally stored in deep wells to keep them cool and refreshing and ready for village parties when the sun went down. A lot of nostalgia there...
ReplyDeleteAlso felt the puzzle was tough but rewarding to finish despite some uneven clues and slang references. Liked how @Rex described his mental adventures trying to navigate this one--empathized completely.
Big time Natick for me at 51D and 57A. Otherwise, did ok, even with the excess pop culture.
ReplyDelete“SOMETHING (suddenly) CAME UP” -Marcia Brady
ReplyDeleteAlso, the letters in GATTACA are all DNA nucleotides.
Medium-tough with the bottom half easier than the top. NW was last to fall. HEIDI and VIBRA were WOEs, DEBUG was not obvious, GATTACA was a vague memory, I thought Superior was a nun, me too for Barb before BURN…tough corner.
ReplyDeleteSOJU was also a WOE.
HUNDy before HUNDO
Absolute UNIT???
I did know KATY
Solid with a bit of sparkle and more than a dollop of crunch. Liked it.
Barbara's Rhubarb Pie dances. I cant get enough
ReplyDeleteDNF. Very little fun with this Saturday on Friday.
ReplyDeleteALEVE/ADVIL, BARB/BURN, ENG/LIT, FLAP/FLAK, TSK/TUT, AT SEA/UPSET, OVERDUE/DUE DATE. I didn't have ANY, not even a TAD. And then all the WTF proper names.
So I cheated, first with the horribly-clued *taps watch anxiously*, which fixed the North. Then I googled "slang for hundred", which put the South together.
Tough but doable- the way I like ‘em.
ReplyDeleteDifficult. A lot I didn't know - SOJU, FLAK, VIBRAPHONE, HUNDO, never heard of SADIES & had barb before BURN - but it was a puzzle I wanted to stick with - as opposed to some others lately that were a slog.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the work-out, Kate :)
Took a looong while to sift thru to completion, but survived. Had some no-knows and some no-comprehendos, but also some near gimmes, sooo … ok, with maybe a "TUT, TET".
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick (of a mere 8 choices): PGS. Plural abbreve meat that evidently gave many folks like @RP some trouble. Looked in my dictionary just now, and behold:
pg.
abbreviation
page.
some fave stuff: RHUBARB pie. CABINFEVER [one of them near gimmes]. IDONTHAVEALLDAY. weirder-than-snot HUNDO [debut word]. Double-digit U count.
Thanx for the GENEROUS portion of feistiness, Ms. Hawkins darlin.
Masked & Anonymo11Us
p.s. M&A got a 2 on Wordle today. Owe it all to clean livin ... whatever that is. har
**gruntz**
I hadn’t seen either of the films referenced, so those were very tough for me, The bottom half of the puzzle came together better in my case. BUT I really came here to say that my Mexican friend Patricia goes by Paty. So I would think that all Spanish-speaking countries spell the nickname as Paty.
ReplyDeleteMy 21A AP class was bIo. I kept trying to make sense of 1D's clue to be Adlib with that ending B. I finally got traction with OMNI, a magazine I used to subscribe to in the late 80s.
ReplyDeleteI was afraid I was shooting myself in the foot by plopping down PROVE IT with only the T crossing but it proved helpful in getting 19A, the V being a key letter to that phrase.
It FELT GOOD to finish this puzzle but the PPP was far too high to make this a comfortable solve. Thanks, Kate Hawkins, for introducing me to "Absolute UNIT", I think.
A few too many names for me, and not just in the answers. Why oh why must they clue something like DOGMA with the name of someone from a 25 year old movie? I mean, I like Alanis as much as anyone, but...
ReplyDeleteAnd because it was clued so obscurely, it didn't feel wrong to have LADIES and SAFE crossing it instead of SADIES and SOFA. However the FBI surprise being a BULTINAN didn't work so I eventually fixed it.
Also hands up for BARB before BURN. And one that really hung around forever: CISSIO crossing GATTICA. More damned names!
I remember buying issue #1 of OMNI, way back in the 70s I think. The good old days for sure.
[Spelling Bee: Thurs 0; last word an SB standard 8er. Streak 11 days.]
This popped into my head last night. The clue is Small men's room. 5 letters.
ReplyDelete@Gary Jugert-Yikes. At least we didn't have to move an upright. Mine is a Yamaha and either a spinet, which is what I would call it, or a student model, which I think is how it's described by Yamaha. No real problems except it had to go across quite a stretch of soggy ground, over a (plastic) gutter, and in to our ground floor rental unit through sliding glass doors. But in it went, and will be there forever as far as I'm concerned.
ReplyDeleteYou're right about nobody wanting pianos any more. I grew up with a big old upright back when lots of folks had a piano. I get that an electronic keyboard is way more portable but I'm thankful I at least had something to learn to play on. I do have a uke, but I vastly prefer my six-string.
I love reading how challenging this was for some of you bc it was easy for me. The tables have finally turned!
ReplyDelete@Gary J (1:52)-- re: "It's a Steinway!" Yes, but it's an upright. Do you really think people don't want pianos anymore? Or is it more that-- in these days of electronic pianos and keyboards that never have to be tuned -- they just don't want uprights anymore? I've never been blown away by the sonority of any upright -- have you? I betcha that if it had been a Steinway baby grand or grand, many people would have wanted it. They don't make pianos like that anymore.
ReplyDeleteBlown away that this played so hard for so many. Blew through this one a full 8 minutes faster than my Friday average after a DNF yesterday that everyone else seemingly has little problem with.
ReplyDeleteI do think there’s a demo aspect to todays grid - plenty of elder millennial references that came easy to me but would otherwise be pretty tough.
Confidently dropped in THUMB PIANO for 16A "Marimba lookalike". Oops, I guess I was thinking of a Kalimba.
ReplyDeleteI was thrown off by the asterisks in the clue for 19A IDONTHAVEALLDAY, "*taps watch anxiously*". Maybe a carry over from yesterday? Since the clue begins with a lower case "t" in "taps", I thought maybe some letters were missing. Looked up asterisk used as a punctuation mark and found a dizzying array of examples but none of them seem to explain how they are being used in this clue.
Lived in SEOUL for half a year and still didn't know (or remember) 51D SOJU. Not giving any indication in the clue "Bound for the big stage?" that the crossing answer JETÉ is French for "jump" didn't help.
I get that no one outside Sweden is gonna care about it but the oldest university in Sweden and the Nordics is Uppsala University. Lund University was established in 1666, according to both Wikipedia and their own website. So I think that's a pretty poor clue.
ReplyDeleteshocking error- where are the nytimes fact checkers!
DeleteYeah, a vibraphone looks like a marimba made out of metal with pedals and a motor on it. Oh, wait. It's not a marimba lookalike at all, is it? Maybe it looks *similar* to a marimba. Yeah, you could say that.
ReplyDeleteI really dislike such sloppy cluing. NYTimes just keeps getting worse with it.
Found this puzzle very hard
ReplyDeleteI gather Rex dnf’d under my rules. i .e. Checked to see if he made an error. That made me feel better. I had no problem thinking of flak but jete eluded me ( when I went through the alphabet I didn’t pronounce je-té. Which was stupid. Soju sounds much more Korean than somu oh well).
Have no IDEA how Rex can call don’t have more formal than haven’t got.
I do agree too many names maybe but I still liked the puzzle.
Gattaca is a very decent movie. Have to love a future where everyone is driving a Studebaker Avanti
ReplyDeleteOval
ReplyDeleteI googled the answer for the site of the oldest Scandinavian university and several said Uppsala. Lund was founded two centuries later. Did 8 read the clue wrong or is this a big error in th3 clue itself?
ReplyDeleteI googled the answer for the site of the oldest Scandinavian university and several said Uppsala. Lund was founded two centuries later. Did 8 read the clue wrong or is this a big error in th3 clue itself?
ReplyDeleteWhy is "*taps watch anxiously*" I don't have all day?
ReplyDeleteTougher than a Texas steak. No-knows abound. NE & E gave me the fan-tods. EDEN Prairie? I had no IDEA (=gist?!). The clue for 26d certainly wasn't the BEST "choice." Wonder of wonders, I'm not up on my Swedish towns. LUND? If you say so. And then there's UNIT.
ReplyDeleteI just don't know what this language is evolving into--but it surely isn't any form of English. Go ahead and TRY to explain what UNIT has to do with size and strength. You can't. It's like a cryptogram, and makes just as much sense.
I took wild guesses at much of those areas, and at #57. Pinned all my hopes on the across on that one. Strangely, my two writeovers were elsewhere: ClaW for CREW, and SaFe for SOFA.
It certainly FELTGOOD to finish, ALOT of triumph points. After solve, Googled KATY Tur: yep, DOD. Birdie.
Wordle par.
I have NEVER ever heard anyone say, "Ah, me". This sounds like it originated in the 1700's. And what the hell does it mean???
ReplyDeleteCREW @ FAULT (SUM PROM DAY)
ReplyDelete“IDON’THAVE ANY IDEA”,
She said IN SADNESS, UPSET.
“IT FELT so GOOD”, sobbed MILA,
“now I’ve A DUEDATE to SWEAT.”
--- OLAV LUND
Ooh, ooh, oldest university in Scandinavia. I know this. Uppsala, right. Only 4 squares. Shoot, what now? Wait for crosses to get LUND. Upon googling, you can find websites with claims for each. Otherwise not much resistance, at least for me.
ReplyDeleteWordle birdie that could easily have gone DNF with BBGBG on the second shot.
Impossible.
ReplyDeleteAnd then it all fell into place. After I looked up a few names, that is. Of course. I guess I'm just not a good name dropper - at least when it comes to dropping them into a grid.
The final letters felt miraculous.
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords
Nice and crunchy. I loved it. Thank you Kate Hawkins.
ReplyDeleteJust started solving weekends again for the first time and today was my first solve without lookups since climbing back aboard so (obvs) the trivia was in my wheelhouse. I’m one of the luddites who still watches TV (and news) which may have helped… who knows!
ReplyDeleteThe J in SOJO/JETE almost Naticked me (considered B) but chose correctly! #Yay4Me
Happy MDW! 🍸