Saturday, July 20, 2024

Eponym for a ship in a famous thought experiment / SAT 7-20-24 / Characters in "300" / David Grammy-winning French D.J. / Touring show for figure skaters / Punish like Montressor does Fortunato in "The Cask of Amontillado" / ___ Wood, portrayer of the Bond girl Plenty O'Toole in "Diamonds Are Forever"

Constructor: Ricky J. Sirois

Relative difficulty: Medium (Hard, then Easy)


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Ship of THESEUS (21D: Eponym for a ship in a famous thought experiment) —

The Ship of Theseus, also known as Theseus's Paradox, is a thought experiment and paradox about whether an object is the same object after having had all of its original components replaced over time, typically one after the other.

In Greek mythology, Theseus, mythical king of the city Athens, rescued the children of Athens from King Minos after slaying the minotaur and then escaped onto a ship going to Delos. Each year, the Athenians would commemorate this by taking the ship on a pilgrimage to Delos to honour Apollo. A question was raised by ancient philosophers: After several hundreds of years of maintenance, if each individual piece of the Ship of Theseus was replaced, one after the other, was it still the same ship?

In contemporary philosophy, this thought experiment has applications to the philosophical study of identity over time, and has inspired a variety of proposed solutions and concepts in contemporary philosophy of mind concerned with the persistence of personal identity. (wikipedia)

• • •

[at Point Pelee National Park, Ontario, Canada]

Oof, I am out of practice. When I go on vacation I Go On Vacation, which means I haven't so much as looked at a crossword puzzle since my last write-up on Whenever That Was (last Sunday, I think). I'd planned to blog throughout the week, but then the internet at our lake house turned out to be spectacularly bad, and so my stand-ins mercifully stood in and I got to take the week off. Genuinely off. It was great. I stared at Lake ERIE (4) from my back deck and watched the birds and listened to Barry Manilow and Dan Fogelberg and the Bee Gees and George Benson and Ambrosia and whatever other mellow childhood radio tunes my best friends decided to play on their little outdoor speaker cube thingie. Drank cocktails, read books, walked around quaint little towns eating gelato. Zero puzzles done. 



[MARI'S Gelato in Kingsville—a must]

And then I come back to a Saturday! Thrown in the deep end. I floundered around the NW corner of this one like a total incompetent, though, to be fair, some of the clues were dumb (who has bungee jumping on their BUCKET LIST!? Is bungee jumping still a thing? Feels like an "extreme sport" from the '90s—I wanted the answer to be ESPN ... something—"Hey, you wanna watch bungee-jumping?" "No." "Cool, I'll just turn on ESPN X-TREME." "I said 'no.'") (I think I also just hate the term BUCKET LIST, the way it sounds, the very idea of it ... just do the things you want to do, you don't need some mythical list, which almost certainly is not an actual "list" anyway). "STARS ON ICE?" (17A: Touring show for figure skaters). That feels made-up. ICE CAPADES is a very real and well-known thing. "STARS ON 45," also a very real thing, and once well known. "STARS ON ICE?" Maybe it's super famous and I just can't think of anything I'd want to go to less except maybe a monster truck rally (do they still have those?). I went to grad school in Michigan and know the names of all the little colleges there (my good friend taught at Adrian College for a while), and I *knew* ALMA, but couldn't retrieve it. Access denied. No idea about the Spanish province, forgot or blanked on the Hangul writing system. Entire NW, a washout. I had YDS and LAN and TREAT, and I wasn't really certain about those last two. Pitifully, shamefully, my first toehold came from the completely ordinary and unremarkable YDS / STAT cross-reference. Got STAT because I had YDS (and the "A" from TREAT) in place. Tried "I WAS NOT!," which, while not correct, was 5/7 correct, which was enough to get me into the PEN TENOR RAPPER section, and then things began to open up a little.


Part of my NW flubbery was (somehow) not even seeing the clue at 19A: Actors Feldman and Haim (COREYS), which would've been a gimme ... if I'd been able to spell. I thought COREY was CORY, and so for my plural, I had (logically!) CORIES, LOL. I was like, "Is that right? Is that how you pluralize Y-ending names? 'I wonder how many GARIES I know...' No, that looks bad." Sigh. But I figured it out, and I (somehow!) knew David GUETTA, despite being able to name absolutely nothing he's done (32A: David ___, Grammy-winning French D.J.). I just remembered seeing "ft. David GUETTA" on a bunch of song titles earlier this century, or maybe it's "David GUETTA, ft. [someone else]" (yes, that's it—he's collaborated with a ton of singers, including AKON, who shows up in puzzles sometimes, or did, once).


I also totally forgot about the Ship of THESEUS, which made getting into the NE corner very, very hard. Well, harder than it could've/should've been. Thought maybe the ship was "THE something," like "THE ZEUS" or "THE DEUS" (deus = Lat. for "god"). Speaking of "THE," THE EYE (26A: A bad look) was rough, both because it’s hard to parse ( “THEE-?”), and because it really wants to be THE Evil EYE or THE Stink EYE. I don't think of THE EYE as a "bad look," exactly. If you give someone THE EYE, you're checking them out in an at-least-semi-horny fashion ("to look at someone in a way that shows sexual attraction" — merriam-webster dot com). Thank god I knew window shades were PLEATED, because the NE might've been inaccessible otherwise. PLEATED gave me EXPAT gave me EXXON, and I was able to get up into the corner from there. After that, the puzzle got remarkably easy. Followed ALGEBRA into the SE and, with the help of NAPE PATH PABST (all easy), got all the long answers down there, no sweat. And the SW was even easier. Lit that part up like it was dry grass. Whoosh. NO CAN DO + PROTIP + GADOT, gimme gimme gimme and ... done. 


Bullets:
  • 16A: ___ Wood, portrayer of the Bond girl Plenty O'Toole in "Diamonds Are Forever" (LANA) — we're still doing Bond Girls of Yore? With so many good (and actually famous) LANAs to choose from? Boo. 
Lana Turner has collapsed! 
I was trotting along and suddenly
it started raining and snowing
and you said it was hailing
but hailing hits you on the head
hard so it was really snowing and
raining and I was in such a hurry
to meet you but the traffic
was acting exactly like the sky
and suddenly I see a headline 
LANA TURNER HAS COLLAPSED!
there is no snow in Hollywood
there is no rain in California
I have been to lots of parties
and acted perfectly disgraceful
but I never actually collapsed
oh Lana Turner we love you get up 

    ([Lana Turner has collapsed], Frank O'Hara, 1964)
  • 42D: Characters in "300" (ZEROS) — a "letteral" clue, but for numerals, which are "characters" ("a graphic symbol [...] used in writing or printing" (merriam webster dot com); here the character in question is "0" (which is in "300," twice, along with "3," obviously)
  • 9D: Small denomination (SECT) — well, the misdirect worked; I was thinking currency. But are SECTs "small," by definition? Smaller than the group they broke from, sure. But if they're a full-blown "denomination," then "small" seems ... misleading. Possible, but not definitive.
  • 25D: Punish like Montressor does Fortunato in "The Cask of Amontillado" (ENTOMB) — I had the "EN-" part and thought "... is ENWALL a word?" But I decided to go with the more recognizable ENTOMB. Great story, that one.
  • 34D: Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest (NEZ PERCE) — my mom grew up in northern Idaho, in St. Maries (just north of the original NEZ PERCE territory), so NEZ PERCE is probably one of the first Native American tribal names I ever learned.
[Green = original territory, brown = reservation]
  • 38D: Have to shave one's head, perhaps (LOSE A BET) — I had LOSE and wrote in HAIR. That's why I shaved my head. "Yes, THAT TRACKS," I thought. But no.
  • 36D: Horses around? (CAROUSEL)
     — the highlight of the puzzle. Just a great clue. I live in the CAROUSEL City. Well, it's actually called "The Parlor City," but it's also known as "The CAROUSEL Capital of the World." Seriously. George F. Johnson (of Endicott-Johnson shoes) built parks for his workers all over the area, including CAROUSELs, some of which are still operational (including one in Rec Park, just a stone's throw (give/take) from my house). The local minor league team here (a Mets Double-A affiliate) is called the Binghamton Rumble Ponies (an olde-tymey name for CAROUSEL horses). 
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

113 comments:

  1. Ride the Reading6:33 AM

    Thanks for the Rumble Ponies explanation, Rex - my guess had been that it had something to do with a drag race between Ford Mustangs.

    Felt like an older puzzle, in a way - in terms of time to solve, and lots of white space after first pass through. Hype instead of FLOG at 11A. Had ON ICE at 17A, but a STARless sky. Wanted, but didn't enter, Amoco for EXXON. Amoco was my go-to gas station until it became BP.

    WOES - Biscay, Guetta. THE EYE? That stinks.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:43 AM

    Did not enjoy EXXON. Few companies have done more to harm humanity. Since the 80s they knew climate change was real and chose to deny it, helping to create the mess we are in.

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  3. STARSONICE went with no crosses. Indeed, first thing in my grid. Some luck there, in that ice capades did not occur to me first.

    More luck: I know maybe two DJs; it just happens that David GUETTA is one of them. Titanium, which people think of as a Sia song, is really David Guetta featuring Sia.

    A mostly smooth solve, but I did have hype/yourEXIT before FLak/LASTEXIT before FLOG/LASTEXIT, and maRtYS before COREYS.

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  4. Knew Marty Feldman so Martys went in but real problem for me was CHAntS for CHARMS.

    Eventually looked at tONEYS for unknown Feldmans and whoever the other name was. What a weird spelling. DNF had to look up COREY Feldman

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  5. This was tough for me. I confidently wrote in ICE CAPADES, which as you say, is a thing. It was quickly clear that was wrong, but STARS ON ICE? Feh. CAROUSes before CAROUSEL, EXile before EXPAT (knew that had to be wrong next to LAST EXIT--the two Is didn't work), "tout" and then "hawk" before FLOG, that's also how I know David GUETTA. Tough but ultimately fair.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:18 PM

      Adam
      FWIW
      Stars On Ice
      IS a thing. I have heard of it. It still exists and a top listing on Google is ticket sales.

      Delete
  6. Andy Freude7:05 AM

    Welcome back, Rex. Sounds like a wonderful vacation, even for those of us who associate crossword puzzles with leisure time.

    A somewhat similar solve today. I drew a complete blank in the NW, jumped over to the NE, and ONE BY ONE worked my way around clockwise, finishing with BUCKET LIST, which is strangely appropriate, I suppose.

    Never heard of the Rumble Ponies, which has to be the all-time greatest name for a team. Thanks for that!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I knew of the Rumble Ponies but not the origin of the name, so I learned something today. However, best minor league team name ever? It's good, but I'm going with either the Rocket City Trash Pandas or the Amarillo Sod Poodles.

      Delete
    2. Sounds like a great vacation, Rex. Glad it went well. I visited Point Pelee years ago when my cousin and I sailed there in his little Sunfish from Put-in-Bay, Ohio, to buy full-alcohol beer when he was over 18 (legal in Ontario) but under 21 (not legal in Ohio except for "3.2 beer.") Must have been around 1981. Great memory.

      As for the puzzle, a very enjoyable solve today. Came in slightly under my average Saturday time, at about 14 minutes. I first had LOSEhair instead of LOSEABET for the same reason as Rex, but BABYBOOMER fixed that one. NW gave me trouble – I also put in IceCapades immediately – but overall this was fun.

      Delete
    3. Sorry, all, that last comment was supposed to be in the main thread, not a reply. Not sure what happened there.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous1:33 AM

      E-check? Yuck. I'm not a fan of E-mag, E-cigarette etc. LOTR is stupid too. Lord of the Rings- 4 one syllable words needs an acronym? How often am I texting someone about Lord of the Rings?

      Delete
  7. The north and through the center was very tough with the GUETTA guy and whatever The Cask of Amontillado is. I also got a chuckle thinking “who does a thought experiment with a ship named THESEUS ?” - then I realized it mights just be something translated from Ancient Greek or something like that. Anyway, that whole section is above my pay grade.

    Made my way down south and found myself in much more familiar territory - BABY BOOMER, STREET TACO, LOSE A BET are all solid and fairly clued and CAROUSEL rocked. So there was at least some fun to be had today, but it came in fits and spurts.

    Btw, that far left column of BISCAY over NEZPERCE is as unpleasant to look at as it was to fill in.

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  8. Anonymous7:13 AM

    The SW was a bear for me. Never saw “300” but was sure the answer was HEROS and have never heard of NEZ PERCE which really felt like a letter salad. Tricky but fair.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:56 AM

      Came here to say exactly this. Was flying through this and didn’t stop to think about this one, or remember that it’s Saturday , it was obviously HEROS without a second thought

      Delete
  9. Had SENSE at 29A instead of TENOR for a long while, and THAT held me up all over the place.

    Never heard of the Nez Perce tribe, ever, so ROSS was elusive and I ended up with LOSS which was a poor answer but LOSS LEADER is definitely a term so I told myself "ehhhhh... I guess..."

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  10. Anonymous7:16 AM

    I thought I was in for an actual Saturday challenge for once, given how tough the NW was. I admittedly got a bit lucky, I had TENSPEED which I vaguely remembered being a thing, and I knew KOREA, so I got BUCKET LIST off of the wrong T.

    CAROUSEL had a great clue but it was also very easy to get.

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  11. Naticked at Nezperce and zeros. Otherwise smooth. Had the mb so put "delimbed" for the Cask of Amontillado clue, which is gruesome, but then so is "entombed".

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  12. Anonymous7:23 AM

    I will never not be excited to see some Frank O’Hara.

    ReplyDelete

  13. Challenging, with lots of stuff I didn't know: BISCAY (1D), STARS ON ICE (17A), both COREYS (19A), ALMA College (23A), David GUETTA (32A). Totally forgot about the THESEUS paradox (21D). Sergey, Larry and I solved as a team.

    Overwrites:
    japan before chinA before KOREA at 4D
    Ten SPEED before TWO at 6D (never heard of a two-speed bike but I was pretty confident about the T)

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  14. Anonymous7:34 AM

    I first had oneSPEED for “Like some basic bikes.” TWO(-)SPEED bikes are barely a thing. Now, the 1980 Honda Civic I used to pass my driving test (in 1994) did have a TWO SPEED transmission.

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    Replies
    1. ChrisS2:05 PM

      Forward and reverse?

      Delete
  15. Anonymous7:34 AM

    Since I started off with FEARFACTOR for 1A (which made CPU work for 7D - but absolutely nothing else), NW was nightmarish for me. ☹️

    ReplyDelete
  16. DavidF7:35 AM

    Crosswording is a great way to remind yourself that everyone has different life experiences. Things that are gimmes for one person (STARS ON ICE, The Cask of Amontillado) are no-gos for others. It gives me even more respect for the constructors who build these things.

    This one was exactly what I want from a Saturday - challenging, but not frustratingly so. Lots of clever clues (especially CAROUSEL), and lots of zippy answers (THAT TRACKS, STREET TACO). My biggest overwrite was 47A, which went from "tidbIt" to "hot TIP" to "PRO TIP". :)

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  17. Two puzzles into the NYT, it’s clear that Ricky is a wordplayer.

    In his first puzzle last November, a Monday, his four theme answers were two-word phrases, both words starting with B, such as BEAN BURRITO. The revealer was TO BE FAIR, meant to be read aloud. Hah!

    Today, the play abounded in the clues. I marked eight wordplay clues that struck my fancy – eight! – such as the stellar question mark clues [Beat poet?] for RAPPER, and [Horses around?] for CAROUSEL.

    This was a TWO SPEED solve for me. Most of it was fairly steady, but with enough delicious resistance to keep me well engaged. But then there was one area like a block of ice that I had to keep chipping away at, where I kept coming back with futile results, where it laughed at and mocked me for my incompetence, until finally, finally, I cracked it open, happy and grateful.

    Three reactions. First, much to my amazement, BUCKET LIST has never appeared before in the NYT puzzle! Second, the black squares dominating the center of the grid look like a giant S, and even though it’s backward, I couldn’t help but think of Superman. Third, I loved the P fiesta in the clue “Place to pick up a puppy, perhaps”.

    Sweetness all around, Ricky, in your sophomore NYT creation. You can be sure I’ll be looking for your name ahead, as I relish wordplay. Thank you for a sublime outing!

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  18. Glad you had a nice vacation away from the blog, Rex :)

    Medium by time, but felt tough. KOREA went right in (Anyong!), but that wasn't a huge help. I've heard of Bilbao (Guggenheim Museum Bilbao) but didn't know BISCAY right away. (Bay of Biscay, sure.) Thanks, Corey Feldman, for being in The Goonies. Possible DNF corner without those footholds.

    May 7, 2023 Ship of THESEUS puzzle. My brother has had shoulder, knee, and ankle surgery, all within the past decade. After his recent surgery last year, I brought up the Ship of Theseus. He was not amused.

    NYT #2 from Ricky, after a Monday debut. Enjoyed this one. Well done and congrats!

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:29 AM

      I have the hatchet George Washington chopped down the cherry tree, replaced the handle, then the head, but it is the genuine article!!!

      Delete
  19. Good on you Rex - just the type of VACAY I like.

    Neat puzzle - some obscure trivia that had to be backed into but overall smooth sailing. Liked all of the ? offerings especially ROSS. Confidently put in ICE Capades right away but realized quickly I was off. Don’t really care for BUCKET LIST or BABY BOOMER.

    HOT WATER Music

    Rest in peace Joe D.

    Enjoyable Saturday morning solve. We also get another wonderful Stumper from Matt Sewell today.

    Dropkick’s covering Rodgers and Hammerstein

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  20. Anonymous8:16 AM

    Welcome home. Your replacements were awesome but there is only one fearless leader. The killer for me was I wrote in ice capades and like a dog with a bone I then refused to let it go even when I knew it had to be wrong. The rest of the fill was okay but my solve was marred by my own stubbornness.

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  21. Good to have you back. Just have to say I hate the term bucket list also. A shopping list, as though the notably wondrous places in the world, or the accomplishments of skill and discipline, are just markdowns to be piled in a shopping cart as one races through the discount aisles of life. And then you can post about them, with selfies.

    Had carouses before carousel. Less clever but grammatically more exact.

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  22. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  23. Eraser Day here. NW was impossible, finally got started with BEA Arthur, or all people, but then BURGER before BIGMAC, THATCHECKS before THAT TRACKS, and on and on. Hand up for TEN and ONE before TWO, as they are both better answers. Wanted FLOG right away but couldn't think of a seasonal treat that began with an F, probably because it was a "threat". Duh.

    NW finally fell, after the bike thing and changing IDIDNOT to IWASNOT to ITISNOT. The only Feldman I know is MARTY, another erasure. I don't think of CHARMS as words but the biggest slow down was BISCAY, which I know as VIZCAYA, which wouldn't fit.

    Also made the acquaintance of M. GUETTA, Ms. LANA, and ALMA. Nice to meet you all, I'm sure. And TBA was right but so was TBD. That kind of day.

    Nice challenging Saturday, RJS. Really Just Stumped in several places, until I wasn't, which is just how I like it. Thanks for all the fun.

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  24. Wow. I cannot believe that @Rex had the pretty much the same thoughts about the puzzle that I did (even the fact I knew of ALMA but could not THINK of it). Yep, I thought the NE to middle was medium, then the entire bottom was easy (for a Saturday) BUT…the NW!? Yikes. Unlike @kitshef, ALL I could think of was Ice Capades and STARSONICE didn’t even knock on the door of my brain. Unlike @Rex…no prob with COREYS but THAT didn’t do much, but…here was a killer for me…a TWO speed bike!? Yes, I googled after solve, I know NOW it exists, but c’mon. End of story is that I had to cheat to get BISCAY which allowed me to finally suss out BUCKETLIST and STARSONICE and TWO (instead of one) speed. All in all, fun challenge!

    @Southside, you definitely need to read some Edgar Allen Poe…at least The Cask of Amontillado and The Telltale Heart.

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  25. Anonymous8:59 AM

    NW corner was literally impossible but the rest was stupid easy.

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  26. I will forever wonder if I am counted among the Garies. My Gariipode includes only one other Gary. He's smarter than me.

    Stymied by proper nouns. Welcome to the Saturday themeless. Not much here to redeem the slog through the gunk except I like the idea of a BUCKET LIST and once or twice a year I sit in my car by myself crying and eating a BIG MAC.

    Propers: 7
    Places: 3
    Products: 10 (boo)
    Partials: 8
    Foreignisms: 1
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 29 (41%) (grr)
    Recipes: 1 (beta)

    Funnyisms: 4 🙂

    Uniclues:

    1 Array of whips my dominatrix hopes to acquire.
    2 A ten year old, typically.
    3 Woos 30 plastic horses.
    4 Tastes bad and erases your memories of tonight.
    5 Arithmetic.
    6 Culinary masterpiece waiting before the open road.

    1 FLOG BUCKET LIST
    2 STARS ON ICE USER
    3 CHARMS CAROUSEL
    4 TWO-SPEED PABST
    5 IT IS NOT ALGEBRA
    6 LAST EXIT BIG MAC

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: American Kennel Club's ongoing nuisance. DISMAYING MUTTS.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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    Replies
    1. Great uniclues today!
      I don’t know why Rex was so upset about it

      Delete
  27. Anonymous9:09 AM

    Was so sure “Supreme leader?” was “Taco” until STREET TACO emerged. Tough, but fair and clever - enjoyable Saturday.

    ReplyDelete
  28. I finished well below my average time, but I'll still call this medium because the NW sat mostly empty for a long time. Once I remembered STARS ON ICE, most everything else came readily to mind. That DJ's name is the only answer I had never heard of.
    I don't usually think of the NEZ PERCE as Pacific Northwest, so that's wasn't helpful (I think Tlingit or Salish) but it only takes a couple crossing letters to make it obvious what the answer is.
    A bit of a fight in this puzzle, but very fair. I really enjoyed it.

    Last Exit

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous9:20 AM

    welcome back. you got your Coreys so why not your Rumble Ponys? seems fair. I'm torn between my former fiancé Gal Costa and my current fiancé Gal Gadot. For your Hebrew speaking fans "the wheel keeps turning."

    If people only knew how ridiculous they look in a baseball cap they'd ditch the caps now. And with the cap on backward? don't get me started.

    zippy

    ReplyDelete
  30. I'd take a Dad joke any day over a MAPOUT.

    Wasn't it just yesterday that commenters were defending their preference for well-done steak? Let's see if today we have any fans of the OVERDONE steak.

    I thought it'd be a TREAT if I caroused on a CAROUSEL after drinking a boatload of PABST. Cross that one off the old BUCKETLIST.

    I wasn't at all sure which Grammy-winning French D.J. to put in 32A. I guessed GUETTA, but it was pure luck to pick him out of the many that we all know so well.

    Really nice cluing today. Thanks, Ricky J. Sirois.




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  31. Hey All !
    Had to cheat twice to finish up in the NE. UX, of all things, was unfamiliar to me. Got the upper NE, but couldn't make sense out of MA_O__ for plot. Had to use a crossword building tool to suss that one out. Finally got MAPOUT, which let me change sLatTED to PLEATED and let me see EXPAT, allowing me to change EnrON to EXXON. Dang. Finished with the P of RAPPER/PLEATED, and the E of THESEUS/PLEATED.

    Otherwise a fairly fair SatPuz. Got through most with the stuck-not-gonna-get feeling, but plodding along, eventually getting everything.

    Thought the Gal of note was GADOT, but resisted putting it in, as the "of note" had me thinking there was some sort of singer with the name Gal. Misdirection working well on that clue.

    Some writeovers, oneSPEED-TWO, EbaY-ETSY, TENet-TENOR, TNa-TBD, aforementioned EnrON-EXXON.

    So a good SatPuz that was tough but fair. If I can remember UX is User Experience, it might come in handy in the future. Would've come in handy today.

    OVER and DONE. Happy Saturday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  32. Like others, I found the central and eastern puzzle very much do-able, easy in places, and the NW impossible. Threw in icecapades and was sure it was right until I decided IdidNOT was more right. Don’t know my provinces of Spain, or those particular COREYS. The clue for ETSY was hard because I assumed the answer should be more generic.

    In my young days of having a bike, one generally went from a oneSPEED (which I had at 6D for a long time) to a threeSPEED.

    I’m with you, @Anonymous 6:43 about EXXON.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Anonymous9:41 AM

    OVEN TIMER and CAROUSEL in the same week! Two fantastic clues, and sure, I had CAROUSES first, which left me with EESY and the light dawned. Brilliantly! A tough puzzle for me but enjoyable--so many good answers!

    Nice to hear about Rex fumbling around a bit, as I pretty much always do on Saturdays. Enjoyed the vacation pics. Point Pelee is a magical place, especially in the migration seasons. And I don't know what that cocktail is, but I wouldn't mind having a taste--looks good!

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  34. @🦖
    Thanks for the link to Amontillado. Just read it and I think this is the first time I made it to the end. Nothing like masonry towels to keep the pages turning. My first degree is in English, and I fell in love with colonial and early American writers, so by the time the 19th century writers come lumbering along, with their long sentences and many many commas, for me they are a bit of a dud. I could never get on board with Poe. Especially when Hawthorne is sitting next to him on the shelf like a flame thrower next to a pilot light. Poe gets invited to the A-list parties thanks to the bird poem, but I would rather drink coffee in a back alley café with the Scarlet Letter dude any day.

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  35. Pretty hard for me (20 min) but chipped away at it, lots of delights to be had along the way. Except for the dratted NATICK at GUETTA / GADOT. Had everything from crosses except the initial letter. Guessed at "G" and whoopee, that was it, what a thrill. Did I say "thrill"? I meant to say "meh," which is a crappy feeling for finally ending an otherwise very enjoyable just-hard-enough puzzle. "Meh" is why I hate NATICKS. When you get them, you still don't care.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Tom T9:53 AM

    Clues for Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW) in today's grid:

    1. 54 at the old ball game

    2. Pretty woman once in jolly old England

    3. Like characters in Children of a Lesser God

    Tough Saturday, with enough answers I didn't know (GUETTA, LANA, THESEUS, NEZPERCE) to cause me to hit Check Puzzle as soon as I didn't get "Congratulations!" Turns out my only mistake was the above referenced NEZPERCE. (I had hEROS, not ZEROS, and tNET, not CNET--one day I'll remember CNET.) Totally unfamiliar with NEZ PERCE in all my 73 years of life, including my current two-plus years of life in the Pacific Northwest. I'll have to read up on that.

    Wanted Disney ON ICE, but it wouldn't fit; hope College (Holland, MI), but it wouldn't work; maRtYS, thanks to Young Frankenstein; Titanic, off the T in THESEUS, sLatTED before PLEATED. So, yeah, a challenging fill.

    HDW answers:

    1. OUTS (from the O in 56A, ROSS)

    2. TART (T in 29A, TENOR, moves to NW--apparently TART first appeared in the language as a reference to a pretty lady, and shifted toward "lady of the night" over time

    3. DEAF (D in 22A, TBD)

    I won't say this puzzle had UNTOLD CHARMS, but there was a lot to like.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Crossing NEZPERCE with ZEROS was cruel. I had “heros” even though I didn’t like the spelling but is “zeros” correct either? Argh, that one cost me finishing the puzzle, which was otherwise tricky but doable.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Super easy Saturday puzzle. If it hadn’t been my for misplacement of BEA (it was supposed to be at 44A; putting it into the 49A slot held up many things, like ALGEBRA and RAPPER), it may have been a near record solve time for Saturday.

    I liked the clue for SECT. I had thrown in ______ON ICE crossing LAN. My thoughts went to Rex's currency so I wrote in buCk but TREAT soon got rid of that, and then, voila, BUCKET LIST led to the conquering of the NW.

    NE entry was FLU/FLOG. Reading 14D as “woods” rather than “weeds” meant that GARDENED got a double take when it filled in. Who gardens deep in the woods? Wearing all the DEET that would be necessary would keep me from that “plot”.

    I needed EXXON's help to get rid of “stop” as in LAST stop for 12D.

    Thanks, Ricky Sirois, for a very enjoyable Saturday puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Terrific Saturday solve. I can't remember the last time a late week section froze me out as throughly as the NW did. A big part of the problem was my own CENT/SECT write over and my fervent belief that there is no such thing as a TWO speed bike. No clue whatsoever on 1A or 1D. The COREY/MARTY conundrum was compounded by having no idea who this Haim person was. CHINA agreed with neither actor and I was convinced I kept coming up with ALMA only because of ALMA mater.

    Strangely it was KOREA that finally broke the dam. It seems an obvious alternative in retrospect but reading Hangul as Asian was purely a guess on my part so I didn't want to concentrate on just that category.

    Cracking the NW was probably half my solving time but it felt like 95% of the work.

    yd -0. QB2 Wednesday I choked on UNITVE leaving my QB streak at 89. Still a chance to break 100 this year.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Same solve as RP it seems. Entered ICECAPADES pretty confidently. Also tried to make ESPN XTREME fit at some later point when I returned to the NW. Rest of the puzzle was medium Saturday. Really helped that I remembered GUETTA. NEZ PERCE/ROSS was a tough cross for me, but I had read the name Nez Perce somewhere long ago, and I know enough French. Dunno what Ross is referring to. Overall I enjoyed the challenge!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:45 AM

      Diana ROSS and the Supremes

      Delete
  41. Not on my BUCKET LIST, Ricky!!!!!! Sheesh! I would have preferred this clue to have been written: "Bungee jumping might be seen on it and then again it might absolutely NOT be seen on it!"

    Also, Ricky, is 21D really THAT famous a thought experiment?

    I thought one cheat on the absolutely impossible-for-me NW section would spring it open and I looked up BISCAY. Nope-- not good enough. NO CAN DO. I had to look up the COREYS too. So two cheats to finish.

    One problem: I had been looking for ICE CAPADES at 17A and I knew that if ICE didn't go at the beginning, it would have to go at the end. But cEnT instead of SECT for the "small denomination" kept me from seeing STARS ON ICE.

    Based on crosses, I have GARAENED at 14D. I have no idea what it is and I don't like it at all. I assume it's yet again another pot-smoking term that I, who does not smoke pot, is unfamiliar with. Of course, if it's USED instead of USER at 18A, then it would be GADAENED. But I don't like that either.

    Impossibly hard in parts and easy in others. Cute clue for CAROUSEL.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:37 AM

      It’s not TBa it’s TBD (to be decided) so the word you’re wondering about is GARDENED. As in you’re deep in the weeds when you’re gardening.

      Delete
  42. Bob Mills10:26 AM

    Finished it with more cheats than I could count. Didn't know GADOT, or GUETTA, or COREYS, so that area was impossible. Finally I had to changed "carouses" to CAROUSEL, when the idea of horses on a merry-go-round finally occurred to me.

    Very, very hard puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous10:33 AM

    Two nits: 1)Charms are not words - they are objects that boost the power of spells - which are the words.2) The Nez Perce were not a Pacific Northwest tribe as they did not live on the Pacific coast - hence they are a Northwest tribe.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Anonymous10:34 AM

    Is that a pride flag over Rex’s right shoulder?
    If so, what on Earth is it doing at a national park?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:36 PM

      Anonymous 10:34
      Apparently you may be happy after the next election when we have a dictator who will decide what we can say

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:03 AM

      It's in Canada, no Mean Angry Grifter Americans (MAGA) minding OPB, other people's business

      Delete
  45. Man, tough! There were plenty of moments of looming DNF for me in this one. Lots of probing each area just one more time....and eventually getting the breakthroughs I needed. My PATH: In the NW, I suspected SECT, but nevertheless wrote in "icecapades," and ground to a halt there. In the NE, FLU x FLOG x ONE BY ONE seemed promising, but not after I wrote in UbER (for Uber X). After SPINE and PLEATED there were UNTOLD minutes of struggle. The only easy part was PABST leading into the SE. Last: the SW, where I finally erased "hot" before TIP and guessed at NO CAN DO, which fortunately turned out not to be true for me today. Loved the clue for TREAT!

    ReplyDelete
  46. Fortunato, more specifically, was IMMURED.

    ReplyDelete
  47. JohnJay10:57 AM

    Loved the reference (and appreciated the link) to The Cask of Amontillado. That was a gimme due to a long (long) ago 9th grade English reading assignment.

    ReplyDelete
  48. GARDENED!!! Good grief, it's GARDENED!!! I should have seen that, obviously.

    But when did the ubiquitous, the familiar, the, like, FOREVER acronym TBA (for To Be Announced) morph into TBD? Someone did it while I wasn't looking.

    I was so completely locked into TBA that I never thought to correct GARAENED. Talk about your idee fixe!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:35 AM

      TBD and TBA are like “affect” and “effect”. Lots of people think they’re the same but they convey different information. And they’re commonly misused by people who don’t know the difference which perpetuates the confusion.

      TBD = to be determined. Decision hasn’t been made yet, but will be communicated as soon as it’s known.

      TBA = to be announced. Decision has been made but the information is being intentionally withheld, to build curiosity, suspense, etc.

      Delete
  49. KathieO11:04 AM

    My server often denies me access to the comment section. Don't know why it let me in today, but in any event this is for you to enjoy and to please pass along to Eli, who posted a very short D. Letterman clip a few days ago that resonates of this. I hope you and he both enjoy it! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wi-fcJRYU58

    ReplyDelete
  50. Hard for me, due in part to confidently writing in wrong answers. First hype, but that wasn't too bad, because the first cross had to be FLU, so it was FLOG, and that whole corner filled itself in.

    But then came the Ice Capades (or is it Icecapades?). Ice Follies would have fit too, but there were some crosses to rule it out by the time I thought of it. Thank God for HANGUL--I've been to Korea 5 or 6 times, so I was dead sure of that one. But all those incorrect letters sitting there made it hard to see the crosses--since it was a 10-letter entry, I tended to forget that the letters on each end were potentially wrong.

    I got the rest of the grid figures out (changing I miSS to BLESS you), but was stuck in the NW. The crosses from BUCKET LIST and IN HOT WATER, and even ALMA (I was the opposite of Rex and @Beezer, I thought of the name right away but wasn't sure it wasn't ALvA) all made it look like maybe Bilbao was in BIlbAo province. Finally I decided to cheat, but before I hit the search button I thought wait, it's on the Bay of BISCAY, maybe that's it?' Then I hit search, and sure enough. I'm gonna say that wasn't a cheat, though.

    I thought LOSE A BIT had a great clue, along with the others mentioned.

    Like many others, the crosses were leading me to CAROUSEs, griping that it didn't fit the clue--but at the last minute I checked 62-A, yet another clue for EELY, and that was it.

    After reading about it here, I vaguely remember the Ship of THESEUS. It's not really an eponym, though, which threw me off. The ship was used by Theseus, not named for him. Anyway, we now know that every atom in our bodies is replaced over the course of our lifetime, and we are still the same individuals (unless you believe that we're all just fragments of the cosmic whole).

    Welcome back, Rex! And so long until Monday.

    p.s. @Nancy, by now you will have noticed the TBa/TBD error. After reading your first post I realized that I had done the same thing -- but in my sloppy hand lettering, the A looked like a D when I put in GARDENED.

    ReplyDelete
  51. I spent three times as long in the NW as in the rest of the puzzle. Eventually I removed Ice Capades and saw BUCKETLIST. But Martys stayed in a long time - I don’t know Mr. Haim by name. I tried Kyoto and Korfu, no idea about YDS, ALMA, BISCAY.
    I enjoyed sussing out INHOTWATER. In other areas of the puzzle things were crossed more fairly.

    ReplyDelete
  52. The NW was the last part I finished. I've been biking my whole life; I've had 1, 3, 5, 10, 12, and maybe 14, 18, and 21-speed bikes (I lose track), but I've never heard of a TWO-SPEED bike. I see now that they exist, and you can get one for $1500, but that's hardly what I would consider "basic". That's why I resisted putting it in even when I could see it crossing "ON ICE". YDS was another entry I resisted, as the clue seemed too specific. What about passing gains or rushing gains; aren't they also measured in YDS?

    BTW, I see that Rex was at Point Pelee, Ontario, the southernmost point in mainland Canada. One of my favorite bits of geographical trivia is that it's further south than the California-Oregon border.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:46 PM

      Made in Japan
      Specific clues leading to general answers like YDS are very common. Nothing wrong with them. Remember the clues aren’t definitions but hints to the answer
      The clue here doesn’t say receivers are the only players who gain yards.

      Delete
  53. Anonymous11:24 AM

    Even though my best Gal was sitting there,
    I initially HONEd IN to pay attention. So NO CAN DO until IT ISN'T I became IT IS NOT. Then I finally recalled the punishment in "The Cask of Amontillado" and whoosh!

    ReplyDelete
  54. Bilbao is the de-facto capital of the "Basque" region, which I knew, so "Biscay" threw me off badly in the Northwest corner for quite a while.

    ReplyDelete
  55. A confession. I consider myself well rounded but in all my 82 years somehow the Theseus paradox slipped by me. And l was left wondering what ship was
    THE SEUS? (Like THE EYE, I thought). On learning of my woeful ignorance, l was really angry at myself because at age14 l played Celia in 'As You Like It" (it was an all boys' school, so we did it like they did it at the original Globe) in which Theseus and Hyppolita are the ideal couple celebrating the solving of all the mortal mix-ups.
    .

    ReplyDelete
  56. A confession. I consider myself well rounded but in all my 82 years somehow the Theseus paradox slipped by me. And l was left wondering what ship was
    THE SEUS? (Like THE EYE, I thought). On learning of my woeful ignorance, l was really angry at myself because at age14 l played Celia in 'As You Like It" (it was an all boys' school, so we did it like they did it at the original Globe) in which Theseus and Hyppolita are the ideal couple celebrating the solving of all the mortal mix-ups.
    .

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous11:28 AM

    For me was easy, then impossible. Couldn’t make any sense of the NW.

    BISCAY and ALMA were WOEs that I would have needed every cross for.

    Confidently wrote oneSPEED and never reconsidered. Thought that office hookup was “tel” and small denomination was “five” which meant the figure skating show was plausibly “______ Live”.

    I was only certain about KOREA and had the right answers COREYS, ETSY, and TREAT, but not confidently enough to untangle my other mistakes.

    Funny enough, I couldn’t tell you a single thing about either of those COREYS, but my brain kept telling me I’d heard of a Corey Feldman, with the right spelling and everything.

    ReplyDelete
  58. Stars on Ice was the first thing I put in. It’s alive and well. Icecapades went out of business in 1997.

    ReplyDelete
  59. Leroy Valle11:43 AM

    RE: LANA Wood

    Why not --It is Saturday! Also it was the first answer I wrote down.

    RE: Bucket List

    I looked for a good Synonym -- Couldn't find one.

    BTW -- Sunday is National Ice Cream Day!!!

    ReplyDelete
  60. Welcome back, Rex & thanks for sharing the pics :)

    A doable Saturday! I didn' know THESEUS, GUETTA, stumbled on NEZ PERCE & never heard of THAT TRACKS - hopefully, I'll remember it now. But I did like CAROUSEL a lot & the fact that I finished it without getting frustrated & wanting to cheat. Thank you, Ricky! :)

    ReplyDelete
  61. ChrisR12:11 PM

    My time was 10% above my overall Saturday average and 23% above my average for Saturday puzzles solved on a computer. A good chunk of the time came from bumbling in the NW where I had tenSPEED for a while. I thought I had FIREONICE, but it must have been FIREONNICE, which I should have seen. With the bike error, I could not parse the mess I had instead of ETSY and INHOTWATER.

    Oh well, we battle through it--just as I'm doing with the shortening of a trip to the East Coast because of the tech outage yesterday. Still not sure there wasn't some way for Delta to get four people from Des Moines to an airport somewhere near southern NJ in less than two days.

    ReplyDelete
  62. Robert Montgomery12:19 PM

    Thank you for the tee shirt shoutout to a noir classic: the lady in the lake

    ReplyDelete
  63. Tough and really satisfying. Loved ONEBYONE, NOCANDO, THESEUS.

    I have one real complaint, which is that ROSS's cluing was too much of a stretch--it's a good idea but needing Supreme in the singular for the misdirection to work breaks the actual definition, in my opinion.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Actually, when Iturned 60, I did make a Bucket List, doing adventurous stunts I would soon be too old to attempt.

    Calles it my Phuket List, both because Thailand was the site of many events (and I just liked the sound of itj.

    Included in my Phooliah Pheats:

    Scuba diving certification (and one disastrous night dive)
    Skydiving
    Flying and landing a plane
    Go-Kart Parachute flying (weird but fun)
    Jet packing in Hawaii
    Barefoot waterskiing (briefly)
    Flyboarding (so fun!)

    And the scariest of all, the Human Slingshot in Pattaya. Here’s the video - thought my face was coming off.

    HUMAN SLINGSHOT!

    I was supposed to follow that up with a bungee jump (got the two-fer discount) but was so dizzy from the slingshotting took me two days to recover. As they were loading me up for the pull, noticed two things: a) I’m afraid and b) hey, these jumbo rubber bands are frayed. Thought, hey, that’s a homophone!

    Nearing certain death, i still had my wordplay wits about me.

    Ps - I turn 70 in a few weeks snd am glad I did what I did then. Walking the dog and occasionally swimming a few laps are what I can withstand currently. They still owe me a bungee jump in Thailand but I doubt I will cah in…

    ReplyDelete
  65. Another sign of aging - eyes that no longer see typos. Called, not calles, Phoolish Pheats, cash in.

    Oh well, at least I get to post my flyboarding fun foto - first person in Lake Lewisville, Texas to reach the full 35 feet height the hose allowed, according to the operators in a Vine post.

    When it goes, it goes quickly, so seize the day before you have to seize any available handrail! #funwhileitlasted

    ReplyDelete
  66. Not overly hard, SatPuz-wise. But did have to meander down to the GRE/ALGEBRA area, to get my solvequest started. Sooo…. basically did the bottom puzhalf first.

    staff weeject pick: YDS. Plural abbreve meat. Also, nice obscured-up clue.
    best SUSword: GUETTA. One of 2 no-knows in the puz, along with THESEUS.

    some fave stuff: STARS SO NICE. NOCANDO. ONEBYONE. LASTEXIT clue. ROSS clue.
    also kinda liked BUCKETLIST - laughed at the notion of puttin a bungee jump on my list. NOCANDO, bucketaroo.

    @RP: Primo vacay pics. Thanx. And welcome back.

    Thanx for yer primo double-X puz, Mr. Sirois dude. It pretty much tracked.

    Masked & Anonymo5Us


    **gruntz**

    ReplyDelete
  67. Easy. Very whooshy for me. LAN, SECT, and TREAT pointed me to some sort of LIST for 1a so the NW, while tougher than the rest of the puzzle, fell fairly quickly for me.

    Did not know GUETTA but did know GADOT so no Natick problems.

    Also did not know BISCAY, THESEUS, and LANA.

    Erasure - one before TWO SPEED

    Fun and breezy with delightful three stacks in the corners, liked it

    ReplyDelete
  68. Mark G near NYC1:10 PM

    We all have our arcane wheelhouses. Mine is late-80s Icelandic punk music. So I semiconsciously passed by The DEUS. Until I saw that iconic Sugarcubes first LP (well, CD) artwork. How very eclectic. But the real bonus was placement of THE EYE. So, before Bjork was BJÖRK, she fronted Thr Sugarcubes (or Sykurmolarnir in Icelandic) which had some MTV popularity (and inspired me to study Icelandic). Before that, she was in a band called KUKL. Their first album was.... wait for it... The EYE. Going even further back, she was in a band called Tappi Tíkkarass. The name's meaning is delightfully punk - look it up ;-). Thank you Rex and welcome back! Whenever a NYTxw annoys me, I love to come here and evade the toxic positivity of Wordplay and Barry Ancona's endless dismissive comments. And thank you for my Sugarcubes fix for the month.

    ReplyDelete
  69. BISCAY?...so it's BISCAY and not Vizcaya or even Bizkaia? Ay dios mio, the Basques are probably eating a BIG MAC with a side STREET TACO on this spelling. A little side story on Bilbao.....

    My mom lived in a small village outside of Bilbao called Algorta. My sister and I would take the train from Madrid to Bilbao and then Mom would drive us in her "Seat 600" back to the village. Bilbao, in the late 60's/early 70's was quite possibly the dirtiest, ugliest city in all of Spain. It was industrial; it was a shipyard for rusting behemoth old shipping containers and it smelled horribly. Algorta, on the other hand, was as charming and pristine and wonderful. Not many "tourists" had discovered her neck of the woods and not many blondes (my sister) or redheads (moi) were seen frolicking down the cobbled stoned streets going from tapas bar to tapas bar and singing "Bottle of Wine...Fruit of the Vine......la la. Now look at Bilbao. A gorgeous, pristine very large city. Everything clean and smelling good. I recommend that BILBAO be on your BUCKET LIST of cities to visit...

    OK...back to my regular programming and BUCKET LIST. Apart from my LMAO conundrum of yesterday*, I always wondered why you'd put something you'd like to do in a BUCKET and make it a LIST. It's a bit weird that it sits atop of IN HOT WATER. Two answers that took me forever to eventually get. My "BUCKET LIST" is to sky dive when I reach one hundred and hope my dentures don't fly out.

    I left the top section. I had BISCAY and TREAT...that's all. Went sniffing around the bottom. BABY BOOMER...Bam! In you went along with PABST....Pour myself a little Pinot, watch some TV then go to bed. Morning all refreshed....Now to tackle the upstairs. Inch by inch words would pop out. GUETTA...I had to cheat on you! Then, like @Nancy, I had TBA instead of TBD. Egads...all these anachronisms...Should I LMAO or whatever one does? Erase, erase...stare, stare. I did. GARDENED is what you get deep in the weeds. I wanted stoned or something. Finish that up with EXPAT and then clean up some other aisles. I did, using up a few other cheat cards. Looking at you BIG MAC. I had you as a BURGER till BOOMER came along. I also cheated on ZEROS because I don't know any character in "300"....Finished up with NEZ PERCE and THAT TRACKS and finally smiled. I did it! I had some help, but I did it....

    *From last night....Thank you @Anoa B for the ass tutorial and the much needed laugh. AND @Gary J for his delightful "albatrossification." Did the albatross come to you when you LMAO'd?

    ReplyDelete
  70. I think LANA Wood is Natalie Wood's sister.

    ReplyDelete
  71. Liked the clueing a heap. THESEUS and ENTOMB recalled highlights from a lifetime of reading. Best of all was learning of the Binghamton Rumble Ponies. That is what keeps me coming back: wit, wisdom and trivia are their own respective rewards👏🏼

    ReplyDelete
  72. Anybody remember the 1963 over the top zany movie It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World? I don't know if it stands the test of time very well but in '63 it was hilarious and had an incredible all star cast. In one scene the great Jimmy Durante is dying of injuries after a horrific car wreck. He tells onlookers, cryptically, where he buried the treasure and then he takes the LAST EXIT and literally kicks the BUCKET. Retrieving his $ was on his BUCKET LIST but his fatal injuries made it a NO CAN DO.

    My first thought for 34D "Indigenous people of the Pacific [sic] Northwest" was PINCE NEZ. It fit the 8-letter slot. Took a while for crosses to show it was NEZ PERCE. Must remember that PINCE NEZ are pinch-your-nose glasses. Did/do NEZ PERCE pierce their nose?

    Bungee jumping is #347 on my BUCKET LIST, right after #346 Poke myself in THE EYE with a sharp stick.

    ReplyDelete
  73. Anonymous2:34 PM

    Yep, you’re correct. Also another bit of trivia… the Nez Perce were known for their animal husbandry, & are credited for developing the Appaloosa Horse. They are known for a spotted blanket pattern on their hindquarters .

    ReplyDelete
  74. Minoridreams3:02 PM

    So happy to have you back! But as happy that you had a wonderful vacation!

    ReplyDelete
  75. Okay puzzle for me. Had BISCAt/tDS crossing. Guetta's best known track probably is Titanium for Sia in 2011. The last thing I remember about him from the gossip rags is that he's gotten chummy with Ivanka and Jared and bought a house in their Miami billionaire's neighborhood. ICK

    ReplyDelete
  76. Solid Saturday puzzle. Solvable but challenging. For me at least, much harder than Friday’s effort.

    Lots of solvers showing their age/maturity today. The Ice Capades and Ice Follies were popular in the 50’s and 60’s then waned in popularity. The Ice Capades folded sometime in the 80’s and I think the Follies morphed into Disney on Ice. Stars on Ice features World and Olympic champion skaters touring. Scott Hamilton was one of its founders. It has been successful artistically and commercially.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kristin9:26 PM

      Showing my age as a child of the 80s, I suppose. One who always wanted her parents to take her to the Ice Capades, thinking it sounded like the highest form of live entertainment.

      Delete
  77. @Mark G says...

    "I love to come here and evade the toxic positivity of Wordplay..."

    What an inspired description, Mark! I absolutely love it!! The sentence about Barry too.

    ReplyDelete
  78. Anonymous5:41 PM

    I was also outraged by TWOSPEED. OK, it exists, but I have never, ever seen one, or known anyone who claimed to own one. I still own the three speed I acquired 50 years ago, though I don't ride it any more. Held on to ONESPEED way too long as a result.

    I knew NEZPERCE once I had the Z, but before that my feeling was give me a break, there are dozens of indigenous tribes in Washington and British Columbia.

    Had Mobil before EXXON just because the letters are more common.


    Villager

    ReplyDelete
  79. Anonymous5:48 PM

    “English man in New York” had me think of STING (it fit), but alas…

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kristin9:09 PM

      I had that too at first!

      Delete
    2. Kristin9:15 PM

      I found this one the reverse as you, Rex — easy, then hard. But maybe it just felt that way, because I had a lot of false hope going there for a while. So many perfect fakeouts here! Bungee jumps had to be FEARFACTOR, right? Just as obvious as STING being the Englishman in New York, as well as your ICECAPADES, which is most definitely a thing. So many fakeouts here. PLUG to shamelessly promote, HEROS not ZEROS, and the list goes on. But it’s not a Saturday puzzle for nothing, I suppose!

      Delete
  80. Anonymous9:13 PM

    hi villager. I've seen a two speed bike but never owned one. it was a "fixie" aka "track bike." the hub had a gear on both sides. the gears were different sizes. you had to take the wheel off to change the setup. we called it a "flip flop hub."

    why? I guess different track bike events had different rules for contestants. this might have save a rider from having to buy a second rear wheel.

    I'm not sure a second gear makes it a two speed bike if you can't access the second gear without having to take off the wheel. buthwonose.

    zippy

    ReplyDelete
  81. Anyone still out there?

    Vacations are especially relaxing when you lack internet or TV. I just finished a trip to central/east NY being chauffeuse for Mr. A, who was doing the eastern half of the Erie Canal Bike Trail. I rode a bit too, but not on a TWOSPEED. Actually I don’t even know how many speeds my bike is. I do know I had to use more of them than usual getting from Green Island to Waterford. We did have internet most places but stayed away from TV and The News. Glorious!

    I solve on paper and didn’t want to do the puzzle online while on the road so before we left I randomly printed several from 2009. Yes, they seemed harder, though maybe my brain just didn’t want to work that hard. Anyway, I think that practice helped with today, where I had no idea of anything in the NW. Well, I suspected ETSY and TREAT but waited, and wanted IdidNOT and didn’t wait. Worked everything out bit by bit. One other erasure - allalONE before ONEBYONE.

    Liked the TENOR/TUNESIN cross.

    Knew NEZ PERCE from reading horse books as a kid. Used to confuse it with Pince Nez, which I also confused with Fez. Hi, @Anoa Bob!

    Thankful “Have to shave one’s head” did not have anything to do with chemo, which was my first thought.

    Funny, I just used PROTIP in a horn lesson yesterday - pretty sure I’ve never said it before.

    Love me a CAROUSEL. Again with the horses. Spent one night in Binghamton on the way home, but sadly missed the Rumble Ponies. The CAROUSEL waltz is allso maybe the best OVERture to a musical. And a city near me, Meridian, MS, is also a CAROUSEL city. Home to the oldest Dentzel carousel in the world (I think). It was made for the 1904 St. Louis Exposition and has beautiful carvings and paintings. text

    ReplyDelete
  82. Oops, problem with CAROUSEL link. DoOVER. Meridian Dentzel Carousel

    ReplyDelete
  83. Anonymous9:30 AM

    Great Job Ricky Sirois. Challenging but rewarding puzzle.
    I mostly agree with Rex's write-up. for 62 across, i grugdgingly admit Eely is a word but i have never heard it used or read it for that matter.

    ReplyDelete
  84. Anonymous11:00 AM

    Failed miserably on this one. Oy!

    ReplyDelete
  85. Anonymous10:04 AM

    DNF. Had COnEYS-CHAntS-ALtA in the NW corner. Too many proper nouns. Bad. Bad. Not good!

    ReplyDelete
  86. Anonymous10:08 AM

    PS - The clue for 36D is too much of a groaner. And since when is STREETTACO a thing?

    ReplyDelete
  87. Anonymous10:11 AM

    Way too much PPP.

    ReplyDelete
  88. Anonymous3:38 PM

    Not to throw a pleated shade at you, Rex, but Stars on Ice has been around for 38 years , and the Ice Capades went out of business last century.

    ReplyDelete
  89. Burma Shave4:13 PM

    CHECK THAT OUT

    LANA has A BUCKETLIST,
    she CANDO things ONEBYONE,
    UNTOLD BABYBOOMERS missed,
    YET SECT STARS OVERDONE.

    --- ALMA BEA ROSS

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  90. DNF. Man, if I've ever seen a perfect clue for ICECAPADES, this is it. To put anything else in there is patently unfair. To boot, I had NO downs to work with. No wonder nothing worked.

    Wordle par.

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  91. Anonymous8:44 PM

    Many of our Xword bloggers are showing their age. The Ice Capades ended 29 years ago. Luckily for me, I got the ending ice part first.

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  92. rondo9:05 PM

    Yeah, I had ICECAPADES at first also, but got enough downs to change it. Same with BABYsittER, because that's how it works out many times. SW to NE not so tough.
    Wordle par

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  93. Anonymous9:17 PM

    The top five rows were a bitch. THE EYE should have been THE STINK EYE. GUETTA was junk. Who knows French DJs?? C'mon now...

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  94. DON BYAS3:53 PM

    Got THESEUS without crosses. I know my Gedankenexperiments. I'm disappointed when I don't learn a new word with a Saturday puzzle. Anyone else bothered by LOSE A BET? Feels like "green paint" to me. TENOR could also be clued "Sax for Don Byas, Brecker, or Turrentine" If you appreciate George Benson listen to Sugar by Stanley Turrentine featuring Benson , Freddie Hubbard and Ron Carter the genius from Detroit.

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