Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- RING ANNOUNCER (19A: "And in this corner..." speaker)
- SING BACK-UP (32A: Use non-lead pipes?)
- VING RHAMES (39A: Actor who plays Luther Stickell in the "Mission: Impossible" franchise)
- PING-PONG BALLS (49A: Projectiles tossed into cups of beer, in a drinking game)
Beer pong, also known as Beirut, is a drinking game in which players throw a ping pong ball across a table with the intent of landing the ball in a cup of beer on the other end. The game typically consists of opposing teams of two or more players per side with 6 or 10 cups set up in a triangle formation on each side. Each team then takes turns attempting to throw ping-pong balls into the opponent's cups. If the team "makes" a cup - that is, the ball lands in it, and stays in it - the contents of the cup are consumed by the other team and the cup is removed from the table. The first team to eliminate all of the opponent's cups is the winner. [...] The game was originally believed to have evolved from the original beer pong played with paddles which is generally regarded to have had its origins within the fraternities of Dartmouth College in the U.S. in the 1950s and 1960s, where it has since become part of the social culture of the campus. The original version resembled an actual ping pong game with a net and one or more cups of beer on each side of the table. Eventually, a version without paddles was invented and the names Beer Pong and Beirut were adopted in some areas of the United States sometime in the 1980s. In some places, Beer Pong refers to the version of the game with paddles, and Beirut to the version without. // Bucknell University's student-run newspaper, The Bucknellian, claims Delta Upsilon fraternity members at Bucknell created "Throw Pong", a game very similar to beer pong, during the 1970s, and that "Throw Pong" was then brought to Lehigh University by fraternity brothers who visited Bucknell and this led to the creation of the version of beer pong that is played today. // The origin of the name "Beirut" is disputed. A 2004 op-ed article in The Daily Princetonian, the student newspaper at Princeton University, suggested that the name was possibly coined at Bucknell or Lehigh University around the time of the Lebanese Civil War. Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, was the scene of much fighting during the war, particularly mortar fire. (wikipedia)
• • •
I rewatched the movie recently, which is to say I sat next to two guys (one right next to me, another one row up) who were both watching the movie on an airplane, and so I kept jumping back and forth between screens, watching the movie without sound. It's amazing how much I didn't need sound. It all came back. Great movie. VING RHAMES is also fantastic in one of the other great crime films of the '90s: Steven Soderbergh's Out of Sight (1998), where he plays George Clooney's longtime partner in crime (the crime being heists, mostly banks). Apparently, he's also in the Mission: Impossible franchise. That, I'm less familiar with. But I didn't need the clue today: I no-looked his name just from letters I already had in place (I tend to work short crosses before I ever even look at longer answers). As I say, not many things start with "VING."
The other themer I enjoyed was SING BACK-UP. It's an original answer *and* it has a wicked trick (32A: Use non-lead pipes?)—one of the only challenging moments of the puzzle. Not the element lead, as the clue implies, but "lead" as in "lead singer," and not "pipes" as in plumbing but "pipes" as a metaphor for one's singing voice. Late-week trickery on a Tuesday. I like it. So, as for the theme—it was too thin ... until it wasn't. Revealer to the rescue. I wonder why they went with PING PONG BALLS and not PING PONG TABLE. Is "BALLS" just an inherently funnier word? I think I just answered my own question. There's something about the BALLS portion of this grid that is both messy and interesting. A pile-up of consonants and odd letter juxtapositions, with RSVP running through NHLMVP (44D: Hart Memorial Trophy recipient, for short) running through THX (48A: Text of appreciation), with the odd "XL" in OXLIP (45D: Yellow primrose) and the odd "-SI" ending on TARSI (48D: Ankle bones), all with the very smooth and original AIR MILES running through it. Like it or not, it's got character, that corner. Does it also have BALLS? Well, literally, yes. You can see that.
If I look at my Mac keyboard ... well, actually, it's a wireless keyboard, not the one on my actual Mac (laptop). I was gonna say, if I look at my keyboard, I see "ALT" printed just above "option," so I can see easily that they're the same key. But the key on my actual laptop just says "option." This is all to say I could've guessed ALT (1A: Option : Mac :: ___ : PC), but I cheated and looked down, just to be sure. Is Voodoo Ranger a known beer!!? (4A: Voodoo Ranger, e.g., for short). I got IPA easily from crosses but remember thinking "what the hell is that?" (as you know, I'm more a cocktail drinker; cocktails, wine, beer, in that order (order of preference, obviously, not order of consumption, that would be ... a lot)). Interesting clue on TL;DR today (3D: "To recap," in an initialism). I first knew the initialism as a dismissive comment made in response to some other commenter's longwindedness (it stands for "too long; didn't read," after all). It was created to ridicule, but has apparently morphed into a more neutral summing-up term. Language is funny.
Bullets:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
- 6D: Soprano Netrebko (ANNA) — kind of a big deal. She is a Russian who made some comments at the start of the Ukraine invasion that got her into trouble. They don't seem terribly controversial, tbh (she condemned the war but thought artists should be allowed to be apolitical and not be forced to speak out against their homeland), but the blowback was harsh. Performances were canceled, etc. Then she opposed the war more clearly and forcefully and was denounced as a traitor by Russia. I am just now discovering that "Netrebko made a cameo appearance as herself in the 2004 film The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement" (wikipedia), so having recently waded into the whole Princess Diaries universe (one week ago today), I may have to check this one out. It still has Julie Andrews, right? OK, good. I own one Netrebko album and while I'm no opera expert, I think she sounds sensational.
- 51D: Brooklyn squad (NETS) — I hesitated at -ETS, but I'm not sure why. The NETS are in Brooklyn, the METS are in Queens, and the JETS ... I dunno, New Jersey somewhere, I think. Those, Ladies and Gentlemen, are your New York -ETS!
- 42A: Uber- relative (MEGA) — really should've taken that dash into consideration. I didn't write in LYFT here, but I definitely considered it.
See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
I didn't pick up on the "ING" theme, so I needed to cheat to get VINGRHAMES. Otherwise I found the puzzle easy.
ReplyDeleteElegant little early week puzzle. Revealer is apt and overall well filled. Like Rex - loved the non- lead pipes clue. Maybe slightly too much trivia but all easily crossed. ROTUNDAS and GRASP AT are solid.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable Tuesday morning solve.
ANNA
Really, really liked this one! Should be a puzzle-of-the-month; possibly my favorite Tuesday ever. @Rex did a good job of hitting the high points, particularly VING RHAMES (I didn’t make the connection at first, but agree with OFL that he was magnificent in Pulp Fiction) and SING BACKUP, with a clue that will surely make Lewis’s top 5 list—late week level cleverness, but not hard to get here, between crosses and theme involvement.
ReplyDeleteVoodoo Ranger is brewed right here in Fort Collins CO, and served everywhere, so that was a gimme for me.
This is the truly rare puzzle that didn’t get dinged by @RP for any crosswordese or other fill dreck. (IPA about it, I’d say, and redeemed by its clue.) Took me just a little longer than Tuesday average, so difficulty level just right. Bravo Jeffrey and Will!
webwinger
Bizarre. Solved down clues only, and looking at VINGRHA---- I thought "no way that's correct" but stuck with it and it... was? RING SING VING PING is the theme evidently? Yikes. I can't believe Rex liked it. Seems so thin to me.
ReplyDelete(BTW I'm looking at the "new" very ugly interface with the "REPLY" option... what next? Ick. It just keeps getting worse.)
I came here mostly to SING BACKUP for Rex’s praise of the “non-lead pipes” clue. Made the whole puzzle for me.
ReplyDeleteNypd before NETS for the Brooklyn squad. GRAbs for before GRASPS AT. CHeer before CHANT. GO TEAM. Quick and enjoyable puzzle.
Was glad to see that the VING RHAMES dude is pretty well known. I think I watched Pulp Fiction like two decades ago - I don’t know how Rex recalls all of these proper names. At least I remember the scene where John Travolta was dancing with Uma Thurman.
ReplyDeleteI see we have TLDR and THX today - so the text-speak fetish continues to fester and mutate. I knew that was a slippery slope when they first embraced it. Didn’t care for it then and it hasn’t really grown on me since.
As I recall, Ving Rhames grew up in Harlem. His given name was Irving, which wasn’t too cool, so he shortened it to the more dynamic Ving.
DeleteWhat about the horrible duplicate of Mac in the 1A clue and the answer to 10D??? Yeesh!
ReplyDelete@Mike Herlihy 7:07 AM
DeleteI suppose we all set the bar for what "horrible" means. Feels like some set it at family members dying, putting pets to sleep, war, famine, oppression, or anything to do with a political opinion of the opposition. Others find "horrible" when their hot dog falls on the ground at the fair, when the wind musses a highly orchestrated Dippity-Doo-ism, or when grampa expresses an opinion gleaned from his media savvy TV watching all day. Maybe the boy your daughter is dating is horrible. For us here on the blog, KIVA crossing KEG is horrible, ARSES magically vanishing when a new editor is promoted is horrible (for me), and for some, puzzles shaped like pizzas are horrible (or not). So when you ask, "What about the horrible dupe..." I guess I need to ask the circular question, "What about it?"
This type comment and the blog in general are now the only reason I do the puzzle everyday. Btw—thanks to the group for taking my mind off of many days at MSK. The large family could not touch it!
DeleteLoved Gary Jugert response to Mike Herlihy
DeleteI would add what I said before.
The Times puzzle has has had a lot of dupes, and some very blatant ones, for a LONG time now. Rex has mostly given up mentioning them unless they cross. Personally, they bother me not at all. But I think it’s fair to say that both Shortz and Fagliano probably like dupes. They are clearly not listening to all the complaints here. At this point, I am surprised that people still bother to complain so much.
Anyway why are dupes so “horrible “ to people?
I used the word as in the sense "terrible". Nothing more, nothing less. My opinion does not have to agree with yours, does it?
DeleteMan there was a lot of non-Tuesday material: ALT, IPA (as clued), VINGRHAMES, ANNA, IMAC, OXLIP.
ReplyDeleteANNA crossing IPA felt particularly egregious, as I have to imagine 90% of people have heard of neither Voodoo Ranger nor Ms. Netrebko.
A mostly very nice grid and some stellar clues (looking at you, SING BACKUP). But another weak theme in a month that has been littered with them.
Non-scientific poll of my family: 4 out of 5 knew Voodoo Ranger, only 1 out of 5 knew Netrebko
DeleteI had ROTUNDAe for a while, not sure why the more obvious plural didn't leap out at me first. Must have been the Pantheon that got me in a Latin mood. Anyway, pretty fun.
ReplyDeleteVoodoo Ranger rode the wave of the recent IPA craze…which I’m relieved to say has ebbed in my household, opening up space for craft ciders that don’t taste like kool aid (tbh, had to check sp. on that—shrug emoticon).
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete@Rex PING PONG tAbLe before BALLS was my only overwrite. Didn't know ANNA Netrebko (6D) or VING RHAMES (I had to look him up post-solve to see where the space should go).
@kitshef: Rule of thumb: A three-letter answer with a weird name in the clue is almost always IPA.
I enjoyed the puzzle and theme a lot. But I have to say that for me, VINGRHAMES is not at all a household name, I’ve never even heard of him. I had to get every letter of his name from crosses and even then I doubted it. Of course, I haven’t watched any of his movies, so that’s on me. I also hadn’t heard of ANNANETREBKO or VOODOORANGER, which I assumed was some superpower action character until IPA was clearly the answer there. So, am feeling like a bit of an old fuddy-daddy.
ReplyDeleteSo it’s VING RHAMES? I never heard of him, but I got it easily from crosses and just assumed his name was VING RHAMES. The company that makes the reel for my pool solar cover is VINGLI, but I imagine that’s even less well-known.
ReplyDeleteKind of surprised Rex didn't complain about RSVPing being a word that's rarely used. I guess you could say, "Not enough people are RSVPing to my party!" or "I spent all morning RSVPing to invites" but it seems way more common to use RSVP or RSVPed.
ReplyDeleteLovely surprises in the box today. A 72-word grid on a Tuesday, which usually has 76 or 78. A terrific end-of-the-week clue for SING BACKUP – [Use non-lead pipes?]. A double-layered theme, playing on RSVP as well as the ING rhymes. And something not seen too often: four UTAHs (those block shapes that look like the state) in the grid.
ReplyDeleteThen there’s the spark. Every theme answer is a NYT puzzle debut, giving solvers new clues and answers to tackle. And when the puzzle’s bones are fresh, the whole puzzle shines.
I was patting myself on the back, because before uncovering the revealer or reading its clue, I not only saw the rhyming start to the theme answers, but the RSVP as well. That gave me all the elements I needed to guess the revealer, a skill I’m weak at and trying so hard to improve on. But I didn’t get it! I was looking for something more complicated, I think. Oh well. Small steps.
That didn’t dull my enjoyment of this puzzle in the least, however. There was even a most lovely moment where the cross of ARTIST and ROTUND (of ROTUNDAS) immediately drew to mind Fernando Botero.
Will is a pro’s pro, one shy of 50 NYT puzzles, and Jeffrey is becoming a staple, with six Times puzzles in eight months. Thank you both for a scintillating puzzle – I loved this!
Lovely Summer Olympics echo today:
ReplyDeleteNETS (tennis, basketball)
PING PONG BALLS
DASH (track)
RING ANNOUNCER
GRASPS AT (wrestling)
SPIN (cycling)
Plus the CHANT/GOTEAM PuzzPair©, and the French underpinning of RSVP.
Voodoo Ranger was pretty well known to me, even as someone who doesn't drink IPAs. I remember seeing their trucks delivering to local bars in the college town where I lived.
ReplyDeleteI got PING PONG BALLS before the rest of the themers and was vaguely disappointed that there weren't repeating Rs and Ss and Vs.
UGG crossing VING was a square I was deeply unsure about, I guess it was just surprise that an Australian surfer would have need for winter boots!
Voodoo Ranger is popular with a certain… problem drinker set. It has a very high ABV and a comparatively low price.
ReplyDeleteHere’s a slightly edited quote from Reddit (“r/cripplingalcoholism”), so you can get a sense for how truly dire (and unintentionally telling) its inclusion in this puzzle is:
“I was drinking like a fifth of whiskey everyday for a while. But it became unsustainable and I was like I gotta stop, gotta get through withdrawals and never start again. But I couldn’t. So I picked up a six pack of Voidoo Ranger beer and that **** is awesome. Actually felt pleasantly drunk … weird that a fifth of whiskey was just numbing but a few of these beers took me back to when it was fun … so I got another six pack. Good stuff. Skull guy is like a memento mori for us alcoholics”
First response: “Glad you found something that brings the magic back!”
One more New York _ETS, the West Point CADETS. I know, too many letters. Just saying.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of Ving Rhames and thought I had made a mistake (do puzzle on paper). Came here to check.
ReplyDeleteI'm with the "who is VINGRHAMES ?" club today. Some unlikely letters there. Nor did I know Ms. Netrebko. How do you do? Also had a technical DNF because I had HEHIS and didn't go back to change SEGA to MEGA. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteOTOH, IPA's are about the only kind of beer I drink now. Hac some Voodoo Ranger last week with some musical friends. Very tasty.
The Hart Trophy led to a nice string of initials. Glad I knew what it was.
A little more crunch than usual on a Tuesday, JM and WN. Just Maybe Would Not include some of the names myself, but it's your puzzle. Thanks for a medium amount of fun.
pabloinnh
DeleteHad exactly the same mistake with sEGA/HEHIs. Also didn’t change it.So fixated on his.
I called it simply a dnf. On a Tuesday. Oh well.
Glad I wasn’t the only one!
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteI can imagine a bit of hair tearing happening in that SE corner during construction. Trying BALLS and TABLE, trying to get the best of initialisms in there, may have even been playing around with Blocker placement. When you end up with NHLMVP crossing THX, there are both common enough to pass, and you let out a "Whew, found OK fill!"
Nice open NE/SW corners. Stacks of six with a Themer. That's not that easy for clean fill, either.
Interesting theme. Different. Works. Not bad for a TuesPuz. No EELs or OREOs, but we do get Brian ENO. Although I AM NOT seeing any F's. UGG.
Happy Tuesday!
No F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Naticked on Ving Somebody and Japanese something.
ReplyDeleteMonday level easy - for the first time (not on a Monday) ever, for me, every single answer went in cold, no need for crosses. And a cute revealer! Breezy way to start the day.
ReplyDeleteHaha! They got me. I was all upset thinking RING SING VING and PING were the laziest theme ever, but then they knock my noggin' over with a gotcha ... forget those INGs, they're just for show. RSVP. Still kinda disappointing, but better than I thought it might be.
ReplyDeleteBottom half was way more challenging than the top. VING RHAMES was a cross and hope spelling. METS for NETS because in the yeehaw city I live, we see New York City as one place so Brooklyn, the Bronx, whatever is wherever remains a mystery. As an out of towner, all I know for sure is there's a lotta people everywhere.
The triple stack of TARSI, NHLMVP, and OXLIP took some brain power, or brain fog as seems to be my way.
How "dramatic" is a DIP in a salsa dance? Any Arthur Murray grads? My wedding dance teacher from 38 years ago was terrible, but I saw my brother-in-law dance at a wedding this weekend and eeshk, I am Rudolf Nureyev compared to him.
❤️ [Use non-lead pipes.]
Propers: 5
Places: 0
Products: 5
Partials: 8
Foreignisms: 0
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 (25%)
Recipes: 0 (beta)
Funnyisms: 1 🤨 (but man it's good)
Uniclues:
1 One painting Budweiser cans.
2 Cover notable magician or football squad in green slime.
3 What I did when designing my wardrobe.
4 Vikings.
5 Odes from an Italian grandmother who takes shortcuts.
6 Clear off your childhood bulletin board.
1 ALT-IPA ARTIST
2 GOO PENN
3 THOUGHT HASTILY
4 MEGAMAD NORSE
5 "PREGO, SHH" POEMS
6 UNPIN MANGA
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Mom's ultracool sister schools you in the driveway. OPTIMAL AUNTIE DUNKS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I still don't know what TLDR is but I got ALT right away. And I got a little stuck at the end with OXLIP and THX. Even though I use the latter in texts all the time it didn't come to me right away. It was a fun Tuesday. And Ving is the bomb in so many movies.
ReplyDeleteHas the entire comments section been changed -- the typeface of it, the way you type your comment, absolutely everything about it? Please let me know if it's happened to all of the rest of you too. Although I'm not on Twitter, it now looks like what I imagine a Twitter page would look like. Please let me know, everyone, and I'll cross my fingers that I'll be able to access what you say. FWIW, I hate this new format, Rex.
ReplyDeleteThere’s no new format ~RP
DeleteThe blogger.com comment section has changed (at least on my chromebook). On the plus side when I expand the box, the comment lines also expand - before I had to expand the comment lines after. Also, it appears that the replies will follow the original post (based on Rex's reply to Nancy)
DeleteNancy
DeleteFWIW
On my I Phone
No change.
(I always read the blog on my phone. )
Shoutout to Lehigh, where I honed my Beirut skills on the Hill in the early 90’s. Fun Tuesday puzzle!
ReplyDeleteHi, Rex -- Are there two pages now: the old yellow one and the new white one with the purple N that I described at length in a second post? Am I accidently on your Twitter or Facebook page? And if so, how do I get back to the yellow page? I keep clicking on the same arrow I've been clicking on for 10 years, and it keeps taking me to the white page with the purple N. PLEASE HELP!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is the first time reading comments on my IPad that the comments are threaded. So 👍 to whatever changed.
ReplyDeleteI emailed Lewis, but he hasn't gotten back to me yet. Does anyone else here have both my email address and Rex's, and if you do can you forward Rex's to me? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAlso -- this post of mine today got lost. I asked if anyone else on the blog was being taken to a white (not yellow) comments page with no ability to jump to the comments box and with no avatars for any of us and very user-unfriendly compared with the old comments section. I think I may be inadvertently on Rex's Twitter page or Facebook page and if so I HAVE NO IDEA HOW TO GET BACK TO THE OLD FORMAT.
Any help from anyone at all will be appreciated!
To quickly get to the Comments "box" (not REPLY), click on the "Collapse all comments" line at the top, and scroll down. To reply to a comment, click REPLY, and your reply will post below the original comment.
DeleteA lot of fun and a bit more challenging than the average Tuesday. I nearly had a DNF at 48A/45D because my football obsessed brain insisted on NFL MVP (GO TEAM!) which took a while before THX/OXLIP finally appeared. And while I’m a big fan of VING RHAMES, I can’t say the same for the MI films and would’ve tried my best to make him VIN DIESEL if I’d THOUGHT it would fit. Just seems like the kind of thing he’d do.
ReplyDeleteIt is my humble opinion that PREGO over spaghetti strongly resembles egg noodles with ketchup. And it occurred to me that after enough beer and PING-PONG BALLS we might be able to get @Gill to SING BACKUP at the STRATA Lounge. Anyone? RSVP. OR ELSE! ;-]
I THOUGHT HASTILY that I had a case of SLOPITCH (anyone remember that?) but the Doc said "Nope, it's PINGPONGBALLS."
ReplyDeleteLoved the puzzle. Not so keen on the change in blogger.com format.
@Nancy: You’re not alone; I’m seeing a new format too, for no apparent reason. Since RP seems to be unaware, it’s likely a change in the platform.
ReplyDeleteClues for Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW) today:
ReplyDelete1. Ham partner
2. People associated with Chiwere
3. She's a homophonic zilch
Try to avoid violent films and "action" films in general (which cuts out a lot of viewing options, admittedly), so had to get VING from CCTV.
Alternative clue for 5D: The top ad-men have it! (PR EGO)
Answers to HDW clues:
1. EGGS (E in 42A)
2. OTOE (O in 9D)
3. NUN (N in 13A)
I AM NOT done ... NOT! (I gotta GO, TEAM)
Yep, new format here too. Works OK but certainly different.
ReplyDeleteNot a new format on the mobile version.
ReplyDeleteMedium.
ReplyDeleteDid not know ALT, IPA and ANNA.
I needed the Crossword Fiend blog to sort out 32a.
Very clever, liked it.
@Kitshef - Re: Croce - Google meta quest.
Inferable or not, I can do without these teeny-bopper neologisms like TLDR. (Or should I say ICDW/OTBNS.)
ReplyDeleteElsewhere, working from the bottom, I saw __LIP and confidently wrote TU. That slowed me down a bit. There was no THX yet.
I heard of “Oxeye” but not “Oxlip”. I got it from the crosses but kept staring at it and willing it to change! I’m not sure why I hold onto a word I know is incorrect but I guess that makes me human. Have a great day fellow bloggers!
ReplyDeleteI saw Pulp Fiction late in its run, in a seedy theater near Times Square. I was alone and there were only about 8 of us in the place.
ReplyDeleteAt one point in the movie, Willis and Travolta meet in a bar and Willis says something that I just missed. I didn’t hear it. There was no one near me I could ask. But Travolta says to Willis on the screen: “What did you say?”
Great! What luck! He’s going to repeat it! But Willis just glared at Travolta and said: “You heard me.”
D’oh!
What a great puzzle! It was a joy to whoosh through - I really loved
ReplyDelete32A SING BACKUP :)
Really hoping to see more like these - thanks, guys :)
Okay -- I actually laughed out loud at "Use non-lead pipes = SING BACK-UP." Even though it was buried in a Tuesday, that one just might be a contender for Clue of the Year.
ReplyDeleteI was a bit bothered that the theme used only the first words of each theme answer; only just now I realized that that often happens, but usually the revealer mentions that fact in its clue. So that's OK, and I now think more highly of this puzzle, even though I didn't know Mr. RHAMES.
ReplyDeleteAs for 1-A -- well you're clearly looking for a key on a PC, and CTRL is too long, and DEL doesn't seem at all like an "option," so there you are.
AIR MILES is a stretch; usually airlines give you miles, and credit cards give you points which, in some cases, you can use to buy miles. But I guess they are the same at heart.
The interface here looks the same as always on my PC (using Chrome and Windows 10). It always looks a little different on my iPhone, but unfortunately (well, fortunately, because I'm still alive) I fell into the harbor at a marina Sunday (no, it wasn't in Rye) and by the time I managed to get back into the boat, the phone was at the bottom of the harbor.
The comments section has always been white for me; only Rex's part is yellow. But it has the jump-to option at the start, and comments are posted in the order of their arrival. I think Rex is acting as moderator today, so he gets the chance to reply to a comment instantly.
@Nancy - it's been fixed
ReplyDeleteRadio City Rockettes
ReplyDeleteVINGRHAMES has to be the most successful character actor of our time. With one or two exceptions, he has been in at least one movie every year since 1986.
ReplyDeleteWhen I come here on my iPad, I get the yellow screen for Rex's comment. On my iPhone, he's in white and responses to blogger comments immediately follow them.
Kind of a blah theme, but not undnjoyable.
@Nancy - comments section has been bouncing back and forth between two different formats for the last two days.
ReplyDelete@jae - that helped, although that seems like a combination of incredibly obscure and incredibly tortured cluing.
@Kitshef - Isn’t that Croce’s philosophy of puzzle construction?
DeleteI’m surprised there was any confusion over PING PONG BALLS. It would be difficult to throw ping pong tables. And how often do you play beer pong on an actual ping pong table?
ReplyDeleteEverything now looks like everything used to. Interesting.
ReplyDeleteGot the Croce all done, I think correctly, but the NE corner is still a huh?
I wish I could help with @Nancy's woes but ye gads, I felt someone might be sticking some pins in my Voodoo doll lookalike....This is TUESDAY??????
ReplyDeleteTLDR CCTV UGG and VING whatshisname.....Who are you? Do I need a KIDS MENU to figure out what you mean as I RSVPING? So @Rex lays it all out and I say well yeah, when there's a necessary ingredient with VING, I then did a salsa DIP.... Cool beans and all that. I caught on to the ING thing but missed the RSVP thing. I really can't believe I had to cheat on a Tuesday to get that VING name. I didn't know CCTV and I had META uber instead of MEGA uber and the surfer dude wears UGT's and I felt I was becoming dumb and dumber.
So now I appreciate this puzzle a lot more. I just needed someone to slowly explain how this is actually pretty damn good and that I need to memorize : TLDR CCTV UGG THX and that NEIGHED is an actual word.
There...I feel better. Now on to @Nancy and see if her woes are taken care of.
ING gets RSVP-ed. Like it.
ReplyDeleteAlso, luved seein VING, from one of my fave flicks ["Pulp Fiction"].
Sure had some Nat-tick troubles in the NW:
* ALT/TLDR.
* IPA/ANNA. Really enjoyed learnin about Voodoo Ranger, tho.
A 72-word puzgrid, on a TuesPuz. This puppy meant business.
staff weeject pick: SHH. honrable mention to THX.
best SUSword: UNPIN.
more fave stuff: THX/NHLMVP/RSVP - har. KIDSMENU. THOUGHT. VITAMIN & its clue.
Only one ?-marker clue that I see, and it was sorta desperate: {Big Apple?} = IMAC.
THX for gangin up on us, Martinovic & Nediger dudes. Good job.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
p.s. See y'all in about 3 weeks. [M&A Road Trip time.]
**gruntz**
New format looks modern. Only minor annoyance is that refreshing takes you back to the top of the page, so you have to scroll back down to read the newer comments. It'd be nice to be able to sort comments by New/Old.
ReplyDeleteSimple, clever theme. Is 43 black squares the max allowed? It made for a clean puzzle, anyhow.
TIL: VINGRHAMES was the "We have the meats" voice in the Arby's commercials. I knew the voice sounded familiar, but never bothered to look it up. It does have a similar cadence to the "M***f***" line in Pulp Fiction. It's crazy that Samuel L. Jackson went from the "Hold on to your butts!" guy in Jurassic Park to a BMF just one year later. My favorite movie, glad to have been able to watch it in the theaters as a kid (thanks to an older brother). Highlight of the puzzle, for sure. :)
I got RSVP at the beginnings pretty quick but didn’t pick up on the -ING part until I came here. So I initially didn’t love the theme (was thinking “Really? It’s just four entries that start with R S V and P?”), but have a newfound appreciation for it now. Also one of my fastest Tuesday solves!
ReplyDeleteFor those of us who don't do well with change, me included (Hi @Nancy) I'm glad the old version is back
ReplyDelete👏🏻
Many thanks to all of you who sent me Rex's email address. Also thanks to all of you who either confirmed they were having the same issue or who said that they weren't.
ReplyDeleteI didn't need to query Rex because Lewis rode to the rescue. He was having the same issue today, but solved it on his own -- and then let me know what he had done. I followed his instructions; they miraculously worked; and I have made a note of them which I've shoved into my --
Well why don't I just share with you my last email to Lewis:
"I love you, Lewis. I don't know HOW you figured it out. I could have pressed a million keys for a million trillion years and NEVER figured it out!!!!!!!!!!!!
So here's what I'm going to do:
1) I'm going to write out all your instructions on a single piece of paper -- with the headline: "What to do when the Rexblog comment section goes kerblooey." (There isn't a chance in hell that I'll remember them.)
2) I will put it i my Luddite Drawer that has other single pieces of paper with such headlines as "When Locked Out by Windows"; "Get back Search Bar"; "When DVR and/or Netflix go phooey --TV"; and "To Shut Down a Computer and Reboot -- to fix a problem". That way I know I'll remember your instructions; otherwise, it's 100% certain that I won't.
2) Instead of pestering Rex with questions, I'll just send him copies of our correspondence just now and tell him that you helped me solve the problem -- hopefully forever.
Thank you Lewis!!!!
Really liked it. Quirky theme, good clues. Got stuck on THX for 5 minutes somehow!
ReplyDelete"For those of us who don't do well with change, me included (Hi @Nancy)..." --@jb129
ReplyDeleteYa think?
Guess not - it's back to the old annoying way. I need Louis' instructions!
DeleteThank you Rex for the Tosca link. I agree she sounds wonderful
ReplyDeleteRex's comment on the theme was a hoot.
I hadn't caught the ing thing when I did the puzzle late last night. But even realizing it was how the theme worked, not just some silliness o Rex's the ! after p-ing. !
Agree that the non lead pipe clue was great. I had a mental Oh Wow when I got enough crosses o catch on.
Agree with kitshef that there was a lot of non-Tuesday material and the Anna tossing Ipa as clued was particularly...(what he said)
DO NOT agree it was a weak theme, nor that the month ha been littered with them.
Well, at this time of day , I'm probably talking to myself so I'm out.
What a funky puzzle. The theme was the perfect amount of wacky and cohesive. If not for the theme, I would still be stuck trying to parse 32A and trying to make SINkBACKUP (??) work. But I filled in what it had to be and came here and saw how clever it was. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteTARSI/NHLMVP/OXLIP was quite an odd stack of answers. Amazing that THX could tie them all together cleanly.
rex, you do get the "order of consumption" right though - after all, "beer before liquor, never sicker; liquor before beer, you're in the clear." [the unfortunate and potentially perilous part of this is that it sounds good both ways.] it's wild to think back on my drinking days where we would have a [hard liquor] drink before the pre-game, then drink during pre-game, drink all the hours at the club, then at the end, to "sober up" we'd close out the tab with a beer. HA.
ReplyDeletesimple but nice puzzle today. like rex i also nearly typed LYFT but thought better of it. only [very brief] holdups were starTS before ONSETS and for some reason typing NHL viP before NHL MVP.
-stephanie.
For anyone who may need it now or in the future, here are Lewis's instructions on getting back to old format:
ReplyDelete(You don't want to read the 7 emails Lewis and I sent back and forth, so I've boiled it down to the basics):
Go to the NW corner of Rex's blog page.
Find the orange square that looks like a strange "B"
Find the 3 horizontal lines directly to the left of it -- also in the NW corner. Click on them twice.
Leave page.
Return to the Rexblog and click on the arrow to the comments as you've always done. The old format page should come up this time and it should continue to come up thereafter.
So far, it's worked for me!
@Anonymous (8:22). Voodoo Ranger is not what I would call "really high alcohol." It's 7%, which is stronger than your usual 5% beers.(Now they do have an imperial IPA that is 9%). "Really high" starts (at least for me) with around 9% beers to your double digits. It's also not comparatively cheap. It's usually around $11-$12/6 pack around here, normal craft beer prices. If you want to get blitzed, there are cheaper and stronger options. When I was a problem drinker, Voodoo Ranger was definitely not anywhere near my usual choices.
ReplyDeleteThat’s a weird flex, my man.
DeleteLewis's corrections of my instructions -- which I evidently got wrong: Copy these!
ReplyDeleteGo to the NW corner of Rex's blog page.
Find the orange square that looks like a strange "B". CLICK ON IT.
IT WILL BRING YOU TO ANOTHER PAGE THAT ALSO HAS AN ORANGE SQUARE WITH A STRANGE B, ALSO IN THE NW CORNER. Find the 3 horizontal lines directly to the left of it AND Click on them twice.
Leave page.
Return to the Rexblog and click on the arrow to the comments as you've always done. The old format page should come up this time and it should continue to come up thereafter.
@Lewis: Thank you for solving the mystery!
ReplyDelete@Nancy: Thank you for sharing with the rest of us. I just copied and pasted your second post into an email to myself. So if you ever misplace your paper . . . I will hopefully have a back up.
TL;DR is "too long; didn't read". How do you recap something you haven't read? I still don't understand the clue.
ReplyDeleteYou don't recap something you haven't read; you provide a "TL;DR" recap for those who aren't willing to read the whole thing. Like, if you wrote a 2000 word rant about how you shouldn't use the same word twice in a crossword, at the beginning or end you might put:
ReplyDeleteTL;DR: You really shouldn't use the same word twice in a crossword, even in different combinations such as "uptoyou" and "giveup".
It's become quite common in some corners of the Internet.
Perhaps the initialism in this case means "too long; don't [bother] read[ing]." Still it was a techie answer crossing another (at 1a). Plus nearby lurks ESIGN, that's three of 'em in one small corner. And then there was the soprano. Of all the ANNAs in the world, they picked a pretty steep one for a Tuesday--crossed by a drink brand name. I almost didn't make it out of the NW! On a flippin' TUESDAY!!
ReplyDeleteOnce out, though, things got a little better. The theme was unique vis-a-vis the revealer. Certain liberties were taken in the fill; understandable. Par.
Wordle birdie.
Lame theme. Not “easy” for a Tuesday.
ReplyDeleteI still don’t get the clue for 3D TLDR. And I understand what TLDR stands for. How can mean be “To recap”?
ReplyDeleteI misread 53D as orthodontist and wrote in BIte, which was my only real holdup, but quickly fixed when I reread the clue. DOH!!!
ReplyDelete"Pulp Fiction" is one of my favorite movies of all time, along with "Reservoir Dogs". And finally we get Ving Rhames in a Xword puzzle. About time. Am I right?! We've had Travolta, and Uma has been all over the map, along with her almost identical twin sister, Uta.
ReplyDeleteIf I had been in "Reservoir Dogs", I would've been cast as Mr. Aubergine. Which sounds a hell of a lot cooler than Mr. Eggplant.
ReplyDelete😁
MEGA MAD
ReplyDeleteMy ROOMIE ate A ‘VITAMIN’,
drove HIM BACKUP on A wall,
HE THOUGHT, “I do NOT like to SPIN
with the ONSET of PINGPONGBALLS.”
--- ANNA PENN