Friday, August 23, 2024

Holly genus / FRI 8-23-24 / Beat decisively, in video game lingo / Jazz trumpeter Jones / Forest, in a metaphor / Color of a proverbial French beast / Antagonist in a 1604 play ... or a 1992 animated movie / Free-roaming residents of Japan's Nara Park / Famed recipient of a lesser blessing

Constructor: Taylor Johnson and Rafael Musa

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Aparna NANCHERLA (33D: Comedian Aparna who wrote "Unreliable Narrator") —

Aparna Nancherla (born 1982 or 1983) is an American stand-up comedian and actress. She has had recurring roles on television series including BoJack Horseman and Corporate and has written for Late Night with Seth Meyers and Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell. Nancherla released her debut comedy album Just Putting It Out There through Tig Notaro's Bentzen Ball Records on July 8, 2016. [...] In seasons fourfive and six of BoJack Horseman, from 2017 to 2020, Nancherla had a recurring voice role as BoJack's alleged daughter, but actual half-sister, Hollyhock Manheim-Mannheim-Guerrero-Robinson-Zilberschlag-Hsung-Fonzerelli-McQuack. (wikipedia)
• • •

This was two puzzles: extremely easy, and NANCHERLA. Pop culture proper nouns are, as you know, frequently an adventure, and can be radically inclusionary ("Hey, I know that person! So happy to see her!") ... or exclusionary ("Who the ...!?"). I fell somewhere in the "Hey!" / "Who the!?" gap. I could picture her. I knew I'd seen her in ... that thing ... with those people ... on that show ... but her name, I just ... couldn't retrieve it. I would've been able to retrieve APARNA much more easily, I think (her first name has appeared once before, in a 2018 puzzle), but NANCHERLA, that ended up being a letter-by-letter ordeal. Well, "ordeal" makes it sound harder and more grueling than it was, but still, her name was an extreme outlier in this otherwise very easy and relatively (if not completely) name-free puzzle. What I liked about NANCHERLA was looking her up and discovering that she voiced a recurring, important character on Bojack Horseman (a show I adored); she was the voice of Bojack's half-sister, Hollyhock. In fact, she does a Lot of voice work for animated shows. Unreliable Narrator (the book mentioned in the clue) was not something I'd heard of, so it did nothing to help me retrieve her name. She's an established comedian / writer, so she's eminently crossworthy, but she's also not a household name, so if solvers are gonna struggle *anywhere* today, they're gonna struggle there. And when you struggle in only one place, it gives you a kind of WARPED solving experience, an imbalanced feeling. It's like I forgot most of the rest of the (lovely) puzzle because all of my actual solving energy had to go into making NANCHERLA appear. But—and this is crucial—the crosses were all fair. Can't imagine a single letter that a solver might wipe out on. So, no Naticks! Which, at the end of the day, is the most important rule of crosswords. So you have to work to get a name you've never heard of. It happens. And if you have heard of it, then you get that thrill of recognition. Either way, we all survive. 

["... hunting the HORNY black TOAD ..."]

But there were other answers in this puzzle, so let's look at them. We've got SWIFTIES content, which seems like it will never let up, abate, or relent (10D: Fan base added to the O.E.D. in 2023), but beyond that we've got a cavalcade of cute colloquialisms—a truly loaded puzzle at the marquee-answer level. "I HAVE TO RUN!" over "NOTE TO SELF ..." into the big drop at "ARE YOU KIDDING ME!?" You've got the cutesy half-sailorish "AHOY THERE" (2D: Bit of salty language?) ("salt" is slang for "sailor") and the curt "YEAH, FINE" (20A: Begrudging assent) and the exasperated "WHO KNOWS!?" All the moods, basically. It's colorful and smooth and entertaining, extremely hard to fault. I don't have any real struggles to document or report, though. Didn't make any mistakes, didn't fall into any traps, and didn't work particularly hard to get anything beyond the aforementioned NANCHERLA. There was one little moment of puzzlement when I wrote in OWN for 60D: Beat decisively, in video game lingo (PWN), and then, faced with BIG O- at 59A: Forest, in a metaphor, just stared for a few seconds and thought "BIG ... BIG ... BIG OLD TREE?" What the hell kind of folksy idiom is that, I wondered. "C'mon, kids, we're gonna take our sleeping bags and tent and go out camping in the BIG OLD TREE," Pa would say. I thought the answer was the metaphor. But the forest is the metaphor. "You can't see the forest (BIG PICTURE) for the trees." And so PWN, not OWN. That's the kind of fun, low-key struggle I enjoy having on a Friday. Wish there'd been more of that, or more of any kind of resistance today, but I can't be too mad at a grid this pretty.


Bullet points:
  • 18A: Holly genus (ILEX) — OK, so there's one stale olden Maleskaesque answer in the puzzle. Sometimes you gotta feed OOXTEPLERNON (the God of Bad Short Fill). Sacrifice an answer. Appease him. It's easier that way. You don't want him angry. You wouldn't like him when he's angry. The things he does to grids ... gruesome.
[October 30, 2009]
  • 40A: "TiK ToK" creator (KESHA) — this clue made me smile. Her hit song "TiK ToK" (2010) preceded the existence of the app by many years.
  • 58A: Antagonist in a 1604 play ... or a 1992 animated movie (IAGO) — I want to say I got this because of Shakespeare, but if I'm being honest, I think the Othello villain and the Aladdin parrot flew into my head roughly simultaneously  
  • 38D: West Coast political hub, familiarly (SAC) — do people call it that? I grew up in the San Joaquin Valley, just a few hours south of Sacramento, and I don't remember anyone saying that. But then, I don't remember anyone talking much about Sacramento at all. Anyway, SAC is a baseball term to me, now and forever, irrevocably. 
  • 52D: Color of a proverbial French beast (NOIRE) — from the expression "bête NOIRE" (literally, "black beast"), which means "something strongly detested or avoided" (merriam webster dot com). It is also the ironic name of a 1987 Bryan Ferry album ("ironic" because I neither detest nor avoid it.)

See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

83 comments:

  1. I dunno about no Naticks. For 1A I had Lara, not Sara, which gave 1D as Line (not sine). Of course, IYKYK, but to a non-math person 'line' seemed just as valid as 'sine'

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:15 AM

      Fell into the same trap

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    2. Me too! Like, LINE didn't feel right but it felt...plausible?

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    3. Looks like you LINEd on the dotted SINE.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous6:13 AM

    Exactly the same experience as OFL. This had to be my favorite puzzle of this year by a factor. I think it would have been more appropriate perhaps on a Wednesday but that does not take away from the puzzle at all. Standing O for the constructor and yes the editor(s).

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  3. Out here, I've heard Sacramento referred to as Sacto, maybe Sac, but rarely. Gill lives there.

    The Sphere is the immense new performance space in Las Vegas. It opened last year with U2 performing. It holds over 18,000.

    I'm no great solver, but I knocked this one off easily, even though I didn't know NANCHERLA.

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  4. There will come a day when I don't roll my eyes at creators leaning on SPAS (or spa) as an easy fill, but today is not that day.
    Otherwise a fun, breezy puzzle with some good clues and nice answers. Went faster than my usual Friday and overall a pleasant experience.

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    Replies
    1. Hi Anthony: Curious why you don't like the word "spa"

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    2. Anonymous5:24 PM

      Oooh, oooh, I know this one: because it’s in nearly every darned crossword.

      Delete
  5. Mostly fun - although heavily trivia based. The singleton spanner is nice and the long corners shine. Liked BIG PICTURE and NOTE TO SELF.

    ANGEL #9

    Big guy expounded plenty on the drawback of NANCHERLA. All of the crosses were gimmes - so the question is why include one obscure bit of trivia? Also an issue when we stoop to TikTok based pop culture.

    Enjoyable Friday morning solve.

    Green on Red

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    1. Son Volt, you make a good point but having this fairly crossed piece of trivia (NANCHURLA) had me running to Google to check out the book before I looked at Rex…and I now have it on my queue to read. I am really NOT good at rating puzzles, but a big reason I solve every day is to discover things just like this.

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    2. Son Volt
      As Rex pointed out, Tik Tok here refers to a song by a one named singer Kesha ( formerly styled Ke$ha) that predates the site Tik Tok. It was a kind of misdirect. In my case only AFTER getting the crosses did I realize it was referring to her. (I have read about her in the Times Arts section where the song was probably mentioned but I had forgotten it

      Delete
  6. Although I generally do not like ‘conversational’ puzzles, this one worked pretty well for me.

    Technically, she was KE$HA when she recorded TiK ToK, but RATE HIKE$ makes no sense.

    Terrible, terrible, terrible cross of DNA with NANCHERLA. The former has a poor, vague, '?' clue, and the latter is known to 0.17% (+/-.02%) of solvers. And for anyone who does not know German, that's another tricky NANCHERLA cross. How little-known is Aparna Nancherla? Wikipedia doesn't even know how old she is.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:47 AM

      I guessed, wrongly, that Aparna was her surname so had Nancy_______, rats! Fouled up the whole SE!

      Delete
  7. It’s an interesting collaboration. Taylor’s NYT puzzles have mostly been early week, and Rafael’s have mostly been themeless. And yet even though each filled in half the grid (according to the constructors' notes), the puzzle to me seems unified, as if made by one person.

    That’s the sign of a lovely pairing.

    The puzzle has five NYT debut answers. One, NANCHERLA, I hadn’t heard of, and even after it filled in I wondered if it was correct. But it was, and whenever I fill in a long unknown, especially a name where it’s hard to infer letters, well, that sure makes me feel good, so I’m grateful for it.

    Regarding the other four debuts, what wonderful contributions to the oeuvre they are, and I’m amazed that they have never appeared before in the 80 years of NYT puzzles: HORNY TOAD, IN DISPUTE, WHO KNOWS, and RATE HIKES (even RATE HIKE hasn’t appeared before!).

    Nice to see the letters for “Eras” in SNARE, the grid neighbor to SWIFTIES; lovely to see SOLACE, a word that calms me top to bottom; and it was sweet to see the hand-centered PuzzPair© of ARM WRESTLE and SHAKE ON IT.

    What an entertaining outing! Thank you, Taylor and Rafael, and give it another go, would you?

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  8. Anonymous7:36 AM

    I am delighted that I wasn't the only one strongly considering BIG OLD TREE and wondering if I'd somehow missed that metaphor for my entire life. Ha! Great puzzle overall.

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  9. Anonymous8:01 AM

    no, no one calls it "sac" unless they do so in socal.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:34 AM

      My sister who lives 45 minutes from Sacramento often refers to it as Sac in regular conversation.

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    2. Anonymous10:52 PM

      As a kid in norcal in the 90s/2000s, just about everyone I knew who lived in or near Sacramento called it Sac.

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  10. Anonymous8:26 AM

    SAC would be the airport code for Sacramento, which has become something of a hub for the last decade or so.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:20 AM

      Respectfully, SMF - Sacramento metro field

      Delete
  11. I had some areas where I could cruise along pretty nicely, so wasn’t at all surprised by OFL’s “easy” assessment. I had a bit of an adventure down in the SE - where shed a LASH just didn’t want to reveal itself, even after I got a couple of the crosses, and I don’t really think of a WARPED record as “broken” although it’s definitely an appropriate clue, and of course NANCHERLA could be the name of one of Jupiter’s moons for all I know.

    Being the trivia buff that I am, the SARA/AVEDA cross was going nowhere (and EYED UP, which I would never say and THAD the trumpeter were no help) - so that whole section was pretty much a mess.

    The real fun to be had today was with the longer stuff - the grid-spanning down in the middle dropped right in and some fun clues for NOTE TO SELF and ARM WRESTLE.

    I believe I have seen ILEX before, so it may be B or C-level crosswordese (unless I have it confused with something else) and I’m two, three (maybe four) generations removed from knowing who KESHA is

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    Replies
    1. Completely agree with al of this.

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  12. Hooray! Friday-on-a-Friday difficulty! Fun puzzle!

    Overwrites:
    elf before ORC at 45A
    I fell into a nemO/IAGO trap at 58A, convincing myself that there was a play fashioned after (or before ) 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.

    I balked a bit at 23A because I thought the animal was a horned toad, which didn't fit. The actual answer is another name for a bad date.

    WOEs:
    Never heard of NACHERLA Apama (33D) or KESHA (40A)

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    Replies
    1. I tried "HORNed owl" at 23A, which is an animal but LOL at my idea it might somehow be a lizard.

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    2. Wow, you made me cry with laughter. Have a great weekend!

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  13. Replies
    1. Comes from old internet gamer slang. If you beat your opponent badly, you're said to "own" them. People were typing quickly in the chat to celebrate their victories, and often used a P instead of an O accidentally. Thus "PWN" was born.

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    2. Fred S1:50 PM

      Thnx!

      Delete
    3. Thanks for the explanation - trust a bunch of gamers to evolve a term that’s both unpronounceable and incomprehensible to most of the population.

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    4. Anonymous9:57 AM

      Egass, I mean egaDs

      Delete
  14. Bob Mills9:01 AM

    I agree with Rex. Mostly easy, but NANCHERLA was impossible. I had "nanc" and assumed it was "nancyanne." I had to look it up. But it was my only cheat, so I'll call this a successful Friday.

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  15. Anonymous9:03 AM

    Nice job, Rex, on using "Different Drum" for your forest/trees. That took a sec.

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  16. Hey All ! (Or I should say HI ALL)
    Decent Themeless. Got a chuckle in NE corner when I had WORn for WORE, ending up with SnXED, thinking it was some new-fangled expression that's out there. "Man, good thing I got SNXED yesterday."

    LIE first for DNA, trying to convince myself SPeY was the proper spelling. Really wanted POOF for SNAP, too. Same area, NyetS for NEINS, as I obviously don't know where Bundestag is.

    KE$HA makes an appearance, it's been a minute for her. Does she still use that dollar sign?

    Knew of PWN from video games. I believe I learned about it through crosswords. It was a typo of OWN (the P next to the O) and eventually just caught on as the meaning of dominating someone in a multi-player video game.

    Gonna see how @Gary will WARPED HORNY TOAD. Har.

    Happy Friday!

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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    1. SNXED made me snicker.

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    2. Anonymous9:59 AM

      Sexed bumping up against a horny toad is risque

      Delete
  17. Really enjoyed this. Love the conversational nature of AREYOUKIDDINGME, NOTETOSELF, IHAVETORUN and YEAHFINE, as well as "Any IDEAS?" and its too-often response WHOKNOWS. SHAKEONIT evokes SHAKEitoff for the SWIFTIES or SHAKEiton for what I do with CINNAMON on French toast. COMBAT is an awful thing, but it looks good in a grid.

    Some things I forgot or never knew:
    -- PWN. Gamer stuff, not for me. Where does it come from? Is it an initialism for something?
    -- ORC. Tolkien stuff, not for me. Seen it a zillion times of course, but I can't get ORC, ort and roc straight in my head.
    -- Never heard of Aparna NANCHERLA but thought all the crosses were obvious enough to make it acceptable.

    HORNYTOAD makes me think of this guy.

    HANOI running down to NOIRE suggests a HANOIRE portmanteau. "Vietnamese black market", perhaps? (I'm sure someone can do better).

    Given the state of my golf game, I tried hasitgiventome at 29A, but it didn't fit.

    As a native of the Golden State, my view is that no one says SAC, Cali, SoCal, NorCal or Frisco unless they are (A) not from there, and/or (B) just trying to piss us off.

    I laughed out loud at the clue for DEER. So they roam free in Nara Park, do they? Where do they not roam free? There must be close to a hundred of them in the marshland 200 yards from my house.

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    Replies
    1. Sir Hillary, you can bet "has it given to me" wouldn't apply if the match were all square!

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  18. I didn’t have too tough a time with this considering the fact I’m in a convention coma this morning. (NOTE TO Dems: Next time, start the speeches a little earlier. There’s a reason it’s called primetime.) But wow, those speeches! And history now on the books.

    Had some tough spots, primarily thanks to the trivia, but it was all doable with fair crosses. I nearly WORE my eraser to a nub and finally looked up the name of the comedian so I could finish. Loved ARE YOU KIDDING ME and WHO KNOWS, both things I tend to say. I think SAC is acceptable for Sacramento. Hi @GILL. I always assumed that was the airport code but after looking it up now see it is not the primary one.

    Okay FINE. I HAVE TO RUN because I’m definitely gonna need a nap later.

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    Replies
    1. Re: DNC, I felt the same way until I remembered that prime time on the East Coast isn’t prime time on the West Coast

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  19. Anonymous9:26 AM

    FH
    I was SNARED by I HATE TO RUN which works fine but creates ATEDA which sounds a little odd but since I don't track cosmetics brands......

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  20. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  21. So I immediately knew that the salty comment was going to be a sailor's comment -- but do sailors really say AHOY cHERi?

    This confusion was brought about by confusing the Jones jazz guy with the Baker jazz guy and at first having CHET at 22A. ETUDES made me change it to CHAD, but that was no help for the AHOY CHERI thing. Finally I realized that CHAD Jones must be THAD Jones.

    A note about NOTE TO SELF. It was almost my first entry in because I'm sure that I've written more NOTE TO SELFs than any human being, living or dead. If there were a Guinness Book of Records for such a thing, I'd be in it.

    I thought my name would make it into the puzzle at 33D, but no such luck. I'm really glad I don't have a name that's such a mouthful.

    I had the "S" and wanted SPERM before SEX-ED for the Planned Parenthood offering.

    Especially good clues for BIG PICTURE and ARM WRESTLE. I had BIG OICTURE initially because I had OWN before the [WTF?] PWN. Didn't you?

    An easy Friday with a lot of breezy and colorful fill.

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  22. That thing under a cowboy is not a HORSY, and there ain't no nothin' named a HORNY TOAD. It is a HORNED TOAD. You don't get to just make up words.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:58 AM

      “Phrynosoma, whose members are known as the horned lizards, horny toads, or horntoads…” (Wikipedia)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:23 PM

      Jammon
      Before you criticize the constructors
      Check before posting
      Horned toad is a toad
      Horny toad is as explained something else.
      Just because you don’t know it, doesn’t mean the creature is made up.

      Delete
  23. I’m with @Southside today and joining the Nemo/IAGO fan cotillion with my BOA leftover from the CONNECTIONS warmup

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  24. Names I didn't know today: SARA, THAD, KESHA , and of course NANCHERLA. At least I knew old friends ESAU and IAGO.

    OFL may think of ILEX as "stale", but I prefer "classic". Unlocked the entire NE for me too. Welcome back, ILEX. Nice to see you, and thanks for the help.

    SE was toughest because of the unknown comedian, but also for forgetting PWN and having DOES for DEER. I often forget that every plural does not end in S, which I will remember when I remember that the video game version of OWN is PWN, i. e. not any time soon.

    Loved all the in-the-language answers today and had a very good time with this one. Nice work TJ and RM. Took Just enough Real Mental activity for a Friday, and thanks for all the fun.

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  25. Alice Pollard10:18 AM

    I hate this gamer lingo PWN. c'mon. the rap stuff is hard enough, but this is just made up by some guy in his basement. AREYOUKIDDINGME? Had to Google NANCHERLA... on Fridays I allow the random google or two.

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  26. Wanderlust10:23 AM

    EIGOIHTU-E. What the hell could that be for “Forest in a metaphor”? Yeah, I was in all kinds of trouble in the SE, and not just because of NANCHERLA. I had COMe AT instead of COMBAT (makes no sense now, of course), oWN instead of PWN, and SOothE instead of SOLACE for “comfort.” The latter seemed absolutely right, but once I reluctantly took it out, I got WARPED, and things started falling into place.

    Anyone else guess that we all shed at least one tear every day? Anyone else think the Planned Parenthood offering for short was a Smear?

    Fun puzzle, with great colloquial answers and a couple nice clues for AHOY THERE and ARM WRESTLE.

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  27. This thing is filled up with wonderful longer phrases, not so many actresses, a good sense of humor, and a lower gunk rating. My kind of themeless.

    Thankfully I knew NANCHERLA. She's funny.

    SARA crossing SINE and AVEDA, and those three crossing the four longs in the northwest made that section pretty rough, but otherwise the puzzle was breezy.

    Our vocabulary of four German words is holding strong even in plural today.

    ❤️ YEAH FINE, ARM WRESTLE, HI ALL trailing underneath AHOY THERE.

    😫 NOS, SAC.

    Propers: 6
    Places: 1
    Products: 1
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 2
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 16 of 72 (22%)

    Funnyisms: 7 😂

    Tee-Hee: Who needs a BOYTOY when we've got this: EYED UP SEXED TEENY HORNY TOAD.

    Uniclues:

    1 The demonic creature that descended from heaven the day we put our home on the market.
    2 The basement of the music school.
    3 Gamer's evening plans.
    4 Why they play such un-catchy tunes at the funeral home.

    1 RATE HIKES ANGEL
    2 ETUDES AREA
    3 STOP. SIT. COMBAT.
    4 HYMN SOLACE

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Slogan for urban campers. I SURE DO TENTS.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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  28. In the event I disappear from the Blog, it will not be from choice:

    My old laptop is in its death throes and has been hanging on by its fingernails. At 2 p.m. today, my tech-savvy handyman comes to set up my new one. I have a note to him of the websites I hope and pray will recognize me in my new home base. This is one of those sites. He's good at this stuff...but you never know. Fingers crossed...

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  29. A happy beast is one with NOIRE.

    While I would second the notion that no one calls Sacramento SAC, a better way to clue it would be the way PHI is clued (The Flyers, on a scoreboard). Thus "The Kings, on a scoreboard."

    If you get paid for uttering cries of fear, do you Eke out a living? Just asking.

    Sweet, smooth puzzle. Thanks, Taylor Johnson and Rafael Musa.

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  30. HDW* clues from today's grid, starting with a 5-letter gem:

    1. Get-together on the side
    2. Name shared by British band and law clerk
    3. Wilbur the pig in Chapter One

    I've been solving nyt daily for over four years now. I'm better than I once was, but today's solve made me hope I never get as good at it as Rex and others among us. Typing in the SARA/AVEDA shared A, then the KESHA/AREA shared A, and seeing "Congratulations!" pop up on my screen at the 29:00 mark produced such a feeling of glee--a miracle that I didn't have something askew somewhere!

    Answers to HDW* clues:
    1. TRYST (begins, appropriately, with the T in 27A, TMI, and moves to the NW)
    2. HEEP (H in 36D, WHO KNOWS, first name Uriah)
    3. RUNT (R in my favorite answer of the day--23A, HORNY TOAD, because a) I'm a reptile fan and b) what a gift for GaryJ!)

    Speaking of that RUNT in Chapter One, grab a copy of Charlotte's Web and read the opening chapter, with it's battle of wits and emotions between Fern and her father John Arable. Then find the passage of Charlotte's death scene: "No one was with her when she died." Then pick up Stuart Little and read it cover to cover and revel in the delightful brilliance of E. B. White.

    Time to "SINE" off.

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  31. Enjoyed this, but PWN was even harder for me than NANCHERLA (never heard of either one).

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  32. This puzzle sparkled like crazy. Like @Pablo, I loved all the in-the-language answers plus, as I replied to @Son Volt, I looked up and put Aparna NANCHERLA’s book on my queue to read (listen to). Like Rex said, you can’t get too upset about a person or thing you don’t know about if the crosses are fair…and they were. As for PWN or PoWN…I oddly learned about that word reading the book The Nix by Nathan Hill. I listened to the book, so I heard the “own” pronunciation…the somewhat minor character was a gamer who used Powner as his online “name.” @Alice Pollard…you know, you are right! It probably WAS made up by some guy in his basement, or some teen gamer in his bedroom. Funny how things like that happen.

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  33. Wasn’t that a Gilbert O’Sullivan song - Alone Again (NATCHERLA)?

    Have just started doing KenKen again - fun to work my atrophied simple logic and basic arithmetic skills again. Like word games more but gotta fend off the inevitable dementia as best I can.

    Had a friend at Stanford who was from what he called Excremento. Would have associated SPAY and SAC more with Planned Parenthood than SEXED but maybe that’s because I had my sack spayed years ago (would NOT do this in any mobile structure, free or not).

    PWN is terrible - especially if this “word” is just based on a typo. ACK, ARRGH and EEK (or is it EKE, since I barely squEEKed by with this mostly enjoyable Friday).

    Btw, Diva let me sleep in till almost 8 this morning. A Personal (Canine?) Best for which I’m mighty grateful…

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  34. Ay frijoles negros....I loved this. ALL of it - except the things I didn't know - I'm looking at my very first. That's you, SARA. I didn't read your book, and to make matters more devious, I did not know that Estee owned AVEDA. Then that 180 thing. Big sigh to start. BUT....Oooh, did I have fun with the rest of you.

    My first longie: ARE YOU KIDDING ME! Oooh, did I do a fandango tango. You opened it up, yes you did!...HORNY TOAD, you were next! And then.....NANCHERLA. Who might you be. Excuse me while I check with your crosses and see how I can spell your name....I paused at 53A LASH and began to wonder...If I lose one LASH per day, do they grow back? Does anyone know? I don't want to lose a LASH if it doesn't grow back.

    Finished with some CINNAMON and headed back up stairs to tackle the spider webs. Man, I didn't want to cheat on this lovely day but I just didn't know SARA at 1A and I wasn't sure about SINE. Cheat Cheat...Ok so I did and I'm grateful I did because I let out a delightful squeal. Oh, so the takeoff clue doesn't involve nudity? I HAVE TO RUN, of course!!! And my grand finale AHOY THERE!. No chips in sight.

    @Rex, FYI....SAC is the three letter airport code. It's the Sacramento Executive Airport. The International airport's code is SMF. But all the big brass probably fly their private jets into SAC. ergo "political hub." I liked that clue....

    @Whatsername....I'm still on a high after last night. Wow, just Wow. Can't wipe the smile off of me......

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  35. NANCHERLA took me a while, like many others, but I really got caught up by my lack of cosmetics knowledge and spent a (too) long time trying to figure out what I had done wrong in entering I HATE TO RUN, which I thought was a clever answer. Alas, ATEDA is not a thing.

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  36. Medium for me, an enjoyable workout.
    Do-overs: AHOY matey, AVEne, HORNed [ran out of room]
    Help from previous puzzles: PWN
    Help from unknown crannies of memory bank: THAD, ILEX
    No idea: NANCHERLA
    Small moment of triumph: NOTE TO SELF with no crosses

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  37. Easy-medium for me. Not particularly whooshy, but a relatively smooth solve with the NW (SARA and LINE were WOEs) and SE (NAN…and DEER were WOEs) taking some extra effort.

    Erasure: SOothe before SOLACE.

    Solid and sparkly, liked it.

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  38. I was stalling on my final word for yesterday's SB so I took a break and knocked this puzzle off on my phone. I consider it much more medium than easy.

    SARA, THAD, KESHA and NANCHERLA were all unknowns.

    Complicating the NW I was slow recognizing 1D as a SINE clue. Until the I and the N showed up it was just another one of those damn cryptic number clues.

    There were several write overs MATEY/THERE, CARDAMON/CINNAMON and OWN/PWN.

    SEXED looks like it's missing a T and HIALL is definitely missing a Y.

    yd -0. QB26

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  39. M and A11:40 AM

    NW start-up SNAREs:
    Got SINE pretty quick, but didn't know SARA [or AVEDA or THAD or KESHA].
    Still, fairly smoooth solvequest, at our house. NANCHERLA was an M&A no-know, nancherlaly. Reminded m&e of a short lecture subject presented at our watercolor class retreat: ASHERAH [and plurals ASHEROT & ASHERIM].

    staff weeject pick: PWN. Think maybe I've seen this before, in another crossword.

    Thanx for gettin m&e back into FriPuz level solve-mode, after my 3-week puz layoff, Johnson & Musa dudes. [oooh ... the new GoogleMonster autocorrects FriPuz to Fritz. AI gone further amok.]

    Masked & Anonymo4Us


    **gruntz**

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  40. Own seemed a gimme & went with soothe rather than solace so big picture, just didn't see it. Finally looked up Nanchherface to get it sorted. Easy otherwise

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  41. Looks like I'm the only one.
    I was doomed from the start with NANCHERLA, PWN & KESHA :(

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  42. I know ILEX because I have been a plant nerd for over half a century.

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    Replies
    1. Also a bit of a plant nerd here but my familiarity with Ilex comes from the subculture of bonsai where Ilex serrata (aka Japanese Winterberry) produces some wonderful specimens. Ilex crenata is also fun to work with but is not nearly as showy.

      Delete
  43. Feather12:30 PM

    I loved this puzzle. Aplus. Didn’t feel dated. Learned some things (sine!) Like good hot sauce, just spicy enough to keep me interested but not face melting. Same struggle with Nancherla. I remembered the brilliant title (funny already) just not her name. I live near Sacramento and often say I’m driving to Sac, unless I’m going shopping when it’s Sacoftomatoes.

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  44. Anonymous1:07 PM

    EEK! ARE YOU KIDDING ME?
    WHO KNOWS KESHA, NANCHERLA or PWN?
    I HAVE TO RUN.

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    Replies
    1. Feather3:58 PM

      If you skipped out on real learning to play video games you’d know PWN!
      Kesha was derived from crosses.

      Delete
  45. YEAH yeah is what I had in place in the NE. I fixed that. The one I didn't fix was AHOY cHERi. No idea that KESHA had a Tik Tok song so I was going with the possibility that it was the Chinese corporate owner of Tik Tok, the app, and couldn't think of any other name than cHAD ending in HAD. Now, of course, it all makes sense.

    I attended Worldcon once, circa 1987 or 88, in New Orleans. It was a great time. Listened to a lecture by Orson Scott Card on how to create an alien species, had books signed by authors, partied with sci fi nerds.

    Thanks, Taylor and Rafael!

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  46. Anyone else think makeup ingredient was PDA?

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  47. Fairly breezy puzzle today. Only held up - like many others - in the SE with NANCHERLA. Unlike Rex, I did not find the crosses all that easy. My SLEET was wet before ICY and I couldn't get past the cosmetic angle of makeup (DNA). I dislike bracketed clues like the one for SNAP and LASH just eluded me so that corner took as long as the rest of the puzzle. I'm terrible at video games; haven't enjoyed playing them since the Zelda era (30 years ago, maybe), so I was thrilled to drop in PWN at 60D. My kids are all millenials and they occasionally allow me to talk to their friends, so PWN, sure. If you say so. I must have heard it from them.

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  48. Anonymous2:54 PM

    When there is an impossible answer that nobody knows, is the puzzle really "easy"? Is a comedian really established if nobody has heard of her?

    Had SOOTHE instead of SOLACE, which killed me. I don't listen to records because I'm not 80 years old, so I had no idea they could warp. Never heard of Chichi unless it was followed immediately by the word "beans". That entire SE was a distaster. I've also never heard of AVEDA or the jazz person, so that's a Natick for me. Overall hated this puzzle and obviously DNF.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:47 PM

      Anonymous 2:54 pm
      Entitled to your opinion on the puzzle. But really. “I don’t listen to records because I am not 80 years old …..” Putting aside the fact that there is a significant uptick in sales of LP’s , purchased by a wide variety of age groups ( including Swifties BTW)
      Into the late’70’s or maybe later records were still the dominant way to sell music. So many tweens then would be aware of that problem, born about 60 years ago. So before you justify your error, check your math.

      Delete
  49. Rex at his best: "a cavalcade of cute colloquialisms". Dredged up a memory of an early black and white TV show "The Gillette Cavalcade of Sports". It was best known for its boxing programming and featured the Gillette Blue Blade theme song.

    Another swipe at Will Shortz's predecessor NYTXW editor Eugene Maleska for 18A "Holly genus" ILEX had me wondering if his predecessors Margaret Farrar or Will Weng ever used ILEX. I would check but my account at xwordinfo.com has expired. If they did, why is ILEX not Farraresque or Wengesque?



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  50. Anonymous3:30 PM

    @jberg, on my phone, about to leave for 10 days in Iceland. Me too for oWN; but then I remembered an earlier time when own was clued that way and Rec complained that it should’ve been PWN.

    Me too for finishing with lARA/lINE as well.

    We have a number of ILEX in our garden. So that was ok.

    Gotta run— see you all Sept 4.
    .

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  51. ChrisR9:29 PM

    I'll battle through pop singers and rappers, but as a fan of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra, which has since become the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, I'll always be glad to see THAD in a puzzle. In addition to writing songs that I've listened to dozens of times, THAD offered me a toehold into a Saturday puzzle that I completed in 2015 while receiving the twelfth and final treatment in (ultimately successful) chemotherapy.

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  52. I'm a day late, but for what it's worth, people here in Northern California call Sacramento SAC all the time. It sounds ugly to my Midwestern ear, but it's a real thing.

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  53. Yet another reason I love this blog! Here I'll find all the explanations I'm too lazy to look up (pwn?) and I'll be inspired to look up things I never knew needed looking up (Zanzibar?) Thanks to everyone for an enriching read!

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  54. On the easy side for a Friday. I too got stuck on NANCy______ before NANCHERLA. I loved that Bojack Horseman show. Decent puzzle with a tolerable amount of junk fill.

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  55. Doable...and then SE. Of course, like every other solver, I had oWN and so BIGOI.... I thought maybe BIGOILRIGS, they could look like a forest. But it wouldn't work. I so wanted SOLACE, but that would leave BIGOIC_____: nonsense.

    Eventually I was able to get BIGPICTURE, even though that left PWN. Talk about nonsense! But I couldn't budge anything else, so PWN it was. Incredibly, that was correct!

    I must confess I will never understand modern slang. Please, PLEASE don't tell me that PWN evolved from a mistype, and the person was simply TOO LAZY to go back and retype OWN?!! Because if that's true, we are all doomed. Most of us were doomed anyway with that uber-obscure name going down. The letters went in, and somehow they were right, but oh, brother!

    Typical Friday in other areas, + an SE from hell. Bogey.

    Wordle birdie.

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