Libby offerings / FRI 8-16-24 / "Chain Reaction" singer, 1985 / Artist Cindy known for her photographic self-portraits / Meals that traditionally include four cups of wine / Cheese also known as French Gruyère /

Friday, August 16, 2024

Constructor: Kate Hawkins

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Libby (20A: Libby offerings = EBOOKS) —

The Libby mobile app requests the user's library card. With the library card, Libby connects to the user's account at the library and provides support in checking out books. The intent is improved service and ease of accessing the library instead of using the library's own website.

A reviewer for Literary Review of Canada praised Libby's management of reading data, including books read and books in queue for reading. A reviewer for Time called Libby one of the best apps of 2018. Popular Mechanics named Libby as one of the best apps of the 2010s.

According to OverDrive CEO Steve Potash, as of 2023, Libby is used by approximately "90% of public libraries in North America". Free library services of the sort supported by Libby are unusual in a time period when almost all such services come from commercial vendors. (wikipedia)

• • •

The pillars of this puzzle are very nice (PLAYED MIND GAMES, "ALL KIDDING ASIDE..."), and the other longer answers are at least solid, with SELL SHORT over STAY TUNED being perhaps the spunkiest section (SPUNKIER, that is, than most other sections). That said, the puzzle runs a little plain, a little dull. Beyond the pillars, the marquee stuff doesn't quite sing. I might feel differently if I were more on the puzzle's cultural wavelength. There are probably people for whom ZOOLANDER is a welcome answer (30D: Film character who asks "Did you ever think that maybe there's more to life than being really, really, really ridiculously good-looking?"). I saw that movie when it came out, in the theater, once, and haven't thought about it since. The clue meant nothing to me. I had -OOL and thought there was some movie character named COOL Somebody Or Other. COOL KEN or something. It sounded like something a Ken would say. I've seen many Bond films in my life, though almost none of the recent (i.e. 21st century) ones, and if I ever saw Goldfinger, I certainly forgot that any part of it took place in the ALPS. That "Locale" could've been anywhere. Any four-letter place. CUBA? LAOS? I wanted to write in MOON (this is probably because I saw Moonraker at the New Beverly in L.A. two years ago, the last time I watched a Bond flick). And I lived through the '80s and listened to more radio then than at any other time in my life and I still have no idea, as I sit here right now, what Diana ROSS song this is—"Chain Reaction"? LOL OK now I see why I don't remember it. It Peaked at No. 66 (!?) In This Country, wwwwhhhhyyyy is this the Diana ROSS song you're using!? Yeesh. The woman had more Top Ten hits than you can shake a stick at (both solo and with the Supremes), and you give me "Chain Reaction?" Yes, it was (apparently!) No. 1 in Ireland and Australia and the UK, but I do not live in those places, and the bulk of the NYTXW's solvership does not live in those places, and the NYT is not based in those places, so cluing ROSS this was is inexplicable, really.

[listening to this now and I swear I've never heard it before, ever ... which, considering how much radio I listened to and how much MTV I consumed in the mid-80s, feels statistically impossible; this song simply didn't register in the U.S.]

Also no clue about Libby. None. I was thinking tea, but that's Lipton. Libby's (apostrophe "S") was a company that produced canned food and vegetables for a time. Libby's Libby's Libby's on the label label label you will like it like it like it on your table table table. If you watched a lot of TV in the '70s, then you know what I'm talking about. But E-BOOKS. Nope. I hate E-BOOKS. Reading for me is an opportunity *not* to look at a screen or hold a "device." I tried. Lord I tried. Seemed ... efficient, or paper-saving, or something, but the whole E-BOOKS experience is just soul-crushing for me, so nope. Nope. I do use the library app Hoopla, but mostly just to stream free movies. I've never seen the Libby logo until today. It seems ... popular. But I never heard of it. So once again, the puzzle just missed me, culturally. On the other hand, Cindy SHERMAN (24D: Artist Cindy known for her photographic self-portraits) and HOLLY Hunter (17A: Hunter on screen) are old friends (so to speak), so the puzzle's cultural POV didn't miss me entirely. It just missed me enough to make this otherwise easy puzzle somewhat difficult. Which put it right at expected difficulty level, I guess. The puzzle was very ... expected. I mean, it feels like the definition of "just fine." It's well made. It's not loaded with gunk. Some of the clues are tricky. A routine Friday, in most respects. Nothing particularly standout, nothing particularly godawful.

[OMG Cousin Oliver! LOL, wow, YouTube is a drug]

Lots of opportunities for missteps today, most notably, I think, at 54A: Add exaggerated details to, where you could have the first three letters (EMB-) and still write in the wrong answer, i.e. EMBELLISH. EMBELLISH fits, both spacewise and meaningwise, and it's a more common word (in this particular sense) than EMBROIDER. I'd use EMBELLISH. I would not use EMBROIDER. But that's OK. Not faulting the puzzle, only pointing out the dastardliness of the clue and the EMB- coincidence. There's also the potential RATTLE-for-RACKET misstep (36D: Clatter) (I made this one, or at least strongly considered making it). Did you spell BURGS right at first pass? (21D: Small towns). I didn't (BERGS!). I think that's it for actual slip-ups. There were some absolute did-not-knows, like COMTE (49A: Cheese also known as French Gruyère), and ... hmmm, that may be the only answer in the grid that I truly didn't recognize (though I've almost certainly seen it in cheese shops and cheese sections of supermarkets over the years, but like a pedestrian clod just kept buying boring old Gruyère, I guess) (which is Swiss, not French, despite its French-looking name).


Notes:
  • 18A: English cathedral city (ELY) — a reflex answer for old-timers like me. Put it in your crosswordese quiver right now, 'cause you're gonna see it again (if you don't see Tarzan portrayer Ron ELY first) (there's also apparently an ELY, Nevada, and even an ELY, Minnesota, but it's the cathedral city and the Tarzan guy that dominate Elydom)
  • 33A: Expeditions, e.g. (FORDS) — The Expedition is an SUV produced by Ford Motor Co.
  • 30A: Where lines may be drawn in the sand (ZEN GARDEN) — excellent clue, one that kept me stumped for a good while (since I didn't have the "Z" from ZOOLANDER). ZEN GARDENs contain gravel or sand that is raked "to represent ripples in water." The rakes produce the lines ... in the sand.
  • 14D: Things found in a well (STAIRS) — er, I guess. But you'd never call a stairwell anything but a stairwell. You'd never (ever) refer to the space in which one finds the STAIRS as simply the "well." This clue definitely feels like a case of TTH (Trying Too Hard). 
  • 35D: Million ___ March (political event of 2000) (MOM) — you'd be forgiven for putting in MAN here. The Million MOM March was, in fact, modeled on (or at least patterned its name after) the Million Man March, which was held five years earlier. The "Man" march was concerned with the civil rights of Black men. The "MOM" march was concerned with gun violence.
  • 55A: Coin once known as the "piece of eight" (PESO) — I have only ever encountered the term in the plural ("pieces of eight"), and then only because it was the title of a Styx album. I saw that album cover in record stores a lot as a kid. Never heard the title song, but this song (the biggest hit on the album) was a juggernaut: 

See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

87 comments:

Anonymous 6:02 AM  

RUCKUS for RACKET and also fell into the EMBELLISH trap. Before that was whooshing around, starting with PLAYED MIND GAMES, which was fun. Plus a big Libby fan!

Bob Mills 6:10 AM  

Finished without cheating, albeit it took an hour. I figured out PLAYEDMINDGAMES early, which got me going. The ZOOLANDER/ALLA cross was the final straw, after I changed "ebbs" to "sags" to "saps." The clue for ZENGARDEN was a highlight for me.

Son Volt 6:30 AM  

Nice puzzle - liked the vertical spanners and the big NW/SE corners. Embellish before EMBROIDER and complete back in to SHERMAN and E BOOKS.

ZEN Arcade

The FORDS and OVA misdirects seemed flat. Watched ZOOLANDER with my kids some years ago so knew it - but didn’t know it. Good friend loves PILSNER Urquell - not really my favorite.

Enjoyable Friday morning solve.

There's also the great Joe ELY

Andrew Z. 6:35 AM  

Goldfinger is the best James Bond movie.

Johnny Mic 6:46 AM  

I love LIBBY. Proud of myself for getting ZENGARDEN with only 1 cross. I defend the clue for STAIRS, I thought it was cute and different and made me chuckle. I think I liked this one quite a bit, seems like it was in my wavelength.

Anonymous 7:01 AM  

I thought this puzzle had a nice zing to it. Finished it in two quick sessions. Love the feeling of returning to a puzzle and suddenly getting unstuck.
How are buffs LOVERS? ❤️ I don’t get that one.

kitshef 7:15 AM  

Started off well, as a nice puzzle mercifully free of proper names. Then I hit SHERMAN, ROSS, AND ZOOLANDER pretty much back-to-back-to-back. Fortunately, that was just one area and after that it got smooth again until HOLLY.

The thing is, I know three of those four, but with the exception of ZOOLANDER, not from those clues.

Anonymous 7:24 AM  

If you’re a film buff, then you are someone who knows a lot about film aka a film lover

Alex 7:26 AM  

I thought this was a great puzzle. Loved the clues for MAGICIAN and ZEN GARDEN. Didn’t know SHONDA or SHERMAN, but got them from the crosses. Never saw Zoolander, but knew the name and filled it in when crosses gave the first three letters.

Lewis 7:28 AM  

An answer set peppered with spark, just a cornucopia of loveliness: STAY TUNED, ZEN GARDEN, EMBROIDER, LET LIE, SEE ABOVE, CHURNS, IT DEPENDS, PLAY MIND GAMES, ALL KIDDING ASIDE, SELL SHORT (as clued).

STAY TUNED, by the way, is appearing for the first time in the 80 years of the NYT puzzle, which I find amazing.

One thing my brain loves is a riddle clue, and here’s a lovely trio:
[Things found in a well] for STAIRS.
[Where lines may be drawn in the sand] for ZEN GARDEN.
[One known to disappear during work] for MAGICIAN.

I also love when little treasures pop out, too, like “clutter” in one clue and “clatter” in another.

Then there was the memorable moment when I saw that the answer to [Container for the Ten Commandments] had three letters, and all I could think of was BIN, which brought the to-me-very-funny image of THE Ten Commandments sitting in a bin somewhere. (Moses: "I don't know where to leave this. I'll just put it here for now.")

So, Kate, you brought pleasure to the box for me from a host of directions. I relished this. Thank you so much!

SouthsideJohnny 7:29 AM  

Ok, this should go without saying, but if you can not find a way to clue your entry without resorting to 2 pt font, then your answer is not crossword worthy (obviously staring right at you, ZOOLANDER).

Hopefully COMTE won’t stray too far from the weekends, where it seems right at home.

It was nice having the two long downs be solidly mainstream phrases rather than the convoluted gimmicky stuff we frequently are asked to parse together on Thursdays. This is a good example of what a NYT puzzle could (and in my opinion, should) be like on a regular basis.

Put a mark in the LIBBY was a WoE column for me as well.

Anonymous 7:35 AM  

Another plug for Libby, especially for people who use e-readers to increase font size and think that they therefore need to purchase kindle books. Your tax dollars at work!

Rick Sacra 7:52 AM  

Loved the long downs! PLAYEDMINDGAMES and ALLKIDDINGASIDE were truly marquee answers! Enjoyed it a lot. felt like it was impossible until it wasn't.... really loved this puzzle. The EMBROIDER clue was the trickiest thing. I enjoyed the MAGICIAN disappearing at work... for some of us ambItIoN is what disappears at work ! : ) 16 minutes for me. better than my average. --RICK

Rick Sacra 7:54 AM  

Totally agree about LIBBY--Great service ! And they have audiobooks!

EasyEd 7:57 AM  

Now have Shirley Bassey Goldfinger theme firmly embedded in head. Going to have to get the Libby app to help dislodge it. Had a hard time getting SAPS, was stuck on ebbS forever. Thought the long down columns were great. ZENGARDEN was fun to find.

Anonymous 7:59 AM  

Good puzzle, very easy for me. Rex: Before the United States began minting coins in 1793, and well into the 19th century, the most widely circulated coin in the colonies, and later, the US, was the Spanish Dollar, sometimes referred to as the Peso. It had a value of eight "Reales." As a dollar was a lot of money in our early days, this coin was often cut into eight pieces, known as "Bits." From this we get our term "Two Bits," for a quarter dollar, or simply a "Quarter".

Dr.A 8:05 AM  

I liked this one and I LOVE Libby and my Kindle. Granted print books are better than ebooks but I read everywhere and taking my Kindle is much easier than schlepping a big book. Have three or four lined up on my Kindle is a lot lighter on suitcases than bringing three or four books on vacation! And taking all my books out through Libby has saved me a fortune without having to get to the library! My daughter uses exactly your logic, she wants a screen break, so I buy her tons of books and schlep them anyway, but at least it’s better than if we both needed to bring a book or books.

pabloinnh 8:29 AM  

Like many others, thought the long downs were just great. A nice smooth solve with a major snag in the SE with DELAY instead of DETER, which blocked the long acrosses for way too long.

Kind of a local flavor with SHONDA perhaps the most (currently) famous alumna of the college up the road and ELY VT being nearby, just between
East Thetford and Fairlee.

Unfamiliar with Libbys, haven't met Ms. Sherman and haven't seen ZOOLANDER, so crosses needed there. Nor have I encountered COMTE , who I sort of thought had something to do with Monte Cristo. (I know, I know.)

I enjoyed your Friday offering very much,, KH. Knew Half of the propers, which is unusual, and thanks for all the fun.



Conrad 8:37 AM  


Recently we've had a lot of Saturday-on-Friday puzzles. For me, this was one of those. Medium-Challenging for what I consider Friday difficulty, but Medium for a modern day Friday.

Overwrites:
6D: brag before HONK
9A: @EasyEd ebbS before SAPS
15A: ScooT before SPLIT
23D: twigS before SECTS
31D: lAndS before RAINS (that first letter in my mistake is a lower-case L)
42D: DElayS before DEferS before DETERS
54A: Wanted @Rex EMBellish before EMBROIDER, but didn't write it in because 10D was solid

WOEs:
24D: Cindy SHERMAN
30D: Didn't know the ZOOLANDER quote (or anything else about the movie)
49A: COMTE

Anonymous 8:51 AM  

This feels like a “your mileage will vary” puzzle from fine to delightful based on age. Was so on my wavelength I looked up Kate Hawkins and yep, we’re both middle-of-the-generation millennials. I still quote Zoolander sometimes without even realizing it…. And Libby is a staple!

RooMonster 8:52 AM  

Hey All !
The ole Almost There! popped up. Argh!, said I, my Streak in peril. Normally, without a streak going, I would just hit Check Puzzle and see the wrongness, and fix it. Laziness at its finest. Today, I decided to look for it. Found it in the SW corner, knowing that COMTu was not ringing correctly to the ole ears. Had RuCKus in, which begat uLLA/COMTu/AVERs. Reread clue for 53A (Forestall), said Hmm, could it be AVERT? Threw in the T, then had the lightbulb moment of RACKET!, changed the answer, and Happy Music filled the room.

Good tough enough to hold you up FriPuz. Light in junk, well polished grid. Couple of 15 Downs. Tricky cluing. Just what one wants on a Friday.

Have a great day!

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

puzzlehoarder 9:09 AM  

A very easy Friday solve. Thursday's SB was probably the easiest QB ever so it's an inauspicious start to the weekend. The Friday SB is down to single digits so it looks like I'll have time to find a stranger in the ALPS today.

Alice Pollard 9:12 AM  

I agree about Kindles and Ebooks. I read alot, but I need an actual book. I tried to, just didn't do it for me though I can see the benefits (if you do not know a word you can highlight it and get the definition, for example). But there was no hesitation on entering EBOOKS. It was nice to see Holly Hunter, was Broadcast News really 37 years ago? Hadn't seen her in a while and she popped up in an episode of Succession. I did have Man before MOM and thought it strange that Man would cross MENSROOM. PLAYINGMINDGAMES brought John Lennon to mind, always a good thing. Easy Friday for me, I enjoyed it.

Smith 9:26 AM  

Had to laugh at myself; I read EBOOKS from Libby *every* day, but the clue had me humming the old jingle, "When it says Libbys Libbys Libbys on the label label label, you will like it like it like it on your table table table." Does that Libbys still exist? [checks google] Hmm, sort of.

ALL KIDDING ASIDE, the puzz wasn't really medium here because the long downs were obvious.

24A made me think of Ed Asner.

BURbS before BURGS until ZEN GARDEN fixed it.

Anonymous 9:42 AM  

Love Libby!

For me, the paper to ebook transition was made when I discovered that the kindle paperwhite is a completely different animal - no eye strain! Not a shill, just a fan. Add a nice leather cover and it looks and feels like a book.

Michelle Turner 9:43 AM  

Interesting!

Beezer 10:06 AM  

Well, I LOVED this puzzle because it was square in my wheelhouse and had some sparkle and misdirection to boot. When yours truly finishes a Friday puzzle in 19 minutes (thanks timer) it’s a banner day! My only snag was having PLAYEDheaDGAMES before MIND.

I admit, ZOOLANDER was right up my alley and it made me kind of giggle as I pictured Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller) giving his “Magnum” look on the runway.

Also, hand up to extol the greatness of LIBBY…of which I use for audiobooks. I find listening to an audiobook much more relaxing (than most music) when driving through crazy traffic so I ALWAYS have an audiobook going while driving anywhere alone. And you can multi-task and listen to a book when walking for exercise! But @Rex…you can also use Libby to put yourself on the “waitlist” for a popular “actual paper” book and it will notify you when you can pick up the book at the brick and mortar library.

Gary Jugert 10:08 AM  

Rough start and a slow solve without much payoff (kinda hard to be inspired by SIT and SET), but I do like [Skeedaddle x 2], SPUNKIER, ZEN GARDEN, MAGICIAN, and EMBROIDER.

It's all about the propers as usual in themeless.

Not one single attempt at being amusing. Not one. No attempt at all.

Propers: 6
Places: 3
Products: 3
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 19 of 70 (27%)

Funnyisms: 0 😫

Uniclues:

1 Enticement to not pick the clown.
2 Church picnic open to the neighborhood.
3 What architects give each other awards for.
4 Why I woke up with a mysterious black eye, no pants, and a bowling ball in Prague.

1 MAGICIAN ON SALE
2 SLY SECTS INTRO
3 STAIRS RACKET
4 PILSNER ELEVEN

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: The distance between a kangaroo and your broken nose. JOEY SPAN.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Adrienne 10:10 AM  

I'll see your berg/BURG issue and raise you "I'm not sure" instead of IT DEPENDS. Made the NE a (brief) disaster. I also decided that the car chase must have been in Rome and the "good stuff" must have been "riches" (???), so that was not helpful. On the other hand, I knew EBOOKS immediately (long live Libby and her plentiful supply of audiobooks for those of us who read with our eyes for a living and need to switch to our ears if we want to actually relax), so I wasn't lost for long.

Also briefly had "max" for CAP in the SE, but I was pretty sure a xeso is not a coin and momte is not a cheese, so...that got sorted quickly.

I thought ZOOLANDER was a delightful entry. Probably helps that I never saw the movie...

Beezer 10:10 AM  

And btw…one of the things I’ve noticed with the “new” Blogger format is that it tends to “flip” me off Google and be on “Anonymous” mode. Not every time, but I have to keep tabs. Anyone else have that happen?

andrew 10:10 AM  

I love Libby! Along with access to available e-books (which I find SO MUCH better than paper versions - font size, definitions, portability) from the local library, it offers 4,877 current magazines, most of which you’d never want to look at but still…wish I could get Hoopla for the movies, but my library isn’t a member.

Liked Rex’ popcorn reference last week to a puzzle that gives you nothing for the longest time then everything starts popping. Clever clueing, good long answers, fun Friday!

Whatsername 10:12 AM  

A lovely Friday which was not too hard and not too easy, just right. Went very smoothly for me without a single cheat. Kate Hawkins, it’s only been a few months since we heard from you but it seems longer. Thanks, I enjoyed this one and hope to see you back soon.

FRUITS was my first reaction for a Libby offering. I wasn’t thinking BOOKS at all, even though I have the app on my iPad. I’m a big fan and a regular customer of my local library. They do a marvelous job and seem almost giddy for the chance to serve you.

I’m 100% in agreement with Rex on electronic reading. Sometimes I feel like a dusty old relic when everyone else is staring at their phones but for me, there is no substitute for holding an actual book and turning the pages. Besides, I already spend too much time on devices and after my last eye exam, I’ve tried to keep that to a minimum. One of the questions on the patient intake form was “how much time do you spend looking at electronic screens, including TV.” I asked why and was told there is increasing concern that staring at screens for too long may contribute to the development of macular degeneration. Can’t afford to be messing around with that at my age.

NY Composer 10:25 AM  

Loved it. Grsat clueing, just one clever step away from obvious, lots of idioms and spot on real-world phrases. A perfect Friday!

mathgent 10:27 AM  

Great puzzle! Appreciated everything about it.

Just as I am bored by "Too (hard/easy) for a (day of week)" comments, you are probably bored with my complaining about them.

Reminds me to watchBroadcast News again. Great acting.

Sir Hillary 10:36 AM  

Very nice puzzle, for all the reasons noted by @Rex and others. Feels like it was made with a great deal of care. When MCS is the only thing that gets even close to a side-eye from me, count me as a major fan. Things that stood out:
-- LIBBY is new to me; nice to learn about it.
-- Clue for ZENGARDEN is Hall-of-Fame level.
-- DElayS >> DEfERS >> DETERS (like @Conrad above)
-- icet before ROSS at 56-A. Um...no.

I have a longtime, deep obsession with James Bond films; my "nom de Rex" and avatar both come from a Bond story. It started with "The Spy Who Loved Me" which ran constantly on the first Southern California cable TV service in the late 1970s. That led to me renting the entire back catalog on VHS in the early 80s, making bootleg copies of those videotapes (not cool, I realize now) and watching all of them over and over. In college I began collecting original one-sheet posters, and I know have 19 of them framed in my basement, including one for "Moonraker" very similar to the one @Rex posted.

When I was about 30, I was looking through my parents' old photo albums, one of which contained pictures of me as an infant with accompanying narrative text from my mom. Turns out the very first movie I ever "saw" was "Goldfinger" at a drive-in in Spring 1965, when I was about 6 months old. So I guess the passion was planted from the very beginning.

I share the above as long-winded context for my visceral response to 1-A, which is enhanced by the fact that hanging on the wall right next to me as I type is this photo, a gift from my son last Christmas. Come on, has any movie star ever looked cooler??

Thanks for your patience. :)

Ben 10:40 AM  

Really liked it. Loved MAGICIAN and especially EMBROIDER (extra fun because I also tried embellish first).

I think different formats are better for certain books, but without a Kindle I would read much less than I do now.

egsforbreakfast 10:40 AM  

I was really happy to get 23D. I guess I was experiencing the Joy of SECTS.

I was sitting in a cafe yesterday, munching on some COMTE, when I found myself listening in on the conversation at the next table. Something about a plan to round up tube travelers was OVA HERD.

I recently lost the definitive record of the English language belonging to Mrs. Egs, so I figured I OED her one.

ALLKIDDINGASIDE, I thought this was just right for a Friday. Thanks, Kate Hawkins.

Anonymous 10:43 AM  

Google "MC" and it tells you that it's an abbreviation for Master of Ceremonies.
Abbreviation. For short. Abbr. Editor take note.

That editorial lapse didn't slow me, or likely anyone, down. But rules is rules.

Anonymous 10:44 AM  

Couldn't decide whether EMBellish was wrong or DElayS. Joke was on me; they were both wrong. As was DEfERS.

Carola 10:51 AM  

This one hit the sweet spot for me, a just-hard-enough work-out with the reward of many satisfying answers.

Do-overs: trekS before FORDS, EMBellish, rEst ROOM, rely ON. Big fan of Libby, Cindy SHERMAN, and the clue for STAIRS.

Tom T 11:12 AM  

I don't think I'm off base assuming that many of you remember Rex Harrison as Dr. Dolittle, with his menagerie, featuring the pushme-pullyu. Well amongst the Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW) in today's grid was a pushme-pullyu, donkey style. If you begin with the A in the lovely ZEN GARDEN, 30A, and move--diagonally of course--to the SW, you get ASSA, two asses headed in opposite directions!

This solve fell right into the "normal" time frame of a (successful) Friday solve for me, 25 to 30 minutes. Speaking of fell, I fell for the EMBellish trap and the "Million Man March" also (but glad it turned out to be MOM, thus avoiding a MEN'S ROOM/MAN cross).

Two other HDW notes: STY, 12D, has a duplicate STY in the NW corner (13A/D); and the P in 57A, PENS, begins the Hidden Diagonal Name of a familiar crossword dude who was pretty good with PENS ... POE.

I'm gonna SPLIT.

GILL I. 11:13 AM  

I don't want to be too rude, put this was painful. I disliked the cluing so much that I was contemplating @Nancy's wall.

The ZEN GARDEN clue was just so tepid and I know you're trying to trick everyone but good gravy....Where lines might be drawn in the sand? OK, I get it but....Ughishness. It's made up of placed stones that symbolize mountains and the white sand represents water. Can't you do better than your clue? Please tell me why AIR is inspired at 34A. Why do you clue MONACO as the most densely populated country in Europe. Then the further gotchas kept mounting up. One known to disappear MAGICIAN? 40D Buffs are LOVERS???? Do tell. The ROSS song I've never heard of before and I really like her voice....

Trivia, names, and very convoluted cluing turned me off. Oh, I forgot.....ZOOLANDER? And why do you have the longest clue in the history of puzzle making? Oh, and EMBROIDER....Add exaggerated detail to??????? I've run out of SPUNKIER. Can you guess that this wasn't my cup of CHAI?

Anonymous 11:15 AM  

This is the way I like my Fridays… Tough but fair, with lots of clever misdirection

andrew 11:16 AM  

Here’s a hack for those of you frustrated by the small box format of the blogger replies.

Write your comment in some other app (I’m using Apple Mail for this), select all, copy and paste in the little box (then, obviously, hit publish.)

Trying this now for the first time - if you’re reading this, it worked!

Hack mechanic 11:32 AM  

Don't agree embellish "fits"
because tip, 52d is a gimme
Didn't like the alt spelling of
pilsner either. Tough sledding but fun nonetheless

Elena 11:33 AM  

I've been scratching my head over that one too. Glad to see an explanation here.

Nancy 11:42 AM  

Seems there's a new kealoa: EMBellish/EMBroider. I waited for crosses, natch, so didn't fall into the trap.

There was a big difference for me between the left side which I found very easy and the right side which I found a lot harder. For some reason I could not think of SPUNKIER when I had SP???IER. Guess it didn't help that my small towns were BeRGS, not BURGS. (I realized that there were two possibilities when I wrote in BERGS, but made the wrong choice.

I didn't know that ZEN GARDENS even had sand. I thought they had grass.

The two long grid answers, PLAYED MIND GAMES and ALL KIDDING ASIDE are very nice. I'm wondering if they're first-time entries? And no, I'm not going to go check.

A pleasant if not especially memorable Friday puzzle.

Sam 11:43 AM  

Challenging for a Friday, but not overly so. I enjoyed! Had to put it down for a bit and then pick it back up to suss out the NW. I too fell into the EMBELLISH trap, which I’m sure was intentional. Unlike Rex, I immediately knew and loved the answer ZOOLANDER. COMTE finally getting its due. Lots to like here.

Kate Esq 11:47 AM  

I liked this puzzle a lot. It had the perfect amount of chew for a Friday. Seemed unapproachable at first, but if you worked it a bit the whooshes came. But I am an avid user of Libby and love the movie Zoolander.

Cyclist227 11:58 AM  

You're right. Dr. No is also pretty terrific.

A 12:17 PM  

No time to write much (you’re welcome) so I’ll just say ditto @Lewis, except I did not go the “bin” route. “I’ll just put this here for now” was LOL funny, as it it’s very close to home.

Anyone else try MIGraine before MAGICIAN as the “One known to disappear during work”? Guess it’s obvious I’ve never had one.

Malapop with SEEintro before SEEABOVE, then INTRO shows up at 44D.

@ROOMonster, is your BOOK available on Libby’s? I checked it out, but I will get the real book version.

@jberg from yesterday re the “End” button, glad you found it. Let’s hope @Nancy saw that post and gives it a go.

Let’s have more Kate Hawkins!

Whatsername 12:19 PM  
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Whatsername 12:21 PM  

Love your James Bond story and that picture is magnificent.

Whatsername 12:22 PM  

Got to agree with you on a couple of those. A MAGICIAN doesn’t so much disappear as make things disappear and I would call EMBROIDERY an adornment or decoration.

Whatsername 12:24 PM  

Good suggestion. I’ve been doing that since about the first week of this clunky new process. I type my comment in the Notes app, then cut and paste to the blog. So frustrating. If I had wanted to use a two-inch screen, I would’ve bought one.

jberg 12:43 PM  

It's funny how the mind works. Usually, the letters at the beginning of a word are more helpful than those near the end. But here I had the initial A and a few other letters for 10-D, but I couldn't make anything out of it until I put in EMBROIDER, and that D suddenly made ALL KIDDING ASIDE obvious. PLAYED MIND GAMES did not come as easily, because what the hell is COMTE? Well, I can see it's a cheese, but there are something like 513 types of French cheese, so I struggled with that.

I had a bunch of wrong answers. StubcS before SECTS went in and came right out again due to SEDERS, and DElayS was quickly shoved aside by DETERS to make room for SET. But Scare at 90A and fAllS before RAINS had staying power, and forced me to get many, many crosses.

And -- "Libby offerings?" I'm familiar with Libby as a brand of canned peas, no idea about E-BOOKS. And I guess HOLLY Hunter must be an actress, but I was looking for someone like Daniel Boone or Davy Crockett. Thank God for SHONDA Rhimes. My wife and I have been working our way through Grey's Anatomy, two episodes a night, so I've seen her name on the screen a lot recently. Anyway,, she broke the NE open for me, and that was it.

Is a FOLIO really a leaf? I thought it was a large sheet of paper folded over to make two leaves of a book, but maybe it has more meanings.

OK, I'll be back after I read you all.

Anoa Bob 12:49 PM  

Enjoyable solve for me overall but I didn't know SHONDA, HOLLY or SHERMAN. Like OFL I never heard of the song "Chain Reaction" but a four letter singer from the 80s starting with R and ending with S? At least I knew ROSS.

What am I missing with the clue 43A "One known to disappear during work" for MAGICIAN? I thought a MAGICIAN stayed right there and made other things disappear.

This one did lean on some minor grid fill trickeration to get the job done. PLAY MIND GAMES, for example, needed a two letter bump to fill its slot. There were some two for one POCs, (plural of convenience) where a Down and an Across both get a letter count, grid filling boost by sharing a final S at CHURN/SEDER, BURG/FORD and one where a two fer is most likely to occur, in the lower, rightmost square with DETER/PEN.

When I was a kid almost every home had an example or two of EMBROIDERy, kind of a miniature ZEN GARDEN, if you will.

jberg 1:10 PM  

I'll have to give LIBBY a try. My wife and I have sort of agreed that I will reduce the number of physical books in the house, so I have taken to getting new ones on Kindle or the Apple e-book reader; but if I could get them free from the Boston Public Library, that would be nice!

@Gill -- no one ever says this, but the original meaning of inspire, at least in Latin, is breathe in; that's were the clue is coming from. Took me a long time to figure it out.

Sailor 1:12 PM  

Those of a certain age may remember "Gold Doubloons and Pieces of Eight" as the theme song to Disney's television adaptation of the Hardy Boys.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPd_fSpBj1o

Count me in as one more fan of Libby!

jae 1:22 PM  

Tough Friday for me. The most frustrating part was picturing Ben Stiller saying the movie line and drawing a blank on the movie name.

Erasures:
Scoot before SPLIT
DEfER before DETER
Me too for EmBellish before EMBROIDER
TIESto before ON.

Did not know SHERMAN, COMTE, and EBOOKS (Libby was canned veggies for me too).

All of the above made for a challenging solve.

A very smooth gird with quite a bit of sparkle, liked it.

Chip Hilton 1:24 PM  

Having driven the Furka Pass in Switzerland, one-across put an immediate smile on my face. A wonderful road, filled with switchbacks (and pretty much devoid of guardrails) and extraordinary scenic overlooks. Hasn’t changed too much since James and Goldfinger engaged in pursuit there. One more scenic reference: ELY Cathedral is so worth a visit. Its central octagon defies description, and gravity.

mathgent 1:36 PM  

Thanks for "popcorn" puzzle. I just skim Rex. This puzzle was indeed popcorn for me ... no sure things my first time through.

Teedmn 1:37 PM  

My solve was Rex's solve with some embellishments. I did do the Million Man March even though OED was the only thing that came to mind for 38A. The only Libby I knew was the ad in the write-up (couldn't think of a single product I used but I knew the jingle.)

Another clever misdirection clue for SECTS, 23D's Broken-off branches although I did see through it.

I've never seen more than a couple of scenes of ZOOLANDER but I got the answer from just the ER, I think. A friend told me that her daughters watched that movie over and over. Me, meh.

Thanks, Kate Hawkins, for a truly difficult (for me) Friday puzzle.

Anonymous 1:45 PM  

No, it's From Russia With Love. And Sean Connery is the ONLY James Bond ... everyone else is a wannabe

sharonak 1:48 PM  

Zengarden was one of the easy ones for me, but I could never have gotten Zoolander from the z. I may go google it to find out what it is

old timer 1:53 PM  

A splendid little Friday, and tough, as Fridays should be. Got most of it early excepts for the East side, where I did not think of SPUNKIER because I knew not SHONDA nor Libby for EBOOKS nor ZEN GARDEN, as clued. Fortunately MENS ROOMS was an early entry, and I remembered how tasty COMTE cheese is, or was when my local store carried it.

I see I had an error. Had SAT for SIT. Figured the SAT test must be done that way. I wonder if the nuns at my Kindergarten had us sit applesauce -- I vaguely think our nearby Montessori preschool used that phrase, and my daughters all went there because it used to be a block and a half from our home.

old timer 1:58 PM  

I should add that everyone who drives to Cambridge makes a stop at the amazing Ely Cathedral. The Isle of ELY was a palatine, which meant that the lord in charge got to run everything, no approval needed from the King. In this case, the Lord was the Bishop of ELY. County Durham had the same setup, though I don't know if it was the Earl or the Bishop who had the power. Durham, if course, has everyone's favorite cathedral. And my favorite folkie, Jez Lowe, is from near there.

okanaganer 2:09 PM  

And now the comment box is totally blank! I went to the mobile version of the page to type this but it didn't work. Then it fixed itself. Good grief.

Was no one else tripped up by LEANNE Rhimes? (Yes I realize there's actually no E at the end.) Paired with SCARE for 9 down "Startle", it gave me E-CARDS for Libby and held me up for ages. (Never used Libby; it's listed on our library's site but I avoid e-books if at all possible.)

Also wanted JONSED before LONGED for "Had a hankering".

jazzmanchgo 2:18 PM  

I think they're using "disappear" as a verb -- the magician "disappears" things in his/her act. It's not exactly standard usage, but it's not unheard-of, either.

Penna Resident 2:22 PM  

cannot believe that COMTE caused so many problems. it is so common that you can find it in some grocery stores not just cheese shops. even my 20 year old son uses it to make mac&cheese in his college dorm. its one of the 4 cheeses that is always in our fridge, along with cheddar, jack, parmigiano.

however, i could not find NAGICIAN in the AED.

Anonymous 2:47 PM  

While l would guess Orthodox US Jews have 2 "SEDERS" (here in lsrael we have only one, due to the vagaries of the Hebrew lunar calendar--long story) the correct Hebrew plural of "SEDER" is "SEDARIM." Think "kibbutzim," not "kibbutzes" (oy). This is according to the standard lsraeli Sephardic pronuciation of Hebrew, which is now almost universal even liturgically, except among the very ultra-Orthodox some of whom still use the Eastern European Ashkenazi (Yiddishized) variant, and hence they would pronounce the plural of "SEDER" as "SEDORIM." Things are never simple. But of course l can understand the anglicized usage "SEDERS".

Anoa Bob 2:55 PM  

Your comment on COMTE reminded me of an old Charles de Gaulle quote. Apparently there are a couple of versions; here's one from BrainyQuote.com: "Only peril can bring the French together. One can't impose unity out of the blue on a country that has 265 different kinds of cheese."

Charles de Gaulle

Anonymous 3:29 PM  

Delighted with Zoolander clue! A favorite movie for me, husband & daughters. Also Libby is a great source for audiobooks as well as ebooks.

ghostoflectricity 4:02 PM  

Ok until the SW, then realized it was MOM, not MAN (35D) and the rest fell into place, even though I'd never heard of comté cheese (now I'll have to try it). Slight stumble with 21D (had BERG at first, actually BURG), otherwise, moderately easy Friday.

Nitpicker 6:42 PM  

re 30d: the name of the movie is Zoolander. The name of the character is Derek Zoolander. WTF NYTimes

KennyMitts 7:29 PM  

Amen to all of this. I love my Kindle Paperwhite, which I use for nothing but reading ebooks so it doesn’t feel like I’m staring at a screen, and the Libby app has allowed me to check out a great many library books, some of which my library doesn’t have in paper form.

dgd 7:38 PM  

Anonymous 7:59
I knew 2 bits were from pieces of eight, but I didn’t know the original coin was a peso. ( put in peso as my first choice anyway). I guess they avoided Spanish words when I learned about it as a child.
Anyway, made me think of “Shave and a haircut, two bits!”

Anonymous 7:51 PM  

Adrienne
FWIW
Burg vs. Berg
Berg as in ice berg. Berg means hill. An ice hill.
Burg as in St. Petersburg. Burg means town. Hence burg at the end of town names.

dgd 8:04 PM  

Whatsername
Embroider is a fine answer, actually. It is used metaphorically and negatively to mean exaggerate. Saying Trump embroidered a story is not a compliment!

Nancy 8:12 PM  

Re: End button. First I tried using it on the newly formatted page and nothing happened whatsoever. Then I found the "Blog Archive" that someone mentioned yesterday or the day before and used it on that page. The page moved to the right. It did not move down.

Two possible explanations. One is that I have Google Chrome, not Firefox which someone had mentioned that you need. The second is simply that I'm a Luddite and that while it IS do-able, it is not do-able by me.

Anonymous 8:19 PM  

Nit-picker
The clue did not ask for the whole name of the character. The clue asked for the NAME of the character. In crosswords at least, name is ambiguous. It can ask for the whole name but sometimes the last name. The character’s last name is Zoolander. Nothing for The NY Times to apologize for.

Anonymous 9:18 PM  

@8:19 you are so wrong it’s pathetic, his NAME is Derek Zooming , They don’t make the same mistake for ILSA Lundfrom Casablanca

A 10:16 PM  

@Nancy - Aha! Or is it Oho? At any rate, the game is afoot! The fact that the page moved to the right is a clue: pressing “End” after going to the Blog Archive didn’t take you to the end of the page, but to the end of the line - i.e., to the right. I saw mention of that online, and they said in that case to try pressing the “Ctrl” key plus the “End” key. Perhaps that will be the solution for you.

FYI, the keyboard shortcut on my Mac doesn’t work inside the new comments area either. There I have to use the mouse, if on a desktop, or a trackpad on a laptop.

Here’s how that works. On the border of the rightmost edge of the window is a narrow vertical column, about 1/8 inch wide. Whenever you scroll, a bubble inside that column moves down when you scroll down, and up when you scroll up. If you use a mouse (or trackpad) to put the cursor on the bubble and grab it, it turns darker. Then you can pull the bubble down to the bottom of the column, and ergo to the bottom of the page.

John Face 12:02 AM  

Quite zippy today. Close to a record Friday. I quite enjoy Zoolander and crosswords. I contain multitudes, lol.

Anonymous 10:26 AM  

Pilsner is spelled thusly, not pilsEner!

Nancy 11:26 AM  

"Think "kibbutzim," not "kibbutzes" (oy)."

Love your droll comment, @Anon -- and I wish I knew who you are. There's not much amusement coming out of Israel right now and your humor is refreshing.

Will you even find my comment (posted a day late) under the new Blogger format? It's doubtful.

Anonymous 2:09 PM  

Can someone please explain why SLY is the answer for 4D Arch… ?

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