Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (*for a Tuesday*)
Theme answers:
I was kind of with this one at first. TYPE to TYPO and HERE to HERO both had just the one letter change *and* the one sound change, which is really a sound addition—it's like you're just adding an "O" to the end. But then NOT QUITO comes along and ... well, that answer didn't feel quite-o right-o. Because now you've got additional sound changes (notably the first vowel sound in "QUITO," but also the initial consonant sound ("kw" to "k")), so instead of having this cool, lean, simple, elegant thing going on, you've got a clunker. LIME to LIMO also clunks in this same fashion. It would've been better if the simple change in the first two themers had continued with the last two—or if the more complicated change of the last two had been operative from the beginning. Something about switching apparent logic midstream made this one feel not smooth, not quite (!) worked out. Now, you can argue that this puzzle's execution of the theme is actually the most simple and elegant, in that all that has changed, in every case, is the final letter. That's it. "E" to "O." What could be simpler? But I don't just look at words, I hear them, and the pronunciation inconsistencies feel like a glitch. Another thing that feels like a glitch—not having both halves of the incantation "Presto CHANGO" in the actual grid. So odd to just have "CHANGO" on its own, in that weird (completely arbitrary) position. Also—and this isn't the puzzle's fault—"CHANGO" looks like it should rhyme with "tango" or "mango," so somehow looks extra-ridiculous without its "Presto" to give it context. PRESTO and CHANGO have the same number of letters, so could (theoretically) have been arranged symmetrically in the grid. That would, admittedly, have been tougher to pull off, but PRESTO on the left of the grid, CHANGO on the right, that would've been better, or more aesthetically pleasing, at any rate.
- BLOOD TYPO (17A: "AB negatve" or "B poditive"?) (from "blood type")
- SAME HERO (28A: Odysseus vis-à-vis Ulysses?) (from "same here")
- NOT QUITO (41A: Surprising answer to the question "What is Ecuador's most popular city?") (from "not quite")
- LEMON LIMO (52A: Prom transport that keeps breaking down?) (from "lemon-lime")
Clyde Austin Drexler (born June 22, 1962) is an American former professional basketball player who currently works as the commissioner of the Big3 3-on-3 basketball league. Nicknamed "Clyde the Glide", he played 15 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA), spending a majority of his career with the Portland Trail Blazers before finishing with the Houston Rockets. He was a ten-time NBA All-Star and named to the NBA's 50th and 75th anniversary teams. Drexler won an NBA championship with Houston in 1995, and earned a gold medal on the 1992 United States Olympic team known as "The Dream Team". He was inducted twice into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, in 2004 for his individual career and in 2010 as a member of the "Dream Team". Drexler is widely considered one of the greatest basketball players and greatest shooting guards of all time. (wikipedia)
• • •
I actually think "NOT QUITO" is the best of the bunch, in that it is the wackiest, the most wacky, the king wackadoodle themer of the day, for sure. Which is to say it's the most daring and the most inventive. Also, twenty bucks* to anyone who can, without looking, name the actual most populous city in Ecuador. It's got 2.7 million people (to Quito's 1.8) and I've never heard of it. Give up? You should give up. The answer is Guayaquil. Put that in your grid and smoke it! Zero NYTXW appearances for GUAYAQUIL, you'll be unsurprised to learn. You can't exactly call Guayaquil "obscure," though. No city that big can properly be called "obscure." It's the 17th biggest city in South America, and the 7th biggest outside Brazil. Man, Brazil has So Many cities of 3+ million people. Campinas? Salvador? After Rio and Recife (why do I know Recife!?), I'm pretty much out. Ooh, São Paulo, I know that one from crosswords (SÃO!). You're all probably way better at world geography than I am. Maybe you all knew (or at least had heard of) Guayaquil. Not me. News to me. I'm staring at this list of the 50 largest cities in South America (all with populations over a million) and just shaking my head at my own ignorance. Anyway, NOT QUITO is right. It's not Quito. It's Guayaquil. And now you know. Or you already knew, and now you know how little I know, which is pretty much the daily theme of this blog.
Back to the theme. Another thing I would've liked, that would've made it ... nicer ... is if there were no other "O"-ending words in the grid. At all. Let your theme shine by eliminating the static, the competing "O" noise. No OPPO or ALPO or AGO or CAMEO or SLO-MO or "UM, NO" or BUONO. Just TYPO HERO QUITO LIMO and out. One last thing on the theme: there really should be an extra "?" in the NOT QUITO clue (41A: Surprising answer to the question "What is Ecuador's most popular city?"). All the others have "?" as a wackiness indicator, but this one just has the regular old interrogative "?" that I guess is supposed to double for the wackiness indicator, but wackiness indication is an entirely separate role, so a second "?" (outside the quotation marks) seems appropriate. This is maybe the smallest criticism I've ever had of a clue, but I notice what I notice and I want what I want, smallness be damned.
The fill is interesting in places, ugly in others. The SW corner is particularly ugly. EHUD INUK DEKES ... that is high levels of grim packed into one tiny corner. On the other hand, I like that there's a Q SCORE alongside CUE TIPS but no Q-TIPS in sight. Somewhere on the sidelines, Q-TIPS is shedding a single tear. "Am I not ... good enough?" I had more trouble than I usually have on Tuesdays, which is to say I had some non-zero amount of trouble. The very nature of the theme meant you had to kind of think about those answers, and then, well, there was "WELL, GEE" (the "WELL" part was not immediately apparent), and "UM, NO" (not "UH, NO," as I first thought) (26D: "That's just completely incorrect"), and then I had EASES before CALMS, that was an unforced error, for sure (39A: Soothes). Oh, and that BARBELLS clue got me good (37D: People are often spotted pressing them). I came at it from below and even after I got BELLS all I could think was "well, DOORBELLS doesn't fit!" It's a great clue, with both "spotted" and "pressing" having weightlifting meanings—double wordplay!
Bullets:
- 22A: Dessert drink made from frozen grapes (ICEWINE) — drove past a lot of vineyards in southern Ontario this summer that seemed to specialize in ICEWINE. And oh look, there's a reason for that: "Canada is the world's largest producer of icewine, producing a greater volume of icewine than all other countries combined with Ontario producing over 90% of Canada's icewine, followed by Germany" (wikipedia). I don't know that I've ever had it.
- 1D: Texter's "Hang on a sec" (BRB) — "be right back"
- 36D: Abandon one's social plans (BAIL) — nice modern colloquial clue on this one, love it.
- 4D: Cloying (TOO SWEET) — had the "T" and actually tried TREACLEY (a variant spelling that I invented solely for this answer).
See you next time.
Ugh. First, “chango?” Um, no. “Change-o.” And the majority of clues are inconsistent and of little help. The best answer relating to the clue is BLOODTYPO.
ReplyDeleteUm, no - it is presto chango
DeleteUm, no - it is presto change-o
DeleteBoth are valid but CHANGO is more valid (it’s what’s in the m-w dictionary)
DeleteI’m solidly on the side of change-o.
DeleteHit more resistance than usual for a Tuesday. Also, I have very limited knowledge about South America and no idea about a Q-score, so that 'Q' square was the last one to go in and took several tries!
ReplyDeleteMedium partly because I didn’t read some of the theme clues carefully. No WOEs and erasures mostly involved correcting misreads.
ReplyDeleteCute and clever with very little dreck, liked it. The “simple and elegant” “E” to “O” CHANGO worked just fine for me.
ReplyDeleteEasy-Medium for me; liked it a lot more that @Rex did.
Overwrites:
9a: dregs before WORST
30D: tENant before RENTER
35A: atIT before INIT
WOEs:
6D CLYDE Drexler
48D INUK
33A: I'm never sure if Patsy's name is spelled with a C or a k. Today I guessed correctly.
My overwrites were, RODS and SLOTS I had KNOTS and SPOT...
DeleteJust off-beat and quirky enough to keep me interested. Agree that the revealer is a little disjoint but it’s goofy and it gets enough of the point across. I liked LEMON LIMO.
ReplyDeleteOMD
I cannot tell a LIE - I’ve never watched COLBERT or COLIN - guess I’m not hip enough. Do like one of the CULT FILMS at least - loved CLYDE the Glide and USURP is on my Mt. RUSHMORE of English words.
Hands Off
Pleasant Tuesday morning solve.
Mark Erelli
As @,"
ReplyDeleteAs @Mark (2:22) pointed out, CHANGO isn't a word. We have to pronounce it "CHANGE-O" for the theme to click. That's a serious flaw. Too bad, it could have been a sweet theme.
ReplyDeleteIn a perfect world, we would not have such ugly constructions as CHANGO, but in this lamentably imperfect world, "Presto CHANGO" is, in fact, the most commonly accepted spelling. The "g" retains its soft pronunciation after the vowel switch.
DeleteAnd, since CHANGO is itself formed by dropping the "e" from "change" and replacing it with "o", it is a diabolically clever clue that we need to do the same in the theme answers. So I will argue that it IS a sweet theme, and quite a clever one!
The U.S. Embassy in Ecuador is of course in Quito, but there's a Consulate in Guayaquil. Just, should anyone find themselves in trouble there.
ReplyDeleteChango is 'monkey' in Spanish and that threw me off somehow... and the puzzle was challenging for a Tuesday... twice my normal time. Clever concept and good wackiness, it seemed more like a Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteWhen I went to the Galapagos, we changed planes in Guayaqil, so I will claim my heart-felt wishes...
ReplyDeleteOmg, how many words did Rex devote to examining the theme as if it was the Zapruder film ? Wow, it’s like he was (literally) parsing every syllable. I thought the theme involved changing some Es to Os to get different words - is that not sufficient ?
ReplyDeleteI struggled more than the usual Tuesday, with the real sticking point being finding a path into the NE - WELL GEE could have been one of many phrases and I had no clue on the ENOLA character (and RODS) just wouldn’t come to me - kept thinking TWISTS or STICKS.
I also enjoyed the CUE TIPS clue.
Same issues as you in the NE, and like you, I found the simple E-to-O change sufficient.
DeleteEasy except for the NE, where I needed an alphabet run to get the ENOLA/RODS cross. I also had "bueno" instead of BUONO for a long while. Nice idea for a theme, I thought.
ReplyDeleteI actually prefer the difference in QUITO and LIMO, but I wish it went for all four entries
ReplyDeleteWhen we went to the Galapagos, we were supposed to first land in Guayaquil. But due to bad weather, the plane got diverted to Quito. Then we had to take an hours-long bus-ride to get back to Guayaquil to take our scheduled flight to Baltra. After our tour, we were supposed to fly back to Quito. But due to bad weather, our plane was diverted to Guayaquil. Bus ride back the other way. Then we spent some time in the Amazon basin around Iquitos. Coming back from Iquitos, we were supposed to land in Quito, but ... you guessed it. Three flights to either Quito or Guayaquil, and none landed at the scheduled airport. So, Guayaquil is very, very familiar to me.
ReplyDeleteRevealer did not work for me; CHANGO to me implies you find the letter 'o' and change it to something else, not change something else into an 'o'.
And while it would be unreasonable to ask that no other 'e's or 'o's appear in the grid, asking for no other terminal 'o's is a reasonable expectation. Ditto for not having any other 'e's in the theme answers.
This is a delightfully awful travel story! 😂
DeleteI'm with @Southside in thinking the E to O gimmick was sufficient, and taking a while to come up with WELLGEE, which I don't think I have ever said. Also only know ENOLA as the plane named the ENOLA Gay, so the whole NE corner was inordinately sloggish.
ReplyDeleteKnew the rest of the proper names,(well EHUD took some crosses) so an unusual day in that respect. Guayaquil is familiar but didn't realize its size. Always nice to learn something. And CUETIPS? Har.
More pushback than the average Tuesday and that's a good thing. Well done, HN. I Hope Nobody complains too much, and thanks for all the fun.
No one mentioned the pairing of chang-o and Elliot directly next to each other. Look them up if you haven’t before or weren’t familiar with Elliot.
ReplyDeleteNice catch!
DeleteSlower than avg, but it helped to know ENOLA, DALEY, EHUD from previous puzzles, and INUK from a few weeks ago (singular of Inuit.) Also never heard of Guayaquil, but nice to learn.
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the debut, Howard!
Didn’t know EHUD and guessed zEKES instead of DEKES. Ehuz looked weird but no more so than Ehud as a name.
ReplyDeleteWell, holy moly, this debut puzzle was submitted after 39 rejections. Long before that, so many would have BAILed, or at least stopped sending puzzles to the Times. Started doubting their ability. But no, Howard persisted, and, as I imagine him, tried to do better, tried to learn from what feedback he got. Kept at it.
ReplyDeleteAnd oh, the day he got a yes! The flood of feelings. The excitement.
This is not a going-through-the-motions puzzle, as one might expect after 39 rejections. The theme has spark, with each theme answer a riddle in its own right, so I was motivated throughout, taking stabs and feeling quite satisfied when I figured one out with few crosses. The theme clues/answers brought me smiles. Lovely answers deepened the solving pleasure – GO LONG, TOOK PAINS, CUE TIPS, CULT FILMS.
This is not just another grid – it has a bold look without scattershot black squares, and it has never appeared before in the Times. At 72 words and 34 blocks it is more Thursday/Friday than Tuesday, yet still works because the theme, cluing, and answer set are Tuesday.
Howard, I am inspired by your persistence, your continuing to tell yourself, “Okay, I’ll find another way,” until you reached success. You, sir, are my hero of the day!
Agree
DeleteDefinitely hard for a Tuesday! I was not a huge fan of the North West corner, I got ENOLA and could not come up with the rest until the end. However overall fun and I loved the write up, King Wackadoodle is my new favorite expression.
ReplyDeletenorth east ? but yeah, i had similar difficulties.
DeleteYes! Sorry.
DeleteIf you’ve never had ICE WINE, you’re missing out! There are some who think it’s TOO SWEET, but I absolutely love it. And Rex, you live so close to the Finger Lakes, where you can find some excellent ice wines.
ReplyDeleteAs a Canadian, I'm very familiar with ICEWINE. It's delicious, but very very sweet. Best served in tiny glasses. Oddly, with regular wine, I like the reds and not the whites. With ICEWINE, it's the other way 'round.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteCan't decide twixt BUONO or UM,NO. Well, not true, I liked it.
The pronunciation change doesn't bother me. There's two that do change, two that don't. Even Steven. Besides, NOT QUITO is fun.
Would have liked less O's, since the Theme is based on them, but it's a popular vowel, so they're tough to get away from to get a clean grid.
Nice TuesPuz. Visually appealing grid.
Have a great Tuesday!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Nice puzzle with an unusual theme which I enjoyed, but yikes! While far from a SLOG, still seemed tough for a Tuesday. Not that many proper names to speak of but ENOLA, CLYDE, ICE WINE all tripped me up. I’ve always seen/heard it as presto changeo or change-o, so agree with RP that CHANGO looks like the ODDEST form of that term.
ReplyDeleteCHANGO should be CHANGE-O
ReplyDeleteJust a crossword question. Shouldn’t Bottom of the Barrel be in quotation marks?
ReplyDeleteI can’t believe WELL GEE is an acceptable answer in the year 2024. Just the most laughable example of nonsense phrase fill. A little editing would be nice.
ReplyDeleteDon’t ordinarily do Tuesdays, but this one provided some fight, and was a really clever theme. Don’t understand all the nitpicking, as puzzle was so clever, and so much fun. Hope to see more from you in the future, Howard!
ReplyDelete+1!
DeleteA great debut and - as Lewis points out - a testament to persistence.
ReplyDeleteHaving played hockey for almost 60 years (hung up the skates when I was age 62 - my attempted DEKES were all in SLOMO), have always wondered why the term short for decoy was only used in this one sport. DEKES - moves used to fake out opponents - are everywhere!
Everything you could possibly want to know about hockey DEKES!
I knew DEKES as a hockey term for many, many years before I finally connected it to "decoys" , and then I was torn between congratulating myself and feeling dumb for missing it for so long.
DeleteLike @pabloinnh I knew the hockey term DEKES. Never tried to uncover its origins. Just knew it as a description of a technique I could never master! But, hey, I was pretty good in the corners.
DeleteComplaining about the missing second ? in the Ecuador clue isn't at all nitpicking. Perhaps I am biased as I struggled to figure out if there was some alternate English translation to Guayaquil that would somehow fit into the eight available spaces.
ReplyDeleteIs QTIPS a play on words for CUETIPS? never really thought about that before
ReplyDeleteThe company claims that the "q" stands for quality. I have my doubts
DeleteNice theme; glad the constructor's perseverance was rewarded.
ReplyDeleteNE corner was the hardest Tuesday section I can remember -- dregs before WORST; Seed before SLOT; ENOLA Holmes?, WELLGEE? All the clues up there were late-weekISH.
How embarrassing! I had to cheat on a Tuesday. ENOLA.
DeleteThe last two acrosses were a real grind that put me in a foul mood. So much so that I called my friend. He’s a commie sot, so we call him the Red Wino.
ReplyDeleteI liked the theme, with all of the warts pointed out by @Rex. Congrats and thanks, Howard Neuthaler.
Sw corner was hard and slow. I agree with the blog post on all of your points. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteMy son and daughter-in-law went to the Galapagos a number of years ago. I was clever enough that one embarks from mainland Ecuador so I asked, "so I guess you fly into Quito." My son’s response was "No, Guayaquil". The "you dummy" was implied from his tone of voice (i.e., "Don’t you know the big airport in Ecuador is in Guayaquil, the largest city, you dummy?").
ReplyDeleteTwo stinkerissimos in a row, starting on a Monday. What on earth is going on with the NYTXW?
ReplyDeleteYou haven't liked a puzzle in years
DeleteDNF. I still don't get it.
ReplyDelete1 day since our last rap-themed clue (after 2 in a row!). 0 missed opportunites for fill-in-the-rapper today but lots of close calls:
ReplyDeleteRODS. It's criminal that Messrs. Wave (the rapper) and Stewart (the not rapper) weren't paired here.
WELLGEE sounds like the name of a clinic for rappers.
ICEWINE? I've got an elevator pitch for Ice Spice, Ice Cube and Ice T.
Tyler, the Creator? Earl Sweatshirt? Who is the ODDEST Odd Future rapper?
Give Playboi Carti CARTE blanche and you'll drown in BEATS.
Maybe the most enjoyable Tuesday puzzle I've ever done. The themers are all so imaginative and so funny. It takes a certain kind of wacky wit to come up with these and I can picture Howard chortling with delight as answers like BLOOD TYPO, SAME HERO, and LEMON LIMO came flooding into his brain. They are all quite delicious and they're all clued in an exceptionally playful way.
ReplyDeleteBut Howard also TOOK PAINS with the non-themer clues. He seems to have been having fun there as well, as he clued MOI and BARBELLS and COLBERT and GO LONG.
Sometimes a constructor's personality shines through and makes you feel that this is someone you'd enjoy having lunch with. This is one of those times. A delightful puzzle.
Quito is way up in the Andes, about 10,000 feet above sea level, with mountains towering above - hence the difficulty in landing there ….
ReplyDeleteI lived there for 5 months. Cool city, at least way back then. So yes I have heard of and even been to Guayaquil. I believe it has become quite the warlord/drug lord hot spot
Fun puzz.
I didn't like the revealer. I guess the idea is that people usually say, "Presto! Change!" But do they? I would think "Presto! Changeo!" is more common, in which case you are not changing e to o, but dropping the e. (Actually, I grew up saying "Presto Majesto!" but that's a whole different kettle of fish.) But maybe my experience is not typical; I don't know all that many magicians.
ReplyDeleteOnce I worked that out, my only major problem was dregs instead of WORST, which blocked that whole corner until I gave up and just worked the downs. My minor problem was going Spanish and putiing in BUeNO before BUONO.
After that clue for EMERGE, I just have to post this linkto my favorite aria from Messiah.
No, I don't believe the reveal was meant to imply "Presto Change!", but rather "Presto Change-o!", and that that was the cue that the o's in the theme answers were meant to change.
DeleteBut I love "Presto Majesto"! Never heard that before!
This was a wonderful surprise for a Tuesday and I echo @Nancy as to the playfulness of many of the clues. Hah! I was very glad to see NOTQUITO since I’ll put my hand up to say it’s the only city I know (well, NOW I know two) in Ecuador. I had no qualms with plunking in CHANGO and didn’t even think it was of “questionable” spelling until I read Rex and some comments, but it seems to be a legit spelling according to many dictionaries.
ReplyDeleteAlso hand up for not realizing that DEKES refers to decoy moves. I could plead the fact that I’m not from a “hockey” state, but it seems so obvious now!
M&A will accept either CHANGEO or CHANGO. And all CHANGO claims to be is a "hint" to the puzthemo, sooo ... that works.
ReplyDeleteLiked this themo -- it had amusingly clever answers.
staff weeject pick: AGO. As in TEEN AGO ANGST.
some cool stuff: ONEISH. WELLGEE. CULTFILMS. BARBELLS clue. USURP.
Thanx for the fun, Mr. Neuthaler dude. And congratz on finally gettin yer well-deserved debut.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
**gruntz**
Another hand up for the difficulty in the NE corner and the unappealing WELL, GEE. I had the GEE, but "golly" wouldn't fit and nothing else would come. Also started with dregs for bottom of the barrel which added to the problem. But finally got it to fall.
ReplyDeleteIt is odd that this puzzle had so many non-theme answers that ended in O. I thought perhaps it was because the constructor needed O-ending words in order to go with his O-ending themers, but that only happened once, with SLOMO and QUITO. Does that qualify that shared letter as an OOC (O of convenience)? Asking for a friend.
I stand corrected. Apparently people do say CHANGO-- or rather, they write it. The truth is, I have never seen it written out before today; the spelling was just what I imagined I was saying.
ReplyDeleteI did appreciate the theme -- somehow, even though I saw it right away with BLOOD TYPO, it still took some thought to figure out the other ones. I wanted to change Grek to Roman, I wanted the long car to be a LEMONzine. I used to send interns to Guayaquil, (Rex, just accept my $20 as an additional contribution), but it still took a second to see the logic of NOT QUITO.
@Kitshef, that's quite a story! Worse than the time I took a flight from O'Hare to Milwaukee (last leg of a flight from Boston), couldn't land in Milwaukee because of weather, couldn't land in Chicago because of more weather, and ended up in Fort Wayne, and a long bus ride back through Chicago to Milwaukee. But your has me beat.
I've never head an ICEWINE (or an eiswein either), and was excited at first to heard they were made in Ontario -- but I just did a search, and those seem to be just as unaffordable as the German ones, so I guess I'll wait until I win the lottery.
12 down - I had spot instead of slot. Never heard of Enola Holmes. Enopa was as good as any other name. Is that some form of a natick.
ReplyDeleteICE WINE is a thick sweet dessert wine.
There is no change-o in Quito. And gringos call the port city of quayaquil… why-I-kill-you.
ReplyDeleteMe quedé dormido haciendo este rompecabeza.
ReplyDeleteThe word in Spanish for puzzle is rompecabeza. Games is juegos. I am betting my Spanish sentence above doesn't mean what I think it means.
I did have a very long solve time on the puzzle as I apparently snoozed through it last night and remember nothing about it. I am headed to the tire shop today. Did you know tires cost $1000 now? When I pick my final town to die in, I am going to make sure I am in walking distance to a hospital and a Starbucks.
I like the phrase LEMON LIMO and I plan to visit QUITO in my lifetime as it looks magical from everything I've seen. I've heard Ecuador is one of the South American countries trying not to suck.
If you're wondering, I am on the naughty list.
Propers: 10 (sigh)
Places: 1
Products: 2
Partials: 6
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 22 of 74 (30%)
Funnyisms: 3 😐
Uniclues:
1 Took pro-England Gael out back.
2 Drunken dogs.
3 Pool tool's cheese shop.
4 Stood in for the electrocution at the dominatix.
5 Quarterback's comment to confused wide receiver about upcoming Hail Mary.
6 Total amount of tough guy stuff I've lifted in my life.
1 BEAT WORST SCOT (~)
2 ICE WINE PUGS
3 CUE TIP'S DAIRY
4 TOOK PAINS CAMEO
5 "UM, NO, GO LONG"
6 ONE-ISH BARBELLS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Gambling addiction leaves Rosie alone and penniless. SLOTS ISOLATE RIVETER.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Hardest Tuesday ever for me - EHUD, RODS, ENOLA, CLYDE. But the constructor's comments were so grateful & sincere, all I can say is thank you, Howard, for an 'interesting' (if frustrating for me) solve & congrats on your debut :)
ReplyDeleteDelightful puzzle! I chuckled at BLOODTYPO and soon after CHANGO. And then NOTQUITO! And then Rex’s use of “king wackadoodle” and Then, Southside Johnny calling him out on parsing the theme as though it was the Zapruder film! What a morning! Thanks to all 😀
ReplyDeleteMy personal favorite of the themes didn’t seem to interest anyone else. Same hero. Maybe because I am fascinated by etymology.
DeleteAs Roo pointed out, there are 2 no changes in pronunciation and 2 with changes Rex has been fine with that on many occasions, reserving his criticism when there is an odd one out. Didn’t see anything to criticize here.
Know Enola Holmes from crosswords. It has been in the Times before. But it did take a bit to recall I have had a fifty year habit of trying all acrosses first, then trying the downs. ( not for any good reason) but up top the puzzle looked like a late week one after my run through of acrosses
However, doing the downs, it turned out to be easy for me.
Good point someone above made about cue tips/Q-Tips. Never thought of that before. Maybe an idea for a theme? Not that I could ever construct a puzzle!
Rarely notice these types of connections but I did see DEKE and NHLER
Commenters who said they never heard of it should put deke in their memory banks because it appears fairly often here. To me it qualifies as crosswordese.
One of our favorite criticisms appears here SLOG. Made me laugh.
Again I agree with Nancy. Good puzzle.
There were a late response to a rant I posted last night
The response completely avoided my comments about progressives’ over obsession with nomenclature and to me supports my argument. While democracy is in grave danger in this country- and around the world- many in this country spend too much time arguing about the words to use to describe various sub subcategories of human beings.and hurling insults at people who don’t 100% agree with them.
In any event, while cis fill in the blank is used and therefore part of the language it is used mostly by academics and activists and others in the in crowd. The public does not use it on a regular basis and perhaps a majority of Americans do not even know what it means. No more than they would know Cisalpine Gaul. A ancient Latin word. How Eurocentric! Progressives often do not seem to understand how off putting academic language can be. And how odd and arcane it can sound
You are assuming trans phobia though you have no proof. It could simply be a response to a weird phrase being imposed on them. And make no mistake, there is an attempt to impose the term on others.
Also it is frequently used with a negative connotation.
Finally why cis? Who makes the choice? Why create a new term at all?
@dgd 1:50
DeleteI agree completely with your rant. Well said. Oh, and monkeypox is holding on line 2 to speak with you.
Ehud Barak is the most decorated soldier in Israeli military history. Worth looking up the exploits of Ehud ben Gera, his left-handed biblical namesake (Judges 3:12-30). Not for the faint of heart.
ReplyDeleteOn Tuesdays I start off trying to solve down clues only, but I keep my options open. And here, when I hit the revealer, I thought it would be better to solve the "normal" way and I was right. It was pretty fun for a Tuesday! BLOOD TYPO was the best, partly because "blood type O" is a thing.
ReplyDeleteRex, I'll collect that imaginary 20 dollars the next time I run into you, as I knew about Guayaquil. I read an article about the horrible time they had in the early weeks of Covid.
ICE WINE is a kinda big deal here in the heart of Western Canada's wine country. It's quite tricky, in that the first time the temperature drops below -8 C (20 F) -- usually in the middle of the night -- they have to run out and quickly harvest all the grapes. Here, some winters they are waiting well into January. It is much like a sweet liqueur, worth trying if you get the chance.
[Spelling Bee QB streak 16.]
I can't believe no one is saying a pretzel ROD is not a thing. That is a ridiculous clue and really poor editing. Add the cross with ENOLA and that made for a NE corner that was the WORST.
ReplyDeleteI will go out on a limb here and say i hated this puzzle especially UM NO and Dekes
ReplyDeleteI've flown into Quito numerous times on my way to SCUBA dive at Cocos Island (see avatar), Too many stories to tell here, but I was there on Sept. 11th. Also, @GJ Quito is neat. Don't recall ever hearing of Guayaquil.
ReplyDeleteA delightful theme bit I was a little peeved with the revealer. Put me steadfastly in the CHANGe-O camp. And, yes I spell judgement with that extra "e".
ReplyDeleteHad problems with the casual expressions, WELLGEE and UMNO, because they are incredibly vague and not really in my vocabulary and because I solve Tuesdays downs only and so have no support from the acrosses.
Re: ICEWINE. Don't bother. Just mix up a litre of simple syrup and splash in a bit of cheap Reisling. I'm only sorta kidding. There are lots better dessert wines out there. Try a Sauternes, a Tokaji, or even a Port after your meal.
This puzzle was a SLOG and I wanted to BAIL several times. Was the WORST answer ONEISH or NHLERS? UM, NO, it was QSCORE.
ReplyDeleteI've only had time to read @Rex today but I'll read the rest of the comments later on.
ReplyDeleteOK...So has this possibly happened to anyone else other than me?: I woke up this morning thinking it was Friday; finishing the puzzle and commenting to myself that this was the easiest Friday I've ever done!!!! Do I need to take Vitamin B12 and sharpen up some old brain cells? I've been retired since the age of 50 because I wanted to travel and paint and draw and just have time to do things I like, so I've lost track of time for quite some time. Is that good or bad?
Speaking of traveling.....@Rex, of course you know of Guayaquil....It's the gateway to the Galapagos. I've been to both Quito and Guayaquil. I recommend you put those on your bucket list of places to visit. Ecuador is pretty safe nowadays and it's a beautiful country. In Quito, one should visit the Centro Hispanico because it's incredibly rich. After you've taken in the history and the vistas, you wander on over to the "Cafe Dios No Muere" and eat your heart out. Excellent empanadas, by the way.
Move on to Guayaquil to the Cerro Santa Ana. Do a lot of walking and enjoy the bars, the art galleries the flowers, the music and the Santa Ana church. And then, of course, take a little cruise on the Henry Morgan ship.
UM....the puzzle. Apart from it being an easy Friday, I rather enjoyed the little O endings. CHANGO was my favorite.
Hasta luego y hasta la visto....
one doesn't 'press' bar bells. one presses round weights on a bar.
ReplyDeleteSeems that the New Guy's puzzles, either by choosing tougher ones or by editing worse clues, are harder than Shortz. Discuss.
ReplyDeleteGuayaquil is a gimme for us diplomats, as was ice wine, which they make in upstate New York! Drive north, Rex! There is good stuff up there! https://www.johnsonwinery.com/Our-Wines/Ice-Wine
ReplyDeleteFILM SCORE
ReplyDeleteShe LEDON A guy?
GEE, ENOLA did NOT!
She’s TOOSWEET TOO LIE,
but IN FILMS she’s A SLOT.
--- CLYDE CLINE & COLIN COLBERT
Alternate themer: Viewing TV game show with a card - BINGOWATCHING
ReplyDeleteWay out of place. More Thursday than Tuesday. An early challenge. Agree that CHANGO without the E should rhyme with MANGO. You need that E, fella!
ReplyDeleteNever heard of a QSCORE, which was no help on a difficult grid. I got it done with some judicious guesses, but I shudder to think what's coming if we get this on a Tuesday. Bogey.
Wordle par.
I'm a little surprised at how hard people found this puzzle. It was fun and clever. I immediately knew the game was afoot when I saw 17A's BLOODTYPOs. And I'm very surprised at how many on this blog did not know Enola Holmes. She's fairly new to Xword puzzles, but I found it refreshing to have a second Enola added to the Xword lexicon.
ReplyDelete