Debugging soft wear? / FRI 9-27-24 / Tough loss for a poker player / Port caller / Middle's middle / Lines of text that are less useful on paper / Title for Bobby Flay on reality TV / Who's cutting onions? / Triumphs for one's country, maybe

Friday, September 27, 2024

Constructor: Jake Bunch

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: EGO death (9D: ___ death, concept associated with LSD trips) —

Ego death is a "complete loss of subjective self-identity". The term is used in various intertwined contexts, with related meanings. The 19th-century philosopher and psychologist William James uses the synonymous term "self-surrender" and Jungian psychology uses the synonymous term psychic death, referring to a fundamental transformation of the psyche. In death and rebirth mythology, ego death is a phase of self-surrender and transition, as described later by Joseph Campbell in his research on the mythology of the Hero's Journey. It is a recurrent theme in world mythology and is also used as a metaphor in some strands of contemporary western thinking.

In descriptions of drugs, the term is used synonymously with ego-loss to refer to (temporary) loss of one's sense of self due to the use of drugs. The term was used as such by Timothy Leary et al. to describe the death of the ego in the first phase of an LSD trip, in which a "complete transcendence" of the self occurs.

The concept is also used in contemporary New Age spirituality and in the modern understanding of Eastern religions to describe a permanent loss of "attachment to a separate sense of self" and self-centeredness. This conception is an influential part of Eckhart Tolle's teachings, where Ego is presented as an accumulation of thoughts and emotions, continuously identified with, which creates the idea and feeling of being a separate entity from one's self, and only by disidentifying one's consciousness from it can one truly be free from suffering.

• • •
[11D: Simply delectable]

This seems like a fine, ordinary Friday puzzle, but it lost my good will at 1-Across and never really got it back. Poker lingo, ugh. There's something uniquely repulsive about it to me. Other lingos that aren't my own don't bug me nearly so much. But poker lingo, barf. BAD BEAT? Sounds like a dance music problem to me. I think I had BAD DEAL in there at one point. It's such an unpleasant, ugly-sounding phrase, BAD BEAT. And hey, look at that, No Surprise, it's a debut answer today. Constructors have been debuting some winners losers of late. Just 'cause it's new doesn't mean it's good. I realize this is a highly personal reaction based on my finding the whole poker phenomenon uniquely unattractive. Poker on television, that was really the beginning of the end for me. The elevation of poker players to household names. Pass. Hard hard pass. I'm just saying, poker brings nothing good to the world so let's all memory-hole it forever. Thanks.

[The poker player has spoken!]

Once I got out of that NW corner (which, despite the putrid BAD BEAT, wasn't all that hard to work out), things leveled off. But they just leveled, that is, they were fine. Things were fine. Adequate. Of the marquee stuff, only VICTORY LAPS is really giving us some ZESTY Friday flavor. ON AUTOPILOT is a bit dull, plus it's part of this phenomenon today where answers are unnecessarily long. Like, we get the formal or redundant versions of several answers. First, ON AUTO is a common phrase (16 NYTXW appearances!), but today we get the full, unexpurgated ON AUTOPILOT (I had ON AUTOMATIC here at first). Then there's SPOT ADS, which is a thing, I admit, but it's a thing I see in puzzles way way more than I hear or see it irl, probably because "spot" and "ad" mean the same thing so most people just say one of them. Ugh. Then there's "ARE YOU IN?," a valid interrogative phrase, but, as with ON AUTOPILOT, we see more often in shortened form—as "YOU IN?" (10 NYTXW appearances!). I don't think of these answers as faults so much as ... a tendency to bloat for the sake of "originality." So your "original" answer feels like something we've seen (a lot) before, just ... bigger. 


I really like the clue on MOSQUITO NET (24D: Debugging soft wear?) except I don't really think of the net as something you "wear." I guess you might have one hanging off your ... what, pith helmet? Whatever, the clue's commitment to the computer programming pun is so enthusiastic that I can't help but be charmed. "LET'S ROLL" and "YOUR CALL" lend some nice colloquial energy to their respective corners. And while I generally hate ICER as a word, and more in the plural, today I that hatred was defused by the visual pun of having the ICERS (if not the actual icing) right on top of the CUPCAKES.


My primary difficulty (to the extent there was any difficulty) occurred in and around the verb phrase WINS GOLD (32A: Triumphs for one's country, maybe). I read "triumphs" as a noun, so that was my problem there. Then there was the kind-of-clever but very ambiguous clue on STS. (i.e. "streets") (26D: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.: Abbr.) and the not-clever, very clunky clue on GULL (33D: Port caller). I get it, you see GULLs near "ports" and the noises they make are in the general category of bird "calls" but what sort of phrase is "Port caller"? Are you trying to evoke "port of call"? It's such an awkward phrase. If you're gonna go awkward, there should at least be some wordplay reason for doing so, but I don't see it / hear it. I wanted BELL here at first because I had the "LL" and ... isn't there some nautical time-telling thing involving "BELLs"? Yes. Yes there is. But that's on a ship, not (only) in "port." Needed crosses to get FLEET (65A: Side in a game of Battleship) (which was the only way I was gonna get that second CHOPIN answer, IN E), and I had ALETAP before ALE KEG (47D: Source of a draft). Other than that, this puzzle was a breeze.


Bullets:
  • 30A: Org. whose website has a "Register Your Drone" page (FAA) — Federal Aviation Administration. They should have a "Destroy Your Drone" page. "Smash drone with hammer. Get new hobby." There, I just wrote it for them. You're welcome, FAA.
  • 3D: Middle's middle (DEES) — a "letteral" clue, i.e. you need to look at the letters in the clue to figure out the answer, namely the "middle" letters in the word "middle," i.e. the DEES.
[Rick DEES at the 3:00 mark but ... honestly I think you're gonna wanna watch it all]
  • 13A: Root words? ("GO, TEAM, GO!") — the "words" one might use when "rooting" for one's team. I'm rooting for the Tigers, who (improbably) seem like they're about to make the playoffs? They were a sub-.500 team like [checks watch] 3 minutes ago. What a world. Go, Tigers, go.
  • 38D: Who's cutting onions? (DICER) — not sure what this clue is trying to do. I think it wants to evoke the colloquial expression "Who's cutting onions?" (used when someone is crying and wants to blame something besides their emotions), but then ... it ultimately wants to be literal (a DICER cuts onions). I guess I can't figure out precisely what work the "?" is going here. A wordplay "?"? A simple interrogative "?"? Both? 
  • 18A: It'll rock your world (SEISM—why is the word "seismic" so great but the word SEISM so so terrible? I think it's a pronunciation issue. "Size 'em?" Is that how you say it? But it looks like "Say-ism," or like a typo for "sexism." I don't even like looking at it, let alone saying it. Just say "tremor." Or, if you must be fancy, "temblor."
See you next time, and my apologies to poker and drone enthusiasts everywhere. You deserve a more understanding crossword blogger.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. Happy [counts on fingers ... runs out of fingers ... twice] 21st anniversary to my beautiful wife, Penelope, without whom ... well, I don't like to think about it. It's not pretty. Love you, honey.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

103 comments:

Conrad 6:07 AM  


Happy Anniversary, @Rex and Penelope!!

I found the puzzle Easy-Medium for a Friday.

1A: BAD dEAl before BEAT
2D: I'm never sure how to spell ATTILA so I entered AT--LA until I got 13A
8D: bILLIONAIRE before ZILLIONAIRE
21A: dali before MIRO
42A: wan before ILL

My only WOE was @Rex BAD BEAT at 1A

Bob Mills 6:19 AM  

Finished it with one cheat; I Googled QROBA and got QDOBA. Otherwise I was able to deal with the Fridayish cluing, like "root words" for GOTEAMGO and "Lovers' divide" for AGEGAP. I never once heard BADBEAT at the poker table, but I assume it's like having four kings only to lose to four aces. Average difficulty for a Friday, I thought, and well constructed.

Anonymous 6:22 AM  

Penelope’s anniversary present to Rex: poker chips and a drone.

DeeJay 6:30 AM  

Having played poker for more than 50 years, I've never heard of a BAD BEAT. I'm not even sure I know what it is now.

Congrats on both 18 and 21!

Andy Freude 6:47 AM  

Happy anniversary, you two!

Left 1A incomplete, solved clockwise, and finished up with the poker term, which I’ve never heard but don’t mind as much as the big guy does.

I’d say I know Chopin’s music as well as the next classical music lover, and there are two beautiful Chopin scherzos, one in B minor and the other in B-flat minor (gorgeous!). But the key of that seldom-played third one? I needed the cross today to learn that it’s IN E. At least I knew the answer couldn’t be SO.

Adam12 7:11 AM  

LETS ROLL should be forever stricken from the vernacular. as It is wholly owned by Todd Beamer, never to not be “too soon”. Never, ever forget!

SouthsideJohnny 7:19 AM  

You could definitely make a meal out of this one. You’ve got that BONE-IN ribeye with BASMATI (or if you prefer, we will LOAD UP a spud for you) and we have a DICER working on the onions. For dessert, enjoy some CUPCAKES with ICING. All prepared by IRON CHEF Bobby Flay. You can wash it down with a drink from our ALE KEG. If you would like to dine al fresco, we will even go to the trouble of putting up a MOSQUITO NET for you and piping in some CHOPIN music as well.

D 7:19 AM  

I see that An die Freude reference and applaud you.

Anonymous 7:24 AM  

Happy anniversary!

I know BAD BEAT as a sports gambling term. There was an ESPN sports anchor (Scott Van Pelt, maybe?) who had a segment where he would highlight a team that, for example, beat a point spread by scoring a meaningless touchdown in the closing seconds, thus handing bettors a “bad beat.” I’m not sure what the poker equivalent is.

Anonymous 7:24 AM  

How does someone whose entire presence in the known universe is based on a popular game look at another popular game and say that it brings nothing good to the world?

Stuart 7:32 AM  

I don’t play poker, but I have heard of BAD BEAT. Go figure.

Pretty easy and fair today, IMHO.

dash riprock 7:33 AM  

Wrapping this, a slog. I'm counting it a solve, another notch in the near fourscore streak (prev a five!), but in fact it was a double fail. First at ZILLIONAIRE X ZESTY (8), I knew bESTY felt wrong, but I couldn't make sense of BAD BEAT either, despite having had goes with penny ante years ago. So I figgered, let's rip the nonsense right across the row. Zillionaire, it's a werd, but not one I've used since I was five. It's not an interesting word, Bunches better ways to tag big swinging.. And though sussing the error post the 'Just about' splash can be fun, this was anything but. Took ages (focus was elsewhere, read on), then zillblahblah was anticlimactic.

The other fail stemmed from having to lay the game aside for a 15 min breather (auto-fail, as, in my book, all puzzles need to be reconciled in a sitting.. or a handstand, or however you solve them // coffee break? fail. sleep on it? fail. break out your tennis-ball'd walker to meet the great-grans? fail. etc.). Cross-eyed and short the Q and the E at 24d, the lone remaining voids, I could not arrive at MOSQUITO NET, as _DOBA (37a), made no sense and I began to question whether AMA (23a) might be ADA. The chain first occurred but now I was set on a 'competitor' pepper. Whatelsecuditbe.

The NET dropped, the gong sounded and then.. did I misspell MOSQUITO. Let's turn my phone sideways to confirm.

So apparently we've Qdobas in the area, a Bunch. Incl. one w/shite reviews on a campus. Me? Nevah heard of it. This despite following the rise of locals Five Guys, CAVA (and their mega IPO), sweetgreen + more, and having met some of their principals. (The cazh eatery sector is interesting - not McD's, not fine dining.. bahtwixt.) So when did this interloper arrive. Riprock investigates.

Dint feel this one. I could go on, but let's not.

Son Volt 7:35 AM  

Fun puzzle - cluing voice was just funky enough to make the initial pass demanding but fell in line quickly. Overall fill was scrabbly - felt strained in places. Liked GO TEAM GO, MOSQUITO NET and CREAMERY.

Martha Argerich

Never like ALE KEG or ALE tap which we tend to see also. SPOT ADS is weak and don’t really know QDOBA. Limited glue throughout.

Enjoyable Friday morning solve. Happy Anniversary to the Parker’s!



Joe R. 7:57 AM  

A bad beat is when the odds are greatly in your favor at the point where you make the big bet and then your opponent draws a lucky card to win the hand. Imagine, for example, going all-in with QJ after the flop and turn came Q38J, and your opponent calls with 89, and then a 10 comes on the river.

Anonymous 8:00 AM  

I’ll just go change my coffee shirt now :D

Rick 8:01 AM  

happy anniversary! as an amateur, this was medium-hard. Too many phrases and not enough nouns (which I might have known) to give me a footing

EasyEd 8:02 AM  

Yikes, this puzzle had some fun stuff—MOSQUITO NET, ZILLIONAIRE—but also had BADBEAT—I backed into that answer but still didn’t believe it until reading here that it’s a well-known poker term. Tried to Google its inception but no luck—it has apparently been around a long time but used mainly in tournaments where there is a special pot assigned to very high losing hands.

Dr.A 8:11 AM  

I laughed out loud at the pith helmet comment. Pretty easy for a Friday but fun.

Ted 8:17 AM  

This is kinda my take. Rex does not have to love poker, but spitting pure hate at a card game just comes off as ugly and toxic. It's a game, a popular one, a skill game that's easy to learn and hard to master. Chill. :)

RooMonster 8:43 AM  

Hey All !
Wanted MEATY for 8A forever, but the resulting 10D ALAMS isn't a word. Hmm, says I, it must be SLAMS. But, what could _ESTY be? 8D is an M, or a B, or even a J. Even tried changing EGO to AGO, even though that was just silly. Finally ran the alphabet, getting all the way to the Z, and voila, ZESTY ZILLIONAIRE. Followed by a "D'oh!"

QDOBA. Yow. Haven't seen one of those in a while. Wanted ZABAS there first. Are QDOBAs still out there?

LETSRide first, causing slowdown in the SW. Can someone explain to me like a five year old how ILL= Peaked? Thanks.

Liked this Themeless. Did look up MIRO (wanted Dali) and QDOBA, but still taking as a victory, because I can. 😁

Happy Friday!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Liveprof 8:54 AM  

Hmmmm. Perhaps the explanation derives from the differences between the two?

Mothra 9:21 AM  

So agree!

Anonymous 9:22 AM  

So agree!

Anonymous 9:27 AM  

Think peak-ed, pronouncing that second syllable. As in, “You look a bit peak-ed today. You ok?”

Anonymous 9:31 AM  

I was definitely expecting a debate if not a lecture on "peaked" vs. "piqued."

Beezer 9:34 AM  

I’m not big on Rex getting on the soapbox, but to add to Liveprof, it’s one thing if you are playing with matchsticks or non redeemable chips and quite another when you are playing with a stake in the game. Other than my NYT subscription (cheap!) I’ve never lost money working a crossword.

Beezer 9:38 AM  

You kind of nailed it for me. I also got stuck by the fact my region has an ADOBO Grill and I forgot about the “lower quality” QDOBA. Plus, very funny post above, with the tennis balls etc.

Anonymous 9:38 AM  

That Brady Bunch clip is unspeakably bad! I tried to get through it but could not bear it...

pabloinnh 9:42 AM  

Another "phew, finished that one somehow, let's see what the man says--Easy! " Not here. BADDRAW, BADDEAL, but BADBEAT?? OK. Backed into ZESTY after TASTY, TANGY, and even SAPID, which I thought was pretty clever. If there is something called a QDOBA it's not in NH. Hello DALI, goodbye DALI. Adios MAGICAL, hello LYRICAL. Even spelled old friend SELENE wrong. Not helpful. (See also ATTILA). Boo to ALEKEG and double boo to the clue for GULL . Painful.

In short, I had a wonderful morning with a crossword, but this wasn't it. Some good stuff, JB, but Just Because you can throw in new stuff or bad clues doesn't mean you should. Thanks for some fun at least.

Happy Anniversary to OFL and Penelope, who shares a first name with a wonderful teaching colleague of mine. And FWIW, I don't like poker either, a game where the best liar gets to win.


dash riprock 9:43 AM  

"...and the not-clever, very clunky clue on GULL (33D: Port caller). I get it, you see GULLs near "ports" and the noises they make are in the general category of bird "calls" but what sort of phrase is "Port caller"? Are you trying to evoke "port of call"?

Yes. Believe you read that wrong. Not 'noises,' visits. Port caller, port visitor. In fact - caller, one paying a short visit. So fit well.. ta me.


Roo 8:43 AM: "Can someone explain to me like a five year old how ILL= Peaked?"

Yes -> [2].

Think diff pronunciation altogether, it'll come to you. In fact, I reckoned it one o' the best clue/ans pairings of the lot.. had to have a wee think, then registered.

Greggory S. 9:44 AM  

Heartily recommend "To Die For," Gus Van Sant's take on Joyce Maynard's novel about the real-life Pamela Smart's murder plot against her husband. With Nicole Kidman, Matt Dillon (as her soon to be murdered husband) and Casey Affleck & Joaquin Phoenix as the seduced young teens who carry out the murder (in very early roles for both), it is not only hilarious, but is a cutting and insightful look at how celebrity culture has permeated and taken over even small town America.

Nancy 9:49 AM  

So I'm trying to guess what a BAD BEAT at poker is. I mean I already know you're seated on a chair that's painted green, but what else? You had a huge bet sitting on the table? You lost by a whisker -- three queens to three kings? I don't play poker, but I sort of have the feeling that this may be a made-up phrase that nobody says.

Not a good idea to put questionable or controversial fill at 1A. Other than that, though, I found this an enjoyable puzzle. It seemed fairly easy for a Friday -- except for the places that weren't. I made my grid very messy by filling in two answers in very dark ink that were wrong: ON AUTOmatic before ON AUTOPILOT and, spurred on by the initial "Y", I had YES AND NO instead of YOUR CALL for "I could go either way on that".

I liked the clues for VICTORY LAPS and SEA LEGS. But many clues seemed quite easy for a Friday -- CHOPIN in particular. I very much appreciated the lack of names and the very clean grid. And will I EVER learn to spell ATTILA? I knew him early on, but waited to write him in until I could confirm the spelling. I'm a really good speller, but this is a blind spot. Does anyone know a mnemonic?

Anyway -- smooth, clean and enjoyable.

Beezer 9:53 AM  

Wow, kudos to everyone that found this puzzle easy. For whatever reason, I did not seem to be on the same wavelength as the constructor but I woke up to the first spate of three days of constant rain due to the fallout from Helene, so maybe the low pressure did something to my brain. At any rate, I raise my hand to say I could not finish the puzzle without a few cheats. I liked the things I COULD get but I won’t bore you with that.

Serious/not serious, but in my mind the only thing that is a “real” moneybags in 2024 is a bILLIONAIRE so yes, I am with Rex on the “I haven’t said that since I was a kid” thing. Of course there is “bazillion” and “gazillion” also.

I was very upset I couldn’t parse MOSQUITONET (even without th Q) after having spent some time in the backwoods of McCarthy, Alaska this June. After realizing how huge and vicious the mosquitoes were, we were crushed to find out that SOMEONE had bought ALL the mosquito nets about an hour before we went to the General Store (and it was called that). And a pith helmet would have been good to have with the mosquito hat over it, but a baseball cap would suffice.

H.E. Gel 9:59 AM  

.Occasional gratuitous cheap shots are part of Michael's schtick. And they are not bound any by any conventional rules of logic. They are bound only by the logic that this is Michael's blog and he is therefore entitled to go on about any one of his pet peeves, without any appeal to the rules of logic and whenever he wishes. But they are just that: pet peeves, Nothing more. Nothing less. Don't try to analyze or critique them. Just let them be.

jberg 10:00 AM  

I loved this puzzle, although it was hard to get started--my first entry was "dali," every letter of which was wrong. But the tricksy clues, for the most part, were first incomprehensible and then obvious, once I saw the trick. My favorite was MOSQUITO NET, which I got off the N (plus the ? in the clue). ARE YOU IN and ON AUTOPILOT were tougher, sort of could have been anything.

I grew up in Wisconsin. There were a lot of dairies, but I don't recall a CREAMERY anywhere near us--well, maybe one, where they made and sold cheese. We just called it Renard's.

I liked the culinary delight in the NE, with ZESTY crossing TO DIE FOR. And we get CUPCAKES, IRON CHEF, maybe even GUSTO.

Didn't we have SEISM a few weeks ago? Or was that a different puzzle?

The hardest part, MIRO aside, was understanding why STS wasn't NTH. Duh. But then where I grew up the numbered roads were all AVEs.

Later

Beezer 10:07 AM  

Ha! Yes, you can see GULLs at landfills also!

Anonymous 10:11 AM  

I’m not comfortable with the NYT puzzles constantly normalizing the use of LSD. You wanna go trip on acid, enjoy. But it feels like the Times is trying to normalize its use. I’ve had more than one person in my life ruin their life from continued use. It is generally illegal, and wisely so, although there is some medical research being done to use it to treat certain psychological conditions. But it’s extremely dangerous unregulated stuff that shouldn’t be normalized in something as accessible as a puzzle. IMO, of course.

Liveprof 10:17 AM  

On tricks to remember things -- My wife and I (both in our 70s) were driving our granddaughter Lianna (14) to her first day of 8th grade. I asked her who her homeroom teacher was. She said "Mrs. Mackey." I said, "Okay, to remember that, you can think of a Mack truck." And my wife added "and then a key, like to unlock a door." And Lianna looked at us funny and said "Why don't I just remember Mackey?" Oh, to be young.

egsforbreakfast 10:19 AM  

"I could go either way on that, you GULL." YOURCALL port caller.

Coincidentally, I had SEALEGSfor breakfast this morning.

Sometimes it's hard to know whether @Rex is spouting wisdom ORBS. But I nonetheless wish him and Penelope a happy anniversary.

Liveprof 10:25 AM  

Happy Anniversary RP!

My wife and I celebrated our 40th in June. When we were getting married we read an article that said that what causes problems for couples are decisions. Disagreements over decisions can be very stressful. So we agreed early on that I'd be in charge of all the major, important decisions, and my wife would make all the smaller, minor ones. For example, she decides minor issues like where should we live? what schools should the kids go to? And I'm in charge of important matters like should we invade Iraq? Should we cut the defense budget? It's worked out well for us.

We also agreed early on that no matter how stressful our lives became -- with work, with the kids, etc. -- no matter what -- we would go out once a week for a romantic, candlelight dinner. It's been great -- she goes on Tuesdays and I go on Fridays.

Whatsername 10:29 AM  

Without fail, my first thought when I hear those two words. 😢

Whatsername 10:37 AM  

Happy anniversary to Mr. and Mrs. Rex. And belated felicitations on your blog anniversary too.

jae 10:41 AM  

Medium although it seemed easier. I had a few of easily fixed wrong guesses that slowed my whoosh…e.g. AUTOmatic before PILOT, bILLION before ZILLION, soy before PEA, Imout before IWONT…no whoosh.

A solid Friday with more than a bit of sparkle, liked it.

Happy anniversary @Rex & Penelope!

MAC 10:50 AM  

ADAM 12, roger....totally concur....KMA 367

Gary Jugert 10:52 AM  

Llegaron mis nuevos anteojos.

The coating on my wildly expensive lenses failed and for the last two weeks I've been staring through the fog waiting for a new pair of glasses and they're here. They may need adjusting as seeing my way through this puzzle was murky. MIRO whooped me as did [Peaked].

I've gone down a MIRO rabbit hole this morning and ended up in Cincinnati where he painted a magnificent mural in a fancy dining room, but the hotel has fallen into ruin thanks to the greed of real estate developers, and the renovations are supposedly underway, but there's no sign of the mural in any of the news reports showing the dilapidated building. I hope somebody tried to save it.

MOSQUITO NET took every single cross, felt like the most inscrutable collection of letters, and a joyous reveal.

❤️ ZILLIONAIRE. TO DIE FOR.

😫 BADBEAT. EGO.

Happy anniversary 🦖

Propers: 5
Places: 0
Products: 3
Partials: 10 (ugh)
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 19 of 70 (27%)

Funnyisms: 3 😐

Uniclues:

1 What I take each morning when I realize I didn't die in my sleep.
2 Why his songs stick in your heart.
3 Those enthusiastic for enthusiasm.
4 Oft quoted line from How to Increase Your Real Estate Holdings with Elephants.
5 A fat wallet.
6 Why one of the 1% can't sleep.
7 The one flying through the sky and headed for your skull in a bar fight.
8 Those ending with the line, "Too radical for [fill in the state]."

1 NOT VICTORY LAPS
2 CHOPIN CUPCAKES
3 GUSTO MANIACS
4 ATTILA, "LET'S ROLL."
5 AGE GAP DICER
6 ZILLIONAIRE PEA
7 TO DIE FOR ALE KEG
8 SASSY SPOT ADS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: TikTok with the volume up. I HEAR TIME SUCK.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Iydianblues 11:04 AM  

Very funny! A mixture of Rodney Dangerfield and Rumpole of the Bailey…

Anonymous 11:12 AM  

Some other important man-decisions: what movie should we go to? What sports teams do we root for?

puzzlehoarder 11:14 AM  

The easy rating does not surprise me even though it took me 50 minutes to knock this out on my phone last night. While I don't remember too much of the puzzle I do recall looking over it after getting the congrats and thinking this should have been easy.

For starters 1A's BADBEAT was a complete unknown but at least it's composed of common words. QDOBA on the other hand was just a random string of letters that was of no help whatsoever. Thank Ja for the crosses.

I had a DISTILL/DISSECT write over adjacent to a DALI/MIRO one. MILL and BILL competed for "moneybags" long before ZILL showed up. I think I was slow on ZESTY just because I really wanted TANGY even though ILLIONAIRE blew it out of the water.

My final entry was LAA. That's an otherwise totally forgettable example of painful short fill. I cringe every time I see one of those "scoreboard" clues as I don't follow sports and couldn't care less.

In the SE I can remember INE. like the sports clues these in this or that key or that key along with the MAJ/MIN musical whac-a-moles are perpetual speed bump guessing games for me. I'm sure there are classical music buffs who have this down cold but for me it will always be random.

yd -0. QB8

A 11:14 AM  

Sometimes a random clue will catch my eye as I’m printing the puzzle, and I’ll start solving from there instead of 1A. Fortunately that happened today, so I didn’t have to start off with a “Tough loss.” Said clue was “Composer….” so I plopped in CHOPIN and things radiated out from the SW. Last in was the less-than-gratifying DEES/SEISM/BADBEAT mess.

Admirable collection of solid phrases - LETSROLL, VICTORYLAP, GOTEAMGO YOURCALL, TODIEFOR, and ONAUTOPILOT, which I hear more often than ONAUTO.

Interesting that ON AUTOPILOT crosses with AD LIB. I just started a new book by Dan Levitin (the “This is Your Brain on Music” guy), called “I HEARD THERE WAS A SECRET CHORD: Music as Medicine.” In one passage he describes a live performance by Ella Fitzgerald in which she forgets lyrics to “Mack the Knife.” She continues singing AD LIB, melody and rhythm perfectly intact but with made-up words and imitations of other musicians, like Louis Armstrong. He makes the point that her brain is so well trained that it’s ON AUTOPILOT for most facets of the performance, allowing her to AD LIB the less familiar words. Fascinating stuff. I highly recommend his books. Here is Ella.

burtonkd 11:16 AM  

Gee, I always liked that one. Others so overplayed as to lose their novelty, drama and beauty.

Tom T 11:17 AM  

Happy anniversary, Michael and Penelope!
Hand up for BAD BEAT struggle and ATTILA spelling. Also had SpaSM before SEISM. Two s's in the middle of DISSECT look so weird to me. Liked the pairing of WINS GOLD and VICTORY LAPS (if you are on a long losing streak, could that be called a VICTORY "LAPS"?). ALEKEG is a very strange looking answer.

Crappy grid for Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW), other than an addition to the gustatory mini-theme of this puzzle--that Elizabethan honey wine: MEAD, off the M in 21A, MIRO.

Wright-Young 11:20 AM  

Peak-ed

Anonymous 11:22 AM  

And Danny Elfman's soundtrack is, well, to die for.

burtonkd 11:23 AM  

Always nice to hear Martha, my fave, but that Scherzo is in the xword unfriendly Bbminor

Carola 11:25 AM  

For me, the four quadrants of the grid were made up of two CUPCAKES down below and a couple of tough customers up top - it just was a struggle to get going in the NW and NE, with some errors making pattern recognitions impossible. Lots to like throughout - WINS GOLD followed by VICTORY LAPS, ZILLIONAIRE, my Badger State CREAMERY - by the way, my favorite one got a nod: SASSY Cow Creamery which really does have ice cream TO DIE FOR. Fun Friday.

Do-overs: me, too, for ON AUTOmatic; eGoism before AGE GAP (the lovers' divide), MOth....something before MOSQUITO.... No idea: BAD BEAT.

@CDilly, I was so sorry to hear about your frightening ordeal. Best wishes for your full recovery!

burtonkd 11:26 AM  

My whole life until today, I thought it was piqued for being ill, even though I also know it as “piqued my interest”. Maybe it was those darn French lessons, hi Nancy:)

Wright-Young 11:27 AM  

😅

LenFuego 11:28 AM  

Loved BAD BEAT, cannot believe that is this ubiquitous phrase's NYT Xword debut.

Newboy 11:30 AM  

Ahhh, young love is grand, so enjoy your anniversary and know that it only gets better with aging. Not so true for today’s grid unfortunately. Yesterday was a hoot, but today lacked a certain something that I couldn’t put my finger on until Rex and commentariat clued me in. And as OFL noted it all was downhill after BAD dEAl.

Anonymous 11:30 AM  

Hilarious! Thanks for the laughs!

Visho 11:30 AM  

Thanks so much for Martha! I can't believe how incredible she is!

burtonkd 11:34 AM  

The same passion that keeps Rex doing this blog is the double reverse/same part that will set him off on a tailspin because there is a clue for something he doesn’t like. I’ll take the bad with the great - here’s to 18 more years!

I have to say that I’m with him sometimes about drones (despite having seen some spectacular footage produced by them). If you go to a historic site or interesting geographical place, you have to deal with listening to multiple buzzing drones whizzing around while you are trying to enjoy the majesty of the place.

mathgent 11:44 AM  

Enjoyable. Cute trickery at 21A. There is also a Dali museum in Barcelona.

R Duke 11:58 AM  

A very good movie, and Nicole Kidman has never looked better.

M and A 12:09 PM  

Impressive themeless FriPuz wear/fare.

staff weeject pick: STS. Plural abbreve meat, and primo evasive clue.

Too much good fill-ins to list, and very few no-knows. M&A's kind of themeless solvequest.

har. QDOBA was one of my no-knows, and I checked -- and there is a QDOBA in our town.

Thanx a U-know-what, Mr. Bunch dude. Nice one.

Masked & Anonymo6Us


biter alert:
**gruntz**

old timer 12:10 PM  

SEALEGS came to me almost at once. Perhaps because of that, I finished the puzzle and was pleased as punch. A very workmanlike job, I said to myself at once. My only real problem was QDOBA, which we don't have here, or if we do I have never been tempted to go.

Now it just so happens I have played a lot of poker in my day. Long before there were legal lotteries and Indian casinos, we had card rooms scatterered all over California, and I played and often won at poker, often lowball. A bad player with a great hand would give what they call a tell, and probably not win much. I learned to pretend I was playing a hand likely to lose, thus luring my opponents to call my bets. And I witnessed more than one BAD BEAT. Such as someone being dealt a 64321, betting big, and then his opponent drew the almost impossible to get "wheel", 5432A, which under most house rules beats a 64, even though in regular poker it is a straight, and not a low hand at all.

Had OFL stayed in California, he probably would have played poker in the card rooms -- Fresno has a few, I believe -- and probably would have done quite well.

Raymond 12:15 PM  

I need a mnemonic too (rare fot me). How about ATTiLA The Hun - the idea is that the capital T of The reminds you to double the T in Attila

jb129 12:21 PM  

This was in no way EASY - but I guess that makes it a proper Friday. QDOBA? Filled in MOSQUITO NET but for the life of me, couldn't make out what it spelled, ACA before AMA, because it seems to care for people more than the AMA (just my opinion.)
Happy Anniversary Mr. & Mrs. Rex :)

Sir Hillary 12:25 PM  

Oh brother. The most over-the-top reaction of the year...
-- "the putrid BADBEAT"
-- "uniquely repulsive"
-- "poker brings nothing good to the world"
...and yet, he can't bring himself to say what I suspect he really wants to say -- that poker players (especially those on TV) tend to speak and act like bros one might find at a hedge fund or investment bank. In other words, it's not the game he has a problem with, it's the people who play it.

And BTW, poker players are "household names" to a very small percentage of households -- kinda like medieval poets.

I hate myself for commenting only on the write-up and not the puzzle (which I liked) and I hope never to do so again. But sometimes you just have to call the ball.

Shandra Dykman 12:45 PM  

Oh my god OF COURSE I WATCHED THE WHOLE THING. That Brady Bunch Variety clip has EVERYTHING - even the I Love Lucy theme! That was all magic I can handle today. I’m exhausted.

okanaganer 12:47 PM  

After a slow start, this filled in nicely. Lots of typeovers and leaving parts of answers blank. I propose a new KeaLoa: looking at -ASM--- for "Rice Variety", could be JASMINE or BASMATI!

Also MIRO had the museum in Barcelona until I thought no, it's probably DALI. Nope, MIRO! For the draft source, I tried SPIGOT, then when the initial A appeared I wanted: AIR LEAK! Good answer but doesn't fit. At the end, looking at ALEKE-, I thought: there's the L and the K from AIR LEAK! Still no.

QDOBA??? Never heard of it at all! But I live in a smaller town in western Canada and don't travel so much these days, so whadda I expect?

[Spelling Bee: yd 0, streak 8.]

Anonymous 12:52 PM  

CDilly52 here with my third solve in a row but I haven’t a streak going yet because yesterday my Covid Brain (or lack of “brain” at all) messed with me.

Yesterday I blew through the non-theme material and knew what the real answers to the theme clues were but had so much trouble with the DOUBLE REVERSE that it took me longer than 24 hours for the “aha” to set in, but I got it eventually - by cheating. Didn’t help that because the NW corner contained the former Oklahoma 🏀 coach LON Kruger, I was convinced that the theme was going to be all about basketball! Whatever.

Today also an easy Friday except my brain didn’t connect with some of the NW for a while. Any of you with whom the dreaded 🦠 has taken up residence and resisted eviction will know about “Covid Brain.” It. Is. Real.

So, I had TO DO and AGE GAP going down up in the NW, and that gave me GOAL at 19A. That’s all I needed to get the middle from 18-32A done and dusted. It was an easyish sashay down through the remainder, then up to finish the NW and NE.

But the NE gave me a DNF. I put triLIONAIRE (yep, the 6th grade Spelling Bee Champ of yore failed to note her own misspelling - sheesh) because I wanted TASTY at 8A. Since aGO is a fine crosswordese entry, I didn’t even look at that clue and assumed (y’all know what that made me!) ‘twas correct. When I was not rewarded with the happy music (CHOPIN would be nice , I love the etudes) it took me until this morning to break down, come here and discover that once again hubris will out.

As I mentioned the other day, I have given myself permission not to care (much?) about mistakes for a while, so overall I enjoyed this Friday offering. I liked the cleverness of “Root words,”. Loved seeing Miro this morning; he’s an absolute favorite of mine. I think everyone should go to Barcelona; it’s one of my favorite cities. Art and architecture certainly, but wonderful people, fabulous food (the things they do with pig!) excellent wine and breathtaking beauty! And some fabulous memories of a trip with my late husband.

All in all, a good morning and a fun puzzle. I shall not complain that it was too easy for a Friday. For a while, I’m obviously going to need all the “easy” I can get.

Happy weekend everyone!


Bass 1:10 PM  

Google "MOSQUITO head NET", that's wearable...

Anonymous 1:21 PM  

That show is still on espn late night with van pelt. I don’t bet, but watching Scot and his cohost describe each improbable losing bet as the game action unfolds is hilarious. The show is an anti-gambling PSA.

jberg 1:31 PM  

I've never been in a QDOBA, nor a Chipotle for that matter, but they are all over the place in New England. Despite that, I put in QDOBo at first, needed _ILLIONAIRE to fix it.

I thought ALE KEG was the worst answer in the grid -- just not a thing one would say. Not lager KEG either, it's just a KEG.

The clue for ACRE was one of those instances where you start off thinking it's ridiculous, then after a little thought realize what it has to be, both from the magnitude of the number, and from its precision-- the number of employees might be similar, but it changes, as does the number of visitors per hour; but the acreage is constant (unless they go to war with DeSantis again, and takes some of it by eminent domain).

ORB should only ever be clued with this photo.

Anonymous 1:32 PM  

Sending a 21 drone salute your way, Rex! Happy Anniversary to you and your much better half!

Anonymous 1:46 PM  

For the billionth time Will, no GIs since 1/27/1973.

bulgie 1:54 PM  

Does _ILLIONAIRE count as a kealoa?

Has anyone ever seen a snow globe that was an orb? They're all domes in my experience.

CuppaJoe 2:04 PM  

I LOVED playing poker with plastic chips as a child but did leave it in childhood. Never heard of BADBEAT and got to it in a round-about way like Rex. BADDEAL must happen a lot in poker! One of my favorite short stories is John Updike’s “Poker Night” which is not really about poker.

In other news, I just read an email from my gas & electric company; they will be sending drones out next week to check our equipment.

Happy 21, Rex and Penelope (love that name).

Georgia 2:08 PM  

I agree! Done, enjoyed, but certainly not Easy....

Anonymous 2:09 PM  

CDilly52 again re: MOSQUITO NET. It is in fact something one would wear. The MET itself is a fabric. Very soft and drapey and impermeable to the dreaded proboscis. I am allergic to certain varieties of the skeeters and do indeed add MOSQUITO NET to an Australian bush hat and wear it (with my long sleeves, gloves and long pants tucked into hiking boots.

Anonymous 2:12 PM  

I don't have anything against poker but when it's on ESPN and presented as thrilling......eh. Love the movie Rounders however

Anoa Bob 2:13 PM  

Did the puzz about 1:30am this morning after a long night of, yep, playing poker. And, yep, had a BAD BEAT or two.

I played my first poker game while in the Navy. We were coming into Hong Kong for Christmas in 1964 after a long deployment in the Tonkin Gulf off the coast of Vietnam. I lost every penny I had and needed to borrow some money from a slush fund just to be able to go ashore. I swore I would never play poker again, a promise I kept for about 45 years.

So the first Across tied in nicely with the last Across SEA LEGS, which I had when I experienced my first BAD BEAT. It's an amazing thing, SEA LEGS. The first couple of days out to SEA, you need to consciously compensate for the rolling and tossing of the ship. Then, almost as if by magic, you go ON AUTO PILOT
and you just do it without even thinking about it.

Then when you come back into port, you have to unlearn that and get your land LEGS back. That takes a little while during which you walk like a drunken sailor lurching wildly from side to side. It's comical watching a bunch of sailors walking down the pier after a few weeks at SEA.

Did you know that the Utah state bird is the California GULL (33D)?

Anonymous 2:34 PM  

100% agree! it should be retired like Jackie Robinson’s number 42 across all of baseball

A 3:03 PM  

I was hoping you'd do something with ORBS - egscellent!

Anonymous 3:05 PM  

I have a friend who won $40,000 on a bad beat. At a casino, the casino nay set some hand as a hand that should not be beat. When that hand is beaten however, the person holding the hand that is beaten suffers a bad beat. And when's whatever has been in the pool for however many days until the bad beat happens.
E. G. You hold a straight flush hand, King high, and are beaten by a royal flush.

Anonymous 3:07 PM  

Highly agree with Rex's take on drones, disagree on take with poker.

Anonymous 3:29 PM  

OH SURE, easy maybe, for someone who knows what QDOBA is (never one around here, or anywhere around Binghamton), what a BAD BEAT is, who keeps up with "reality tv" (the genre that gave us a certain unnamed former President - a feared 21st-century "leader"), someone who didn't enter ALE TAP or YES BUT NO, even though they've been to Museo de MIRO.
Not my day.

Anonymous 3:39 PM  

Rex, you never watched Rounders? You don't have to play poker to hear that phrase. As you so often say regarding wheelhouse answers that people struggled with: the crosses were fair 🤷‍♂️

KennyMitts 4:19 PM  

Your moralizing is out of place. I am a recovering alcoholic who has had life changing experiences using LSD, and am among the many people who have been helped by its effects on negative thought processes. Alcohol, on the other hand, nearly ruined my life (and here again I’m far from alone) by leading me into deep debt and deep depression, but is cheerfully promoted by puzzles on a near daily basis.

Anonymous 4:45 PM  

A “Bad Beat” is when you’re ahead early in the hand, but your opponent gets lucky right at the end. It is a very common term in poker. If you play at a casino everyone knows and uses it.

Anonymous 5:17 PM  

I started 24D with MOTHBALLING. I still like it better.

PDX 5:29 PM  

I was sure "root words" was "surnames," so DNF. Anyone else?

Emily Ransom 6:02 PM  

Did this one from hurricane stricken NC, where I had no power all day. As a newer solver, I normally let myself Google proper nuns and acronyms in the later-week puzzles, but with no Internet I was forced to power through it. This makes it the first Friday puzzle I’ve made it through without any cheating, and though my time was horrible, it feels like a milestone.

dgd 6:34 PM  

Bob Mills
Had the same problem as you about the chain restaurant ( I almost never go to them and this one isn’t in my state. ). But I thought of dicer first and that goes with onions better!
I am not a fan of smaller chain clues.

Anonymous 7:07 PM  

Anonymous 10:11 AM
Don’t see the mere mention of a drug is normalizing. The term ego death is not glorified just referenced. The word death doesn’t make it sound wonderful after all.
There are many substances that have destructive impacts on people but do have their uses. As noted, there are experiments going on to see if UNDER CONTROLLED CONDITIONS LSD et al can help people with severe PTSD and other illnesses.
Also however bad it can be LSD is part of cultural history.
I don’t agree that all references to LSD should be banned.

Anonymous 7:16 PM  

Tom T
Happy I wasn’t the only one to have trouble with dissect!

Anonymous 7:34 PM  

Anonymous 1:46
Shortz had a stroke in February. He hasn’t returned yet
As to the GI quibble
There is very little prairie left and very few people live in a tepee Yet every one understands why tepee is the correct answer to prairie home. The clue doesn’t say it is limited in time. On August 15, 1945 there were millions of vets to be who were called GI’s
Close enough for crosswords.

dgd 7:54 PM  

Rex did have one of his classic rants!
I think Sir Hillary said it perfectly, he doesn’t like the bro image surrounding poker.
To me , putting the image aside, there are worse types of gambling. Like slot machines etc. At least skill can make a big difference. I personally have played poker once or twice a year for the past few decades, always with friends with no large stakes. Poker itself is not evil.
Clearly a nephew who likes to gamble would know the term. I didn’t. But it makes sense. Every human endeavor has its own lingo. So there’s nothing sketchy about the term either.
I have heard on autopilot much more often than on auto. Is Rex’s criticism generational?

As usual, I liked the puzzle
The bottom was very easy. But things like QDOBE slowed me down to easy medium.

Beezer 8:07 PM  

Good deal! Hahaha…back in the “old days” it was no big deal to take your time with a puzzle but now, if you want to talk about it, it has to be done right away!

Anonymous 9:44 PM  

WTF is “QDOBA”?

Lena 10:18 PM  

Me too!

REV 1:27 AM  

Love poker, second only to xwords, and got BAD BEAT right out of the gate. This puzzle was really on my wavelength except for QDOBA which is a random string of letters to me. Had to get all crosses and was quite surprised.
BUT- came here to say thank you to Rex for that Brady Bunch, disco duck, Rick Dees clip. Seems like such innocent times.
Happy anniversary!

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