Friday, October 18, 2024

Cryptaesthesia, more familiarly / FRI 10-18-24 / Accommodates, in listing-speak / Eucharist plate / Attention-grabbing visuals / Artist whose full name anagrams to A MAN DETOURED / Juice provider / First pitcher, maybe / "Star Wars" planet that's home to womp rats / "There, there" accompanier

Constructor: Jesse Cohn

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: É-D-O-U-A-R-D MANET (27A: Artist whose full name anagrams to A MAN DETOURED) —

Édouard Manet (UK/ˈmæn/US/mæˈn, məˈ-/French: [edwaʁ manɛ]; 23 January 1832 – 30 April 1883) was a French modernist painter. He was one of the first 19th-century artists to paint modern life, as well as a pivotal figure in the transition from Realism to Impressionism.

[Un bar aux Folies Bergère, 1882

Born into an upper-class household with strong political connections, Manet rejected the naval career originally envisioned for him; he became engrossed in the world of painting. His early masterworks, The Luncheon on the Grass (Le déjeuner sur l'herbe) or Olympia, "premiering" in 1863 and '65, respectively, caused great controversy with both critics and the Academy of Fine Arts, but soon were praised by progressive artists as the breakthrough acts to the new style, Impressionism. Today too, these works, along with others, are considered watershed paintings that mark the start of modern art. The last 20 years of Manet's life saw him form bonds with other great artists of the time; he developed his own simple and direct style that would be heralded as innovative and serve as a major influence for future painters. (wikipedia)

• • •

This one definitely got better as I went along. After that first corner, my main feelings were "RAGE ROOM? Again? Please stop" and "ESP is not real, why does it have a f***ing Greek name like it's an actual scientific phenomenon?" and "wait, not INSEAM?" (1D: Clothing line) and "really, you expect me to know the line-up of the Allman Brothers band beyond the Allman Brothers? This clue is Todd HAYNES erasure." So I was happy to get out of there. EYE CANDY is OK, but otherwise, happy to see that corner go. Then, instead of taking the obvious route (straight down the middle), I tiptoed across via ESPN (nice clue) (20A: It's often playing games), and up into the NE corner via Marc COHN, whose name I knew (though I did hesitate at COHN v. COEN) (8D: "Walking in Memphis" singer Marc). There I found Jamie Lee CURTIS starring in (well, on) a ONE-ACT play, as well as some soothing HOT TEA, a Star Wars reference I both knew and spelled correctly. Halloween (1979) and Star Wars (1977) made a perfect introduction to RETRO VIBE, which was the first answer that actually made me stop and relax and think "There we go! The Friday puzzle I've been waiting for has arrived. I don't think I actually BEAMED, but I was close. After that, I got the very quick trans-grid 1-2 whoosh-whoosh of PAINT-BY-NUMBERS* and "MYSTERY SOLVED!" which left me in a good position to polish off the remaining corners down south.


The SW corner was the one part of the puzzle that gave me real pushback. I dropped GINGER ALE in there OK, but neither AUDIENCE (33D: Market) nor POOR SOUL (32D: Sad sack) was computing—I mean, I got the POO- alright (!) but I wanted something like POOPER ("party pooper?"); even when I got the POOR part, SOUL did not follow intuitively. And I certainly didn't get CLAUSES off just the CL-. I forgot Sharon's first name (that's on me, grrr), I always suck at those "word before" clues, so USER was a bust (46A: Word before friendly or name), I thought the geometry figure was a literal figure, like a triangle or sphere or something, and, worst of all, I assumed that the [Checkout screen option] at 50D (TIP) was TAP. "Insert or TAP" [your credit card]—a very common option! All of that plus a tough (but very good) clue on SLEEPS (55A: Accommodates, in listing-speak) (as in "this Airbnb SLEEPS eight"). If I'd only remembered ARIEL, maybe this corner would've been a cinch, but as it was, it definitely leaned toward Saturday difficulty. Nothing else in the grid put up that much of a fight, but the grid was sufficiently scrappy overall to make for a very Friday-level Friday puzzle.


Please indulge me while I BOO AT some of these clues and answers... namely BOO AT, which I don't mind, or didn't, at first, until I hit POKE AT. Then I thought "too many blank-ATs!" It's appropriate, very appropriate, that BOO AT was directly underneath ROWR, because I definitely booed at that. The [Playful snarl] is RAWR. We've established this. There is ample crossword precedent for RAWR (four NYTXW appearances). Sadly, however, there is also precedent for ROWR, though not as ample (just two appearances before today). I hate that the crossword thinks you can go either way on this, when the correct spelling seems to me quite clear: RAWR is the playful snarl, ROWR is a typo. The more you bend the spelling, the more obviously you are in "playful" territory, so RAWR > ROWR by a country mile, case closed, stop using ROWR, it's ****ing awful. Another thing I would like you to NOT DO is NOT DO. Please do NOT DO that, and by "that" I mean "put NOT DO in your grid." NOT DO crossing NOVO (?) is making a mockery of the otherwise glorious NO NOTES (56A: "That was perfect—I don't have any feedback"), because notes ... I have them—for that corner, for sure. Here are some more notes:

Notes:
  • 1A: Juice provider (CHARGER) — me, looking at the first clue of the puzzle at 4am: "uh ... JUICER?"
  • 27A: Artist whose full name anagrams to A MAN DETOURED (MANET)  — such a bizarre way to clue him, but it's a bizarreness I like. You've gotta extract a last name from a full-name anagram. Anagram extraction! I pulled MANET out pretty easily, but then thought "wait, those other letters don't spell out CLAUDE" (that's because CLAUDE is the first name of MONET, not MANET, which I should know by now). This MANET is in my eyeline (in refrigerator magnet form) every morning as I write this blog:
[Devant la glace, 1876

  • 12D: First pitcher, maybe (ICE WATER) — I see that you are trying to do that "identical sequential clue thing" with this clue and the next Down clue, 13D: First pitcher (STARTER), but it really only works for one of the clues (i.e. STARTER) (this is extremely typical with the "identical sequential clue thing," which is why it's a gimmick that should be used sparingly). The "First" part doesn't quite make sense for the ICE WATER pitcher. If you're talking about a pitcher of ICE WATER that might be brought out "first" at a restaurant ... I dunno ... "First" implies that there are going to be other, different pitchers to follow, and unless you are in a restaurant called "Pitchers" where all items on the menu come in pitcher form, I don't think more pitchers are likely. Do people drinking pitchers of beer typically open with a pitcher of ICE WATER? Maybe that's it. I admire the ambition and weirdness here, but when you have to lawyer your way to a defense of the clue, it's probably not a clue you should use.
  • 21D: Eucharist plate (PATEN) — I knew this. How did I know this? Moreover, why has the word PYX just entered my brain? [Looks it up] Ha! PYX is the "small round container used in the CatholicOld CatholicLutheran and Anglican Churches to carry the Eucharist, to the sick or those who are otherwise unable to come to a church in order to receive Holy Communion" (wikipedia). Hurray partial memory!
  • 52D: This is what it sounds like when doves cry (COO) — now this is a perfect clue. Absolutely NO NOTES:


  • 32A: Digital art? (PAINT-BY-NUMBERS*) — at first I was mad because I assumed the crossword was doing its whole "'digital' = related to the fingers, tee-hee, aren't we clever?" thing, and I was like "finger painting and PAINT-BY-NUMBERS* are not the same thing!" Well, of course they're not. The "digital" here refers simply to the numbers (or "digits") ... by which one ... paints. Assuming "digital" + "?" = finger-related ... that's peak crossword brain. 
  • 42D: Scrolls from right to left? (TORAH) — because Hebrew is read right to left, as are Arabic and Persian. Together, these are the "most widespread RTL writing systems in modern times" (wikipedia).   
  • 49A: Beethoven's "Hammerklavier," for one (SONATA) — lucked out here. I probably would've put together SONATA pretty easily anyway, but it helped that I've been listening to this specific SONATA a lot in the past month, in a new recording by Marc-André Hamelin. Enjoy.

See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

*oof, looks like the actual answer in the grid is PAINT-BY-NUMBER, singular, not NUMBERS. The singular feels bad / wrong. My brain was clearly protecting me by having me misread it.


[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

91 comments:

  1. Handsome looking grid - well filled and fun. The long central cross is fantastic and I loved EYE CANDY, RETRO VIBE and POOR SOUL. Some trivia all around but very straightforward - Jamie Lee is temporal.

    James McMurtry

    Slight side-eye to the BOO AT - POKE AT combo. Liked the misdirect with EUCLID. Is the constructor related to Marc?

    Enjoyable Friday morning solve.

    Seek me when this small sunflower stands above the garden wall

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:35 AM

    As confirmed by this review exclusively using the plural, I feel like the phrase is definitely PAINT BY NUMBERS and not PAINT BY NUMBER, which I felt extra confused about while solving since it would have been very easy to include the final S simply by making STARTER plural. Otherwise a nice grid

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Andy Freude7:01 AM

      I had the same thought, Anonymous. But doing so would mess up the grid symmetry, which I guess is more important and filling said grid with real words and phrases spoken by actual human beings. So PAINT BY NUMBER it is.

      Delete
    2. Of course, "number" is an old slang term for a joint, though I am not sure that gets us far

      Delete
  3. RAWR, ROWR...who gives a (stool sample.) Neither one is a word, regardless of how often the NYT uses them. The best crossword puzzle should NEVER just make up words, yet the NYT does it almost daily.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's Rawr. always has been

      Delete
    2. @jammon 6:40 AM
      You do know that EVERY word is just made up, right?

      Delete
    3. Anonymous12:49 PM

      Always? Like since the Big Bang? Since the first crossword puzzle? Since Will Shortz? Since Joel Fagliano? Since you woke up this morning?

      Delete
    4. Anonymous4:08 AM

      I typed ROWR right in there. Because that’s how it sounds.

      Delete
  4. Andrew Z.6:47 AM

    This was by far the easiest and fastest Friday I’ve ever done. Literally the only answer I had to change was 42a, I had sOtO instead of NOVO. I thought Rex was going to say this puzzle was too easy for a Friday!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7:00 AM

    The way COO was clued might be great if you’re a Prince fan, but for the rest of us it was completely inscrutable. Ruined the puzzle and my morning :-(

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:47 AM

      This makes no sense. Knowing the Prince song wouldn’t help at all. The song isn’t about COOing. The clue is ultimately literal, not “inscrutable.” The Prince angle is a nice touch, but Prince fans do not have an advantage here.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:29 AM

      Ruined your morning? Seriously? How do you react when something legitimately bad happens?

      Also, "When Doves Cry" was the #1 song of 1984 (a stellar music year), as well as the lead single off one of the biggest albums of all time (Purple Rain). It's literally ranked in the top 50 songs *of all time* in multiple polls. You don't have to be a Prince fan to know it; you have to be conscious.

      Delete
  6. Anonymous7:08 AM

    Just here to raise my hand and say, "ESPN/PATEN/COHN" was like a little Bermuda Triangle, especially if you could not grok it from ES--, and that getting it right felt bad, not good, which is when you know a difficult spot isn't difficult in the good way. I know that ESPN is arguably not even an abbreviation at this point, but I feel like I've been trained to expect abbreviations in the clue if there is an abbreviation in the answer (e.g., "frequently features MLB, NBA, or NFL")

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:23 PM

      ESPN hasn’t been an abbreviation for decades, it’s the actual name of the network.

      Delete
  7. A tale of two puzzles for me today - I got along much better with the southern hemisphere. Sorry, I just don’t care who was in the Allman Brothers band, even though I did feel bad when Duane crashed his motorcycle into a peach truck. And of course there is yet another booooring Star Wars monstrosity in TATOOINE sitting next to one of the worst-clued answers of the year for ICE WATER.

    Adding to the First pitcher/ICE WATER head-scratcher, you don’t have to wonder very far to bump into the nonsensical PAINT BY NUMBER - what does one do, open up the kit, take out all of the supplies, fill in all of the sections that contain one number, then marvel at your talent and throw the whole thing away? I don’t know how these things escape some minimal editorial scrutiny.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Surprised that Rex called this medium as I thought it was the easiest Friday in over a month. And that's with me not knowing COHN, and blanking on ARIEL, and not knowing PATEN, and being very reluctant to put in ICE WATER because that clue makes no sense, and not knowing HAYNES.

    My vote would go to ROWR over RAWR, so that may have helped me.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous7:19 AM

    Very confidently put in BATTERY for CHARGER which had me stumbling out of the gate, but otherwise really enjoyed this one. Was particularly pleased with myself for puzzling out Cryptaesthesia with no crosses from “mystery” and “sense”.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous7:43 AM

    Super job, COHN! Liked the Meta insertion at 8D. Challenging with fresh words/phrases but plenty of easy answers to help. More from you, please

    ReplyDelete
  11. After completing his debut puzzle in May, I suspected that Jesse had that secret sauce, the ability to craft top-notch puzzles. After finishing today’s, that suspicion has grown to a near-certainty. Twice now, he has:

    • Crafted a low-word-count (68), low-black-square count (30), with hardly a whiff of junk in it. That is SO HARD to do. Look at those chunks of white in each corner, not only cleanly filled, but alive with interest and variety!
    • Created a grid with a high number of long answers (eight letters or more), that is, answers that can wow, and are fun to guess at with as few crosses as possible. Today’s grid design is a NYT debut, BTW.
    • Brought in a passel of NYT debut answers. When debut answers are good, they and their never-before-seen clues bring spark. Today’s, IMO, are glorious additions to the oeuvre: MYSTERY SOLVED, NO NOTES, PAINT BY NUMBER, POOR SOUL, RAGE ROOM, RETRO VIBE.
    • Taken great care with the cluing. Loveliness in the clues for COO, SLEEPS, ONE ACT, ESPN, TORAHS, and the wonderful misdirect [Geometry figure] for EUCLID.

    Jesse, thank you for a sterling outing today, and I eagerly await your next. Bravo!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Eh. The Rawr miss was meh. Few other mehs but I agree all in all, solid puzzle. Very easy, though.

      Delete
  12. I really liked this, but I thought it was way too easy, even though there was a bunch of PPP and other stuff I just didn’t know. It just filled itself in from crosses very smoothly and quickly.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Here's an example of Jesse's charming cluing from his debut puzzle in May:

    [One who can't handle their moonshine well] *






    * WEREWOLF

    ReplyDelete
  14. Cute pun on "42D: Scrolls from right to left? (TORAH)." A Torah is commonly referred to as a scroll (just look at one), so there was the wordplay of 'scroll' sounding like a verb in the clue, but being a noun in the answer.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Anonymous8:01 AM

    If you have never listened to Marc Cohen (I too had the cone vs cohen issue) , play walking in Memphis. Super talent.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Puzzle maker managed to get his name in the grid. Most of it was unpleasant, especially NOTDO

    ReplyDelete
  17. Bob Mills8:53 AM

    Hat to cheat in the NE to finish. ROWR was silly. Never heard of TATTOINE, and using the last name CURTIS (Jamie Lee Curtis) as the answer to a character with two names in the clue is a violation of protocol. Isn't it?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:34 AM

      If you didn't know who played Laurie Strode, my guess is you wouldn't have known who played Laurie.

      Delete
  18. Adam Jaffe8:55 AM

    I'm a pianist and am impressed you've been listening to Beethoven's longest and not-very-accessible sonata. Richard Goode also has a very good (heh) recording if you want more.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Hey All !
    Whew, had to prid the ole brain a bit to get the finish. Good FriPuz (probably because I finished error free sans cheats!) that had me stuck in every section.

    Had ROWR in initially, but couldn't get anything to go with it, so erased it. Managed to suss out the NE corner, only to see that yes indeed, ROWR was the answer. Odd how not having anything in an answer helps more than a correct answer (sometimes). There should be a name for that.

    Nada before NOVO, putting the over/under on that at 90%. TaP before TIP, luckily a fair cross, as EUCLaD isn't anything. PAint before PASTE, then, lol and behold, PAINTBYNUMBER appears. Is the general game spelled sans S? And each individual painting with the S? Plus, multiple TORAHS.

    Made it to Friday. Hope you have a good day. It's ridiculously windy here today. We get wind a lot out here, it always sucks (or rather, blows). Hasn't been this windy for a while, but it's back. Ah, well.

    Happy Friday.

    No F's (BOO AT that!)(At least it's the feature letter in SB)
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous9:18 AM

    Disheartened by all the Allman Brothers shade being thrown. I just saw Warren Haynes in Boston last Saturday night. Super talented musician and you’re all missing out if you don’t open your minds a bit. Just because you don’t care about the ABB doesn’t mean no one does. SMH.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:28 AM

      Yep. HAYNES was a gimme for me. And Duane did NOT hit a peach truck.

      Delete
    2. Diane Joan10:28 AM

      I couldn’t agree more! Warren Haynes is a fantastic musician. If you get a chance check him out in a live performance. You won’t regret it!

      Delete
    3. Anonymous5:06 PM

      Warren Haynes also does an annual holiday benefit for his hometown of Asheville, NC so I hope you haters feel super guilty now.

      Delete
  21. had ORANGES at 1A and "confirmed" it with AGEGAP, GRAS, and EON. Took me forever to get out of that one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:30 AM

      I did the same thing!

      Delete
  22. Alice Pollard9:37 AM

    I agree with Andrew Z and Morgan, this was an easy Friday. Very surprised Rex rated it Medium. I did not know De NOVO and ROWR/RaWR was wonky for me . I had oranGEs before CHARGER, but I knew that didn't seem right. We just saw Halloween the other day - we're trying to watch alot of the classics this October (Night of the Living Dead, Dracula (1931), Frankenstein (1931), Get Out... ) but NY baseball playoffs has gotten in the way. I knew PATEN from my Catholic school days at St Peter the Apostle (River Edge NJ). I loved the "First pitcher" parallels. And I especially got a kick out of the constructors name being 8 Down. Thanks Jesse! enjoyed it

    ReplyDelete
  23. Easy and pretty breezy for me but ROWR and singular PAINT BY NUMBER were also icks for me.

    ReplyDelete
  24. "Seat with 17 heads ahead of you?"–ROWR

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:56 PM

      Great clue! Too bad the constructor and editor would rather make up a word.

      Delete
  25. DE jure, rien, Nada, NOVO
    Paint by numbers wants to be plural for me too, but I could see a singular version.
    Bottom half filled in easier than top, so worked my back up.
    No happy music, so check puzzle had the MoNET, MANET square that I filled in thinking I should remember to crosscheck it later. I didn't do the whole anagram, and either name fit...

    ReplyDelete
  26. When Mrs. Egs and I were contemplating divorce, we alternated picking household items that we would take. She had just chosen our dog and then says "I'll also take the fork-tailed bird." I COUNTERS, "No, it's my TERN."

    A poet who is not inclined to write anymore could be said to be AVERSE to AVERSE.

    We were so hungry last night that our DOORDASH order became DOORDie.

    Found myself occasionally whooshing on this one. Thanks, Jesse Cohn.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Clue for Hidden Diagonal Word (HDW) in today's grid:

    Hoosegow (British-style)

    Answer below

    One of those puzzles that I kept having to pause (feeling totally stuck), get away from, and then return with fresh eyes and find a little breakthrough. That happened at least three times on my way to a successful solve. Although my official NYT time was nearly 50 minutes, if you add in the pauses it seemed to take EONs. I use the plural because EON, 6D, is not alone in this grid. There are Hidden Diagonal EONs beginning with the E in 16A (ONE ACT) and in 48D (TERN).

    And speaking of HDWs, the answer to the clue--Hoosegow, British-style:
    GAOL (off the G in 29A, GAS)

    Ok, time to "TERN" the page on this ONE. It's been a GAS.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anonymous10:17 AM

    De Nada held me up for a long time, but as someone who saw the modern Allman Bros Band 9 times before Gregg passed, I was thrilled to see Warren HAYNES get some love! His band Gov’t Mule is EXCELLENT if you’re into psychedelic country rock!

    ReplyDelete
  29. Rex, I disagree with "ice water." I thought it was a perfect clue. It's the pitcher that gets brought out first... whether more pitchers come later is irrelevant. I thought it was pretty clever and fitting. But I feel you on Rawr.. big time! It pissed me off as I did it.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Johnny Laguna10:29 AM

    Near record Friday for me, but NW was last. First quick successes were in the NE so just worked down from there, cringing hard at ROWR and BOOAT. Good fun all in all, though.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Not religious thank God & wouldn't know a paten if you hit me over the head with one.
    As someone already commented the espn,paten,cohn intersect a bit of a swine.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Left the NE corner unfinished. Plain didn't care enough to look up even one crossing pop culture answer.

    It's a familiar rant that I'm sure you all are sick of by now, but once again I say unto the blog: If the price of being able to finish a crossword puzzle is to watch, learn about, and remember a horror movie franchise, a Star Wars franchise and a pop singer, then the price is too high. I could have looked up one of the answers and perhaps gotten all three, but cheating is he homage I pay to a puzzle I'm wildly enjoying and don't want to have to quit. The NE corner of this puzzle was not remotely enjoyable. And let's not forget that ICE WATER in that self-same corner is a ridiculous answer to "first pitcher." Why "first"?

    The rest of the puzzle was fine, and some of it even quite good -- but by then I had stopped caring.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And don’t forget ROWR(?) floating in the ICE WATER next to the unguessable planet. I should know what a womp rat is? As usual, your rant spoke for me and is the reason I won’t otherwise comment today.

      Delete
  33. NW SE EASY; had to cheat (pita); fun finish.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Chips 'n' salsa10:59 AM

    Evidently Rex has not had enough pitchers of margaritas.

    ReplyDelete
  35. I liked PAINT BY NUMBER in the middle, because after that the squares became easy to fill in. Up top, the names I didn't know slowed me down quite a bit (HAYNES, COHN, CURTIS); I thought the 8A/8D cross was particularly unfriendly. Other than that I have NO NOTES - there was so much to like in both clues and answers (see @Lewis 7:52).

    Do-over: PAint before PASTE. Help from previous puzzles: ROWR (because I forgot it used to be RaWR). PPP to the rescue, COUNTERing my complaint above: TATOOINE, MANET, ARIEL.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Anonymous11:00 AM

    Gotta Let that Soulshine

    ReplyDelete
  37. Anonymous11:03 AM

    Anim 9:18 10:28 and Diane Joan
    Amen. Big Warren Haynes fan—even bigger Allman’s fan.
    Last time I saw them was at the Beekman
    and Haynes and Trucks were in rare form . Two virtuous at the top of their game.
    Blessed with a lagniappe when Susan Tedeschi came out for a song. Even gave hubby Derek a kiss on the cheek before leaving the stage ( he never stopped playing.Didn’t even look up)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:15 PM

      Beacon? Saw Allman's with Greg. Buddy Guy and Trey Anastasio joined. The good old days!

      Delete
  38. Anonymous11:09 AM

    South side Johnny,
    Why do I doubt the sincerity of your sorry?
    Oh yeah, because it’s glib and doesn’t even bother to get the one detail of G.Allman’s death correct.
    The real Southfide Johnny would be ashamed of your post. So would the Jukes.
    Probably everybody else in Asbury Park too.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Medium. Not a whooshy solve, or just about right for a Friday. It took me a while to see MYSTERY SOLVED.

    I did not know: HAYNES, COHN, and CURTIS (as clued…”portrayer of Donna in The Bear” would have been a gimme)

    Erasures: GINGER tea before ALE and RaWR at first…fortunately I knew TATOOINE.

    Solid with some sparkle, liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Like Nancy, I didn't like the puzzle enough to try to solve it clean. I looked up HAYNES and TOTOOINE and went to bed with no regrets. Very little sparkle besides the clue for TORAHS. Several clunkers, as have been pointed out.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous11:24 AM

    Yep, I’m with @Southside today as the top was a bear and the bottom purred like the friendly furry fellas at the foot of the bed. Gotta tip my hat to a constructor who worked COHN into the grid in an obvious but subtle way; strange as many will find it, CURTIS did not Spring instantly to mind though I remain a fan.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Didn't know Jamie Lee was in the Halloween movies and am unfamiliar with Marc's work, so technical DNF here. Didn't look anything up and put a J where the C should have been. This does not deeply depress or anger me.

    I am trying to imagine a PAINTBYNUMBER project, which seems like it would have only one color. Maybe the finished product would be a good example of abstract expressionism.

    Really posting today to say that I finally got my first QB in a long time. Can't really brag since it was Wednesday's SB which I worked on Wed. and quite a while yesterday. Hate it when I'm stuck at -1, so I kept at it. Yay me.

    Pretty good stuff once I got into it, JC, which took a while. Just Can't keep up with all the PPP I should (hi Nancy), but thanks for a good-sized portion of fun.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous11:35 AM

    My first instinct on 1 across, having -GER filled in, was ORANGER. Doh.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Misterio de pintar por números resuelto.

    Our furniture and boxes allegedly arrive today ending our use of card tables and folding chairs and upside-down U-Haul boxes. And I should be able to get out my PAINT BY NUMBER and PASTE projects.

    Super easy wheelhouse solve for me. I couldn't remember PATEN so that nutty clue for MANET became my nemesis. Enjoyed this one all the way through.

    ❤️ BOOAT. OOHED. COO.

    Propers: 7
    Places: 1
    Products: 3
    Partials: 2
    Foreignisms: 3
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 16 of 68 (24%)

    Funnyisms: 5 😄

    Tee-Hee: TOKER.

    Uniclues:

    1 My living room when I don't listen.
    2 Jars filled with leaves.
    3 My dog (rarely).
    4 Apiologists.
    5 What the Elks did when the cake came out.
    6 One reliant on a how-to auto manual.
    7 When you refuse to click on the link to see what the '90s were really like.
    8 Unlikely trait of Polar Bear Club members.
    9 Bar mitzvah class implement.

    1 ONE ACT RAGE ROOM (~)
    2 HOT TEA EYE CANDY (~)
    3 GAS RETAINER
    4 BEE COUNTERS (~)
    5 LODGE OOHED
    6 HAYNES POOR SOUL
    7 NOT DO RETRO VIBE (~)
    8 ICE WATER AVERSE
    9 STARTER TORAHS

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Nickname for pyromaniac bivalve mollusk. INFERNO CLAM.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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  45. What an enjoyable and intelligent puzzle! But NO NOTES? No way! I scribbled several positive ones alongside the many excellent clues. “Common reason for a missed reference” (AGE GAP) was my favorite, with “Scrolls from right to left?” (TORAHS) running a close second.

    Pity the POOR SOUL who has to deliver DOOR DASH to a RAGE ROOM.

    The misdirects at 1A and 1D were just enough of a MYSTERY to toughen up the NW corner for me. And I thought EYE CANDY was all about attractive people, so that didn’t help. RODE IN to the puzzle with a PITA-ful of Shawarma and a MANET on the MANTEL.

    Sorry, @Rex, I plopped in ROWR without a second thought, maybe because ROaR starts with RO? And I liked the Starting pitcher pairs. I can’t COUNT the NUMBER of times I’ve witnessed someone say “I’ll start with some WATER” and get WATER served from a pitcher. Whether said pitcher is left at the table matters NOT. PAINT BY NUMBER is the term I remember from EONs ago.

    I appreciated the non-Disney clue for ARIEL - proud of myself for remembering Sharon’s first name. OTOH, I only sheepishly admit to remembering TATOOINE, because that is from the original SW movie that I saw 5 times in the theater when I was 16. (I know, it’s not worthy, but those of us who grew up in the 60’s needed some uncomplicated Good vs. Evil. And John Williams’ score is what actually made the film.) I didn’t memorize lines like I did with Monty Python and the Holy Grail or Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, but (Star Wars clip alert - @Nancy, AVERT your EYEs) I remember Luke’s womp rat brag. I didn’t remember how big womp rats are.

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  46. M and A12:15 PM

    About average solvequest, re: nanosecond usage. Some real neat entries, includin:
    MYSTERYSOLVED. RETROVIBE. TATOOINE. ICEWATER clue. COHN [name-dropped into Cohn dude's puz]. PAINTBYNUMBER(s) clue. OOHED.

    staff weeject pick: ESP. Which M&A has -- cuz I could see @RP's reaction comin, in advance!

    Thanx, Mr. Cohn dude. themeless thUmbsUp.

    Masked & Anonymo6Us


    **gruntz**

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  47. Anonymous12:27 PM

    Rowr and rawr are different. Rowr is sexy. Rawr is cute. This is known.

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  48. This one was tough for me, and not entirely fair, in that it crossed the name of an unknown actor (I have heard of CURTIS, but not in this context) playing an unknown character with the name of an unknown singer of a song I've never heard of. I've also never heard of a RAGE ROOM, but that's me. Our second son sometimes got very angry, so we said he could take an egg outside and throw it at the garden shed to cool down; I guess it's the same idea.

    I've certainly heard of EYE CANDY, but I don't think it means what the puzzle wants it to mean. NO NOTES is also questionable as clued, but I got it all from crosses. And PAINT BY NUMBER??? No such thing, it's always numbers, with an S. I think there's an Ad Reinhardt painting that is solid black, so you could do it with only one number, but who would buy that? And BOO AT? Especially in the same puzzle as POKE AT. But the latter is at least a real phrase;; to BOO AT someone is simply to boo that person, tout court.

    Still I worked out all those things -- what really held me up was the perfectly fair HOT TEA. I was looking for something like "oo-e-oo-e-oo-e-oo" the start of my warmup when I was briefly taking voice lessons. I finally decided that even though I didn't know from womp rats, the only Star Wars planet I could name was TATOOINE (though I would have thrown another T in there if it would have fit), and I eventually realized I was dealing with a beverage, not an arpeggio.

    So it was quite the struggle, but rewarding in the end, despite the above-listed irritations. And MYSTERY SOLVE, once I finally saw it, was great.

    I'll give a pass to calling a BROOM a stick; that's like calling a knife a haft. Synecdoche, I guess.

    Later.

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  49. I just now noticed the CHARGER/RODE IN cross, which is a nice touch.

    I also wanted RAWR, which I can't hear (or read) without seeing Claudia Cardinale on a tiger rug in The Pink Panther (or maybe one of its sequels).
    Back when I was still trying to play the piano, someone gave me a book called "Playing the Piano for Pleasure," which was full of excellent advice, including the instruction that no amateur pianist should ever try to play the Hammerklavier. I've always followed that rule.

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  50. Anonymous1:25 PM

    I had to go all the way back to my dad’s generation to pull “gas” up. Does anyone still say that? Peachy keen and neato!

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  51. Right on 15 minutes again... fast (for me) Friday. I was annoyed at the PITA PATEN cross because I thought Shawarma was a religious text or object as well, but then realized it must be a food because that letter had to be A.

    5 down is wrong! MERCREDI follows Mardi!

    Every time I see DOOR DASH I want to parse it as DO OR DASH because of crosswords. I guess it's "do or die" crossed with "dine and dash"?

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  52. sharonak1:37 PM

    @Adam Jaffe Not very accessible? Really? I'm Loving it and to me it sounds extremely accessible (that's assuming you meant to the listener - not the performer. The latter I know nothing about)

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  53. Raymond1:47 PM

    Another Hebrew nitpick. The correct Sephardic (the variant of Hebrew now dominant in lsrael and worldwide) plural of "Torah" is "Torot," not "Torahs". However. I'll let off the constructor today because in the Ashkenazi (Yiddish-style variant) it is indeed "Tores" (accent on the 1st syllable) not because of the plural "s" but because the unaccetented letter "tav" (that last "t" of "Torot") is pronounced like an "s" in the Ashkenazi variant.

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  54. Anonymous1:51 PM

    An easy medium Friday puzzle for me. A one cup of coffee solve...

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  55. Anonymous1:52 PM

    "And we'll fill in the missing colors
    In each other's paint-by-number dreams..."

    Jackson Browne, "The Pretender"

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  56. I have personally watched Warren HAYNES sing the phrase “PAINT BY NUMBER” (no “S” at the end). (Full line: “Paint-by-number morning sky, looks so phony.”)

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  57. Anonymous3:30 PM

    A question for the puzzle creators out there: do you assume that people are going to start in the NW and make that part easy just to suck us in and then stomp all over us?!

    I thought I was doing so well when I started out with battery and then quickly realized that it was CHARGER. Unfortunately after filling in the entire NW things went straight downhill, complicated by my parsing a mis-spelled MYSTERY SOLVED as "my story solved". Oy, that hurt.

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  58. Jazzmanchgo3:49 PM

    WARREN HAYNES is not my favorite guitarist (but then how could he be, given whose shoes he's trying to fill), and I had absolutely no love for his earlier band, Govt. Mule -- but I must admit, "Soulshine" is a really pretty song.

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    Replies
    1. He actually didn’t form Govt Mule til he was already in the Allmans. I love his playing and his singing, but I’m not a huge fan of Mule’s originals either - love the way they play though.

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  59. MetroGnome3:53 PM

    After giving up and going to Google to fill in the CURTIS/COHN/ TATOOINE Natick in the NE, I found that the rest of the puzzle played relatively easy.

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  62. Anonymous4:32 PM

    Apparently Rowr is in the online urban dictionary “ exclamation. Used to express one's arousal at a person or idea. The written form of the "sexy cat growl/purr". That said if you have seen the film The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra - the character Animala aka “Pammy” often says rowr but she was more likely saying rawr - the original spelling. Check out this link (only need to watch first 15 seconds to hear Pammy say Rowr). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvnEyrVNNG4

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  63. Anonymous6:40 PM

    I’ll be damned, Rex Parker! Because I did the NYTXW today & then read your blog, I’ve finally learned that my little round silver box which belonged to my uncle, a canon in the Church of England, is a pyx! Thank you ever so much! Its intended use mystified me for years. XOX

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  64. Anonymous6:42 PM

    And perhaps I also just spied a sly reference to the “ROSEBUD” episode of the Dick Van Dyke Show. If so, well done, well done.

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  65. Thank you for the validation. Rawr is what I had and wasn't sure of the spelling of Tatooine. Gave me first.

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  66. On the easy side, for a Friday, once I got going. NE gimmes (DOD Jamie Lee CURTIS, constructor's namesake COHN {couldn't resist, could you?}, TATOOINE) kicked things off. Wasn't long before I had the whole East, then moved westward with PAINTBYNUMBER. Yes, I missed the S. Much more natural.

    Some funky clues and odd entries (looking at you, NOTDO) tried to make it tougher, but didn't. Par.

    Wordle birdie.

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