Melancholy Musketeer / THU 10-10-24 / Like many Keats works / Swahili honorific / Indian honorific / Lou Grant's wife on "The Mary Tyler Moore" show / "Educated insolence," per Aristotle / Sufficient, informally

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Constructor: Grant Boroughs

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: "W" OR "D" CHOICE (58A: Author's concern that, when parsed as four parts, provides a hint to this puzzle's theme) — six circled squares can contain either a "W" or a "D" and still work (i.e. still make plausible answers, in both directions)

Theme answers:
  • COW / COD (1D: Major food source animal)
  • WASHBOARDS / DASHBOARDS (15A: Instrument panels)
  • PAW / PAD (9A: Dog leg terminus)
  • WITHER / DITHER (11D: Fail to act decisively in the face of a challenge)
  • WRY HUMOR / DRY HUMOR (28A: Trademark of deadpan stand-ups)
  • WINED / DINED (28D: Lavishly regaled, in a way)
  • WELLS / DELLS (33A: Areas that are lower than their surrounding terrain)
  • FLEW / FLED (21D: Raced, as away from danger)
  • SOW / SOD (52A: Do some garden work)
  • PLOW / PLOD (39D: Move forward resolutely)
  • WAY AHEAD / DAY AHEAD (44A: What lies before you, with "the")
  • WISHES / DISHES (44D: Things listed on a wedding registry)
Word of the Day: WASHBOARDS (15A
n.
1.
a. board having a corrugated surface on which clothes can be rubbed in the process of laundering.
b. Music A similar board used as a percussion instrument.
2. board fastened to a wall at the floor; a baseboard.
3. Nautical A thin plank fastened to the side of a boat or to the sill of a port to keep out the sea and the spray.
adj.
Having rows of ridges or indentations similar to those of a washboard:washboard abs; a washboard dirt road.
• • •

This one really tries to impress you with volume. Volume volume volume! That is certainly ... a lot of D/W squares. Six squares, twelve clues that have to work both ways (that is, for "D" and "W" versions of the answers). That's ambitious, and it creates a *very* thematically dense grid—twelve themers plus the revealer, with hardly any answers not crossing some bit of fixed thematic material (as a constructor, you "fix" your themers in place before you fill the rest of the grid). So, architecturally, this one is ... really going for it. But the problems of "really going for it" are all on display here, and very predictable. Two big issues: forced cluing and strained fill. As for the cluing, you have to really (really) play on the margins of word meanings at times to make those clues work for both words. DAY AHEAD works great for its clue (44A: What lies before you, with "the"). WAY AHEAD really, really doesn't. WAY FORWARD, maybe? If you were cluing WAY AHEAD normally, you would never, ever use the clue that's used today. In fact, you'd probably go with a different sense of WAY AHEAD entirely ([Leading by a lot], [Up big], something like that). Time and again, one of the two D/W answers works great, the other ... uh, not so much. See especially WELLS for its clue (33A: Areas that are lower than their surrounding terrain), and especially WASHBOARDS for its clue (15A: Instrument panels). I was done with the puzzle and looking up WASHBOARDS before I realized that "instrument" must indicate the musical instrument type of "washboard," the kind played in jug bands, say, which is really just ... an actual washboard, right? The kind used for scrubbing clothes before washing machines came along? I guess WASHBOARDS are "panels" ... of a sort. Still, [Instrument panels] is some ... let's be generous and say "inventive" cluing. Certainly works for DASHBOARDS. But for WASHBOARDS ... I dunno, man. Pushing it.


And then there's the fill. No surprise that it creaks—it's under a lot of thematic pressure. But it really creaks, and that's after the constructor has added not one but two pairs of cheater squares (black squares that don't increase word count, added to make filling a grid easier)—just before ACES and just before PA(W/D), and then their symmetrical equivalents. I had a "oh it's gonna be one of these days, is it?" moment very (very) early on:


You will never (ever) see the word ODIC anywhere but crosswords. I studied Keats and other ODISTs (another crossword favorite), and I never saw the word ODIC in the wild, to my knowledge. ODIC makes ODIST look like everyday language. ODIC. That's what I'd call someone who looked and acted like ODIE from "Garfield." Someone dim-witted and annoyingly happy, with their tongue hanging out all the time. To encounter ODIC at literally step two, that was deflating, and ominous. See also ENUF, and not one but two crossword honorifics (SAHIB, BWANA). Plus, dear lord, HAH and HAH!? HAH HAH!?!? No one says "HAH HAH!" Laugh syllables are already the lowest form of crossword fill, but here you've gone and combined them in some new and unholy way, why!?!? For 19A: Syllables of laughter, I wrote in "HA HA HA," as did all nice normal decent and good people. The fact that those mutant HAHs also crossed DAH (!?) ... it's all a little much. I mean, I know I said laugh syllables are the lowest form of crossword fill, but I forgot about Morse Code. ENUF said (oof, ENUF ... you're killing me, puzzle). 


The revealer itself ends up feeling forced, too, when you read it as four parts. "You have a 'W' or 'D' choice!" It doesn't really trip off the tongue. But on a clunky, hyperliteral level, it works. The whole thing works, but it clunks, and it wasn't particularly fun to solve. Once you get the gimmick, the puzzle actually gets easier, as you can fill all those circled squares, and with "W" and "D" options, you can get all those crosses really quickly. Only trouble for me today came with the whole HAH HAH-not-HA HA HA fiasco. That corner also had PELHAM, which I did not know and would never have heard of were it not for one of the greatest movies of all time, The Taking of PELHAM 1-2-3 (the original, 1974 version, with Matthau). It's about the hijacking of a subway car. Do yourself a favor and watch it. Right now, today. It's perfect. I wish I were watching it right now. But PELHAM wasn't clued via the movie, it was clued how it was clued (9D: ___ Bay, neighborhood of the Bronx), so I was at a loss. I also had LONGEST instead of LARGEST for a bit at 40A: Like the femur, among all bones in the body. The femur is, in fact, that LONGEST bone in the body, so if you faltered there too, you have nothing to be ashamed of. 


Bullets:
  • 36A: Toss out (SCRAP) — I wrote in SCRAP but then figured no, it has to be SCRUB, because no way they'd use SCRAP when "SCRAPpy-Doo" is in the clue for UNCLE, which crosses this answer (at the "C") (29D: Scooby-Doo, to Scrappy-Doo). But SCRUB was a bad fit for the clue and the crosses didn't work, so it was back to SCRAP. Bah.
  • 30A: Lou Grant's wife on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" (EDIE) — we did a complete "MTM" rewatch last year, so this answer made me smile. EDIE is very likable, but ... she's not on many episodes, really. I feel like over seven seasons I saw her maybe half a dozen times? (Looks like it was just five!). But Lou does talk about her a lot. They get divorced! She gets remarried! (spoiler alert). Anyway, this seems like it would be very hard for most people, especially the youngs. You just work crosses and wait for something namelike to appear, I guess. We all have to do that sometimes.
  • 60D: Private sleeping accommodations? (COT) — sleeping accommodations for a "Private" in the Army
  • 51D: What makes a sticker stickier? (AN "I") — you add the letter "I" to "sticker" and bam, "stickier"
  • 20D: Melancholy Musketeer (ATHOS) — I've known ATHOS forever, for crossword reasons, but it occurs to me now that I have never read The Three Musketeers or, as far as I can remember, seen any film version of their story. So this "Melancholy" bit is news to me. I had no idea. But again, I didn't need to—"Musketeer," five letters, ATHOS, moving on ... (the other Musketeers are ARAMIS and ... POTHOS? ... [looks it up] ... dammit, PORTHOS! So close. Ah well, doesn't matter, you're never gonna see PORTHOS in crosswords anyway (well, you might, but it's been 16 years, so don't hold your breath).
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

78 comments:

Son Volt 6:09 AM  

Really - we’re still doing these Schrödinger themes? I’ll give you a hint - the cat is dead.

My dreams have WITHERed and died

The fill is all over the place - the big guy highlights most of it. I did like ASIAGO and SASHAYS and RUNS RIOT is pretty nifty.

Rex is spot on with his movie choice - a great film and period piece. I think there was a modern remake with Denzel.

ECHO

The revealer is apt and fairly clear - but these two faced themes just don’t do it for me.

A PAGAN Place

Conrad 6:16 AM  


I didn't get the theme at all. I decided to try solving without reading the clues for the acrosses with circled letters. I finished quickly and thought, "This was super easy for a Thursday. And where's the trick?" Then when I filled in the last letter and the circled letters changed to "W/D", I thought "Oh cute. Clever!" Before that I had been ready to come here and say things like "PAw before PAD at 9A", but never mind. My only real overwrite was at 52A, the crossword-favorite hOe before SO[W/D]. Oh, and I also had HAHAHA at 19A, thereby making me a nice, normal decent and good person.

Anonymous 6:40 AM  

Also loved The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3! (Also the only reason I knew 9D.)

Adam 6:41 AM  

@Rex, you should watch The Three Musketeers, either the 1921 version with Douglas Fairbanks or the 1973 version, which I used to watch a lot on TV (along with its sequel The Four Musketeers). Not as perfect as The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3, but a fun movie for a kid.

SouthsideJohnny 6:53 AM  

Just a weird solving experience - they point out the rebus squares for you, which is kind of unusual - especially since they are all the same. The reveal felt flat and empty - it didn’t really reveal much of anything. At best it just confirmed what everyone knew by then. Rex pointed out how much the fill suffered - so with a theme that’s kind of dull and an over-taxed grid, about the best you can come up with for this one is “meh”.

Anthony In TX 6:56 AM  

I didn't get the trick at all. Filled in all the circles with just Ds, got the "solved!" screen in the app, and nothing changed for me. Didn't make sense until I saw Rex's post.
I kind of feel like that says a lot about how clever this whole thing was (or wasn't).

Andy Freude 7:01 AM  

According to Rex, I’m nice, normal , decent, and good, and I have nothing to be ashamed of. Wait till I tell Mrs. Freude!

JHC 7:15 AM  

Like Rex, I went with COW in 1D, and then threw down WASHBOARDS on the W alone, so YMMV for the aptness of that clue.

jammon 7:18 AM  

You CANNOT sod a garden, because then it's a lawn.

kitshef 7:23 AM  

Hand way up for the 1973 version of The Three Musketeers, with Michael York, Oliver Reed, and Spike Milligan and Raquel Welch as a married couple.

Also knew PELHAM only from the movie. And had LonGEST before LARGEST. And raised an eyebrow way up for the WASHBOARD clue - that is major torture of the English language.

Recently completed a trip to Belgium and The Netherlands mostly focused on art museums. I don't understand the popularity of sidewalk CAFEs. You are jammed together, elbow to elbow or butt to butt, with other patrons, while people walk past you on sidewalks that are not quite wide enough so they have to pass within inches of you. And then the smoke! I guess I've been accustomed to people not smoking in public areas, but in Western Europe smokers are everywhere. We gave up and ate inside whenever possible.

Glen Laker 7:24 AM  

Solved as a themeless; didn’t see what was going on until the revealer. Still very easy. Had some D’s in circles, and some W’s. I would have respected this puzzle more if it only gave the happy music with WD or W/D in the circles.

Anonymous 7:30 AM  

Books are great as well-6 in all

DeeJay 7:31 AM  

Did anyone else enter TEE at 9A? Green certainly didn't fit. Nor hole.

I was slightly tickled because my first and last initials are DW.

pabloinnh 7:49 AM  

I get to be in the "good for me, I had HAHAHA crowd today. Also the LONGEST/LARGEST group, the folks who went with one letter only in the circles to complete the puzzle, and those who find WASHBOARDS a little sketchy as "instrument panels".

It took forever to see old crossword friend ATHOS, as I was trying to think of a sad Mouseketeer, which I was thinking was pretty obscure. I would have been right about that if that was the actual clue. Oh well.

The best part of this one was finally parsing WORDCHOICE as W OR D CHOICE and then going back to see how that worked. I thought that all the W's or D's I had first entered made the better answer and when I started swapping letters around I still thought so.

Pretty nice trick with a nifty revealer, GB. Things Got Better when I caught on, and thanks for all the fun.

Ted 8:08 AM  

I didn't have any of Rex's problems with WAY AHEAD as clued. I confidently wrote that in and never looked back. It's a perfectly cromulent phrase.

Anonymous 8:09 AM  

Agree

Iris 8:17 AM  

What??? You’ve never seen Richard Lester’s brilliant, hilarious Three Musketeers?? Every performance delicious. I particularly love Geraldine Chaplin, in a fit of aristocratic boredom she somehow renders as innocent, exclaiming “Make them go faster! Whip them!”

Whatsername 8:25 AM  

Without being aware there was a CHOICE, I had a D in every circle except two. Probably just me, the girl raised on a COW farm, but I don’t think of COD as a major food source. And if I was “doing some garden work,” the WORD sod - a verb meaning to cover with sod or turf - would never come to mind. I mean, be it flowers, vegetables or rocks, the absence of SOD is what makes a it a garden. Anyway, until I had stared at the revealer long enough to figure it out, I thought I had done my first themeless Thursday. A solid Thursday puzzle, yes, but a theme which didn’t really make much of a difference in the solving experience.

Gary Jugert 8:43 AM  

¿Cómo se dice BWANA en español?

😫 BWANA is an ODIC way to start a puzzle. And ENUF with the HAH HAH says my SAHIB from PELHAM Bay.

Kinda hard to see past the bad parts of this one, especially when the theme switcheroo is optional. But we do have a rare "under 20" gunk score, and a FISH TAIL RUNS RIOT, so perfectly pleasant.

[Mass murder victim] COW.

Off to see the hot air balloon special shapes rodeo.

Propers: 6
Places: 2
Products: 1
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 15 of 78 (19%) Woo hoo! 🎉🎉 Party! A rare and epic achievement.

Funnyisms: 3 😐

Tee-Hee: BOWL, brah.

Uniclues:

1 What happened when I used the ab machine.
2 Why you're all gangstery.
3 Most likely cause of your harumphing.
4 What will happen to democracy if you vote for a tyrant.
5 DJ.
6 Why I weep in a deli.
7 Hit the reload button on a swimsuit site.
8 Drunken dances.

1 WASHBOARDS ALIT
2 HOODIE HAH HAH
3 DRY HUMOR LIABLE (~)
4 LARGEST LULL
5 STROBE EDITOR
6 WISHES COW FLED (~)
7 BODIES RENEWAL
8 TONICS SASHAYS (~)

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Sitcom based on me. JERK-ISH.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Bob Knuts 8:52 AM  

Rex -- you clearly need to listen to more Zydeco music (re washboards a/k/a rub boards as clue). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fa8vyTfugcI

RooMonster 9:03 AM  

Hey All !
W or D. HAHHAH. I put in two D's and four W's. It did finally dawn on me that either letter would word for the clues. Moved the puz up a notch for me after that realization. Tough to clue different words to mean the same thing. And Grant did it Twelve times!

I'm sure some bloggers will say the circles weren't needed, but I think they are, to highlight the Revealer and let you realize that either letter will work. My two cents.

Could referenced Weird Al for FAT. Funny video. Also, look up WORD Crimes video, by Weird Al. Quite funny, even though the song that's parodied is immature, to say the least.

Today is Thursday. Have I mentioned yet this week (probably, I'm trying for only once a week! 😁) that I Authored a WORD CHOICE book? Changing Times by Darrin Vail. Hey, gotta try to get it out there! Har. I'm OPEN TO criticism of it, btw.

Anyway, a decent ThursPuz that Thursed. Have a great day!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

mmorgan 9:04 AM  

I am a nice normal decent and good person who wrote in HA HA HA. Also ODes. But figuring out the gimmick in this was kinda fun, and I didn’t mind the stretched meanings.

andrew 9:04 AM  

Was expecting a full Rex rant on the racist colonialism of terms such as BWANA and SAHIB. (“Was he not a Bwana, a white man, and therefore one who knew all things?” from P.C. Wren’s Cupid In Africa.). Was pleasantly surprised that he didn’t - and somewhat shocked that I did. Been reading this blog too long - HAHHAH on me!

Agreed with everything Rex said - another rarity! Puzzle was quite easy, even though I had no idea what the gimmick (underwhelming for the solver) might be.

Anonymous 9:06 AM  

There’s also a PELHAM Parkway exit from the cross-Bronx X-way. That’s How I got it.

TKL 9:07 AM  

For those of us who live in lower Westchester "Pelham Bay" was a gimme!

Anonymous 9:10 AM  

@jberg here, computer all packed up for a weekend away. I just put W in every circle and failed to parse the revealer. Only avoided ARIal for the bold type at the last second. See you all next Tuesday!

JC66 9:25 AM  

Thanks everyone for your kind birthday wishes yesterday . Made my day even better.

Anonymous 9:53 AM  

For those who don’t think of cod as a major food source, it’s because we wiped them out. For example, Cod drove the exploration of the Atlantic Ocean as fishermen sailed ever further to find and catch them.
I highly recommend Mark Kurlanski’s book
“Cod: the fish that changed the world.”
Fascinating. Then read his book “Salt” which traces salt’s impact on world history and get your mind blown.

BlueStater 9:57 AM  

As usual, I didn't get the gimmick and so solved (online) without rebusing the two-letter answers (to which I had a four-letter response after I came here and found out what was going on). At the end I got the happy music anyway. Go figure....

Carola 10:20 AM  

My first entry was COW (Dairy Stater here), but WASHBOARD looked iffy to me, whereas DASHBOARD......and that was my aha moment, when the COD also appeared. I enjoyed ferreting out the other W/Ds and thought the reveal was a happy find by the constructor. Also enjoyed FISHTAIL, SASHAYS, RUNS RIOT.

Anonymous 10:21 AM  

Loved the Michael Yorke movie

Trina 10:26 AM  

I entered “ODEA” as the presumed crosswordese plural of ODE, which left a weird EAHO as the 4D Los Angeles [___ PARK]. I asked Dr Google whether there was such a thing as EAHO and low and behold, it is a nickname for East Hollywood (think “SOHO”) …

egsforbreakfast 10:33 AM  

Shouldn't @Rex have carped that if your theme is going to revolve around the D/W gimmick, there shouldn't be any other Ds or Ws in the grid?

Seems like EDITOR sitting right on top of WORDCHOICE was a foregone opportunity to link into a two part revealer. I suppose Joel Fagliano struggled with the old "to EDITOR not to edit" question.

I think that someone who overdoses a lot might be described as ODIC.

Rex's criticisms are not wrong, but I'm so impressed by being able to make this whole thing work as well as it does that I come out very positive on it as a whole. Thanks a lot, Grant Boroughs.

Mr. Blue 10:35 AM  

The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (Wiki post)
The title is derived from the train's radio call sign, which is based on where and when the train began its run; in this case, the train originated at the Pelham Bay Park station in the Bronx at 1:23 p.m. For several years after the film was released, the New York City Transit Authority would not schedule any train to leave Pelham Bay Park station at 1:23.

Newboy 10:41 AM  

Best thing today was chasing that COW/COD down the rabbit hole to revisit John McPhee and The Founding Fish his book on the Atlantic COD. I’ve Liked any grid that lauds the EDITOR as does Grant today, so two thumbs up obviously.

Currently enjoying McPhee’s Draft No. 4 which describes how his writing and engagement with editors at the NewYorker evolved over the decades. If you’re looking for fascinating WORD CHOICEs it’s hard to beat any McPhee.

Niallhost 10:48 AM  

It's pretty freaking impressive. Didn't even get the W OR D thing until reading the write-up. If I were the constructor who had pulled this off and then came here to read a bunch of "meh" reactions I'd be wondering why I even bothered. Way to go, Grant.

EasyEd 10:55 AM  

Easily my favorite was WINED and DINED. Wish the rest of the W/D pairs could have been as familiar. Lived next to PELHAM much of my young life so that was a gimme. Like @Andrew expected some blowback on BWANA and SAHIB, with maybe a history lesson—oh well, maybe next time…now off to re-read the Three M’s to see why ATHOS is angsty, something I didn’t pick up on as a youth…

EasyEd 10:55 AM  

Easily my favorite was WINED and DINED. Wish the rest of the W/D pairs could have been as familiar. Lived next to PELHAM much of my young life so that was a gimme. Like @Andrew expected some blowback on BWANA and SAHIB, with maybe a history lesson—oh well, maybe next time…now off to re-read the Three M’s to see why ATHOS is angsty, something I didn’t pick up on as a youth…

Nancy 11:02 AM  

I picked this up at WRY/DRY HUMOR as I asked myself which one it was? Then I noticed the tiny little circle. Then I went back and noticed that my PAW could have been PAD and my WITHER could have been DITHER; that my COW could have been COD and my WASHBOARDS DASHBOARDS. By then, there was only DAY AHEAD/WAY AHEAD and DISHES/WISHES to go.

Very very clever. Very, very smooth. This is one of those rare times when there is a really compelling and interesting reason for employing tiny little circles in a grid.

This is -- on a less-grand scale -- similar to the CLINTON/BOB DOLE puzzle of such great fame. The type is described by that word I can never remember: the one that begins with an S and sounds somewhat like the kid piano player in the "Peanuts" cartoon. I liked this puzzle a lot and think that it's very well conceived.

Anonymous 11:05 AM  

I have to thank Frank Zappa for keeping Bwana in my head all these years

Michelle 11:08 AM  

I liked it.

mbr 11:20 AM  

The fourth Musketeer was D'Artagnan. The real d'Artagnan lived near AUCH, France, where the founder/owner of the gourmet meat company D'Artagnan (Ariane Daguin) was born. There's a statue of D'Artagnan in the town.

JT 11:27 AM  

I never perceived the D/W choices, just concentrated on the correct fill. But now that I see the trick, I appreciate the puzzle's constuction. I liked the lightning bolt yesterday, too. I'm not nearly as demanding or critical as Rex!

Anonymous 11:41 AM  

Did someone explain “when parsed in four parts” 58Across? If so, I missed it. Help!

Anonymous 11:44 AM  

Ok, found it. W or D choice.

M and A 11:50 AM  

Neat puztheme. The Circles were essential, to allow the presence of non-Jekyll/Hyde D's and W's, elsewhere in the puzgrid.
Very cool revealer.

Can't quite buy WASHBOARD's clue; needs a ?-mark.

staff weeject picks: COD [Not allowin COW-- see above]. PAW/PAD. SOW/SOD. But ... why would U SOD yer garden? I mean ... U can, but seems kinda anti-productive.

some fave stuff: HOODIE. WASHBOARDS, if U had a ?-marker clue for it. RENEWAL. FISHTAIL. SASHSAYS. YEROUT. ANI clue.

Thanx, Mr. Boroughs dude. Quite a wad of themers, dad.

Masked & Anonymo4Us


**gruntz**

Anonymous 11:55 AM  

I’m a New Yorker so Pelham is just fine. But washboard as “instrument panel”? Nah.

Anonymous 12:04 PM  

Agree.

Phil 12:14 PM  

WAYtHEre was my first input for 44. What lies before with ‘the’

jae 12:21 PM  

Easy. Most of my “problems” arose from misreading clues. However, I did need to stare at the finished grid for a while to grok the theme.

Me too for HA HA HA and LongEST before LARGEST.

Cute reveal, liked it.

SharonAK 12:28 PM  

Despite my having started with cow and wondered for a second what control panels were called washboards; and preferred "paw" to" pad"; And thought of wishes before dishes for 44D; when it came to the reveal I could NOT figure out how to parse it into 4 parts.

Now that I see the trick, I think it is fun and clever.
Before that I had smiled at the lie for 60A and the across/down pairs of cod and cafe and dishes and set.

If I ever knew there was a melancholy Musketeer I had totally forgotten. It's been over 20 years since I read the Three musketeers (while studying French) and about that long since I saw a Musketeers movie.

Anonymous 12:34 PM  

I am out of town, haven't seen Lewis lately, is he okay?

A 12:39 PM  

Never read The Three Musketeers??! Never seen any of the movies, and you a film buff - WOE! @Rex, you missed out big time, and you’re probably too old and jaded to appreciate them now. I read the books when I was around ten or eleven. The (also jaded) ATHOS was my favorite Musketeer.

Speaking of jaded, I thought the “volume” of criticism was more than ENUF. I actually was impressed by the volume of themers, and also by the WIT in some of the clues. I thought the WASHBOARD clue was awesome. Got the trick at DITHER and DRY HUMOR and went back to see if the W worked for DASHBOARDS too. Scratched my head a minute and then - doh, it’s a musical instrument board!

I drew a smiley face beside “Text massager,” and thought “Private sleeping accommodations” for COT was cute. I have seen ENUF enough in print and thought that was cute too (and an ADDED bonus for @Roo). The clue for ANI maybe wasn’t brilliant, but it was preferable to a Star Wars reference.

I wholeheartedly agree that ODIC is ODIous, but what is unholy about HAHHAH? HAH is a syllable of laughter, so two HAHs are “Syllables of laughter”. Yes, my first thought, like that of any “nice normal decent and good” person, was HAhaha, but I have learned from much erring to check the crosses. Likewise with the LARGEST/LonGEST WORD CHOICE, a clever trick that certainly seems intentional.

That’s ENUF, gotta ZOOM.

PS. @pablo from yesterday, I am too - maybe someday they’ll join us and the world will live as one. :-)

Gary Jugert 1:05 PM  

Maybe a duplicate post?

¿Cómo se dice BWANA en español?

😫 BWANA is an ODIC way to start a puzzle. And ENUF with the HAH HAH says my SAHIB from PELHAM Bay.

Kinda hard to see past the bad parts of this one, especially when the theme switcheroo is optional. But we do have a rare "under 20" gunk score, and a FISH TAIL RUNS RIOT, so perfectly pleasant.

[Mass murder victim] COW.

Off to see the hot air balloon special shapes rodeo.

Propers: 6
Places: 2
Products: 1
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 15 of 78 (19%) Woo hoo! 🎉🎉 Party! A rare and epic achievement.

Funnyisms: 3 😐

Tee-Hee: BOWL, brah.

Uniclues:

1 What happened when I used the ab machine.
2 Why you're all gangstery.
3 Most likely cause of your harumphing.
4 What will happen to democracy if you vote for a tyrant.
5 DJ.
6 Why I weep in a deli.
7 Hit the reload button on a swimsuit site.
8 Drunken dances.

1 WASHBOARDS ALIT
2 HOODIE HAH HAH
3 DRY HUMOR LIABLE (~)
4 LARGEST LULL
5 STROBE EDITOR
6 WISHES COW FLED (~)
7 BODIES RENEWAL
8 TONICS SASHAYS (~)

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Sitcom based on me. JERK-ISH.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

jb129 1:14 PM  

I've come to not look forward to Thursdays (especially not being a fan of rebuses). I solved as a themeless & came here to see the theme. This one went by pretty quickly, no woes, so I enjoyed it. I do think that DOG LEG TERMINUS was a pretty fancy, contrived description of a poor puppy's paw, though but that's just me.

okanaganer 1:30 PM  

Great Thursday theme. A little annoyed when it didn't work just typing all Ds, so then I put in DWs... which also didn't work. Oh!... they have to be WDs... hmph.

YER OUT was apt for solving the puzzle between two baseball playoffs. Go Yankees and Dodgers!

Yes, The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3 (Matthau / Robert Shaw version) is one of the best movies ever. The ending is brilliant... absolutely perfectly filmed and acted just right. And the score / soundtrack!

[Spelling Bee: yd 0; took ages to get that longer pangram. QB streak at 21.]

Rick Sacra 2:59 PM  

I loved this puzzle, Grant! As a relative novice, it was just right--not too easy, not too hard. Took me about 22 minutes. Getting the trick took a while; I finally saw it with WINED and DINED--that's the best themer of the bunch! Then saw it with DASHBOARD and WASHBOARD, and then away we went. Loved it! thanks. : )--Rick

Rick Sacra 3:01 PM  

This one had a personal connection for you : )

Anonymous 3:34 PM  

Schrodinger's cat

Anonymous 3:35 PM  

Two versions across - Two versions down - equals four.

Anonymous 3:37 PM  

I finished the puzzle and wasn’t even aware there was a theme. The clue for WORDCHOICE said there was a theme, but I had no idea. Had to come here to understand. Also, I use dark theme on the app and the circles are virtually invisible with that color scheme. Maybe that’s why I was so lost.

sharonak 4:02 PM  

@jammon, Depends on your definition of "garden" In England I found that what we typically call a backyard or front yard is called a garden. And Public/ botanical/etc. gardens refer to the lawn as well as the beds and trees and shrubs as a garden.

SharonAK 4:15 PM  

More than 60, not 20, years since I read Three Musketeers. There was at least one other error as well. I was sure I corrected all errors before clicking "publish". Could swear there is a gremlin somewhere between publishing and appearing. Has anyone else experienced this? I've thought it happened other times as well.

Dan P 4:24 PM  

I had nothing but D circles, until I saw 58A.

For future reference, PELHAM is also a small town in Massachusetts, about 50 miles west of .... Natick!

ChrisS 4:50 PM  

Unless you are British since they refer to the garden as the greenscape in the back yard. But also a Brit would not sod a garden as 'sod' over there has a very different meaning.

Anonymous 5:44 PM  

This exact theme has been done before! Rex, here’s what you had to say about it way back in 2018 https://rexwordpuzzle.blogspot.com/2018/03/classic-letter-puzzle-parsed.html?m=1

Anonymous 6:17 PM  

It’s not exactly the same, but it’s close! Thanks for the reminder ~RP

Anonymous 6:55 PM  

I could not agree more with today’s movie recommendation from OFL. I watched a bunch of oldies while in the hospital (possibly the only good thing about the recovery period). “Pelham 1-2-3” is everything a film watcher could want in excitement and edge of the seat-ness, acting, directing and especially cinematography.

Alas, if only the puzzle had been that exciting. All the theme entries were fine for what they are, but the weak reveal irked me. The Wither/Dither theme answer also failed to land-most strained for me. And honestly, that’s all I have.

CDilly52

Anonymous 7:01 PM  

@Dan P I just happened to drive through PELHAM yesterday. It took about 30 seconds. I loved the idea of the puzzle, and had no problem with WASHBOARD as an instrument: just listen to Zydeco music. But I thought the cluing was not great. So 4 stars out of 5.

Anonymous 9:18 PM  

No problem with the fill. Just ignored the rebus(as always - I hate them) but found it a pleasant solve. Didn't realize til I read this column that there was supposed to be WD thing, but it wasn't necessary to complete the puzzle.

Anonymous 9:22 PM  

Maybe <<< W * or * D * Choice >>>is in 4 parts?

Anonymous 1:04 AM  

I ended up on that Washboard Youtube page for 40 minutes binging clips, I love where this blog takes me sometimes!

Anonymous 5:32 AM  

AGREE! I thought it was fun and great.

BugMommie 11:52 AM  

Ive always been a fan of puzzles but am new to the NYT themes and particularly the Thursday themes. The REBUS option always takes me a minute to consider.With WASHboard and DRYhumor and SCRUB (SCRAP, as previously noted) in the top across half, I really was hoping for wordCYCLES or some clever laundry lead-in.
By the time I got back around to the acrosses I had a lot of cleanup to do.

bulgie 5:10 AM  

And Sheik Yerbouti

Anonymous 9:41 AM  

Bad. Bad. Not good! WASHBOARD is a bridge too far.

Anonymous 10:45 AM  

I miss Will Shortz

spacecraft 10:47 AM  

I agree that the original "Taking" movie is far superior to the remake. Shaw is fantastic. Most unforgettable line?
"Even great men have to pee." Compare this film to another that features the New York mindset: "Quick Change," starring Bill Murray and the love of my life Geena Davis, with a marvelous bit by Tony Shaloub as a cabbie who speaks a strange language.

But I digress. Today's offering is indeed ingenious, illustrating once again how quirky the English language can be. Yes, the fill suffers, how could it not? But he somehow pulls it OFF. Birdie.

Wordle par.

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