Midwesterner's embarrassed interjection / WED 11-6-24 / Gobi desert grazer / Inspiration for Toblerone's shape / Hip-hop's Madvillain or Mobb Deep / Baxter, "Poor Things" protagonist / Composer with a namesake horn / Green roll / Patterned fabric named for a Mideast capital

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Constructor: Adam Aaronson

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: LONG AND SHORT OF IT (63A: General idea ... or a hint to the clue/answer pairings at 14-, 29-, 39-, 41- and 53-Across) — long theme answers contain a second short answer inside of them (in the shaded squares):

Theme answers:
  • PLATINUM (14A: Silvery element)
  • BLACK SABBATH (29A: Band in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)
  • SOMALIA (39A: African country)
  • LIMEADE (41A: Sweetened beverage)
  • MEADOWLARK (53A: Bird with a distinctive call)
Word of the Day: MEAD (see 41A) —
a fermented beverage made of water and honey, malt, and yeast (merriam-webster.com)  
Mead has a reputation for being extremely sweet. Many people are hesitant to even try it after having tasted one of those syrupy-sweet honey wines that so many commercial meaderies make. People assume that it’s sweet just because it was made from honey. What they don’t realize is that the sugar in the honey gets fermented and turned into alcohol, just like the sugar in grapes. Whether the final product is sweet or not is up to the mead maker. People have even asked us if mead is thick like honey. That of course is not the case, since the honey is broken down by the yeast and turned into alcohol and CO2, meaning there’s not much left of the original honey except flavor. [...] 
There are two main methods of making a sweet product. The first is to simply add honey to the mead after it is done fermenting (with steps taken to prevent it from fermenting again). The second is to add more honey than the yeast is capable of converting into alcohol, which leaves some sugar behind. Each strain of yeast can only tolerate so much alcohol before the alcohol they make actually kills them. This method is fairly unpredictable, in part because there are usually several strains of yeast in any given fermentation, not just the one added by the wine or mead maker. The nutrient regimen and other factors can also impact how much alcohol the yeast can produce. ("Is Mead Sweet?," Contrivance Wine & Mead Co.)
• • •

[DRAX]
This puzzle felt somewhat harder than a typical Wednesday—the clues all seemed to be Really trying (to be tricky, or ambiguous, or pop culturally current). But I just set the difficulty back to "Medium" because my brain was addled by disrupted sleep (I fell asleep at 9 and woke up at 1 (?)—it's 2:15 now; the cats are very confused). From the very first clue, I just couldn't wrap my brain around a lot of little things. A [Gobi Desert grazer] is a what now? After GNU and ELK, I'm out of three-letters grazers. Oh, do ASSes graze now? Of course they do. Lots of animals graze, but I didn't know grazing was classical ASS behavior (I have no idea what lives or doesn't live in the Gobi, to be honest). I don't think of SOD as green, though of course it is (for some reason when I see SOD, I just see dirt). I figured the [Domain suffix that most people can't register] would be GOV. So that's strike 1 2 and 3 on the first second and third Across answers. "UH UH" instead of "UM, NO." And so forth. Things evened out and got slightly less disorienting through the middle of the grid, only to get sludgy again at the bottom. "OK, GOOD" (like its cousin, "UM, NO") was not quickly forthcoming. Totally forgot DRAX was a name in the MCU (I have tried to forget every Marvel movie I ever wasted time watching—though to be fair, the "Guardians" movies were my favorite of the lot). I tried to make 73A: Dave Bautista's role in "Guardians of the Galaxy" be GRÜT ... but the character I was thinking of is GROOT. Alas. And then there was the SW corner, which slowed me down some more, as I assumed 48D: "My plans aren't set in stone" was "I'M something" ("I'M OPEN?") rather than "I [space] [verb]" (in this case, "I MIGHT"). BLOW was somewhat tough to get to from its clue (56D: Major setback). No idea what making a KNOT with one hand even means, rockclimbing-wise (58D: Something a rock climber might make with one hand). ... [looks it up] ... Oh, a KNOT in your rope. LOL I thought you were "making" your hand into a KNOT somehow. Like KNOT was a special grip or something. So you can see ... much of this just wasn't clicking. Probably more apt to say my brain wasn't clicking. But I never got really stuck, and much of the rest of the grid was simple enough, so as I say, I'm just calling it "Medium" today. Seems like the safest bet.

["I DO x 5"]

As for the theme, I really liked it. It does what it tells you it does. You get a "long" and a "short" answer for each clue, with the latter embedded inside the former. "Long" and "short" in one answer. Nifty trick, consistently executed. The only answer I balked at was MEAD, which, while being made from fermented honey, is not what I'd call "sweetened" (41A: Sweetened beverage). But a little research shows that mead makers (who work at "meaderies," a word I just learned—see "Word of the Day," above) do "sweeten" some of their meads (by adding honey after fermentation or starting with more honey than the yeast can convert to alcohol; again, see above). So calling MEAD "sweetened" seems fine. All other theme pairs seem right on the money. No issues, perfect fits for their clues. Not sure I'd've called TIN (or any metal, besides silver) "silvery," but it seems like a reasonable description. Overall fill quality feels about average. STINK BOMBS good (3D: Foul-smelling prank items), HEALTH BARS meh (10D: Indicators of remaining energy for video game characters), everything else fine. Very little wincing today. 


The one answer I was truly happy to see today was AGNES Varda (54D: ___ Varda, director with an honorary Palme d'Or and Oscar). I've been (intermittently) shouting for years that, like fellow legendary film director Yasujiro OZU, she should be in more puzzles. Then last year, Erik Agard and Malaika Handa finally used a [French film director Varda] clue for AGNES, and I was elated. And now I'm re-elated. Varda's Cleo from 5 to 7 is one of my three favorite movies (along with Wilder's The Apartment and Hitchcock's Rear Window). Varda had a long and varied career. Her documentaries are particularly exceptional. I have a beautiful, massive Criterion Collection box set of her films (haven't come close to watching all of them yet). Still haven't seen VARDA in the grid yet, but, baby steps, baby steps. And this puzzle's cinephilic streak keeps going, extending from DRAX and AGNES to BELLA (22D: ___ Baxter, "Poor Things" protagonist). That seemed like a somewhat tough BELLA clue. Yes, it's a recent role, and an Academy Award-winning role, but I don't know how widely known Emma Stone's character's name is. I saw the movie in the theater and the name still didn't come to me quickly. But crosses seem fair. Anyway, Marvel movie reference notwithstanding, I love this puzzle's movie-mindedness. It's the one part of the puzzle that did, in fact, click with me.


Notes and explainers:
  • 19A: Northernmost city in North America with over one million people (EDMONTON) — brain, not clicking, assumed that "North America" meant "United States of America," and so tried to invent a city called EDISON, AK.
  • 20A: Inspiration for Toblerone's shape (ALP) — weird clue. Yes, the inspiration is an ALP, but more specifically, a very famous ALP: The Matterhorn. This is a little like cluing PRESIDENT as [Person on the five-dollar bill]. I mean ... yes ... but
  • 2D: Composer with a namesake horn (SOUSA) — yes, the SOUSAphone, which is a horn, and (sadly) not a telephone you use when you need someone to compose a march, stat!
  • 8D: Hip-hop's Madvillain or Mobb Deep (DUO) — a tough clue if you know nothing about hip-hop, which experience tells me is a lot of you. I've heard of both these acts and DUO still didn't leap to mind.
  • 11D: Actress Tracee ___ Ross of "American Fiction" (ELLIS) — Diana Ross's daughter. 
  • 67D: Midwesterner's embarrassed interjection ("OPE!") — I forget which Midwesterner says this. Minnesotan? Hmm, looks like it's common across Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. According to this 2020 article from "Oshkosh Northwestern": "['OPE' is] said after bumping into someone, dropping something, or as an alert of someone needing to get around or “sneak right past ya.”"
See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

***

Important Note:

As of Monday, 11/4/24, the NYT Tech Guild is on strike. 


The Guild is asking that readers honor their picket line by boycotting the Times’ selection of games, including Wordle and the daily digital crossword, and to avoid other digital extensions such as the Cooking app.

Annie Shields, a campaign lead for the News Guild of New York, encouraged people to sacrifice their streaks in the wildly popular Wordle and Connections games in order to support the strike.

You can read more about the strike here (nyguild.org).

There were some anti-union talking points being credulously repeated in the comments yesterday, so just to be clear (per Vanity Fair): "The union said Tech Guild workers' main concerns that remain unresolved are: remote/hybrid work protections; “just cause” job protections, which “the newsroom union has had for decades”; limits on subcontracting; and pay equity/fair pay.

Since the picket line is "digital," it would appear to apply only to Games solved in the NYT digital environment—basically anything you solve on your phone or on the NYT website per se. If you get the puzzle in an actual dead-tree newspaper, or if you solve it outside the NYT's proprietary environment (via a third-party app, as I do), then technically you're not crossing the picket line by solving. You can honor the digital picket line by not using the Games app (or the Cooking app) at all until the strike is resolved. No Spelling Bee, no Connections ... none of it. My morning Wordle ritual is was very important to me, but ... I'll survive, I assume. 

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

62 comments:

Conrad 4:55 AM  


Medium for me. I didn't know BELLA Baxter (22D), AGNES Varda (54D) or DRAX (73A) but got all three from crosses with little difficulty. At 48D I thought of I'M open and I'M free before I MIGHT, and I misspelled NENA (49D) as NENE - I don't know my singers from my birds.

My only other overwrite happened because I was working in the SE and without reading the clue guessed stoppeD SHORT OF IT at 63A, but that was quickly corrected.

SharonAK 5:47 AM  

LIke Rex I had trouble thinking of I might for 48D, but once i saw it, it was so much better than other answers.
Agree the theme was fun. Did not get what was happening and was a bit down on the clues 29 and 39 A for being ridiculously general until I read the clue for the revealer. Trying to make sense of it I looked back at the theme answers I had and Oh, yeh!
Disagree with Re re silvery metal plates and tin are very silvery, tho my first thought was mercury.
4A green roll with three letters was immediately sod to this gardener. But 1A, yeah I do not think of asses as grazer and had no idea they were creatures of the Gobi.
Chuckled at 59A Puff pieces when crosses shoed me cigars.
And smiled at ribbit just because it's a smiley word.

Mark 5:59 AM  

I tried the app Black Ink that you recommended yesterday. It’s a terrible bare bones crossword whose only good feature is the puzzles it can download. I don’t know why the Time allows that app to access its puzzles and not other much better apps.

Anonymous 6:12 AM  

Seemed easier than a normal Wednesday puzzle

Anonymous 6:23 AM  

Strange. I use Black Ink every day (on my laptop). Interface is clean and intuitive. No complaints. 🤷🏻 ~RP

SouthsideJohnny 6:46 AM  

That has got to be the most unusual clue for ASS that they have ever run at the NYT. And right out of the gate at 1A. Impressive.

Wanderlust 7:16 AM  

Today’s blog feels like I’m living in an alternate universe, where what happened last night did not happen. We just go on solving blithely - or not, if we’re honoring the strike. Not there yet.

kitshef 7:22 AM  

Got the theme quickly at plaTINum, then zipped down to see if I could get them all without crosses. Got all but LImeadE.

The revealer, on the other hand, eluded me for a very long time. I think my main problem was OPE, where I could not anything to work in that slot and never would have imagined it could be OPE.

Lewis 7:23 AM  

Well, at least there are crosswords. Coming into a grave new world, at least there are crosswords…

Oh, I really adored this language quirk theme. What finds! Furthermore, I loved reading Adam’s notes, learning how much brain work and time went into coming up with these theme answers and perfect revealer – the sign of an artist, the sign of one who is not satisfied with anything less than excellence. There is beauty and inspiration in that.

This puzzle gifted me with a lovely interlude at the perfect time. Adam, it was so good to see you again in the Times after an absence of almost two years, as I love your puzzles. Thank you so much for this jewel!

Edward 7:27 AM  

Please help me understand. If the Guild is still on strike, why did Rex post the solution today? If he explained that in his post, I missed it. Then again, there are a lot of things I missed and a lot of things I need help understanding today.

Rug Crazy 7:29 AM  

Never saw MEAD.

pabloinnh 7:49 AM  

Ok puzz, caught on quickly, but nothing seems fun this morning.

Anonymous 8:09 AM  

Agnes Varda ❤️❤️❤️

Whatsername 8:11 AM  

Like yesterday, I solved without noticing what was happening with the highlighted squares. It seemed more difficult than usual, and I had to work at it almost like a Friday, using small breakthroughs to make progress, slowed by trouble with some of the many proper names.

I was born, raised and spent most of my life in the Midwest, but not once have I heard anyone say OPE. Maybe it’s a northern thing, not that it matters any more in the grand scheme of things.

Anonymous 8:22 AM  

Anyone….Ollie? Don’t get this one. Help…

Anonymous 8:42 AM  

Does anyone have any recommendations for third-party apps that work on Pixel phones/non-Apple products? I don't get the dead tree paper and I'd like to keep supporting the strike (and keep puzzling).

Smith 8:42 AM  

I'm definitely MOPEY this morning with a POUT on my face, no, no, it's worse than that. It's existential. And I'm still supportive of the union but since I've already paid for the subscription and I need something to keep me calm I'm doing puzzles.

Didn't know DRAX or BELLA but didn't really notice either one so the crosses must have been fair. Nice concept, although before I saw the revealer I was trying to put the shaded words together - like doing Connections. Revealer popped right in off of ________SH_RT_FIT, basically running through the vowels. So never saw OPE, either. But then I did see THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT.

What on earth do we do now IRL??

Nancy 8:49 AM  

Nothing, nothing, NOTHING can make ephemeral, unimportant pop culture trivia seem more pointless and mindless than a morning as apocalyptic as this one feels right now. Only belatedly did I realize that the theme is very, very clever. I just wish it hadn't been surrounded by so much gunk.

I suppose I should, like Lewis, be grateful that the NYTXW still exists -- no matter how filled with gunk a given puzzle is. Who knows how long there will even be a New York Times now that the one who has threatened to destroy it -- along with a zillion other institutions and people -- will soon be in a position to do so?

RooMonster 8:51 AM  

Hey All !
Lots of PPP today, it seems. Waiting for @Garys count, as I'm too lazy to do it myself!

Grid is 16 wide, in case ya missed it.

Tough to get clean fill, with so many locked in place letters. That Middle section, with all the Shaded answers close to each other in the longer Themers was especially thorny to fill with anything non made up. So kudos on that Adam.

Neat Theme, nice grid, overall good puz.

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Liveprof 8:54 AM  

It's John Philip SOUSA's birthday today (1854). U. of Michigan fans are proud to note Sousa said the Wolverine's fight song is the best march ever written. (Of course, he may have been humbly excluding his own.) That's "The Victors" written by Louis Elbel, a Umich student.

Anonymous 8:55 AM  

He said he used a 3rd party app as to not cross the digital picket line at NYT.

Anonymous 8:56 AM  

OLLIE is a skateboard trick. It’s in the puzzle a lot.

Anonymous 8:56 AM  

Agreed. Must be used much closer to Canada.

Liveprof 8:57 AM  

RP explained the approach he was taking to the strike yesterday.

Edward 9:03 AM  

That 3rd-party app appears to work for Apple products. I don't have any, so I will continue to honor the picket line.

Smith 9:18 AM  

@Anon 8:22
Skateboarding

Anonymous 9:30 AM  

Rex write up was particularly amazing today but maybe I’m just appreciating everything more to block out everything else.

Anonymous 9:42 AM  

My solving experience almost word for word as described by OFL today (although of course my time was probably at least 4 times as long).

And a big “mwah” for AGNES Varda’s Cleo from 5 to 7–the empathy it creates with its main characters is truly astonishing. I too own the Criterion box set of her complete films, still many remain to be watched.

webwinger

Anonymous 10:00 AM  

I enjoyed today's puzzle, clever theme! I'm not concerned about the strike. Oh, and check out The Onion's take on the election:
https://youtu.be/9ql0LTmSr38
Perspective is important!!

LewS 10:07 AM  

Rex, don’t miss LE BONHEUR …

Anonymous 10:08 AM  

Sorry we'll be able to afford to live now

jberg 10:42 AM  

So I started right in with "yak" for my Gobi Desert grazer. Much later, STINK BOMBS became inevitable, and I realized it was our old friend the ASS. They do graze, so fair enough. The rest was a slow crawl, with lots of slippage. The theme clues were very vague ("Band in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame," e.g.) until I had figured out the theme, which came only with the revealer. Maybe the shaded squared should have been a tip-off, and I did have MEADOWLARK already, but by that time I'd forgotten about the shaded letters.

Is a shot dropped into a glass of beer really called a SAKE? It doesn't sound like the type of thing I'd want to drink with my sushi. And as a native Midwesterner, I'm puzzled by OPE, an expression I don't recall ever hearing.

And with all the Italian regions -- essentially, every region in Italy--why does is always, always have to be ASTI?

I'm suffering withdrawal symptoms from my morning Wordl, which may have impeded my solving experience. I did like the theme, once I finally figured it out.

MelissaH 10:52 AM  

What are the premium features of the Black Ink app? Are these things I should be paying for so I can access them?

jberg 11:03 AM  

Gah! I own a pair of TEVAs, and it's not my first. I remember getting the first, at an REI store. The sales person told me not to try them on unless I was willing to spend that much (around $75, when that was a lot), because I would really want them once realized how good they felt. So I'm very familiar with them -- but I finished with RIBBIt/tEVA. Somehow, "athletic" didn't ring a bell for me.

I guess I should repeat every day that I'm solving in ink in the paper delivered to my doorstep. So at present I guess I'm honoring the strike.

Carola 11:06 AM  

Nicely done! Although it took me a while to appreciate it. Feeling utterly trashed this morning, I was oblivious to the shaded squares until by happenstance I had an OWL in the middle of an otherwise blank line. How lovely to see the MEADOWLARK appear! Terrific reveal, too.

jb129 11:14 AM  

@Lewis & @Nancy - I watched in horror all early morning :(

jae 11:34 AM  

Tough Wednesday for me because there was so much I didn’t know in addition to the tricky/ambiguous clueing. Getting a foothold was a struggle.

WOEs: ASS, OUI, BELLA, AGNES, OPE, DRAX, HEALTH BARS, DUO, KNOT

Reasonably smooth grid, clever theme, liked it.

Now I’ll go back to working on not walking around like a zombie.

Anon 11:49 AM  

I'd recommemend the 2017 documentary "Faces Place" to anyone remotely interested Agnes Varda

jb129 12:04 PM  

Solved as a themeless, which I've been doing a lot lately (???) & didn't see the theme until I came here. Fun puzzle (once I saw the theme).
Thanks, Adam :).
BTW, I know it was for a good cause Rex - missed the Blog yesterday, Rex.

thfenn 12:09 PM  

@wanderlust 7:16, ditto. Just trying to "keep calmala and carryonala".

M and A 12:11 PM  

Cool puztheme ... musta been a tough set of themers to come up with. Only extra one that M&A has thought to add:
{What this election turned out to be} = C[LOSER]ACE.

staff weeject picks: TIN & OWL. Always fun to have weejects get to be part of the theme mcguffin.
Nice weeject stacks in the NE &NW & S central, btw.

16x15 E/W symmetric(al) puzgrid. Like.
other fave stuff included: STINKBOMBS. RIBBIT. DA MASK.

Thanx, Mr. Aaronson dude. Good make. I solved on paper, so I think I'm scab-free.

Masked & Anonymo5Us

A couple of totally spam-free runtpuzzles, for desserts:
**gruntz**

**gruntz**

Beezer 12:54 PM  

Double ditto! Never have I ever heard OPE uttered and it makes me go back to my old complaint…what the heck IS the Midwest? Does it include the Great Plains? Since when is Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana remotely like Minnesota/Iowa/Dakotas?

Teedmn 1:17 PM  

I have a pair of TEVAs somewhere, but I abandoned them long ago for my Keenes. My husband used to wear his sandals all summer and would show off his brown and with feet with his TEVA tan, as he called it.

Like @Rex, I was stuck on the USA rather than the whole of North America and with _DM in place, was looking forward to filling in what city could possibly have that letter placement. EDMONTON, ok, good.

HEALTH BARS just sounds like the most boring salad bar ever. Since I've never played a video game, I can't picture where these bars are. Is there a side icon with "health bars" for every character? And no, I don't actually care. I have other things on my mind.

Adam Aaronson, thanks for the bit of brightness today.

Sailor 1:21 PM  

Absolutely mystified by OPE. I'm a native midwesterner with extended family across the northern tier from ND to the UP, and have never heard this. Like others, wondering where in the Midwest this is supposedly common.

Anonymous 1:25 PM  

Read the blurb on mead. I make mead pretty often. People are surprised that it tastes like a dryish white wine. It’s pretty refreshing, but I caution them that it’s usually about 14-15% alcohol

Carola 1:27 PM  

We live close to the practice field for the University of Wisconsin marching band, and I'm always happy when it's Michigan coming to town. I love that fight song! (Second to "On, Wisconsin!," of course :) ).

mhoonchild 1:32 PM  

I'd also love recommendations for third-party solving apps that work on PCs or non-Apple phones. What are others using (or should I just print the puzzle and solve it old-school?)

okanaganer 1:33 PM  

The grid looks like a face of some sort... a Panda? Anyway, nice theme. However (this is a recording) spoiled by too many names, especially in the lower right.

BOSSA Nova comes from Portuguese for "new wave" (sort of). EDMONTON is a gimme for any Canadian. I had BEANS before BELLA Baxter; shows how old I am.

Liveprof 2:26 PM  

Seriously. There's nothing quite like a game at the Big House. I had no interest in college sports until my son took me to a game out there his freshman year. I'm a raving lunatic now for all their teams.

Anonymous 2:32 PM  

Another one solved as a themeless.
On paper, of course!

Anonymous 3:15 PM  

Midwesterner all my life - Minneapolis born and never heard or used or thought of using “ope” for anything.

okanaganer 4:40 PM  

@mhoonchild and others, on a Windows PC (probably on Mac too) the Crossword Scraper plugin for Firefox or Chrome enables you to download .pdf or .puz files which you can solve with AcrossLite and other programs.

Whatsername 5:10 PM  

Same here, and for several others if you noticed the responses to my post at 8:11. Makes me wonder how the constructor came up with it.

Whatsername 5:14 PM  

Apocalyptic is precisely the word for it.

Anonymous 5:36 PM  

Anonymous 10:08 AM
If he gets those tariffs in, don’t be so sure.
It is very dangerous to listen to anything he says. He doesn’t have a clue about economics.
Your comments remind me of those who praised Mussolini for getting the trains to run on time.
Ditto Hitler and the promises he made

dgd 6:01 PM  

Funny how many of the American commentators , including me, made the same initial mistake about the Northern most large city. Our eyes saw North America and our brains registered the United States. Okanaganer would have been entitled to make a snarky comment but he chose not to We do tend to edit out Canada.
The puzzle was trickier than it first seemed. I liked it. When I saw TIN and ABBA I got the theme. By the end, OWL got me MEADOWLARK. The hardest part of the theme for me was the revealer!

About the big news of the week, sadly, I was not surprised. I hoped against hope that my feelings in the run up to the election were wrong. But he was behind and getting closer., then it was a tie. In a close election the one gaining usually wins. Reading between the lines, I think most of the reporters of the Times agreed with me. So I stopped reading election news a week ago.
This blog helps me keep my sanity
Thanks!

Mark 6:03 PM  

Maybe the iPhone version is different from the desktop one.

Anonymous 7:19 PM  

Please support the NYT tech workers and don't cross the "click it line."

BobL 7:31 PM  

Live in Oshkosh, Wis most of my life - never encountered OPE

Anonymous 7:31 PM  

I was hoping to see your rage about the clue for 63A. That’s the “Long and short of it”. That’s the way that phrase is used. It never starts at Long.

Anonymous 5:44 AM  

Weird. I'm from upstate NY but feel like I say and hear "ope" pretty regularly. It's basically a variation on "oops."

Anonymous 9:15 AM  

This is what I do. Print a week’s worth and solve with a cup of tea. Didn’t even know about the strike until reading Rex’s write ups today for last week’s puzzles

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