Friday, December 20, 2024

Common motifs in high art? / FRI 12-20-24 / Member of the Golden Horde / Goddess often depicted clothed in green / Rhea's relative / Ancient music halls / Subject of 199 silkscreen paintings by Warhol / Org. with towers / Aptly named descendant of Standard Oil

Constructor: Henry Josephson

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: THE GOLDEN SPIKE (32A: Symbol of America's first transcontinental railroad) —
The 
Golden Spike (also known as The Last Spike) is the ceremonial 17.6-karat gold final spike driven by Leland Stanford to join the rails of the first transcontinental railroad across the United States connecting the Central Pacific Railroad from Sacramento and the Union Pacific Railroad from Omaha on May 10, 1869, at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory. The term last spike has been used to refer to one driven at the usually ceremonial completion of any new railroad construction projects, particularly those in which construction is undertaken from two disparate origins towards a common meeting point. The spike is now displayed in the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University. [...] Completing the last link in the transcontinental railroad with a spike of gold was the brainchild of David Hewes, a San Francisco financier and contractor. [...] To drive the final spike, Stanford lifted a silver spike maul and drove the spike into the tie, completing the line. Stanford and Hewes missed the spike, but the single word "done" was nevertheless flashed by telegraph around the country. In the United States, the event has come to be considered one of the first nationwide media events. The locomotives were moved forward until their cowcatchers met, and photographs were taken. Immediately afterwards, the golden spike and the laurel tie were removed, lest they be stolen, and replaced with a regular iron spike and normal tie. At exactly 12:47 pm, the last iron spike was driven, finally completing the line. (wikipedia)
• • •

[56A: "Sorry, those secrets are
*beyond* classified"]
If this is a debut (as it appears to be, since the constructor's name is not in my database), then it's one of the more impressive debuts I've ever seen. The grid shape itself is arresting. At first glance, it looks too choppy—like, too many black squares, too many short answers, not promising. But then it unfolds and it has this really incredible flow—not all-over flow, but a kind of trickle-down, three-part flow, where one mini puzzle leads down to the next, that part fills up, and then down you go again to the bottom, with big, bright answers splashing across the grid along they way, leaping like KOI across the grid (I know, KOI don't really leap, just play along, for once!). And yes, there are a lot of short answers, but they are mostly clean and *all* in service of gorgeous marquee answers. That is the proper job of short fill—hold the longer, better, more impressive fill in place without being aggressively ugly. And today's marquee fill is indeed impressive. Eight (8) grid-spanners! Well, two are near-spanners, at 14 instead of 15 letters long, but that's another virtue of the grid: you get a couple of rarely-seen 14s (for structural reasons, 14s are often hard to accommodate in a 15x15 grid, generally), and you get a center stack that's leaning, staggered, a little off-kilter, which keeps the grid from being excessively blocky (yes, sometimes I just like (or don't like) the way the squares look in the grid—not as important as how the puzzle plays, but the eye likes what it likes). Yes, the puzzle was too easy, but it was fun while it lasted. Exhilarating to be able to drive ANSWERED TO NO ONE (7D: Had carte blanche) like a spike, right through the heart of the grid, and then have THE GOLDEN SPIKE show up as an answer. My spike didn't *complete* the puzzle, the way THE GOLDEN SPIKE completed the railroad, but man was it fun satisfying to hammer it home:

[one little mistake at this point: JOAN instead of JOÃO (15D: John, in Portuguese); I was thinking of Miró, who was Spanish, not Portuguese]

This puzzle has one pretty bad editing foul-up, which is that the word "GOLDEN" somehow made it into a clue (46D: Member of the Golden Horde), despite being already in the grid, and in a marquee position. This is fine with small words (articles, prepositions, ultra-common 3- or 4-letter words), but with longer words, it's obtrusive. Solvers are apt to notice. At best, it's a distraction. Reads like a glitch. At worst, a solver might second-guess an answer because "they wouldn't duplicate such a standout word, would they?" They shouldn't, that's for sure. Absolutely no need for "Golden" to be in that TATAR clue. Unforced error. (Although I have to say that that clue led to my favorite mistake (or near-mistake) in the puzzle—I had TAT-, looked at [Member of the Golden Horde], and thought "... TATER?" Gonna start calling my tater tots "The Golden Horde."


These puzzles with long stacks and lots of short crosses are often much easier than they look because just a few of those crosses can unlock a longer answer, and then you get a cascading effect from there. Cascading! That's the word for how this solve played out. It played out waterfallishly. Falling water, one third down to the next third down to the next. Well, there's the rapid descent of the central spike ("ANSWERED TO NO ONE"), but after that, back to the top and cascading commences. I have almost no ink on my printed-out grid, which means very few trouble spots. That JOAN-for-JOÃO error didn't last long. I had some minor trouble wondering what MARIJUANA was going to have to do with art ("motifs"), but they realized "oh, they're looking for a motif, not a specific art term" (14A: Common motifs in high art?). It's just LEAVES. The crosses there were so easy that LEAVES just materialized without much effort on my part. Had a couple seconds confusion trying to parse MINERAL DEPOSITS (38A: Veins, e.g.) because I had MINE- and figuring it was going to be some more specifically *mining* term. MINE ... something. But then the "R" from ORGAN slid in and that problem went away. I lucked into knowing the one not-terribly-famous name in the grid (ELLY) (47D: 2024 M.L.B. All-Star ___ De La Cruz). Baseball fans will know him, others, I'm guessing, not so much. He's very young (b. 2002, MLB debut 2023). But very good and likely an All-Star for years to come. I remember when I first saw his name and thought "hmm, good for crosswords." So now you know. ELLY. Be on the lookout. Move over, ELLY May Clampett of The Beverly Hillbillies, there's a new ELLY in town.


Further notes:
  • 1A: Abbr. in a scholarly paper (ET AL) — Me: "IBID!" (bzzt!)
  • 18A: Goddess often depicted clothed in green (GAIA) — earth goddess. Never sure if it's GAEA or GAIA. Just gotta wait on that cross.
  • 43A: Where to watch the cubs (DEN) — hmm, I'm gonna guess that park rangers don't recommend that you do this. Cubs are cute, but ...  you're gonna wanna stay out of the DEN.
  • 1D: Rhea's relative (EMU) — a gimme ... and yet my crossword brain went "MOA! It's MOA! Write in MOA!" "But Rhea's are still around and the MOA's been extinct for over five hund-" "Write it!"
  • 13D: Aptly named descendant of Standard Oil (ESSO) — if I ever knew this, I forgot it. "S" "O"—whaddya know.
  • 23D: Move like a crab (SIDLE) — there's a very arresting shot of a sidling crab in the movie All We Imagine As Light, which I saw at Cinemapolis up in Ithaca yesterday. A remarkable, patient, subtle, lovely movie about three Mumbai nurses—their friendship and the challenges they face as (mostly) single women in the big city. Recommended.
  • 26D: Place to take notes (ATM) — so bank notes, i.e. currency. Cute.
  • 50D: Ancient music halls (ODEA) — there are lots of repeaters in the short fill, but this is the only one I would classify as hardcore "crosswordese." 
  • 57D: Org. with towers (AAA) — they tried to get you with the towers/towers thing (tall structures v. things that tow .,. your automobile). Hope you survived. I never even saw this clue.
  • 52A: Subject of 199 silkscreen paintings by Warhol (MAO) — same as with MOA-for-EMU above, except here my brain was shouting "ONO!" "Jeezus, brain, you know it's not ONO!" "Ooooooonoooooo!"
Holiday Pet Pics now! 

(reminder: submissions closed til next year!)

First up, a double shot of Roxy, who was Jewish, but also the most ardent Christmas enthusiast. She'd sport whatever look you wanted. Up for anything. What a sweet baby (RIP)

[Thanks, Liz]

Henry and Lily here look slightly less enthusiastic, but they are hungry for treats, so they will patiently abide your photo session, just hurry up with it.
[Thanks, Carol]

"Oh, hi, whatcha doin? Takin' a photo of the tree? Can I be in it?" Sure, Penny. You can be in it.
[Thanks, Ciara]

According to their owner, Cody thinks he hears Santa, but Bella knows it's just the mailman. "Go back to sleep, Cody." If it's not the real thing, Bella ain't budging.
[Thanks, Martha]

And finally, this hilarious chonkster and his microhouse. The cat's name is Rocky, and well, I guess you're wondering how he got into this predicament. I'll let his owner tell it: "This was a Xmas present for our then-feral then-outdoor cat, but I misunderestimated just how big he was in comparison to the house I bought online. Eventually, a friend used it as a model to make a 1.5x scale one he could fit in." Rocky says "It fits. I sits. Keep out!"
[Thanks, David]

See y'all tomorrow, I hope.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]

72 comments:

  1. Fantastic puzzle - I’ll argue for 8 spanners also - all solid. I’D HAVE TO KILL YOU is all world fill. SNOT NOSED, DOLMA, SATIE transition nicely to all the 4s and 5s. SIDLE will always be Seinfeld for me.

    REPO Man

    The shorts abound no doubt but the cluing tends to be interesting - love to see ELLY, TANG and BYOB. Deal with a lot of Portuguese masons so JOÃO went right in. Another ATM misdirect today.

    The PAN Within

    Highly enjoyable Friday morning solve.

    Santa’s On His Way

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:16 AM

      A random appearance of The Waterboys is always great! Thank you.

      Delete

  2. Easy but fun. I fell into the @Rex ibid/ETAL trap at 1A, but no big deal. I'd forgotten about JOAO (15D) and ELLY (47A) but everything fell into place nicely.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Great Puzzle, Henry! Thank you! 15:37 for me, which is probably easy-medium for a Friday. Loved all the long answers, not a clunker among them, and all the color of SNOTNOSED and TONGUETWISTERS. Great puzzle! : )

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  4. Anthony in TX6:42 AM

    My thoughts while solving this one:
    "Hey, this is pretty fun!"
    "Not too tough for a Friday, but I'm really enjoying myself."
    "I bet Rex is gonna go gaga for this one."
    Pretty simple overall (beat my Friday average by 5:47), but a thoroughly entertaining puzzle with great long answers and ome fun surprises.

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  5. I loved this one. IDHAVETOKILLYOU is one of the best answers this year. In fact, this puzzle itself is up there in the year's best. It's certainly the best of the month, so far.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous6:55 AM

    You can also watch the Chicago CUBS in your DEN.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The clue was written with a lower-case "c", so wouldn't fit on the technicality in this case. I'm sure it was part of the vibe intended, though.

      Delete
    2. Doctor L8:50 AM

      Agree that the lower-case C was a twinkle. And, Rex, it’s not you watching the cubs in the den, it’s the mama bear.

      Delete
  7. Not so easy for me but I liked it a lot and eventually it all came together. The middle long acrosses needed lots of crosses. Loved IDHAVETIKILLYOU

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  8. Great puzzle. Typically I only check out constructor notes on puzzles I like (or favorite constructors just to see the thought process). Glad I did today. There must be something in the Lake Michigan water, as this marks the 3rd current UChicago undergrad to have a NYTXW published. Or maybe it’s their school Provost, Katherine Baicker. She’s had 3 NYT puzzles. All collabs and all excellent, imo. In any event, Go UChicago crossworders.

    Had the same cascading effect Rex described. Also agree on the easy side, but a very fun solve. Happy Friday!

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  9. Druid7:13 AM

    I don’t think the clue perfectly set up the answer at 56a, but close enough. And the answer was maybe the best answer ever!

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  10. Anonymous7:13 AM

    Wow. It just kept flowing, almost cascading to completion. My favorite for as long as I can remember. Well done!!

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  11. I liked the elegant symmetry of FOO and MOO - nice touch. There is enough for me to trip over (crosses like GAIA x JOAO always give me trouble), so not quite the cake walk for me as others are experiencing.

    I also enjoyed the long grid-spanners, with the clue for TONGUE TWISTERS as my favorite.

    One thing I definitely noticed and appreciate is the absence of B or C-list celebs. Yes, absolutely I would rather have SNOT NOSED instead of trivia any day !

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  12. Anonymous7:16 AM

    The AAA clue threw me at first. I read towers as towers, not towers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:56 PM

      I read it as towers (architectural), as well, and the 3 capital As kind of look like towers.

      Delete
  13. Pretty tough by modern Friday standards. Of course, I stubbornly refuse to hit the short downs early but persist in my standard solve pattern. Astonished to see I had zero erasures. I guess I thought a lot of incorrect things but didn't put them in.

    Top-notch work.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:31 PM

      very tough for me

      Delete
  14. Anonymous7:22 AM

    Really fun solve! Lots of colorful answers. Good job, Henry Josephson!

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  15. Best puzzle of the year......Never heard of UNICORN STARTUPS, but was inferable

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  16. Anonymous7:38 AM

    Nicely constructed and an impressive debut. But super easy. At 13:30, I thought I had a personal best Friday, but I somehow managed a 10:00 on a Friday sometime in the past 10 years.

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  17. One of the great pleasure pings of solving is when there’s a long answer in the grid with a few crosses, and, in a flash, you suddenly realize what the full answer is. Truly, isn’t that a great moment?

    There was much opportunity for that today through a combination of 10 answers with nine letters or more, and sufficient footholds crossing them. For me, a glorious pingathon.

    This was buttressed by spark in the answer set, with 11 answers that have appeared but twice or less in the Times puzzle over its 80+ years.

    A lit-up grid filled with pleasure-bursts – well, that’s a sweet devil of a puzzle, and in a NYT debut puzzle, no less. Wow!

    I loved the originality as well, with two answers that are debuts not only in the Times but in all the major venues -- REMAIN ANONYMOUS and MARIJUANA LEAVES -- and [Harsh sentences?] for TONGUE TWISTERS, a most lovely clue for it that has never been used anywhere before.

    Henry, it’s clear you are ABLE, and I’m hoping you’re willing as well, to create more. Thank you so much for this day-brightening jewel!

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  18. Anonymous7:49 AM

    Usually like a bit more challenge on a Friday, but this puzzle was so fun and impressive that I didn't mind at all.

    No idea where a UChicago student finds time to create a puzzle like this (or any puzzle for that matter)

    Ready for the weekend!

    ReplyDelete
  19. Anonymous7:53 AM

    From the Department of Redundancies...

    A UNICORN is a STARTUP.

    The is just plain incorrectly wrong!

    Otherwise like the puzzle

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, specifically a high value, BILLION-dollar start-up

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:08 AM

      Hmm. My niece & her backpack, bedspread, coat, hat….would like a word with you….

      Delete
    3. Anonymous9:41 AM

      I suspect you meant the Department of Redundancy Department. You may want to self-correct yourself.

      Delete
  20. Bob Mills8:10 AM

    I wouldn't call it easy. Cheated several times in the NE and NW. My main problem was having -------starters instead of STARTUPS. I finally got OVUM and that fixed it. The other long clues were reasonable, more so than some of the difficult fill.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Hand up for liking this one a lot. Minimum of propers and familiar with the ones that were there.

    Nanosecond losses at (THE)GOLDENSPIKE, wasn't looking for the THE, but the worst was having LEGIT for LICIT, which made it hard to see MARIJUANA, even with most of the word in place.

    Two "to be's" , hello SER and ETRE, and a nod to Les EXPOS who I used to watch in old Jarry Park and later at the Stade Olympique. Fun listening to the bilingual announcements, and of course French was always first.

    Congrats on the debut, HJ. Holy Jumping catfish, this was a beauty. Looking forward to many more and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous8:49 AM

    Thought this was way too easy for a Friday. Felt like a Tuesday with longer answers. Other than that, well done puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Hey All !
    Rex's "easy" NW corner was my toughest spot! JAOA new here. GAIA is a known name, but just couldn't come up with it today. Didn't know Rhea as an EMU relative, and ETAL as clued was a mystery. Throw in the SUR, and Googing ensued.

    Had the ends of the Longs, LoAVES, STARTUPS, but the ole brain refused to come up with the starts. Notice that LoAVES is quite the difference from LEAVES. But, after getting (read: looking up) EMU and JOAO, managed to suss out the rest, even changing it to LEAVES, and got the Happy Music.

    In the South, I had fAA, the misdirection the sneaky constructor was looking for, plus zIN for VIN. So, I had in IDHFZ to start that answer. Judging by the clue, I thought it would be nonsensical letters to represent a code, or somesuch. But, eventually saw the errors I had, and corrected without too much trouble.

    So a nice FriPuz that fought back. Nice one, Henry.

    Happy Friday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  24. Anonymous8:56 AM

    A rein never goes in a horse’s mouth. A bit goes in the mouth. The reins go in the (human) hands.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It say FROM, not IN

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:57 AM

      But the clue was "comes straight from" and that it does (or at least from the side of the mouth).

      Delete
  25. Very enjoyable puzzle. Reins don’t go in horses’ mouths, bits do, but I can live with it.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I waited until I had more crosses on the IBID/ETAL answer mixup. Liked it a lot, didn’t notice the Golden issue and as usual the pet pics are fabulous. Thanks to all who sent them in, love seeing your fur babies.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Ride the Reading9:06 AM

    Was roughly easy-medium here - but it didn't start out that way. I usually start with the Downs in the top row, then switch to Acrosses. EMU, TANG, LICIT (thought it could also be LegaL), SUR, PAN, SATIE, SER, OVUM - had none of those. So ended up moving on down.

    ACT, AIR and THE GOLDEN SPIKE went in (tho I had okS instead of XES for a while - EXPOS cleared that up). Was able to build back up after filling in more of the middle.

    Thanks, Henry Josephson. Fun puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Pretty smooth, except for the GAIA/GAeA kealoa, it all went in, and the long acrosses were a lot of fun--although MINERAL DEPOSIT and REMAIN ANONYMOUS fell a little flatter than the others. The "high art" clue was especially fun, even though I saw through it right away.

    You only LOB a softball if it's slow-pitch; and silkscreens by Warhol (or anyone else) are prints, not paintings. No big deal, unless you want your daily newspaper to be accurate.

    And if you want to go view the bear cubs in their DEN, I'll wait for you here.

    It was nice to see Rhea (clue for 1-D) near her sister GAIA, and reflected with foreshortening as REA down below.

    ReplyDelete
  29. @Henry Josephson, congratulations on your debut! I look forward to your next one.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Did anyone else have tongueLASHINGS before tongueTWISTERS?

    ReplyDelete
  31. My first reaction is that you all are a bloodthirsty lot, with all the enthusiasm for I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU; but I have to admit it's a pretty good answer, well clued.

    I had missed the paired 101 verbs, got ETRE from the crosses without looking at it; thanks, @Pablo!

    ReplyDelete
  32. Some good longer answers, but not a fan of a themeless with only 10 answers that are longer than 5 letters.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Tendría que matarte.

    A wonderful puzzle top to bottom. Every one of the longer answers is a gem. Probably gonna make the experienced solvers weep at its easiness, but I enjoyed the journey.

    Propers: 7
    Places: 2
    Products: 5
    Partials: 4
    Foreignisms: 6
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 24 of 70 (34%)

    Funnyisms: 4 🙂

    Tee-Hee: SNOT.

    Uniclues:

    1 What I'm sure my family thinks when I sing in the shower.
    2 Acreage for sleepy espionagers.

    1 TENOR ARIA ... OH MY (~)
    2 SPIES INN LAND (~)

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: One recommending the best way to destroy African civilization. BOERS' DEAR ABBY.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  34. Really fun and rewarding puzzle! More challenging than an average Friday for me.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Gorgeous long answers -- and a lot of them! I got ANSWERED TO NO ONE off just the ANS, though, being me, I checked a couple of crosses before writing it in. How can you not love an answer like ANSWERED TO NO ONE? And when you cross it with answers like UNICORN STARTUPS, TONGUE TWISTERS, SNOT-NOSED, REMAIN ANONYMOUS and most of all I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU, well, isn't this just the most colorful grid in ages!

    Has Henry been reading too many spy thrillers? SPIES! REMAIN ANONYMOUS! ANSWERED TO NO ONE! I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU! Lots of fodder for our @Gill and, even though it's not Monday, I would urge her to weigh in here with one of her hilarious stories. You'll never get better material to work with than this, @Gill.

    It's interesting, though, how long answers can actually make a puzzle so much easier. Perhaps today is the exception that proves the rule, but every single long answer was apparent to me from word pattern recognition and I filled this in quickly and with no difficulty at all. Still a lovely, colorful grid.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Woke up late again. They won't let me sleep. This is torture

    ReplyDelete
  37. I was wondering if I was getting better or if this was just a very easy Friday (I'll give myself some leeway and say some of both!) I ended up having to look up a few things but overall I was able to use out quite a bit of it which was a nice change!

    ReplyDelete
  38. Joe Klonowski10:34 AM

    Joan is a Catalan name, not a Spanish-lanuage name. The Spanish name for John is Juan.

    And Joan Miró in particular would've likely identified as a Catalan before or instead of a Spaniard. Some of his works are explicitly Catalan nationalist and anti-Francoist.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Easy. AIR, SOUL, and ELLY were my only WOEs and I had no serious erasures.

    Fun Friday, liked it a bunch! …or what @Rex said.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Anonymous10:56 AM

    I LOVED this puzzle. The most fun I've had with a puzzle in awhile. "I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU" made my morning!

    ReplyDelete
  41. Unlike the cascade down exhilaration for Rex and others, I experienced this one as a walk up experience. Just couldn't grasp enough answers in the top two-thirds of the grid to get going. Agree with Nancy that the long answers eventually unlocked things for me, beginning with ID HAVE TO KILL YOU which fell even though I had a couple of incorrect letters in place. From there I built back up toward the top and finished without errors in what turned out a medium time for me.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Craig Shelton11:07 AM

    Just loved today’s puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous11:24 AM

    You watch cubs on WGN.

    ReplyDelete
  44. 43A should have been "Cubs watching place". Too easy as written.

    Sometimes my partner and I take turns making progress, I came back to a grid with I_HfVE__ etc. in it and I was like "uhhh..." I'm not surprised Rex never saw the clue.

    Good puzzle though, had a blast.

    ReplyDelete
  45. Anonymous11:50 AM

    We visited Promontory Point in Utah. If you’re a history buff, you’ll find it thrilling. Just to stand on the spot where the Golden Spike was driven into the ground gave me goosebumps. There’s a series about the Transcontinental Railroad called Hell on Wheels. I can’t recommend it enough. Realistic and gritty (and the lead actor is quite handsome!).

    ReplyDelete
  46. To Carol, Henry and Lily's mom -- My Teddy looks like Henry's twin, no exaggeration. Is Henry, by any chance, a Havanese???

    ReplyDelete
  47. M and A11:59 AM

    Good fillins, considerin all them longball answers swishin around, crossin each other, all over the day-um place.
    ODEA! An ancient crossword fave! Better clue: {Idea where I got inflated??} = ODEA.

    And a puz with both "masks" & ANONYMOUS, too boot. And the Jaws of Themelessness, all-in-all makin it an official Great FriPuz.

    fave word: SNOTNOSED.
    fave clue: {Came down after getting lifted up?} = SKIED. cleverer than snot.
    least fave crossin: GAIA/JOAO. Needs to buy a consonant.
    staff weeject picks: SER & SUR. Lesser Knight of the Round Table titles. honrable mention to the MAO-->MOO-->FOO word ladder.

    Thanx, Mr. Josephson dude. Superb debut. Liked it all.

    Masked & [remain]Anonymo6Us

    and further more...

    "Fall Collections" - 8x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  48. I noticed that JUAN (from MARIJUANALEAVES) and JOAO are sharing a "J". It feels like ilLICIT activity in an Iberian John.

    Mrs.Egs and I jointly signed an I.O.U. for TENOR so grand. Then we worked side by side to pay it off and eventually got it back from the lender. We feel like we really got our CHIT together.

    We've seen an awful lot about Mendel and GREENPEAS and GENES lately. In fact the only place with more about GENESis the Bible.

    I agree with the consensus that this was a fantastic debut. Thanks and congrats, Henry Josephson.

    ReplyDelete
  49. Enjoyable solve but the shine for some of the marquee entries was dulled for me when I noticed that MARIJUANA LEAF, UNICORN STARTUP, TOP SEED, GOLDEN SPIKE, MINERAL DEPOSIT, TONGUE TWISTER and ANSWER TO NO ONE all needed some letter count inflation (LCI) to do their job. That's not meant to be a PAN of the puzz since I thought its overall TENOR had good GENES.

    Over forty Japanese ships were sunk in waters around PALAU (22D) during WWII making it a world class destination for scuba divers interested in wreck diving.

    The MAYAN (63A) ruins in Tulum are easily accessible since they are a short distance from Cancún, Mexico which has an international airport.

    Never thought of the lymph node as an ORGAN (34D) so I learned something there.

    ReplyDelete
  50. Wow. ( I haven't read the comments yet.)
    I said yesterday that I was "looking forward to tomorrow." And I was rewarded :)
    What a debut, Henry and on a Friday!
    Didn't know TOP SEEDED, JOAO, ELLY (gotta remember that since I only know "ELLY Mae Clampett"). But really liked MARIJUANA LEAVES,
    I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU, & REPO.
    Once again, a great debut Henry & thank you. Now I'm looking forward to your next puzzle!
    (BTW Rex - Cinnamon sent a 'Thank You' note to your inbox - it's not a pic 🐾



    ReplyDelete
  51. Anonymous12:34 PM

    Nice memory of being in Porto for the Feast of St John (Sao Joao) where strangers bop one another with plastic hammers

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  52. Puzzles with grid spanners tend to be pushovers and today's offering was no exception. Due to being slow on SPAS and my lack of familiarity with JOAO and SATIE the north center was the only section with late week resistance.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Yes the best puzzle in weeks... so many good things and very few bad ones. My only problem was that it was over too soon (10:40 for me).

    Great long answers, especially ANSWERED TO NO ONE crossing ID HAVE TO KILL YOU. And not too many names... ELLY was the only Unknown Name for me. Also they somehow resisted the urge to nameify the clues; ARIA is so often clued as "[some unknown song name], e.g." but today it's so nicely clued via "Brava!"

    Hello ESSO my old friend; you're back to a gas brand but today without "Canada" in the clue. And DOLMA is not Greek?... huh.

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  54. Alice Pollard2:40 PM

    Loved it. Mediumish for me. the AAA curveball was good enough for me to share with my non-crossword family.

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  55. EasyEd3:17 PM

    Liked this puzzle. But for some reason could not pull LICIT or JOAO out of the brain, much less SATIE, so finally got started at the bottom with a reflex entry of IDHAVETOKILLYOU. Built up slowly from there, not an easy one for me, but enjoyable challenge.

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  56. Anonymous3:30 PM

    Apparently I'm the only one who had an issue with the clue for TONGUETWISTERS.. A few might be harsh, ie: grating to the ear. But how could something like "silly Sister Susie sitting by the sea" be harsh? Tricky or difficult, yes, but I don't think harsh fits.

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  57. I'm in total agreement with OFL except on the easy rating. After a quick start with EMU, TANG and ARIA, I plopped in “I’ll” pass, and I fell very hard for the “scrubs and masks” misdirect, so no SPA treatment for me. I also resisted CAT for a while, thinking it could be peT or even Leo (was President Garfield a summer baby?).

    SIDLE - fun word and it was my first thought for the crab but waited to be sure wasn’t "crawl". Things got easier traveling south and that lifted me back up where I finished with the S in SPAS/SUR.

    Great debut and I hope we see more from Henry Josephson.

    @Lewis, your lovely quotes the last couple of days have put a smile on my face - thank you!

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  58. Anonymous4:44 PM

    WAY too much crosswordese. Hated this.

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  59. Very impressed with the elegance of the grid and the long answer stacks, especially liked the bottom two but man I found this one hard. Brain was not clicking today, some shorter fill was just not falling for me- took forever for things like LICIT, TANG, CHIT and SUR to fall. But all on me, they beat me fair and square.
    Like someone else said, there is some really nice aesthetic to how MOO and FOO fall symmetrically in the grid.
    I did have the same type of cascading experience that @Rex did but my journey was MUCH slower and not without several mishaps. All worth the hard work though, congrats Henry on the debut!
    Need to clear my head so going out to get some AIR to soothe my SOUL for a bit. OH MY, smells like someone is burning their yard waste next door, I hope that’s all it is as the smell of MARIJUANA LEAVES me cold these days.

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  60. Anonymous10:02 PM

    On WEDNESDAY'S puzzle, 12D was "ESSO" - and today 13D is also "ESSO". Same word, same location. Is this a new trend?

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  61. Anonymous6:01 AM

    I’m a day behind and came here to understand the Rhea/EMU thing? Why is that obvious? Who is Rhea? I tried looking up some goddess I’d never heard of but nothing came up. And Rex’s “explanation” didn’t help anything.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:25 AM

      He probably expected you to know a rhea is a bird.

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