Disney villain with a pet parrot / TUES 12-31-24 / Singer Bega a.k.a. "The King of Mambo" / Adjective in the theme of "The Addams Family" / Alternative to "Hasta la vista" / Boy king of Egypt
Tuesday, December 31, 2024
Hi, everyone, it’s Clare for the last Tuesday of the month and the last crossword of the year! I hope everyone is having a happy holiday season. I went home to California for the first time in a couple of years, which was lovely. I packed a full suitcase and then proceeded to wear the same, like, three outfits the entire time (read: sweats). I also had my hands very, very full… ’cause I got a puppy!! I picked her up (along with her brother for my mom) and took her to California, then brought her back to D.C., so Christmas was full of “Oh, no’s” and “Awws” and “I’m tired’s” and lots of puppy cuddles (and nips). I’m now back in D.C. trying to get my puppy used to the loud noises and people and sirens and a new place with my sister’s dog, who’s 14 and doesn’t really play the same way as my puppy's brother. But my dog, Red, is super adorable, and I’m just trying to be a good puppy mom to her!
Anywho, I’ll shut up about puppy stuff (maybe, at least until the end) and get on to the puzzle…
Relative difficulty: Medium-ish
THEME: A pair of words that clue phrases that incorporate a word that means (or is) two
Theme answers:
- POWER COUPLE (17A: VOLT, AMP)
- PAIR OF SOCKS (32A: PUNCH, WALLOP)
- DOUBLE DIGIT (40A: FINGER, TOE)
- TWO POINTERS (59A: HINT, TIP)
Nixon in China is an opera in three acts by John Adams with a libretto by Alice Goodman. Adams's first opera, it was inspired by U.S. president Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to the People's Republic of China. The work premiered at the Houston Grand Opera on October 22, 1987, in a production by Peter Sellars with choreography by Mark Morris. When Sellars approached Adams with the idea for the opera in 1983, Adams was initially reluctant, but eventually decided that the work could be a study in how myths come to be, and accepted the project. Goodman's libretto was the result of considerable research into Nixon's visit, though she disregarded most sources published after the 1972 trip. (Wiki)
• • •
That was a solid puzzle to end the year. It was a cute theme (even if I do have some nits). And it has a lot of nice, uncommon fill (even if there was some typical crosswordese). There wasn’t a revealer, which didn’t affect the solve but which (selfishly speaking) left it much harder for me to try to accurately describe the theme! Like, how do you say the theme is words synonymous with “two” when one of the actual words is TWO? But that description was the best I could come up with.
The idea of having two words in the clue lead to answers that involve pairings worked. And I liked the theme phrases, my favorite being POWER COUPLE (17A). But I kept finding nits with the theme (maybe blame my lack of sleep because of the puppy). Why are PAIR, DOUBLE, and TWO at the start for the three of the answers but COUPLE is at the end of one of the theme answers? And the answers being plural or singular felt arbitrary to me. My main issue is with DOUBLE DIGIT (40D), which I think should have been made plural. It just doesn’t make sense to have that one singular while also having TWO POINTERS.
After my original annoyance, as I kept looking at the puzzle, I found more and more that I liked. There were a lot of words that are uncommon in puzzles that zhuzhed this one up. You don’t see COFFEE CAKE (11D), SPOOKY (46A), TOPSY (15A), KIWI (3D), DEXTER (48D), ADIÓS AMIGO (28D), SHIVA (14A), JAFAR (22A), etc. in a crossword every day. And then there was LORETTA Lynn (41D: Country legend), who’s amazing. The aforementioned POWER COUPLE (17A) is a fun phrase. CLEAR SKIES (12D) and IT’S UP TO YOU (29D) also work well.
The punny clue/answers were also good. 54: Present day, in brief as XMAS got me for a while before it hit me that it meant the day for, well, opening presents. I was all set to rail against this clue/answer being in the puzzle on New Year’s Eve instead of Christmas and then had to backtrack. 26A: Apple gadgets as CORERS confused me so much at first, but that was clever — I’m just so used to seeing products made by Apple in the puzzle. 6A: Drive crazy? as SPEED felt straightforward to me, so I did originally wonder about there being a question mark. My biggest “aha” moment was well after I’d completed the puzzle and just couldn’t figure out why 30D: Police work? was SONG, and then it hit me that the clue was referring to the band.
I’ve been playing gin rummy (or, more often in my household, gin 500) for most of my life, and I’ve somehow never heard of MELD (27D: Gin rummy combo) before. You learn something new every day! 49D: Gold, silver, or bronze got me when I typed in “metal” instead of MEDAL. 18D: “Nixon in ___" (John Adams opera) with CHINA wasn’t overly familiar to me, especially not in relation to John Adams. For 36A: Member of K-pop’s Blackpink, I originally typed in ROSÉ, the other member of Blackpink with four letters in her name (and with an “s” as the third letter, to add to my confusion) instead of LISA. I wonder if this gave some people pause, as those of you who aren’t as familiar with K-pop and Blackpink probably don’t know the names of the individual members (though they all have launched solo careers). And if we want to get technical, TUT (44D: Boy king of Egypt) is actually a nickname (full name is Tutankhamun), so the clue could indicate that (even if the name commonly used is King Tut). Anyway, that answer did play off nicely with ROI (34A: French king).
There was some mundane crosswordese thrown in the puzzle, of course. But overall, the puzzle was a good one to end the year on. Now on to another year of crosswords (and write-ups)!
Misc.:
Misc.:
- To quote the iconic Edna Mode in response to 50D: Certain superhero accessories as CAPES —
- Pshhh, a game of WAR is never “simple” (5D: Simple two-player card game). These can last hours — and obviously require intense skill and focus!
- I would like to use this opportunity presented to me by 13D: Fortunetellers to plug the show “Agatha All Along.” It’s absolutely incredible, and one of the characters is a SEER (technically a divination witch) played by Patti LuPone. She’s fantastic in the show, and the show itself is unique and incredible. I’ve now run out of adjectives.
- My DYE JOBS (10D: Certain salon offerings) don’t involve going to a salon but instead involve me using a box dye over my sink. It kinda sorta works.
- So sorry to my sister, who didn’t win the MEGA Millions (55D) (and share it with me, of course) pot of something like $1.2 billion. It went to some other person in Northern California. Ugh.
Finally, in keeping with Rex, here’s my own version of Holiday Pet Pics, where it’s just my new puppy, Red! When I grew up skiing in Lake Tahoe, my home mountain had a chairlift that was one of my favorites and was memorable in other ways, too. My races were often held there. While on that lift, my dad got a call from a soccer coach saying that I’d made a team that was quite important to me. I watched a World Cup race there, and Mikaela Shiffrin and I practically became BFFs at the bottom. (I swear she smiled into the crowd while looking straight at me.) Anyway, the lift is called Red Dog. So I now have a Red dog!
I’ve been having fun with puns now. My pup is black and white and “Red” all over. My dad told me that when I was close to getting her, he was issuing a “Red” alert. My sister and I love books, so she’ll be a well-“Red” dog… etc.
Here’s Red trying to eat the holiday decor as we were taking it down.
And finally, here's Red intently planning how she would get from the bench to chew my phone (again).
And that's all from me. Have a Happy New Year!
68 comments:
Hi Clare! Great update on your life / puppy. Best new year to you.
Well, I thought this was pretty great. I tried solving it down clues only; almost bailed on it, then did one little cheat... success! I had 3 consecutive blank downs at 23, 11, and 12 which left me helpless. The cheat was pretty minimal... we don't have In-N-Out here in western Canada and never ever seen one, so not the slightest idea what might be yellow in their logo, so googled it to discover it was an ARROW (why this clue??.. see below). For 12 down "Sunny forecast" I tried ROSY FUTURE but no go. Finally figured it out with the help of the themers.
I was sure that 59 across was the revealer and expected something revelatory from the clue. But no!!... it's just another theme answer. It was fun to finally read the across clues which added a whole dimension to the theme. Anyway, I liked it just fine.
I was a little disappointed that even with Will's return, the Nameification of clues continues: EPICS, SPOOKY, CHINA, ARROW, PONY all clued using unnecessary names. Why??
Easy-medium for me (medium-ish also works). I did not know LISA (or Blackpink hi @Clare) and LOU and I had usa before OLE and mopes before POUTS (this happens when you don’t check the crosses). i did know Nixon in CHINA.
Smooth, cute, clever and fun, liked it.
Agree it was solid Tuesday puzzle, with some good and not common answers.
At first I thought" power couple" was the strongest theme answer, but in reading back over the puzzle, it was"Pair of Socks" for "punch, wallop" that somehow made me chuckle.
H
Red is adoREDble! Thanks for sharing, Clare! Medium for a Tuesday.
Overwrites:
StEEr before SPEED at 6A
gIgS before HITS at 21A
SABerS before SABRES at 30A (I get that wrong every time)
@Clare MEtAL before MEDAL at 49D
WOEs:
LISA of Blackpink at 36A
I'd never heard of Mike EPPS (8D), but I didn't need to with Omar in the clue.
Will Shortz
Hi Clare,
Best of luck with Red - what a cutie :)
Thanks for sharing (I'll be back later)
Never heard of Blackpink. But, having looked them up, I’ve learned something new. I’d have loved to see “Blackpink” as an answer. But crowbarring the band into the puzzle experience in this way, as part of the clue for the name of a band member, on a Tuesday, seems highly questionable, and left a sour taste.
Not to be a downer so early on New Years Eve day but let's just be happy Will is back :)
Happy & Healthy New Year to all!
Congrats on adopting Red, he seems adorable! You might say the theme is all about duos :)
I found it very easy after picking up the friendly theme with PAIROFSOCKS. My only hesitation was with XMAS as "present day" on Dec. 31, but now I realize "present" meant "gift." Will Shortz has used that misdirect previously, so I should have known better.
Hi Clare - thanks for the nice write-up today. This was an interesting, slightly more difficult than usual solve for me. I just couldn’t see the theme, and was taking an o-fer on the Disney, Showtime and K-pop stuff, so it started to feel like I was headed for a dnf. Finally, I pieced together POWER COUPLE and the floodgates opened. A nice way to start off the last morning of the year.
This is a tight theme. Lovely theme answers, all of them, and for fun, I tried to come up with more. It was no easy task. The two that hit me were TWIN BILL, clued [BEAK, INVOICE], and DUPLICATE BRIDGE, clued [DENTURE, SPAN], but I don’t like them because “twin” and “duplicate” mean that the examples are exactly the same, and they’re not.
Amazingly, tight as this theme is, Michael found answers that fit symmetrically. Actually, all four theme answers have the same number of letters (11)!
Tight *and* symmetrical. A pair of bravos on that, Michael!
I liked seeing a couple of echoes to recent puzzles – a down ARROW countering Sunday’s UP ARROWS, and ADIOS AMIGO, which appeared Friday. I also liked seeing ABYSS smack dab at the bottom. In addition, I loved seeing five palindromes, including a rare-in-crosswords five-letter one in TENET.
Michael, you have had 18 daily puzzles in the Times, and they have appeared every day of the week, except for Saturday. Is “hit the cycle” one of your New Year’s resolutions?
In any case, your lovely puzzle today ended the solving year for me on a sweet note. Thank you so much for making this!
Administrative note: Tomorrow, I'll be posting my Favorite Clues of 2024 list...
Just gonna say: King of Mambo is still Perez Prado, not the guy who used a Perez Prado sample in a one-hit wonder song.
When John Adams’s Nixon in China premiered back in the 1980s I thought it was gimmicky. An opera about Richard Nixon? Give me a break. But revisiting it over the years, I’ve come to find that it holds up really well and is beautiful and genuinely moving in places. Part of that may be the music growing on me and part of it may be getting more distance from the historical Tricky Dick.
Pretty good puzzle. Very cute puppy.
Is IRANI a singular noun?
Hi Clare,
I’m a lot older than you, been playing gin rummy my whole life and never heard of a meld either. Go figure! Your puppy Red is adorable and looks like she’s going to grow into a big girlie. Anyway I’d like to wish all of you on this blog a happy and healthy new year!
Ending the year on a fine note. Will is back, a fun crossword, a reverse rainbow on Connections and solved Octordle Rescue with a guess to spare.
Will editor on paper version, wishing him the best.
Hey All !
Liked the 10 stacked Downs in NE/SW.
Had iroNED before EVENED.
Agree with @Clare on the Themer nits.
Working today and tomorrow. I know, poor me! Har.
Nice TuesPuz. What ever happened to Holiday puzs though? We had the two for XMAS, but how many others were there this past year? I have a New Years theme one that's been under construction for years now (lazily revisit it to try to finish it, knowing that it'll most likely get rejected if I were to send it in). Maybe in 2025.
Man, 2025, Holy cow. I (barely) remember being 25, thinking "I'm a quarter century old! Dang!", and now we're a quarter century into the 2000's. Dang! As much as getting older beats the alternative, why can't time slow down a bit?
Hope y'all have a fun and safe night tonight. Be careful out there. Party it up, but be responsible.
Last chance this year to grab a copy of my book, Changing Times! (Of course, you can get it anytime next year! 😁) Search Darrin Vail on Amazon or barnesandnoble.com. 👍
Happy NYE!!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I literally had the exact same thoughts about the puzzle, very cute, but the theme answers were not consistent in a way that would have made it more pleasant. Red is the absolute cutest! I want a puppy now. congrats on your new family member.
Tu decides.
This was two much fun. A double dose of adiós amigo this semana.
Not sure why a crate is orange? Are these east coast crates? Are they mature crates? What is going on in the world of crates? Out here in the sticks, they're made of wood. They're brown, right?
Propers: 8
Places: 1
Products: 9
Partials: 7
Foreignisms: 5
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 30 of 76 (39%)
Funnyisms: 6 😅
Uniclues:
1 Cost of being bonded and beautiful.
2 Kitchen knives used in horror movies.
3 Pep talk to fuzzy fruit representative.
4 Why my belly looks like it does.
1 POWER COUPLE FEE
2 MAIDEN SABRES
3 KIWI, IT'S UP TO YOU
4 MEGA COFFEE CAKE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Iceberg influencer. HERBIVORE POWER BROKER.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
OMG! Puppy! Smoosh, smoosh, smoosh.
Welcome back Will. So happy to have you back.
@okanaganer 1:49 AM
I have 21 days as the over-under for the first complaints about Will's editing, so one day is too under. 😉 I'm gonna pretend this never happened.
To the gang here, and that includes Rex and his subs – you provide the perfect chaser to solving the puzzle, taking it from a solo to a group experience, where I become enmeshed in wit, humor, insight, reactions, and stories. What a gift! Warm wishes to all of you for a sweet 2025, and may it be sparked with a surfeit of happy surprises!
Thanks for the nice write-up, Clare. Your new pup is adorable but are you sure he isn't a Commie? Har
I feel like crossing Blackpink with the gin rummy clue has potential to be a major Natick. I know who Blackpink are, but no idea of their names, and I’ve never played gin rummy in my life, so I pondered if it was MELD/LISA, or MEnD/nISA. LISA is obviously a more common name, but as they’re Korean and pop stars I figured it was plausible.
Hah! Did anyone else get a flash of The Cisco Kid with ADIOS AMIGO(s)?
Absolutely delightful. Cute and amusing and original. Another theme I wish I'd thought of. The exceptionally well-chosen themers are all different enough that each one brings its own special chuckle. My favorite was DOUBLE DIGIT, but has PAIR OF SOCKS ever been clued more deliciously? Kudos, Michael -- this is as good as a Tuesday puzzle gets.
Same WOES as some others, viz. EPPS, LISA and LOU as clued, and you can add DEXTER, another Showtime drama that I've never seen, which kept the clue for XMAS from making sense, and it was pretty diabolical already. All the crosses were easy enough so no real slowdowns.
Got to the last themer which I guessed was going to start with TWO and therefore expected it to be TWOOFAKIND, which, you may have noticed, it was not. I still like it though.
Nice solid Tuesday, ML. A Marvelous Last puzzle of the year, and thanks for all the fun.
Welcome back to Mr. Shortz. The new year is looking better already, and hoping everyone here on the Rex bus has a happy and healthy 2025.
Fun puzzle, fun review, fun blog, life is good! Not knowing the bands in a way made the puzzle easier—just relied blindly on the crosses. Happy New Year All!
Oranges shipped in crates
ENDORSE, SUPPORT
QUESTION, EXCLAMATION
(Answers below)
DYEJOBS sounds like employment for Australians who don't work at night.
Nice appearance for RuPaul's seldom-seen cousin, RUDEST.
I love boxing. I went to ABOUT the other night and saw more than a PAIROFSOCKS and lots of HITS (sorry to be using all this technical boxing lingo).
I wrote an opera in anticipation of what will happen to our next President (sic) as a result of his McDonald's habit. It's called Trump Angina.
Love the write-up and, of course, Red. Thanks, Clare. Also thought the puzzle was great. So another thanks to Michael Lieberman. And a Happy New Year to this whole blog community, which is a most enjoyable part of my life.
BACKBRACE
MARKTWAIN
Hand up for being a gin rummy player who’s never heard of MELD. Great write-up Clare, and what an adorable puppy! Happy New Year!
Claire, congratulations on your Red dog! Looks like she’s ‘Reddy’ for anything!
SPEEDy solve today, cute theme with interesting fill and nice longer downs to balance the themers. They EVEN tell a story: ADIOS AMIGO, IT’S UP TO YOU now. I’m off to Mauna KEA. Nothing but CLEAR SKIES, COFFEE CAKE and KIWI for this MATURE MAIDEN.
The puzzle does have its dark side, with STOIC POUTS, a SPOOKY (EKE!) ABYSS, ASPS, PAIN, HITS, and WAR. Watching Christiane Amanpour on PBS last night was so depressing. Good riddance to 2024, but it’s hard to imagine how things will get any better next year.
How ABOUT a SONG or TWO to PEP things up?
No More Tears - Duet with Donna Summer and Barbra Streisand
MAIDEN Voyage - Herbie Hancock
Glad Will is back. I also really love Joel and his very clever clues. He is amazing.
Agreed. And you – without fail – provide the most objective and most tactful reviews of anyone in this gang. I also appreciate your explanations on the finer points of construction, which sometimes go way above my pay grade but do help me better understand the creative process. Best wishes to you and your family for a very happy new year.
I was annoyed by POWER COUPLE at first because neither volts or amps are units of power (which is of course the watt). But P(watts)=V(volts) x I(amps), so volts and amps are a COUPLE of sorts in that formula. Phew!
I've certainly heard of MELDing in card games. It is something you do (verb) in Pinochle (laying down your scoring combinations just after the bidding, and before the tricks are taken); the result of this being your MELD (noun). But I've played gin rummy all my life and never heard of MELDing in rummy!
MELD, of course, is also a 20th Century word invention, a portmanteau (??) combining weld and melt. This was a controversial vocabulary shift, one which I resisted!! ("NO!, meld doesn't mean to "blend together'!! It's a step in Pinochle!") It is also controversial whether MELD qualifies as a portmanteau or just a blend. But now it is accepted and included in all English dictionaries.
Fun puzzle on a Tuesday New Year’s Eve. Reminded me of the old gum commercials. DOUBLE your pleasure, double your fun.
Clare, thanks for sharing pictures of your sweet fur baby with us. All puppies are adorable, but Red is irresistibly precious. Wishing you many years of fun and good times together.
Hi Clare. Nice name for your pup! YNWA
HOT, DOG!*
Nice puztheme. Fun to decode all the pairins.
some faves: ITSUPTOYOU. COFFEECAKE. SPOOKY. Bein able to somehow recall JAFAR.
staff weeject pick: WAR. OK card game, altho I prepare its cousin card game, called OH HELL. Taught to M&A by his [new, substitute] junior high school homeroom teacher [after we bonded -- a few weeks after he had thought I was the class trouble-maker]. Long story, involvin some accusations by girl bullies.
Thanx, Mr. Lieberman dude. Nice [dye] job.
And thanx, Clare and Red.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s. * {HOT, DOG} = TWIN BEDS.
... oh, and ...
"The Runt Is Afoot" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Flew through this one & enjoyed it.
Great puzzle, Michael, thank you :)
p.p.s.s.
That’s “prefer” in the first msg, not “prepare”. sheeesh.
M&A House of Corrections
This is how I remembered the chorus to the Addams Family theme:
They’re ooky and they’re spooky
Mysterious and kooky
And altogether ???,
The Addams Family
After finishing the puzzle I googled for the ??? and discovered I’d left out creepy at the start, ah well.
Anyone for the theme to Mister Ed? Let’s begin: A horse is a horse...
Thanks, Michael, for the fun Tuesday; hi, Clare, adorable puppy (and yes! to what Edna Mode says); welcome back, Will Shortz!
I thought the theme's pun consistency was a little wobbly. Got off to a good start with 17A "VOLT, AMP " POWER COUPLE. Like @Dorkito 11:33, I remembered that VOLTs times AMPS equal watts, a measure of POWER. And POWER COUPLE also can be something entirely different as in, say, married movie stars. Nice word play there, right?
Things went downhill for me from there. As Clare points out, the "duo" part shifted from back to front and continued like that for the remaining themers. PAIR OF SOCKS isn't the most exciting themer, to put it mildly, but at least it's still a noun phrase like POWER COUPLE .
Then there is a shift from a noun phrase to an adjectival one in the next two themers. And as Clare also point out, 40A "FINGER, TOE" are DOUBLE DIGITS. So the S-less version looks like a singular of convenience. That sticks out more so when we get the correct plural TWO POINTERS for 59A "HINT, TIP".
The back to front shift in the duo synonym placement, the shift from noun to adjectival phrases and the questionable singular to proper plural all seem to go against the NYT Submission Guidelines that says "Themes should be...narrowly defined and consistently applied throughout the puzzle. For example, if the theme includes a particular kind of pun, then all the puns should be of that kind."
Maybe these are nits for some of you folks but if you had had numerous puzzle submissions rejected over the years because of "theme inconsistencies", you would see where I'm coming from.
All was not lost. I appreciated the quite low for a themed puzzle 34 black squares which left room for some nice non-theme stuff. So since it's 72 degrees F with a nice breeze and CLEAR SKIES here in Tex-Mex Land, I bid you ADIOS AMIGas y AMIGOs.
Thanks for the great write up Claire! Agree on all points, nothing wrong with this one! Some of the fill was on the Monday easy side of the spectrum but really liked all the long downs as well as the theme. This seemed to have a higher than usual percentage of cute/misdirect cluing for a Tuesday, and I always enjoy that - I liked them all:
*Police work (somehow I sussed this one out pretty quickly)
*Present day, in brief
*Apple gadgets
I'm not much of a gin rummy player so I never heard of Meld as a thing but as always, welcomed the learning experience.
Just yesterday I mentioned @Rex's "loakea" situation for COLA vs. Soda and USAGE vs. Osage (well, Rex also mentioned it :o)) and here it is today in it's purest form! Though today I already had the "K" from COFFEECAKE (a terrific answer that looks just lovely in the grid) so KEA fell quickly.
Does anyone else have a mental block with the spelling of SABRES? I consistently rush to write in SABERS first. I'm from MUCH further down state New York so I never mistakenly write in RANGRES for RANGERS!
A very solid way to end the year. Congrats on the new pup @Claire and happy new year to everyone in this great community! Not to brag, but my New Years plans will likely put me in bed by 10:00 pm :o). I'm off to see A Complete Unknown this afternoon - anyone here see it yet? Thoughts?
@Lewis 9:11 – That’s just what this commentariat is, a solo beginning then a wonderfully creative group share. You described it beautifully. A happy and healthy new year 2025 to you, Lewis, and to everyone here.
My frugal father always joked he wanted to be buried in an orange crate. It was a gimme.
When I was in High School in the 40s, Canasta was all the rage. All ages were playing it day and night. Melding was a major part of the game and the word was frequently used. What ever happened to Canasta? Meld was a gimme for me.
I had the same thought process. Post-solve, I learned that LISA is actually Thai.
I learned how to play canasta when I lived with a Spanish family during my Junior Year Abroad program in Spain. more than fifty years ago. We played every Sunday and I have no idea how to say "meld" in Spanish.
Feliz y prospero ano nuevo, and please excuse my lack of diacriticals.
I too enjoy the group commentary after the solve and adding Lewis’ sweet to Rex’s sour makes the experience even more pleasant. I’m delighted that Will is back and commend Joel for a great job filling in.
No pics of Red's brother?
Happy New Year to one and all.
(I tried to post this earlier, but I don't see it up. Apologies if it somehow appears twice.)
Nixon in CHINA fell right in for me since it was my go-to music when I painted some rooms in my house decades ago. I heard John Adams on NPR once tell a story that stayed with me. When he was in his teens, he was a member of a community band that was terrible. You could barely discern what tune they were trying to bang out. But one day they were set to perform in a local mental institution as a goodwill gesture. As the band was setting up, the patients were brought in and they were in various states of disarray -- drooling, staring into space, mumbling to themselves, and so on. And then the band began to play and it was as if their lights were turned on. They all turned to watch and listen in wonder. They slowly shuffled their way towards the band and encircled them, enraptured for the entire performance. Adams said he never saw anything like it and it was then that he decided to pursue a life in music. If it could reach such lost souls so deeply, he wanted to be part of it.
Sam
Irani is singular
MELD was a gimme for me, too, @oldactor. Indeed, there was no way to play Canasta without knowing the word MELD. And people were still playing Canasta in the 1950s.
Liked this puzzle
The inconsistencies in the theme ( which as usual I didn’t notice) are offset as has been noted by the fact that all theme answers are of the same length and the top 2 positions mirror the bottom 2.
People complain about the over use of computer sources by puzzle constructors and then set consistency standards that seem to me to be over the top.
Until I read the blog I missed the Police reference because I never had to look at the clue. Good excuse for a name clue.
And we get a misdirection with “Apple product “ on the other side.
For whatever reason the puzzle was in my wheelhouse.
Confused a bit about Claire’s reference to John Adams. He is the composer of the opera. Never saw the opera but liked his opera Dr. Atomic which I saw on PBS
It’s good to see you back. You once mentioned that you played tennis (or maybe paddle ball) with Trapper John. Would like to hear who else you have had the pleasure of working with.
Why were the theme clues in all caps?
Clare! I just realized I know your mom! (Well, actually only met her a few times but she is good friends with a lot of my friends from Lindenwood.) That Tahoe stuff helped the penny drop.
Thank you Clare! Wonderful and fun review as usual! Glad you had such a wonderful holiday topped off with a new Pup! She is adorable! We love our two grrrls! Happy New Year to all you other nice people and to you Miss Clare! See ya next year! Have fun wherever you are Rex! HNY!!
Also melding in Canasta
Adorable puppy! Enjoy!!!
@ Egs thanks again for the laughs . I didn't think the rudest comment was quite up to the Australian one. But the boxing story was very fun and the "apology" in parenthesis got me chuckling out loud. Which the opera kept going.
Happy New year to all.
I believe it was Phil Ochs who declared "I'm a quarter century old and a half century high". I'm not certain because I'm 3/4 of a century high
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