Cornhole action / THU 1-16-25 / What follows T.S.A., weirdly / Sent a reminder text, in lingo / Gaming ___ (console alternatives, for short) / Part of a makeup routine / Something a meter reader reads? / Word that becomes its own synonym if you add a 'k" to the end / Affirmation not usually spoken at a Jewish wedding / First half of a two-volume encyclopedia on physics, aptly?
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Constructor: Rebecca Goldstein and Adam Wagner
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- MOBSCENEST(17A: Brouhahas / Most appalling) [mob scene + obscenest]
- EDNAMODEL (23A: "The Incredibles" costumer / Science class display) [Edna Mode + DNA model]
- CLOSESHOPE (34A: Lock up for the night / Despairs) [close shop + loses hope]
- APRESSKIT (46A: Like some activities at a mountain lodge / Marketing fodder) [après-ski + press kit]
The Common Core State Standards Initiative, also known as simply Common Core, was an American, multi-state educational initiative begun in 2010 with the goal of increasing consistency across state standards, or what K–12 students throughout the United States should know in English language arts and mathematics at the conclusion of each school grade. The initiative was sponsored by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers.
The initiative also sought to provide states and schools with articulated expectations around the skills students graduating from high school needed in order to be prepared to enter credit-bearing courses at two- or four-year college programs or to enter the workforce.
[37D: Housing bubble?] |
Bullets:
- 21A: First half of a two-volume encyclopedia on physics, aptly? (ATOM) — I legit thought "aw that's cute" as I wrote this in. ATOM ... A-TO-M ... good one.
- 30A: Singer/songwriter Reznor (TRENT) — a gimme for any Gen Xer. I think of these days as primarily a composer. With collaborator Atticus Ross, he has two Academy Awards for Best Score (The Social Network, Soul) and an Emmy for Outstanding Musical Composition (Watchmen). Most recently, he and Ross did the music for Challengers (2024).
- 45A: Cornhole action (TOSS) — will admit my first reaction to this was a very Beavis & Butt-Heady "uh......" But it's just the beanbag TOSS game. Of course it's just the beanbag TOSS game. (If you have strict "breakfast test" rules re: the crossword, then definitely do not look at this definition of "cornhole")
- 49A: Affirmation not usually spoken at a Jewish wedding ("I DO!") — I don't think I knew this. And I've been to a Jewish wedding or two. Huh. Live and learn (and maybe pay closer attention next time)
- 8D: Something a meter reader reads? (POEM) — lol leave it to me to stumble over the one clue that is explicitly about my actual job. The second half of my Brit Lit I class covers meter in depth and yet today I was like "so ... someone who stares at a literal yardstick? No wait ... what's the word for a metric yardstick?"
- 42D: Button clicked to advance to a YouTube video (“SKIP AD”) — yes, I too wondered what a SKI PAD was, for a second…
- 56A: What follows T.S.A., weirdly (PRE) — "weirdly" because "PRE" is a prefix meaning "before," so it shouldn't follow anything. But it does. Here:
- 34D: Something to put stock in (CONSOMMÉ) — sincerely read this as [Something to put a sock in] and my only guess was "... 'IT'?"
- 53D: Word that becomes its own synonym if you add a 'k" to the end (MAR) — my eyes glazed over around "synonym" and I was like "nope" and just got this one from crosses. There's really no other way to come at an answer like this. What, are you gonna sit there all day thinking about every three- and four-letter answer in the language? No. I mean, I hope not.
*kealoa = a pair of words (normally short, common answers) that can be clued identically and that share at least one letter in common (in the same position). These are answers you can't just fill in quickly because two or more answers are viable, Even With One or More Letters In Place. From the classic [Mauna ___] KEA/LOA conundrum. See also, e.g. [Heaps] => ATON or ALOT, ["Git!"] => "SHOO" or "SCAT," etc.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
74 comments:
Haha constructor and editor think "fillet" is something you do to a fish. (Filet is what's needed here)
Oops after a brief google I see both are acceptable. MYBAD!
Fun puzzle anyway.
I found it harder than OFL did, a Medium level for a Thursday.
Overwrites:
39A: @Rex nudGED before PINGED
44D: STEady before STEELY
48D: RHiNE before RHONE
50A: BRaH before BRUH, which led to 47D: baCKS before PUCKS as my goal seekers
51A: yokE before HIRE
62A: red(?) before DRY
WOEs:
TRENT Reznor at 30A (I'm definitely not Gen X)
Not the tricky Thursday I look forward to. Quirky little theme in an early week level grid. I liked MOBSCENEST and APRESSKIT.
The JAM
Overall fill was fine - but basic. Cluing tried a little too hard to be cute? The SW was cool with CONSOMMÉ and BIODOME.
I’ll Be Your MIRROR
Pleasant enough Tuesday level solve on a cold Thursday morning.
Pearl of the Quarter
Nice, fun Thursday. Say, did anyone else have GAS for 13A?
Bad sound to hear while bending over
Last letter in was to change BRaH to BRUH. That pair of words makes an interesting Ngram: “brah” was the more common term from 1800 (yes, it’s been around that long) until 2016, when there was a huge uptick in preference for “bruh,” leaving “brah” in the shade. Does anyone here remember a specific popular-cultural event in 2015 or 2016 that might account for that?
Can someone help my understand the "H" clue for ETA?
Once again, I “sorta” got the “two clues means we are looking for two answers” theme construct. Unfortunately, it didn’t help me make much sense of the theme answers, as I was looking for a shared “CORE” (e.g. a common set of shared letters for the handoff).
One of the (many) downsides of a grid full of gibberish is the difficulty encountered tracking down a typo or other error upon completion. I’ve had more trouble on some Thursdays for sure - I just wish that the theme were a little more straightforward; but it’s Thursday so this seems like a fitting opportunity for the Xword sleuths out there to shine. At least I feel like I held my own today.
Does anyone else feel like the clue for WHIPLASH stepped over the line a bit and is flirting with WOE??? territory ?
Same trouble spots as Rex. Quickly resolved each. My reaction to the revealer was “really? That’s it?”
My biggest hang ups were the diacritics. I still haven't a clue what consummé is, and despite growing up in the mountains and learning to ski at age 3, I have never once heard the term aprés ski.
And because every theme answer contains a side with 2 words, I didn't get that it was everything but ends. I thought it was "Edna mode"/"model", "mobs"/"obscenest", "closes"/"loses hope".. so when "ski" was alone in the middle of "a press kit", I was very confused.
took a while
Dunno, I did not find this one easy, over my average. I'd have to rate it as medium for me. I had nudGED before PINGED as well . And sAucE before PASTE. I did not really get the theme right away. And for some reason I thought the rocker's name was Trevor not TRENT. Once I got the revealer, COMMONCORE, I figured out what was happening theme-wise and went back to work on the large missing spaces. Time Consuming!
Me: “Ski pad? What the… Crossing Apres ski? And what does that have to with YouTube?” And then it hit me - doh!!
I thought the theme was clever and well-executed. There can't be very many word combos this works for.
We got gaming PCS, the NES and SEGA all in the same grid.
Not a fan of RAGSON - nothing like a little misogyny to start your day
I didn't notice the double kealoa as I was solving, I guess because the R in BRUH was one of the common letters in that answer. But kealoa BRUH crossing the too-cute didn't-quite-work clue on PUCKS? Yeah, that got me at first.
Greek letter
This, the first NYT collab from this pair, seemed destined to be a winner. Two constructing pros with a penchant for Thursdays, and who each have a twinkle in their eye, with the knack for keeping the solver in a good mood.
I felt that twinkle, for example, in clues such as [Something a meter reader reads], and [First half of a two-volume encyclopedia on physics, aptly?].
I appreciated their skill in
• Coming up with this remarkable theme set at all. How did they do it? Was it, as yesterday’s constructor said, “… thinking really hard”? Was a computer involved? Would Rebecca and/or Adam like to chime in here?
• Seeding beauty into the box with PINGED, MOB SCENE, APRES SKI, LAST LEGS, CICADA, CLOSE SHOP and WHIPLASH.
For some reason, as I scanned the completed grid, my eyes fell on the HOP of HOPE, and the POP of POPIN, and I was thrust back to that glorious period when one of my sons was enamored with Dr. Seuss’s HOP on POP, and, as if I were there again, I relived his excitement and joy.
So, smiles, respect, and heart-warming memories rising out of the box for me, Rebecca and Adam. A winner indeed. How about some more … please? Thank you for a very sweet solve!
The Greek letter eta is H in uppercase.
I didn’t check, but I’m guessing that ETA is considered the Greek letter H. The NYT uses that convention pretty frequently.
Greek Letter
The uppercase Greek letter eta looks like H.
Greek eta is H.
Didn't find it as easy as Rex - had to set it aside and come back to it - but it was pleasant enough. Not knowing Edna Mode slowed things down a bit. Had BRAH/PACKS at the bottom that stopped my from completing the solve right away. And take issue with the notion that all Gen Xers know Trent Reznor - I'm almost exactly Rex's age and had never hear of him! It's a bad day that you don't learn something :)
Not quite in my wheelhouse, with the gamer clues and unknown (to me) singer. So I found it harder than Rex did and had to cheat on the last themer, which was a mystery although I know the term APRESSKI but it was hard to parse and PRESSKIT wouldn't come. I got the theme early on but it was a bit of a slog. Also, BRUH? I guess I’ve seen it, but (eye roll).
Really enjoyed this. Had fun imagining contrived definitions of the combined words.
I liked the way A PRESS KIT made sense on its own and I wished the other themers did as well, but that probably would have been very difficult to accomplish.
Huh?
Hey All !
The ole brain did figure out what was going on with the odd Themers. But it took a bit. Interesting idea.
Fill not too difficult. Everything was COMMON. Har.
Pressed for time this morning, so y'all get a break from my ramblings. You're welcome. 😁
Have a great Thursday!
No F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Based on your comment I looked this up and the term “rag/ragging” is “tease/teasing” (other synonyms like “tormenting”). Anyway…not what I think you think.
This puzzle seemed like an “easy” Thursday to me -at first- because I quickly figured out the themer gimmick and was able to suss COMMONCORE. Then…I just lost interest at my mess in the southeast corner caused by my certainty that IBM was the three-letter early tech company. I figure this boils down to what period of time we used the term “tech” as a sector and the age of the constructors, and that’s okay. My inability to think past my nose was more likely caused by my rare attendance at an after-hours office shindig and a wearier-than-usual puzzle solving brain.
Hopefully I can stop laughing long enough to post this comment. As RP mentioned, I was a bit perplexed - but for way more than a second - by SKI PAD. I actually thought it must be some new millennial slang for fast forwarding videos that I just haven’t learned yet. And of course, I mostly learn the latest millennialisms from crossword puzzles, so maybe this is a debut answer? Luckily for me though, our blog master stays on top of these things and when I saw SKIP AD, I couldn’t help but laugh at my own absurdity. Maybe someday I’ll be more dope, but that ship has probably sailed.
As far as the puzzle goes, I thought it was very clever and liked it a lot. At first, seemed like it was going to be tough but once the trick became clear, that helped fill in a lot of blanks. Pretty easy otherwise and not many names which I always appreciate. Thanks Rebecca and Adam, for the good time and the good laugh.
Dreadful. The only thing worse than a gimmick-based puzzle is a gimmick-based puzzle that Doesn't Work.
I had the exact same experience. This is the the fun of the puzzle. Just when you think you're cruising, there's something that trips you up. I cruised through the west, but got stuck in the mud in the southeast.
I've got to ask Mrs Egs whether ladies caulk and sand before applying PRIMER. It might depend on whether the next coat is latex or acrylic. And speaking of Mrs. Egs, she asked me whether I sent a reminder text to my BFF that we were watching all 5 seasons of Arrested Development last night. "Yes dear," I replied. "I PINGED before I binged.
Do you suppose that around the Vatican they refer to the Bishop of New York as the BONY guy?
I was looking online to buy a mountain BRUH Cave for winter sports, but I got confused when I pushed the SKIPAD button and just saw a bunch of YouTube videos.
They were thinking of giving Edward Scissorhands a shortened moniker, but decided that he was definitely NOTATED.
You know you're out of gas if the needle is PASTE.
I think that Goodfellas is the MOBSCENEST movie I've ever seen. I saw it early because I had APRESSKIT.
I thought this was a great example of not thinking like a MIME - - outside the box. Thanks, Rebecca Goldstein and Adam Wagner
I got the idea of the theme very early on. But getting the idea and figuring out the answers are two entirely different things. I found this to be at the harder end of Thursday-hard -- and I loved it. I loved it for its intricacy and cleverness, as well as for the challenge and the many "Aha Moments" it provided.
Nothing came easily. Maybe if I thought of "brouhahas" as MOB SCENES instead of, say, ADOS. Maybe if I'd ever heard of "The Incredibles" costumer. But even where I'd heard of both components of the COMMON CORE, I had trouble. Both APRES SKI and PRESS KITS are exceedingly well-known to me and yet I really struggled with APRESSKIT.
Some wonderful clues elsewhere: LAST LEGS; PEEPHOLE; and the DOOK-y one that gave me fits: CONSOMME, with a clue of "Something to put stock in". I'm thinking first of cattle; then I'm thinking of the stock market -- and my last 4-letters of OMME just confused me. It took forever to figure it out.
Time to start making my POY list for 2025. This will be my first entry.
Just some random thoughts:
- I got EDNA MODE and thought just MODEL made sense for the other answer. When I got CLOSE SHOP/LOSES HOPE, I realized that it was supposed to be DNA MODEL.
- We have SPYING and PEEPHOLE, and luckily they're not cross-referenced.
- The SPASMS clue works well IMO. The PUCKS clue... not so much. I get that you can stretch the meaning of words with "?"s but PUCKS don't seek anything. The players, they absolutely do "seek goals".
- I've seen the ATOM/A TO M re-parse in cryptic clues for ATOM. The [In] - AT HOME clue/answer pair also reminded me of cryptics, specifically the fact that I constantly forget that "home" in a clue can indicate "IN" in the answer.
Never heard of EDNA What's-Her-Name; still have no idea what '"APRES-SKI" means, except that it's apparently some kind of faux-French "Look how cool and sophisticated we are" routine that recreational skiers indulge in; and . . . OBSCENEST? Really??!
"RAGGING ON" someone, as in harassing or tormenting them, is a longstanding slang. No "isms" implied or suggested.
I could be wrong but I think APRESSKIT is the outlier here since I believe the “second clue”/answer is PRESSKIT. The theme answers require removing the last letter for first clue and removing first letter for second clue. So, the article A that lends to “a press kit” was kind of confusing.
Am mighty inclined to call this rodeo easy-ish, for a ThursPuz. Did have a few extra nanoseconds fall, gettin started in the NW. I blame it on mybad knowledge of electronic gamin applications and makeup applications. Also, EDNA MODE was a total no-know.
OTOH, "Primer" *was* a badass complex 2004 sci-fi flick, that always makes one's head explode, tryin to keep all the time-travel complications straight. M&A Recommended.
But, I digress ...
COMMONCORE revealer was fine by m&e. Much easier to understand than the "Primer" plot line. Did get a hoot outta @RP tryin to blogsplain it to himself, tho.
I can sure see why this puz was a collab effort. Just comin up with a list of suitable themers musta been quite a treasure hunt.
staff weeject pick: IDO. Has both ID & DO in it, a la puztheme. honrable German mention to JA & AM, I'd grant.
some faves included: 69-worder puzgrid. Jaws of Utah black squares. WHIPLASH. PEEPHOLE. OWN/OWETO [double OW!]. PUCKS clue.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms. Goldstein darlin & Mr. Wagner dude. Clever puztheme and good constructioneerin.
Masked & Anonymo2Us
... and now, ITSTIME ...
"High and Dry" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Surprised Rex didn't have anything to say about OBSCENEST, which is a terrible non-word that nobody would ever use. Definitely the cringiest part of the puzzle for me.
Also, is this the debut of the hyperkealoa?!
Trouble getting the gimmick because OBSECENEST looks wrong and EDNAMODE is a who? but finally caught on with CLOSESHOPE, although the SHOP part was tardy in arriving.
Gamer terms were WOE's, I hit SKIPAD daily, but could I see it, no, we are in the TSAPRE group, couldn't see that either, that kind of day. Had to be BRUH because PUCKS but cluing them as "goal seekers" seems to give them some form of cognition, which seems dubious. PRIMER is before you paint something, in my experience (hi @egs).
Hello to TRENT and ANYA. Nice crosswordy names.
Very clever stuff indeed, RG and AW. Really Good Thursday and A Worthy foe. Thanks for all the fun.
I'm calling horseshit on 50A. "Bruh" is a bad thing, "My man!" is a good thing. It could have been clued "Man!," with the same fill, or filled "Brah" with the same clue. (And yes that square added 5 mins to my otherwise beautiful single-digit time ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I struggled a lot, between having never heard the terms APRES SKI or PRESS KIT, and the BRUH/PUCKS cross. I had a lot of wrong answers in that area: SEINE over RHINE, BRAH/BROO over BRUH, and I forgot the term COMMONCORE. I was just completely a mess down there.
51 across team builder. I had sire.
Easy-medium only because of a couple of costly erasures: BRaH before BRUH and misspelling CONSOMMÉ. Other than those this was pretty easy, although I briefly had ibm before AOL.
Liked it, but I had the same misgivings about the theme that @Rex did.
LOL. You outdid yourself today. I’ve been using this cold weather as an excuse to binge on The Sopranos, undoubtedly the MOBSCENEST television series ever.
Well, obviously you're more millennial-er than I am, @Whatsername, because in addition to not knowing all the same millennialisms that you don't know, I also don't have a clue as to what "be more dope" means. I know it doesn't mean "dumber"; I know it's something positive, not negative in today's youth-speak -- but exactly what it means, I don't know.
And "dope" might not even be millennial at all. It might be Gen-X or Gen-Y or Gen-Z or that new one, that Alpha one. (Dear God, are we going to have to go all the way through the Greek alphabet now?) This obsessive "naming" of succeeding generations the nanosecond they emerge from the birth canal is ridiculous -- and it will only contribute to even more tribalism than we already have in our all-too-fragmented society.
I never can tell one "Gen" from the other. I'm content to say "20-somethings", "30-somethings" and so forth as I always have done. That way I don't have to keep track of any particular demographic as other demographics come along to eclipse it.
This rant, btw, is not directed at my good blog pal, @Whatsername, whom I commend on keeping track of as many new coinages as she has managed to do.
Re SKIP AD/SKI PAD, I don’t think there’s been this much fun discussion of a grid entry since the infamous SLO PITCH/SLOP ITCH incident.
TSA PRE means you are Pre-approved to board an airplane without having to go through the ticket checking lines. One has to undergo a questionnaire or interview and pay a fee for this privilege. It’s commonly used by frequent flyers and you can’t see the PRE teller lines split as you wind your way through the boarding process.
that was my last letter as well. BRUH has a decidedly negative connotation in today’s world, like “bruh, i cannot believe you just did that.” the clue “my man!” sounds much more positive to me.
After M-OBSCENES-T showed me the way, the rest of the theme phrases came quickly. It definitely helped to know EDNA MODE, one of my favorite characters ("No capes!"). For me, the hoped-for Thursday trickery came in the non-theme cluing - PEEP HOLE held me up for a good while, CONSOMMÉ required every cross + some staring, and PoCKS defeated me (a couple of days ago, I complained about BRO-fatigue; today I was sunk by a BRUH).
Agree a great POY starter. Re your generational rant above, I used the word dope in a very general sense to mean cool, awesomely with-it, etc. But to be honest, I’m not even sure that’s what it means. Also, I had no idea there’s a Gen Alpha now, so thanks for that update. See? You’re way more enlightened than you knew. ;-)
Ingenious theme. When I first got MOBSCENEST I thought we were going to find some made-up superlatives, or there was some twist I could not see. Well, I missed the twist for sure…
Borrowing from Henry Miller, when I hear the word “Thursday” I reach for my revolver. Per usual, I found this to be a tedious slog.
La escena de turba más obscena.
Clever theme and I'm happy I knew Edna Mode or I could've been in for some sobbing. In America, knowing the tailor for super heroes passes as wisdom. I do feel like a bit of an expert on all things obscene and using the made up word OBSCENEST is itself an obscenity. After the cute theme, and unimaginably low gunk count, so many awkward clues made me cringe and ultimately dislike the rest of the puzzle even though it's trying to be amusing.
Awka-Hall of Fame:
-That enormous clue for the lowly partial PCS.
-The MAIL clue fell like a brick on my skull.
-ATOM's fake clue tried to be cute.
-Parents are important people in the PTA and in a child's life? Who knew?
-WHIT's clue. Ug, Just ug.
-Lots of people RAG ON me, but they're a long way from roasting me.
-A SPOOL can be unwound too.
-Weird flexes?????!! What???
-BRUH, BRAH, BRO are another example of the BAA, MAA, MOO or DRAT, DARN, DANG wisdom we cruciverbalists can take pride in knowing.
-Today I learned women put PRIMER on their faces.
-You're going all the way to Spanish Scrabble for UNO, eh?
-I think of marginalia as bad drawings of other people in the meeting and notation as something bringing you Beethoven's 9th symphony.
-WHIPLASH is a different category than HUH?
-Yes, a mirror reflects. It's its job.
-Pucks aren't sentient beings (yet), so comedy averted.
-I've had plenty of good filets with bones in them.
❤️ What a meter reader reads. That's good.
Propers: 2
Places: 2
Products: 3
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 12 of 69 (17%) {Hooray! It is possible!}
Funnyisms: 7 😂
Tee-Hee: [Sneak peek] and PEEP HOLE... Can you sense Joel's presence back on the slush pile? He's warming up.
Uniclues:
1 Riot needing salt.
2 Traditional conversation after every social function when I said something stupid.
3 My Pavlov's doglike gyrations trained into me by Apple, Inc., every time my phone buzzes.
4 Procedure for handling your theater program.
5 Human resources administrator job description at every financial institution.
6 Dirt.
7 Take credit for the welt.
8 Mountain condo with holes in the walls.
9 Statement you'd think I already would have made based on the enormous reflection therein.
1 ICY MOB SCENE ST.
2 RAGS ON AT HOME
3 PINGED SPASMS
4 TOSS APRES SKIT
5 I DO BRUH HIRE
6 CICADA BIODOME
7 OWN WHIP LASH
8 PEEP HOLE SKI PAD
9 IT'S TIME MIRROR
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Attorney wanna-be sings poorly in Switzerland. ONE-L YODEL FAIL.
¯\_(ツ)_/
Never got the theme. Never got the puzzle. A real struggle for me & one I wasn't enjoying. I wanted to throw it against @Nancy's wall several times.
Just one of those days, I guess (at least it wasn't a rebus),
But the name of the program is "TSA PreCheck". PRE is the leading syllable of the word "precheck" so how is it "wierd" that it follows TSA? Is it "wierd" that "pre" follows "Christmas" in the phrase "Christmas present"?
Lotsa good Uniclues today. I particularly liked I DO BRUH HIRE. Thanks for putting yourself out there every day, @Gary Jugert.
Only 17%? Wow! The least gunkiest I can recall.
Spanish Scrabble? How the heck am I supposed to know... oh yeah, it's just UNO. By the way, a fun clue for ONE is "Value of 'Z' in Polish Scrabble".
Hands up for BRAH before BROH... I wondered why PACKS were "Goal seekers".
The word "dope" meaning "cool" or (as we used to say) "far out" dates back at least as far as Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five's 1988 release, "The Boy is Dope." I'm guessing that it was already a pretty common expression in the Caribbean community of New York, which is where Flash grew up (he was originally from Jamaica -- the island, not the neighborhood in Queens).
The word "dope" meaning "cool" or "far out" dates back at least as far as Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five's 1988 release "The Boy Is Dope," and I'm guessing it was probably already a pretty well-known term in New York's Caribbean community, which is where Flash grew up (he was originally from Jamaica -- the island, not the neighborhood in Queens).
Dope has been used as a synonym for "cool" for over 30 years. It's not slang of "the youth." Even the NYT first clued it as a positive over a decade ago, and has done so many times since.
Did I miss it, or did no-one comment on/explain how "primer" is
"part of a makeup routine".
Well, Egs did have a typically hilarious comment on it, but that just left me still wondering how primer could possibly be a correct answer for the clue.
I enjoyed this puzzle a lot. Having worked as a professor of education in a past life, I chuckled seeing the COMMONCORE. Glad it's not part of my world much any more. For 26A, I really struggled.
First, I confidently wrote in ATOM, but then noticed 21A was ATOM. Okay, then I wrote IOTA. Nope. Then finally, WHIT, which feels like a totally new word for me. But given that this word has likely never passed my lips (perhaps today I will change that!), the feeling makes sense.
No mention of the narrow 14 x 15 grid??
I too thought this was super easy for a Thursday. I started it this morning, got distracted and just came back to finish it. I knew as soon as I saw the PCs and Primer(love this clue personally because you must use primer when started ones make up routine, juat like when you paint a wall lol) followed closely by a cartoon character that a lot of you guys wouldn't like this puzzle. I personally really liked it and found it to be one of the easier Thursdays I've done.
Just a small rant. As a parent of a 19 year, I had to endure Common Core math with her and I still shudder remembering how horrible it was/is. Whoever thought it was a good idea to suddenly "change math" is an idiot. To this day I can recite all my times tables without a single problem. I ask my very intelligent college student daughter who gets excellent grades what's 7 x 8 she's counting on her fingers and writing little blocks on a paper to come up with an answer.SMH Crazy.
@egsforbreakfast 1:17 PM
Thank you sir, but I am but an abecedarian neophyte to you my master. I sit at your feet each day and wonder in amazement as you render the vast landscape of the English language into a bauble or a puppet to be played and ripped assunder like a dog with a stuffed animal. I aspire to your slobbery mercenary ways.
@Whatsername 1:50 PM
Yeah! Amazing really. We did have a 14% once, but anything below 20% is exceedingly rare. It's nice to see it's possible even with a complicated theme and a bit of humor to boot.
This is a “new” thing, I think. I think it’s stuff you put on your face before “foundation” to minimize the appearance of pores and other imperfections. Hah! When I say “new” it could be 20 years ago or more.
Having read Faulkner's "Sanctuary" years (decades?!) ago, I cringe whenever I hear the word "cornhole."
Liked the uniclues as usual.
But I disagree about the long list of clues/ answers you didn’t like As pointed above, ATOM is an easy version of the very difficult (to me) English style cryptic crosswords clues. I don’t see anything wrong with this one.
Especially since it was easy!
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