Saturday, January 4, 2025

Portmanteau term for airplane fuel / SAT 1-4-25 / "Holy oleo!" speaker / Shopping meccas of old / Spelling seen in credits / Language spoken in northern New York / Ancient figure called the "huey tlatoani" by his subjects / Cook's offering with chips? / Sauce named after a steward to Louis XIV / Historic founder of the Shakers / Hip-hop group with the 1990 hit "100 Miles and Runnin'"

Constructor: Sam Ezersky

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (more Medium if you didn't know the names, more Easy if you did)


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Simon PEGG (59A: Simon of "Shaun of the Dead") —

Simon John Pegg (né Beckingham; born 14 February 1970) is an English actor, comedian and screenwriter. He came to prominence in the UK as the co-creator of the Channel 4 sitcom Spaced (1999–2001), directed by Edgar Wright. He and Wright co-wrote the films Shaun of the Dead (2004), Hot Fuzz (2007), and The World's End (2013), known collectively as the Three Flavours Cornetto trilogy, all of which saw Wright directing and Pegg starring alongside Nick Frost. Pegg and Frost also wrote and starred in the sci-fi comedy film Paul (2011).

Pegg is one of the few performers to have achieved what Radio Times calls the "Holy Grail of Nerd-dom", having played popular supporting characters in Doctor Who (2005), Star Trek as Montgomery "Scotty" Scott (2009–2016), and Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015). He currently stars as Benji Dunn in the Mission: Impossible film series (2006–present). He provided the voice of Buck in Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009), Ice Age: Collision Course (2016), and The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild (2022). (wikipedia)

• • •

Not THE WORST puzzle I've ever done, not by a longshot, and not the hardest, either, but then I knew all the proper nouns. Well, almost all of them. I needed a couple of crosses to nudge my brain on ADAM SILVER (11D: David Stern's successor as N.B.A. commissioner). And I wouldn't have known EDDIE right away (15A: ___ Huang, whose 'Fresh Off the Boat" memoir was turned into an ABC sitcom)—but then I never saw the clue for EDDIE, so easily did that NE section fill itself in. Everyone else, though—totally familiar to me, including (and most helpfully) CHLOÉ ZHAO. I remember deliberately tucking her name away in my brain after she won the Oscar for 2020's Nomadland, thinking "oh she's a clue now, for sure." And while she hasn't appeared a ton, she has appeared. This is her second full-name appearance; she's also been a ZHAO clue twice (the only ZHAO ever to appear in the grid), and the CHLOÉ clue once. A name worth knowing, in all its parts, for sure. Getting that freebie up top, and especially getting that "Z," really opened things up fast. This wasn't the fastest Saturday I've ever done, but I never actually struggled, and there was only one place where my flow was even significantly impeded—when I tried to take the turn from THE WORST into the SE corner. I got the wordplay on the TORI clue easily enough (49D: Spelling seen in credits), but I just couldn't commit to SLOP, since I couldn't believe we'd get SLOP two days in a row. What kind of cafeteria is this!? So I had to stop there, go back up to the center, and come at the E and SE from there instead. Which wasn't hard. 

["The Loooove Booooat..."]

I enjoyed this one for the light workout that it was. But I can imagine some solvers finding it a bit of a namefest, especially if those names are unfamiliar. That's typically how the name game goes. Whoosh + happiness if you know 'em, GRR + grief if you don't. You'd think that would be true of any answer, but it's truer of proper nouns than other things. Proper nouns often have a very pronounced gimme/stumper fault line, and if you're on the stumper side, it doesn't feel so great. Today's names seem pretty prominent, though. There is a preponderance of names from one cultural area, namely Hollywood (CHLOÉ ZHAO, EDDIE Huang, Simon PEGG, TORI Spelling), so non- (or anti-) pop culturalists might grumble about that. I'd understand. But there actually weren't *that* many names in this thing, and the grid is pretty smooth, wide-ranging, and general-knowledge-y. Is it weird to call a Saturday puzzle "pleasant." That's what this puzzle felt like to me. Not challenging me much, but not annoying me much either. Low-key enjoyment is what I got.


Not much SLOP today. "Agora" in the singular is classic crosswordese, but in the plural it's somehow ... crosswordesier. I know that Latin plurals are "-A" to "-AE," but I don't think I knew that was the case with Greek. I'm sure I wrote in AGORAS at first (I always default to the standard English "S" plural and correct it later as needed). That was the only thing that really felt tired/old to me today (18A: Shopping meccas of old). I do not like AVGAS (AViation + GASoline) as an answer (mostly because I have no idea what that is and it seems like an awful abbr. contrivance), but whatever it is, it isn't old hat (it's made only two other NYTXW appearances—once in 2018 ... and once in 1986!?) (23D: Portmanteau term for airplane fuel). If you enjoy buying your AVGAS from AGORAE, then this puzzle must've seemed perfect to you. To me, those two answers suck, but as I have no other significant answer complaints, I can tolerate them just fine. Would've been nice to be able to leverage the negative-sounding answers in this grid for my write-up (THE WORST! SLOP! SO OVER IT! GRR! INANE!), but there's no real cause today. It's a fine puzzle.


There were some parsing challenges today, most notable with USEMBASSY (1A: Home in the country?) and NPRTOTEBAG (25D: Iconic bit of media merch). The latter ended up being easy after I got over my initial  "wait, nothing starts 'NP-'" reaction. USEMBASSY was a bit harder, as the clue was much harder. I guess the idea is that at U.S. EMBASSY is our (i.e. the U.S.'s) "home" in another "country"?? I dunno. "?" clues are great when they land, but I feel like this one has been tied to a chair and tortured. I have to mentally add too many qualifiers to make the clue make any kind of sense. Whereas with something like 48D: Refuse to eat? (SLOP), there's a nice, clean "aha" when you see the wordplay. It tracks. Instantly. Then there's 39D: Babe in the woods? (BEAR CUB), which doesn't seem like it needs a "?" at all.  Cubs are babes, they live in the woods ... Babe in the woods. Very literal. I see the play on words, we all see it, but still, if the clue works on a very literal basis, I think you leave the "?" off, if only to confuse Saturday solvers (which is what you're supposed to do to solvers on a Saturday). 


Bullets:
  • 1D: Holder of the longest winning streak in N.C.A.A. men's basketball history (88 games) (UCLA) — nice fat gimme at 1-Down. This gave me AGORASE SHAG ELMO in no time.
  • 31A: Language spoken in northern New York (MOHAWK) — living somewhat near northern New York helped. Got this off the "M." My only rationale was "Native American names that start with 'M'" and if you live in New York (and probably even if you don't), MOHAWK comes to mind pretty quickly.
  • 8D: Maker of the 900 in '94 and the 9-3 in '99 (SAAB) — first guess: AUDI. Only rationale: four-letter car make. They should've just called the "9-3" the 6.
  • 4D: Ochlocracy, by another name (MOB RULE) — got run over by OCHLOCRACY in a puzzle from days of yore and never forgot it.
  • 6D: Ancient figure called the "huey tlatoani" by his subjects (AZTEC EMPEROR) — again, thank god for the "Z" in ZHAO, which made this answer much easier than it might've been. I wrote in AZTEC quickly, then reasoned my way to EMPEROR (which is to say, EMPEROR fit in the spaces provided and seemed legit).
  • 54A: "Holy oleo!" speaker (ROBIN) — every time ROBIN Yount made a spectacular play at shortstop, he'd cry out "Holy oleo!" Man, baseball really was better back in the day. Where are the colorful catchphrases of old! ... Unless this clue is about ROBIN Williams in Good Morning, Vietnam, which also seems possible.
[I'm including this pic in the hopes of staving off correction emails; we'll see if it works]
  • 52D: Cook's offering with chips? (IMAC) — The "Cook" here is Tim Cook, CEO of Apple Inc. The "chips" here are potato chips. Every IMAC comes with a bag of potato chips. This is why Apple is so successful.
How many Holiday Pet Pics could I possibly have left!?!? Let's find out.

Say hello to Grover Cleveland, seen here with fresh kill. In addition to Christmas treats, Grover enjoys lying across his owner's neck in the morning, which adds an extra layer of challenge to the crossword puzzle.
[Thanks, Michael]

The SuperMega belongs to Squid and Squid alone. Get your own copy.
[Thanks, Sophie]

Now that the holidays are over, it's time to undecorate the tree. Enter: Katlin.
[Thanks, Donna]

And for our final Holiday Pet Pic of the year, we've got Bugle, the "one-eyed pirate cat." He is the perfect morning coffee / crossword / blog-checking companion for his owner, Meredith. Bugle wants to give a shout-out to "grandpa Bill" (Meredith's father), who introduced Meredith to this blog. Family, traditions, one-eyed snuggle-cats ... that's what the Holidays are all about.
[Thanks, Meredith]

Thanks to everyone who submitted pet pics. I think I got to all of them. We'll do it again next year. 

See you tomorrow, I hope :)

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]

98 comments:

  1. You didn't mention RECS (recommendations I guess?) clunky

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  2. The plural of "agora" in Greek is, indeed, *not* agorae, it's agorai (or in English just agoras). That slowed me down more than the proper names!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:56 PM

      Drewjake is right. AGORAI

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:23 PM

      Not according to the OED. What dictionary has agorai? In classical Greek agorai would be the literal transliteration, but don't think that made it into English.

      Delete
  3. Enjoyed this one! Perfect Saturday, looked impossible at first. I did get USEMBASSY and SHAG but then got hung up when I confidently plugged in Attilathehun at 6 down.... it fit, after all! Didn't know many of the names, so had to rely on crosses for help. Funny how each of us get toe-holds in different spots, right? I knew ANNLEE, and that helped with NPRTOTEBAG and I knew ROBIN. But it took me a long time to correct my mistake and figure out it was an AZTEC ruler. Ochlocracy was a WOE, but gettable from crosses. 22 and 1/2 minutes later, I was pleased as punch to get the happy music! Thanks, Sam! : )

    ReplyDelete

  4. Medium-Challenging up top, then the lower half was Easy-Medium

    Overwrites:
    duke before UCLA at 1D
    updo before SHAG at 2D
    Sega before SAAB at 8D
    @Rex AGORAs at 18A because AGORAE looks more Latin than Greek (thanks, @drewjake)
    StOAT before SHOAT at 26D.

    WOEs:
    "huey tlatoani" in the 6D clue
    CHLOE ZHAO (14A) - She's undoubtedly crossword-famous but I don't get to a lot of movies
    EDDIE (15A) Huang
    ANN LEE (23A)
    AVGAS (23D)
    Simon PEGG (59A)

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  5. challenging for sure, not just for names, but for vague cluing

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  6. I was unfamiliar with most of the names but that made the solve much more interesting and satisfying. A perfect Saturday puzzle here, medium tough and a pleasure to solve. When the Z dropped in for AZTEC something, that was a rush. Chloe Zhao was a mystery that got solved in that moment. Yes! The puzzle was one of those ones that seemed like trouble but then slowly came into view, hence 'perfect'.

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  7. Anonymous7:29 AM

    Anyone else put in HAWK for SAAB, or have I played too much Tony Hawk Pro Skater?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Tom F7:58 AM

    Gah! Enough already with the Apple references please!

    Seems like a typo Zhao won in 2021 my app reads the clue as 2020 but that shouldn’t hold anyone up.

    Seemed like there were too many -ING answers today but maybe it’s in the average

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. From Rex's FAQ: "Oscars are handed out for achievements that took place in the preceding year. Thus, 1992 Oscars are handed out in 1993, but they are still 1992 Oscars."

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:30 AM

      The 2021 Oscars are for movies released in 2020. Not a typo.

      Delete
    3. Max W.9:02 AM

      This is always a bit confusing with the Oscars. The 93rd Academy Awards ceremony was held in 2021, but it honored the films of 2020 (into early 2021). Nomadland premiered in fall 2020.

      Delete
    4. Max W.9:03 AM

      It’s sort of like discussing Super Bowl winner years. The famed 1985 Chicago Bears won Super Bowl XX in 1986. But the vast majority of that season was in ’85.

      Delete
    5. Tom F2:11 AM

      Thanks all!

      Delete
  9. When I see Ezersky atop a Saturday puzzle, I sequester, go into a cocoon. I leave my brain alone so it can work in the background, marinate, deliver things in its own time.

    You can count on two things in a Saturday Ezersky. One, the grid will be spiffy clean. I never take this for granted, because, believe me, it’s so hard to pull off. Sam does it every time, and high credit to him for that.

    Two, the grid will be saturated in freshness, words never seen before in the Times puzzle. Ten today, my favorites being CROWDFUNDING, NPR TOTEBAG, SHOCKING, and SO OVER IT. Today’s debuts are long, too, averaging nine letters.

    The result is the sheen of newness. This is not just another crossword, not just a same-old, same-old. This is singular, a one-off; it makes the brain come alive.

    I loved two crossing faunal PuzzPairs© -- a backward BAAS and LAMB STEAK, and PIGGY crossing SLOP. I also adored the playful [Red container] for CASK and [Fudge substitute] for DARN IT.

    I emerged from my cocoon satisfied and grateful. Sam, you bring so much to Crosslandia. Thank you!

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  10. OldCarFudd8:14 AM

    If you fly a small plane, AVGAS is very much in the language and is the only thing the stuff is ever called. These days, it's 100 octane low lead. Don't put it in your car; aside from being illegal, the lead will ruin your catalytic converter, and your car's computer will be very unhappy. So will you, when you get the repair bill. Some older airplane engines have been approved to run on unleaded car gas, known to pilots as another portmanteau - MOGAS.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:06 AM

      Came to say something similar - in the Army we used MOGAS in the HMMWVs and AVGAS for the helicopters in our flight unit.

      Delete
  11. I love the pet picks and your captions. Thank you.

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  12. Seems like a fairly nicely built puzzle, albeit with a lot of names. But some of the cluing is just atrocious. 8D, 37A and 38A are the poster children, but 54A, 33A, 32D, 7D are all very bad. I really can't remember a puzzle with so many clues I just flat out dislike.

    Almost Naticked at the 23 square but eventually figured AV would be for aviation.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kitshef
      About 33A
      Surprised that annoyed you so much. Very common type of clue and wouldn’t be surprised if something almost like this clue/answer combo has appeared more than once. Three letters Pacific. What else? Just background noise to me. Personally I find UFC much more annoying -random martial arts org. Also too many names. But I can see that you hated this way before you got to LEI.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:41 PM

      I don't understand your problem with 8 down. Would you have the same complaint for a clue:maker of the Taurus for Ford?

      Delete
  13. I’ll be grudgingly a touch more accepting than OFL of AGORAE, although I agree that AV GAS sounds totally convoluted.

    It seems like I may be in the minority, but being the immature little knucklehead that I am, I actually enjoyed “Refuse to eat?” for SLOP and “Cook's offering with chips?” for IMAC.

    44A seems like it was a misfire to me. I’m guessing that TORO is a bull, so maybe we are dealing with Spanish - zodiaco could be zodiac (Taurus?) or I guess you could see a bull at the zoo. Anyway, I personally don’t consider the signs of the zodiac in Spanish to adhere to the “common usage” standard that the NYT alleges but rarely enforces. Who knows, I may not even be interpreting the clue/answer correctly. At this point I suspect few of us even care.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:17 AM

      The entire clue is in Spanish. It’s clearly asking for the Spanish word for one of the animals in the Zodiac.

      Delete
    2. Thank you. That is precisely my point. I don’t speak Spanish. It’s not a big deal, but my preference would be that if Will alleges that he has a “common usage” policy, he should not approve clues that are written in a foreign language. He obviously disagrees, which is fine (he has forgotten more about cruciverbalism then I have ever, or will learn).

      Delete
    3. @SouthsideJohnny: coming to the blog very late but have to comment. I’m not a native Spanish speaker but proficient and according to the Spanish language wikipedia, the bull in the zodiac is called Tauro, not Toro. I guess a lawyer could get Sam off by noting the clue says “animal” not “signo” but I think a different clue should have been used.

      Delete
  14. Wow, did NOT know the names but fortunately they are easy to search up! Cheating I know, but there were just so many. I did get TORI, I think that’s it. Sad too because I should have known several others. I got CHLOE _HAO but the Z eluded me! Well thanks for the pet pics, so cute and fun. Looking foward to next years already.

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  15. Torturous. I drew a blank on many proper names, the most damage done when I saw A_T as a ruler and confidently filled in "Attila The Hun." Never recovered from that one.

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  16. Too many unknown names to make this enjoyable

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    Replies
    1. Made cross-checking tough when I threw down Acamapichtli in 6D, since he was the first AZTECEMPEROR. Also threw down contributING for CROWDFUNDING.

      Delete
  17. Hey All
    One Rex's Easy is another Roo's difficult!

    Was struggling in every area. First pass through grid got me something like four answers. Slowly started making progress, however. First to go, SE corner. Solve went, East Center, Center, SW, West Center, NW (toughie with the names), NE.

    Was totally stuck/stopped in NE. I had ECHECKS and RECS as the edges, with nary a clue about any answer up there. Wanted to Goog for everything, but stopped short, and decided to just look up the NBA Commissioner (don't follow NBA). Put in the missing ADAM, and was able to suss out the rest. A one-look-up on a tough SatPuz is OK in my book!

    I thought I knew my sauces, but BECHAMEL is a new one for me. Still not fully understanding CASK as clued.

    Thought I should've got the UFC clue quicker than I did. Yes, the UFC HQ is out here, no, it's not in The Strip. When I was driving limos as my job, I drove Dana Whites wife and kids to a concert. It was a residence pickup, under the wife's name. I rang the doorbell, and Dana White answered! I said, "I know who you are!" He just chuckled.

    A good, tough for me, satisfying to finish SatPuz. Made by SB dude. I would've cried "Foul!" if AROAR made it in! 😁

    Have a great Saturday!

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV
    .

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    Replies
    1. @Roo, I think it means that red (wine) may be in a cask. Um…not sayin’ I got it from clue…afterthought.

      Delete
    2. @Roo 9:11

      AROAR! Good one. Sam, are you listening? Can you hear us AROAR?

      Delete
    3. Hey @Roo- Well I knew BECHAMEL but it didn't help that I started with BERNAISE. Thought I was pretty smart too. That'll learn me.

      Delete
    4. Gotta chime in here @Roo & @Smith about AROAR in SB. Sam never allows that word but seems to be fond of ANAL ...

      Delete
  18. MaxxPuzz9:11 AM

    Didn’t know Zhao but could maybe have guessed it because I had a student of that name. But what gave me the Z was the TL- segment in the ruler's native designation. Typical AZTEC!
    As one who was unfamiliar with many of the proper names, I had more snags than Rex. But there was just enough traction from crosses and individual clues that saved me. Good Saturday workout, Sam!

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  19. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy being a nit picker but DrewJake beat me to it. The plurals of greek nouns ending in an “a” is ai. NYT, tsk tsk. And so I started out with an “s” on the end. Beyond that - it was ok for a Saturday. Never heard of AVGAS and have never ordered a lamb steak from a butcher or seen it in his case or a menu on a restaurant. Seems a bit made up.

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  20. EasyEd9:28 AM

    A beast for me! Didn’t know any of the names. Wild guesses everywhere and had to Google ANNLEE to get a start. For example, got CHLOEZHAn on a guess with a couple of crosses in place including AZTECEMPEROR, then got the final O after seeing YnKE. Also guessed that Spelling was a name and started out with TeRI. The clues were all fun to decipher but needed every cross to and a lot of luck to get this one done. Good Saturday puzzle that took me forever to complete but was worth the effort.

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  21. Anonymous9:31 AM

    Way too many names.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Nearly Saturday Stumper territory here. I saw the clue for Mr. Pegg while I was scanning so started there and missed UCLA, which would have been a gimme. Somehow knew ORANGUTAN but spelled it wrong. Remembered ADAMSILVER as NATE, he's the polling guy, I think. Didn't know EDDIE at all. And I'm glad OFL remembered CHLOEZHAO instantly but it took me virtually every cross. I did congratulate myself for inferring AZTECEMPEROR from the "tl" combination in the clue, which suggested Nahuatl.

    Overall a very satisfying challenge from a worthy adversary Solid Effort, SE, and thanks for all the fun.

    In SB news this is two days in a row that I've had a pangram rejected although other sources say they're OK. I'm filing protests.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Same here with starting with BERNAISE (comment above)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:26 PM

      Same here w BERNAISE. Also convinced myself AZTEC TERROR was a thing. Tbh it’s the same amount of thing as AZTEC EMPORER to me.

      Delete
  23. Blue Stater9:39 AM

    This was the hardest and nastiest puzzle I can recall in recent years. Utterly without redeeming value.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Yikes! This puzzle was challenging for me. When I resort to cheating early (and ultimately often) in a puzzle I alternate between thinking “I must not have slept well” to “uh oh…am I losing brain cells?” I think much of it is I tend not to be on the same wavelength as Sam E. I liked some of the wordplay today…USEMBASSY, UTERUS, LEI…but the proper names killed me (other than TORI Spelling, maybe a few others). I KNOW Simon PEGG, but I simply could not draw up his name!

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous9:53 AM

    did not know the proper names. did not enjoy this one.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I wish I could BEHALF as funny as @Rex is.

    I know a mugger who UPHOLDS hold-ups as a valid way to make a living.

    Mr. Brooks might be an EGOT winner, but I BECHAMEL can't make a basic French sauce to go with LAMBSTEAK or PIGGYBACK.

    SLOP two days in a row? WS must have had SLOPITCH this week. (Anyone remember the tee-heeing here about SLOPITCH from several years ago?)

    When someone gets a small dent in their car from a jolly mob, is that a CROWDFUNDING? Asking for a friend.

    Really fun, well-clued puzzle, but I expect that from Mr. SB. Thanks, Sam Ezersky.


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  27. Ugh. Names, non-names (UCLA, I'm looking at you).

    Knew BECHAMEL, SAAB and ANN LEE (recently read an article about the last Shakers...), oh, and TORI. No idea ZHAO (that one's embarrassing), SILVER, ROBIN, PEGG, EDDIE, but did like seeing him above CRAZE.

    Had updo for2D for tooooo long which really messed up the beginning. Thought the STEAK was weird, but I don't eat that kind of thing (steaks, chops) so not an expert.

    So, medium hard here.

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  28. Bob Mills10:04 AM

    Cheated several times and still got a DNF. The names were all unfamiliar, and the cluing for LAMBSTEAK was very misleading (the clue was nonspecific as to any animal, so "lamb" didn't belong in the answer). Don't know where AVGAS came from, and had "Oneida" instead of MOHAWK. A very frustrating morning.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:15 PM

      Bob Mills
      That is a very strong statement that on on a Saturday being vague is somehow against a “rule “. The end of week puzzles are supposed to be hard and one way to make them harder is to do something like this . There is nothing wrong with this clue/answer combo. There is no reference to cattle in the clue after all.

      Delete
  29. Tan cansada de eso.

    Unpleasant experience for me. Another "don't know who that is" Saturday. If this is how they're toughening-up themeless grids, we're gonna need to march on New York.

    When I learned yesterday the dog ate @egsforbreakfast's homework and part of it involved CardiB, I wept for our country. More comedy dammit, not less. You da man @egs.

    I love ORANGUTANS so much. I think NPR TOTE BAGS are way more famous among cruciverbalists than in society at large.

    Propers: 12 (THE WORST DARN IT)
    Places: 1
    Products: 3
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 3
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 25 of 68 (37%)

    Funnyisms: 2 😕

    Tee-Hee: SO OVER IT UTERUS.

    Uniclues:

    1 Where mass murders come from.
    2 My uncle when he opens his mouth after years of watching Fox News exclusively.

    1 LAMB STEAK CRAZE
    2 INANE ORANGUTAN

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Aunt and uncle in Dr. Seuss. MOM AND POP AM NOT.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anonymous10:11 AM

    Total torture for me.

    ReplyDelete
  31. I didn't know any of the names, not a single one of them, but I only cheated on ANN LEE. So that to me is a moral victory and a "Solve!".

    But some of the most fiendish things in the puzzle weren't the names at all. For the "hesitant response to "is that you?", I confidently wrote down IT'S I. Grammar and all that, you know. I never thought of OH HI -- and it's a great mislead. Another great mislead: IMAC instead of GUAC for the "Cook's offering with chips."

    But "home in the country" for US EMBASSY is too clever by half. Whose home in the country? This seems like part of the clue went missing.

    Despite the names, I enjoyed my "suffering" today. Not knowing the names forced me to be a lot cleverer and a lot more persistent in sussing out everything else. Enjoyably Saturdayish in its difficulty.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nancy
      I rarely criticize 1A type clue/answer but that was a stretch even for me. Home away from home maybe? Wonder if that was an original clue.

      Delete
  32. Anonymous10:16 AM

    Thanks for the pet pics. What a delightful way to start one’s day!

    The puzzle was typical Sam, and I’m rarely on his wavelength, so I struggled a bit and had to resort to Google. I had UCLA and SAAB in the northwest and nothing else.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Bill Sedlis10:18 AM

    A puzzle i enjoyed enormously
    Just the right degree of difficulty
    TENK gave me the K to trigger PIGGYBACK the U in UTERUS
    Triggered FUNDING the G in PEGG gave me BAG
    I

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  34. It’s been awhile since I’ve had a faith solve, but this was one. Yes, the names were the major obstacle, though at completion the error I had to hunt down was having cloudFUNDING instead of CROWD. I knew MOHAuk was off, but… kept moving. I think celebrity names are uninteresting fill, so this was not the most enjoyable puzzle, but a pleasant and rewarding workout.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Niallhost10:25 AM

    Anyone have "Solo" before CASK? Seems like the red Solo cup is having a moment. CHLOE ZHAO sounds familiar in retrospect but would never have gotten her name without plenty of crosses in place. I kept thinking that it was going to be the director of the Barbie movie (I know not for Barbie, but she seems to be the most famous female director of our time.)

    Also had updo before SHAG which I imagine was the constructor's intention. Another enjoyable Saturday grind for me. Finished in 37:53, a little over average time.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:11 PM

      Yes, I also had solo before CASK!

      Delete
  36. Not the WORST, you say? And not the hardest but okay, let’s call it “pleasant?” Yeesh! I guess so if you enjoy staring at blank squares waiting to be filled with names you’ve never heard of and completely baffling trivia you have no hope of guessing. But I did manage TORI and BERT and instantly knew AVGAS, a term which is very old-hat at airports. Even as long as I’ve been solving, I still expect a struggle on Saturday, but this was mostly just suffering for me.

    Pleasantness abounds though and no suffering allowed when it comes to the holiday pet pics, a daily seasonal dose of comfort and joy. Thanks again RP.

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  37. Andrew Z.10:30 AM

    Not a fan. The ‘ol “Let me use words and names most people have never heard of so it will be difficult, trick.”

    I feel some of these puzzles are created with Rex in mind so they’ll get a good review from him.

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  38. Anonymous10:43 AM

    I knew none of the names, which made this puzzle a slog, but I knew AVGAS right away. Those flight lessons I took 15 years ago coming in handy!

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  39. Hard! I felt I had the Sword of DNF hanging over me as I waded through acres of white space in the top two-thirds, with just a few entries, some of them wrong (AGORAs, BErnaise, oneida), until I final got a grip in the far SW, thanks to INANE and remembering the name PEGG from MIssion Impossible. Crawled my way up to the top from there. Last in MOB RULE x LAMB STEAK.

    For me, Sam Ezersky's name at the top means "Uh-oh" (trouble ahead, but maybe the good brain-racking kind). I felt this one pushed me close to my limit. I didn't know EDDIE, ADAM SILVER, AVGAS, or CHLOE ZHAO (other than "First name starts with C, last name is Chinese"), and don't know AZTEC from Polynesian. Tough cluing, too. So...a good Saturday.

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  40. Having just come back from visiting my new grandson Harold (middle name Barney) in Michigan, I enjoyed the line in the puzzle that contained: SO OVER IT, UTERUS.

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  41. Slightly easier than medium but I made some lucky guesses because I did not know EDDIE, CHLOE ZHAO, ADAM SILVER, UCLA (as clued and my grandson is graduating from there in March), SHAG (I had updo for a while), AZTEC EMPEROR (as clued), UBER ONE, and SHE. Plus I had oneK before TENK for way too long.

    Solid, liked it.

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  42. I know it's Saturday but this was tough. Had to 'cheat' to solve more often I'd like. I didn't know ADAM SILVER, PEGG, AVGAS was weird. But I did learn a new clue word OCHLOCRACY - please don't use that in SB, Sam, thank you :)

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  43. Can anyone tell me what is iconic about an NPR tote bag? I have lots of online accounts. Have NEVER received an echeck. I order checks online but that’s about it, hated this puzzle, can’t stand it when I have to remember too many names. Zhao….yeah that’s a really common name. I live on the west coast and taught many Asians and never ran into a ZHAO.

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    1. Anonymous4:10 PM

      ZHAO is a very common Chinese last name. It was the eighth most common surname in China in 2020. It can be transliterated as Chiu, Chao, or sometimes Chu, so you may not be seeing ZHAO but one of the other romanizations of the Chinese character.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous4:34 PM

      Tina
      As someone said above, the Times puzzle solvers tend (NOT ALL) to be the type who contribute to NPR. So it makes sense here
      Whether you use an e check is irrelevant. It is a thing so it’s valid. (Rex doesn’t like e- type answers in general but that’s another question).

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  44. Agreed easy-medium for Saturday. Dropped in NPR TOTE BAG with no crosses.

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  45. are we just going to pretend that SHOAT is a real thing??

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    1. Anonymous4:37 PM

      David Brown
      About SHOAT
      Couldn’t tell if you were joking or not. It is a common Times answer. Good letters and all that. I was happy it was there because it is an old acquaintance.

      Delete
    2. I had to laugh at this, as SHOAT was one of the few answers that went right in on my first pass. But I live in a place where it's still relatively easy to find shoats for sale in the spring.

      But too much of this puzzle was a trivia-fest for me, the kind of content that you either know or don't. I knew shoat, but not a bunch of the names. Not a fan.

      Delete
  46. Out of my wheelhouse and not fun for me. I will argue that AVGAS is objectively bad. Blah.

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  47. Impressive puzzle. Definitely a @Lewis “faith-solve” chez @A. CHLOEZHAO, EDDIE, ADAMSILVER, ANNLEE, PEGG were unfamiliar. Also 1D was not a gimme, though crosswords have taught me if I have to guess a four-letter winning college basketball team I should try UCLA first.

    I’m on my second SAAB 900 convertible so 8D was my gimme. Trivia alert - The convertible model SAAB was one year behind the sedan in the transition from the 900 to the 9-3. It was labeled as 9-3 in 1999, but was actually still the 900. The 900 classic ‘vert also was retained in 1994, with the 900 NG (new generation) ‘vert debuting in 1995. Now you know. Back to your regular programming.

    Took a while to demystify some of the clues, but saw through 9D “Join the team?” early on. YOKE and SAAB pointed the way back to the US EMBASSY.

    In addition to AGORAs, I had updo before SHAG, BErnAise before BECHAMEL, UPliftS before UPHOLDS, and both mess and cAfe before HALL. I also put in ‘year’ (L or M, but not N or O) before SIZE.

    I thought 37A and 38A might be some version of “sit on one’s keister” or maybe “rest on one’s laurels,” either of which, if they had fit, would have been more colorful than the mundane ACT on one’s BEHALF. But then we did get the SHOCKING MOHAWK CRAZE, and an ORANGUTAN on PIGGYBACK.

    Thanks for puzzling us, Sam.

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  48. The great Steve Post (may he rest in peace) used to refer (playfully) to the NPR journalist Nina Totenberg as Nina Totenbag, (or something like that).

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  49. The somewhat quirkish RECS is duped today over at the WaPo with virtually identical cluing. It’s fun to see what they offer on Saturdays since they have constructors and an editorial team that is talented enough to amp up the difficulty on a Saturday without resorting to stuff like Simon PEGG, ADAM SILVER, NEHRU, CHLOÉ ZHAO, EDDIE Huang, ANN LEE and what appear to be signs of the ZODIACO. It certainly makes for a different solving experience.

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    1. Anonymous4:45 PM

      Southside Johhny
      Disagree about Nehru. He was a founder of the most populous country in the world. Not exactly an obscure figure. They had to make the clue Saturday level. The British imprisoned most of the founders before giving up.
      I agree too many names though.

      Delete
  50. M and A12:28 PM

    This 68-worder put up a fight, but I kept at it until I got all 68 of em.
    Spent many many nanoseconds, doin solvequest battle in the NW, but finally figured out the Z-words.

    staff weeject pick: UFC. Which also, aptly, put up a fight.

    faves: ORANGUTAN. PIGGYBACK. SOOVERIT. AZTECEMPEROR. USEMBASSY clue.

    Thanx, Mr. non-E-Z-ersky dude. Nice, crafty job.

    Masked & Anonymo6Us

    ... gotta add a few more "special" pet pics to the @RP gallery ...
    Biter Alert!

    "Holy Moly Day Pics" - 7x7 12 min. illustrated themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

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    1. Runt puzzle caused much mayhem today. Explanations would be super.

      Delete
    2. M and A3:21 PM

      @kitshef: yep. Evidently a real stumpy stumper.
      Explanation by M&A has been posted for it, within the DownHome solutions set.
      No refunds.
      M&A

      Delete
  51. Yes the Unknown Names were annoying, though I eventually got almost all of them. Unfortunately I confidently put in CLOUDFUNDING at 20 down, and stuck with it to the bitter end. I'm still not convinced it's wrong... it sounds so right? So the 31 across language was MOTAUK (I was thinking of Montauk). And the informal suggestions were LECS; since I don't know most "modern lingo" it was perfectly plausible if baffling. And of course STOAT instead of SHOAT. Yeesh.

    Agree with @kitshef 8:28 am about the clues... hard is okay; overly cutesy clever not so much.

    @pablo 9:39 am, the longer pangram in SB yesterday sounds related to a word in the clue for 4 down here!

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  52. One my longest Saturday solves of recent months. The names weren't gimmes except for TORI and PEGG. I hate, hate, hate basketball and now I need to know 1D and, har, 11D's NBA commissioner? As if…

    After I saw AGORAs, (yes, had to change that plural) I changed my mind about 2D being an updo and saw SHAG, a nice misdirect. That and ELMO were the only NW downs I had in place until the end. I snuck down the left side and started counterclockwise around.

    For the longest time I thought the clue for 16A was referring to golf hits. Shank, yes but maybe chop was also? STEAK helped me re-think that but having MisRULE held up the LAMB for a bit.

    Sam Ezersky, thanks for the Saturday workout!

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  53. Anonymous12:55 PM

    the only problem with AVGAS is that only a teeny, tiny % of planes run on it. only piston engines, which are (almost?) only general aviation. the rest, jets, run on a version of kerosene.

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  54. This was a little north of meddium for me. I didn't know the names of the director or the commissioner. I hesitated to put in YOKE because of the -AO ending it was committing me to but since I didn't know it anyway I just went ahead with it and let the crosses do their thing. The crossing of the director and the "Ancient figure" had me worried so it was a relief when 6D turned out to be plain words.

    I did this on my phone last night and after I got the congrats I returned to te Friday SB and found the final word for the QB. A double Ezersky win.

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  55. Maybe my favorite type of solving experience. Really struggled because I didn’t know a single name off the top of my head, but had just enough of a toehold to keep going, try to make educated guesses, and finally just getting enough momentum to finish. A real mental workout. Thank you Sam Ezersky.

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  56. I hold LOgINCOdE instead of LOWINCOME as a “Designation for some apartments”. This turned the WAG into GAG (Jokester). That seems possible, right? But couldn’t figure out what an IdAC was. :).

    BTW, ADAMSILVER is a rarity in professional sports - a commissioner who is well liked by the players.

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  57. Anonymous2:14 PM

    A solid 1 1/2 cup of coffee puzzle

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  58. This one was a long, tough and not so enjoyable journey for me - I almost always love difficult puzzles that make me really work, this one not so much. There was just not enough sparkle for me to make me smile. The long stacks just looked like words to me that took too much effort with too little reward. But probably just not my cuppa.
    Even with the UCLA gimme, the rest of the NE took forever and again, not a whole lot of ROI other than MOBRULE. I liked that one and it looks nice in the grid.
    I'll admit (and have said) that I'm a sucker for cutesy cluing and mis-directs and there were several today, but the only ones that elicited even the smallest bit of amusement were "Cook's offering with chips" and "Fudge substitute". The rest fell a bit flat for me.
    Got stuck for a good long time in middle westish - for 37A and 38A I had SIT on one's BEHIND rather than the correct ACT/BEHALF. As the "BEH" were correct for my choice, nothing convinced me that I wasn't right until I came here. Of course, the correct answers are much, much better.
    I also had TOTEBAG, but NPR for whatever reason just would not register - even though my wife had it on in the background like we always do on Saturdays!! So maybe today my brain just wasn't firing on all cylinders.
    I did not know any of the propers, but that doesn't really bother me, I like learning new, cool stuff. This one just didn't float my boat, so it is more of a HUGH problem and a puzzle problem. Again, I love a good workout, this just left me feeling tired and achy. But, as always, much respect for the construction.

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  61. I got ONE answer on my first pass. Never thought I'd get through it. It took 51 minutes, but somehow I finished. Now, THAT'S a Saturday.

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  62. I finished the puzzle. But thought the constructor put too many names in. A kind of crutch I think. No name in particular bothered me though. I remembered ANN’s first name. (I did go to a Shaker museum once but I remembered from reading American history ). Adam Silver didn’t know. Got Silver from crosses and guessed Adam as a likely name to go with Silver That guess finished off the hardest part for me. The NE corner. Now often with artist and sports people I may remember the last name not the first. So having two first names crossing is pretty nasty. Saved by a good guess!

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  63. Oh my gosh -- hard hard hard. I didn't know any of those people! That "doodle oodle oot doo doo!" never sounded sweeter. My "time" was 5 an a half hours but I did have a whole day of skiing in there. Yikes.

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  64. Anonymous6:42 PM

    Completely misread the clues for 37- and 38-across and had "ELF [on]ASHELF" for the longest time.

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  65. Anonymous8:54 PM

    A little late, but I wanted to add that I read the clue for 48 down as refuse (noun) to eat, not refuse (verb) to eat, which is why I think the clue ended in a question mark.

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  66. Alice Pollard11:28 PM

    AGORAE??? ouch. thank God my movie loving son was around, gave me PEGG and ZHAO (Chad the CHLOE) . I liked the clue for UTERUS. Not a bad Saturday.

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  67. Anonymous11:11 AM

    Second very hard Saturday in a row after a very easy week. Seems like the puzzles have gone from a max 5 in difficulty to 10 each week on Saturday. I don’t get how these are easy for Rex. Maybe the proper names were known but there were so many answers that could worked in this puzzle and I apparently chose the wrong one first each time. NFL for UFC, SIT on one’s BEHIND for ACT on one’s BEHALF, for two. I like a good challenge but this one was nearly impossible for me.

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  68. Anonymous1:30 PM

    This puzzle was hard for me. And I thought Robin referred to Batman’s sidekick.

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