Coiffure parts that are sometimes braided / SUN 2-23-25 / Aetna alternative / "Lohengrin" soprano / Collectors of signatures? / Nickname for Milwaukee's baseball team / Marriage equality activist Windsor / Love interest in a Hallmark movie, maybe / Queendom in the Bible / Home of the Sugarloaf Cable Car, informally / Reality competition show with quickfire challenges
Sunday, February 23, 2025
Constructor: Daniel Grinberg and Rafael Musa
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- QUICK TURNAROUND (23A: What a tight deadline might require ... or what's found in 30-Across?)
- "WHERE DID I PARK?" (contains "RAPID" (i.e. "quick") turned around) (30A: Question when leaving a grocery store, perhaps)
- LOOK THE OTHER WAY (46A: Tolerate misbehavior ... or what's found in 56-Across?)
- FEDERAL GRANT (contains "GLARE" (i.e. a "look") facing the other way) (56A: Source of some public funding)
- ASSBACKWARDS (67A: Totally the wrong way ... or what's found in 79-Across?)
- "I'M HAPPY TO OBLIGE" (contains "BOOTY" (i.e. "ass") backwards) (79A: "It'd be my pleasure")
- REVERSE COURSE (91A: Completely change one's position ... or what's found in 104-Across?)
- SCOTCH TAPE ROLLS (contains "PATH" (i.e. "course") reversed) (Gift-wrapping supplies)
Catherine Bush (born 30 July 1958) is an English singer, songwriter, record producer and dancer. Bush began writing songs at age 11. She was signed to EMI Records after David Gilmour of Pink Floyd helped produce a demo tape. In 1978, at the age of 19, she topped the UK singles chart for four weeks with her debut single "Wuthering Heights", becoming the first female artist to achieve a UK number one with a fully self-written song. Her debut studio album, The Kick Inside (1978), peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart.
Bush has released 25 UK Top 40 singles, including the Top 10 hits "The Man with the Child in His Eyes" (1978), "Babooshka" (1980), "Running Up That Hill" (1985), "Don't Give Up" (a 1986 duet with Peter Gabriel), and "King of the Mountain" (2005). All nine of her studio albums reached the UK Top 10, with all but one reaching the top five, including the number one albums Never for Ever (1980), Hounds of Love (1985) and the greatest hits compilation The Whole Story (1986). Since The Dreaming (1982), she has produced all of her studio albums. [...]
Bush has received numerous accolades and honours, including 14 Brit Awards nominations and a win for British Female Solo Artist in 1987, as well as seven nominations for Grammy Awards. In 2002, she received the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. She was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to music. She became a Fellow of the Ivors Academy in the UK in 2020, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2023. (wikipedia)
• • •
I got QUICK TURNAROUND and instantly knew that the first set of circled squares were going to contain a word meaning "quick" but turned around. First thing I thought of (in five letters) was RAPID, and sure enough, sure enough. With the rest of the themers, I didn't even have time or inclination to wonder about how the circled squares would be filled; they were all so easy to get, that I never had to put my knowledge of the theme to use. In fact, I can't see any place in the grid that could've caused any major trouble for regular solvers. I had one brief "yikes" section, and that was the CIGNA / CASTS cross. I don't really know CIGNA well, and while I could hear it in my head, I thought it was SIGNA (49D: Aetna alternative). And CASTS ... well, that has one of the trickier clues in the whole puzzle (49A: Collectors of signatures?) (conventionally, esp. if you're a kid, if you have a cast—for a broken arm or leg, say—you get people to sign it). I've never heard anyone use ELEVENTY, even facetiously, but someone somewhere must've, and it wasn't hard to infer. Thought it was weird to refer to King Midas as GREEKY for a couple seconds—surely he's just GREEK—but actually he's not Greek at all (he's from Phrygia, which was in central Anatolia, i.e. modern Turkey), and anyway, the answer has nothing to do with nationality. He wanted everything he touched to turn to gold, and (tragically) got his wish (the gift was a curse, who'd've thunk!?). I guess that makes him GREEDY, sure.
[I've posted this song before but its mid-'80s R&B'ness is so pure, I can't resist]
Another little struggle happened when I had the [Supply at the Hershey Company] as COCOA and then the [Delta hub: Abbr.] as ORL (!?!), which proved awkward when the "R" cross of ORLand really seemed like (and in fact was) some version of "ORLando" (specifically O-TOWN). Took a little backtracking and untangling to get CACAO / ATL / O-TOWN all sorted out. But that was just your ordinary everyday kind of struggle, not at all unexpected on a Sunday. As I say, this one doesn't bring any heat at all, difficulty-wise. Maybe if you don't know the BREW CREW, the SW might get a little hard, with a reality show (TOP CHEF) (99A: Reality competition show with quickfire challenges) and a ["Lohengrin" soprano] down there. But still, that's more likely to be a slow patch than a knee-buckler.
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[82D: Nickname for Milwaukee's baseball team] |
Comments and explanations:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
- 5D: Receive severe criticism (TAKE HEAT) — I took FLAK there for a little bit
- 74A: It may be on the chopping block (LOIN) — that is, a piece of meat. Pork LOIN, beef LOIN. I don't like the word LOIN. Don't like the way it sounds, don't like its proximity (aurally and physically) to GROIN. I especially don't like it without its specific meat qualifier. I knew the clue was a tricksy / wordplay clue, but I was hoping for ... a different word (I'm never hoping for LOIN).
- 47D: Horse's behind (HAUNCH) — speaking of LOIN (specifically the "LOIN and leg of a four-footed animal") ... I often complain about awkward plurals (see, for instance, ATONERS, or IRONIES (side by side!)) but here I'm going to complain about an awkward singular. It's not that singular HAUNCH isn't real, it's just that I hear HAUNCHES way more often, esp. in reference to living creatures (and not meat). In fact, I'm not too sure about the distinction between HAUNCH and HAUNCHES where a horse is concerned. I mean, look at this definition from vocabulary dot com—it doesn't seem to know the singular / plural distinction either:
A haunch is the back end of an animal — its rump and rear leg. When you walk behind a horse, it's important to stay far enough away from its haunches that you won't get kicked. (vocabulary.com) [if HAUNCH is the "back end" in its entirety, how in the world does any one "horse" have more than one "back end"??]
- 32D: Marriage equality activist Windsor (EDIE) — here's what I wrote about her on Jun. 4, 2022:
EDIE Windsor (1929-2017) was the lead plaintiff in United States v. Windsor (2013), which was a landmark Supreme Court case concerning same-sex marriage, one that paved the way for the legalization of said marriages in this country following Obergefell v. Hodges (2015). It's Pride Month, so though she seems a worthy answer in general, it's especially nice to see her acknowledged this month.
- 24D: Scarlett Johansson, Rami Malek or Vin Diesel (did you know?) (TWIN) — I didn't know, but ... please don't ask me "did you know?" when I'm solving a crossword. You could tack that question on to literally any crossword clue. All of them. "Did you know?" Shh, I'm solving. I know and don't know lots of things.
- 10D: Forget to finish writing a clue, mayb (ERR) — I guess this is supposed to be cute, but the thing is, what you have here is not someone "forgetting to finish" the clue. No one leaves the "e" off "maybe" because they "forgot" it. It's a typo / mistake. "Forgetting" has nothing to do with it (except maybe that you "forgot" to proofread, that I'd buy)
- 16D: Coiffure parts that are sometimes braided (RATTAILS) — lol, the tonal distance, the ... fanciness distance between "coiffure" and RATTAILS cannot be measured. Light years won't cut it. The distance is infinite. In the history of the world, no one has ever put RATTAILS and "coiffure" in the same sentence. Until now. Me. I did it. Call the OED or whoever keeps records about these things.
- 60D: Love interest in a Hallmark movie, maybe (NICE GUY) — are they always "nice"? To start with? Or even to end with? I watched a bunch at peak COVID (i.e. peak shut-in, peak stave-off-gloom), and I feel like there's often something ... dickish about those guys until the woman, like, makes them come around somehow. Like, they're part of some consortium that's going to tear down the old mill until the plucky local woman gets them to see the meaning of Christmas or some such crap. But admittedly I'm no longer an aficionado, so maybe the lead guys are all just nice and ... not sure where the tension is if that's true, but OK.
- 84D: Ocean in "Ocean's Eleven" (TESS) — had the "TE-," wrote in TEAM. I saw the original Ocean's Eleven once. I love Soderbergh to death, but somehow can't bring myself to see the Clooney / Roberts ones. I get real cynical when that much "Aren't we beautiful movie stars?" power is aimed at me. I should probably just suck it up and watch. Soderbergh has rarely let me down.
See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
97 comments:
Easy. Worked a little differently from OFL in that I saw the reversed RAPID in 30A before I tackled 23A (QUICK TURNAROUND). That led me to believe briefly that the theme might be reversed words for fast (tfiws, ytsah, etc.). But that straightened itself out with the next them set.
Overwrites:
Wanted sty instead of PEN at 8D but APPLE was a lock at 6A
My Secret was SAnta before it was SAUCE
hMmm before I MAY at 33D
ecolE before LYCEE at 74D
so HAPPY… before I'M HAPPY… at79A
CoCoa before CACAO at 93D
bomb before TANK at 99D
WOEs:
EDIE Windsor at 32D
O-TOWN at 94D
KATE BUSH at 77D
TESS Ocean at 84D
Took me a couple tries to get the happy music.... How is a MAT a spot for a pin? I thought it should be a hAT but that didn't fit with the cross.... Anyway, fun puzzle otherwise, enough crunch for Sunday, for sure! : )
The NE and SW corners were interesting and challenging. The rest of the puzzle (including the the theme-related questions) were on the easy side and lacked "freshness."
Still, cherish the Sunday puzzle.
tc
Wrestling
Cute enough trick but I was done by the third themer - maybe better suited to a midweek sized grid. WHERE’D I PARK and HAPPY TO OBLIGE were well done. ASS BACKWARDS, SCOTCH TAPE ROLLS etc should have been tweaked a little more.
The Bear and the MAIDEN Fair
KATE BUSH was a nice long gimme. SPURIOUS and UTTER ROT are top notch. Side eye to ATONERS. In general the perimeter of the grid was filled in well - the center short stuff made for a choppy time.
ACE
Nice effort but this Sunday morning solve petered out somewhere in the middle. Wordle warmed my heart today - and if @Pablo plays he’ll agree.
Clem Snide
Delta Hub Atlanta? Uh-uh, that's Delta's HQ.
I really struggled with this one. Just one of these Sundays that I couldn’t grok too many things and was missing knowledge seemingly everywhere. I did like it though - not much crossword-ese honestly. This was a good old blue collar crossword imo.
This is a solid, top quality, very good no bad puzzle, a Sunday puzzle in the lead pack.
The theme is tight. I have yet to see worthy alternative theme answers pairs in the comments here or elsewhere, indicating that they are hard to come by, if not fully used up. I especially love the first entry of the theme couplets – everyday phrases that can be word-played upon. Terrific finds.
The build is impressive – a sky-high eight theme answers embedded in a grid with hardly a whiff of junk.
Lovely spark throughout, with nine excellent NYT debut answers, including BREW CREW, TAKE HEAT, REVERSE COURSE, and QUICK TURNAROUND. Every theme pair has at least one debut. Not only that, but eight other answers have only appeared once before in the Times.
For me, the difficulty is Sunday-pitch-perfect. On this large-puzzle day, I don’t want a mindless rote solve that goes on forever, nor do I want a trudge where I feel like I’m endlessly trying to run in a swimming pool. What I want is what I got today.
Spark, skill, solving satisfaction. I left this puzzle with all my thumbs lifted high, and it’s going on my Sunday Puzzle of the Year list. Thank you so much for this, Daniel and Rafael!
@RP, in the first bit of The Fellowship of the Ring, Bilbo Baggins is throwing his 111th birthday and refers to himself as turning "eleventy-one"
Ugh. This puzzle fit right in the category I call “stupid easy”. I was able to trudge through from clue to clue without hesitating, without having any fun, and finishing in record time. And trust me, I’m not that good! I barely noticed the cutesy reversible words made from the circled letters because I was able to easily fill in the related answers without needing to refer to them. This is the third Sunday in a row where the crossword was unusually easy, and that’s three disappointing experiences for me. Is this a deliberate change in the difficulty level of the Sunday crossword, or just a coincidence?
A really pleasant Sunday to grid to nibble on - the theme was easily discernible and held up well enough that I was still game even at the end, so thankfully I avoided “theme fatigue“ today.
It’s nice to see the NYT crew in a little bit of a lighthearted mood this morning - not just making up words, but now we’re making up entire crosses as well (ELEVENTY x USTED) - it’s always good when you can have some fun at your own expense. I wonder if this is our first “synthetic Natick” - if so, pretty cool, as one doesn’t frequently get to witness CrossWord history in real time.
Nothing very challenging but refreshingly not a tedious and overblown Sunday slog - two cups of coffee by the fire, done and on to my day. Fun.
funny, just yesterday as i was leaving the grocery store, it occurred to me that it’s prob been close to 20 years since i HADN’T asked myself “where did i park?”.
How many times do they air Its a Wonderful Life around Christmas? Eleventy-million.
This was medium-difficulty for me, largely because of the SW region. SPURIOUS, KATEBUSH, and ELEVENTY took a while. Up top, I had STY instead of PEN, and with LEA, this led to 6A looking like --SL- so TESLA was written in for a while. (And then had TEALS for 6D instead of AQUAS.) I didn't *think* TESLA was based in Cupertino, CA but the inertia meant we let this go for a spell.
Favorite clues: 11A ("Plant with bugs?"), 28A ("Hound or dog"), 49A ("Collectors of signatures?"), and 85A ("It comes with a hefty bill").
Meh clues/answers: Agree the ROLLS in SCOTCHTAPEROLLS was superfluous. 60D ("Love interest in a Hallmark movie, maybe") - Gotta agree with Rex on this one.
84A ("1/96 of a pint: Abbr.") is interesting. The premise depends on your definition of teaspoon. Typically, I convert from one system (US: Pint [or more likely, ounces]) to the metric system (Tsp: 5 milliliters). But that's nutritional conversion. Technically, one US teaspoon is about 4.949 mls. But then, when I looked this up after completing the puzzle, I found out there is also a different teaspoon called the Imperial teaspoon, which is slightly larger than the US teaspoon; there are 80 Imperial teaspoons to one US pint!
Above average Sunday, agree easy medium--no big slowdowns but not whooshing-- and well put together. Themers evoked more of a "nicely done" than a chuckle or aha, but that's all good.
Haven't seen HAUNCH in a while, enjoyed ELEVENTY. In fact ,many of not most of the 7 and 8 letter Downs in the puzzle were pretty good.
Somebody put a lot of time/effort into this one, appreciate it!
RP, as a country boy, a handler is not going to stand directly behind a horse- you're off to one side. I think the HAUNCH would refer to that side you're standing on, say the left rump/glute/thigh.
Fun puzzle that I almost didn't finish, because I was sure "pig's digs" was a "sty" instead of a PEN. I also had trouble coming up with MADEWAR, because the crosses seemed tough. But I caught on to the "reverse" theme right away, which helped the solve. I echo the compliments to the constructors.
Theme was awkward at the beginning since I had RAPID TURNAROUND almost immediately and kept until the end when I realized that the NW had to be redone
I did a puzzle yesterday with SCRUM in the exact same position. Rex, can we have a term for this phenomenon?
I liked it! I am partial to Rafael Musa also. However, it was not ridiculously easy which annoys me, i could have had more of a challenge but it’s nice to have it be accessible to newer solvers. I didn’t thought the theme was cute. I do have to say I got a little hung up on “small wood” and couldn’t get my mind out of the gutter until I got some crosses. COPSE, of course. Got it now.
A very intricate job of construction for the constructors and what looks like it's going to be a truly mindless exercise for the solver.
I was encountering absolutely no resistance as I filled in about a third of it on automatic pilot, and I was completely bored. "Well, I suppose I should hang around long enough to see if I need to manipulate the theme answers containing tiny little circles in any way. Or will they just come in on their own with no input from me?" WHERE DID I PARK gave me RAPID in reverse with not the slightest input from me -- at which point I said: "That's it. Done."
A lot of work on the part of the constructors that doesn't translate to giving the solver anything interesting to do. And the clues are SO lacking in crunch.
I second Lewis today. A clean, fun puzzle with a fairly QUICK TURNAROUND, just what one hopes for on a Sunday. Well done, Daniel and Rafael!
Hey All !
Good puz. Easy, straightforward Theme. Not a bunch of resistance for a SunMorning.
Awkward clue for HAWAIIANS, I get it they have their own time zone, but my first initial thought was, "Doesn't everybody live in their own time zone? Do some people live in two?"
ASS and BOOTY, highlighted. Dang, about time, we've been ASSless for a minute.
One second shy of another exact time. Timer says 28:59. Which makes this a quick one.
ELEVENTY and ONES clued similarly. Odd.
Noticed @M&A's U's are ubiquitous, to use another U word. Good on ya, mate!
Enjoyed this puz. ITS A FACT.
Happy Sunday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
What I am missing with the mat being a place for pin? I had hat for a while until I fixed the down clue to get the M
@Anonymous, 9:35 AM: You pin your opponent to the mat, in wrestling.
A comfort puzzle. Lots of memory-friendly phrases. WHEREDIDIPARKMYCAR—ask myself that every time..ASSBACKWARDS, learned that from a tough drill sergeant in the army, definitely not from the nuns in school. ELEVENTY sticks in my mind but darned if I can remember why…my only real problem was TOPCHEF, had of course heard of it but never a focus of my attention.
I’ll come right out of the box and say that I really, really, REALLY liked this puzzle. And…just to add, I stupidly misread the clue for ALASNO, and had ALASSO which means I had a DNF. Who cares!
Gosh. I feel like Rex went to pains today to nitpick on things that, to me don’t amount to a pinch of snuff. And I realize he started by saying that there is really nothing wrong with this puzzle and fairly well executed…but then the nitpicks fly. First. The puzzle is “nothing original or overly inventive”…Says who? Oh, I guess not ME, but others? I’ll let that go, because I’m sure there has been something similar done in the past with the reversal of letters hidden in an answer, but geez. Second, adding “I’m” to HAPPYTOOBLIGE is “overly formal”? Um, I’m almost 70, and to me, using the word OBLIGE is not only formal, but old-fashioned, forget the “I’m” part. My human entity would merely say “I’m happy to do that” or even “happy to.” (But I still liked the answer) Third, “bass-awkward”? Ok, thankfully he backed off that one a bit. Fourth, the Clooney/Roberts “aren’t we beautiful” comment. Sheesh. Everything I’ve seen or read about both of these actors are that they are nice, normal (albeit rich), and genuine people. It brought to mind the old Pantene shampoo commercial with Kelly LeBrock where she says, “Don’t hate me because I’m beautiful.”
Already been answered.
Wait around a bit, Rex. You may get to the stage when you might ask "Where did I park" between the back door and the garage. :-)
Enjoyed this puzzle and though it probably played slightly easy compared to my typical Sunday solve, it felt like I had some work to do in almost each section. It was a steady working solve.
Think wrestling. You pin your opponent to the mat. Took me a while to figure this one out too.
Lorelai once called Rory "loinfruit." Just sayin'.
Easy but entertaining Sunday, as others have said. Caught on early with WHEREDIDIPARK. a question OFL may find himself asking as the years pile up. We once parked at Bradley International in CT, flew to Orlando, and only had noted the number of our parking space but not which lot we were in. Oh oh.
The shuttle driver said "Don't worry, we'll find it," and by god he did.
Nice to see the BREWCREW, but I preferred "Harvey's Wallbangers".
Take a good look at FEDERALGRANT. They're becoming an endangered species.
And hello to old friend IBEXES and especially its clue "wild goats of the Alps". Both classics.
Nicely executed, DG and RM. I Didn't Get bogged down and Rarely Made wrong guesses but super smooth, and thanks for all the fun.
ditto!
Shouldn't the clue for FEDERALGRANT include "archaic" or something since they no longer exist?
Alternative clue/ answer combos for ASSBACKWARDS:
Clue: Why you don't dis U.S. patriots.
Answer: ItSUNAmerican
Clue: Where Lyft steals customers?
Answer: FroMUBer
Clue: I've got the hots for her in a snooty way
Answer: SheSNUBile.
Clue: Ring
Answer: GriN ACronym
I think I could have come up with some alternatives to the other "reversed" themers, but I shot my wad on ASSBACKWARDS.
And speaking of ass, did you hear about the dyslexic who had a hunch about a horse's ass?
Do we have radar financing lined up, Alonso? ALASNO. Also no sonar loans are available.
I thought this was fun, but easier than easy. Maybe a personal Sunday best while jet lagged. Anyway, thanks, Daniel Grinberg and Rafael Musa.
Rex really nailed it today. I join the near consensus in approbation of this puzzle, but as this is for me the fourth Sunday in a row to be treated to a solid, natick-free experience, I feel the need to tip my hat to the editor... four Sundays in a row cannot be chalked up to coincidence!
I think you'll enjoy the Clooney 'Ocean's Eleven'. Soderbergh does some great work...and it's not so much 'Aren't we beautiful?' as it is 'This is fun''. More 'Smokey and the Bandit' lively vibes than anything else.
On the WHEREDIDIPARK topic, I don’t buy new cars that often, but have you ever gotten a new (different color, etc) car, wandered down the parking aisle and thought, “Omg, my car’s been stolen”!?
PS autocorrect foiled me again…”bass-ackward “
This is when I really miss doing Sunday on paper.
I very enjoyable puzzle which stumped me on
ALAS NO, LOIN, AIR, had Ecole for Lycée for what seemed like forever, as well as Sty for PEN.
If I get "Just about" one more time, I'll throw it - well, you know where. Off to find my typo.
Fun puzzle, thanks guys :)
You should definitely watch Ocean’s Eleven. It’s really good fun, and I think it would be a good respite in these trying times.
CoCoa/CACAO can someone explain the difference between the two? Summer of 1982 (year of the Brewers World Series win) I spent a week in Milwaukee visiting friends attending Marquette. We went to a BREWCREW game and cooked bratwursts at our pre-game tailgate, first time I ever had one. For some reason, I did not really like LOIN... I mean it could be alot of things on the chopping block. I liked the puzzle, smooth. One of those that you really didnt need to know the theme to solve.
Easyish for me too. No real problems with this one…even KATE BUSH was vaguely familiar. However, I did not know about the TWINs.
Costly erasure: Wuss before WIMP.
A breezy, clever, and fun Sunday, liked it.
This is where I know it from too.
Me three!
I made a mess of the NW today with my tesLa/teals (hi @Colin) and the ABCs giving me MAsE_______. Attacked? I finally had to reveal the second square of 24D - I was so sure that those mentioned in 24D would be sharing a zodiac sign but at least I never put in LEOS or ARES. Ah, TWIN, no I didn't know, thank you very much.
I've spent too much time in Wisconsin perhaps because my BREWers were BREWSKIS. Good thing I knew many Joan Didion pieces were ESSAYs! I sure couldn't come up with TOP CHEF from the clue.
I'm with @Roo regarding the clue for HAWAIIANS and their living in their own time zone. It's true, my CST time zone is shared with more than one other state but, it was a weird-seeming clue.
AFLAC before CIGNA and ECOLE before LYCEE. The theme answers helped sort those out.
Thanks, Daniel and Rafael, nice Sunday!
¿Dónde estacioné?
@CDilly52: Youre the best. Loved last night's wrap. Feel better.
Puzzle? Done. Fine I guess. Starting with ECLAT, a word I know only from crosswords and one I couldn't define, seemed concerning, and then toss in ESQ, LEIA, and ABCD and it's a grim beginning, but things became more entertaining quickly. Straight up wheelhouse solve in half my typical time.
The @Nancy-Circles™ Nancy-ed hardcore (by being completely irrelevant as she always reminds us).
❤️ MEDAYS. [Fraidy-cat]. ELEVENTY.
People: 13
Places: 3
Products: 11
Partials: 8
Foreignisms: 6
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 41 of 140 (29%)
Funnyisms: 6 😐
Tee-Hee: QUEER BAIT. ASS BACKWARDS. DIKES.
Uniclues:
1 Actors on a Harvey Weinstein film and Republicans in contemporary times.
2 Funds frozen by futile fools.
3 Purpose of @egs. (He's really more of a gazelle, but the puzzle giveth and the puzzle taketh away.)
1 LOOK THE OTHER WAY CASTS
2 FEDERAL GRANT REISSUES (~)
3 BOAR TRADES HIP PUNS (~)
My Fascinating Crossword (not a) Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: So here is where my crosswording journey becomes challenging. I woke up this morning and zipped through this one like a Tuesday except for the sloggy chanteuses. I usually start the puzzle in the evening sitting in the comfy chair with the local news playing. They put the murders on during the first five minutes and that's a great time to dig into the puzzle since I am neither the murderer nor the murderee and I figure that's news I don't need. Afterward the bad homeowners associations and the weather and sports and some dude making portraits of vets out of reclaimed beetle-kill pine capture my interest. The crossword timer is ticking the whole time and I couldn't care less. I like to read every clue since sometimes (not often enough) a constructor and editor have a sense of humor, and in this troubled end-of-the-Boomers era, wry comedy is surprisingly hard to find and plenty of humorless folks have been allowed to walk the streets unsupervised. Sometimes I fall asleep in this process because I feel at least 20 years older than I am. My phone keeps ticking away while I nap and sometimes I have 8 hour solves when the sunrise finds me happily snoring in the La-Z-Boy. It's my SLUMBER PARTY. With 🦖 occasionally posting cartoonishly fast times (while claiming he doesn't time himself 😉), wouldn't it be nice to log our slowest solves too? For those of us fortunate to lead such leisurely lives, we can celebrate reeeeeally long excursions in our favorite activity. Let's have an award for the final contestant at crossword conventions... the one sitting alone in a chair in an empty hotel ballroom with two proctors left grousing in the corner whispering to themselves, "Just give up bro." Finishing a puzzle shackled by the fourth dimension goes two-ways -- the fleet and the lolligaggified. I've got one foot in the grave anyway, so why not savor every possible moment of wasting my final days on Earth doing a puzzle?
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I've never understood the whole "I hate that word" thing. What's the matter with LOIN (or MOIST, another hated word)? I note they share the OI sound--is that the issue? The loin, btw, is not that close to the groin, anatomically.
On another note, while ATL is the current Delta HQ, it was founded in Monroe, LA, adjacent to, if not in, the Mississippi delta region. Fun fact to know and tell.
Hilarious ending and proposal! But…methinks you are a bit too young to have one foot in the grave. You are just NOW at the age that you are even entertaining the thought of…well YOU know…
I THINK cacao is the “nut” and cocoa is what they make with it.
I loved ELEVENTY, which I mostly associate as a hidden Tolkien clue. FotR starts off with Bilbo’s eleventy-first birthday party, which was a hobbit milestone birthday.
As someone who has never seen a Hallmark film in my life and is going entirely on stereotypes, I think the idea of NICEGUY is the stereotype of the big city career woman who goes back to her hometown for the holiday, learns the meaning of Christmas, and walks away from her career to marry the lumberjack. Or something. Like I said, I’ve never seen one.
This was pretty straightforward and steady going until I got to the lower right. At 99 across I had TOP ---- and for 82 down BREW ---- with not the slightest idea what the endings were. All I could think of was TOP GUNS and BREWSKIS. It also didn't help that I had SCOTCH TAPE REELS for some reason.
ELEVENTY, QUEER BAIT, and CIGNA are brand new to me. And the COCOA / CACAO kealoa seems to come up a lot. At least I can now remember that cacao is the plant, and cocoa is the power made from it. Right?
It's fun to remember how huge KATE BUSH suddenly was back in the day.
Had CHA (CHA) before CAN (CAN)....Couldn't figure out why CASTS until it was explained here
@Beezer - walked right by my month old car in a not very big lot the other day. I do street parking in NYC, so my car could be anywhere in a half-mile radius. I know I’m overworked and underslept when I can’t remember where it is.
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/cacao-vs-cocoa
I wondered about BITTE so I asked an AI about. I found the response interesting. Hope you do to-In Austria the official language is German, though it is spoken with regional dialects collectively referred to as Austro-Bavarian or Austrian German. The word "please" in standard German, which is understood and used throughout Austria, is "bitte." This term remains consistent in both formal and informal contexts across German-speaking regions, including Austria.
If you were asking about a specific Austrian dialect, such as Viennese or Tyrolean, the word "bitte" would still be the standard way to say "please," though pronunciation might vary slightly due to local accents. For example, in some Austro-Bavarian dialects, it might sound softer or more drawn out, but the written and understood form remains "bitte."
HAUNCHes refer to the whole thing going on back there as opposed to one or the other haunch. Same deal with buttocks or cheeks. When the focus is one side of the animal in particular, HAUNCH is often what you will hear used. So you plant your hand firmly on a HAUNCH, e.g. when the exact side may not matter, but you're talking about one or the other. And directions might indicate that one should approach the HAUNCH from the left.
Not sure what the problem is here; perhaps Rex is just fixated on the idiom "on one's haunches", but either way, this is a common distinction found in quotidian speech related to the practical care and handling of animals, horses obviously above all. Nevertheless, Rex's complaint was quite amusing; I almost bought into it (NB: I am NOT a horsey person...).
My inability to channel my 6th grade spelling prowess creates quasi-naticks on the regular. Here, it was ELSA/WEANS, or as I had it, ELSe/WEeNS like a goober. SOAPS/ONO and TOTTERS messed me up too, all for reasons I cannot explain. Felt down-the-pipe medium, but those struggles aside, my time was much faster than it felt.
I'm pretty sure that the only reason I know BITTE and Scheiße is having seen Run Lola Run at one of the many erstwhile Cineplex Odeon art houses around Washington DC in the late 90s. Yeah, yeah, it's Lola rennt -- it is known -- but this was how it was released in the United States of North Mexico. Probably saw it a good half-dozen times on VHS... man... I was bewitched by Franka Potente... oof, as the kids say....
The Circles, gone all ass-backwards. Cute, but easy puztheme.
Sorta limited theme humor, but was a pretty quick SunPuz solvequest, sooo ... OK.
staff weeject pick [of an impressive 31 runty choices]: PEN [STY]. MAT [MAP]. CAN [CHA]. M&A's initial guesses shown in the brackets of incorrectness.
some of my fave stuffs: ELEVENTY. UTTERROT. WINGIT. TAKEHEAT. (did you know?) tack-on to the TWIN clue [maybe indicatin that the constructioneers hadn't known, either?]. TOTTERS [sounds like a side dish at Arby's, or somesuch].
Took M&A way too many nanoseconds horsin around, to finally come up with the HAUNCH rearview. [snort]
Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Grinberg & Musa dudes.
Masked & Anonymo12Us
... this next one's in code ...
"Computer Runtpuz Programming" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Re the clue for HAWAIIANS, Hawaii is in the same time zone as (1) French Polynesia and (2) Eareckson Air Station on Shemya Island, AK, in the western Aleutians. So to say that they "live in their own time zone" seems just wrong to me.
This is what I know about Austrian versus Germany. For hello, Germans say guten tag (good day) while Austrians say Grüß Gott (God bless). Regarding Rex's complaint about assbackwards being less right than bassackwards, I remember middle school teachers using the bass version to avoid saying ass.
Regarding pinning people to the MAT: I'm writing an article for my high school alumni publication about how the athletic program has changed in the last 50 years, and the issue of transgender athletes didn't come up once with the people I interviewed. The interesting story I found is that there is no women's wrestling team, so the girls are required by law to be allowed to try out for the boy's team. Four of them made varsity. And judging from the pictures the coach sent me, everybody is having a gloriously fun time of it!
Oh my goodness your riff on hallmark movies is priceless
Too too funny
I took a year of German at university, so when I went to Europe I thought "Germany, Austria, Switzerland... I'm all set!" I entered Germany from the north (Hamburg) and did just fine. Then the further south I got, the less I could understand (eg they would say "zvoh" instead of "zveye" for two). Then I entered Austria, and it was even harder.
Finally in Switzerland, I could hardly understand a word. They even have a name for what they speak: Schweizerdeutsch, or Swiss German.
Fortunately my German was very useful in Czechosolvakia, where it was more widely spoken than English; I think because travel to and from East Germany was easier than the west.
I once drove home from the grocery store in someone else’s F150. Both brand new. I live in a small town and everyone leaves their keys in their truck :-)
CDilly, sorry to hear you are now having to endure “long flu” especially given what you went through not that long ago. Your Milk Duds story was hilarious, and thank you Gary J for mentioning it! I often do not check for posts after a certain time (I’m Eastern) so I love to hear when someone makes a great “western” post!
Regarding haunches, people “sit on their haunches” when they squat, like a baseball catcher. It is a form of sitting without a chair in many cultures.
Delta hub couldn't have been ORL because OTOWN's airport is called MCO. Originally, the Army Air Corps airfield there was called McCoy Air Base, named for the pilot who stayed onboard his plummeting B-47 so it would avoid crashing into a populated neighborhood in Central Florida. The air base was shut down in 1975 and redeveloped into Orlando International Airport, but kept the three letter MCO identifier to continue to honor LtCol McCoy.
Thanks!
Didn’t love this one. The theme was spotted quickly but boring . All in all not a favorite
I’m gonna be a real pain in the neck here but please no Wordle hints. This made it too easy for me. And yes it was definitely a hint.
I agree it's a tight theme, and I enjoyed it. Simply for the challenge of it, I had a go and found the following options:
OPPOSITE NUMBER
makinG NO Sense
hoG NOSed bat
waxinG NOStalgic
or
cleanS UP Ones act
turnS UP Ones nose
endS UP On top
OPPOSITE MEANING
feathers onES NESt
There's probably something to be done with the 90s film THE OPPOSITE OF SEX too, but that might be a bit risque for the Gray Lady.
Great post!
wrong take, it's sad. be beauty!
"ULTA Beauty"? HUH?!
I still say "ASS BACKWWARDS" means "moving forward." The expression should be "ass-ahead" or "ass forward." I've never quite figured out where that came from.
Southside Johnny
I suppose you are using your own term for words you don’t like, specifically, foreign words. But still, to call them “made up “ I find strange. I guess that the hundreds of millions of Spanish speakers in the world are using a newly invented language of made up words?
When I opened the puzzle, I groaned out loud. Rafa’s puzzles torture me every time! By the time I finish, assuming I finish, I am exhausted, brain-sore and always, always impressed and happy. He is just one of the great constructors with whom I have no natural brain connection. I keep hoping that if I relentlessly add to my decades and decades of solving I will check all the necessary boxes and earn what I lovingly call a “brainwave visa” with His Royal Cleverness. ‘Twas not to be today.
Since I don’t want to TAKE HEAT from co-constructor Daniel, let me say simply that I am less familiar with his work and offer my congratulations on a collaboration well done! I sincerely look forward to future offerings from you.
At the end of my solve, I truly felt the collaborative energy between these two clever gents. Often, I can identify areas in a collab that kind of “announce” who’s who rather than allowing for a smooth cohesive feel throughout the solve. That’s my preference in collabs, and today was amazingly smooth. Two big brains gave me one enjoyable Sunday.
My favorite part today was how the obvious theme (I doubt we really needed the dang circles) maintained its cleverness despite the fact that I quickly figured out that I needed something to be read backwards. The fact that we get the paired highlights that ID the theme made finding the word to read backwards easy enough - again no need for the circles (but that’s on the editors nor our constructors.
The clues were well done throughout and we had some great answers. Right out of the gate, ECLAT really made me happy. I knew we’d have some fun “crunch.” Of course, I got off on the wrong foot quickly when I went for tealS instead of AQUAS for the blue-green shades at 6D. That incorrect “T” made me see only tue words “tech giant” at 6A so I compounded my error by dropping in tesLa rather than APPLE. HooBOY what a mess. Throughout my educational adventures, the most common criticism written on my tests were the comments “careless mistakes” and “read the instructions/questions.” Yeah.
My only nit is the use of ASS BACKWARDS (which has always almost seemed redundant to me) rather than its original spoonerism form BASS-ACKWARDS. I learned the (supposed?) origin of this ism being Lincoln from my Grandfather (husband to my dear Gran, and also AG in Ohio) who taught it to me along with so many other valuable life lessons during our Sunday Lectures from Grandfather.
Overall a very enjoyable Sunday. The usual (for me) resistance from Rafa, some excellent clues and answers and an easy yet enjoyable Sunday-appropriate theme. Well done constructors; thank you!
Thanks for the kind words @Beezer. I often read everything so SO late that y’all are likely sound asleep.
Usted isn’t made up; it’s Spanish.
@Gary J. Great post as usual. I adore your uniclues and look forward to them! And I am very familiar with lolligaggification as I was today ever so lolligaggified.. As another neighbor with at least one (possibly 1 1/2) foot/feet in the grave, I appreciate you.
@Chris 12:23 PM. You made me laugh out loud. Thanks
@Dr Ransom. Absolutely loved seeing ELEVENTY. Like Bilbo, I aspire to being eleventy-one.
Quite a screed for “Love interest in a Hallmark movie, MAYBE.”
Rex wonders if they’re always nice. No, hence the qualifier.
Also, the term bass-ackwards is for people who 1) think (incorrectly) they’re being clever by using a spoonerism, or 2) have some hang-up about even the mildest swear words.
Re 2): I worked with a woman who said “scrub a duck” when she was angry and it took me awhile to realize she was referring to a certain Oedipal activity.
Lmao!
Gary absolutely lively post. Thanks!
Call me thick, but even after l revealed all the themers l still had no clue what this was all about. Makes me think there’s a lot more of you out there without Rex’s apparent clairvoyance who had the same reaction.
Did you take a look at the letters in circles?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulta_Beauty
Me too! Have you since figured this out? Because I'm still stumped.
Boring!
I really enjoyed the puzzle, but take issue with the clueing on eleventy. I don’t think anyone ever says that word, but it’s famous due to Bilbo Baggins’s birthday at the beginning of the lord of the rings. (He’s turning eleventy one). I feel like that should have been the core part of the clue.
It’s a chain of stores selling beauty products.
I don’t want to be picky but there seems to be something wrong with 79 across.
It’d be my pleasure. It’d meaning It had. So we read It had be my pleasure? Maybe I’m wrong since esl for me. Just saying.
It's in this case means "it would".
You’re also wrong. The clue says It’d
The correct rating is Medium-Hard
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