Damsel in distress in Donkey Kong / THU 2-6-25 / Ballpark player not wearing a uniform / Ijeoma ___, author of 2018's "So You Want to Talk About Race" / Platform that might update while you sleep / Wonks ... or a candy once owned by the Willy Wonka Candy Company
Thursday, February 6, 2025
Constructor: Aidan Deshong and Jacob Reed
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (16 wide, so times will be slower than usu., but this ain't harder than usu.)
THEME: split-state cluing — In order to be understood, italicized theme clues have to be read in two parts—the first two letters (which must be taken as a state code) is the first part, and then the rest is the second:
Theme answers:
- RUSSET POTATO (18A: Identity?) (i.e. ID [Idaho] entity)
- WILMINGTON (25A: Deport?) (i.e. DE [Delaware] port)
- OZARKS (35A: Arrange?) (i.e. AR [Arkansas] range)
- PADRES (37A: Canine?) (i.e. CA [California] nine)
- KAMEHAMEHA (49A: Hiking?) (i.e. HI [Hawaii] king)
- GULF OF MEXICO (58A: Fledge?) (i.e. FL [Florida] edge)
Ijeoma Oluo (/iˈdʒoʊmə oʊˈluːoʊ/; born 1980) is an American writer. She is the author of So You Want to Talk About Race and has written for The Guardian, Jezebel, The Stranger, Medium, and The Establishment, where she was also an editor-at-large.
Born in Denton, Texas, and based in Seattle, Washington, in 2015, Oluo was named one of the most influential people in Seattle, and in 2018, she was named one of the 50 most influential women in Seattle. Her writing covers racism, misogynoir, intersectionality, online harassment, the Black Lives Matter movement, economics, parenting, feminism, and social justice.
She gained prominence for articles critiquing race and the invisibility of women's voices, like her April 2017 interview with Rachel Dolezal, published in The Stranger. (wikipedia)
So You Want to Talk About Race is a 2018 non-fiction book by Ijeoma Oluo. Each chapter title is a question about race in contemporary America. Oluo outlines her opinions on the topics, as well as advice about how to talk about the issues. The book received positive critical reception, with renewed interest following the May 2020 murder of George Floyd, after which the book re-entered The New York Times Best Seller list. [...] The book received renewed attention, following the murder of George Floyd, in May 2020. Having been listed for one week, previously, it re-entered The New York Times Best Seller list in the category Combined Print & E-book Nonfiction on June 14, 2020, peaking at position #2, on June 21. It remained on the list, until September 13,and it reappeared October 4.
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[Can't wait for the Executive Order banning "woke" crosswords] |
The worst part of this puzzle was the editing decision at OLUO / SOO. Ijeoma OLUO is crossworthy enough, but as she's not especially famous, and she's almost all vowels, you really really gotta watch those crosses, and ... would not say that a completely made-up spelling of "so?" counts as "watching the crosses" (11D: "Your point being ...?"). The opposite, in fact. Look, you put SOO (crosswordese) in your puzzle, please use one of the established crosswordese clues for SOO, thank you very much. There are several. I realize that that would mean crossing two less-than-superfamous proper nouns at a vowel, which is the Definition of a Natick, but the idea that SOO is somehow "easier" to get than the SOO Canals or Phillipa SOO. "SOO" is an awful spelling of "extended 'so.'" in that it's not extended nearly enough. At SOO, it looks like a typo. Or a name (which it is). You gotta go to at least three "O"s to get the effect you're going for. I have said a version of slowed-down / extended "so" that sounds much more like "SHO" before, so I was sincerely contemplating an "H" there for a bit, but the "O" just seemed right. Actually, OLUO seemed right. I knew that was a name I had heard. But I really really hate the clue on SOO here today. That's just a bad cross in general, whatever the clue on SOO. I'd tear that little corner out and try again to get it cleaner.
- 1A: Damsel in distress in Donkey Kong (PAULINE) — played this game almost daily at Round Table Pizza in Fresno, CA from about 1981 to 1983 and I never knew the damsel had a name. I was able to infer her name today from the serial melodrama title "The Perils of PAULINE"
- 23A: Platform that might update while you sleep (IOS) — do other platforms not update while you sleep??? I thought that was just normal.
- 7D: Medium strength? (ESP) — saw right through this one, as all old-timers will have. The "Medium" here is a crystal-ball-reading type of "medium." A psychic medium.
- 35D: Ballpark player not wearing a uniform (ORGANIST) — I like this one. Never saw the clue because that section just filled itself in so easily. I like the misdirection here, though. "Oh, *that* kind of player!" Pretty sure some ballpark organists slap on jerseys now and then, but still, the clue works.
- 14D: Become fuller, in a way (WAX) — took me a bit to get this one because I had no idea about the context (the context was the moon) (although I guess non-moon things can WAX as well ... but the most common context for the word is lunar.
- 59D: Air quality org? (FCC) — they're punning on "air" here (Federal Communications Commission oversees airwaves, not the air you breathe), but seriously, the NYTXW is going to have to rethink all its abbrs. for gov. oversight orgs. From day to day, I don't know how many of them still exist. I made a joke about OSHA being abolished ("because safety is woke and workplace fatalities make America great!"), but then the next day a legislator actually intro'd a bill to abolish OSHA, so ... there are no jokes anymore. If you can imagine it, these dimwitted lickspittles will do it, for sure.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
36 comments:
Great puzzle! Thanks Aidan and Jacob, really enjoyed the theme on this one, very clever. Tried it last night before bed, but I was too tired to think laterally so I just gave up mid solve. Got up this morning and saw the gimmick right away so I was able to get the 2nd half much faster. Loved seeing Kamehameha in the grid--we are right now planning a trip to Hawai'i so that was pretty easy for me to see, since I've been reading all about Hawai'i history for the past couple weeks. I agree with @rex about the great clue for PADRES--canine? That one took me a while! But once you see it, it's awesome. Thanks again, enjoyed this one a bunch! : )
Easy-Medium, ignoring the theme clues.
Two overwrites:
12A: My lawn was covered by sod before DEW
46D: I ADored from afar before ADMIRE
One-and-a-half WOEs:
I kinda sorta knew PAULINE (1A) and got it with just a few crosses. But I was really thinking about Princess Peach.
Ijeoma OLUO (16A). Same problem as @Rex with the SOO (11D) crossing.
Easy except for the Hawaiian king. I had to cheat there, because I didn't think of MOLTS. I inferred from "one's skin" that it was human skin, and that it was a violent action of some sort ("bolts"?). WILMINGTON was the giveaway answer for the theme, after which everything fell into place except for "hiking." I liked the puzzle more than I do on most Thursdays.
Agree 100% on OLUO/SOO--that cross was the last thing in my puzzle. Also, you don't WUSS out--you Wimp out, which makes you a WUSS. I have never encountered WUSS as a verb, but I realized -imp was wrong when nothing else fit and OZARKS became obvious. But feh.
Likable theme, easy- medium due to my upbringing (otherwise fairly easy)
Growing up near Lake Erie, CA meant Canada, not California. So CANINE had to be --BLUEJA? Believe it or not , that had me stuck for quite a while. I returned to it at the end and got the aha moment I needed.
Only other hiccup was OLUO/SOO. It could only be SOO, and It did produce the music, so it had to be right, buut..cmon, one only sees SOOOO with at least 4 "O"s
But nice likable puzzle and no mean feat to put it together .Good job Aidan and Jacob!
Another hand up for finishing at the OLUO/SOO cross. Just left that one blank till the end.
Felt hard but was fairly fast, chiefly difficult because I didn’t get the theme until I came here!
Am I the only one who thought ‘Natick’ at NIHAO crossing KAMEHAMEHA?
In addition to OLUO/SOO, crossing the Hawaiian king with a Chinese word is a choice.
Great puzzle. Rex has not been keeping up with recent Mario lore, as Pauline has outgrown her damsel in distress status. She is now the mayor of the metropolis New Donk City in Mario Odyssey, as well as a playable character in Mario Kart and Mario Tennis.
Had to think a long time on that 11D/16A crossing. Half-expected to find out I was wrong there.
Got the theme fairly early at WILMINGTON, and all the others came in just from the clue except for RUSSET POTATO, where I wanted famous POTATO.
Always irritates me when ESP and mediums are clued without reference to fraud.
Very pleased with Gulf Of Mexico, the only right answer.
Not a Boomer puzzle.
Fine puzzle, but I still don’t understand AXEL for “one footed jump”? Is this some car thing? Can someone please explain it to me? Thank you!
And now, a moment of irony: GULF OF MEXICO is a NYT debut answer, finally getting its moment in the sun.
When I realized you had to be a mind reader (or much more proficient at crosswords than I am) I pretty much gave up any hope . I wandered around a bit. Parsed together enough of KAMEHAMEHA to realize that I had no clue about anything today and threw in the towel. Hopefully there is a large enough percentage of solvers who are able to grok the theme and enjoy solving this one.
Only severed to remind me of the nauseating eloh ssa (pardon my dyslexia).
State codes have been played on often in crosswords, but not like this, and kudos to Aidan for dreaming this terrific theme up (Jacob’s notes make it clear that this was Aidan’s idea). Kudos also to Aidan for already having five puzzles accepted by the Times, before reaching the age of 19. Wow! Finally, Kudos to Aidan for his headshot on XwordInfo, which cracks me up.
Congrats to Jacob on his debut and on having three puzzles accepted by the Times in his first year of submitting. Again, wow!
I had filled in RUSSET POTATO and wrenched my brain trying to figure out its connection with [Identity?}, and when it finally came, it came with one of those huge joyful blasts that are among Crosslandia’s greatest moments. Knowing the gimmick made figuring out the ensuing theme answers uber-fun.
Thrilled to hear from your notes, Aidan and Jacob, about your Times puzzles to come, wows all around, and thank you for a splendid outing!
Ice skating jump
I must be reading into things but I think this is another dig at our president. Kamala Harris and Thurgood Marshall’s alma mater? So you want to talk about Race? UNEASE? EGOISM? GULF OF MEXICO? TOADIES? Maybe I need to get more sleep. Anyhoo, super fun puzzle, loved the subtle resistance.
An Axel is a jump in an ice skating routine.
an axel is a jump in an ice skating routine.
Figure skating
Since when does an M.B.A. seeker take the GRE? Last I checked, to go to business school you take the GMAT.
Isn't the test for an MBA seeker the GMAT?
I believe it is a (jump) move in ice skating.
Have definitely heard (and used) WUSS in the wild. That O in SOO was my last square also so I didn’t have to chase down a mistake later.
Ice skating
Think figure skating
I got the first couple of themers from the crosses. When a few letters suggested KAMEHAMEHA, I went back to see WOE was going on. The old well of state capital abbreviations strikes again - great when a theme seems so obvious in retrospect, but someone went out and conceived of this and found terrific answers.
I call foul on Rex for the “damn” dupe in the write-up. Use it once, I fault the clue, twice I fault poor coffee.
Speaking of dupes, the clue(s) for LLAMAS and ALPACAS was probably the most legit use of the same clue for different answers.
I am really enjoying watching the weather in my park on a SNOWDAY!!! As the puzzle says: SOO AAH
My wife tells me that “wussy” is offensive, because it is a combination of “wimp” and “pu**y”. I would assume “wuss” falls into the offensive category by extension…
Before my time but I remember reading of a NYT puzzle on Election Day 1996 where there were two solutions to the puzzle - CLINTON ELECTED and BOB DOLE ELECTED. It would’ve been cool if they had done that with Gulf of Mexico and Gulf of America. I guess not possible due to extra letter. Oh well.
No you are not. Also a bit of a double Natick, because I don’t know who (what?) Awkwafina is, so that last letter crossing with nihAo could have been anything.
Waxing roth
Hey All !
Another 16 wide puz that doesn't really need to be 16 wide. The reason today's is, is to get the two 6 letter Themers in the Middle Row. Also makes it easier to fill, amazingly enough. If not 16 wide, as puz sits, the 6 letter Themers would go where OFFSET and UNEASE are. Still a decent way to cram all the Themers in. Or a different grid pattern could be a way to go. I'm sure the constructors tried a 15 wide grid, but decided if the 6 letter Themers were on one line, filling would be easier.
As for the Theme, pretty neat. Took me a minute to grok what was afoot. Got it finally at KAMEHAMEHA, knowing something was fishy with the italicized clues after having no choice for 37A being PADRES. Was trying to equate dogs with dads. Har. Saw the Hiking finally as HI king, said, "AHA!", and went through the rest of the Themers, filling them in while smiling.
Just so ya know, SOO is also Railroad company, SOO Line Railroad, a Class 1 Railroad. Better clue, says I. 😁
Fun ThursPuz, Aiden and Jacob. Thanks for more puz for the money.
Happy Thursday!
Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Pegged the maneuver a few minutes in at OZARKS/WILMINGTON, filled on crosses + extrapolation (had kicked NW to curb as it balked at dropping trou post-bloody-haste). "Ar" (Popeye 'a') range, "De" (Hervé Villechaize
'the') port ? No, no.. postal abbrevs. Ach so, verstehe. And they all jibe, except Idaho entity, so I thought. But.. it works too. Clever interrogatives, keen device.
Strikes? The lowliest, dullest of spuds, the dullard, the doofus, the ding-dong, the unmannerly oaf, the vacuous gadfly, the RUSSET, elevated by McD and the Freedom Fry over hundreds of its more appealing cousins to ninety-plus market share. That's it.
We're still wit free. Nothing even knocking at the door for SLEEP TIGHTS, BILLIE JEANS, CUT ME SOME SLACKS (Barbara Lin, 2024-10-22). But the word lists and regular expressions cannot fashion humor. Established.
Conversely, no serious issues the past month either. Same ol', same ol'.
Finished in the NW staring for a few at four blanks, 1a x 1d, 1a x 4d, 21a x 1d, 21a x 4d. Then it smote me, and Riprock shattered his Thurs best by over a min. Booyah.
Two solid thumbs up.
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