Juvenile locust / SUN 4-20-25 / Peach or plum, botanically / Little flap, maybe / Hotheaded liberal politico who's eager to hear? / Dam near the Philae Temple of Isis / Plant that was a top-five girl's name in the 1970s / Smitten person's declaration / "Suh-weet! I love this sandwich cookie!"? / Group that Tiger hires to install wall art? / Makeup of some metallic bonds
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Constructor: Victor Schmitt and Tracy Bennett
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- WOODS WOODSCREW CREW (25A: Group that Tiger hires to install wall art?)
- SPAM SPAMALOT ALOT (41A: Send fan mail en masse to a Monty Python production?)
- MAD MADISON IS ON (60A: Angry early president can be seen now in TV footage?)
- DEM DEMAGOG AGOG (85A: Hotheaded liberal politico who's eager to hear?)
- PRO PROCURES CURES (104A: Pharmacist comes through for customers?)
- RED REDACTION ACTION (122A: Editor's strike?)
- POST POSTAGE AGE (3D: Email era?)
- WHOO! WHOOPIE PIE! (56D: "Suh-weet! I love this sandwich cookie!"?)
Ian Joseph Somerhalder (/ˈsʌmərhɔːldər/ SUM-ər-hawl-dər; born December 8, 1978) is an American former actor and current business owner. He is known for playing Boone Carlyle in ABC's science fiction adventure drama television series Lost (2004–2010) and Damon Salvatore in the CW supernatural teen drama series The Vampire Diaries (2009–2017). (wikipedia)
My brain feels like it's melting—is that really how you spell "DEMAGOG"—I could've sworn there was a "-ue" on the end of it. [Looks it up] Oh thank god. I'm correct. According to merriam-webster dot com, "DEMAGOGUE" is the spelling—under "variants" it says "less commonly DEMAGOG." I'd say "way less commonly." That answer was probably the hurtiest of the lot, not just because DEMAGOG was spelled bizarrely, but because nothing in the clue really indicated demagoguery at all. Being a "hot-headed politico" does not make you a DEMAGOG(UE). Needless to say, the theme kind of went off the rails for me there. The rest of it meandered from fine to bland to awkward. Some of the theme answers seemed pretty snappy (POST POSTAGE AGE, MAD MADISON IS ON, SPAMS SPAMALOT A LOT), but some were just too contrived to be funny (WOODS WOODSCREW CREW) or just kind of blah (PRO PROCURES CURES—"PRO" seems very weak as a stand in for "Pharmacist"). Had some trouble with "WHOO! WHOOPIE PIE!" mostly because "WHOO!" doesn't really track (for me) as a "Suh-weet!" stand-in. "Woo hoo!" is the expression I was looking for (the fact that I live under the deep and abiding influence of Homer Simpson may have something to do with that). I also haven't seen / thought of a WHOOPIE PIE in years. Decades? People still eat these? The only "sandwich cookie" I know is, well, you know.
- 55A: Dam near the Philae Temple of Isis (ASWAN) — this answer keeps catching my eye and every time I think "why is A SWAN" in this puzzle? How is that even being clued? ... oh, right, the dam."
- 70A: Go beyond the opponent's baseline, in tennis (OVERHIT) — only just debuted a few years ago (2019), though it appeared in a NYT acrostic a few years before that. "Baseline" is the example of the thing being exceeded each time, except for the one time it was [Send beyond the green, say]. I would've thought "OVERSHOOT" for golf, but golf's not really my thing, to say the least, so sure, golf too, why not? LOL when I google [overshoot the green] my first five hits are cryptic crossword clue explanation sites. But after those, yes, looks like "overshoot (the green)" is def a real golf concept. (PS: the cryptic clue in question: [Overshoot the green badly, though not with the driver (9)]. Can you solve it? Answer below*.
- 112A: Plant that was a top-five girl's name in the 1970s (HEATHER) — never thought about it, but yeah, went to school with a number of HEATHERs, and HEATHER Locklear and HEATHER Graham were famous actresses of roughly my age (a little older and a little younger, respectively), but then, sometimes in the '90s it looks like, the HEATHER (and Jennifer, and Amy) market collapsed, and the Brittany / Caitlin / Madison apocalypse began...
- 129A: What very punctual people arrive on (THE DOT) — very weird to have THE DOT not following a specific time. "I'll be there on THE DOT!" What dot!?!?
- 6D: Certain queer identity, for short (ARO) — as in "aromantic."
- 16D: Makeup of some metallic bonds (ARCWELDS) — don't remember this at all. Must've worked my way around it using crosses. If you arcweld, you weld using an arc created by electricity.
- 45D: Juvenile locust (NYMPH) — ah, locust taxonomy! Finally a subject I'm an expert in! (shouted someone, possibly ... but not me).
- 85D: Peach or plum, botanically (DRUPE) — basically, a stone fruit. I learned this word from crosswords ... and then crosswords promptly stopped showing it to me (it's been 17 years!!!!? and only the second appearance in the last 34 years ... this surprises me; really thought the word was more common)
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[RAH, lol] |
My book Across the Universe: The Past, Present, and Future of The Crossword Puzzle, is now available for pre-order! If you can, would you pre-order it through Bookshop, Books-A-Million, Barnes and Noble, or your local bookstore?
Pre-orders help books get attention and remain a powerful way to support authors. I've been lucky to receive an early blurb from Stefan Fatsis, the bestselling author of Word Freak, who calls Across the Universe "a gridful of insight and pleasure ... a deft and deep exploration of the crossword puzzle’s obsessive grip on American life."
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You can read excerpts from the book in The New Yorker and The New York Times; the Times piece is about the role of games in moments of crisis, and, unfortunately, is as relevant as ever. I'll be having some events once the book comes out, and I'll keep you posted on that. But for now, pre-order if you can!
- Cryptic part of the clue: "Overshoot" = PASS; "green badly" = anagram of "green" = ENGER
- Definition part of the clue: "not with the driver" = in the car but not driving it = PASSENGER
111 comments:
[Potent potable belonging to cunning actor Sylvester]
SLYSLYSTALLONESTALLONE
Didn't hate it, but didn't love it either. And the delicious Indian dish rogan josh is the perfect way to never use the hate-monger's name ever again :)
DANAE / URACIL: Naticked on the "A"
Better than all the Double Visions in the puzzle!
This was reasonably straightforward once one got the theme, which I thought was pretty clever! Hmm, can I think up of any myself...?
[Prohibit Malia's dad from an exclamation? BARBARACKACK]
[Censor Tricky Dick's TV ad? NIXNIXONON]
OK, maybe not so difficult to come up with, LOL.
While I thought this was a cute theme -- and liked the Monty Python answer best, while not put off by the answer about Tiger -- my wife was in Rex's camp. But neither of us appreciated (knew) "Hanker (for)" / JONES. ARCWELDS was unusual and clever; here I was, trying to dredge up some college chemistry. Still, many of the clues just seemed too easy: "Van Winkle of folklore"; "Strip for breakfast"; "___ Ross House (Philadelphia landmark)", etc.
Laser therapy for acne? Wow, seems pretty aggressive, even in a SPA frequented by Jean-LUC Picard.
Started out Easy-Medium when I was trying to solve without reading the theme clues. Became Easier once I gave up on that. I knew about DANAE (118A) because I follow the comic strip Non Sequitur.
Overwrites:
RAyS before RADS at 7D
BILobA before BILBOA (52D)
DOx before DOC (79A)
BEGiN before BEGAN (81A)
I hEar ya before I SEee you before I SECOND at 103D
CErA before CENA at 108D, as usual
yearn before JONES at 114D
WOEs:
BIOSCAN (10D) had me thinking "Is that really a thing?" (it is)
OVERHIT (70A)
IAN Somerhalder (126A)
URACIL (109D)
When I become editor, Sunday puzzles will be themeless.
Danae being impregnated by a shower of gold appears in many artworks
Man. Our quirky language. The things you can do with it! I actually did a double take when I saw what was going on in the theme answers. I am still childlike when presented with wordplay like this, and there I was, with my jaw dropped and thinking, “This is amazing!”
So, I rode though this outing with an inner smile. A trio of memorable moments:
• Shook my head at how quickly I had forgotten PPE, the term that was everywhere during covid.
• [Liver spot] for ABODE was so silly I immediately fell in love with it.
• DEMAGOG won me over because it contains Biblical pair Gog and Magog.
Eight long theme answers for a Sunday puzzle is impressive. One thing that helped the constructors do it was the addition of an extra column.
Thank you, Victor and Tracy, for finding this quirk in our language and flying with it. What fun – this was a hoot!
Yes to this. Titian has multiple versions, and Klimt and Rembrant among others have done versions of Danae.
Almost quit the puzzle then and there, why include this latter day Lord Haw-Haw and soil the rest of the grid with his presence?
Seth Rogan is very famous and Josh Rogan is less famous but certainly crossword worthy. Maybe they chose to use the podcast guy because they aren’t among the infinitesimal part of the population who would object to seeing his name in a puzzle.
Very easy Sunday to cap a very easy weekend. Kind of a shame that the weakest themer appears first. My favorite was PRO PROCURES CURES.
Annoying at best
Joe Rogan a hate-monger? My, what a thin skin we have.
Please tell me they didn’t clue ABODE that way! What a dud.
The theme was easy to discern, although there seemed to be a true dichotomy as Rex pointed out - the theme answers were either really good or really bad.
The tragic flaw in this one, in my opinion, is that the gunk is really, really gunky, even by the NYT standards. I felt like I was having a bad dream trying to make sense of BILOBA, STREGA, URACIL, DANAE, ASWAN, DRUPE, and LORDE. Possibly a wheelhouse situation, but that’s a lot of answers that don’t even look like real words to me - so I just enter them and hope - which is too many steps removed from an “aha” experience from discerning a difficult clue/answer. If that stuff is in fact in your wheelhouse , more power to you - I don’t think I have enough brain cells left to store that much esoterica in my increasingly feeble mind.
I saw POSTPOST and thought the repetition would stop there. I wanted maybe POST-POSTAL something. Once I got the gimmick, I thought I would breeze through the puzzle, just like last Sunday’s repetition-based theme. However, I had to work a bit for some themers and especially the fill. Easy-Medium overall.
WHOO WHOOPIE PIE is a bit of an outlier in that it’s the only themer where the last two words form an actual phrase.
That cryptic clue sure does look iffy to me. The first “the” does nothing for the wordplay. And “not with the driver” is supposed to define PASSENGER? Parts of speech don’t match, and PASSENGERs very much are “with the driver”. They’re just not the driver. A typical example of a cryptic clue trying too hard just to make the surface reading work.
Speaking of Sunday themes and repetition, a user on r/crossword accidentally found out that today’s theme is exactly the same as https://rexwordpuzzle.blogspot.com/2021/06/social-media-pic-designed-to-attract.html
except the 2021 theme is more consistent in that the middle words are all 3rd person verbs. PRO PROCURES CURES appears in both puzzles.
Whoopie pies are amazing. Very high on my list of favorite treats. Do yourself a favor and eat more of them!
Was "Tiger" supposed to be "Tigger" in 25A? That would help that answer make more sense.
Eliminate ROGAN (figuratively IRL, literally in the puzzle). Use Seth ROGEN instead. Just a few words to adjust
A classic NYT Sunday where you finish and the main reaction is “eh, who gives a shit.” A couple tougher crosses, some cutesy wordplay, but nothing that actually makes you care about what you just did.
Hey All !
Different, I'll give it that. 22 wide grid, to get Mr. MAD MADISON (IS)ON and your DEM DEMAGOG AGOG in the center. More puz for your hard earned money.
I had sHOOsHOOPIEPIE in. Is Shoopie anything? Also had PPp. Had to Goog for LOEW to see we weren't shooing the PIE away, but WHOOing it's existence. Ah, says I, a WHOOPIE PIE. WHOO! ASsAN, ASsAm, ASWAN my damn dam went through.
Had zoNeS in for LANDS, thinking it was neat JONES crossing ZONES. Two UPs Rex missed, SHOW UP, OWNSUP. Oh, and a PUP. (See also, DRUPE 😁)
Nice how the two Down Themers avoid any of the Across Themers. Quite possibly the actual reason for the 22 wide grid
Fill decent, maneuvering around all the Themers.
HEATHER is my main character/heroine of my book, (since Rex plugged a book, I will too! 😁), Changing Times by Darrin Vail. Head over to Amazon or barnesandnoble.com to procure a copy for yourself. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you might throw it at @Nancys wall! I've been made aware of two mistakes in it so far, one rather blatant. See if you can find them!
Have a great Easter/Sunday!
Two F's (in an oversized grid)
RooMonster
DarrinV
Naticked at URACIL and DANAE. Way too much ugly fill and crosswordese to be enjoyable.
*adored* ABODE for liver-spot 96A. incredibly clever.
got PETDOOR right away. 101D
also giggled at THE DOT. c'mon, Rex, that's good. 129A.
I had AGAG at first... I realized the beginnings were repeated, but took me a while to realize the ends were too! 85A
also MIROS instead of DALIS 128A.
LET IN instead of SAW IN 4D.
ADRENALIN(E) instead of ADVENTURE 90D.
and OCULA instead of OCULO 63D.
tripped up a bit on WALE, DANAE, DRUPE, and still don't know what NABOB or ARCWELDS are.
so all this took me 25 minutes longer than a normal Sunday 🫠, but I stuck with it and finally got everything into place. 😮💨
that's what I get for talking about how easy the puzzles were all week!
noooo ABODE was so cute!
Loved this on the whole, though big trouble with SBARRO crossing RTS and OTRA, basically random letters though I somehow inferred them despite the improbable SB.
Unfortunately neither is spelled Rogan. Seth Rogen and Josh Rogin. Agree with the commenter above cluing it as the Indian dish!
Whoopie pies are definitely still a thing here in central Pennsylvania Amish country. So good.
Surprised Rex doesn’t know Seth Rogan or maybe he just forgot. Less surprised he doesn’t know Josh Rogan, even though he is the most talented Rogan IMO. Not a fan of Joe either but why in the world shouldn’t he be crossword clue ? No bad people or people I don’t like allowed in puzzles seems kind of a silly policy.
Hey, Rex. Loved the write-up and awesome music video refs, as always.
I think 85A is not about a demagogue or demagoguery. Rather it’s about a democratic (“liberal”) leader, or DEM who is AGOG (“eager to hear”).
Happy egg hunting, All!
Actually, 77 Down was my favorite answer, not due to any intrinsic value but because I knew it would make a certain DEMDEMOGOGgoGAGA (Goddam mad dog wrecks Rex?)
Paraphrasing Ronald Reagan’s famous debate quip to Jimmy Carter, “There you Joe ROGAN!”
Happy Easter every bunny!
I really enjoyed this puzzle and thought the theme was pretty clever, had some good word-play clues, and didn’t have much gunk (sorry @Southside we just have to agree to disagree). I started out (for me) like a house on fire and picked up the gimmick pretty quickly (which helped) then kind of screeched to something above a halt for the bottom half of the puzzle. Still, I managed to finish without a cheat (victory!) as my patience finally resulted in some eurekas that allowed me to finish without ”clean.”
Okay. I knew the Joe ROGAN guy was the dude who did Fear Factor (I might have watched one of these so how I knew that I do not know), and I “knew” he had some kind of show or podcast these days, but I don’t watch ANY “opinion” spewing fare (on either side) so I decided to search Joe due to the negative comments about his presence in the puzzle (taking aside the proper name biz people hate) and here is a paragraph:
“Rogan has voiced support for same-sex marriage, recreational drug legalization, universal health care, universal basic income, gun rights, and free speech, while opposing cancel culture and military adventurism. Rogan has been criticized for promoting conspiracy theories, COVID-19 misinformation, and for hosting guests who spread misinformation and pseudoscience.[5][6] Having previously endorsed Ron Paul in 2012, Bernie Sanders in 2020, Rogan supported Donald Trump in 2024, but after Trump's 2025 inauguration, he voiced criticism of some of his policies.[7]”
He definitely runs the gamut, and his type of show isn’t my cuppa, but dang…THIS is singled out to be considered totally despicable these days?
Lastly, a few people yesterday commented on some of the commenters and “bragging” etc…or people new to crossworld feel “out of place” (which Gary J addressed in an excellent reply) and I just wanted to say that I felt the SAME way when I first started reading blog comments! Yes. There will always be people who feel the need to put their solving time down. However, most people use the term “easy” to mean “easy for a Friday” or whatever day it is, because that is how Rex “rates” puzzles. Thing is, as Gary J says…the longer you work the puzzles the “easier” it gets (for you). I personally don’t WANT to get my panties in a twist while trying to fill in words as fast as I can. Some folks get their kicks out of that.
The only thing worse than a puzzle that's too easy? One that's too easy for 90% of it, and then populated with words you've never heard of for the other 10%. DRUPE? STREGA? ARC WELDS? I ran the alphabet for the DANAE/URACIL cross which is the only reason I did not officially DNF, although I don't know that it counts. Be careful what you wish for I guess. Finished in 32:58
Very good!
1. Guy gets old gracefully.
2. Jailbird ponders guidelines
3. Deface Scorsese's food cans
(answers below)
Right off, I'd have to say that WHOOPIE PIE sounds like something a lot funner than a cookie sandwich. More like teen boy talk for you-know-what. Course Bob never got in on any of that. When he'd ask a gal out, she'd say "NABOB".
Tourist: Are we close to Aswan?
Local: Dam near the Philae Temple of Isis.
Tourist: I don't care how damn near we are to some temple. Where's the damn dam?
Have to give a shoutout to the ridiculously dark and funny 1988 movie "Heathers". From Wikipedia: Heathers is a 1988[7] American teenblack comedy crime film written by Daniel Waters and directed by Michael Lehmann, in both of their respective film debuts.[8][9] The film stars Winona Ryder, Christian Slater, Shannen Doherty, Lisanne Falk, Kim Walker, and Penelope Milford. Its plot portrays four teenage girls—three of whom are named Heather—in a clique at an Ohio high school, one of whose lives is disrupted by the arrival of a misanthrope intent on murdering the popular students and staging their deaths as suicides.[3].
I could do without giving Joe Rogan any recognition, but at least we also have PROTEST in the puzzle. Mrs. Egs and I were there yesterday with our signs, as it seems we are most Saturday's. Hope you all were too.
The best thing about this theme is that we haven't yet (as of the time I'm writing this) had anyone intoning the phrase "Solved it as a themeless and only got the repeating idea when I came here." Personally, I not only got and used the theme, but I enjoyed it a lot. Thanks, Victor Schmitt and Tracy Bennett.
1. MANMANAGESAGES
2. CONCONTEMPLATESTEMPLATES
3. MARMARTINSTINS
Same.
Writing in "pines" confidently instead of "jones" and typing it "exoteric" tripped me up for awhile. Never heard of nabob either.
Or because they can spell.
Neither are spelled with an A.
Strega Nona is an award-winning, high-selling children’s book that multiple generations of children have read.
Danae was one of Jove's (Zeus's) love objects. He poured gold into her lap. A poem commemorates it:
Jove courted Danae with golden love,
But you're not Danae and I'm not Jove.
- J. V. Cunningham
Easy, yes because of all of the repetition the theme provided. Like Rex, my two least favorites were DEM DEMAGOG AGOG and PRO PROCURES CURES. (Auto-Correct does not like DEMAGOG.) And the clue for WOODS WOODSCREW CREW was iffy. MAD MADISON IS ON is my favorite.
My only trouble here was also the DANAE CENA URACIL, because I had John CErA. Staring at DAr_E and trying to come up with a mythical name finally cleared that up, yea DANAE. "Liver spot" = ABODE, har!
Thanks, Victor and Tracy! And Happy Easter to those who celebrate.
Top half fairly easy, bottom half pretty tough. Getting the theme pattern at the top half helped me finish the bottom where the theme answers were tougher for me to parse.
I don’t think I would have gotten the last O in OCULO without the theme. I had an A there at first.
This was more frustrating than fun.
agreed. i had same problem. ruined whole puzzle for em
If a bald podcaster hankers for a hank of hair, does he JONESROGAINE?
Absolutely!
First time commenter- Rex, you gotta share that this "theme" was originally from 30 rock!
https://www.tiktok.com/@peacock/video/7408328996926213422
I’m with @Niallhost on this one—it ran the gamut from INANE to ESOTERIC with abandon. Of all the definitions, NABOB for honcho was the strangest for me. Have never come across NABOB as implying any organized leadership position in the way honcho does. Anyway, giving this puzzle the benefit of the doubt as to accuracy and logic, I enjoyed the inanity of the theme.
My total sympathy for those who naticked out at DANAE/URACIL... there's just no excuse for crossing one obscurity with another like this. Luckily for me, I recalled a minor cartoon character (in Calvin and Hobbes, I think) who went by "Danae, " otherwise I'd have been as clueless...
Rex is pretty much on the money with today's critique, but since I was able to finish without error, I have to consider it a net positive puzzle...
Really wanting to quit this idiocy, ang got it when I hit Joe Rogan. The depths that the NYT Crossword is sinking to depressing.
Any puzzle that inspires the commentariat to think up their own themers can't be all bad.
The puzzle seemed much too easy at the top, but it grew more challenging as it went on. I'm talking about the surrounding fill. That's when I got to words like DRUPE and URACIL which were great big "Huh?"s. As far as the themers go, I thought they were uneven. SPAMSPAMALOTALOT was nice, but I'm baffled by WOODSWOODSCREWCREW. There' something called a woodscrew?
I liked this OK, but didn't love it.
Good one!
I hear ya on the whole Michael Cera/John CENA confusion!
That’s okay. You’re obviously not old enough to remember a quote from a certain vice president saying “nattering nabobs of negativity.” It’s probably the most clever grouping of words he ever said.
Who spells demagogue, demagog? My fourth-grade teacher is agog!
Yep, HEATHERs was a surprisingly good movie.
That crossing is really bad
Not easy-medium at all. For me this was the hardest Sunday in a long time. DNF at 109D because I had DANtE at 118A which begat URtCIL. I looked up STREdA because I thought MAd was part of 65A but alas STREGA came up on the Google. Excellent, but tough puzzle.
Note to blog: I'm having cataract surgery tomorrow and I don't know how much my ability to do the puzzle or to write about it will be impacted -- or for how long. You might not see me for a few days or so -- I just don't know.
Same, knew her from Titian. I didn't know that Perseus was the result, though.
I haven't a "clue" how I did it but I solved it - no cheats, no typos - started out doing it as a themeless & worked my way through. I'll start with I loved PET DOOR. Hated ARCWELDS, DRUPE, URACIL, STREGA. Knew I'd encountered ARO before. Maybe I should stay up after doing my daily
5 mile walk at dawn more often.
Thank you Tracy & Victor. I'm proud of myself today :)
@Nancy
Good luck tomorrow.
The theme struck me as sort of a high-wire act, challenging for the constructors and inducing nail-biting in the solver: would the entry make it all the way across that long expanse with a flourish? SPAMSPAMALOTALOT - Yes! Or wobble a bit? WOODSWOODSCREWCREW - Mm-hmm. Or fall flat midway? DEMAGOG - Don't want to be reminded in my puzzle. I'm always happy to see Tracy Bennett's name at the top, anticipating a witty theme and fun solve - for me this one was hit or miss.
Good luck tomorrow Nancy :)
Yes, good luck and thanks for letting us know!
Had mine done a couple years ago. Prepare to see the world much clearer and BRIGHTER! (Realized how much my vision was dimmed when I turned on my tv post-op and had to turn the brightness down from the max of 100 to a more reasonable middle range.)
I’m getting total knee replacement in June so I can (eventually) take Diva on long walks again. Get to a certain age, have fewer original manufacturers parts.
Good luck!
The spelling of DEMAGOG crossing STREGA ruined me, even though I picked up on the theme with MADMADISONISON. Nobody asked me, but would the same presidential clue lead to NIXONSTUBERNIXREBUTSNIXON? Maybe not.
Yeah, WOODSCREWS are definitely a thing. From the famous line, How many screws could a wood screw screw if a wood screw could screw wood?
Thought SPAMALOT was the weakest since the name of the comedy was already a spoof on Camelot.
Better would be “Ex-Veep repeatedly went to Broadway musical”: KAMALACAMEALOTCAMELOT (but of course, the missing “to” causes it not to quite work).
At the old MN Twins site (Metropolitan Stadium), the parking lot had areas named after animals to remind you where you parked. So going to Camel Lot might just result in seeing a baseball game.
yes, you do seem to. ..have.
you might not see you for a couple days as well. good luck.
Wrong Woods. You're in the Hundred Acre Wood. You need to be on the golf course.
Danae is the main character in Non Sequitur, a close second to Calvin and Hobbes IMO.
What do you get if you combine Rogaine and Viagra? Answer: Don King.
Doesn’t work for several reasons, do you really not see them?
Good luck Nancy! My wife had that surgery a few years ago. I joked that it improved her vision so much that she left me.
Cool! I’ll be able to sleep in Sundays!
Am I the only one having trouble parsing “RED REDACTION ACTION”? I finished the puzzle, but can’t quite make sense of that one.
Had this done over 25 years ago. As soon as you have one eye done, you'll want the other one done immediately, even though obviously you need to wait a while. You'll say wow! They washed the windows and turned on the lights! Goo luck!!
Late due to church duties--we sang something Mozart wrote when he was 12, the little show off.
Pretty much exactly what OFL said about this one. I learned about DRUPE and URACIL and BILOBA and met IAN and DANAE and probably will never think about any of them again unless they show up in crosslandia.
You can walk into pretty much any convenience store around here and find a WHOOPIEPIE. This is a good thing.
@egs--We were out yesterday with what passes for a crowd in these parts. We're also out every Thursday in one town and Friday in another. Our big local one is scheduled for May Day, with speakers and songs. I'll be leading This Land Is Your Land and America The Beautiful, good seats still available.
OK Sunday, VS and TB. Veered Sharply between easy and Tricky Business, and thanks for a fair amount of fun.
8 themers! Wordplay deluxe. A regular WOODSCREWCREW of weird-ball themers. Different. Kinda liked, even tho not extra-humorous [but at least slightly so].
Sorta easy-ish solvequest, other than Rut-roh Central's BILOBA/STREGA/STILT/DEMAGOG/NABOB/ASADA.
staff weeject pick: ESS. Primo double-POC provider, in the SW [and yo, to @AnoaBob dude].
Primo weeject stacks, NW & SE. Different 3-way to open up a SunPuz. Again, like.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Schmitt dude & Ms. Bennett darlin. U sure gave yer THEME THE MESHUGA SHUGA.
Masked & Anonymo8Us
... closest to a runt I can remember lately that was tryin a somewhat similar puztheme trick ...
"Re-re-recycled" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Samesies
This old timer knows that some Indian rulers were indeed NABOBs, who ruled vast tracts. Macaulay has some amusing things to say about the NABOB of the Carnatic in his letters to his sisters. The term eventually was applied to Brits who returned home with great wealth after working for the East India Company
Same!
Absolutely the BEST thing about getting old! My wife is frustrated that her vision never quite degrades sufficiently for HER to have the surgery too!
All the best to you and eye, @Nancy darlin.
M&A
I was there with you. The REJOIN/JONES/COMETO intersection took a lot of staring/fiddling (like way more than it feels like it should have) once everything else was locked down.
This is a very impressive Sunday of the type I call a “Constructor’s (or in this case constructors’) feat. The idea appeared at some point to our able duo, probably something akin to “look at how weird this looks: “RED REDACTION ACTION is really RED RED ACTION ACTION! I wonder what other similar things we can figure out; could be a crossword theme!” And here we are.
Very, very impressive construction and very solvable once one sees the gimmick. In my solve, this happened quickly just because of the direction in which I wended my way through the grid.
I went diagonally from the NW down through about I’M IN LOVE before I decided to go back to the top and tidy up. Speaking of tidying UP, we have another dupe today SHOW UP AND OWNS UP. Is that just something that’s ok now? Oh well.
I went on a bit of a rant at the (in my opinion) absolute misspelling of DEMAGOGue!!! Sure, it’s listed as a variant. I do not care; the word is DAMAGOGue. Oh right, I just did a post about the current reawakening of the old discussion about whether to make English easier by adopting fonetik speling. If u red that post or this, u may be able to suss out my opinyun on the subjekt. Okokokok.
I found the solve a tad tedious but I enjoyed the constructors’ efforts in creating so many theme entries. My favorites were SPAMS SPAMALOT A LOT and RED REDACTION ACTION.
Quite an impressive feat of construction.
Only one place that slowed me down, but not much. 109D URACIL was new, 119D I had forgotten Enceladus so needed the crosses for ETNA, and I was not familiar IAN Somerhalder at 126D. However, the acrosses down through there were very easy.
Impressive construction, Sunday worthy theme, not very hard, but a tad tedious.
I’m actually sitting at Bodega Bay staring at the Pacific Ocean and watching my kids and granddaughter climb around the rocks and explore what’s left in the tide pools. I might also be drinking some excellent local Cali pinot noir so I’m going to get back to that. Peace, love and believing we can actually find common ground are my mantras.
Many thanks to all of you for your good wishes, encouraging prognostications and humorous asides.
rando comment just did la times Sunday brilliant beyond so worth it
As @Anonymous is asking a reasonable question, let me remind him/her that classically editors would "strike" (out) unwanted verbiage with a "red pen." Thus this is kind of a redundancy, as every redaction is in this sense a "red action."
Conrad
There are several actors who have four letter last names c + vowel + consonant+ vowel. I always have trouble. Even though I just read an interview of this actor the Times!
Southside Johnny
I agree with many here Crosswords have this type of trick clue all the time, here seemingly about an organ , but actually about where one lives. We all thought it was clever
Your list is not of “made up “ words but “real” words and names that we may or may not know and/or like. You are probably not in the demographic who had children reading Strega Nona, fairly popular story translated from Italian , but it is no more a made up word than Pinocchio. I think it’s well known enough for the puzzle. BTW it’s appeared before. Lorde is a quite popular pop star, not on the Taylor Swift level but no more made up.
Obviously, I don’t like your use of the word made up! But I understand why they can annoy
Why are so many going off on DEMAGOG? Americans spell epilogue epilog and analogue analog, catalog catalog. So what's the big deal?
I got irritated by the over use of natick and it’s implied criticism of puzzle Begin rant. Uracil and DANAE is the most commonly claimed natick today.
Rex created and defined natick as the crossing of 2 proper nouns that are objectively obscure to MOST people.
AND the spelling can not be inferred. (Natick Mass crossing an uninferable first initial of N.C.Wyeth.a turn of the 20th Century illustrator.). Just because an individual doesn’t know either doesn’t count.(I didn’t know uracil) By the term creator’s definition this is no natick. Anyway uracil isn’t even a proper noun. I do admit I needed almost every cross, but it is not that obscure. Danae as noted has escaped beyond Greek myth to a character’s name in a popular comic strip. Nowhere near as obscure as the illustrator.
I liked Diane Drew’s post.
Brought me back to the Nixon Administration. Diane, the reason why many Boomers know NABOB is that a later imprisoned VP Spiro Agnew gave a speech attacking the press as nattering nabobs of negativism. Spiro did NOT write the speech. William Safire a Nixon speech writer did. Safire later wrote an op-ed column in the Times.
The theme was okay. I especially liked Spamalot
Demagog doesn’t bother me. It is part of our long tradition simplifying the original British spelling. (See Nathaniel Webster).
Definitely not infinitesimal
I'm a Non Sequitur fan too.
And crossing CENA. Ugh!
😭👏🏾
Alas, same.
Loved that DANAE URACIL nattick. /s
rex is right. a demagogue is "a political leader who appeals to desires and prejudices rather than rational argument."
hotheaded liberal politico who's eager to hear?:
DEM / DEMAGOG / AGOG
so DEM matches to "liberal" and maybe "politico," DEMAGOG(UE) matches to "hotheaded" and "politico" and "who's eager to hear" matches to AGOG.
all of the themers follow this!
see:
send fan mail en masse [SPAM // A LOT] to a Monty Python set [SPAMALOT]
group [CREW] that Tiger hires [WOODS'] to hang wall art [WOODSCREW]
angry [MAD] early president [MADISON] can be seen now in TV footage [IS ON]
pharmacist [PRO] comes through [PROCURES] for customers [CURES]
hot-headed liberal [DEM] politico [DEMAGOG(UE)] who's eager to hear [AGOG]
good luck, nancy. take your time resting and recovering. 💐
👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
because that's simply not how anyone spells it. ;) and we spell epilogue with the UE as well.... there used to be a bookstore in the city with that name.
yes, catalog and analog have dropped the ends, but we also recognize the English spelling and would accept either.
all of that to say - your second set of examples could go either way, but the first set do not.
same thing with "magic" realism earlier in the week.
I loved this puzzle. maybe because family stuff kept me occupied until late, maybe it is a 420 moment but I laughed at the ridiculous themers and every time I got stuck there was a safety clue right next door.
@Nancy 12:04 PM
Hope it's smooth sailing. The surgeries helped my dad a lot.
Podría sorprenderte.
Phew. Wasn't sure I would win today with so much funny business going on. Delightful and amusing and plenty of struggle.
These theme answers are so ridiculous I love them. [Liver spot] needs to be called out on its own as a class 1 comedy felony.
I didn't remember NABOB. I didn't know DEMAGOG would dare be spelt thataway. And URACIL should've been clued as [Six random letters].
People: 14
Places: 3
Products: 3
Partials: 12
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 35 of 145 (24%)
Funnyisms: 13 😂
Tee-Hee: Strip for breakfast. Goon.
Uniclues:
1 Headline to encourage others to become billionaires.
2 How much does a stamp cost?
3 Recommendation to spice up your morning trek to work.
1 EXEC'S SALARY LANDS EEL
2 POST-POSTAGE-AGE RIDDLE
3 OMELET AMPS ADVENTURE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Well, apparently last year's puzzle was so bad I didn't write any uniclues. Ha. It seems I was furious.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
It was meh but the demagogue reminder + Rogan ruined it for me on Easter Sunday morning.
85 across. This is about a Democrat who is agog. The to hear in the clue indicates there is a homophone for the word demagogue.
My wife is a pharmacist and I was a little perturbed by that clue
Funny enough, with the NHL playoffs starting, I went out yesterday and bought myself a NEW NEW JERSEY JERSEY
Go Devils!
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