Tswana for "fly" / THU 5-1-25 / Trailblazing astronaut Jemison / Modern prefix with normativity / Gorgeous ones, informally / Video game character speaking a gibberish language / It's "read" as a stern warning / Cat breed named after an Indonesian island from which it didn't originate / Film based on the 1983 children's novel "The Sheep-Pig" / Big thing in fast food? / Turn into stars, say? / Title friend of Marlin in an animated film
Thursday, May 1, 2025
Constructor: Aidan Deshong and Adam Levav
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- BASELINE (18A: *Cat breed named after an Indonesian island from which it didn't originate) (i.e. BALINESE)
- RICOTTA (24A: *It's "read" as a stern warning) (i.e. RIOT ACT)
- KIMONOS (26A: *Relative of a snowboard) (i.e. MONOSKI)
- AVENGER (52A: *Carve out, in a way) (i.e. ENGRAVE)
- DUSTPAN (55A: *Comedy club fare) (i.e. STAND-UP)
- REVILING (61A: *Villain's expression) (i.e. EVIL GRIN)
Inés María Mendoza Rivera de Muñoz Marín (January 10, 1908 in Naguabo, Puerto Rico – August 13, 1990 in San Juan), was a former First Lady of Puerto Rico, teacher, writer and socialite. She was the second wife of Governor Luis Muñoz Marín. Inés Mendoza stood by the Spanish language, defying the new colonial authorities that wanted to replace it with English.
• • •
... and then before I knew it, I had the first themer almost completely filled in, without ever having looked at its clue. I could see that RIC-TT- had to be RICOTTA, the only question was why:
My only trouble came when my "aha" moment at 18A: *Cat breed named after an Indonesian island from which it didn't originate led me to the correct answer ... but then I wrote it in as the (incorrect) homophone of the correct answer: BASSLINE. This meant that, bizarrely, the hardest answer for me to get today was the three-letter ELM (19D: West ___ (furniture retailer)). Instead of E-- I had S-- and thought "West ... SKY?" I think I was thinking of SKY West—that's, like, an airline or something, isn't it? Yes! Ugh. Then I thought "isn't the furniture retailer West NINE?" But no, that's Nine West, and that's a fashion retailer. Clearly having retail trouble today. With two themers also in the NE, it seemed like that corner might be trouble, but gimmes like ARIANA and PALEO meant I was able to work it out. The corresponding SW corner also seemed like it might give me trouble—your only way in is from the back ends of two themers, but "GAL pal" and GENOA really helped me out there. That corner is pretty awful, in that it's jam-packed with proper nouns—three proper nouns crossing three other proper nouns in a tiny error that also has two themers?! Potential nightmare. I spent part of yesterday evening watching a bunch of relatively inexperienced college-age students solve crosswords, which immediately made apparent the perils of proper nouns. They were crashing out on stuff like Senator Mike CRAPO and the island of PALAU, and had trouble spelling Andre AGASSI. And I've seen my daughter (b. 2000) struggle at proper noun pile-ups that longtime solvers wouldn't struggle with because longtime solvers forget how many common crossword answers aren't necessarily all that common irl. Even with popular brands (AVEENO, say)—that answer came to me almost instantly. Why? Because I know my lotion brands so well? Hell no. Because my brain knows the brands That Are Likely To Appear in a Crossword? Yes. Anyway, all the proper nouns in the SW (except INÈS) seem reasonably familiar to me, but the density felt dangerous down there. (Shout-out to the Binghamton Crossword Club—y'all were fun to hang out with)
![]() |
[My favorite two words on this announcement are 1. "exciting" and 2. "professional"] |
![]() |
[sincerely, my apologies to every ACPT judge who had to deal with this handwriting] |
The fill on this one ran a little toward the FEEBLER side (FEEBLER being the wrong word I wrote in at first for 43D: More delicate and weak (FRAILER)). How are the BAHA Men still appearing in puzzles in the year 2025? And ECLAT and IAMB and ATILT and TSETSE gave the grid a little bit of a musty feel at times. But there's no real eye-roll or "ugh" moments in the grid. It's sufficiently solid. "I LEFT" is not a great partial, but I figure you get one free partial per puzzle, and when it's easy like that one was, well, no harm done
Other things:
- 20A: Places to carry out some takeout orders, for short? (ORS) — jocular clues about surgery, awesome! (actually, as someone who is having ... something ... "taken out" in a couple weeks, this one made me smile, however grimly) (I'm just fine, btw—routine stuff)
- 62D: President posthumously inducted in the Word Golf Hall of Fame (IKE) — so ... not ABE, then? OK.
- 44A: Past-tense verb that's potentially confusing (but grammatically correct!) when written twice in a row (HAD) — "potentially confusing"? Not as confusing as this clue, I assure you. A novel-length clue, complete with parenthetical comment, for ... HAD? Interesting choice.
- 60A: Video game character speaking a gibberish language (SIM) — is this just any SIM or specifically the SIMs in "The SIMS?" I feel like people were playing "The SIMs" back when the BAHA Men were big.
- 68A: Title friend of Marlin in an animated film (DORY) — I always forget Finding DORY was a thing.
- 69A: Times Square ball drop setting, in brief (EST) — "setting" here refers to time zone, i.e. Eastern Standard Time (the time "setting" in NYC on NYE).
- 31A: Is for the people? (ARE) — a person is. People ARE. Verb tense humor!
- 7D: Film based on the 1983 children's novel "The Sheep-Pig" (BABE) — really leaning into kids movies today. Although BABE kind of transcends kidness. I remember it as being great, but I haven't seen it in 30 years.
- 12D: Turn into stars, say? (CENSOR) — sometimes you use asterisks (i.e. stars, "****") to stand in for swear words. In comics, these stars (and other symbols) are known as "grawlix"
- 35D: Big thing in fast food? (MAC) — this is so dumb it amused me. I just like the implications that there are other not-so-big macs out there, or that a "MAC" is a thing at all.
- 51A: Popping pills, say (ON MEDS) — pretty sure that if you are taking prescribed drugs, "popping" is not the right word. "Popping" implies recreational use or abuse. ON DRUGS, sure. ON MEDS doesn't ring true.
See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
108 comments:
A truly exciting and professional review.
But the handwriting sucks.
Got the trick, but still needed to cheat in the SW because I never heard of HAGRID or AVEENO and didn't know DORY. Still don't understand the clue for CENSOR. (How does that create stars?).
Looking forward to a themeless Friday.
SIM is almost certainly from The Sims - they speak in a language known as Simlish, which... admittedly, isn't an *actual* language, but does have some rules to it, and is consistent throughout the series (which is up to The Sims 4, released in 2014 and still somehow supported and receiving updates to this day).
I really enjoyed this puzzle's theme; I didn't get it until after solving the revealer, though (and had RIOTACT in place of RICOTTA for a while as a result, stunting my NW corner somewhat). It felt like an easy Thursday to me as well for the most part, landing right in the middle of my novice comfort-zone. A bit more challenge wouldn't have hurt, but I can't complain too much; really enjoyed this one!
The structure was such that to break into any corner you had to start over without crosses, or puzzle out the themers with the letters in the wrong order.
Which was the only difficulty in an otherwise very easy puzzle. I guess knowing Columbus's birthplace without crosses helped a lot.
Has “Rex” ever said what time he wakes up? Puzzle done and blog post finished by 6 AM EST pretty impressive for a guy who lives in NY. Or does he do them before bed?
I’m not a fan of parsing together (basically) unclued entries to get something that looks like a plausible answer, which is why I am so unfriendly toward proper names and other esoterica. But it’s Thursday, so when in Rome . . . . Today we at least had the theme clues which were in fact pretty reasonable (RIOT ACT and EVIL GRIN pretty much jumped right out at you after a few crosses, for example).
And of course, I despise trivia-laden sections such as the SW with HAGRID, AVEENO, GENOA, INES and DORY - that section was definitely the low-point of what for me turned out to be a so-so grid. I can see where Thursday fans would enjoy this one though, and I wouldn’t be surprised if there are a few amongst us who will even find it a touch too easy for their taste - so to each his/her own - enjoy!
I think he puzzles before bed and blogs in the AM. Up at around 4:30 due to cats, if I recall correctly.
Same outcome for the themes, but I envisioned it differently. Rather than the circles moving to the back of the word, I read the uncircled letters then “circled back” to the beginning of the word and read the circled letters last.
Wait, PALEO is not dairy-less at all. It is carb-less. That messed me up.
Whipped through this one pretty quickly except for all the time I spent tracking down my one error. Finally fixed the AVEENa/DaRY cross. The brand name of a product I don’t use crossing a cartoon character in a movie I never heard of—not my favorite way to finish. (Of course I know “Finding Nemo,” but “Finding Dory”? Pfft.)
But hey, I’m no professional solver (though Mrs. Freude still finds me fairly exciting).
Censored words are often replaced with stars.
I’m impressed that the circled back expressions made other real words to fit the squares ( such as “kimonos” being the word leading to “ mono-ski”. I think it takes some skill to come up with those. I enjoyed the puzzle and it was easily dispatched for a Thursday.
Easy-Medium for a Thursday.
Overwrites:
4D: Loo before LAV
16A: I had eRoS before I started worshipping ARES
27D: My foot-long was a shoe before it was an IAMB
34A: LEtME before LEMME (my bad; didn't get the clue at first)
54D: I had a pen pal before I had a GAL pal
WOEs:
BALINESE cats at 18A
Furniture retailer West ELM (guessed West END at first) at 19D
HAGRID (and everything Harry Potter-ish) at 44D
INES Mendoza at 65A (but easily inferred)
A puzzle that reminds me of the old riddle.
Q: When is a theme not a theme?
A: When it involves circled letters at random places within words.
This would have made a perfectly lovely themeless puzzle.
Things I can do without: Anything Harry Potter / Anything Video Games
I knew it was wrong, but couldn’t resist putting in “texted’ for 67A
E.g. f***ing bull****
A reminder about Aiden – he is under 20, has had three published Times puzzles, and still has at least two in the queue. Wow! Also, if you ever need a pick-me-up, look at his picture at XwordInfo: ( https://www.xwordinfo.com/Thumbs/?author=Aidan+Deshong ). You’re welcome.
Not to leave Adam out, but he hasn’t revealed much about himself to this point.
Aidan’s notes did answer a big question – how the heck did they come up with these theme answers, which to me, a word-quirk lover, were amazing. (Answer: Through Adam’s computer wizardry.)
Aside from those theme answers, the stars of this puzzle to me were:
• The four long downs (TRÈS CHIC, LIP RINGS, BLANKIES, KEEPSAKE).
• A pair of shorter beauts: (MUFFLE, ÉCLAT).
• A squeaky-clean grid despite a high 55 squares devoted to the theme.
• [Places to carry out some takeout orders, for short?] and [Like does].
That is, a layer of lovely infusing a fun fill-in. A splendid time in the box. Thank you so much for this, Aidan and Adam!
Fun fact: If you put a circle around the B of BAHA (answer 28A), it could be a theme answer!
Puzzle was cute enough, but yeah, that SW corner was nasty for me — HAGRID, INES, DENVER, nope.
The paleo diet aims to mimic what our hunter-gatherer ancestors ate, focusing on whole foods like meat, fish, vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds. Dairy, especially processed forms like milk, cheese, or yogurt, is excluded because it wasn't consumed before agriculture developed around 10,000 years ago. Some argue early humans didn't have the enzymes to digest lactose, though many modern people do.
Hand up here for being caught up in that 2x2 proper name natick in the SW. I was sure it was AVEENA (even though I think I have an old can of their shave lotion in my bathroom), INES seemed probable, cartoon name and Potter character could be almost anything, but with that bad last A from AVEENA nothing I tried could work
READ THE WRITE-UP FOR GODSSAKE
Grawlix and Gravlax are two of my favorite words:) Unless you publish a cartoon about really not liking smoked salmon, I can’t imagine another scenario where those words are used together.
Fun, if easy, Thursday. Nice to have a non-rebus idea to chew on.
Along with AVEENO, another type of word I only see in xwords is ones with a- prefix: looking at you ATILT. IRL, I can only think of ablaze as common example. I’m sure there must be plenty more, but not at 8:00am Thursday
Every day I am blown away by how many people ask questions that are clearly answered in the blog post. Maybe find a group chat and let people who actually read the blog post here?
Just curious, when you go to a restaurant do you just tell the server what you feel like eating without looking at the menu?
Anyway, the post you didn’t read answers your question and even provides a picture for more visual learners.
Hi there, I generally wake up in the 345-415 range, yes. ~RP
I’m on the W. Coast and I get up at 4 too, so it’s nice that you are already ahead of me. I thought the theme was cute! I had MII before SIM they both speak jibberish but quickly realized it was not correct. Not a “Thursday” level difficultly but it rarely is these days. Thanks for the write up as always.
Hey All !
Different. At least the Themers were actual words, even if they didn't correspond to the clues. I get the moving of the letters, but seems like the actual answers in the grid should have somehow related to what the answer was supposed to be vis-a-vis the clues. That might be impossible, though.
Got some @Gary Uniclues for the Themers as they sit:
Starting point of a sugar substitute?
STEVIA BASELINE
Perfect outfits to stand next to Lady Gaga's meat dress?
RICOTTA KIMONOS
What the hero group never uses after they are done "saving" a city?
AVENGER DUSTPAN
Mothers-in-law, sometimes?
REVILING FEMALE
Har
Yes, I Har'ed my own list! 😁
Welp, that's about that. Have a great Thursday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Good grid/solve even without the theme. Solved most of the puzzle just using Downs, which were easy and fun
Can never remember the sugar substitutes and put PREVIA at 17A, but it looked like birth control and had to go. LOO and ASKEW also helped me get off to a slow start until the other downs steered me right
Nostalgia for BABE: I remember watching it with my young children, then having them develop a sheep language (beyond BAA-RAM-EWE) to share with each other much to their delight
Good grid/solve even without the theme. Solved most of the puzzle just using Downs, which were easy and fun
Can never remember the sugar substitutes and put PREVIA at 17A, but it looked like birth control and had to go. LOO and ASKEW also helped me get off to a slow start until the other downs steered me right
Nostalgia for BABE: I remember watching it with my young children, then having them develop a sheep language (beyond BAA-RAM-EWE) to share with each other much to their delight
Another puzzle that I solved as a themeless & came here to see what was happening. HADGRID & STEVIA were WOES for me but at least it wasn't a REBUS & I enjoyed the fun pics of the Binghamton Crossword Club, Rex, thanks for sharing :)
Eres un mago, Harry. Y uno muy bueno.
Perfectly delightful once you accept the massive gunkiness. Great word jumbles. I figured out the trick after suspecting the reveal ended in BACK and I could see MONOSKI easily, so I stopped to grok RIOT ACT and BALINESE. Then I used my new found wisdom helpful with the lower three. I enjoyed the rest of the fill, though it wasn't super tough, probably on purpose.
The clue for ORS is a delight. Usually I wipe out on grammar jokes, but I saw through the ARE clue right off, so I'm sorta proud of that. Then [Like does] completely stopped me dead for a bit until the OHO and LOL arrived.
Harry Potter is #1.
I'm an ELDER now, when does the revering start? I have a pill box because I'm ON MEDS and everything.
I've never kissed a girl with a lip ring, but I have kissed a few girls that turned out to be maniacs.
People: 10 {ehem}
Places: 3
Products: 9
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 29 of 74 (39%)
Funnyisms: 5 😄
Uniclues:
1 My fake sweetness level.
2 Outer wear for edible undies.
3 What the janitorial staff needs after those city wrecking battles against evil.
4 Medusa?
5 Those wearing cowboy boots, a fake cowboy hat, and eating ham.
6 You're soft and covered with body fluids oh fuzzy one.
7 Stoned buzzer.
1 STEVIA BASELINE
2 RICOTTA KIMONOS
3 AVENGER DUST PAN
4 REVILING FEMALE
5 TRES CHIC DENVER
6 BLANKIES ODE
7 TSE TSE ON MEDS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Newt ate lunch. TADPOLES ABATED.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Agreed, clever construction but easy.
But instantly thought of Arrested Development with 2 Down and now will have this ditty by William Hung and the Hung Jury rattling around my brain all day…
Mock Trial with Judge Reinhold
This was my interpretation of the theme as well! I like the motion of swooping through the uncircled letters and then looping back to the others.
Am i the only one that repeatedly read “like does” in sort of a valley girl accent instead of like the animal? Had to leave it and come back in the end because it like, does confuse me before I’ve had coffee.
I had had "had" @ 44A but the G in Genoa made me want BaGgin and the N gave me Nemo instead of Dory and helped mislead me further, can't afford eggs ;-) so thought there might be an omelette other than Denver, if I had heard of Hagrid I would have had mo' fun
I could see that RICOTTA was an anagram of RIOT ACT, but by that time I had already put in BALINESE and seen that it didn't work with the crosses. However, I'm not a cat breed expert, and I wasn't all that sure of BALINESE. It could have been javanese, or sumatran, for all I knew. So I really needed the revealer--and then I really needed to understand it--you start the entry with the first non-circled square, go on that way until you get to the end, then CIRCLE BACK to the beginning and fill in the circled squares. Whew! It's exhausting just to describe it.
The rest wasn't too hard, although I'm still not sure about the HAGRID/DORY crossing. I'm just going on plausibility there--I'll check in a moment. Actually I'm not too sure of AVEENO either, I confuse it with Aveda. OK, I'll go see and come back.
Lol
The LOO for LAV was blocking the NW so I moved over, saw what was going on with BASELINE, confirmed it with KIMONOS, and soon ran into the revealer, further proof but by now redundant. The gimmick was helpful elsewhere, notably in discovering the EVIL GRIN.
TIL that a SIM speaks gibberish and that DORY has a friend named Merlin. And if I ever knew STEVIA I had forgotten it so that was new too.
Nice to see an entire TSETSE fly, we usually only get half of this.
My Twilight Zone incident for this morning-yesterday I was thinking about a book we were group reading in second grade, we were taking turns and I was reading when I ran into HAD HAD. I can even quote part of the sentence- "After Mr. Bones HAD HAD his apples.....". That was new to me and I found it wonderfully interesting and here it is again, more or less seventy years later. Anyway I was delighted to read the clue and fill it in instantly. (Cue eerie music.)
Nice Thursday, AD and AL. Mostly A Delight and occasionally A Learning experience. Thanks for all the fun.
I an imagine a s enario where @Burtonkd uses a sentence containing both GRAWLIX and Gravlax as a commenter on a crossword-oriented blog. But that's my imagination just running wild again.
OK, all my guesses were right. Actually, since they called them "art rooms" in my day, my first entry was BBC and I immediately got several answers I didn't know, but which seemed plausible: ALI, BABE, and BALINESE--which then messed me up.
My mother loved to say "Where John had had had had, James had had had. Had had had had a better effect on the teacher." It's neat, but hard to work into the conversation.
A better technical answer for hung jury is a MISTRIAL not a RETRIAL since a retrial is not guaranteed. A retrial occurs only if the prosecution decides to re-try the case. But I guess I’m splitting hairs there. Happy Thursday!
When do you go to sleep?
So funny
Yup, I found that clue way less inferrable than OFL. I had "vegan" and then "lacto" before finally finding PALEO. It's true that there's no dairy in the paleo diet, but it's not the most notable aspect of that diet.
Okay. I have RICOTTA. Now what do I have to do to turn it into RIOT ACT? I just can't see it.
What kind of cat is there that's sort of like BASELINE, but isn't BASELINE, and what do I have to do to get there?
Oh, and I see letters that would make SKI in KIMONOS but SKI-what or what-SKI?
It goes on like this. I'm "solving", but I'm not getting what's happening. Until I get to the place where I can neither solve nor "solve".
It's the SW -- filled with cross-crossing names from a mess of pop-culture I've never read or watched. If I cheat, can I finish? Yes, I cheat on HAGRID which gets me to AVEENA and DARY. Oh, and that omelet's from DENVER. Who knew? I only knew Spanish and Western.
A truly hideous SW corner. A clever but extremely confusing theme. A DNF for me.
Thought for the day re 62D: Eat your heart out, Donald.
"I feel like people were playing "The SIMs" back when the BAHA Men were big."
People still play The Sims. A lot. It, and other games like it, is still wildly popular.
Wasn't it just yesterday that we had CENSORBAR and then today we get CENSOR. Could the NYT be sending a not-very-coded SOS about something threatening the existence of the independent media? And if so, what could it be? One small clue may be the presence of DON in yesterday's puzzle. And come to think of it, we haven't seen Agnus DEI since April 3? Hmm. Maybe they've run afoul of the DEI Executive Order.
Parts of this puzzle were so easy that a toddler could do it. All they had to do was take their widdle bitty pencil and fill in the BLANKIES.
Why is a FEMALE who DOES want healthy skin care like a tourist in an Italian bar? They both ask for AVEENO.
I recently swallowed my phone and now when I get a call my LIPRINGS.
Pretty cool, IMHO, that one could think that the phrase "Circle Back" could be a theme and then see your way to code for themers like these that make solid include words. Liked it a lot. Thanks, Aidan Deshong and Adam Levav.
#7 oughta be "buzzed buzzer"
I really do hate the Thursday themers. But I especially hate them when I finish the puzzle - nonsense answers and all - and I still don't know what message or trick the theme was meant to communicate.
Your kids developed an original sheep language??? I'd love to see it. In any event, your kids are going to grow up to be geniuses!
Outcome of a hung jury is a mistrial. There won't necessarily be a retrial, although there can be.
"When does the revering start?" Very funny! (Am stealing it immediately.)
Did it used to be against the rule to cross two proper nouns? Utterly Naticked by Aveena and Ines.
I can't watch a Mets game anymore without mentioning to my wife five or six times that I'm "finding Nimmo." (Brandon Nimmo, left field.)
Easy. This was easy enough for me to ignore the theme, solve the * clues downs only, and figure out the theme post-solve.
I did not know INES and SYRIA (as clued).
Costly erasures - nemo before DORY and pen before GAL.
Another low dreck grid with a cute/clever theme, liked it.
Never figured out what to do with the circled letters even after getting RICOTTA and knowing it was riot act. Didn’t care. Still finished quickly. The quality of these puzzles has hit rock bottom.
But Nancy - he doesn't have a heart.
Easy. Nice job on the anagramming, to come up with such interesting theme entries! (Hi, @Diane Joan 7:19.) I also liked the wee BABE next to BLANKIES.
@Rex, thank you for reminding me of "grawlix" - that there's a word for that array of symbols and what a great word it it.
Good fun puzzle. Could have been tres difficile with trickier down cluing. ARTLAB was unknown to me but easily gettable with crosses. Also loo before lav (but not after WC).
Don't understand why the puzzle didn't include JEN PSAKI, who brought the phrase "circle back" into daily, even hourly, use and is a great name for crosswords
Enjoyed @eggsforbreakfast’s puns. Here in AZ’s dry climate AVEENO is a fairly popular product, so ultimately changed NEMO to DORY and remembered DENVER. Did have to come here to make sense of CENSOR. Changing Loo to LAV was last thing to go…
Speaking of Babe…if you haven’t watched Okja, you really should…such a sweet movie…until the ending.
This one is tricky because AVEDA is another name brand (hair care rather than skin care) that has appeared in NYT puzzles.
aroar (although not accepted by SB) is a xword regular
Decades ago in junior high English we were asked to punctuate the following sentence so that it made sense: Joe where John had had had had had had had
Professional cruciverbalist's yelling nearly wrecks parkour (3,6)
I got LAV right but had AMISS before ATILT. Like Rex, I had most of RICOTTA filled in but I actually read the clue and saw that RIOT ACT was the "actual" answer. The revealer came quickly after that.
I didn't remember the BALINESE cat right away, but I had B-S and wanted BALI to be involved somehow. I thought of BASSLINE before noticing that BALINESS was wrong.
I knew both HAGRID and DORY, and during the solve I didn't notice how name-heavy the SW is.
Wanted ‘pay’ with ‘pal’ at first
Rex: "Easy to see 'RIOT ACT' in that jumble of letters."
Me, filling it in last: "OK, I see 'ricotta,' but what the f*** is 'riotact' (pronounced ree-oh-tact)"
They did grow into genii, except for handling money!
The clue on HAD reminded me of the old brain teaser where you are asked to punctuate the following sentence so it makes sense: "Mary while Michael had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher."
The answer being as follows: Mary, while Michael had had "had," had had "had had." "Had had" had had a better effect on the teacher.
Beats "Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo," I suppose...
On your phone: You may be giving us a whole new meaning soon for the term "butt dialing."
Human breast milk has lactose. If early humans could not digest lactose, we wouldn't be here.
Yes that southwest corner is truly awful. Six of the nine answers are names (of which I knew exactly one: AVEENO), and two of three others are themers, so their clue is absolutely no help until you have most of the squares filled in. Horrible!
The rest of the puzzle wasn't too hard, and the trick was okay, but jeez that corner...
This theme was not too hard to figure out after RIOT ACT turned into RICOTTA, but that didn't mean I had no trouble sussing them out. Perhaps if I had noticed right away that the crosses were actual words, I may have had less trouble coming up with ENGRAVE or STAND UP or EVIL GRIN. Also, no idea about BALINESE cats, even with the clue trying to give it to me.
KEEPSAKE and TRES CHIC are great answers and BLANKIES, aww, but LIP RINGS, eww.
Nice Thursday puzzle, Aidan and Adam!
Both The Circles and The Jaws. Chewy. When RICOTTA made no sense, M&A immediately whisked off to solvin the revealer, which made RIOTACT "come around" to makin sense.
staff weeject pick: Really liked the HAD clue, but gotta go with the circled-back AAG at 54-Down.
They mighta really gone for it, and had had a 4-letter circle-back, for the 61-Across themer finale. Just sayin.
Thanx for gangin up on us with yer shifty puztheme, Mr. Deshong & Levav dudes. soooo ... Was it AI that found all these themers?
Masked & Anonymo2Us
... now for somethin even more desperate than Hagrid's stevia aveeno ...
"Desperate Word Square #158" - 7x7 12 min. desperate runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
p.s. I notice that as of today, Crossword Fiend site no longer allows its commenters to rate the puzzes upfront with stars. Not sure what happened there? Tariffs?
Cruised through this without getting the theme. Downs easy enough. Knew the words were going to be real words, even though they weren't the right answers as written. Had to visit Rex to figure out what the theme was all about. Still finished in 13:39, below average for a Thursday.
I’d guess around 10:05pm, since the puzzle comes out at 10pm
Hi Nancy. More food info you might appreciate (or resent, depending on your mood) today. ;-) DENVER omelettes and Western omelettes are essentially the same thing; folded and filled with diced onions and bell peppers and chopped cured pork product of some sort (usually ham, but bacon and prosciutto often make appearances). Cheese is optional. Strangely, though it sounds so, so familiar, I can't remember anything about the Spanish version.
@Roo. I, too, wanted connections between the clued and unclued answers and the closest I could come was at 61A where you might do your REVILING with an EVILGRIN. Disappointed there weren't others.
@Anonymous 10:23 AM
Wow. I wish I would have thought of it. Wonderful!
Yeah, this theme looked like it was generated by some CODE. I'm sure that took some high level skill to write but in the end it produces a collection of words that purely by coincidence or happenstance can have two or three letters at different points within the words moved to the ends of those words to form other, unrelated words. We are left with six unclued words and six clues for words that aren't even in the grid. There doesn't seem to be anything thematic other than coincidence to tie the whole jumble together.
I gave the side eye to the reveal CIRCLES BACK. Doesn't that imply returning to the beginning to retry or redo something? Here the CIRCLES move to the ends, not the beginnings.
This had enough BEAUTS like TRES CHIC and KEEPSAKE to make for an otherwise pleasant solve. If the BASELINE, RICOTTA, etc., were clued straight up, I think it would be a nice themeless puzzle.
@RooMonster 8:31 AM
Love 'em. Except, to besmirch poor mothers-in-law might bring offense to our wives, who are flawless.
Exceptionally easy Thursday. Stumbled a bit in the NW after reluctantly dropping in ARTLAB at 1A. In my schools - junior & senior high, university - it was just a studio. I'm sitting in my studio right now. Only ARTLAB In ever knew was my dog Leroi who would curl up on a mat while I painted. ARTLAB sounds pretentious, like you're trying to validate the flaky practise of mucking about with colour and form by relating it to science. BERATE and STEVIA weren't coming to me (don't use artificial sweeteners) so I moved east where, when I hit my first themer, KIMONOS, and knew the "real" answer should be monoski, I groaned and thought, "Oh no, a f**king anagram puzzle!" But it wasn't all that awful, only a "sort of anagram" thing that I was able to zip through, finishing in the NW. SW corner was easiest. I knew all the names except DORY. Wheelhouse thing.
Nice write-up, @Rex, especially your comment about 62D. Also, the pix. Nice.
Since Crossword Fiend is now out of the star-rating biz, M&A decided to ask Google AI to rate today’s puz. GAI said that, since it was a MonPuz (?), it would probably rate 3 stars or lower. But it recommended consultin the Rex Parker blog, for its star-ratings (?)…
I give GAI at least 1.5 stars, for its NYTPuz rating. It was definitely different. M&A likes different.
This here NYTPuz gets a 3.7-star or so rating, from M&A. And a 2-U rating, btw.
And let’s give them tariffs a 4.5-blackhole rating, while we’re tossin out stars.
M&A Ratings Desk
p.p.s.s.
And btw, I still give the Crossword Fiend site an overall 4.5-star rating.
[And 2-dolly Trump is just a big ********.]
M&A Ratings Dept.
Rex, you DO know that the special McDonald’s burger is called a “Big Mac,” right? Thus 35D is a big thing in fast food.
Oooh, Spanish omelette. Just jogged my memory via Wikipedia. It's that triangular slab of cold tortilla they'd place on top of my beer in Madrid. Eggs, onions, and potatoes.
And, while we're on the subject of omelettes, I remember when I entered grade 9, I had, for the first time, to choose electives. I already knew a bit about woodworking and metalworking so I chose Power Mechanics and Home Ec/Cooking. Why not? One of only two males in a class of about 18 and after the introductory lesson our teacher became seriously ill and had to take leave, so the vice-principal stepped in until a replacement could be found. He opened by admitting his lack of qualifications and then added that what he was about to teach us could be life-saving. "It's what I cook when my wife abandons me for the evening and you, John Paul and you Les will probably never be lucky enough to have wives to cook for you, so learn this well." After much laughter from the girls (he was pretty funny for a VP), we dived into the preparation of folded western (DENVER) omelettes. After about 60 years of practise, I think I've got it down. Thanks, Coop. For that and many other things.
Egs, thnx for the laughs.
Fun theme and mostly easy puzzle for a Thursday. But the southwest corner was hard for me, as for many. Partly stupid spelling mistake: I wanted to put in Aveno, which has been my favorite lotion for a decade or two but there were, not enough letters. Still can't mentally picture it as Aveeno.
Just went into bathroom and squirted a bit on my hands and sue enough the label says Aveeno.
Also blanked on 44D even tho I've read the first HP at least 5 times and am very fond of Hagrid.
Did anyone see a reason in the write up as to why we might know Ines Mendosa?
Forgot to say I loved 20A
loved and grimaced at the same time.
I absolutely agree with @Anonymous 11:42AM re Jen Psaki. Good call on both observations. Would love to see her name in the puzz.
Hand up for the PALEO confusion!
@Gary
Of course! 😁
Roo
Lately it feels like the editors have abandoned whatever standards they used to have about not crossing proper nouns. Anyway, I just came here to get mad about the SW corner
Wow, another entertaining puzzle from youthful constructors. The good news for me is that my niece grew up with Harry Potter (and later eschewed her fan status) and the newer Disney films. In my position of ”Favorite Aunt” status, I was hip to all the things back then that became younger fodder today and thankfully I remembered.
This was another impressive feat of construction and the collaboration of our two young minds certainly produced an enjoyable solve for me. The theme’s construction impressed me more than its play. The “move some letters” idea is fairly common. What made it more enjoyable for me was actually having a good reveal. CRCLES BACK not only let the solver know how to use the circles but it also reminded me of the days Jen Psaki served the Obama White House as Press Secretary. Good job Jen! Remember when we got facts? Just excellent construction throughout.
And two clues really tickled me: “takeout orders” in ORS and “turn into stars” for CENSOR. Well done!
This Thursday though easy, provided nice flow, very little junk, and could have been successfully solved without ever getting the theme. The crosses through the theme answers were so fair that I was whooshing through until 55A before I thought to stop and see what the CIRCLES BACK required me to do. I actually did not read the theme clues until then because I had enough letters to see the earlier theme answers: RICOTTA, KIMONOS and AVENGER. I read “Comedy club fare” at 55A and was ready to type in STANDUP automatically but noticed that I already had DU_TP_N. That’s when I had to CIRCLE(S) BACK and “see” the theme.
Keep ‘em coming guys. I look forward to more from both of you, individually of course but especially in collaboration. What a fun solve!
Southside Johnny
The pile up of names in the SW made it much harder for me to get the 2 theme answers. Rex criticized that corner also. So I don’t think you are alone in disliking it
Deejay et al
Ignorance is bliss in my case. I have a feeling that for long term use paleo type diets are bogus so I ignore them
the answer seemed fine to me!
Anonymous 10:46
This is a puzzle not a legal dictionary. AN outcome of a hung jury may be a retrial. So the answer is fine
Played very easy for me for a Thursday but had a lot of fun - I'm one who gets a big kick out of anagrams so this was in my wheel house. Like @Rex and others I liked plenty - TRESCHIC, KEEPSAKE and a couple others.
The revealer came very quickly and the DUSTPAN/STANDUP was the first to fall. After that it was a hoot figuring out the rest of the themers.
A couple of small hold ups - 69A Time Square ball drop setting in brief. I had put in LGBQ for 59D so I was trying to figure out how to abbreviate Times Square with a Q. Took a couple minutes until I realized the setting was the time zone and nixed the Q dropped a T and that was that.
Agree with everyone that the SW was pretty thorny with all the proppers. Liked learning about INES, could not care less about HAGRID.
So all in all a fun Thursday for me - clever theme and impressive construction.
THANK YOU @Rex for posting the pics of students at my alma mater tackling crosswords! I wish there was such a thing as a Crossword Club when I was there but that was back in the Maleska days, I think... we probably all kept to ourselves and snuck in a Sunday between trips to the pub and/or class :o)
Are they seriously calling art classrooms 'labs' now? That's the most depressing thing I've read today.
The a- comment took me aback; I use words aplenty irl like afoot and afield. In today's puzzle I had askew before I had to fix it to atilt.
OOF! Amen, @Gaius Max!!! My sentiments exactly. When did sheer creativity require lab-centric analysis? Yuk!
Thanks for asking the question. I too glossed over that one in the write up. And to the anonymous posters who feel the need to smugly chastised Bob…i hope your smugness is so wonderful and makes you feel so proud of yourself, especially as you couldn’t take the time to actually create a profile and use your names.
HAD a lot of trouble with the first themer, because there's also the RICO ACT, a real thing. An ink mess there. Once I got the revealer, though, it all cleared up.
Typical Thursday hijinks, with a daunting SW corner. Names & themers, not a happy combo. But, we got 'er done. Par.
Wordle par.
I didn’t find it “easy” at all. Medium-challenging for me - and that’s Thursday-level medium-challenging. Clever theme which took a while to figure out. But once I did (at 24A) it really helped to unlock the rest of the answers. My only nit - I wish the circled letters spelled out something.
PLEAS STANDUP
IKE HAD LEFT some FEMALEs MAD,
GALs, now LEMME CIRCLE BACK;
it’s REVILING that IKE HAD
BERATEd our RIOTACT.
--- DORY MAE DENVER
Post a Comment