Flamenco guitarist ___ de Lucía / MON 7-7-25 / Mantra for many foodies / Long-running student quiz show / One might read "FASTCAR" / Singer Clark with the 1965 #1 hit "Downtown"
Constructor: Daniel Raymon
Relative difficulty: Medium (i.e. normal Monday) (solved Downs-only)
THEME: STILL ON THE TABLE (58A: Not yet decided ... or an "artful" description for the last words of 17-, 27- and 45-Across) — the last words of the themers are all things one might find on a table ... and in a still life painting??? (I honestly don't know what "STILL" and "artful" have to do with anything at this point)
Theme answers:
STARTING PITCHER (17A: Player facing the leadoff batter)
VANITY PLATE (27A: One might read "FASTCAR")
COLLEGE BOWL (45A: Long-running student quiz show)
Word of the Day: PACO de Lucía (34D: Flamenco guitarist ___ de Lucía) —
[this guy looks cool as hell, god bless the '70s]
Francisco Sánchez Gómez (Spanish:[fɾanˈθiskoˈsantʃeθˈɣomeθ]; 21 December 1947 – 25 February 2014), known as Paco de Lucía (Spanish:[ˈpakoðeluˈθi.a]), was a Spanish virtuosoflamenco guitarist, composer, and record producer. A leading proponent of the new flamenco style, he was one of the first flamenco guitarists to branch into classical and jazz. Richard Chapman and Eric Clapton, authors of Guitar: Music, History, Players, describe de Lucía as a "titanic figure in the world of flamenco guitar", and Dennis Koster, author of Guitar Atlas, Flamenco, has referred to de Lucía as "one of history's greatest guitarists".
De Lucía was noted for his fast and fluent picados (fingerstyle runs). A master of contrast, he often juxtaposed picados and rasgueados (flamenco strumming) with more sensitive playing and was known for adding abstract chords and scale tones to his compositions with jazz influences. These innovations saw him play a key role in the development of traditional flamenco and the evolution of new flamenco and Latin jazz fusion from the 1970s. He received acclaim for his recordings with flamenco singer Camarón de la Isla in the 1970s, recording ten albums which are considered some of the most important and influential in flamenco history. (wikipedia)
• • •
Not a fan of this one, mainly because the revealer didn't really land for me. That is, I was left uncertain about what the puzzle was trying to do. I'm assuming, at this point, that the "artful" part of the revealer clue means that we are supposed to think about "STILL" in an art context, i.e. as a reference to still-life paintings, which frequently contain tables, on which might be found the items at the ends of the theme answers: pitchers, plates, bowls. It's just that still-life paintings contain so much more than dishware. There are usually lots and lots of things "on the table"—fruit, flowers ... dead animals of various kinds? Hang on, let me try to find a famous one. OK, here's Cézanne killing it with those peaches and pears
And Manet getting fishy with it
And ... lord knows what Braque is doing here ... I think maybe there's a violin in there somewhere (?)
The point is, some of these do indeed have pitchers or plates or bowls, but "bowl" and "plate" in particular don't feel definitely still-lifey. There's so much more to the still life. Also, you kind of have to connect the dots to get to the concept of still life at all from the available evidence. The revealer should land perfectly, like a pow, ta-da, clarifying all, in (ideally) a clever way. Today's revealer didn't really do that, so much as I love art in my puzzle themes, this one left me a little cold.
The Downs-only solve was fairly easy and relatively uneventful, despite there being a couple of names that registered a "0" on the "Familiar To Me" scale. The first was Michelle AKERS, who is one of the greatest women soccer players of all time. FIFA's Female Player of the Century (the 20th century, that is). So why can't I remember her name? Very frustrating. Possibly because women's soccer's popularity in this country didn't really get going in earnest until the late '90s (or so my hazy memory tells me). This is her fifth time in the NYTXW, the third since '06 (when I started blogging), so I can't say I haven't seen her name. But I can say that I keep forgetting it. No question of her puzzleworthiness. It's just ... maybe if her name were more crossword-friendly (hello, MIA HAMM!), it would stick. The other name that I didn't know—and someone who is also a legend in his field—is PACO de Lucía. This is his third NYTXW appearance, but it's been 24 years since he's been in the puzzle (designer PACO Rabanne is still the PACO leader at four appearances—before Shortz, PACO used to be clued as a kind of ore (4 times) or as another word for "alpaca" (once)). I'm just glad the letters in PACO were eventually inferable—indisputable—because his name could easily have killed me.
No other sticking points, though. Wasn't sure about the [Japanese computer brand] at first. Thought maybe ... ACER? ASUS? But those are Taiwanese. SONY is Japanese, but far more than a "computer brand." Eventually, VANITY PLATE gave me the "V" for VAIO. Had some trouble inferring the STILL part of STILL ON THE TABLE, and (relatedly) couldn't come up with EASEL for a bit (after TRIPOD, I couldn't not think of a [Three-legged support]). Still, I was never in danger of non-completion, so maybe I should've rated this something closer to Easy. Whatever. On Mondays, it's hard to differentiate Challenging from Medium from Easy. For me, it's a matter of 30 seconds one way or the other.
More stuff:
27A: One might read "FASTCAR" (VANITY PLATE) — that's the best example you could think of for a VANITY PLATE??? That's pretty weak. At least be imaginative or funny. This one doesn't even play with missing letters or numbers-as-letters or anything. To get at the real spirit of the VANITY PLATE, you gotta go big (and, if possible, dumb, or at least ill-advised):
43D: "OK, that's enough out of me, sorry" ("I'LL STOP") — this is probably the most inventive thing in the grid. A very real colloquial phrase that I can't remember seeing in the puzzle before ... yep, sure enough, it's a debut. It's amazing that after so many years and so many puzzles, there are still little phrases like this out there to be discovered and deployed.
46D: Kaplan of "Welcome Back Kotter" (GABE) — lot of names in this one, and they tend to skew old. Solidly 20th-century, anyway. I grew up in what historians now call the Peak Kaplan Era, which extends from the start of Welcome Back Kotter (1975) to the release of legendary Kaplan-starring basketball comedy Fast Break (1979), which I'm quite sure I saw in the theater (age 10). There are lots of interesting things about that movie (like ... how? and ... why?) but perhaps the most interesting (to me, right now, at this very second) is that it featured the hit song "With You I'm Born Again" by Billy Preston and Syreeta. Talk about transcending your origins. If you are my age or older and paid attention to pop music, you probably know the song, but even I didn't remember it originated in a 1979 GABE Kaplan basketball comedy.
That's it. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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My five favorite original clues from last week (in order of appearance):
1. Stand next to a club? (3) 2. Put a pilot back into action (5) 3. To pieces? (4) 4. It's a straight shot (4)(5) 5. One taking the words right out of your mouth? (3)(6)
Solved it quickly, thanks to an educated guess at the VAIO/OSSO cross. Had to stare at LOLED for a few seconds; that deserves either an award, or censure, for GEN-Z era crosswordese.
So many proper nouns, so many foreign words. Even though my time was only slightly worse than my average Monday, this didn't feel like a Monday. (It also didn't feel FUN.)
Thought the theme was OK, not KAPOW but worthy of quiet applause. A lot of names/proper nuns made the fill seem choppy here and there. Once had a plate WARP IX, typical Trekkie choice, but for some reason it collected too many highway speeding tickets—coulda been the car, or possibly even the driver…
After BOFFO supplied BASS instead of smash, I was off to the races. The grid-spanner moo cow was STARTINGPITCHER, unusual to have one that long. Very helpful--I still don't know what an ISP is, for example.
Is there such a thing as AMSTEREO? Didn't know VAIO. In NH you can buy a VANITYPLATE that has a moose emblem on the far left, to which someone added & SQRLL. Terrific.
Didn't know PACO but as a guitar enthusiast I will find some of his stuff. PACO is the nickname for Francisco, so more or less "Frank". I lived in Spain during the Francisco Franco years and had fun referring to him as "Frank Franco".
Thought this was a very nice Monday, DR. Appreciated the double meaning of STILL, which Didn't Ruffle my feathers, unlike OFL. Nice shout out to Ms. AKERS, and thanks for all the fun.
AM STEREO tried to be a thing, briefly, back in the 1980's and 90's. But FM proved to be so vastly superior for broadcasting stereo that most music programming moved away from AM, which became "All Talk, All the Time".
And that's what's wrong with the clue: all those AM stations stopped broadcasting in stereo when they moved to an "All Talk" format. So you can't listen to news radio in AM stereo, because when AM stations stopped broadcasting music, they also switched back to a mono signal.
Solving across-only VAOI sure looked like an error, but try as I might I could not replace any of the crosses. Did not like the clues on 24A (why the ?) and 47A (I don't think foodies are more or less likely than anyone else to eat local).
@kitshef. I kinda, sorta have to disagree with you about foodies and eating local. The problem here is that "foodie" is a very ambiguous term, as is "local". There are many sects within the great church of foodieism. As a self professed foodie, I prefer, for example, to wait until the local green beans hit the market, rather than buying those old, stale ones trucked up from Mexico or California. They taste better and provide my neighbours with a source of income. Some foodies are more drawn to exotica; things they can photograph and post on Instagram. They don't seem to care where they come from. So the clue rang true for me and my particular sect even if it didn't strike you as well founded. My younger brother, a professed non-foodie likes to joke (repeatedly) that he eats "local" as much as I do. After all, there is a Pizza Hut and an Olive Garden within 10 minutes of his house.
@Les S. More 1:30 - I see your point, but then there is a large group that prefer to eat local because of the lower carbon footprint, or to support small businesses, but are ... whatever the opposite of a foodie is. A food Catholic?
Wow, so many proper names and such a large foreign contingent today - I see we are even crossing propers (LOCKE, AKERS) on a Monday now - the burning question of the day: (a) statistical anomaly, (b) they are amping up the difficulty on Mondays, or (c) the editor fell asleep and the inmates are running the asylum ?
My two favorite propers are PETULA - although I prefer the clip of her doing Downtown on the Sullivan show - something about that black dress with the white lace has stayed with me for 50+ years, and of course I remember when John Travolta was a member of the cast on the Kotter show, although I rarely watch clips of that anymore.
So, I tried imagining a still life painting that included objects from the puzzle, and mine had a MASK in a bowl, a small SLAT on a plate, and SOBA in a pitcher.
While solving, I tried guessing the revealer after uncovering the theme answers, and I actually thought it could have something to do with a still life painting. I got no farther than that, but felt mighty good anyway, I, who usually do so badly at this game.
By triggering my imagination and riddle-cracking muscles, this puzzle got my thumbs enthusiastically pointing up.
The puzzle has pop, with three NYT answer debuts and five once-befores – answers including I’LL STOP, STILL ON THE TABLE, EAT LOCAL, I OBJECT, STARTING PITCHER, and VANITY PLATE.
I liked EVIAN crossing WATER. I loved the theme because of its subtlety.
Daniel, you are just a Saturday away from hitting the cycle. Go for it! And thank you for a splendid outing today.
When Cleveland fell behind Golden State in the 2017 NBA Finals three games to one, things looked bleak. A comeback from such a deficit had never occurred in NBA history. But the Cavs did just that. And Cleveland fan Kory Siverd came up with this great (IMO) vanity plate: LLWLWWW
Also, Vermont had (still has?) a plate with the motto SEE VERMONT across the bottom. And someone, fearing too many tourists perhaps, had his or her plate read DONT.
I didn’t even think of “still life painting” as a theme. I thought of staying at the table with your pitcher, plates and bowls as you decide whether to clean up or have a second helping. Thanks for the clarification, Rex! I found the puzzle easy except for the three legged support clue. I had “stool” which held me up a bit. I also needed crosses to get “Vaio” , a brand which I had seen in stores but have never considered.
Pitcher... plate... something baseball? But isn't... bowl... something football? Both sports, though. So not my wheelhouse. But then they're ON THE TABLE with EVIAN and COCOA. Huh?
Easy enough puzzle, but Wecome Back Kotter??
My older son is following some YouTuber who is "teaching" himself xwords by streaming himself solving the NYT xword every day. My son being who he is, after a couple of months of this, has decided to crack how puzzles are created... should be interesting.
Hey All ! Is AM STEREO a thing? I suppose, but seems kinda BOFFO.
I'll take the Rexplanation about the STILL life paintings, seem logical with the quotationed artful in the Revealer clue.
NE corner kinda tough with the unknown names there. Thankfully, AKERS seemed the logical choice, as LOCKE and FRERE (and AKERS) were unknown. Throw in a Spanish word (which I believe is kind of known?) and you get a corner that might be tough for a good chunk of solvers.
Too easy, even for a Monday. It's impossible for a paper solver to solve Downs only, because your eye sees everything even when you're trying not to, but I mostly solved "guess the answer without reading the clue at all." Then, if I'm feeling really perky, I try to guess the clue too. Other than thinking it would be EIRE, not EINE and ICE CREAM, not ICE WATER, I was pretty much right.
The puzzle did start off with a bang, though, with BOFFO. It was quickly made obvious by BASS and FOR -- but for the briefest fraction of a second, I was puzzled.
Not sure EAT LOCAL would necessarily be the Mantra for Foodies, I'm sure there are others that would better describe a 'mantra'. But I'm nit-picking, sorry. This had to be the easiest Monday ever for me & a PB (under 10 minutes). Thank you, Daniel :)
Played exceptionally easy for me, perhaps because the NE filled fast and then a quick run from there. Had (was gifted?) a VAIO perhaps 30 years ago; a clunky mini clamshell with negligible battery life that never worked. Only slow spot was LOLED.
I'd like to talk about wiggly on the table. I've seen the videos and they're better than a painting of a bowl of fruit. And seriously, where is the fruit in this puzzle? If you live in Appalachia, you might have a still on the table, until you have an explosion in your basement.
[Opposite of right] is RATIONAL these days. If you ever want to visit the right, they've moved onto AM STEREO, or as those outside of the cult call it, Crazyland.
My favorite vanity plate lately read OMGBCKY.
Love Aaron Copeland. Love For He's a Jolly Good Fellow. Adore Frère Jacques. Hate soccer.
Our 10-word German crossword dictionary sticks the landing again.
We do not call garage sales or yard sales out in the west "tag sales." I actually don't think we call anything a tag sale. Doesn't everything everywhere that's for sale have a tag?
I live in the land of ADOBE and [flamenco] and I gotta say, a little goes a long way.
1 Criticism of the sloppy penmanship of the medieval monk. 2 Distracted star-throwing crime fighter with a little comedy. 3 What the beginning ballerina was not. 4 Oh ye snapping lizard / I worship you and your gizzard / you make Floridians vanish like a wizard / with your menace a-blizzard. 5 Oath in the homeowner association's presidential swearing-in. 6 Dinner (after the murder).
1 THINE NIBS FRAY (~) 2 LOLED FOR NINJA (~) 3 COOL ON TIP TOE (~) 4 I TRY CROC ODE 5 I'LL STOP TAG SALES (~) 6 HEN'S TORSO ET AL. (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Two Years Ago: Non-fiction tome subtitled: My Life in Your Backyard. TRASH PANDA OPUS.
@Nancy 10:18 AM & @Anonymous 1:03 PM Thanks you two! Here's what's confusing: Lizard and wizard: only one Z. Blizzard and gizzard: two Zs. Sometimes I think English is all just made up words.
Ah, yes. John Travolta as Vinnie Barbarino. He's near the top of the list of great actors who have never won an Oscar. He did win a Golden Globe for Get Shorty, though.
I agree Mathgent. Unfortunately his early roles that brought him fame also kind of “type-casted” him. Couple that with some fantastic roles he turned down as well as horrible movies he chose to do, I guess I’m not that surprised he hasn’t gotten an Oscar. Now you’ve prompted me to want to search famous actors that never got an Oscar.
A very easy Monday, despite the un-early-week-ish VAIO/OSSO cross. And involving a brand name, no less—ick.
I’m STILL trying to figure out how one pronounces LOLED. The best I’ve come up with is “el-oh-elled.” Thought of that, then oh-welled and what-the-helled.
Socialite: I love your shoe. Is that a Blahnik? Amputee: No, ITIS ACHOO. Socialite: Bless you. Amputee: ITRY.
While the STARTINGPITCHER faces the lead off hitter 100% of the time, it is possible for a pitcher to get injured throwing a single pitch, necessitating a reliever to also face the lead off batter. The cagey AI prevaricator that tops Google results these days assures me that this has happened several times. I tried every which way to solicit a specific example and was told that no records of this could be found.
Ewe: You never talk to me anymore. Ram: SOBA
Unlike many foodies, my mantra is EAT HI CAL, but try to source it from near by.
Another way of saying EXPO would be nouveau rich.
DNFed my DO solve at NAIO/IOBJECT. Just had no plausible guesses, so had to look at an across. You know what Mama Cass said about Monday. Can't trust that day. But trust me, Daniel Raymond, I liked your puzzle.
VAIO/OSSO was an unforgivable cross on a Monday. A true Natick. The Times has been going downhill on so many fronts on its news coverage but sad to see it hit Games too because this was an absolute garbage puzzle and should have never been accepted.
I agree this cross on a Monday was unforgivable. As for Games going downhill, they had a massive error this morning with Strands. It was called “Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah,” and was summer camp themed. Truly tone deaf and terrible timing. It was pulled down around 10:00 Eastern and replaced. I know the puzzles are chosen well in advance, but you’d think that someone in the Games department would have realized over the long weekend that there was a problem.
I’m with Gary on the TAG SALE thing, and I’m from a family of avid garage salers who treat it as a sport. Nevertheless, I understand the need for a broader category that includes garages and yards and anywhere else together. Reminded me of the time I saw a sign declaring “Yard sale inside” and had to chuckle. Anyway, I’ve never heard to the term TAG SALE in all my years of sales in the Southeast and Midwest. Is a regional thing from somewhere else?
Used to live in Connecticut. They called them Tag Sales there. They also call submarine sandwiches grinders. I'm originally from Pennsylvania, we called them hoagies there. Connecticut has their own language.
And for such a small state, there's a line that divides Yankee fans from Red Sox fans. Unsure exactly where that line is, though.
RooMonster Third State Living So Far Guy (not including the Army)
Easy-medium. No costly erasures but I did not know PACO, VAIO, and AKERS.
Reasonably smooth grid with a cute reveal, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1026 was pretty easy for a Croce…about 1.5X a Sat. NYT. The east was slightly tougher than the west for me. Good luck!
I found Croce 1026 medium-hard. Easy up top, but the bottom third very hard. I also had an unusually large number of wrong guesses resulting in overwrites.
A light and easy Monday. The only rough spot was the revealer at 58A which I really didn’t have to deal with because I was working downs-only. Post solve, I wondered what makes these things artful. Is it that they are common subjects of still life art? Bit of a stretch but, OK.
At 27D isn’t Sony the brand name and VAIO the model?
I grew up with yard sales and garage sales and it wasn’t until I moved to Crosslandia that I ever encountered people selling off their unwanted goods at TAGSALEs (7D). Possibly regional? I’m on the west coast of Canada so lots of American and even eastern Canadian terms are news to me.
I really liked the revealer, changing the meaning of STILL as it does. And there are a lot more things you can do ON THE TABLE: EAT LOCAL, drink COCOA, have some SOBA with some EELY fish, all of them building up your AMINO acids.
Some of the cluing is q bit off, though. There's a lead-off hitter every inning, and some of them may be facing a relief PITCHER; and if you're listening to news, you probably don't care if it's in STEREO (also, many of use get news from NPR, on the FM band). The APSE is the whole end of a church, not a "quiet nook" -- that would be more like a chapel. and is EVIAN, a spring water filtered through 15 miles of granite, really a competitor to Aquafina, a "purified" water? I guess you could say that, in the sense that Jack Daniel is a competitor of Tanqueray, but it's a stretch.
I'm not sure about BOFFO. It's certainly seen in Variety headlines, but is it really heard on Broadway? There are those here who know better than I, so I will leave it to them.
How come we see OSSA so much more than its piling partner Pelion?
I found this theme entertaining. I like still life paintings far more than those with people in them. My Dad was a painter. I have one of his still-lifes on my living room wall. It was a commission from a woman who wanted specific items in it - flowers in a vase with particular colors. Other items were two ceramic white cats on a book and on the other side of the flowers were two intricately designed cloths with a military medal and a locket lying on them. When Dad finished the painting, the woman refused it saying the leaves and stems of the flowers were too dark. The floral colors go great with my decor so too bad for her.
I didn't know there was AM STEREO. I thought that was one of the main complaints about AM radio was that it was mono. I haven't kept up with AM since my favorite station finally got an FM signal.
other faves included: IOBJECT + ILLSTOP. EATLOCAL. MASK & OMNI [missin -Ed & -Mush, tho]. And, for best in a comedy series: LOLED = harful. fave @RP plate: 2FNFAST.
Thanx, Mr. Raymon dude. Best still life image: plate of cinnamon rolls, pitcher of vodka, and just a bowl of still-life cherries.
MASKed & Anonymo1U [...s]
... this runtpuz may be way too easy, so M&A will try to make up for that in spades, next time ...
Perfectly serviceable Monday puzzle with a theme that works for me even it is sans fruit or a candlestick. I have to say that somehow I parsed the answer to 47A as EAT LO-CAL, although it should be obvious that while foodies might want healthy food (that is LOCALly grown) they aren’t necessarily on a weight-loss regime. In response to Roo…I found the AMSTEREO odd too so I searched it. The BAND is AM…the STEREO part of it just requires different equipment to achieve (same with FM) that is more expensive. Anyway, while AMSTEREO is “a thing” for news, talk, and sports radio stations…it is not a “band.” Still, it would be hard to come up with a cute, potential misdirecting clue otherwise. I join in inviting ANYONE on the blog to raise your hand if your “area” uses the term TAGSALE. Just curious.
Nice vanilla puzzle to start the week - mild and sweet, nothing to get excited about. Everything about it ok- themers, downs, fill. NE and W better than average.
My uncle was an artist who went through a still-life period for a few years- can't recall a picture with these three themers in one painting, but certainly saw each of them in some combo in numerous paintings .
Old enough to remember PETULA Clark on the radio and in a few G movies back in the late '60s - a cutie
I started to solve down clues only but soon gave up under the onslaught of names, many of them Total Unknowns: LOCKE AKERS MALONE AMOS PACO. The Knowns were AARON AMOS GABE PETULA.
The revealer doesn't ring true to me. I think of STILL ON THE TABLE meaning "still valid", as in "our offer is still on the table". And hands up for TAG SALE not being a thing in these here parts.
Still stinging from the whooping I got from yesterday's puzz so I wondered if it was some kind of extra noogie when I saw that last night the science fiction channel, SYFY, was showing the 2019 movie "Escape Room". Upon further reflection, I think my dismal performance was because I was doing a crossword two-step clue→answer solving strategy while the "Escape Room" calls for more of a three-step clue→clue⋺answer approach.
I was a big fan of GABE Kaplan's "Welcome Back Kotter". GABE was also a professional poker player and became a commentator for the Game Show Network's series "High Stakes Poker". Loved his droll but insightful commentary.
Today's offering provided a salve of sorts for my bruised ego form yesterday. Back when I had received a bunch of rejections for my xword submissions, I was having breakfast one morning and I decided to try an absolute minimalist approach to a theme. Ah ha! Just use what is right there in front of me on the table! And so I got my first NYTXW in 10/11/2010 (Monday) with TECTONIC PLATE, FLYING SAUCER, FIFA WORLD CUP and HOLLYWOOD BOWL. Since I was going minimalist, there was no reveal.
as it happens i'm listening to a podcast about the true story behind the dingo eating a baby - i'm 41 and this was a joke my whole life and i never thought about where it came from, until i mentioned it to my partner one night [the seinfeld ep was probably on] and he (51) didn't know either. so i looked it up and was horrified to find that it's actually a true story. the podcast i'm listening to is called "a perfect storm: the true story of the chamberlains." it's a horrifying event followed by an even more horrible miscarriage of justice that left an innocent mother in prison, with her peers thinking she decapitated her infant daughter and then shoved the body in a camera bag. so, on top of not being able to grieve or be supported in the wake of losing a child, now you're in prison indefinitely, and on top of THAT she was pregnant at the time of the conviction and that baby was ripped away from her. and if alllllllll that trauma wasn't enough, the entire world is joking about it, impersonating you crying out for help when you've realized your child has been torn apart by a wild animal, and laughing.
suffice it to say, i don't find that joke funny anymore knowing the backstory.
sorry to be such a downer lol it's just weird that after all these years that would show up in rex's writeup at the very same time i'm listening to this podcast [which itself came out a few years back].
My five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Stand next to a club? (3)
2. Put a pilot back into action (5)
3. To pieces? (4)
4. It's a straight shot (4)(5)
5. One taking the words right out of your mouth? (3)(6)
TEE
REAIR
ODES
NEAT VODKA
LIP READER
My favorite used-before clues from last week:
ReplyDelete[Alley oops]
[Fir coat]
GUTTERBALL
BARK
Solved it quickly, thanks to an educated guess at the VAIO/OSSO cross. Had to stare at LOLED for a few seconds; that deserves either an award, or censure, for GEN-Z era crosswordese.
ReplyDeleteSo many proper nouns, so many foreign words. Even though my time was only slightly worse than my average Monday, this didn't feel like a Monday. (It also didn't feel FUN.)
ReplyDeleteAmen
Deletecross of VAIO/OSSO was not Mondayish
ReplyDeleteThought the theme was OK, not KAPOW but worthy of quiet applause. A lot of names/proper nuns made the fill seem choppy here and there. Once had a plate WARP IX, typical Trekkie choice, but for some reason it collected too many highway speeding tickets—coulda been the car, or possibly even the driver…
ReplyDeleteSorry to disagree on 2 points ... I thought easy, not medium, and I thought the theme was fine (one might even say 'artful').
ReplyDeleteAfter BOFFO supplied BASS instead of smash, I was off to the races. The grid-spanner moo cow was STARTINGPITCHER, unusual to have one that long. Very helpful--I still don't know what an ISP is, for example.
ReplyDeleteIs there such a thing as AMSTEREO? Didn't know VAIO. In NH you can buy a VANITYPLATE that has a moose emblem on the far left, to which someone added & SQRLL. Terrific.
Didn't know PACO but as a guitar enthusiast I will find some of his stuff. PACO is the nickname for Francisco, so more or less "Frank". I lived in Spain during the Francisco Franco years and had fun referring to him as "Frank Franco".
Thought this was a very nice Monday, DR. Appreciated the double meaning of STILL, which Didn't Ruffle my feathers, unlike OFL. Nice shout out to Ms. AKERS, and thanks for all the fun.
Internet Service Provider
DeleteAM STEREO tried to be a thing, briefly, back in the 1980's and 90's. But FM proved to be so vastly superior for broadcasting stereo that most music programming moved away from AM, which became "All Talk, All the Time".
DeleteAnd that's what's wrong with the clue: all those AM stations stopped broadcasting in stereo when they moved to an "All Talk" format. So you can't listen to news radio in AM stereo, because when AM stations stopped broadcasting music, they also switched back to a mono signal.
Solving across-only VAOI sure looked like an error, but try as I might I could not replace any of the crosses. Did not like the clues on 24A (why the ?) and 47A (I don't think foodies are more or less likely than anyone else to eat local).
ReplyDelete@kitshef. I kinda, sorta have to disagree with you about foodies and eating local. The problem here is that "foodie" is a very ambiguous term, as is "local". There are many sects within the great church of foodieism. As a self professed foodie, I prefer, for example, to wait until the local green beans hit the market, rather than buying those old, stale ones trucked up from Mexico or California. They taste better and provide my neighbours with a source of income. Some foodies are more drawn to exotica; things they can photograph and post on Instagram. They don't seem to care where they come from. So the clue rang true for me and my particular sect even if it didn't strike you as well founded. My younger brother, a professed non-foodie likes to joke (repeatedly) that he eats "local" as much as I do. After all, there is a Pizza Hut and an Olive Garden within 10 minutes of his house.
Delete@Les S. More 1:30 - I see your point, but then there is a large group that prefer to eat local because of the lower carbon footprint, or to support small businesses, but are ... whatever the opposite of a foodie is. A food Catholic?
DeleteYou're right. Maybe we need a better term.
Deletestill giggling at the vanity plates, especially Dingo 8 (my baby)!
ReplyDeleteWow, so many proper names and such a large foreign contingent today - I see we are even crossing propers (LOCKE, AKERS) on a Monday now - the burning question of the day: (a) statistical anomaly, (b) they are amping up the difficulty on Mondays, or (c) the editor fell asleep and the inmates are running the asylum ?
ReplyDeleteMy two favorite propers are PETULA - although I prefer the clip of her doing Downtown on the Sullivan show - something about that black dress with the white lace has stayed with me for 50+ years, and of course I remember when John Travolta was a member of the cast on the Kotter show, although I rarely watch clips of that anymore.
Come on….LOLED!?!?!
ReplyDeleteSo, I tried imagining a still life painting that included objects from the puzzle, and mine had a MASK in a bowl, a small SLAT on a plate, and SOBA in a pitcher.
ReplyDeleteWhile solving, I tried guessing the revealer after uncovering the theme answers, and I actually thought it could have something to do with a still life painting. I got no farther than that, but felt mighty good anyway, I, who usually do so badly at this game.
By triggering my imagination and riddle-cracking muscles, this puzzle got my thumbs enthusiastically pointing up.
The puzzle has pop, with three NYT answer debuts and five once-befores – answers including I’LL STOP, STILL ON THE TABLE, EAT LOCAL, I OBJECT, STARTING PITCHER, and VANITY PLATE.
I liked EVIAN crossing WATER. I loved the theme because of its subtlety.
Daniel, you are just a Saturday away from hitting the cycle. Go for it! And thank you for a splendid outing today.
When Cleveland fell behind Golden State in the 2017 NBA Finals three games to one, things looked bleak. A comeback from such a deficit had never occurred in NBA history. But the Cavs did just that. And Cleveland fan Kory Siverd came up with this great (IMO) vanity plate: LLWLWWW
ReplyDeleteAlso, Vermont had (still has?) a plate with the motto SEE VERMONT across the bottom. And someone, fearing too many tourists perhaps, had his or her plate read DONT.
Exceptional vanity plate. Well-played, Kory.
DeleteExcuse me professor.....you omitted ASSMAN
ReplyDeleteHe Stopped Short
DeleteI didn’t even think of “still life painting” as a theme. I thought of staying at the table with your pitcher, plates and bowls as you decide whether to clean up or have a second helping. Thanks for the clarification, Rex!
ReplyDeleteI found the puzzle easy except for the three legged support clue. I had “stool” which held me up a bit. I also needed crosses to get “Vaio” , a brand which I had seen in stores but have never considered.
Pitcher... plate... something baseball? But isn't... bowl... something football? Both sports, though. So not my wheelhouse. But then they're ON THE TABLE with EVIAN and COCOA. Huh?
ReplyDeleteEasy enough puzzle, but Wecome Back Kotter??
My older son is following some YouTuber who is "teaching" himself xwords by streaming himself solving the NYT xword every day. My son being who he is, after a couple of months of this, has decided to crack how puzzles are created... should be interesting.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteIs AM STEREO a thing? I suppose, but seems kinda BOFFO.
I'll take the Rexplanation about the STILL life paintings, seem logical with the quotationed artful in the Revealer clue.
NE corner kinda tough with the unknown names there. Thankfully, AKERS seemed the logical choice, as LOCKE and FRERE (and AKERS) were unknown. Throw in a Spanish word (which I believe is kind of known?) and you get a corner that might be tough for a good chunk of solvers.
No ASS today, no OREO. We're slipping.
Decent MonPuz, nice grid layout
I SPY, I OBJECT, I TIS. 😁
Welp, have a good Monday!
Three F's - All in first row!
RooMonster
DarrinV
LOL-ED!
ReplyDeleteThe performance review I fear my lovers snarkily text to their BFFs…
Too easy, even for a Monday. It's impossible for a paper solver to solve Downs only, because your eye sees everything even when you're trying not to, but I mostly solved "guess the answer without reading the clue at all." Then, if I'm feeling really perky, I try to guess the clue too. Other than thinking it would be EIRE, not EINE and ICE CREAM, not ICE WATER, I was pretty much right.
ReplyDeleteThe puzzle did start off with a bang, though, with BOFFO. It was quickly made obvious by BASS and FOR -- but for the briefest fraction of a second, I was puzzled.
Not sure EAT LOCAL would necessarily be the Mantra for Foodies, I'm sure there are others that would better describe a 'mantra'. But I'm
ReplyDeletenit-picking, sorry.
This had to be the easiest Monday ever for me & a PB (under 10 minutes). Thank you, Daniel :)
Played exceptionally easy for me, perhaps because the NE filled fast and then a quick run from there.
ReplyDeleteHad (was gifted?) a VAIO perhaps 30 years ago; a clunky mini clamshell with negligible battery life that never worked.
Only slow spot was LOLED.
Bueno, ya es suficiente de mi parte, lo siento.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to talk about wiggly on the table. I've seen the videos and they're better than a painting of a bowl of fruit. And seriously, where is the fruit in this puzzle? If you live in Appalachia, you might have a still on the table, until you have an explosion in your basement.
[Opposite of right] is RATIONAL these days. If you ever want to visit the right, they've moved onto AM STEREO, or as those outside of the cult call it, Crazyland.
My favorite vanity plate lately read OMGBCKY.
Love Aaron Copeland. Love For He's a Jolly Good Fellow. Adore Frère Jacques. Hate soccer.
Our 10-word German crossword dictionary sticks the landing again.
We do not call garage sales or yard sales out in the west "tag sales." I actually don't think we call anything a tag sale. Doesn't everything everywhere that's for sale have a tag?
I live in the land of ADOBE and [flamenco] and I gotta say, a little goes a long way.
❤️ BOFFO.
People: 9
Places: 3
Products: 5
Partials: 6
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 26 of 76 (34%)
Funnyisms: 0 😫
Uniclues:
1 Criticism of the sloppy penmanship of the medieval monk.
2 Distracted star-throwing crime fighter with a little comedy.
3 What the beginning ballerina was not.
4 Oh ye snapping lizard / I worship you and your gizzard / you make Floridians vanish like a wizard / with your menace a-blizzard.
5 Oath in the homeowner association's presidential swearing-in.
6 Dinner (after the murder).
1 THINE NIBS FRAY (~)
2 LOLED FOR NINJA (~)
3 COOL ON TIP TOE (~)
4 I TRY CROC ODE
5 I'LL STOP TAG SALES (~)
6 HEN'S TORSO ET AL. (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Two Years Ago: Non-fiction tome subtitled: My Life in Your Backyard. TRASH PANDA OPUS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
#4 is hilarious!!!
DeleteAgree, #6 pretty good too
Delete@Nancy 10:18 AM & @Anonymous 1:03 PM
DeleteThanks you two! Here's what's confusing: Lizard and wizard: only one Z. Blizzard and gizzard: two Zs. Sometimes I think English is all just made up words.
Ah, yes. John Travolta as Vinnie Barbarino. He's near the top of the list of great actors who have never won an Oscar. He did win a Golden Globe for Get Shorty, though.
ReplyDeleteI agree Mathgent. Unfortunately his early roles that brought him fame also kind of “type-casted” him. Couple that with some fantastic roles he turned down as well as horrible movies he chose to do, I guess I’m not that surprised he hasn’t gotten an Oscar. Now you’ve prompted me to want to search famous actors that never got an Oscar.
DeleteA very easy Monday, despite the un-early-week-ish VAIO/OSSO cross. And involving a brand name, no less—ick.
ReplyDeleteI’m STILL trying to figure out how one pronounces LOLED. The best I’ve come up with is “el-oh-elled.” Thought of that, then oh-welled and what-the-helled.
Socialite: I love your shoe. Is that a Blahnik?
ReplyDeleteAmputee: No, ITIS ACHOO.
Socialite: Bless you.
Amputee: ITRY.
While the STARTINGPITCHER faces the lead off hitter 100% of the time, it is possible for a pitcher to get injured throwing a single pitch, necessitating a reliever to also face the lead off batter. The cagey AI prevaricator that tops Google results these days assures me that this has happened several times. I tried every which way to solicit a specific example and was told that no records of this could be found.
Ewe: You never talk to me anymore.
Ram: SOBA
Unlike many foodies, my mantra is EAT HI CAL, but try to source it from near by.
Another way of saying EXPO would be nouveau rich.
DNFed my DO solve at NAIO/IOBJECT. Just had no plausible guesses, so had to look at an across. You know what Mama Cass said about Monday. Can't trust that day. But trust me, Daniel Raymond, I liked your puzzle.
VAIO/OSSO was an unforgivable cross on a Monday. A true Natick. The Times has been going downhill on so many fronts on its news coverage but sad to see it hit Games too because this was an absolute garbage puzzle and should have never been accepted.
ReplyDeleteI agree this cross on a Monday was unforgivable. As for Games going downhill, they had a massive error this morning with Strands. It was called “Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah,” and was summer camp themed. Truly tone deaf and terrible timing. It was pulled down around 10:00 Eastern and replaced. I know the puzzles are chosen well in advance, but you’d think that someone in the Games department would have realized over the long weekend that there was a problem.
DeleteI’m with Gary on the TAG SALE thing, and I’m from a family of avid garage salers who treat it as a sport. Nevertheless, I understand the need for a broader category that includes garages and yards and anywhere else together. Reminded me of the time I saw a sign declaring “Yard sale inside” and had to chuckle. Anyway, I’ve never heard to the term TAG SALE in all my years of sales in the Southeast and Midwest. Is a regional thing from somewhere else?
ReplyDeleteBack in Door County there were yard sales and garage sales; but I have since learned that some parts of the country do have TAG SALEs.
DeleteUsed to live in Connecticut. They called them Tag Sales there. They also call submarine sandwiches grinders. I'm originally from Pennsylvania, we called them hoagies there. Connecticut has their own language.
DeleteAnd for such a small state, there's a line that divides Yankee fans from Red Sox fans. Unsure exactly where that line is, though.
RooMonster Third State Living So Far Guy (not including the Army)
Easy-medium. No costly erasures but I did not know PACO, VAIO, and AKERS.
ReplyDeleteReasonably smooth grid with a cute reveal, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1026 was pretty easy for a Croce…about 1.5X a Sat. NYT. The east was slightly tougher than the west for me. Good luck!
I found Croce 1026 medium-hard. Easy up top, but the bottom third very hard. I also had an unusually large number of wrong guesses resulting in overwrites.
DeleteA light and easy Monday. The only rough spot was the revealer at 58A which I really didn’t have to deal with because I was working downs-only. Post solve, I wondered what makes these things artful. Is it that they are common subjects of still life art? Bit of a stretch but, OK.
ReplyDeleteAt 27D isn’t Sony the brand name and VAIO the model?
I grew up with yard sales and garage sales and it wasn’t until I moved to Crosslandia that I ever encountered people selling off their unwanted goods at TAGSALEs (7D). Possibly regional? I’m on the west coast of Canada so lots of American and even eastern Canadian terms are news to me.
Same here. I’ve only seen TAGSALE in crosswords.
DeleteTobias Funke had the best vanity plate fail…
ReplyDeleteA New Start!
That’s hilarious!
DeleteI really liked the revealer, changing the meaning of STILL as it does. And there are a lot more things you can do ON THE TABLE: EAT LOCAL, drink COCOA, have some SOBA with some EELY fish, all of them building up your AMINO acids.
ReplyDeleteSome of the cluing is q bit off, though. There's a lead-off hitter every inning, and some of them may be facing a relief PITCHER; and if you're listening to news, you probably don't care if it's in STEREO (also, many of use get news from NPR, on the FM band). The APSE is the whole end of a church, not a "quiet nook" -- that would be more like a chapel. and is EVIAN, a spring water filtered through 15 miles of granite, really a competitor to Aquafina, a "purified" water? I guess you could say that, in the sense that Jack Daniel is a competitor of Tanqueray, but it's a stretch.
I'm not sure about BOFFO. It's certainly seen in Variety headlines, but is it really heard on Broadway? There are those here who know better than I, so I will leave it to them.
How come we see OSSA so much more than its piling partner Pelion?
What to say to someone who's close to solving this puzzle. EWER GETTING WARM.
ReplyDeleteI found this theme entertaining. I like still life paintings far more than those with people in them. My Dad was a painter. I have one of his still-lifes on my living room wall. It was a commission from a woman who wanted specific items in it - flowers in a vase with particular colors. Other items were two ceramic white cats on a book and on the other side of the flowers were two intricately designed cloths with a military medal and a locket lying on them. When Dad finished the painting, the woman refused it saying the leaves and stems of the flowers were too dark. The floral colors go great with my decor so too bad for her.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know there was AM STEREO. I thought that was one of the main complaints about AM radio was that it was mono. I haven't kept up with AM since my favorite station finally got an FM signal.
Thanks, Daniel Raymon!
They sure dished up an easy & artsy-fartsy Monday puztheme, for today's rodeo...
ReplyDelete... exceptin that there K-tense Moment of: LOCKE/AKERS.
staff weeject pick: What? Only 10 choices, on a MonPuz plate? Sheesh. Or, rather ... ISH.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Halloween cover-up} = MASK. A slam-dunker.
other faves included: IOBJECT + ILLSTOP. EATLOCAL. MASK & OMNI [missin -Ed & -Mush, tho].
And, for best in a comedy series: LOLED = harful.
fave @RP plate: 2FNFAST.
Thanx, Mr. Raymon dude. Best still life image: plate of cinnamon rolls, pitcher of vodka, and just a bowl of still-life cherries.
MASKed & Anonymo1U [...s]
... this runtpuz may be way too easy, so M&A will try to make up for that in spades, next time ...
"Dud Ranch" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Perfectly serviceable Monday puzzle with a theme that works for me even it is sans fruit or a candlestick. I have to say that somehow I parsed the answer to 47A as EAT LO-CAL, although it should be obvious that while foodies might want healthy food (that is LOCALly grown) they aren’t necessarily on a weight-loss regime. In response to Roo…I found the AMSTEREO odd too so I searched it. The BAND is AM…the STEREO part of it just requires different equipment to achieve (same with FM) that is more expensive. Anyway, while AMSTEREO is “a thing” for news, talk, and sports radio stations…it is not a “band.” Still, it would be hard to come up with a cute, potential misdirecting clue otherwise.
ReplyDeleteI join in inviting ANYONE on the blog to raise your hand if your “area” uses the term TAGSALE. Just curious.
I've heard "tag sale" around here, also garage sale.
DeleteA "yard sale" is the result of someone taking a spectacular fall while skiing and littering the area with clothing and/or equipment.
Nice vanilla puzzle to start the week - mild and sweet, nothing to get excited about. Everything about it ok- themers, downs, fill. NE and W better than average.
ReplyDeleteMy uncle was an artist who went through a still-life period for a few years- can't recall a picture with these three themers in one painting, but certainly saw each of them in some combo in numerous paintings .
Old enough to remember PETULA Clark on the radio and in a few G movies back in the late '60s - a cutie
p.s.
DeleteOooh … good reminder to m&e …
Big fan of the PETULA answer. And of the “Downtown” tune, which I’ve got on a 45rpm.
Thanx,
M&A
Who is this ninjo that so many commenters seem to have in their puzzle? And exactly which mountain in Greece is also in osso bucco?
ReplyDeleteI started to solve down clues only but soon gave up under the onslaught of names, many of them Total Unknowns: LOCKE AKERS MALONE AMOS PACO. The Knowns were AARON AMOS GABE PETULA.
ReplyDeleteThe revealer doesn't ring true to me. I think of STILL ON THE TABLE meaning "still valid", as in "our offer is still on the table". And hands up for TAG SALE not being a thing in these here parts.
Note: neither Spelling Bee nor Crossword web pages are available to me right now in either Firefox or Chrome.
ReplyDeleteNever mind... they were totally blank for a few minutes but they're back to normal now.
DeleteStill stinging from the whooping I got from yesterday's puzz so I wondered if it was some kind of extra noogie when I saw that last night the science fiction channel, SYFY, was showing the 2019 movie "Escape Room". Upon further reflection, I think my dismal performance was because I was doing a crossword two-step clue→answer solving strategy while the "Escape Room" calls for more of a three-step clue→clue⋺answer approach.
ReplyDeleteI was a big fan of GABE Kaplan's "Welcome Back Kotter". GABE was also a professional poker player and became a commentator for the Game Show Network's series "High Stakes Poker". Loved his droll but insightful commentary.
Today's offering provided a salve of sorts for my bruised ego form yesterday. Back when I had received a bunch of rejections for my xword submissions, I was having breakfast one morning and I decided to try an absolute minimalist approach to a theme. Ah ha! Just use what is right there in front of me on the table! And so I got my first NYTXW in 10/11/2010 (Monday) with TECTONIC PLATE, FLYING SAUCER, FIFA WORLD CUP and HOLLYWOOD BOWL. Since I was going minimalist, there was no reveal.
as it happens i'm listening to a podcast about the true story behind the dingo eating a baby - i'm 41 and this was a joke my whole life and i never thought about where it came from, until i mentioned it to my partner one night [the seinfeld ep was probably on] and he (51) didn't know either. so i looked it up and was horrified to find that it's actually a true story. the podcast i'm listening to is called "a perfect storm: the true story of the chamberlains." it's a horrifying event followed by an even more horrible miscarriage of justice that left an innocent mother in prison, with her peers thinking she decapitated her infant daughter and then shoved the body in a camera bag. so, on top of not being able to grieve or be supported in the wake of losing a child, now you're in prison indefinitely, and on top of THAT she was pregnant at the time of the conviction and that baby was ripped away from her. and if alllllllll that trauma wasn't enough, the entire world is joking about it, impersonating you crying out for help when you've realized your child has been torn apart by a wild animal, and laughing.
ReplyDeletesuffice it to say, i don't find that joke funny anymore knowing the backstory.
sorry to be such a downer lol it's just weird that after all these years that would show up in rex's writeup at the very same time i'm listening to this podcast [which itself came out a few years back].
-stephanie.
@stephanie 3:03 PM
DeleteI did not know this. I thought it was a throwaway Australian accent joke. What a horror.