Relative difficulty: Very Easy
Word of the Day: KILLER BEE (17A: Queen's guard?) —
The Africanized bee, also known as the Africanized honey bee (AHB) and colloquially as the "killer bee", is a hybrid of the western honey bee (Apis mellifera), produced originally by crossbreeding of the African honey bee (A. m. scutellata) with various European honey bee subspecies such as the Italian honey bee (A. m. ligustica) and the Iberian honey bee (A. m. iberiensis).The African honey bee was first introduced to Brazil in 1956 in an effort to increase honey production, but 26 swarms escaped quarantine in 1957. Since then, the hybrid has spread throughout South America and arrived in North America in 1985. Hives were found in south Texas in the United States in 1990.
Africanized honey bees are typically much more defensive, react to disturbances faster, and chase people farther than other varieties of honey bees, up to 400 m (1,300 ft). They have killed some 1,000 humans, with victims receiving 10 times more stings than from European honey bees. They have also killed horses and other animals.
• • •
Welcome back to SMURF Week here at the NYTXW! (see ... yesterday). We hope you are SMURFing a SMURFy SMURF! (26D: 1980s cartoon foe of Gargamel)
["I'm like young LL, / 'cause I'm hard as hell / Makin' n****s screw-face like Gargamel"]
LUNAR LAMP PIE ABODE DUBAI DISC and off to the races. If this puzzle was too easy (and it was), at least it had me careering (and possibly careening) around the grid in bizarre, seemingly reckless ways. Can't remember when I ever took quite this path through a puzzle before:
I didn't get the clue on KILLER BEE, and still mostly don't. I put WORKER BEE in there at first, since it seemed to be asking for a subset of bees, one part of the bee org chart, not an entire subspecies of bee. If you are distinguishing the answer from the "queen," then the answer should be a different type of bee, and there are only two other types: WORKER BEES (which do, in fact, protect the hive) and DRONE BEES: "His only role is to mate with a maiden queen in nuptial flight" (wikipedia). The KILLER BEE doesn't really work as "the queen's guard" since she herself is (presumably) a KILLER BEE (even if she herself is not doing the "killing").
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[CREATION OF ADAM] |
Bullets:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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- 1A: Coaster, usually (DISC) — thought this might be a roller coaster, so ... RIDE? I didn't chance it. Best to move on to something you're sure of when you're trying to get your first bit of traction, which is what I did. Tested LUNAR at 13A: Kind of rover, which gave me LAMP, then PIE, and that was that.
- 31A: Plot device in many a rom-com (MEET-CUTE) — they meet and it's cute. I recently watched While You Were Sleeping, a classic 1996 rom-com, for my Movie Club. That movie has three meets, none of them particularly cute (Peter Gallagher gives Sandra Bullock his "L" train token every day but doesn't really notice her; she pulls him off the tracks out of the way of an oncoming train; he wakes up from a coma weeks later and finally "meets" her—she's been pretending to be his fiancée ... while he was sleeping). And then a totally different guy (Bill Pullman) ends up being the love interest ... and that meet isn't particularly cute either. In fact, I don't remember it. They really don't have much chemistry. But there are lots of great actors in the movie, including Peter Boyle and Glynis Johns, and lots of Dunkin' Donuts (emphasis on the Donuts; RIP "Donuts"), so if you're nostalgic for the '90s and want something that goes down easy (some might say "blandly"), you could do worse.
- 38A: What fan fiction is not (CANON) — a nice, modern clue for CANON, which has extended its meaning from "an authorized set of books" (see, uh, the Bible?) to "an authorized fictional storyline."
- 55A: "Seriously!," in slang ("NO CAP!") — yes, you have seen this before. Yes, you have. I swear. First in 2023, and now three times this year. NO CAP!
- 1D: Home to the torus-shaped Museum of the Future (DUBAI) — mmm, torus.
- 10D: Kathryn of "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" (ERBE) — her name threatened to become established crosswordese in the late aughts, but then disappeared. This is her first NYTXW appearance since 2011! (ERBE appeared once in the intervening years as Italian for "herbs") (!).
- 32D: Dog's post-op wear (CONE) — my first and only outright mistake, and it was a glorious one. I had the "O," saw "post-op," and wrote in GOWN.
That's all. See you next time.
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- Pop Sensation (vintage paperbacks)
Easy, maybe....but I got a DNF. Never heard of a RAPBATTLE, and put in "JFK" instead of RFK. Puzzle included a lot of pop-culture phraseology, so it wasn't as easy for seniors.
ReplyDeleteYou were thinking Jap battle?
DeleteI agree. No idea on Eminem song
Delete@Stan my reaction exactly
Delete8-mile won an Oscar and was a very popular movie about rap battles more than twenty years ago, and it’s remained in the public lexicon since. It’s not remotely a new thing.
DeleteWell, I was thinking "jaw battle," until I got OPEN. I still don't get the spitting connection.
DeleteRelieved to hear not everyone found this so easy -- definitely my biggest struggle this week!
DeleteIDLEST? I’m not BITing on that. Not sure about very easy - but trended easier for sure. Rex highlights the neat stuff - loved AUTODIDACT and CREATION OF ADAM.
ReplyDeleteHüsker
Some obscure trivia that required crosses - ERBE, CLEO etc. Cute clue for BELL CURVE . STAN and RAP BATTLE work well together. Can’t say I LOVED the overall fill.
Hot Water Music
Pleasant enough Friday morning solve.
Style Council
"It is grim how easy themeless puzzles have become. They are really, conspicuously bringing down the difficulty level of the puzzle in general, but you (I) really feel it on Friday and Saturday..."
ReplyDeleteYep
ReplyDeleteEasy-Medium. I don't mind the easiness as much as OFL does.
Overwrites:
DURaM before DURUM for the wheat at 9D
My Samurai was spelled RONaN before it was RONIN
vent before RANT at 42A
jFK before RFK at 51D
WOEs:
Kathryn ERBE at 10D
The Eminem song STAN at 28D
As @Rex pointed out, we've seen NO CAP (55A) before, but I still needed every cross.
Identical solve experience, plus somehow my brain wanted CREATIONOFEDEN! Nice puzzle with maybe a few too many gimmes for a Friday
DeleteI wonder if publishing straight-forward challenging and disciplined themeless puzzles or Fridays and Saturdays has become a lower priority for the NYTimes in favor of Mon-Thurs. themed puzzles that show off all the clever little electronic tricks that it software program can perform to make people ooh and aah, and that puzzle constructors have gotten the message, and are shifting their attention and priorities accordingly.
ReplyDeleteI heartily agree that this is what is happening. I would like to see the focus shift back to words—in both the answers and the clues. Especially on Friday, I want to ooh and aah over clever wordplay. Miss you Robyn!
DeleteAgree with your very valid comment.
DeleteThe themed puzzles lately have been annoying me :(
And @Kathy - YES - MISS A ROBYN FRIDAY!
JB and Kathy nailed it. I’ve also been pretty vocal about my dissatisfaction with the gimmicks (oops, I mean themes) lately. @Nancy has hypothesized that Will drove away Robyn when he started publishing dumbed-down versions of the Friday grids. I’ll characterize that as a hypothesis for now - I know she knows WS and a bunch of other constructors so she may have some inside dope - maybe if she sees this she can clarify.
DeleteIn any event, it’s a pretty sad commentary when a constructor of her caliber gets tired of your nonsense.
I have no inside information on this matter. It was just a stab in the dark when I read about the "easy version" of Friday puzzles and realized that Robyn would be especially impacted by such a development. I only knew how I would feel if I worked hard on coming up with clever and sophisticated clues only to have someone feel free to dumb them down because, hey, it's Friday. I'm not sure that I'm right, but I kinda suspect that I am. Why wouldn't Robyn take her puzzles to a venue where they won't be dumbed down?
DeleteVery easy Friday, maybe my fastest ever. Just dropped by for a reminder of where NO CAP comes from, I remembered it being explained on here recently, so thanks for that link. Happy Friday!
ReplyDeleteI loved your opening RANT. Right on the mark!
ReplyDeleteThat was a Tuesday. Felt like a kid filling in a placemat at a restaurant.
ReplyDeleteNot only was SMURF in yesterday and today's regular puzzle, it was in today's mini! What's going on???
ReplyDeleteSMURF was also in Monday’s regular puzzle (7-Down)! That marks four this week, if we count the Mini.
DeleteThe MANDARIN clue was kind of cute.
ReplyDeleteIf you don't think Friday and Saturday have gotten easier, go into the archive and try some from the 90s. One major change is the nearly complete obliteration of what I call 'highbrow' cluing: opera, classical music, literature, plays et al.. Not that I mind really. I wasn't very good at that stuff.
But it has been replaced with texting abbreviations and rap names which are basically random letter sorts. I'll take "highbrow" over than junk any day.
Delete[yawn]
ReplyDeleteI've been working through puzzles from 1995. Friday, 8/4/1995 was as easy as any Friday puzzle published this year. Friday, 7/21/1995 was easier still.
ReplyDeleteRex nails it (again): “not unfun, but I’ve done funner.” Was this one FUNFILLED? Depends on whether your fun glass is half full or half empty, I suppose.
ReplyDeleteThe puzzles are getting easier. It can be humbling to use the archive feature on the app and try a Saturday from the 90’s.
ReplyDeleteI at least got to laugh at myself a little with this one - I remembered that NO CAP meant something from a previous puzzle, but was sure I had a mistake with AUTODIDACT, which I had never heard of and it sure looks like there is a mistake in there somewhere. I was all set to start looking for my mistake, but I dropped in the C from NO CAP and off went the happy music. Go figure.
ReplyDeleteFor some reason I also thought it was hilarious that (a) Geppetto has a pet goldfish, (b) the goldfish has a name, and (c) somebody knew that and included it in their crossword puzzle.
I know very little about Rap and hip-hop music (are those two terms synonymous - they seem to be used interchangeably?). I could never get past the vulgarity and misogyny - but it comes as no surprise that a RAP BATTLE would be referred to as a spitting contest.
It's a little more complicated than this, but basically "hip-ho" refers to a culture (y'might classify it as a "street culture," although at this point that's pretty dated) that includes rap music, graffiti art, certain styles of dance, cultural-specific kinesic (i.e., body language) styles and movements, vernacular, clothing fashion, etc. Rap, in other words, is a component of the larger cultural milieu.
DeleteNever heard of MEETCUTE.
ReplyDeleteRandom thoughts:
ReplyDelete• The two stars, IMO, were the largest answers, CELESTIAL EVENT and CREATION OF ADAM. Both are gorgeous to look at in the grid as well as in real life.
• Oh yes, Jesse has constructor mind, he who can look at MANDARIN and see four state abbreviations.
• It takes guts for a constructor to put DUD smack in the middle of the puzzle. But, as of yet, no commenter has used that word to describe it.
• About time you showed up in the Times puzzle, EVOO, after appearing in other venues more than 30 times over the past 20 years.
• Lovely to see neighbors PIE / TIN.
• I, who usually don’t enter answer until I’m quite sure of it, had a fair number of take-out-and-replaces today. That, to me, is a sign of a skillful cluer.
• Personal PuzzPair© of MANDARIN (as in orange) and I’LL BITE.
Enough rub to satisfy, enough fun to send me sprightly into the day. Thank you for this, Jesse!
" Oh yes, Jesse has constructor mind, he who can look at MANDARIN and see four state abbreviations." -- Lewis
DeleteBut, Lewis, I'd take every nickel I have in the bank and bet that that's a Will Shortz clue. It has WS's fingerprints all over it!
Completely agree with Rex's rant. Friday and Saturday puzzles have gotten too easy. Perhaps NYT could publish with two sets of clues, a "Fun" set and a "Challenging" set.
ReplyDeleteI often rework older puzzles and while the way-back archives do contain the occasional easy puzzle, in general, older (>= 10 years) Friday and Saturday puzzles are considerably more difficult than contemporary puzzles.
Rex's speculation on the Times' motivations for dumbing down the puzzles reminds me of the rating of climbs in Denver-area rock climbing gyms where, in general, ratings have gotten quite soft. Originally the gyms existed so people could get in or stay in shape for climbing outside on real rocks so gym ratings were somewhat comparable to outside ratings. Over time, the climbing gym clientel came to consist of a substantial subset of people who climb primarlily or exclusively in gyms. The gym based climbers seem to like the easy ratings so they can feel good about their climbing. "Outside climbers" have come to view indoor and outdoor ratings as two separate entities to have little to do with each other. I suspect if the gyms tightened up their rating systems to more closely match outdoor climbing, they would lose a non-negligible portion of their customers.
The NYT does in fact publish an “easy” mode version of the Friday grid, so the one we are all commenting is the one they consider the “challenging” version.
DeleteI was able to track down today’s easy mode version - the clue for RFK is Subject of the 2006 political drama "Bobby", for example.
I agree that the older puzzles are more difficult and even more so if you go prior to 2000.
DeleteAt [Start of some temple names], who else confidently threw in BETH instead of BNAI?
ReplyDeleteHand up for BETH initially.
DeleteI did!
DeleteYup!
DeleteEarly in the solve I thought I was going to rate this medium, because I was having trouble getting really established -- mostly due to all the pop trivia nonsense. But 1/3 of the way through everything started giving way and the rest was cake. So... Easy-medium?
ReplyDeleteMy biggest complaint already got a sizeable writeup by Rex: that's a bad (even arguably wrong) clue for KILLER BEE. That answer doesn't work any more than Saskatraz or Cornelian or Randy Oliver Golden West. It's like saying "Person who defends the head of nation" and having the answer be SWEDE. It doesn't make any sense. As Rex said, not all bees in a hive have defensive roles. In fact, of the worker bees he mentioned, not even all of them defend; it's mostly just guard bees. Foragers are too busy getting food to care, and attendants and nurses are quite docile.
Anywho, enough ranting; I'm unlikely the only commenter who will feel the need to indignantly repeat what Rex already said.
On a weirder, lighthearted note: yesterday evening -- by complete coincidence -- I solved an archive puzzle with a theme about...
Wait for it...
...Spoonerisms.
Cue eerie Twilight Zone music
Even weirder- I also did the spoonerism puzzle yesterday 😳
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteAgree easy, which I'm sure y'all know by now, is fine by me. I don't like spending close to an hour solving a puz. Today's clocked in at 20 minutes
Good puz, but agree with Rex about nothing really scintillating jumping out. Now I get when he says a puz is workmanlike. This one is.
Neat block of quadruple L's in North-Center. Noticed a bunch of doubled letters, @Lewis rubbing off (har), turns out to be 18 of them. Close to his "high" rating.
Randomness:
Neat fact in MANDARIN. Probably a bunch more words I've never noticed with State Abbrs. Odd clue on BELL CURVES. EVOO is odd. Seen before, but still odd. SMURFs are getting their moment in the sun.
That's it. Have a great Friday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Highest number of doubles today in quite a while.
DeleteWas hoping for an SNL Killer Bees clip. Completely agree with the RANT.
ReplyDeleteTired of slang that I haven't encountered
ReplyDeleteWhile some recent Fridays have seem very easy this one played tough me. I put it down for a while. Finally got it. JFK v RFK was an issue. I didn't know meetcute or the smurfs enemies.
ReplyDeleteI still want 35A to be DDD’s. To me, that is a big bust!
ReplyDeletetc
First, this wasn't "very easy". I bet the average time of regular puzzlers wasn't abnormally short. Obviously, there will be a BELLCURVE for finish times each puzzle, so maybe Rex and a few others had quick times today. I did not. Took me nearly 27 minutes vs. usually 15-20. Second, inspired by the repeated claims that the 1990s were so-much-more-difficult, I went back in the archive and did Saturday, August 5, 1995. Some parts were gimmes, others took a little work. Finish time? 18:11
ReplyDeleteSo based on a single data point, you have developed a theory of the history of crossword difficulty? Impressive.
DeleteCertainly not a HARD Friday, but I disagree that it was TOO easy. I've been going back and doing older and older NYT Friday and Saturday Xwords and, man... yes, they were harder. But often not in a fun way, often in a "you will not know this name, you will need to simply get every cross" way. Opera stars and actors from 75 years ago, and not the ones you've ever heard of... just a constructor digging through a big book to see if "EGARTHO" is really anything at all. :D
ReplyDeleteBest starting point for me was the SW, and then it was JFK or RFK? Pretty much steady progress after that, but I didn't find this Monday-easy. Wednesday maybe.
ReplyDeleteThings I learned from crosswords: STAN, MEETCUTE, NOCAP. These are things I have yet to encounter IRL. I have heard of DURUM wheat but never tired to spell it, so was thinking of Durham in England, or perhaps NH, where by sons went to college at UNH. Nice to learn something. Also went through The Grinch and Scrooge before HEROD showed up. And hello Ms. ERBE. Never saw your show. How do you do?
I had a good time with your Fridecito, JC. Just 'Cause it was on the easy side didn't make it less fun, for which thanks.
Today happens to be our 55th wedding anniversary, which we will celebrate with more festivity than our 50th, which was right in the middle of Covid. Seems like a long time and it is, unless you look backward and say "How did that happen?" Anyway, we're counting our blessings.
Happy Anniversary!! 🎉
DeleteTell Mrs. pablo I said Hello (and Congrats ... You may take that any way you want! Har! 😁)
Roo
Congrats and happy 55th to a wonderful commenter whose name begins and ends with State postal abbreviations.
DeleteYeah, Pablo, I ask myself the same question. How did that happen? How did I luck out? Mrs. More, as somebody termed her a few days ago in these comments, and I like the sound of it, and I moved in together 55 years ago, too. Made it legal in 1975. So I think I know how difficult and how wonderful it can be. Congratulations to both of you.
DeleteYes, congratulations to both of you!
DeleteWhy clue MUNSTER as a "member" of a 1960s TV family? Shouldn't the clue simply be "A 1960s TV family"?
ReplyDeleteAt eighty, I've finally aged out.
ReplyDeleteAm I the only one that had DDD for big bust?
ReplyDeleteHad a tough time getting started with this one but found some traction in the NE where, once I got rid of Tic (off) at 12D and replaced it with TEE I could see, by pattern recognition, BELLCURVE, KILLERBEE, and CELESTIALEVENT. And then things just opened up. With the AUT in place at 27D I wanted something AUThor-related but then, recalling all the times in my life I’ve had to research stuff for myself, AUTODIDACT appeared and I was just cruising from there. RAPBATTLE at 51A put up a bit of a fight but 55A NOCAP went right in based on its inclusion in a few recent puzzles.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of Kathryn ERBE at 10D because I’ve never watched that show. Did, however watch a lot of Food Network stuff in its earlier days and could not avoid Rachael Ray, who popularized the initialism EVOO for extra virgin olive oil. She was incredibly annoying, like that ultra chirpy girl in your high school class that you just wanted to tell to f**k off and die. You know the one.
So, yes, ILOVEDIT but, to me, that would be a five star review. I especially appreciated the absence of spoonerisms. Thank you for that, Jesse Cohn.
Wrote this at 11:45 Pacific time and I have early appointments in the morning. New mechanic’s office manager: Sure, we can fit you in on Friday morning. How about 8 o’clock? Me: How ‘bout you make me toast and coffee when I get there? I’m fond of marmalade. Her: Umm, maybe later? Me: I’ll try to be there by 9.
So I’ll have to post as soon as I get up (7ish) and read all you good folks later.
NO CAP has not yet entered my crossword lexicon so the crosses did all the work there.
ReplyDeleteThis wasn't all whooshy for me - I was held up in the NE because I never heard the two tails of the bell curve mentioned in my statistics class though I can see where it comes from.
I love the movie "While You Were Sleeping" and I think Sandra Bullock and Bill Pullman have great chemistry. The movie that had no chemistry, in my opinion, was the Sandra Bullock/Hugh Grant film, "Two Weeks Notice". I could not make myself believe in their relationship. Too bad, because "Notting Hill" is one of the all-time great rom-coms.
My husband thought a scene of a King Kong movie he was watching was evocative of "The Creation of Adam" and we talked about it a bit last night and here it is in today's puzzle.
Although not, perhaps, a CELESTIAL EVENT, this was a very nice puzzle. And thanks, Rex, for reminding me that I hadn't done last week's Stumper yet.
Jesse Cohn, nice job!
Because NO CAP makes no logical sense, I am never going to remember it -- even if I see it 100 times.
ReplyDeleteEVOO doesn't sound like a "high quality" anything at all.
I couldn't care less who the "cartoon foe" of someone or other is...nor anyone's "pet goldfish's name"...nor what "Slack convos" are (this clue seemed written in gibberish.)
Do you spit when you rap? Does anyone? Remind me not to watch any BATTLES up close.
This played impossibly hard for me, but I did manage to solve it. Or rather I hate-solved it. Pretty much everything I dislike in contemporary crosswords could be found here.
EVOO=extra virgin olive oil
DeleteSlack is a widely-used communication app.
One spits bars/words in a rap battle.
Agree Nancy - a hate solve.
DeleteTo 'Anonymous' at 9:51: It's really easy to be snarky when you're posting online, isn't it? No, of course I'm not basing an entire theory on a single data point. But what was I supposed to do - - select 500 old Friday/Saturday puzzles from 1995 to 1999 and solve them under controlled conditions? But as a quick check on everyone's else's unsupported theories, solving August 5, 1995 was an interesting datapoint.
ReplyDeleteEasier than the typical Friday & less enjoyable too. I prefer themeless puzzles to the recent theme-related ones, so I didn't mind this that much.
ReplyDeleteWOES=NO CAP, RAP BATTLE, RONIN & IDLEST (really?).
WHERE'S ROBYN W,???
Enjoyed your write-up, Rex :)
Ahora me tienes intrigada.
ReplyDeleteThe software plops IDLEST in your grid. In a world filled with beauty and light, you open up your word list, delete IDLEST, and recompile. In a paranoid, "I might need that in a themed puzzle someday" kinda world, you erase that area and recompile without deleting. In a "you should've known better" world, you send in a puzzle with IDLEST in it, the editor puts it back in your SASE and writes, "IDLEST isn't a word." At the end of days here, our editors forget this is a themeless outing with no constraints on construction and the main goal of a weekend puzzle is to flummox us with actresses we've never heard of, athletes in minor sports, authors who won a prize, and cartoon characters. And so IDLEST gets published, I cry like an Anonymous commenter complaining about a math clue being WRONG, and we look to tomorrow. Oh, and we grouse about being too smart for the puzzles these days.
BBKING and ERBE beat me up today. Otherwise a mostly forgettable outing. DURUM, RONIN and EVOO filled from crosses, so I'll forget them again. Never can remember the definition of AUTODIDACT probably because it's such an ugly word.
Our COASTERS are square. Almost all fiction is not CANON. RAP BATTLE is FUN FILLED, its clue is a travesty.
❤️ KILLER BEE. THE CREATION OF ADAM. CELESTIAL EVENT.
People: 7
Places: 1
Products: 6
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 4
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 21 of 72 (29%)
Funny Factor: 2 😕
Tee-Hee: The final column begins TEE HES.
Uniclues:
1 How the man in the moon knows he's above average.
2 My palm ... actually that's going to be his coffin because I don't back down to murderers.
3 Harmonica song in Hong Kong.
4 Result of spontaneous combustion after being pushed to the limit.
5 Camera pointed at potential thieves, and homophonically, what you'd love to have as a weapon if they do steal.
6 The joy of conjugating a particular group of regular Italian verbs.
7 Feelings 🦖 rarely experiences.
8 Go to a nice poetry reading.
9 Having used a sledgehammer to break into a Starbucks. (But please don't do this as your espresso addiction is not going to kill you and it'll take forever for the machine to warm up.)
10 Oddly, the exact same thought went through Anthony's brain (let's call him Tony) and the asp's brain.
1 LUNAR BELL CURVE
2 KILLER BEE ABODE (~)
3 MANDARIN BLUES
4 SWINGSETS ASH
5 CUSTOMER CANON
6 FUN FILLED -ARE (~)
7 I LOVED IT MOODS (~)
8 EVADE RAP BATTLE (~)
9 OPEN, IN ONE SENSE (~)
10 I'LL BITE CLEO
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Fell in love with the idea of owning a quarter acre, knowing none of your neighbors, and driving 45 minutes to everywhere. CRUSHED ON EXURB.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Your treatise on IDLEST and how it is symptomatic of the huge cesspool that we all come here to deal with for 15-30 minutes everyday and then spend the rest of the afternoon complaining about is brilliant - the highlight of the day !
DeleteMLK, then JFK, then RFK ( got the ick with RFK, I guess the apple can fall very far from the tree)
ReplyDeleteAt least this puzzle didn't have any of those Morse Code clues with the "dits" and "dahs". I mean, don't get me wrong, ILOVEDIT, but not dah.
ReplyDeleteIf you supersize an [Order in the court] is it WRIT large?
I was seriously cold when I wore NOCAP this winter. Looks funny to have NOCAP in all caps.
Mrs. M: Honey, would you come home and help with the kids?
Michelangelo: I'm working on The CREATIONOFADAM painting on the f***ing ceiling. Call your sister.
Pretty easy, it's true. But a good few minutes of fun for me. Thanks, Jesse Cohn.
Easy.
ReplyDeleteI did not know STAN and DUBAI.
Costly erasures - jFK before RFK and Beth before BNAI.
@Rex - thanks for explaining why KILLER BEE felt wrong.
No much junk and a fair amount of sparkle, liked it.
A first guess at CREATION OF ADAM followed by BBKING x BNAI and DURUM x DEET led me to that happy place where I had just enough crosses to suggest the next word, on through the grid. So it did turn out to be a fast Friday for me. But I can't quite join @Rex in his rant, as I found it a pleasure to solve - especially KILLER BEE, SWING SETS, AUTODIDACT, and being reminded of BB KING'S "The Thrill is Gone."
ReplyDeleteI really liked the pairing of the long Downs, as the CREATION OF ADAM in Michelangelo's representation is at least in part a CELESTIAL EVENT. More tangential but...I also liked how HEROD of the Christmas story was connected to ADAM, as Christ was known as "the new Adam."
As Senor Wences would say. "Eee-see for you. Dee-fee call for me."
ReplyDeleteThanks, Nancy.
Wow. Not "Very easy" for me. I finished, in 44 minutes, but not easily, Had to rework the NW corner several times, working first with NOMAD and LONER for "Kind of rover" before finally landing on LUNAR, which led me to DUBAI. Had CREATION OF EDEN before ADAM,and VENT before RANT, so that held me up in the SW for a bit.
ReplyDeleteHad no idea about BELL CURVE and KILLER BEE for the longest time since I didn't know ERBE, and had TIC before TEE; and also had to change MOTES to IOTAS further down, so I couldn't get CELESTIAL EVENT for a while. No idea about Eminem or Slack. Still don't understand NOCAP. So this was a proper Friday workout!
Good clues for KILLER BEE (Queen's guard), SWING SET (Places where it's OK to push someone at school), DEED (Proof of a plot). Thanks for the challenge, Jesse.
For once I noticed that I was not signed in before posting, mirabile dictu! Here it is:
ReplyDeleteI seldom call a Friday easy, but this did lean that direction, with some serious effort in certain areas. The southeast was in particular was a bear for me. I started out with AVID READER at 27 down, had no idea on NO CAP which makes no sense, or EVOO despite the fact that it’s something I use nearly every day. I figured out the top half was AUTO but struggled to figure out the rest of it. When I woke up this morning, I couldn’t spell AUTODIDACT and now I’ve learned I am one.
ReplyDeleteWishing a happy and safe holiday weekend to ALL.
I think the Times clueing has a particular style that you get used to over time. This makes them easier over time. Other puzzles can be completely out of one’s wheelhouse if you don’t do them often. The Times editing gives a very clean puzzle without clueing gaffes, but maybe it suppresses some variety in the personality of the puzzles.
ReplyDeleteI first had the same reaction as everyone to KILLER BEE. But on further thought, it's an instance of a standard cluing maneuver -- using words with their dictionary meanings. So KILLER BEEs are a particular species of bee -- but KILLER and BEE are both ordinary English words, so a killer bee is a bee that (sometimes) kills, which I imagine is the case with those that guard the queen. That line of reasoning led me to admire the clue.
ReplyDeleteKey to makin a themeless puz hard: Lotsa no-knows. Talkin obscure no-knows, here now. Not just trendy/new stuff like EVOO and NOCAP.
ReplyDeleteOld NYTPuzs used to sport some really cool hopeless no-knows. M&A ain't even willin to put them beasts into runtpuzs, unless maybe one when extremely desperate. Some fave samples: *
1. {Shrub genus} = ? [4 letters, starts with some of EVOO's letters.]
2. {Ovid's "It hurts!"} = ? [5 letters, starts with some of NOCAP's letters.]
3. {Orbs, old style} = ? [4 letters, contains two of ERBE's letters.]
4. {Native} = ? [10 letters, starts with some of AUTODIDACT's letters.]
5. {Irish vagabonds} = ? [9 letters, starts with some of RAPBATTLE's letters.]
yep, them were the days ...
Maybe I'll try makin a feisty runtpuz with some stuff like that in it ... and see what happens, solvequest-wise. No refunds, tho.
staff weeject pick: RFK. Acceptable, without the brain-wormy JR.
Thanx for the themeless mostly non-KILLER BEEfest, Mr. Cohn dude. Nice job.
Masked & Anonymo8Us
... and now, for an equally friendly themeless runt ...
Stumpy Stumper: "Jaws of Themelessness #25" - 9x7 12 min. themeless runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
p.s.
* 1. EVEA
2. NOCET
3. EYNE
4. AUTOCHTHON
5. RAPPAREES
p.p.s.s.
Wild-ass clues for known words can also help make a puz hard, I'd grant. I'll use those occasionally in runtpuzs, but then also throw in some gimmes to balance things out.
"Easy" -- almost. Natick'd on DEET/DURUM/ERBE, no idea what the hell a "slack convo" is, and utterly flummoxed by EVOO (??!!)
ReplyDeleteIDLEST is one of the WRONGEST answers I've seen. in a while. It made me the PISSEDEST I've been in days.
ReplyDelete