Relative difficulty: Easy (6:12 solving on my phone) (this was a small grid, btw, only 14 rows)
THEME: IT'S NOT THAT DEEP — "You're overthinking this" ... or what might be said about 3-, 9-, 17- and 34-Down?
Theme answers:
Word of the Day: DIP ("When I ___, you ___, we ___" (lyric from a Freak Nasty hit)) —
- [Item that has to be blown up before being filled with water] for INFLATABLE POOL
- [Minor office injury] for PAPER CUT
- [Quick throw in football] for SCREEN PASS
- [Rejuvenating break] for POWER NAP
Word of the Day: DIP ("When I ___, you ___, we ___" (lyric from a Freak Nasty hit)) —
"Da' Dip" is a song written and recorded by American hip hop artist Freak Nasty. It was released in 1996 as the lead single from his second album, Controversee...That's Life...And That's the Way It Is. To date, "Da' Dip" is Freak Nasty's only top forty hit.Upon its initial release in mid-1996, "Da' Dip" failed to make an impact on the Billboard charts, charting low on both the R&B and rap charts. The song, however, managed to break through into the mainstream the following year, reaching number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Da' Dip" was then certified gold by the RIAA on April 10, 1997 before reaching platinum certification on June 3 of that year for shipments exceeding one million copies; the single sold one million units in 1997 alone. In 2024, the song gained popularity on TikTok with users recreating the dance from its music video.
• • •
When I first opened it, the layout threw me off a bit. It has the look of a themeless puzzle, like one of the Kameron Austin Collins grids that takes me over an hour to solve. But the center is chopped up into small words, rather than left wide open. I got thrown off again when I hit 2-Down (which was very early on, I was bopping around rather than going in order). I saw [Six-stringed instrument similar to a cello] and immediately thought "viola!" and when that didn't fit, I prepped myself for a rebus.
But as I made my way through the grid, everything else was fitting nicely, and I soon saw that this was just a standard themed puzzle with a bit of a funky layout and vertical theme answers. My guess is that they are laid out vertically because the word "deep" is associated with up-and-down orientation. I loved the revealer! I use that phrase all the time, it's not just in-the-language, it's in-my-language. And it does perfectly apply to each of the four theme answers. (Actually, I'm not really sure what a SCREEN PASS is so I can't comment there. But I trust it.)
There was some fill that caught me-- I stared at ESAI for a long time, trying to decide if I had an error there. And two-word phrases like DABS AT, OIL UP, and LET DIE can feel a little clunky. (Not LOOK UP though, that sounded very normal to me.) I had never heard of EROICA before (my brain immediately clocked that it's one letter off from "erotica" lol), so that corner was the final one for me to finish.
After looking up ESAI Morales, I realized I know him from a "Curb Your Enthusiasm" episode that I just watched. (I've been rewatching the show, it's a comedy masterpiece.) |
When I'm helping new constructors, I try to steer them away from what we sometimes call List Puzzles, where the theme answers are all just stuff that's in the same category. But List Puzzles work (and, in my opinion, stop being List Puzzles) when the revealer has an element of wordplay to it. This was a perfect example!
Bullets:
Bullets:
- [Bit of gear for an entomologist] for NET — An entomologist studies insects, so I guess the idea is they are capturing specimens using a net
- [Winners of Super Bowl III (and no other Super Bowls since then)] for JETS — This was such a rude clue lmao, love it. Last night I watched the "Curb Your Enthusiasm" episode about a very depressed Jets fan.
- [Peter Pan transport] for BUS — I had to look this up-- it's the name of a company. I have only ever ridden MegaBus and Greyhound.
- [Animal on a "Hang in there!" inspirational poster] for CAT — This is kind of odd, now that I think about it. You'd think it would be like.... a sloth.
Congrats, you've made it to the end, and now I will talk about Summer Tomatoes!! Please skip this part if you only care about puzzles. I am not growing any tomatoes this year, but I had a good trip to the farmer's market and this is what I made:
I make this savory, jammy, tomato tart probably five times every summer, it is unreal delicious. The crust and the filling are from two different recipe developers, but I combined the recipes and wrote them up here. |
I served the focaccia with a pretty standard gazpacho that I eyeballed... tomatoes, cucumbers, shallot, garlic, bread, olive oil, vinegar, salt&pep. Apparently garlic is a controversial ingredient(?) but bro it tastes sooo good. |
Panzanella with sungolds, peaches, mozzarella, and shallots. I used my focaccia (toasted) for the bread, and I used the basil-infused oil in the vinaigrette :) |
xoxo Malaika
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“It’s not that deep” refers to the height of the puzzle itself?
ReplyDeleteAh, I wouldn't have thought of that!!! Clever
DeleteOh, nice! Yet another nifty thing to admire in this puzzle.
DeleteThe (h)ero of EROICA is Napoleon I believe. Which now that I think of it, makes me question the political proclivities of Beethoven. I wonder if he eventually had a change of heart about that... (LOOKS UP in Wikipedia) oh, I see he did -- when Napoleon declared himself emperor. Now, who does this remind me of?
I'm afraid YEET is not in my lexicon. But it seems to mean about the same thing as woot.
It’s a phrase that one might say to someone who’s overthinking a simple task
Deleteagreed!
Delete@anon 7:09am woot is a happy exclamation, like "yay!" meanwhile, yeet is a verb meaning to throw something hard - or "hurl" as the clue in today's puzzle explains. :)
Delete-stephanie.
Anonymous 3:44 (stephanie): thanks. I looked it up. YEET has another meaning: an interjection "used to express surprise, approval, or excited enthusiasm". That's what I was referring to when I posted at 7:09.
DeleteI'm very interested in how common knowledge the "Hang In There" poster one is. I put in bAT (makes so much more sense to me because they actually hang?)
ReplyDeleteFwiw I'm 43 and I knew that one instantly. The classic poster depicts a cat hanging from a clothesline (how it got there is not for us to know). This poster had a moment when it was definitely in the zeitgeist, though I couldn't tell you when. It's possible it was in the movie Office Space (and if not, it definitely has that vibe to me).
DeleteProbably common knowledge for my age group. Often hung in offices and cubicles.
DeleteI’m remembering it being popular in the mid-nineties? Pre-internet. Precursor to cat videos
DeleteYup—the poster was in nearly every teenager’s bedroom and college dorm room (late 70s, early 80s).
DeleteMonday easy for me with some help from the smaller grid. No costly erasures and DIP (as clued) was it for WOEs. I’d complain about Freak Nasty but I wonder how many GenZers know about Chubby Checker and the TWIST?
ReplyDeleteBreezy, low on junk, and fun, liked it.
Please what is a WOE? I know it’s crosswordese for something but is very hard to look up. Word Of enigmafication?
DeleteAnonymous 1:25 PM: What On Earth.
DeleteWhat on earth
DeleteSo after a bright, sparkly Tuesday we get this, a puzzle designed for optimal dullness. Actually the theme was pretty cool and the individual theme answers were all good and reasonably well clued. But some of this was just so dull. I mean I’m a car guy and I don’t really give a s**t how they renamed a Kia sedan. Nor do I care about a bus line that’s never travelled west of Pennsylvania. Yes, I looked it up post-solve and yeah, you got me but you had to use a regional NE carrier to do it. Proud of yourselves? It may be the New York Times Xword but it is sold nation-, no, continent-, no, world-wide.
ReplyDeleteThe lowest point in the puzzle came, appropriately, at 61A BASEPAY, a clue/answer combo that could have only been written by a CPA.
No fun. Hope Thursday brings some sparkle back.
Malaika, the food pics are great. It's raining tonight so things are cooling down but it's supposed to heat up again next week so I'm looking forward to making some gazpacho for a couple of patio lunches. Yes to garlic, but just a bit and topped off with home-made croutons and finely diced green bell peppers. Love the idea of pairing peaches (in season here) with tomatoes. Tomato salads are a staple in this house.
Haha, Les…my mind worked differently on OPTIMA to K5. I wondered if this was due to a lawsuit that alleged that the name OPTIMA was too similar to Maxima and Altima which would cause the “likelihood of confusion” between Kia and Nissan. But hey, my husband is an IP attorney, so I’ve heard about THAT little phrase for 45 years!
DeleteSounds like you need a power nap
DeleteNow that makes it kind of interesting, Beezer. Their cars are not. But I find it hard to believe that anyone would go shopping for a Nissan Altima and drive home in a Kia Optima due to "likelihood of confusion". If they do, they deserve to be fooled.
DeleteGood point Les! But even though I’ve never bought a Kia or a Nissan (my last two have been Subaru and Mazda, respectively, I have to admit that in the past, when sitting at a stoplight…I thought…Optima…hmmm…is that another Nissan? Here’s the thing, my husband over the years had BEEN in litigation with what I would think were MUCH “less confusing” trademarked names…like two different industries…let’s say “autocare” and “fried chicken.” (I truly just came up with something). When it involves the same industry/product…it doesn’t matter and the “foolishness” factor doesn’t come into play.
DeleteBeezer and Les S More
DeleteI had made the mistake of buying a Kia Forte in 2015 (2 big failures that shouldn’t have happened) but I already forgot the name of the bigger model. Crosses brought it back. Interesting speculation. Kia used to be an upstart and established brands often get in litigation as Beezer said about brand names with upstarts. The established brands can be very picky when they sue so that is why the guess. The names are both feminine superlatives of Latin adjectives, highest and best so maybe Nissan complained quietly and Kia figured it wasn’t worth fighting about?
8:30 for me, which is easy for a wednesday. Yeah, smaller grid--I didn't even notice. Fun puzzle! Because the revealer is a negative, but very in-the-language, it gives it a fun edgy feeling to it. Enjoyed this puzzle a bunch! Thanks, Hanh!
ReplyDeleteEasy, except I had "era" before EON. "It's not that deep" is simply a catch phrase that happens to describe the theme answers. A SCREEN PASS is thrown behind the line of scrimmage (as opposed to down the field). so the word "deep" works in a negative context...likewise with the others.
ReplyDeleteEra is correct. Eon is not.
DeleteA SCREEN PASS is a play in American football where the quarterback throws a (usually quick) pass soon after the snap to a player who is only a few steps downfield--the idea is that it's quick and the linemen form a screen to block so the receiver can run downfield. It's not that deep into the other team's territory and so fits the theme perfectly. I enjoyed that "deep" in each of the theme answers meant something different. You should listen to EROICA--it's a beautiful symphony.
ReplyDeleteUm Respectfully disagree. A screen pass is in fact slow to develop. The receiver is not downfield, since the linemen cannot cross the line of scrimmage til the pass is thrown. The QB drops back as if to throw downfield, then tosses a pass ( often softly) over the onrushing defensemen.
DeleteAnd for more beautiful music, listen to Jordi Savall playing the viol (aka viola da gamba).
Deletethose tomato dishes look delish!
ReplyDeleteList Puzzles are at their best when the revealer has wordplay AND each themer is related to the revealer in a different way. This one works great. Deep sleep is not physically deep like a POOL would be, that kind of stuff.
ReplyDeleteThis would've been perfect as this week's Monday puzzle. The fill is a LOT cleaner than whatever happened with ARIL ANGI ANAG UPC TDRUN etc. + a sizable amount of Spanish mixed in for good measure. And the theme is the kind that many beginner solvers would praise the constructor for once they get that lovely aha moment. Many people didn't even realize that there was a theme on Monday at all.
A Q just occurred to me: are there xword puzzles for Spanish or French speakers?
DeleteStrange experience for me. I solved this one faster than it took me to complete Monday’s grid - without a doubt the easiest Wednesday I’ve ever encountered at the NYT. I hesitated very slightly at NET (not knowing what an entomologist does) and EROICA - I enjoy classical music when I listen to it, but I don’t really know anything else about it. The rest was read the clue and drop in the answer.
ReplyDeleteI didn’t even notice the theme - I didn’t read the second half of the revealer. I just filled in the answer after only reading half the clue. Wow, things have sure changed here at the Old Gray Lady since I started solving in earnest maybe 7 or 8 years ago.
@SouthsideJohnny 7:03 AM
DeleteIt is possible things have changed between your ears over the 7 or 8 years too, right?
Hey @Gary - no doubt. I really struggled with basic crosswordese when I first started here. I was fortunate enough to get a lot of good advice along the lines of “remember that one, you will be seeing it again”, etc. The first two entries on my 3x5 “cheater”card were REY and REINA - which I still can’t remember off the top of my head (have I ever mentioned that I don’t care for foreign language clues?). But even limiting the sample size to the last 12-18 months, this one seemed surprisingly easy. I think your Gunk Gauge at 25% today had something to do with that as well.
DeleteWell, I've never heard said or seen written the revealer in my life, so while I'm willing to accept it is in the language, it is not in my language.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I love list puzzles and hate that the world has turned away from them. Apparently this is all Malaika's fault.
If there is no longer an IRON, why even bother playing Monopoly?
Right???
DeleteWash and wear has made the iron obsolete to recent generations. What’s that thing in the hotel closet?
DeleteThe theme makes this one fun. With DEEP and POOLing at the bottom some good word art. Seemed very easy on the difficulty scale so expect some comments along that line. All those tomato pics have made me hungry for more.
ReplyDeleteHi Malaika!
ReplyDeleteThe viol is a beautiful instrument. Sort of a bowed guitar. Have a quick listen:
https://youtu.be/UgYeFtMT2mE?si=-2lnLdY2z5jNXAhR
(I wish I knew how to make these links live.)
Also, the Eroica Symphony is something worth getting to know. Kinda like “Da’ Dip,” but much longer.
Yes, it's almost eerie how similar Da' Dip is to the Eroica. :)
DeleteWow, fabulous looking food, Malaika! I’d like to eat dinner at your house. I agree that summer tomatoes are heavenly.
ReplyDeleteAbout the puzzle, I was flummoxed on the revealer cross with LETDIE because I was convinced it was LETlIE (that’s let lie) and the phrase ITSNOTTHATDEEP isn’t particularly familiar to me. I’m thinking this is a generational thing, but maybe I’m just having a weird brain block.
Other things that Malaika had trouble with were gimmes for me: EROICA, NET for an entymologist, the Peter Pan BUS company, familiar to every New Englander, and maybe regional.
Good to know Peter Pan is regional as I’ve never heard or seen it. I will say it’s an odd name for a bus company. I mean…Greyhounds are fast…check. I guess Peter Pan will take you to Neverland?
DeleteYes. I only know him as flying around in tights. “Bus” took my brain and ground it into the carpet. “Wha ?”
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteNoticed the puz seemed short, so maybe the ole brain is operating properly this morning. Tis 14 rows.
Neat that the whole Themer answer is needed, not just a "first word" or "last word" type. And Themers going Down, ergo, DEEP. And grid 14 long, so the entire grid in NOT THAT DEEP..
That's deep. 😁
Puz on easy side. BUS toughest answer, as was naturally thinking Peter Pan the story, not the BUS Company. Are they still in business?
Good fill, nice overall puz
Have a great Wednesday!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Sure, it was easy, but it WAS a Wednesday after all. You’ve got two more days before you can get to the puzzle where you won’t like yourself anymore.
DeleteMalaika try adding strawberries to your gazpacho, so good!
ReplyDeleteHah! I was just reading yesterday about adding raspberries.
Delete¿Estas listo para hacer esto?
ReplyDeleteLove a vertical puzzle and the goofy theme here is a delight. I might like it because I'm not that deep either.
I should work up some teary-eyed aghastery at how fast I roared through this. "The Wednesday sky is falling!" screamed Chicken Little. "But I'll be back tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, until the last puzzle of recorded time has lighted fools the way to signifying nothing."
See, not that deep.
Will we have AORTAE advocates today? My first sofa bed will be my last sofa bed as it weighed ten tons. I like imagining a university professor wandering about outdoors with a NET. I did not know Peter Pan rides the BUS.
❤️ EVIL EYE. INFLATABLE POOL.
People: 6
Places: 1
Products: 8
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 0
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 73 (25%)
Funny Factor: 3 😐
Tee-Hee: UNDRESS. OIL UP.
Uniclues:
1 Where babies come from.
2 How to join the Mile High Club.
3 Uses the dictionary to find out where babies come from.
4 Those over 60.
1 SOFA BEDS TWISTS
2 JET'S DUET NOTCH
3 LOOK UP UNDRESS
4 POWER NAP HERDS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: How you spell "painful pics." T-A-T AND ESS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I was hoping you would Uniclue
DeleteDABSAT NEAP HAM, cause I got nothin’… :-)
Peter Pan is the name of a bus company, as was already mentioned.
Delete@Anonymous 12:59 PM
DeleteDABS AT NEAP HAM: Smokes a pig on the waves? Dances with Ms. Piggy under the quarter moon? Yeah, I got nothin' too!
Started with ITS NOT THAT hard, and INFLATABLE POOL seemed to fit.
ReplyDeleteEasy. No WOEs, one overwrite, LET lIE before LET DIE at 51A prevented the happy music on the first try. DIP (47A) would have been a WOE but I had it filled in before I read the clue.
ReplyDeleteITSNOTTHATDEEP is " in the language"? I'm with @kitshef, not in mine. Also found out that Da DIP was a gold record. Missed that one bu tI guess the lyrics are what make it so memorable.
ReplyDeleteI now know ISSA but always have trouble with ESAI. Also was wondering what Team USE might me until I corrected my spelling of INFLATABLE. Come on man.
Very easy for a Wednesday, surprised that Malaika didn't know EROICA, a crossword staple, and I still see the occasional Peter Pan BUS on the interstates around here, although I wouldn't say it's local.
Nice themers and the revealer makes sense to a lot of folks so I'll say well done, HH. I Have Had more fun with harder puzzles but this was perfectly serviceable, so thanks for that.
“Esai” seems to make an appearance once a week.
ReplyDeleteA screen pass is not that quick. A screen is a play in which the offensive line will intentionally let the defenders past them, which takes some time, and then the quarterback throws the ball to a receiver (usually but not always a running back) who now has blockers between him and the pass rushers. A shovel pass, which could fit, is typically "quicker." As is a slant pass. Contrasted with a screen pass which you sometimes hear described as "slow developing."
ReplyDeleteSignificantly faster than my average but the center kept me from a record time. I had ERA before EON and VASE before CASE, and a SCREENPASS never appeared. It's not a Quick Throw - actually one of the slowest plays to develop, as blockers, the screen, have to get in position first.
ReplyDeleteThe PETERPAN clue was delightful, never ridden one, but sure have seen them plenty.
I have never heard of any geologic phase referred to as an “eon”—only “era.” Is this typical? Acceptable in the field?
DeleteSteve Washburn
DeleteScreen pass
Depends how you look at it. The actual pass is short therefore quick. A Wednesday clue is aimed at people like me who might know the pass name but not the details!
First puzzle I’ve done this week and could’ve sworn it was Monday. Certainly no Wednesday level resistance anywhere. I did not notice the “overthinking” entries at all, but did like the mini football theme. As for the revealer, IT’S NOT THAT HARD is the expression more familiar to me.
ReplyDeleteI was employed by The Quaker OATS Co. for about five years long ago when it was still an independent entity. Now a subsidiary of PepsiCo, it was a great place to work and a very well run organization.
personal best!
ReplyDeleteConsignment shop owner: Who do these SOFABEDS belong to? That nice guy Ned or that son-of-bitch Ed?
ReplyDeleteAssistant: Unfortunately, they're that SOFABEDS.
The JETS may have won only one Super Bowl, but Namath, with the help of some good LINEMEN, sure could YEET a SCREENPASS.
What can you say about a lady who pronounces "DIP" as "thip" and "UNDRESS" as "unthress"? She can't pronounce HERDS.
It was a fast Wednesday, but I sure couldn't find even a whiff of a good guess at what the revealer would be. Delightful job, Hanh Huynh.
Never have I seen duller, less imaginative, and more familiar cluing. And certainly not on a Wednesday. It got to the point where I tried to guess what the clue would be when I already knew what the answer would be -- and I kept hitting the nail right on the head.
ReplyDeleteThere was only one exception. LET DIE also could have been LET LIE -- and that's what I had until I got to IT'S NOT THAT DEEP.
The theme is very cute. Unfortunately, I was so busy lamenting the cream-puff quality of this not-really-a-Wednesday puzzle that I missed it entirely until I came here.
Haven't read the blog yet, but I imagine some solvers are railing against the deliberate dumbing down of the clues by the Editor or by the Puzzle Dept. It's been my experience that the constructor is the one determining the difficulty and sophistication of the clues. Sure, there are always some changes, but I find that most of my original clues are left intact. I would squeal like a stuck pig if they weren't and/or I'd probably submit elsewhere. So I suspect the failure of even a single clue here to puzzle, intrigue, baffle or amuse is mostly the fault of this constructor. A hugely disappointing Wednesday.
I almost agree with this post. I zipped through it in 11 minutes that was 24 minutes less than my usual time for a Wednesday puzzle. I just wouldn’t be so strident about it.
DeleteI just saw a performance of the Eroica Symphony over the weekend, arranged for a quartet, which included Yo-Yo Ma. An impressive work. And it made for a ready answer. Although Beethoven originally dedicated the work to Napoleon, he changed his mind after Napoleon seized a crown.
ReplyDeleteMore Malaika food updates, please!
ReplyDeleteI'm totally trying that tomato tart when our cherry tomatoes ripen (they are behind due to the coldest Bat Area summer for 20 years - even as the rest of the world swelters).
ESAI used to be as plentiful in xwords as OREO. Not so much any more.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait for football season. LINEMEN and SCREENPASSes (the description by one of the commenters above is wrong). Baseball has been bleak out here. The Giants limit themselves to two runs a game. The Canadian Open tennis tournament has stepped in nicely. American Ben Shelton is playing brilliantly.
ReplyDeleteSame here. I am ready for kickoff.
DeleteI say "Malaika" ... she say "Tomato". Great foodfest! She really can dish the neat stuff out.
ReplyDeleteCool puztheme with the not-so-deep 15x14 puzgrid bonus. Very Different. Like.
Agree with @Nancy, that the clues were mostly extra-WedPuz-friendly, for some reason. And the only ?-marker clue was the revealer's.
staff weeject pick: BUS. This was not an easy clue, at our house. Thought Peter Pan did more flyin around than he did bus rides. [DIP clue was also a bit mysterious, IM&AO.]
some faves: EVILEYE. UNDRESS. SCARIEST. LOOKUP [debut]. ASS+T's #2 clue. Near-Jaws of Themedness.
Thanx for the deep fun, Mr. Huynh dude. A most clever creation.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
... This pup ain't all that deep, either ...
"PronounCements" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
This comment smells like mocking someone’s name and that kind of thing is really stupid.
DeleteESAI not quite as common as ENO, but pops by regularly for a visit.
ReplyDeleteMalaika, it’s so interesting how accomplished you are in xworld while having some things like ESAI or EROICA that are stalwarts for longtime solvers not in your knowledge base.
The photos of the tomato creations are beautiful (as was the picture of you for lollapalooza in your link). It is always funny to see people I only know from radio, podcasts, or the printed word. I always assume anyone in crosswords looks grey lady adjacent, so a sparkling dress with a drink on some kind of rooftop was unexpected). Thanks for the great writeups recently, and congrats!
The thing that threw me is that a screen pass is DEF not a quick pass in football. It actually needs a second to develop as the lineman position themselves and the qb then passes to a player who will have ‘screen’ downfield blocking. This is emblematic of constructors who stray (for necessity or fancifulness) beyond the fields of their actual competency and fail to do the actual work of understanding what they are clueing.
ReplyDeleteI agree completely with what you are saying. I would only add that many clues are the work of editors. It's hard to know who should get credit or blame without direct knowledge.
DeleteI didn’t get the revealer but doing the puzzle on the bus on my way to the dentist was fun. It put me in a good mood. Got most of it which made my Wednesday.
ReplyDeleteFantastically easy for me! No glitches or google checks!
ReplyDeleteFinished this in just 11 minutes that was 24 minutes faster than past Wednesday puzzles. I zipped through it with no errors or lookups! Yay for me!!
ReplyDeleteI seemed to have a somewhat opposite experience from Malaika, in that VIOL SCREEN PASS and EROICA were complete gimmes for me, whereas the revealer meant nothing. Oh well, easy enough, much under my average Wednesday. But wow, the tomato recipes are such a treat! Will absolutely make that tart!
ReplyDeleteAfter quickly filling the entire puzzle, I looked it over and -- Oh! BASTLE?
ReplyDeleteWho would hang a CAT? Not too inspiring. Never seen or heard of that poster.
Neat theme. DEEP has kind of the same meaning in PAPER CUT and INFLATABLE POOL, but the contexts are so different, so I'll take it.. Pretty easy except for the theme answers. I looked at AE_ in the grid and knew immediately not only what the entry was, but what the clue would be, so I guess that's a crossword cliche. Cluing SAP as "sucker" was fun in that my mind jumped to the yellow-bellied sapsucker, and whether it would be synonymous to call it a "sapsap," or maybe a "suckersucker."
ReplyDelete"That woman" cluing SHE is grammatically correct, but somewhat unidiomatic, since most of us would say "her," in most cases. Educational, then.
I've seen VIOLs with various numbers of strings, but six is one possibility, so that's OK.
tackles before LINEMEN, and atv before SUV; the only other difficulty was my inadvertently leaving out one of the Ts in ...NOTTHAT...
This is by no means a reflection on the constructor & BTW thank you, Hanh - but shouldn't this have run on Monday?
ReplyDelete@Malaika: Your culinary efforts are impressive. It’s such fun to try new dishes and it’s pretty hard to mess up a homegrown tomato. Last year I made my first tomato pie. I was skeptical, but it was delicious. Most important step in that recipe was to salt the tomatoes/drain out the excess liquid. Otherwise, it’s tomato soup in a crust.
ReplyDeleteYes, there is still a Peter Pan BUS company. They had a rough time about 15 years ago due to competition from what everyone called the "Chinatown Bus"--actually a couple different companies whose names no one remembered. It started as large vans that went directly from Chinatown in Boston to Chinatown in New York (and the other way); they picked up and dropped off on the street, avoiding the charges for using the bus station and charging a lot less. They also paid their drivers much less. Finally Peter Pan and Greyhound got the city to ban on-street pickups, so they had to use the station too, and the big companies were able to compete on price.
ReplyDeleteWoW. I was amazed at Nancy's extremely negative comments.
ReplyDeletePersonally, I found all the theme answers interesting and fun. And I was sufficiently challenged by Peter Pan riding a bus, the screen pass, the Freak Nasty hit (having never heard of either the group or the "hit" , for which I'm grateful) and a couple of others.
I liked Please turn up the thermostat/Brr and the sound of the Fjords and firths.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI love your food pictures and comments. Thanks for the recipes and for the write up.
ReplyDeleteThe puzzle was fine, but Malaika's foodie pix were awesome!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the Bond-fest -- Moonraker in a clue and (Live and) LETDIE in the grid.
My wife went to NY High School of Performing Arts with ESAI Morales.
There seems to be an ETSY in the southeast of many recent puzzles. It's the current hot entry.
ReplyDeleteJust under 9 minutes so pretty quick for a Wednesday. I didn't even bother checking what the theme was after finishing last evening!... can't remember why.
ReplyDeleteA huge boo to the ridiculous clue for BUS... as Les said, why oh why clue it using a regional company name? Stupid.
Hands up for BAT before CAT since they actually do hang.
Really hope tonight's puzzle is more interesting.
How many have already made up a list for ITS NOT THAT HARD for your next crossword?
ReplyDeleteNice food Malaika!
ReplyDeleteI must be getting better at this!
ReplyDeleteGreat puzzle - very fine revealer.
Re 55D: one of my earliest memories (it must have been during the 1956 presidential election campaign) is of my dad showing me a paper with a < sign followed by a stack of 3 horizontal lines. Then he said “add 3 lines to turn it into a bald-headed golfer.” The answer: IKE.
ReplyDeleteHey Malaika!! You and I are on the same page as far as tomatoes go. I also didn’t get to grow anything this summer because of my move to Northern California and seemingly eternal construction project. Your “extra” offering today made me so happy! All your dishes remind me of my trips to Spain and Portugal. I practically drooled over your culinary delights-all some of my very favorite things to do with ‘maters. Thanks for that.
ReplyDeleteAs for the puzzle, it’s a winner for me. Just last week (I think, but recently at any rate) we were commenting on themed puzzles and what makes a well executed theme. This is a great example. Here we have a seemingly unrelated bunch of long vertical answers. Had I not tripped over the reveal early on (a perfect example of why I generally wish the app wouldn’t highlight the theme answers until the happy music plays) I would have been able to cheer the surprise. Alas, the excitement of a truly well executed theme and its clever reveal were lost to me.
Regardless of my early discovery, this was such a fun solve with a truly creative and superbly executed theme that I forgive the app’s giving it all away. What a winner today! Mr. Hyunh made my list of constructors whose puzzles I shall eagerly anticipate.
The puzzle had some delightful surprises, the best for me being “I like IKE.” Yep, I’m so old that IKE was the first thing that popped into my mind and I spent a couple minutes trying to think of anything else it could be since surely a 2025 puzzle wouldn’t include that old chestnut!
After completion, I was surprised to learn that SOFA BEDS is a debut. I did many TWISTS to Chubby Checker, adore the EROICA - especially the final movement, have flown on several AER Lingus JETS and can never forget Joe Namath’s JETS. It’s been a while since we had a NEAP tide, and that answer was about the only truly old saw in today’s tool box.
The highlight was the theme. I enjoyed reading the theme answers post-solve and marveling at the creative artistry that pulled those answers together to show that ITS NOT THAT DEEP. As Malaika astutely observed, the answer itself is very “of the language,” and perfectly describes each theme content. Just thinking “what do these things all have in common?” would have been so much fun. My one regret today is that my meandering easy solve gave me the reveal too early. I got an equal amount of joy reviewing the puzzle post solve, but truly wish I could have enjoyed it after wondering what on earth a SCREEN PASS and a PAPER CUT have in common.
Can’t wait until tomorrow’s farm market so I can get some more tomatoes. Thanks Malaika; great job today. Also can’t wait for the next Hanh Huynh puzzle!
“Hang in there” is an old motivational poster of a cat hanging onto a clothes like by one paw.
ReplyDeleteLiked the puzzle. A bit surprised how much Nancy disliked it. The puzzle kept my interest. Agree on the easy side
ReplyDeletePeople have noted the answers which were hard for Malaika but easy for many Some surprised me however
I had a blank in the NW for a bit because I forgot ELSA so I should talk!
I forgot the anecdote about Eroica so I looked at it up. Napoleon was originally considered a force for good in Europe and Beethoven dedicated his revolutionary symphony to this new spirit of change. But when he learned Napoleon had crowded himself emperor, Beethoven was so furious he left a hole in the score sheet where he scratched out Napoleon’s name.
IT'S NO THAT HARD? Yep. IT'S NOT THAT COMPLICATED? Sure. IT'S NOT ROCKET SCIENCE? Definitely. IT'S NOT THAT DEEP? Say what? Not familiar with that version.
ReplyDeleteDwight (IKE) Eisenhower's running mate was Richard (Dick) Nixon. So 55 Down reminded me of a time long ago when I was a wee lad and heard the local Women's Republican Supporters group chanting "We like IKE! We like Dick!". It was only years later that I realized why my grandfather was trying to suppress a wry grin at that.
Maybe I missed it but just in case Hang In There!.
Pretty easy for a Wednesday. And yes, screen pass is definitely legit. You just don't see it that much any more. Or referred to by the commentators. Thanks for the recipes. Nice that you gave credit to the two you combined for the tomato tart. I frequently do the samething.
ReplyDeleteThank you Malaika for pointing out the rudeness of 27A!! No reason to have to add to the cluing "...and no other Super Bowls since then"! What does that do to enhance the clue? Just plain mean. "Winner of Super Bowl III" PERIOD, end of story! I must have made a VERY audible WTF as my wife looked up startled from the couch, When I explained my (very) hurt feelings, she rolled her eyes and told me to move on with my life (pretty much what she says every time I talk about my beloved Jets)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, liked this for all the reason Malaika and anyone else did. For whatever reason the POOL part of INFLATABLEPOOL just refused to enter my brain, but that was the only real hold up. Liked the themers and the revealer. Fun puzzle, good job Hanh! (well, other than the jab at the Jets)
J-E-T-S, JETS JETS JETS!