Perishable bit of apparel / WED 8-20-25 / Electronic setting on a floor model / Custom in Japanese food service / Expel with jeers / Actor Lamorne of Fox's "New Girl" / Frenemy of Betty in comics / Went letter by letter, to Brits / Material in some eco-friendly clothing / First receptionist on "The Office"

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Constructor: Victor Schmitt

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: A single tumbling DIE (39A: Item seen rolling through this puzzle) — six sets of 3x3 shaded squares represent dice—or, apparently, a single tumbling DIE in six different states of "rolling"; every "O" on every DIE is a PIP (33D: What every "O" in this grid represents), and each side of the DIE is represented exactly once in the grid:

Theme answers:
  • there aren't any except DIE and PIP
Word of the Day: Josephine TEY (9A: Mystery author Josephine) —
Elizabeth MacKintosh
 (25 July 1896 – 13 February 1952), known by the pen name Josephine Tey, was a Scottish author. Her 1951 novel The Daughter of Time, a detective work investigating the death of the Princes in the Tower, was chosen by the Crime Writers' Association in 1990 as the greatest crime novel of all time. Her first play Richard of Bordeaux, written under another pseudonymGordon Daviot, starred John Gielgud in its successful West End run. [...] MacKintosh's best-known books were written under the name of Josephine Tey, which was the name of her Suffolk great-great grandmother. // In five of the mystery novels, all of which except the first she wrote under the name of Tey, the hero is Scotland Yard Inspector Alan Grant. (Grant appears in a sixth, The Franchise Affair, as a minor character.) The best known of these is The Daughter of Time, in which Grant, laid up in hospital, has friends research reference books and contemporary documents so that he can puzzle out the mystery of whether King Richard III of England murdered his nephews, the Princes in the Tower. // The Franchise Affair also has an historical context: although set in the 1940s, it is based on the 18th-century case of Elizabeth Canning. The Daughter of Time was the last of Tey's books published during her lifetime. Her last work, a further crime novel, The Singing Sands, was found in her papers and published posthumously.
• • •

As with Monday's puzzle, which was just a list of some of the voices Mel Blanc did, the rationale here escapes me. It's one DIE ... "rolling through" the puzzle? To what end? Why? If we were really supposed to see a "rolling" DIE, then the various representations of that DIE wouldn't be positioned like this. No one DIE could ever "roll" through those six positions, unless it was rolled into some kind of box with sides that would allow it to careen around. The visual effect of "tumbling" just isn't there. But then nothing is there. You've got each side of a DIE, the "O"s are PIPs ... and that's it. That appears to be the whole of the gimmick. No particular game is being represented. Since it's just the one DIE, there is no ... outcome? At first I thought this puzzle was going to have something to do with Yahtzee!, but that would entail five dice, not six, and anyway, as you know, these aren't six dice—these are the six sides of a single DIE. Tumbling. For some reason. Pretty thin. And the one word that might've been brought in as a bonus answer (ROLLED) ... isn't (3D: Like some oats).


From a structural POV, there are two challenges, which the constructor meets quite well. Actually, it's one challenge that has to be met two times—the triple-"O" sequence. That "6" side forces a nearly abutting pair of "OOO" phrases, the type of phrase you don't see TOO OFTEN oh hey, look at that, there it is. Still, you *don't* see it too often, and here, you've got two: TOO OFTEN and (my favorite) BOO OFF STAGE. It's very inventive, and for that reason maybe feels a little home-made, a little loose, a little improvised, drifting into EAT A SANDWICH territory a little, but I like it, perhaps because I've heard the phrase used in real life (if Eminem's "Lose Yourself" can be said to be real life). 

["I've been chewed up and spit out and BOOed OFF STAGE..."]

Those triple-"O" answers give the grid some much-needed pizzazz, as do SCOUT'S HONOR and the best answer in the grid: DOG KISS! (47A: Slobbery smooch). I miss slobbery smooches. We lost our dogs and then almost immediately, completely unexpectedly, became a cat house (which is what happens when you find a kitten literally under your house). I love my cats, but slobbery smoochers, they are not. Most of the time they barely seem to tolerate us. They put on the appearance of "loving" when they want food. And they kinda sorta like being in the same room we're in. But, yeah, the love appears to be completely, overwhelmingly one-way. We're obsessed with them, they mostly ignore us. I know snuggly cats exist. I had one once. But ours ... no. Too much ... let's call it "dignity," though considering how much they barf, fall off furniture, etc. that may be too generous.

[My dad, Lola]

Beyond that good longer fill, this grid is somewhat overfilled with less pleasant short stuff. Old crosswordese like ALMA TEY (whom we've seen twice this week?!), and then a slew of less-than-great stuff like ELMST VPS SAN CEE APEMAN REC ONO YEP ERE LEI SRO (also twice this week!?!?) NOTIPS ORI NAV ABE TSA MSG ... any of these answers would be OK on their own, but in high dosage like this, it wears.  I'm quite sure the visual gimmick of the rolling DIE put a lot of pressure on the grid—all those fixed "O"s would've made it difficult to fill the grid cleanly. And isolating those DIE shapes probably also contributed to the grid's being somewhat choppy, which in turn makes for a lot of short answers. So subpar fill is the price you pay for the gimmick. The gimmick just doesn't seem substantial enough to justify the trade-off.


Bullets:
  • 1D: Change seeker (BEGGAR) — winced at this one. There's just something so condescending and dehumanizing about calling the person who "seeks change" from you a BEGGAR. I'm sure I'm more sensitive than I ought to be here, but I guess I don't mind providing counterbalance to the absolute cruelty being visited upon unhoused people in this country. While I'm being "oversensitive," please keep all HP content, including Ron Weasley and his PET RAT, out of my grid. Embarrassing that constructors / editors keep going to this poisoned well.
  • 22A: Only U.S. prez born in Kentucky (ABE) — Andy Beshear was born in Louisville. I don't really have a horse in the 2028 race yet, but ... we could do worse (have done worse, are currently doing much worse).
  • 59A: Frenemy of Betty in comics (VERONICA) — never ever gonna be mad at Archie Comics content. My daughter absolutely devoured every Archie imprint for like six years of her life ... maybe more. My house and office are still full of digests and double digests, despite the fact that I have given scores of them away to my comics students. I actually find reading Archie oddly soothing, esp. the older Archies. My favorite Archie artist is Harry Lucey. Yes, I have a favorite Archie artist. Here's some crossword-related Archie content—featuring VERONICA—that my friend Doug sent me the other day:
  • 43D: Actor Lamorne of Fox's "New Girl" (MORRIS) — absolutely no idea. Easy to infer from crosses, but ... nope. And because of kerning issues, I'm not even sure if it's "Lamorne" or "Lamome," hang on ... OK, it's Lamorne, with an "r" (that makes more sense), and ... weirdly, I wondered, after I got MORRIS, "wait, is this the guy who played Garrett MORRIS on Saturday Night (2024)?," which I saw for the first time earlier this month. And it is! I remember noticing that the actor who played MORRIS was also named MORRIS, and I thought "wow, is he being played by his son??" But it appears that Lamorne MORRIS and Garrett MORRIS are, in fact, unrelated. 

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️: 
  • Venmo (@MichaelDavidSharp)]
=============================
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
=============================
📘 My other blog 📘:

95 comments:

Conrad 6:14 AM  


Medium Wednesday. Odd that both the long-ish answers were not theme-related.

Overwrites:
mogul before BARON at 1A
EMOpoP before EMORAP at 12A
lIe before FIB at 25A

WOEs:
Mystery author Josephine TEY at 9A
PET RAT Scabbers (or anything Harry Potter-ish) at 13D
MORRIS Lamorne at 43D
SEITAN at 50D, although I know I've seen it before I needed every cross.

Anonymous 6:22 AM  

There is a new game on the NYT app called Pips, I think the theme was a little cross promotion!

SouthsideJohnny 6:48 AM  

I saw the reveal(s) and kept wondering how/why the highlighted areas were going to represent die(s) and it turns out that the answers are they don’t and JUST BECAUSE.

This is another example of a grid with a “theme” that’s just a sad gimmick which over-strains the fill and we basically end up with a grid full of junk.

The NYT is the only major publication that I’m aware of that publishes grids with this type of experimental (?), Avant Garde (?) (I’m trying to be generous) approach to puzzle themes. Personally, I believe that if the NYT is going to require a theme 5 days a week - they should insist on the best of the best and aspire to be the gold standard. How this kind of stuff so consistently gets published is beyond me.

Ian 6:57 AM  

Not quite as critical of this puzzle as you are here but still found this to be weirdly easy for a Wednesday. Which I don't necessarily mind! I think the first three days of the week can and should vary in difficulty. But that said it's still a strange experience to have a theme that doesn't really... Theme. Honestly I didn't even get it until solving the "6" side with the triple-O downs.

Anonymous 6:58 AM  

I wonder if this puzzle is some sort of promotional synergy for NYT’s new Pips game. “Domino” was in Connections today as well. They do that sort of thing

Bob Mills 7:00 AM  

Caught onto the DIE/PIP trick quickly, but assumed the O's were part of a TIC/TAC/TOE game (duh!). Needed look-ups for PETRAT and SEITAN, and had "nabob" before BARON.

This puzzle seemed heavy in GEN-X and GEN-Z popular culture.

Son Volt 7:13 AM  

Solved as a themeless - no interest here. Overall fill was fine - liked TOO OFTEN, IM A MORON, SEITAN and especially DOG KISS.

Easter

The shaded dice were annoying. Difficulty trended early week. Love Asimov.

Caetano Veloso

Theme aside - pleasant enough Wednesday morning solve.

Ella Sings Cole

kitshef 7:17 AM  

A very impressive job of construction. In addition to the two triple-Os, one of which passes through two dice, there is also SCOUTS HONOR passing through another pair of dice.

I quite liked it. DMC is a little ugly on its lonesome, but I can live with that.

Anonymous 7:18 AM  

I guess I'm a moron but I just don’t get this. I mean, I solved it, but if these things are dice, what about all those letters in them that aren’t Os? They’re just random, right? The gray squares don’t look anything like dice.

Andy Freude 7:25 AM  

Another thumbs-down here. Post-solve, I can appreciate the challenge for the constructor of getting the O’s into the right places and nowhere else. But that doesn’t compensate for the ho-hum solving experience.

I’m surprised, but not shocked, to learn that Rex has a favorite Archie artist. For me, the most striking thing about Archie visually is the titular character’s hairstyle. What is that crosshatching at the temples supposed to represent? I’ve never seen anything like it in real life. But just now I’m imagining an interesting head tattoo . . .

Anonymous 7:38 AM  

What a misery. As usual.

Lewis 7:41 AM  

Capital-P Puzzle for me. Six no-knows. Many answers that needed crosses before confidently slapping in. Believing the puzzle had to do with tic-tac-toe after filling in the first two gray areas.

I like having hills to climb, being riddled with riddles, so this hit my happy place.

I love the visual mind that envisioned this Pips-Ahoy theme, and the skill behind pulling it off -- making a cogent puzzle out of a dense and extraordinarily constricting theme set, not to mention having no non-pip O's in the grid.

I enjoyed the Japanese sub-theme, with SEITAN (a word of Japanese origin), MISO SOUP, HAIKU, and NO TIPS (as clued). Even IMAMORON backward, though it doesn’t mean anything, has a Japanese feel.

I love the triple-O look of near-neighbors BOOOFFSTAGE and TOOOFTEN, and the PuzzPair© of LAB and DOGKISS.

Just a mass of mwah in the box for me. I’m a fan. Thank you so much for this, Victor!

Ben 7:43 AM  

Man, I came here for the vitriol of NYT’s shameless Pips self-promotion, and I’m sadly disappointed.

pabloinnh 7:44 AM  

I think the last thing I penciled in on my printout was the first P in PIP, and then (finally) I went back to see how they could be on a DIE, and there they were. Good for you if you saw this coming, but that happiness was not mine.

Was Ms. TEY really in another puzzle this week? Missed that. I read "The Daughter of Time" when I was doing a paper on Richard III in college. It didn't strike me as the best mystery novel of all time, I guess I should try it again.

No idea about MORRIS and the next emoji I send will be my first, and as I didn't know SEITAN I was wondering if an emoji might start with a COLOR, but I decided a COLON probably made more sense, so I was able to hum the happy music for myself when that turned out to be correct. Also I learned the name of Ron Weasley's pet rat, which I had been wondering about.

Nice enough Wednesday, VS, a Very Stunty stunt puzzle, and thanks for a fair amount of fun.



Ralph 7:47 AM  

The New York Times engaged in marketing and cross promotions? Unheard of. Outrageous! If that's the case, next thing you know it will be marketing products and taking a cut of the sale whenever you click the link and purchase an item while cleverly disguising the content as an objective product testing & review feature. NEVER would the NYTimes stoop so low. It has too much respect for its readers.

JJK 7:52 AM  

I recognize the feat of construction but it was no fun to solve. I didn’t get the theme at all until the very end. PIP and DIE were my last two entries, and I was guessing. “Oh, maybe the squares are dice and the O’s are PIPs?” Eye roll, head shake. With random letters interspersed. A real stretch for a theme.

RooMonster 7:57 AM  

Hey All !
Interesting idea. At first, thought TICTACTOE, but got dispelled of that pretty quick. While that was in the ole brain, thought the Center Down, 33, might be Rebussed TIC, TAC, TOE.

Figured out they were dice, or as Rex correctly pointed out, six sides of one die, as also pointed out by the Across Revealer. Is it National Dice Day today? Craps Day? (That's a funny day!)

A boatload of Theme material to work around, the six Cubes of Theme, so the iffy fill gets a pass. Junk in every grid, this was handled quite well.

My beef is the Blockers. Granted, have to get full that works, but seems with a touch extra work, could've gotten rid of 4 cheater squares. There's 42 Blockers, getting rid of the 4 brings it back to normal 38. The Blocker after ORI/GEL in NW, before ANI/ONO in SE, and either side of the T Blocker bunch in NW or SE. Just sayin'.

Did like the puz. No other O's, obviously, also making it tougher to fill cleanly.

Have a great Wednesday!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Gary Jugert 8:01 AM  

Me surgió algo. {tee hee?}

Well, let's focus on the positive of this gunkfest:

The phrase I'M A MORON is here, so that's fun. There's a Labrador in the puzzle and there's nothing better than that except maybe DOG KISSES, but I personally find too much tongue is rarely a good thing, don't you agree?

There's a RADICAL in here and I was reminded I was once pretty good at math and now I am not. There's the joy of spelling "spelled" "SPELT," or shall we say "wrong?" There's Elm Street's most famous citizen needing a therapist or a girlfriend. There's Veronica and if I remember right, she's cute, so maybe she could date Freddy K.

There's a ROBOT and I once loved me a good robot until recently when they became super creepy and not made out of tin. There's a patty melt and if you're pro-murder, they're a great way to spend an afternoon feeling bloated.

There's also a Harry Potter (#1!) reference in here and I hope it will lead to the same discussion we have every time there's a Harry Potter reference so I can light my digital public book burning torch and march to kill the monster.

So, not bad I suppose, but I also have a dozen frownie faces here and I am pretty sure the dice caused the ugly fill for no meaningful pay off. I BOO (them) OFF STAGE.

People: 9
Places: 5
Products: 10 {nope}
Partials: 8
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 33 of 78 (42%) {Clang goes the gunkorama bell.}

Funny Factor: 2 😕

Tee-Hee: HEMP and THC ... dude.

Uniclues:

1 Songs against short unrhymed poems.
2 Lesser known neighborhood terrorizer.
3 Controversial topic among mouse, hamster, and guinea pig owners.
4 Reputation earned by experimental musician after serving tasty Asian food that made everyone sleepy.

1 HAIKU DIE TUNES
2 ELM ST. APE MAN
3 PET RAT PARITY
4 MSG PUNK ONO

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Gobble it down. ABATE JELLYBEAN.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

EasyEd 8:07 AM  

If you’re an absolute literalist it’s hard to imagine any collection of squares actually rolling. This one relies on some imaginary tossing about that seems OK in the land of crossword puzzles but I guess can be off-putting if yuo are not in the mood. However, references to Archie and VERONICA, SCOUTSHONOR, and DOGKISSES (and maybe PETRAT) bring this one to life.

Adam12 8:10 AM  

The only PIPS I know sang with Gladys Knight.

mmorgan 8:11 AM  

I got that the blocks of circled letters were dice and that the Os were pips, but the point of it escaped me.

Sutsy 8:16 AM  

It felt as though the puzzle suffered to accommodate a theme that (at least to me) had zero "wow" factor. The entire SE is just a joyless slog of proper names.

Anonymous 8:52 AM  

OK, IMAMORON too , cuz that was my big gripe with the theme. The overly complicated construction overshadowed an otherwise decent puzzle

pabloinnh 9:04 AM  

I thought that Salome doing the polka was the height of absurdity but you surpassed that by giving her seven dirndls. Nicely done.

JT 9:05 AM  

There really isn't much to the dice theme—the dice aren't tied to any game or any particular "roll"—so the theme falls flat for me. But I still found it a fun puzsle to solve. I liked "shape-shifting organism" for AMOEBA and "Went letter by letter, to Brits" for SPELT. Liked the HAIKU clue being an actual Haiku. But, yes, BEGGAR made me wince.

How many had MOGUL before BARON, like me?

Anonymous 9:09 AM  

While I wholeheartedly agree with how you appear to feel (and I can be completely wrong about how you feel), it seems as if this is all about survival at this point.

Anonymous 9:11 AM  

Sorry to be thick, but I don’t understand how nine squares relate to the six sides of a die. Help!

Sir Hillary 9:19 AM  

If I had woken up cranky today, I would have ranted about the shameless cross-promotion for the NYT's new Pips game. Because that's all this puzzle is.

Fortunately, I woke up rested and happy, so what I choose to take from this puzzle is the wonderful memory of the NYT running Patrick Berry's amazing weeklong die/pip-based meta oh-so many years ago. That series was the catalyst for my transition from GAMES Magazine (already wounded, soon to die) to the newspaper puzzles I had ignored for over 10 years.

So, this one left me deeply satisfied, despite its flaws and the rationale for its publication this week. Thank goodness for a good night's sleep.

Lee Gerston 9:24 AM  

yup...that was my first thought

egsforbreakfast 9:24 AM  

TOOOFTEN TwOOFTEN correct is good enough for a CEE.

The clue for 1D brought to mind the old adage: Change seekers can't be choice seekers.

Nice how the COLON is at the bottom.

Wouldn't it be RADICAL if a PETRAT gave an APEMAN a DOGKISS?

Shouldn't the clue for RYE have read [Patty melt bread often used in a city with a marina]?

Can't say that this puzzle was to DIE for, but I enjoyed it and respect the construction feat. Thanks, Victor Schmitt.

Anonymous 9:31 AM  

thanks for the spoiler. geez. you should play their new game CONSIDER.

Mack 9:33 AM  

I'm ambivalent about this one. I didn't hate it, but I also didn't love the excessive three-letter fill.
I was disappointed that the clue for PARITY wasn't obstetrics-related, considering it crosses another clue: "Delivers, as a baby." That was a missed opportunity for a little bit of cleverness.

On the other hand -- dead horse or not --any time AMOEBA is spelled correctly is cause for celebration.

Masked and Anonymous 9:46 AM  

Kinda weird puztheme mcguffin, I'd grant. I mean, shoot -- the two theme revealers are weeject-lengthers PIP & DIE. They share staff weeject pick honors, of course. Poor ROLLED did not get to participate, theme-wise.

fave stuff included: DOGKISS. SCOUTSHONOR. IMAMORON.
Also really like the loookk of BOOOFFSTAGE.

Thanx, Mr. Schmitt dude. Buildin this pup musta been kinda dicey. Nice theme-only O usage, btw.

Masked & Anonymo4Us

... and now, for a runty ode to AI, tech which is certainly a roll of the dice ...

"AI Generation" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:

**gruntz**

M&A

Nancy 9:53 AM  

So I'm not feeling all that great this morning and this puzzle is making me feel worse. The grid is hard to read and makes me dizzy. And the pop culture would seem to be off the charts. Not at all tempting. SPLAT.

MetroGnome 9:58 AM  

"Easy"? This PPP slog?

Berry 10:18 AM  

Superstars, but they didn't get far.

Anonymous 10:25 AM  

Naticked out at the ISABEL/SUE/SUNOCO crossing. I thought it was spelled SoNOCO, and have never heard of the author or T-Rex, so I then had IzABEL and zoE. Impossible to spot as all are real words. Bummed out there.

Gary Jugert 10:27 AM  

@Andy Freude 7:25 AM
He's also wearing an orange kilt for some reason. (With a green polkadotted bowtie?) And Jughead's crossword has trapped single cells and no rotational or mirror symmetry, so obviously an independent puzzle made by a rogue constructor. (M&A?) And Betty's straw is floating in her empty glass. Maybe she's drinking the magical invisibility potion of jealousy.

Anonymous 10:29 AM  

Those are dominoes, not dice

jb129 10:30 AM  

I didn't like this. Except for DOG KISS & Rex's comment about (his) dogs & cats. BEGGER = CHANGE SEEKER - very off-putting. And lately I'm finding the Monday-Wednesday theme puzzles very annoying - leaving me with "WHAT?" & so I've since learned that I a prefer themeless.
And I won't get started with the addition of the new NYT game, PIPs. I had to cancel my NYT subscription because it became too expensive & not worth the price to read about DJT throughout. I always preferred doing the puzzle on paper but got used to digital. Now the NYT has raised the price of their Games Subscription.
It's cold & gloomy in NYC. Guess I'm not in a good mood today :(

Anonymous 10:31 AM  

I really liked the die theme and at least it's unique and memorable. Missed a trick not having 'rolled' clued more appropriately.

Hack mechanic 10:36 AM  

Should be booed off stage. Frightful

jb129 10:41 AM  

Absolutely. And PIPS isn't my sort of game anyway :(

jb129 10:43 AM  

@ Ralph I'm assuming (hoping) you're being facetious (re: NYT having too much respect for its readers). Or maybe I'm just annoyed that they've increased their Games Subscription while giving us PIPS.

Les S. More 10:46 AM  

So that was it? PIPs on a DIE? The 5 possible rolls on a single DIE? In no particular order. Or am I missing something? How did this pass muster? You could have at least filled in the Os when the puzzle was completed to, you know, make it semi-exciting. At least there don’t seem to be any stray, non-theme Os. A lot of people will be happy about that.

It was Tuesday easy and the theme was not necessary for the solve. Felt like I spent more time reviewing this than I actually spent solving it. Tried to figure out what those non-O letters on the faces of the DIE represented. No luck. Which means that I’m really thick tonight, or there just isn’t anything else here. Too bad.

I have to admit that finding phrases with the right number of Os in them (BOOOFFSTAGE, TOOOFTEN, SCOUTSHONOR) was pretty impressive but I don’t think I would have bothered.

Learned about SEITAN. Maybe that’s a good thing.

jae 10:55 AM  

Medium. I needed some post solve staring to figure out what was going on.

No costly erasures but I did not know SEITAN, MORRIS, and PETRAT.

I spent a fair amount of time trying to make something out of the letters in the shaded squares…no dice.

I’m with @Rex on this one.

jberg 10:58 AM  

Alll those shaded squares, all that careful placing of every O in the grid, and for what? DIE crossing PIP right in the center of the puzzle. Is that all there is? I think it needs more of a payoff. Either some hidden message spelled out by the non-O letters in the shaded squares, or else some significance to the order of the numbers. Reading left to right and top to bottom, they are 3,6,2,1,5,4, which does nothing for me-- there might be another order to try, but I don't have the motivation to go on. Maybe it's a guide to a winning lottery number? Beats me.

I keep reminding myself of Joaquin's dictum, that they are clues, not definitions. Otherwise I'd be wondering how you can have more than one VP in Air Force 2, whether C is still a grade if it is spelled out, whether Mixed Martial Arts are a "style," whether the news anchors in the studio are not also "LIVE," and whether the absence of a custom is itself a custom. Real customs in Japanese food service: every restaurant employee will take your order, servers kneel at your table (because traditionally you are sitting on the floor, but they will do it anyway), servers run to show respect, etc. I needed most of the crosses to see NO TIPS. (Custom in our household: we do not slap guests in the face as we welcome them in.)

Also, it's a lost cause, but it needs more than 17 syllables to be a haiku. In particular, you have to have a seasonal reference, which this illustration lacks.

OK, you can tell I'm feeling grumpy because of the eyestrain required to read the tiny numbers in the gray boxes--maybe they are more legible if one solves online, but I'm not going todo it.

Is it acceptable now to have "bats" in the clue for TSA crossing BATS at 27-D? It still grates a bit.

Question of interest, not a criticism of the puzzle. Marijuana ingredient is THC, but all the dispensaries are advertising CBD. What's up with that?

Teedmn 11:04 AM  

I thought this was fun and impressive. All six sides of the dice displayed, nice!

14D, had DMz in my head for a moment, har.

I find I miss THE in the phrase BOO OFF the STAGE. 8D just seems truncated though BOO OFF STAGE is something one could say.

Victor Schmitt, nice Wednesday puzzle!

Anonymous 11:08 AM  

Yes! This was medium/challenging for Baby Boomers like me

jberg 11:11 AM  

And SEITAN backwards is (almost) NA[h], TIES.

Les S. More 11:11 AM  

No dice. Nice.

jberg 11:14 AM  

The thing starting with a colon is an emoticon, different from an emoji--I don't know how long it took me to understand that. Emoticons are images you can create with a typewriter.

mathgent 11:14 AM  

I enjoyed finding the six faces. The opposite faces of a standard die add up to seven, but that doesn't seem to be reflected in the grid.

We seem to be wanting to out-grump Rex today.

jberg 11:19 AM  

Dear Nancy, I hope you get well very soon!

jberg 11:23 AM  

Just before solving, I read Robert Hubbell's daily post in which, among other things, he reports that Elise Stefanik was BOOED OFF the STAGE

jberg 11:25 AM  

Drat, I hit the publish button by accident. the point was encountering BOOED OFF ... STAGE in the wild just before finding it in this puzzle, a nice coincidence.

Lauren 11:26 AM  

Excellent excuse for Linda Ronstadt's Tumbling Dice. Thank you!

Anonymous 11:31 AM  

For anyone interested Jim Horne at XWord Info included a link today to the week of Patrick Berry puzzles Sir Hillary mentioned.

Anonymous 11:35 AM  

Gosh yes! Indigestible for this old guy

Anonymous 11:36 AM  

DNF’d on PETRAT/NOTIPS. Had PETRAS/NOSIPS. I thought sipping might be rude, and only saw the first Harry Potter movie and never read a HP book. (See what I did there? I assumed that the abbreviation would be recognized - just like many NYT constructors assume about the pop culture knowledge of their solvers.)

Whatsername 11:37 AM  

Impressive construction, ho-hum solve. It would’ve helped a lot if I’d known what a PIP is in connection to this puzzle. To me - besides being what TV Archie used to call Edith - it’s a crack in the eggshell when a baby chick is getting ready to hatch. Since there were no Bunkers or baby chicks in the puzzle and the blocks with the jumbled shaded letters made no sense to me, I mostly ignored the theme. Now that it’s been explained, I see what the O’s meant … dots …1 through 6. Alrighty then.

Kate 11:38 AM  

As well as the offensive HP clue, questionable use of "beggar" and haiku that really isn't, I will add that "moron" is also not a word that should still get used. Merriam Webster lists it as "dated, now offensive" and I agree. Along with the missed opportunity on 3d, this puzzle really needed better editing.

Anonymous 11:40 AM  

Ditto

Whatsername 11:43 AM  

Since I had a tough time without the excuse of having Covid fog, I completely understand. So hoping you will get over the hump and start feeling stronger soon.

Anonymous 11:43 AM  

Wonder what the average age of NYT puzzle solvers is. Gotta believe it’s older than GenXYZ what have you.

Anonymous 11:53 AM  

Really hated the clue for HAS: “delivers, as a baby.” First, I think HAS is a lame word to have in a crossword, and secondly, there are a million other ways you should clue it. Doesn’t an OBGYN typically “deliver” a baby that the mother “has”? Maybe I’m just being picky about an unsatisfying puzzle, but that one grated.

Liveprof 12:02 PM  

What do you mean by opposite faces adding up to seven?

Anonymous 12:06 PM  

I don’t get it - if it were one die wouldn’t it have the same pips (letters) and as it rolled you would see the different sides? This seems to be six dice, as every square is different. Pointless except for the cross promotion and Pips is annoying

Penny Lane 1:02 PM  

I've been siting with this for a while and finally uncovered the secret message contained in the puzzle. Those others letters on the die? If you scramble them, tap your heel together three times, and play them backwards at a lower speed to a musical accompaniment by 64D, you can hear clearly spoken in the language of an isolated indigenous people of the Amazon rain forest: "Paul is dead."

Les S. More 1:08 PM  

@Gary. "There's a Labrador in the puzzle and there's nothing better than that except maybe DOG KISSES, but I personally find too much tongue is rarely a good thing, don't you agree?"

I do agree. I'm a dog lover, always have been. have kept company with some fabulous ones, some good ones and ... nope, can't recall any bad ones. I lavish affection on them and they almost always return it. But when they start licking my face, I recoil. Just don't like it. I don't smack them or yell or anything like that. I just quietly tell them I'm not a big fan of slobber and that usually works. Strangely, I have one llama that, when we are standing in the pasture talking to each other, likes to reach in and chew my beard and I don't mind that near as much as dog slobber. Go figure.

Luke 1:17 PM  

It's not often you'll see a eight-way proper name Natick, but there it lies in the southeast corner: MORRIS, ONO, IROBOT, SENECA, ISABEL, SUE, ANI, and SUNOCO. Luckily, it was all rather easily inferable/known, but wow. That has to be some kind of record...

elk 1:21 PM  

I actually really enjoyed the dice gimmick today. Sure, some of the fill was a little stretched/forced, but on the whole this was a fun puzzle. ANi / SEiTAN was a brutal Natick that I had to resort to trying letters in (had originally gone for ANa / SEaTAN) until I got that sweet solve music

Andy Freude 1:26 PM  

Pablo: The bit about “The Daughter of Time” being the greatest mystery novel surprised me, as I’ve never heard of it before, much less read it. Which raises the question: What’s _your_ nominee for best mystery novel you’ve ever read? I’ve got two very different favorites: Dorothy Sayers’s “The Nine Tailors” for British puzzlemaking, and Raymond Chandler’s “The Big Sleep” for vivid characters and dialogue, even though I couldn’t follow the convoluted plot.

Anonymous 1:28 PM  

Moron is a terrific word. Just the right amount of derision.

Sharaoan AK 1:35 PM  

Today I could not follow Lewis comments on the puzzle.
I do NOT see die in nine squares with occasional "o"s/pips and a lot of other letters.
Got my biggest chuckle from Penny Lane 1:02 comments. Seemed just about absurd enough for the puzzle.
I did find some enjoyable answers, but a number of names made it difficult for a Wednesday.
59 A Veronica came immediately.

Photomatte 1:39 PM  

Even with the explanation, I still don't see the theme. Cats, however, I see all the time. Ours may not give slobbery kisses (which is just fine with me!) but one of them runs to the door every time I come home, then brings me her favorite ball so we can play fetch together. She's a cat/dog

Les S. More 1:44 PM  

I tried all that and it didn't work, just like back in the 60s.

Dan P 1:48 PM  

Dogs have masters; cats have staff. Think MORRIS.

okanaganer 1:50 PM  

Hoo boy, so many Unknown Names, so many wrong answers, and confusion. And I spent ages trying to figure out how the grey areas related to HAIKU because I thought "Illustrated here" in its clue referred to the theme.

Strange that of the last 7 puzzles, Monday was the best.

Anoa Bob 1:50 PM  

Greetings from sunny Port ISABEL, TX. Put me in the "Is that all there is?" crowd. Each shaded DIE has, in additions to the PIPs, from 3 to 8 letters and they mean nothing? I thought surely I was missing something. Came here to find out what. Maybe they spell out a HAIKU? Tell how to add THC to HEMP? Guess not. Head scratcher, that.

Speaking of ODOR (55A), I gave the stink eye to 42A APEMAN and its clue "Evolutionary 'missing link'". This plays on a long-discredited 19th century idea of an evolutionary "ladder" with some primeval ooze at the bottom and, ta-da, humans at the top. Contemporary models liken evolution to an ever-branching tree with monkeys, apes and humans all stemming from a common primate ancestor. No APEMAN. No missing link.



Whatsername 2:02 PM  

@Les: First I’ve ever heard of a beard-chewing llama … but I love it! Oddly, my cat has recently started giving face kisses when we first go to bed. No idea why but I’ve had to employ the same gentle attempts to discourage her without causing any hurt feelings.

Whatsername 2:05 PM  

😂

Whatsername 2:09 PM  

Nine if you count FDR. That was my biggest challenge in the whole grid but didn’t realize why. No wonder! Nice catch.

Les S. More 2:12 PM  

@jb129. If I beg, I am a BEGGAR. The word is not the problem, the conditions that cause the poverty problem are. Perhaps you found the clue a bit flippant - I did, too - but it is a valid description of what is a sad situation. With respect, let's work on the real problem.

JT 2:16 PM  

The nine squares make up ONE side of a die. There are six dice (six groups of nine squares) in the puzzle. Each die shows one of the rolls you may get: one pip, 2 pips, 3 pips...up to 6. The letter "O's" are the pips.

Anonymous 2:18 PM  

I did not get this one but I deem very clever. Congratulations Victor,

JT 2:26 PM  

CBD is not psychoactive; it can't make you "high." It has certain medicinal properties (pain relief, relaxation, etc.). THC is the main psychoactive chemical in maijuana and can make you"high." It can induce altered perceptions, euphoria, impaired cognitive function, etc.

egsforbreakfast 2:31 PM  

Adding to @Gary Jugert's observations on Jughead's crossword. There are multiple two-letter answers, so definitely not the NYT.

Les S. More 2:31 PM  

Ah, Kate, having been married to a psychologist fro over 50 years, I have learned not to use the term "moron", but BEGGAR is a legit word, even if it hangs on to its old-timey spelling. Let's not attack the word when we could put our energy towards attacking the conditions that necessitate the practise.
And you're right about the haiku.

Anonymous 2:35 PM  

@aononymous (9:09 am). Surely you can't be speaking of the New York Times survival - a company that has gained over 10 million online subscribers in the past decade, has been buying up other complementary businesses left and right, has been putting mid-city newspapers out of business with its market dominance, has added feature after feature after feature to reach and become market leader in specialized markets, and has grown into a corporate marketing behemoth over the past decade. NYTimes company is now more often the predator threatening the survival of others; and you can be confident that no one and nothing are threatening its survival.

Anonymous 2:38 PM  

Am I the only one who has never heard of a pip before? Made this puzzle pretty awful for me.

egsforbreakfast 2:41 PM  

But, hypothetically, would moron be acceptable if it were the simplest and most accurate way to describe a holder of very, very high office?

Gary Jugert 3:07 PM  

@Les S. More 1:08 PM
Wait... what? LLAMA?!! Crossword field trip.

Anonymous 3:17 PM  

Backgammon

Les S. More 3:21 PM  

BTW, I did mean to type "6" possible rolls on a die. Sheesh.

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP