Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Blue-skinned race in "Avatar" / TUE 9-23-25 / Gymgoer's goal, perhaps / Country that dropped "western" from its name in 1997 / Some Rhode Island Reds / Word before deck or hand / Iliac artery feeder

Constructor: Jacob Stulberg

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: JUG BAND (40A: *Where the starts of the answers to the five starred clues can all be found) — theme answers start with JUG BAND instruments

Theme answers:
  • SPOONS OUT (18A: *Serves, as soup or ice cream)
  • WASHBOARD ABS (23A: *Gymgoer's goal, perhaps)
  • JUG BAND (40A: *Where the starts of the answers to the five starred clues can all be found)
  • STOVEPIPE HAT (51A: *Accessory for Abraham Lincoln)
  • BONES UP ON (63A: *Refreshes one's knowledge of)
Word of the Day: Bones (see 63A) —
The 
bones, also known as rhythm bones, are a folk instrument that, in their original form, consists of a pair of animal bones, but may also be played on pieces of wood or similar material. Sections of large rib bones and lower leg bones are the most commonly used bones, although wooden sticks shaped like true bones are now more often used. Metal spoons may be used instead, as is common in the United States, known as "playing the spoons". The technique probably arrived in the U.S. via Irish and other European immigrants, and has a history stretching back to ancient China, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. They have contributed to many music genres, including 19th century minstrel shows, traditional Irish and Scottish music, the blues, bluegrasszydecoFrench-Canadian music, and music from Cape Breton in Nova Scotia. The clacking of the loose rib bones produces a much sharper sound than the zydeco washboard or frottoir, which mimics rattling a bone up and down a fixed ribcage. (wikipedia)
• • •

I have absolutely no experience of JUG BANDs that are not headed by Emmet Otter, although I now realize that my childhood memories have conflated Emmet Otter's JUG BAND Christmas with the animatronic Country Bear Jamboree feature at Disneyland, which I might be conflating with various animatronic musical acts at Showbiz Pizza (RIP, Showbiz—you were better, and weirder, than Charles Entertainment Cheese Pizza ever was).




If you'd asked me to name the instruments in a JUG BAND before I'd solved this puzzle, I would've been like, "Well, jug, first of all ... washboard (ding!) ... maybe spoons (ding ding!) ... some kind of makeshift string instruments? (bzzt!)." I had to look up "bones" (though I correctly surmised that they were literally bones, at least originally), and I still can't really conceive of how one plays a "stovepipe." Wikipedia doesn't have a separate entry for "Stovepipe (instrument)," but has it filed instead under "Jug (instrument)":

The stovepipe (usually a section of tin pipe, 3" or 4"/75 or 100 mm in diameter) is played in much the same manner, with the open-ended pipe being the resonating chamber. There is some similarity to the didgeridoo, but there is no contact between the stovepipe and the player's lips.

So it's jugesque. My main question today is a cultural one, namely "how does anyone know what a JUG BAND is (anymore)?" How popular are they? Where? With whom? In terms of broader pop culture, where do you even see them? Do younger people know about Emmet Otter? If not, what are their JUG BAND touchstones? Every experience of JUG BANDs that I have involves puppets or animatronic animals, which seems crazy to me. It seems like the kind of musical act that, in live-action fictional representations, might lend itself (strongly) to caricatures. Maybe that's why the JUG BAND scene is dominated by animal puppets. Annnnnyway, today we get JUG BAND instruments. Some of them. And then a very dull Tuesday puzzle on top of that. I can't say I had fun solving it, but I can say I had fun doing 15 minutes' worth of JUG BAND research.

[with Jughead, inaptly, on drums]

I have almost nothing to say about the non-theme material today. Lots of repeaters, no surprises. Haven't thought about THE CW for a while (1D: "Superman & Lois" airer). Is it still a network? ... apparently it is, look at that. I haven't had cable TV for so long, I no longer know which of seemingly hundreds of networks are still viable. But I do remember that Superman & Lois once existed, and that it aired on an off-brand network. It's possible I wrote in THE WB at first. I'm writing at length about this clue because it's possibly the only clue that made me think much of anything. Oh, I had to think about what things are in the gym (there are definitely MATs, but they are not among the first, say, ten things that spring to mind, so that clue was less easy than others) (30D: Gym sight). I wrote in ENOS as the [Son of Adam], but ENOS is not the son of Adam. He's the son of (... wait for it ...) SETH! Who is, in fact, the son of Adam. ENOS is not only the son of SETH, he is also a baseball player in the Hall of FAME (really awkward crossreference there) (58A: Slaughter in the Baseball Hall of 61-Across). Different ENOSes I assume (oof, man, I do not recommend trying to write ENOS in the plural; feels ... bad). That's it for trouble. Nearly nonexistent.

[Just pretend they're saying "ENOS"]

Bullets:
  • 4D: Doesn't give proper respect (SLIGHTS) — really (really? really) thought this was spelled SLEIGHTS. Like Janet LEIGH (27A: Hollywood's Janet or Vivien).
  • 43A: "On the Road Again," for one (TITLE) — hilariously arbitrary. Stunningly arbitrary. Spectacularly arbitrary. Of all the millions of TITLEs in the history of the word, today's example is ... a Willie Nelson movie title track from 1980?! Do JUG BANDs play this? Well, yes and no (yes they play a song by that title, no it is not the Willie Nelson song):

  • 2D: Country that dropped "western" from its name in 1997 (SAMOA) — occupied by various "western" colonial forces (Germany, then NZ after WWI, then the U.N.), SAMOA gained its independence in the 1962 and finally eliminate "Western" from its name in 1997. The country does, in fact, lie just "west" of American SAMOA.

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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14 comments:

  1. Wierd theme, although being an older person, I’m vaguely familiar with JUGBANDs, from summer camp mostly, I think. But one instrument that’s missing here is the one (second to washboard maybe) that I associate most with a JUGBAND: a gut bucket, kind of like a bass with only one string. And, I’ve never heard of a stovepipe used as an instrument.

    That person SPOONingOUT their soup and ice cream is being very inefficient - one scoops out ice cream and ladles out soup.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:01 AM

    As a fan of a certain choogly jam-band named the Grateful Dead, I guess I’m more familiar with jug than some, as one of their early incarnations was as Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions (get THAT in a puzzle, someone!).

    At least in my geographic region, THE CW is a broadcast OTA channel, not cable. Still more obscure than ABC, etc.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bob Mills6:03 AM

    The theme was invisible to my old-guy's eyes, so I needed cheats for the JUGBAND/NAVI and THECW/WASHBOARDABS crosses. Otherwise, a pleasant puzzle with normal Tuesday difficulty.

    ReplyDelete
  4. What a weird clue for TITLE. Hardly a clue at all. Nancy could write dozens of cute ones.

    ReplyDelete

  5. Easy, but for some reason the holly-related Christmas carol (13A) that initially emerged from the synapses was The Holly and the Ivy, and I couldn't remember that song's holly locale. Aside from that, no WOEs and only one overwrite, at 70A, where my white alternative was dYE before it was RYE.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous6:59 AM

    I read it as “Holly locale in a Christmas CARD” and thought … FRONT?

    ReplyDelete
  7. EasyEd7:00 AM

    Thought this was a light and lively puzzle with an imaginative theme, even if a bit esoteric for today’s world. Very little jargon and plenty of fair crosses. The range and inventiveness of Rex’s comments are amazing! Don’t know how he does it, but am glad he stays with us.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Andy Freude7:11 AM

    I wouldn’t say that I’m a jug band aficionado, but I do enjoy weird folk stuff, including the entrancing sound of the jug band. Agree with JJK that it’s odd to leave out the gut bucket, a jug band staple. And the STOVEPIPE is a new one for me.

    Couldn’t see SPOON OUT (another oddity noted by JJK), so skipped over the NE corner to race through the rest, coming back to that quadrant to finish up with my last answer, TA-TA!

    ReplyDelete
  9. A couple of real head scratchers today, such as a borderline bizarre clue for TITLE. I’ve seen similar constructs used before, but this one really stretches it to the limit. Why not use the clue “Frog” for NOUN? Ok, a little off the beaten path, but still a misdemeanor.

    And wow - how many spoonfuls does it take to make a ladle ? Jeez, serving your guests soup with a spoon would be one sure way to kill your dinner party.

    You can definitely get to SKEW from “Bias”, but that combo would be just as comfortable here on a Saturday.

    I know ORC is standard Crosswordese, but haven’t we beaten that LOTR dead horse beyond recognition by now? There has got to be an alternative way to clue it - isn’t there some random foreign language that it means something in ?

    I know I’m not an outlier with my distaste for clues that ask which of the 250+ networks broadcast one of the several thousand TV shows that have aired (because I am the140th person who has expressed that sentiment here).

    ReplyDelete
  10. Random thoughts:
    • Nice to see Jacob, maker of 35 Times puzzles, back after a four-year absence.
    • The puzzle’s stars to me were the theme answers, all colorful – look at them! Fresh, too, with two NYT answer debuts and two once-befores.
    • Two lovely PuzzPairs© involving backward answers: GAGA and a backward NUTS, and TSARS and a backward IVAN.
    • I liked the cluing, which was a step thornier than Monday cluing, but not as tricky as on Friday/Saturday. For example, [Holly locales, in a Christmas carol] for HALLS. A simpler clue from a Monday past is [Passages], and a Saturday clue from the past is [Passages in a long story?].
    • Have you ever heard a good spoon player, whose sound is crisp and mesmerizing? For many years we had one of the best here in Asheville -- Abby The Spoon Lady, who busked downtown. Please, give her a listen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nLmM9kcBKs&list=RD_nLmM9kcBKs&start_radio=1 .

    I came into the box today blank and neutral, and have left it alive and buoyant. Thank you for a splendid outing, Jacob!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Hand up for @Conrads "The Holly and the Ivy" (the hollies were in the woodS), and for @Rex's THEwb, which apparently has not existed for nearly 20 years.

    Tons of 50/50 or 33/33/33 clues today, e.g. EPIC/POEM, SETH/CAIN/ABEL, GEEK/NERD, EMAIL/MAILS, JEST,JOKE/JAPE, RED/RYE. Most needed only one cross to settle, so no complaints.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous7:36 AM

    Thanks for your questioning mind about “slights”. Forced me to look up the difference. The clue, of course, is correct for “slights”…and then there is “sleight of hand”. Ain’t English grand?

    ReplyDelete
  13. Hey All !
    I'm guessing no one under 40 has ever heard of a JUG BAND. OK, I'm sure a few have, no one is quite a large assumption. But rare.

    Interesting Theme subject. If there is still JUG BANDs around today, they stay mighty hidden. Or I'm just not in the correct circles to know about them. Or Ariana Grande and Taylor Swift have just completely whitewashed out all other music. Har.

    A pretty SASSY puz, Jacob. Had a bit of a bite, wasn't an auto-fill here, which is good for a TuesPuz. Nice open corners. A bit high on Blockers, 38 normal, today was 42.

    Have a great Tuesday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete