Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- LIVER SLIVER (17A: Skimpy serving of foie gras, say)
- POTTER SPOTTER (23A: One of Daniel Radcliffe's paparazzi, say)
- KETCHUP SKETCH-UP (35A: Heinz bottle blueprint, say)
- MOTHER SMOTHER (45A: The biggest and most loving of hugs, say)
- TATER STATER (53A: Idahoan, say)
Georg Simon Ohm (/oʊm/; German: [oːm] ⓘ; 16 March 1789 – 6 July 1854) was a German mathematician and physicist. As a school teacher, Ohm began his research with the new electrochemical cell, invented by Italian scientist Alessandro Volta. Using equipment of his own creation, Ohm found that there is a direct proportionality between the potential difference (voltage) applied across a conductor and the resultant electric current. This relation is known as Ohm's law. // Ohm's law states that the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points. Introducing the constant of proportionality, the resistance, one arrives at the three mathematical equations used to describe this relationship:
where I is the current through the conductor, V is the voltage measured across the conductor and R is the resistance of the conductor. More specifically, Ohm's law states that the R in this relation is constant, independent of the current. If the resistance is not constant, the previous equation cannot be called Ohm's law, but it can still be used as a definition of static/DC resistance. Ohm's law is an empirical relation which accurately describes the conductivity of the vast majority of electrically conductive materials over many orders of magnitude of current. However some materials do not obey Ohm's law; these are called non-ohmic.
• • •
[Ruby Blue had an album called Glances Askances but I can't find the song I want from it so I'm playing a different song from a truly great album, Down from Above—I actually think this song was *also*. on Glances Askances, maybe in a different version; you don't need to know any of this ... anyway, just know there was a crossword "logic" that got me here]
So the fill skewed stale. I wish I had better news about the theme. I really do. But I don't. It's just a word ... and then that word, repeated, but with an "S" on its front. It's the kind of theme that I came up on, a very 30+-years-ago theme. Trying to squeeze a lot of "wackiness" out of a very small and ultimately unjuicy concept. The theme answers go all kinds of ways, none of them good. Well, one of them good: I really like TATER STATER for some reason. It's snappy. Concise. It lands. The others ... er, not as entertaining. There's something kind of grotesque about LIVER SLIVER, esp. as its clued via foie gras, a "delicacy" achieved only through a force-feeding process many regard as cruel. Daniel Radcliffe is not, himself, Harry Potter, so the clue makes little sense, and Radcliffe has done his damnedest to distance himself from the hateful woman who created Potter—I don't know why the NYTXW can't do the same, but clearly it cannot. I have no idea what a SKETCH-UP is. I know what a SKETCH is. I know what a "mock-up" is. SKETCH-UP, pfft, don't know it (it seems to be 3D modeling software from Google? if that's a very well-known thing, and that's what's intended here, then I apologize for my ignorance). There's nothing in the MOTHER SMOTHER clue to suggest "mother" at all and further, ick—the answer itself evokes not love but murder—matricide? infanticide?—or at a minimum mild suffocation. In short, the concept was flimsy and the execution awkward. The theme also makes for another excessively easy solve (once you know the concept, you just need a little of the front half of the answer to be able to write the whole thing in).
What else?:
- 10D: Mesh for securing items in transport (CARGO NET) — real trouble with the "G" here. Just couldn't parse CAR-ONET and thought the "mesh" might have a technical term, namely CARBONET!
- 6A: Rock, for one (COMIC) — the Rock in question is Chris Rock.
- 20A: Otis's love interest on Netflix's "Sex Education" (MAEVE) — I watched and liked the first season of this show, and then gave up on it in season two. I had absolutely no memory of any of the characters' names. This seems like an obscure answer today, esp compared to the rest of the highly unobscure fill. But you can get it from crosses pretty easily.
- 4D: "Richard of York gave battle in vain," for the colors of the rainbow (MNEMONIC) — a great word, but why on earth would you use *that* as your rainbow MNEMONIC when Roy G. Biv exists. Who does that? 1950s British schoolboys?!?!? Roy G. Biv. So concise. So useful. I used it literally just yesterday (when trying to explain a cryptic crossword clue to my wife—specifically, how the "red" part of the clue indicated "R"). Richard of York! "Gave battle"? Yeesh. Make it easy on yourselves, people of Britain!
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Fun puzzle that I messed up by misreading "sulf" as "suff" and adding "ice" to make "suffice" instead of sulfIDE, and by not knowing carne ASADA. So...one cheat. KETCHUPSKETCHUP was a highlight for me.
ReplyDeleteIDE. itE, atE--kealoa suffixes!
DeleteI was too busy trying to figure out whether 35-Across was going to be built around a pun on KETCHUP, CATCHUP, CATSUP, or some other variant. Not sure if it's really fair to base a themer on a word that can be legitimately spelled (and punned upon) in so many different ways.
DeleteFor the longest time I read carne as came, my eyes suck. So I could not get aSaDa as I was also hung up on suffix for sulf: ite, ine, ide,.... Counterpart to FF is REV have never seen rewind abbreviated as REW
Delete
ReplyDeleteEasy. No overwrites or WOEs. I solved without reading the theme clues, and imagined that the theme would turn out to be different from what it actually was. For example, I thought 23A might be clued as "One who makes Harry's crockery" (POTTER'S POTTER) or "Nana" for 45A (MOTHER'S MOTHER).
I got it from the crosses, but “Rock” for comic?
ReplyDeleteChris Rock
DeleteChris
Deleteeasiest wednesday I remember... 8 minutes for me. Loved TATERSTATER! Liked it more than Rex did--they were pretty simple and repetitive themers--I think that's why it's so easy. Chris ROCK is a comic, right? Agree that ASKANT was a little out of step with the rest of the puzzle, but it needed some bite somewhere! Thanks, Cole and Harit, for a fun Wednesday!
ReplyDeleteOnly one bright spot in this bland puzzle – MOTHER SMOTHER crossing HAVE A TIT
ReplyDeleteI added nearly 30 sec to my time figuring out how it was not that.
DeleteI'd never heard the phrase "take a powder" before a few days ago so I thought this was just another blind spot...
DeleteHAVE A TIT at… 36D?!
ReplyDeletevery raunchy, trebek, you dog!
Best sketch ever!
DeleteI had a really hard time with 36 down. I had all the letters but parsed it as HAVE A ***. It made no sense and I knew NYT wouldn’t have that word unless it was a little bird. I laughed out loud when I realized it was HAVE AT IT!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Was still squinting at that . . .
DeleteJust a reminder ... I believe one of tonight's contestants on Jeopardy will be Paolo Pasco, top tier constructor, winner of two ACPTs.
ReplyDeleteHe lost, right?
DeleteHave a tit.
ReplyDeleteTATER STATER is for sure the hightlight today, and worth the price of admission. Lowlight is that clue for MAEVE, which is an example of the worst kind of microtargeting.
ReplyDeleteMuch easier than either of the last two days, and could definitely have gone on a Monday (unlike Monday’s actual puzzle, which could definitely have gone on a Wednesday).
MOTHER SMOTHER is not something I thought I’d see in a crossword, however delicately clued.
I'm surprised Rex didn't comment on YKNOW.
ReplyDeleteHAVE A TIT - sure why not? Maybe run this as a Monday - it doesn’t belong midweek. Simpleton theme - basic fill.
ReplyDeleteTrampled by Turtles
MNEMONIC, CARGO NET etc are decent longs. YKNOW x REW is pretty bad - there’s others here that the big guy highlights.
To further expand on Rex bestie Doug - Stan Newman has been featuring his wares fairly consistently on Mondays - mature, nuanced early week puzzles that the NYTXW should be running.
Whether you liked yesterday’s alternating vowel theme or not - today’s solve pales in comparison.
Tunnel of Love
My favorite Dire Straits song.
DeleteGive beginners a chance. Easy themers. Lots of crosswordese for them to meet. For me, ugh.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteSimple Theme, I like it, it seems like something I would come up with. And it seems like a puz that would get rejected if I'd sent it in. I've sent in many with a similar type, not quite Repeaters, but a couple with Rhymers, let's call them cousin-puzs. Apparently the NYT doesn't like Rhymers.
After figuring out one Themer, you quickly realize they would all follow the same theme, as it were, so helped in the filling in of Themers. Which helped make the puz quick and easy.
A few odd letter combos today, MN in MNEMONIC (which is NOT accepted in SB, c'mon Sam!), ML in MLADY, and YK in YKNOW.
Big showing of K's today. Five. I don't consider the K like I consider the F, as the K seems to be less commonly used overall in English as the F. Less commons are the Q, Z, X, J, K. Plus, I don't think I have the energy necessary to crusade for 2 letters! Har.
Nice cross of two sports shots, the SLICE/SPIKE cross.
Welp, hope y'all have a great Wednesday!
No F's (see?)
RooMonster
DarrinV
Thought it was a pretty cute theme once I got it, which actually took awhile. I don’t share Rex’s hatred of all things Harry POTTER just because I don’t agree with his creator’s views.
ReplyDeleteA few tough-ish crosses for me: KARMA / KAL, CARGONET (what a dull answer!) / GAUZE. Had SpedBY before SHOTBY. And I’m another who’s never heard the variant ASKANT, although it was obviously inferable.
I loved the theme and I agree with you, of all the people to hate in the world there are literally thousands of people out there who say significantly worse things on an even biggers stage.
DeleteHard to disagree with Rex here, but I for one appreciated learning about the Richard of York thing, never having been particularly fond of old Roy G.
ReplyDeleteOur mnemonic was VIBGYOR!, which may not sound great but it has stuck with me these 60 years.
DeleteHand up for VIBGYOR.
DeleteAnother hand up for VIBGYOR. I've forgotten most of what I learned in high school, but not VIBGYOR!
DeleteI struggled with this one but was able to finish with no cheats. Today I learned who Daniel Radcliffe is, so now there are probably only a handful of us left in the entirety of the free world who remain unenlightened.
ReplyDeleteI trusted the crosses on ASKANT - I didn’t have the same self-doubt as OFL on that one - my tough spot today was parsing together MAEVE - I suspected it was wrong and was surprised when I got the happy music.
I’ve been doing puzzles for years but feel like I’m still a sophomore when it comes to discerning theme constructs and their associated answers - so a theme like we had today that is easy to recognize and contributes to the solve is actually a bonus for me - so if you are disappointed that it is too easy, there are at least a few of us that are happy to see a day like today (I’ll try not to whine too much if WS gives us an off-the-charts difficult stunt puzzle tomorrow).
Amen.
DeleteLoved the wordplay, rhyme, and overall silliness. These three things have tickled me since early childhood.
ReplyDeleteLiked the two answers with unlikely first two letters (YKNOW, MLADY). Liked guessing at the theme answers with as few crosses as possible.
Liked coming across a pair of non-theme answers that could have yielded theme answers: SPOT (for potSPOT), and SPIKE (for pikeSPIKE). Possible clues -- [Cannabis lounge] and [Certain fish's volleyball shot?].
Loved the obvious camaraderie between the constructors that radiated off their puzzle notes at WordPlay.
Congratulations on your debut, Cole and Harit, and thank you for a fun puzzle, which was, WELL, SWELL!
Oh, and loved [FF's opposite], which stymied me for quite a while. I actually love it when an answer is so obvious, right in front of my eyes, and I don't see it. Those are among the best riddles.
DeletePuzzle, schmuzzle. It was a CAKE WALK.
ReplyDeleteI was looking forward to sharing my misreading (HAVE A TIT -- um..., why thank you MLADY) but everyone else beat me to it. Great minds, YKNOW.
It seems a vain and pointless exercise trying to make MNEMONIC "Wednesday-level difficult" by dredging up an obscure example, when there's basically only one eight-letter word that begins MN.
Lots of overly familiar fill: MAV EMU EMO OSIER STS. Imparts a certain level of boringness, unfortunately. Thus inviting readings like "Have a tit", or inventing lame puns like "we all have to live within our MIENS", just to keep ourselves entertained. (Hey, it's no worse than "SHEAR madness".) Or finally look up the word OLLIE, as something to do.
On a more positive note: have a happy hump day, or a lady lump day, your pick (h/t to Fergie).
Y'all might know Chris Rock as the Slappee at the Oscars? was it?
ReplyDeleteYKNOW, when he didn't keep Smith's wifes name out his f@#&in mouth.
RooMonster Har Guy
I was wondering if RP was unfamiliar with "smother with affection", which as clued is the biggest, loving hug. I just googled it to make sure I had the wording right and the entire first page paints the phrase very negatively - all about neediness on the part of the giver that "can lead to the recipient feeling emotionally drained, controlled, or stifled."
ReplyDeleteHas the phrase always meant that, or is that a newer generational take related to the negative "love bomb"?
My guess is that that reading has been around about as long as the phrase itself, as it evokes an age-old situation. Think of a doting mother who still thinks of her out-of-the-nest son as "her baby", and bestows affection both verbal and physical, to the point of annoyance and embarrassment for the young man, who wants to think of himself as grown up.
DeleteI took the “mother” part of MOTHER SMOTHER to be the size indicator, not an actual human person. Like “mother of all smothers” shortened. But yes, in that way, clunky, and not the elegance of TATER STATER, which I loved.
ReplyDeleteWell said. Agreed on all fronts! Thanks as always Rex
ReplyDeleteI had fun with this theme. It was easy, once I got the hand of it--once I had KET it was going to be KETCHUP SKETCH-UP, so ridiculous that it was good. I had trouble understanding POTTER SPOTTER, but just as I was about to look up Daniel Radcliffe I realized he was an actor who must play somebody named POTTER. OK then.
ReplyDeleteEMU and EMO sharing a puzzle was neat, though emus are far from the only species where both parents take turns on the eggs.
Is M'LADY quaint, or is it just a quick way to say "My Lady?" Or maybe they're both quaint-- I mean, what is the correct way to address a noblewoman today?
If I ever find myself in an OVEN, it will take more than a mitt to save me.
I call my noblewoman the missus.
DeleteVery easy.... more like a Monday. Under 8 minutes while eating breakfast which incidentally was sautéed tomatoes and basil from the garden on toast (a touch of brown sugar and hot pepper flakes). Can't keep up with them. I'll need to have pesto for dinner.
ReplyDeleteThe theme was sophomoric. The puzzle should not have been published on a Wednesday.
1. Guy who gets high on copier supplies, say.
ReplyDelete2. Never turn the wheel type, say
3. A minor insult, say
ASKANT goes, so goes epistemology, they say.
Guinevere: Arthur, what is this awful infestation of bugs in the palace?
Arthur: YKNOW MLADY SLICE.
I would have loved it if the answer to San Francisco/Oakland separator was SLASH.
I liked this quite a bit because it plays with word coincidences. Thanks for a funny, breezy Wednesday, Cole Vandenberg and Harit Raghunathan.
1. TONERSTONER
2. CORNERSCORNER
3. LIGHTSLIGHT
It took me a few beats to understand SLASH -- good one. So disarmingly straightforward.
DeleteGood ones all around!
DeleteRe: LIVERSLIVER. Back in the summer of 1968, I joined Weight Watchers. (Par for the course: I did well but gained it all back.) The program back then required us to have liver once a week. And people complain now about having to wear masks -- imagine having to wear liver. (Wait -- there's a flaw there somewhere.)
ReplyDelete"Hateful woman who created Potter" = "Internationally acclaimed author whom I happen to disagree with on some social issues." Jah help us if anything having to do with Ezra Pound, Alice Walker, Norman Mailer, Henry Ford, or the slave-holding framers of the U.S. Constitution ever shows up in one of these puzzles.
ReplyDeleteHere's a little Cakewalk (38-D) for you -- not really "absurdly easy."
ReplyDeleteJberg
DeleteInteresting origin of the Cakewalk.
Forced into slavery, Black servants were also forced to watch the antics at balls and such of the aristocracy wannabes who owned the plantations. The Cake Walk was a satirical reaction to all that.nonsense The plantation owners didn’t get the joke of course and assumed that Blacks were trying to copy them but poorly. As you showed ,the actual cake walk was not a simple thing at all. But perhaps from the white (racist) perspective, anything Blacks did must be simple, hence the expression. I believe the Cake Walk found it’s way into minstrel shows.
Cute, I suppose -- but with no surprises. I enjoy rhyme and wanted this to be both funnier and more challenging than it was.
ReplyDeleteOn a different subject. You've heard of the Razzies, a put-down "award" for a movie that's really, really bad? May I suggest a similar crossword puzzle "award": one for the most forgettable, resoundingly unimportant and inane pop culture clue of the year. Last week we had some obscure cartoon character's pet some kind of animal, I forget what kind. Today we have "Otis's love interest on Netflix's Sex Education." I expect this to be quite a competitive category.
What should we call this "award"? I give you two choices:
1. The Trivvies
2. The Poppies
"The Vacuities"?
DeleteI like Trivvies.
DeleteThe Fizzles
DeleteThe Pewits?
DeleteThe "Pffties".
DeleteAs you just gave us the two options, I'll go with Trivvies. Poppies being a little too close to malapop.
DeleteI happened to really enjoy MAEVE on Sex Education. I googled famous Maeves and didn't know any of them, so this was as fair as anything, and an extra smile for those who know her. Remember, there used to be clues such as "woman's name". The name is derived from an old Irish name meaning "she who intoxicates", in this case "apt", as WS likes to say.
DeleteOOXTEPLERNON after the god of bad short fill (per Rex)
DeleteCaught on at LIVERSLIVER which made the rest of this ridiculously easy, as so many answers pretty much filled themselves in, which meant toeholds all over. I misspelled MNEMONIC--N and M reversed, which made MAEVE a non-possibility, and she was an unknown anyway. Fixed that and the only other WOE was 43 A. ASKANT would say, there should be a categorical imperative to keep this word out of xwords.
ReplyDeleteDo people really get the SPINS? Around here people get the whirlies. Been there, done that, no fun.
Since I can't remember the last time I saw it, today's old friend is OSIER. Welcome back.
And today's eat-a-sandwich answer has to be ONRYE.
OK Wednesdecito, CV and HR. I Can Very much appreciate your themers, but they Hardly Required much thought to figure them out. Thanks for a fair amount of fun.
Well, as we all learned from Simone Biles when she had to take that time off to get herself back together, gymnasts sometimes fall prey to "the Twisties," so "the Spins" shouldn't be too far off.
DeleteI thought this was a very pleasant puzzle to solve. Flowed right through it. I just don’t think it was Wednesday-level. There should be puzzles that beginners can get, they’re called Monday and Tuesday. It would have fit perfectly there.
ReplyDeleteNormally, I’m not a big fan of puzzles RP describes as wacky, but this was a rare exception. I liked the clever play on words which almost sounded like spoonerisms but better. Really a quite pleasant Wednesday which I thoroughly enjoyed - and a debut for the two young constructors. Congratulations gentlemen! Nice going.
ReplyDeleteI feel kind of sad for anyone who doesn’t understand MOTHER SMOTHER. Nobody’s suffocating for crime’s sake; it’s a mom hug. It immediately made me think of the late Princess Diana who was known for unabashedly showing affection to her sons, as well as her famous glances ASKANT.
I'm with you completely about mom hugs!
DeleteHAVE AT IT ... SHAVE A TIT! Works. Works better than most the themers, actually -- IM&AO.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject picks: REV & REW. [Complete VW fire up.]
Primo weeject stacks, in all four corners, btw.
fave stuff: CAKEWALK. SHEAR clue. MNEMONIC. ACTI clue.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Vandenberg & Raghunathan dudes. And congratz on yer half-debuts.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
... and now, this one is mostly @kitshef's fault (re: his yesterday comment):
"Just For U-All" - 7x7 U-ful runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
For me this was fast and fun Thursday, mostly. The thing that held me up a bit was the COMIC/OSIER cross, as my brain didn't recall Chris Rock, and I've never heard of that willow.
ReplyDeleteI disagree with Rex about the MOTHERSMOTHER CLUE; to me, "The biggest and most loving of hugs" most definitely suggests a mom hug. His gruesome objection made me wince!
It does seems as though we've had Kal-El, Ami, Act I (or V), Edy, Sts, and Emo an awful lot lately, so that made the puzzle seem a but stale, but I still liked it.
Oops, Wednesday. I needed more coffee. It did feel Wednesday-ish to me...not quite as whooshy as a Monday or Tuesday.
DeleteKept thinking that "FF" meant "Fortissimo," whose opposite would be "PP" ("Pianissimo," sometimes notated as "PPP" to emphasize "REALLY softly here!"). Didn't get REW until it fell into place from the crosses, and even then I had to think for a minute to figure out what it meant.
ReplyDeletehands up for musician take, but the 2 letters ruled it out as fast as it came up. I think we've had a VCR clue sometime recently.
DeleteThis was no CAKEWALK for me. Sure, it should have been, with all of the repetition in the theme answers but that advantage couldn't overcome my finding many clues hard to parse. Mis-reading 15A's clue as "Came" for far too long didn't help. And since when is "Rock, for one" = COMIC and "Purpose" = SAKE? Is it just me?
ReplyDeleteLuckily, at the last minute, I remembered that 32D should be SHEAR, not SHEeR. It helps that __KeNT wasn't getting me anywhere with 43A. I did more than look ASKANT at ASKANT, I outright frowned at it.
I liked KETCHUP SKETCH-UP but the rest of the theme answers were either meh or ick. Okay, Rex is right about TATER STATER but he's also right about LIVER SLIVER and MOTHER SMOTHER.
Cole and Harit, thanks for the Wednesday puzzle.
Teedman
DeleteOthers have pointed out. Chris Rock is a COMIC.
FWIW
I looked up SAKE
First listed definition, purpose.
Well I guess Rex didn't like it.
ReplyDeleteAs for me, I thought it was cute & kinda silly - which is okay - & could've run on a Monday. I was also thrown by HAVEATIT thinking is the NYT daring to go into new territory here?
Congratulations on your debit, Cole & Harit :)
Yes, I thought of SNL’s celebrity Jeopardy with Darrell Hammond as Sean Connery. 😆
DeleteI first learned VIBGYOR and never forgot it.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't call the great Chris Rock a comic. "A comedian says funny things. A comic says things funny."
I would say he fits both definitions. Apparently, he tries out material at local clubs without his signature "funny" delivery to see if the jokes are actually funny on their own.
DeleteOn the easy side of medium for me.
ReplyDeleteCostly erasure - Smash before SPIKE
I did not know KARMA as clued.
Cute/mildly amusing theme but ASKANT grated, liked it more than @Rex did.
I agree completely with everything Rex said about the theme. He was shockingly nice about it.
ReplyDeleteAh, the CAKEWALK, a lovely reminder of America's history of slavery.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2013/12/23/256566647/the-extraordinary-story-of-why-a-cakewalk-wasnt-always-easy
Well, "punk" once meant sex worker; a "bully" was once a pimp; "paddy wagon" derives from an ethnic slur against the Irish. If we're going to go back to the original meanings or implications of words that have lasted (and evolved and changed) over the course of centuries, we'll end up even more shamed and guilt-mongered than we're already becoming.
Delete"....why on earth would you use *that* as your rainbow MNEMONIC when Roy G. Biv exists?
ReplyDeleteYou wanna know why? I'll tell you why? Here's why!
Because I am NOT GAY. All my life, elementary school science teachers and others around the country have been using the rainbow as part of the homosexual agenda to tell everyone that I am gay. Even now, Rex thinks it is perfectly fine to libel me in the way. But I am NOT GAY: I shop at Hobby Lobby, eat only at Chick-fil-A (not DUDE-fil-A!!!), support totally the Mom's for Liberty agenda, and am an adjunct counselor at at Conversion Therapy ministry in my state.
I am NOT GAY, and those who continue to teach that I, Roy G Biv, and the gay rainbow are one and the same, will be held accountable. Right now I have associates and attorneys around the country monitoring classrooms and libraries to rid them of this slanderous teaching, and file suit against them, when necessary.
So you are ALL on notice. Be warned. I'd say more if I could. But I'm already late for a brunch date.
Le Tits Now for $500, Alex.
ReplyDeleteSorry if this appears twice but I'm sure I hit the PUBLISH button on it near an hour ago and it seems not to have shown up.
ReplyDeleteNot much going on here. The theme was somewhat, um , underwhelming: repeat word with S in between. Or am I missing something? (I’ll check Rex’s write-up in the morning.) KETCHUP SKETCHUP was probably the best of them but I wonder how many people are familiar with the 3-D design program, SketchUp? My son used it to show clients renovation possibilities. When he first showed it to me I thought it was pretty cool but that was quite a few years ago. Don’t know if it’s still popular.
Aside from the themers and two long downs (8 letters each), there weren’t many entries over 5 letters. The 8s, MNEMONIC and CAKEWALK were both pretty nice. 43A ASKANT seemed a bit off but I just looked it up and it seems to be interchangeable with the more frequently used ASKANce.
Liked LLAMA at 50A but I’ve yet to try using mine as pack animals. For now they just hang around looking good, grazing on grass and various weeds, enjoying the supplemental bales of hay, and supplying us with wool for sale. And because they are fierce guardian animals, the goats like them, too.
Apparently I don't know how to count. There were actually 4 downs of 8 letters. HAVE AT IT was pretty good. CARGO NET, not so much.
DeleteYes Rex, as @Les mentions above, SketchUp is a very popular 3D modeling software that has been around for 25 years!
ReplyDeleteHands up for not getting (Chris) Rock = COMIC until I came here.
I was quite annoyed at MAEVE, especially crossing OSIER. Two totally complete Unknowns for me. And OSIER crossing the ?? COMIC as mentioned. Plus I had sulfITE instead of IDE. Yuck!
On Across Lite, that little YEN symbol was really tough to see. I thought it was an asterisk at first. Fortunately A.L. lets me increase the size of the current clue's font.
Okanaganer
DeletePabloinnh mentioned OSIER as an old friend. It’s crosswordese but hasn’t appeared in quite a while. I and he had no trouble remember it though. I have on occasion seen reference to osier (French origin word) baskets but it’s the crosswordese aspect which made it automatic for me.
As many have pointed out already, Chris ROCK is a comic.
@Egs
ReplyDeleteGood one - whole comment.
I got Toner Stoner immediately but not the other two. And I think that my almost thought of "slash" when reading that clue. It ( the brain) definitely glitched that direction for a sec.
@Jazman, Thanks for the breath of sanity.
Askant sounded right to me. Righter than askance. Wonder why if it is, as suggested, an antique form. I haven't read a lot of older lit since my college days.
ReplyDeleteHere is some AI slop for you about "askant." You're welcome.
ReplyDelete"The terms askant and askance are often used interchangeably, but they have distinct meanings. Askant refers to someone who appears eager or friendly, while askance describes someone who looks at someone with suspicion or dislike. The choice between the two depends on the context in which the word is used. For example, if someone is looking askant at you, it indicates that they are not being friendly but rather showing a level of skepticism or disdain."
I have to go sit in the other corner all by myself today. I was in shocked disbelief when I filled in the first three themers last night. I quit right there, something I rarely ever do on a weekday themed puzzle.
ReplyDeleteAlso in the rarely done category, I went over to the NYT Wordplay (where never a negative word is heard) to see if I was missing something. Apparently not. Even there the puzzle was described as "profoundly silly". I would replace "profoundly" with "childishly".
My second moment of shocked disbelief was reading Rex and the Commentariat today and realizing no one else felt that way about the puzzle. Wow.
Well, I still have some Window PANE LSD left over from 1975. Let me drop a couple of tabs of that to see if it changes my perception of this puzzle.......
[Pink Floyd plays in the background]
Yes it worked! It's a generational puzzle. How could I have missed it? MOTHER'S MOTHER = GRANDMOTHER showed me the pattern. Awesome! And the black squares merge into a strand of DNA!
[Moody Blues plays in the background]
¿Me entiendes?
ReplyDeleteWait. A reasonably amusing puzzle with a very low gunk score? And a Harry Potter is #1 moment. I'm withering with joy.
Y'know m'lady, I like Y'KNOW in a puzzle.
Second comic COMIC this week. CAKE STAND, now CAKE WALK, it's cake week on the Great British Baking Show.
Question Adam: ASK ANT.
Might be a good idea to wear the mitt outside the oven, as once you're in the oven it only glops up the "you stew."
Daniel Radcliffe's reportedly worth $110 million, so my guess is he might distance himself from the hateful woman, but the franchise checks are still rolling in and paying for his haircuts. And man, does he need 'em.
I should send some SLASH cash to @egs for his brilliant divider.
😫 OSIER.
People: 4
Places: 0
Products: 1
Partials: 7
Foreignisms: 2
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Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 14 of 74 (19%) {The heavens open wide, rays of light beam across the skies, a chorus of angels sing to the plinking harps. It's the unnecessarily rare sub-20% gunk rating. Boys, you should be proud.}
Funny Factor: 5 😄
Tee-Hee: DAB. DEBUT. LSD. HAVE A TIT.
Uniclues:
1 Just a smidgen of hilarious comeuppance.
2 Why Starbucks asked the Andean to leave.
3 Standout high school athlete who attributes her success to a poutine-based diet.
4 Stan wants to know if his partner included him in the conversation.
5 Resistance is inevitable: RII.
6 Gobbled up chocolate sponge road.
1 COMIC KARMA DAB
2 LLAMA IN TOW
3 ALL TATER STATER
4 AM I CC'ED OLLIE?
5 MNEMONIC OHM
6 ATE CAKE WALK
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Crazy, but not really crazy. ADEQUATE PSYCHO.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯