Semiaquatic amphibian / THU 9-11-25 / Minuscule, in cutesy lingo / Longtime portrayer of TV's Captain Pierce / "I Am ___," onetime reality TV spinoff / Material with a coarse weave / Nursery rhyme character known as Lille Trille in Denmark / City with a view of Mount Vesuvius / City WNW of Tulsa / Noncombat region, in brief / Archangel in "Paradise Lost"
Constructor: Gia Bosko
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: DOUBLE-HEADERS (36A: Back-to-back sporting events ... with a hint to the answers to the italicized clues) — two-part phrases where the only difference between the two halves is the first letter ("header"); rather than appearing in full, these answers appear at half length, with the first square containing *both* of the first letters of each half (e.g. RAZZLE-DAZZLE appears as [R/D]AZZLE, with the "R" and the "D" in the same square)—to make sense of them, you have to read the answer once with the first first letter in place, and then again with the second first letter in place. The letters in those "double-header" squares function simply as successive letters in the crosses (e.g. the "[R/D]" from [R/D]AZZLE is just "-RD" in BARD):
Theme answers:
[W/T]ALKIE (15A: Hand-held communication device)
NE[WT] (1D: Semiaquatic amphibian)
[T/W]EENSY (7A: Minuscule, in cutesy lingo)
[TW]EED (7D: Material with a coarse weave)
[H/D]UMPTY (59A: Nursery rhyme character known as Lille Trille in Denmark)
WAS[H D]AY (46D: Time for a trip to the laundromat)
[R/D]AZZLE ( 64A: Flashiness)
BA[RD] (55D: Medieval entertainer)
Word of the Day: "I Am CAIT" (51A: "I Am ___," onetime reality TV spinoff) —
I Am Cait is an American television documentary series which chronicles the life of Caitlyn Jenner after her gender transition. The eight-part one-hour documentary series debuted on July 26, 2015, on the E! network. The series focuses on the "new normal" for Jenner, exploring changes to her relationships with her family and friends. The show additionally explores how Jenner adjusts to what she sees as her job as a role model for the transgender community.
In its first season, critical reception of I Am Cait was generally positive. Critics particularly praised the series' approach to the social issues of the transgender community and its influence on the way Americans see and understand transgender people in general. The show's informative and serious tone was also noted, and how it differed from Keeping Up with the Kardashians, a reality series that Jenner has starred in together with her family. In October, the show was renewed for a second season, which premiered on March 6, 2016.
On August 16, 2016, E! cancelled the series after two seasons, due to low ratings. (wikipedia)
• • •
Me, at some point, solving this puzzle: "What ... is WEN TAPE!?"
It's weird how my brain has no trouble accepting GO APE as a phrase (a phrase I only ever hear or see in crosswords, but a familiar phrase nonetheless), but put in the past tense and my brain rejects it like a foreign body. My brain also wanted to reject NEED A NAP, which has serious EAT A SANDWICH energy, but since I often NEED A NAP after I EAT A SANDWICH (if it's large enough), the answer accidentally amused me, despite being somewhat intolerable, and I'll take amusement in any form I can get it. Weird that all the answers that made me wince and cringe and cock my head were in the NE quadrant. SUM TO, yeesh (23A: Total). Is that the same as "add up to?" Or "come to?" I have never used the word "SUM" as a verb in my life, except the verb phrase "SUM UP," which deals with words, not numbers. And what part of the NASTY HABITS clue suggested "NASTY" (as opposed to merely "bad") (16D: Vices that are best abandoned)!? Aren't all "vices" best abandoned? "Here's a vice you should keep!" is not a phrase that makes much sense. I needed a nastier clue there, since "bad habits" is the (much) more common phrase. Would've helped! Outside that NE quadrant, though, I didn't have any problems with the way this thing was filled or clued. In fact, I didn't encounter any difficulty at all. Had no idea that "I Am CAIT" ever existed (couldn't even remember which Kardashian CAIT was until I looked her up and realized / remembered that she was a Jenner, whom I know better as CAITlyn). But you expect a proper noun problem or two most days, and CAIT's crosses were all fair.
What about the theme? I probably should've led with that. It's great, but since it caused no trouble at all, and was almost completely transparent from the beginning, it wasn't at the front of my brain when I finished. WEN TAPE was. But I did enjoy the theme—clever, and neatly executed. I especially like the way the rebus squares are handled, with the letters forming the front ends of either half of the themers, while being merely successive letters in the crosses. WALKIE-TALKIE, one way, NEWT the other. And we've got a revealer worthy of the name, a revealer that does its damned job. Remember earlier in the week when the revealer was just ... VOWEL??? That has no juice, no energy, no nothing. But DOUBLE-HEADERS is both a colorful answer in its own right, and, when interpreted a different (non-sports) way, explains precisely what's going on with the theme. Thematically, conceptually, and execution-wise, this puzzle really sticks the landing.
As I say, the theme was clear almost from the jump. 1D: Semiaquatic amphibian is gonna make most brains go "NEWT! Oh, damn, it doesn't fit." Or maybe, if you have a particularly crossword-scarred brain, you wrote in EFT. I hope not, but if you did, I understand, and sympathize. I was lucky enough to get 1A: City with a view of Mount Vesuvius (NAPLES), but only by completely misremembering where NAPLES is and confusing Vesuvius with ETNA! Double screw-up got me to Exactly The Right Answer! Accidental genius, woo hoo! Anyway, that "N" from NAPLES made me think "oh, it is NEWT and some rebus-y thing is afoot." Bingo. Shortly thereafter:
From there, it was downhill. Just a matter of finding the rebus squares, which the puzzle made Very Easy by italicizing all the theme clues. A ruthless, old-school Thursday might not have been so kind. Another kindness, of sorts: all the themers are symmetrical. While I like and appreciate symmetry, when it comes to rebus puzzles, I actually kind of prefer scattershot answers. Having everything flagged by italics and in perfect symmetrical order takes some much-needed difficulty out of the solve. Give me more of a challenge! Don't tell me where all the hard parts are. Let me stumble my way to revelation! The one thing the puzzle didn't flag, and that wasn't always obvious, was the theme-affected Down answers (e.g. NEWT). So with NEWT and TWEED I had moments of "huh?" and/or "what?" I need more of these moments on a Thursday! But again, I really think this theme is aces. The puzzle's got the difficulty turned to like "3" and I want it up around "8," but the quality of the theme itself is beyond reproach, imho.
Lightning round:
18A: Longtime portrayer of TV's Captain Pierce (ALDA) — from M*A*S*H. I just saw a clip of Bill Hader doing Alan ALDA. Let's see if I can find it... yes, here we go:
50A: Video surveillance letters (CCTV) — "CC" = "close-circuit," though I always think it's "close-captioned" ("close-captioning" is a different phenomenon entirely; the "CC" abbr. and the television-relatedness is what confuses me):
5D: City WNW of Tulsa (ENID) — The unofficial capital of Crossworld. I really should make a pilgrimage there at some point.
9D: H (ETA) — that's what a Greek letter ETA looks like in capital form: "H"
57D: Noncombat region, in brief (DMZ) — Demilitarized Zone. I know this term exclusively from the Vietnam War, I think.
44D: Ready for an emergency, say (ON CALL) — had some trouble parsing this despite the fact that I had a father (radiologist) who was frequently ON CALL. He had a beeper. Remember beepers. Good times.
24D: Archangel in "Paradise Lost" (URIEL) — I teach this poem and still waffle on the damned archangel name, as ARIEL is also an angel in Paradise Lost!!! (just not an ... arch one)
That's it. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd] ============================= ❤️ Support this blog ❤️:
Great, terrifically executed REBUS puzzle, but also the easiest Thursday in modern memory. 10 minutes for me on a rebus is like slicing warm butter. I forgot about the show CAIT, so that took all the crosses. The theme phrases were all terrific, familiar rhyming phrases--especially enjoyed seeing HUMPTYDUMPTY in the grid today! Thanks for a well-constructed enjoyable Thursday, Gia!!!
Easy once the rebus trick is noticed. A very impressive feat of construction by Ms. Bosco, to manage the two-way rebuses and position them symmetrically. Another highlight for me was the clue for PALINDROMES. Nice Thursday for a change.
Constructor extraordinaire Paolo Pasco, who is also a world class solver (winner of two American Crossword Puzzle Tournaments), debuted on Jeopardy yesterday … and won!
His victory included an unforgettable lightning-quick streak of answers in an anagram category, truly a “How does he do that?” moment.
His demeanor – calm, warm, and a twinkle in his eye – makes him a terrific representative for Crosslandia on this iconic show.
My printout didn't have the rebus clues italicized. More fun that way.
EULER made important discoveries in calculus but they aren't what he is famous for. Stillthe clue still made EULER obvious. What other great mathematician was named Leonhard?
While there was a DMZ established in Vietnam in 1954, it was hardly a DMZ in practice as it was continually fought over during the next two decades - so the term was rarely used seriously, except by violation.
I suspect Michael's familiarity with DMZ comes from the Korean War. The 1953 cease fire established an actual DMZ (160 miles long, 2.5 miles wide) which has been maintained and protected intact at the borders to this day by the militaries of both the north and the south, with protocols up the wazoo for what goes inside the zone. It is the site of frequent meetings between the two parties (at times including their allies) that concern anything from matters of great import to matters dealing with tiny day-to-day administrative details. All this while the two parties maintain in a state of war with one another. One can even take guided tours of the DMZ. When one hears the term DMZ, then, this is what is generally meant - and it provides the model for warring parties who may wish to establish (usually unsuccessfully over an extended period of time) a DMZ.
The magazine I work for published this interesting essay about the Korean DMZ a few months ago. https://www.sapiens.org/culture/korean-dmz-estuary-politics-war-borders-diaspora/
I thought it was a very entertaining puzzle to solve. I think the KISS principle paid off for the constructor (and for me as he solver). Rex mentioned a couple of suggestions as to how to “toughen” up the grid a bit (the symmetry of the theme answers, for example), but I thought the degree of difficulty was just right.
It was probably a little comical to watch me try to close things out over there on the west side, as I recognized the misdirect on the butter clue but still struggled to come up with RAM (fun aha on basically a three-letter fill-in clue/answer) and went with GUANO even though I never heard of it (and it doesn’t really sound like a word) - but the crosses were hard to argue with.
If the Times is in fact “dumbing down” their puzzles, one by-product of doing so is that puzzles like today’s are more accessible to someone like myself - I don’t feel bad though, as I still have difficulty on most weekends (even when others are yearning for more of a challenge on Saturdays, for example). I hope they keep walking that fine line and find the right balance. In any event, I’m an enthusiastic thumbs up today.
Sweet puzzle - nuanced trickery that once grokked makes it make sense. The revealer felt a little awkward to me but sits there proudly and does its job. RAZZLE DAZZLE indeed.
The non-theme material is also solid - PALINDROMES, MICROSCOPES, NASTY HABITS all top notch longs. WENT APE is definitely missing the SHIT but I’ll let that slide.
Highly enjoyable Thursday morning solve. 09.11.2001 Never Forget.
I had the same opening experience as Rex - 1D was surely NEWT, so we must have a rebus, but how does it fit exactly? On from there. I enjoyed it but agree that it would have been better, harder, therefore more fun, without the italicized clues.
DMZ may more appropriately belong to the Korean War (thanks, WKHarrison 6:51) but the TV reporting during the Vietnam War mentioned that DMZ all the time and the term is completely tied to that war for me and I would guess all of the generation who grew up watching that reporting.
Gia did it on 9/19/23. I was unaware of (or more likely forgot) the earlier appearance. [checking ... Ah, now I do remember that one; so 'forgot' is correct.]
I thought it was eMdash not eNdash. Apparently they are different and both longer than hyphens, with eMdash being even longer than eNdash. Okay! Good thing it crossed a very solvable WENTAPE because WEMTAPE makes no sense at all! Hahaha!!!!!!!!!
Hey All ! Rex in fine form today. Must've gotten up on the correct side of the bed. 😁
Got the Revealer first, which I interpreted as there's going to be a Rebus, but also thought they would be all be DHs, for DoubleHeader. But, first one I got was WASHDAY/HUMPTY DUMPTY. Hmm, says I, maybe they're reversed? Or maybe they're all different. Bingo on the latter.
Nice way to handle the 13 Revealer. Most of the time, you need a three-block Blocker row around your 13's. Gia handled it quite nicely.
Fill solid. Neat Theme. Seems like all the Themes this week have been related. Let me know if you agree, or think I'm just a wacko!
Either someone put in a Tuesday or Wednesday puzzle by mistake, or I was extremely dialed in on Gia Bosko's wavelength. I finished in less than half my average Thursday time, and that included some dithering about how to enter the rebus letters.
A little knowledge is not helpful: WEM TAPE. Since the emdash is longer than the endash, I didn’t want to let it go(learned this here, thank you blog). Shades of my actually having visited the Mauna Kea observatory earlier and having it still be a KEALOA:(
Love struggling with the gimmick and having the revealer help me out for the second half, opening up everything. That is also the fun of a sudoku, when finding just one tough number unlocks EVERYTHING.
Great puzzle, creative and well edited, managed to be easy and impressive in the same grid. Always nice when you can pick up the theme right away in the NW. I jumped over to NE and picked up TW in the rebus after the initial WT, so I started thinking about a W and T revealer. That didn't pan out, but theme was fine anyway and good revealer. Everything seemed to fit properly, which speaks to the editing Have a feeling they're setting us up for a tough Friday but we'll see
Did I think of EFT first? Of course. That led me to wanting TALKIE, as I was wondering if the answer would be WALKIE or TALKIE, no italics, so no help there, remembered it was Thursday, so why not both, and there it was. After the T/WEED thing I was wondering if they would all be T and W, but no, and that's fine. Only do-over was SCREAM before SHRIEK, easily fixed.
Winced at SUMTO and needed some crosses to remember Mr. EULER. Math was never my strong suit.
Only total no-know was CAIT, which had to be right but looked funny. My daughter-in-law is CAITlin, but no one has ever called her CAIT.
It's a Good Bet that this was my favorite Thursday in quite a while, GB. Sorry when it was over and thanks for all the fun.
Think how cool it could have been to combine yesterday's puzzle and today's. So TATERSTATER could have been rebussed to [T/ST]ATER. I suppose the crosser would have to be CANTST. And I'm sure you all noticed how today's puzzle glaringly included NAN and AAA as extraneous PALINDROMES! Some of you may pick a nit about TINA, semordnilap-wise, but at least I TRI.
If you all think the ENDASH and emdash are long, you should see the 100 yard dash. Now that's what I call longer than a hyphen.
I think EULER declared that one would NEEDANAPp to TEST what all the areas under a curve SUMTO.
Nice concept. Fun for the brief time that it lasted. Thanks, Gia Bosko.
I guess I must have gotten one of those “ruthless old school Thursdays” because there were no italics in my website printout. I’m glad though because that made it more challenging. I started out thinking this was a ridiculously easy Thursday until I saw the theme trick and my meh changed to a big wow! Very impressive to get those extremely clever either/or crosses to also work as a standard rebus in the downs. YES SIR, I’d even go so far as to call it a RAZZLE DAZZLE theme. Thank you Gia, enjoyed it immensely.
MAR?E had to be either MARGE or MARIE. Probably MARGE -- but why did GUENO look so unfamiliar to me? Must check with Rex. Oh, I see, it's GUANO. I had ROME instead of ROMA for the apple. So after doing the hard part, I DNF on the easy part.
I really liked this rebus and think the perfect revealer hits it out of the park. But there's one big exception. Not knowing my ARIEL from my URIEL, I had SAMTO for "total". Whazzat? Something is Very Wrong. I'm thinking it has to be URIEL, giving me SUMTO for "total". But SUM TO is just about the ugliest, most illiterate-sounding phrase I've ever heard. Does Google accept it? I haven't checked because I really don't want to know if it does.
Other than SUM TO and some unfamiliar pop culture names (is MARGE a relative of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy by any chance?), I thought this rebus was a lot of fun.
Overwrites: I had [W/T] in square 7 instead of [T/W] and that prevented the happy music. WENT mad before APE at 14A SUM up before TO at 23A I didn't know there was an aRIEL in Paradise Lost. My 24D was the mermaid aRIEL before it was the archangel URIEL
WOEs: I am CAIT at 51A Didn't remember YER Blues at 61D
A pleasant Thursday morning solve, maybe just a skosh too easy. But difficult to find fault with otherwise. Including "SUM TO", which sounds fine to my ear. ("SUM up" would also work as the transitive verb form.) NASTY HABITS is also well within the language and maybe doesn't need coddling from absolutely precise cluing. If I had to distinguish between a bad habit and a nasty habit, I'd guess it lies in how offensive the habit might be to those around you; for example, you could have a bad habit of having midnight snacks when you don't need those extra calories, whereas a habit of smoking, despite frequent complaints from people near you, could be considered nasty.
Had Em-DASH before EN-DASH. Other than that, nothing much held me up. Thanks, Gia, for a very nice puzzle!
I did not find the theme as transparent as Rex did. I first encountered it in the NE. Not noticing the WEENSY part of 7A, I borrowed the W of WENT APE to make my TWEED. This was confirmed down in the SE, where WASH DAY borrowed the H from HUME and for some reason, I thought DUMPTY on its own was fine. Finally, in the NW, WALKIE TALKIE led me to the correct interpretation. I guess DOUBLE HEADERS should have pointed out my mistake, but I didn't have any italicized clues in my printed-out puzzle so I kind of dismissed the revealer as irrelevant to my solve.
I’m finally caught up on my puzzles after having very fun house guests for several days, and this was a great one to do given that. I caught on to the concept at WTALKIE, completed the rest of the puzzle, knew my NE was a mess (WeMTAPE), and realized I hadn’t noticed the italics in 7A (I only had TEENSY). Yep. Even though I corrected to ENDASH, I stared blankly at WEN TAPE even as my “congratulations” popped up on my screen. I have to believe that for those of us that had that glitch, we had the adhesive property of tape and glue stuck in our brain. I just caught the tail end of Jeopardy last night and didn’t realize the winner was Paolo Pasco, so thanks @Lewis for mentioning that!
I came back to wonder if I was the only one who considered Pompei before NAPLES? There is a modern “city” there, albeit only about 26K population. Oh…then I noticed I wasn’t signed in, so the “house guests” etc comment will no doubt be Anonymous. Grrrr.
Nice rebussy ThursPuz, great revealer. ZEN TAPE, WENT APE.
staff weeject pick: BA[R&D]. Crucial puztheme influencer. Primo quad weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.
some fave stuff: The three longest [11] non-themers ... all gone plural [POC alert, @AnoaBob dude]. NEEDANAP. Buck-toothed Jaws of Themedness. AAA clue.
Thanx for the fun, Ms. Bosko darlin. Shorter themers generated lotsa interestin longer non-themed answers; mighty cool.
p.s. We're gonna be on a long roadtrip, for a coupla weeks or so. sooo .. see yah much later. And congratz to Paolo P. dude on his Jep win. Real sorry I missed the show.
Coming up with ENID whenever a four-letter city in Oklahoma is clued is easy for me. My mother and grandmother were both named Enid. Great-Grandma loved Tennyson's poetry and Enid was his heroine (no radio, TV, or computers back then...today their name might be TECHNICA).
Great, terrifically executed REBUS puzzle, but also the easiest Thursday in modern memory. 10 minutes for me on a rebus is like slicing warm butter. I forgot about the show CAIT, so that took all the crosses. The theme phrases were all terrific, familiar rhyming phrases--especially enjoyed seeing HUMPTYDUMPTY in the grid today! Thanks for a well-constructed enjoyable Thursday, Gia!!!
ReplyDeleteEasy once the rebus trick is noticed. A very impressive feat of construction by Ms. Bosco, to manage the two-way rebuses and position them symmetrically.
ReplyDeleteAnother highlight for me was the clue for PALINDROMES. Nice Thursday for a change.
A fun--if a bit easy--Thursday.
ReplyDeleteGlad to know I'm not the only one who wondered what in the world WEN TAPE is.
There aren't any italisized theme clues in my printed version so it was a little trickier. Fun puzzle.
ReplyDeleteSame problem with it when I printed. I opened the puzzle on my phone and saw the italics then returned to the print
DeleteSame
DeleteConstructor extraordinaire Paolo Pasco, who is also a world class solver (winner of two American Crossword Puzzle Tournaments), debuted on Jeopardy yesterday … and won!
ReplyDeleteHis victory included an unforgettable lightning-quick streak of answers in an anagram category, truly a “How does he do that?” moment.
His demeanor – calm, warm, and a twinkle in his eye – makes him a terrific representative for Crosslandia on this iconic show.
WTG, Paolo, and I’ll be cheering you on!
Thanks for alerting us! Now I’ll tune in.
DeleteMy printout didn't have the rebus clues italicized. More fun that way.
ReplyDeleteEULER made important discoveries in calculus but they aren't what he is famous for. Stillthe clue still made EULER obvious. What other great mathematician was named Leonhard?
While there was a DMZ established in Vietnam in 1954, it was hardly a DMZ in practice as it was continually fought over during the next two decades - so the term was rarely used seriously, except by violation.
ReplyDeleteI suspect Michael's familiarity with DMZ comes from the Korean War. The 1953 cease fire established an actual DMZ (160 miles long, 2.5 miles wide) which has been maintained and protected intact at the borders to this day by the militaries of both the north and the south, with protocols up the wazoo for what goes inside the zone. It is the site of frequent meetings between the two parties (at times including their allies) that concern anything from matters of great import to matters dealing with tiny day-to-day administrative details. All this while the two parties maintain in a state of war with one another. One can even take guided tours of the DMZ. When one hears the term DMZ, then, this is what is generally meant - and it provides the model for warring parties who may wish to establish (usually unsuccessfully over an extended period of time) a DMZ.
The magazine I work for published this interesting essay about the Korean DMZ a few months ago. https://www.sapiens.org/culture/korean-dmz-estuary-politics-war-borders-diaspora/
DeleteBut as a marine during the VN war , it was difficult fill for me.
DeleteI thought it was a very entertaining puzzle to solve. I think the KISS principle paid off for the constructor (and for me as he solver). Rex mentioned a couple of suggestions as to how to “toughen” up the grid a bit (the symmetry of the theme answers, for example), but I thought the degree of difficulty was just right.
ReplyDeleteIt was probably a little comical to watch me try to close things out over there on the west side, as I recognized the misdirect on the butter clue but still struggled to come up with RAM (fun aha on basically a three-letter fill-in clue/answer) and went with GUANO even though I never heard of it (and it doesn’t really sound like a word) - but the crosses were hard to argue with.
If the Times is in fact “dumbing down” their puzzles, one by-product of doing so is that puzzles like today’s are more accessible to someone like myself - I don’t feel bad though, as I still have difficulty on most weekends (even when others are yearning for more of a challenge on Saturdays, for example). I hope they keep walking that fine line and find the right balance. In any event, I’m an enthusiastic thumbs up today.
Sum To is a phrase one can use in math and numeric analysis. It's legit.
ReplyDeleteLoved the clue for ALOHA HI hi. Why in the world anyone would clue LIZ for chicken hawk Liz Cheney when there are so many other options is beyond me.
ReplyDeleteTIL that there are dashes that are slightly longer than a hyphen but not as long as an emdash. Welcome to my brain, ENDASH.
ReplyDeleteSweet puzzle - nuanced trickery that once grokked makes it make sense. The revealer felt a little awkward to me but sits there proudly and does its job. RAZZLE DAZZLE indeed.
ReplyDeleteThe Magnetic Fields
The non-theme material is also solid - PALINDROMES, MICROSCOPES, NASTY HABITS all top notch longs. WENT APE is definitely missing the SHIT but I’ll let that slide.
Highly enjoyable Thursday morning solve. 09.11.2001 Never Forget.
SHRIEKback
I had the same opening experience as Rex - 1D was surely NEWT, so we must have a rebus, but how does it fit exactly? On from there. I enjoyed it but agree that it would have been better, harder, therefore more fun, without the italicized clues.
ReplyDeleteDMZ may more appropriately belong to the Korean War (thanks, WKHarrison 6:51) but the TV reporting during the Vietnam War mentioned that DMZ all the time and the term is completely tied to that war for me and I would guess all of the generation who grew up watching that reporting.
I like newts, and AA Milne, and back in the days when they actually existed, I liked double-headres, and I liked this puzzle.
ReplyDeleteSome of you may remember Gia Bosko as the one who managed to work 'antidesestablishmentarianism' into a puzzle.
Wasn't that Chris A. McGlothlin - July 1, 2011? Or did Gia do it in a non-NYT puzzle?
DeleteGia did it on 9/19/23. I was unaware of (or more likely forgot) the earlier appearance. [checking ... Ah, now I do remember that one; so 'forgot' is correct.]
DeleteRandom thoughts:
ReplyDelete• The puzzle echoes yesterday’s rhyming theme answers (like TATERSTATER), and ISADORA echoes Monday’s alternating vowel/consonant theme.
• And isn’t the sing-song ISADORA a gorgeous name?
• Lovely contradictory PuzzPair© of ALOHA and SHOO.
• I don’t remember seeing a rebus used like this before, as a “double header” horizontally and as usual vertically. Does anyone? If this is a new rebus variant, high props to Gia for originality – brava!
• NAN could have been grouped with mom, dad, and sis, in the PALINDROME clue.
• Punning “butter” to mean “one that butts” in clues hasn’t been done in the Times puzzle since 2018, but long-time solvers know to watch out for that trick, which has shown up often in Crosslandia over the years.
• Lovely touch of delicious in MELON, ROMA, and ICES.
Gia, my brain not only had fun filling in your puzzle, but it loved these little side trips your puzzle triggered as well. Thank you!
I thought it was eMdash not eNdash. Apparently they are different and both longer than hyphens, with eMdash being even longer than eNdash. Okay! Good thing it crossed a very solvable WENTAPE because WEMTAPE makes no sense at all! Hahaha!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts exactly. EMDASH takes up the space of a letter M, ENDASH that of an N.
DeleteDidn't see PALIDROMES until all the crosses.
Totally agree! The clue is incorrect. It should indeed say “short hyphen”. Word for
DeleteThank you for this! Factoid of the day for me.
DeleteThis was my best Thursday time. And I used no hints/cheats!
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteRex in fine form today. Must've gotten up on the correct side of the bed. 😁
Got the Revealer first, which I interpreted as there's going to be a Rebus, but also thought they would be all be DHs, for DoubleHeader. But, first one I got was WASHDAY/HUMPTY DUMPTY. Hmm, says I, maybe they're reversed? Or maybe they're all different. Bingo on the latter.
Nice way to handle the 13 Revealer. Most of the time, you need a three-block Blocker row around your 13's. Gia handled it quite nicely.
Fill solid. Neat Theme. Seems like all the Themes this week have been related. Let me know if you agree, or think I'm just a wacko!
Have a great Thursday!
No F's - SHRIEK!
RooMonster
DarrinV
I was trying to figure out what "wemtape" was, since the obvious response to "long hyphen" is EM dash
ReplyDeleteSame here.
DeleteEither someone put in a Tuesday or Wednesday puzzle by mistake, or I was extremely dialed in on Gia Bosko's wavelength. I finished in less than half my average Thursday time, and that included some dithering about how to enter the rebus letters.
ReplyDeleteHands up for WEN TAPE.
ReplyDeleteNice puzzle, if easy for a Thursday. I briefly thought the down themer crosses were two distinct words (as in NEW and NET), but that didn’t last long.
ReplyDeleteIsn’t it closed-circuit (not close), Rex?
Oh, and congrats to Paolo Pasco — great comeback!
ReplyDeleteA little knowledge is not helpful: WEM TAPE. Since the emdash is longer than the endash, I didn’t want to let it go(learned this here, thank you blog). Shades of my actually having visited the Mauna Kea observatory earlier and having it still be a KEALOA:(
ReplyDeleteLove struggling with the gimmick and having the revealer help me out for the second half, opening up everything. That is also the fun of a sudoku, when finding just one tough number unlocks EVERYTHING.
Easy Peasy
ReplyDeleteVery well executed puzzle today. Great job.
ReplyDeleteGreat puzzle, creative and well edited, managed to be easy and impressive in the same grid.
ReplyDeleteAlways nice when you can pick up the theme right away in the NW. I jumped over to NE and picked up TW in the rebus after the initial WT, so I started thinking about a W and T revealer. That didn't pan out, but theme was fine anyway and good revealer. Everything seemed to fit properly, which speaks to the editing
Have a feeling they're setting us up for a tough Friday but we'll see
My favorite Alda Impression
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/-Futrr9CV4w?feature=shared
Had the HD and DA rebus reversed at washday so DNF. Bummer.
ReplyDeleteIt's both 'closed-circuit television' and 'closed captioning'. The first closed to being aired publicly and the second being 'off' as default.
ReplyDeleteDid I think of EFT first? Of course. That led me to wanting TALKIE, as I was wondering if the answer would be WALKIE or TALKIE, no italics, so no help there, remembered it was Thursday, so why not both, and there it was. After the T/WEED thing I was wondering if they would all be T and W, but no, and that's fine. Only do-over was SCREAM before SHRIEK, easily fixed.
ReplyDeleteWinced at SUMTO and needed some crosses to remember Mr. EULER. Math was never my strong suit.
Only total no-know was CAIT, which had to be right but looked funny. My daughter-in-law is CAITlin, but no one has ever called her CAIT.
It's a Good Bet that this was my favorite Thursday in quite a while, GB. Sorry when it was over and thanks for all the fun.
Me, I was staring down WEMTAPE trying to figure it out…
ReplyDeleteThink how cool it could have been to combine yesterday's puzzle and today's. So TATERSTATER could have been rebussed to [T/ST]ATER. I suppose the crosser would have to be CANTST. And I'm sure you all noticed how today's puzzle glaringly included NAN and AAA as extraneous PALINDROMES! Some of you may pick a nit about TINA, semordnilap-wise, but at least I TRI.
ReplyDeleteIf you all think the ENDASH and emdash are long, you should see the 100 yard dash. Now that's what I call longer than a hyphen.
I think EULER declared that one would NEEDANAPp to TEST what all the areas under a curve SUMTO.
Nice concept. Fun for the brief time that it lasted. Thanks, Gia Bosko.
Tide Is the alternative to gain?
ReplyDeleteTide and Gain are detergents. Think WASH/DAY.
DeleteIf you have laundry to do.
DeleteGain is a laundry detergent. :)
DeleteI guess I must have gotten one of those “ruthless old school Thursdays” because there were no italics in my website printout. I’m glad though because that made it more challenging. I started out thinking this was a ridiculously easy Thursday until I saw the theme trick and my meh changed to a big wow! Very impressive to get those extremely clever either/or crosses to also work as a standard rebus in the downs. YES SIR, I’d even go so far as to call it a RAZZLE DAZZLE theme. Thank you Gia, enjoyed it immensely.
ReplyDeleteMAR?E had to be either MARGE or MARIE. Probably MARGE -- but why did GUENO look so unfamiliar to me? Must check with Rex. Oh, I see, it's GUANO. I had ROME instead of ROMA for the apple. So after doing the hard part, I DNF on the easy part.
ReplyDeleteI really liked this rebus and think the perfect revealer hits it out of the park. But there's one big exception. Not knowing my ARIEL from my URIEL, I had SAMTO for "total". Whazzat? Something is Very Wrong. I'm thinking it has to be URIEL, giving me SUMTO for "total". But SUM TO is just about the ugliest, most illiterate-sounding phrase I've ever heard. Does Google accept it? I haven't checked because I really don't want to know if it does.
Other than SUM TO and some unfamiliar pop culture names (is MARGE a relative of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy by any chance?), I thought this rebus was a lot of fun.
Marge Simpson is a cartoon character, Homer’s wife
DeleteIt's from The Simpsons. MARGE is Homer's wife (and the daughter of Clancy Bouvier and Jacqueline Ingrid Bouvier).
Deleteyet another thursday which played like a medium wednesday. sigh. my ristretto outlasted the solve.
ReplyDeleteRicky Gervais says he can't see any message in Humpty Dumpty.
ReplyDeleteHumpty Dumpty sat on a wall
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall
All the king's horses and all the king's men
Couldn't put Humpty together again.
All he gets out of it is "Don't sit on a wall if you're an egg."
ReplyDeleteEasy-Medium Thursday.
Overwrites:
I had [W/T] in square 7 instead of [T/W] and that prevented the happy music.
WENT mad before APE at 14A
SUM up before TO at 23A
I didn't know there was an aRIEL in Paradise Lost. My 24D was the mermaid aRIEL before it was the archangel URIEL
WOEs:
I am CAIT at 51A
Didn't remember YER Blues at 61D
Same here. No recollection of the TV show or the song, and I was a Beatles fanatic.
DeleteI actually think the World capital of Crossword needs to be Agra. I would support Enid as the USA capital.
ReplyDeleteENID is a strong candidate, but I’m torn. There’s heavy competition from ALTA.
DeleteI'd go with AGRA and ENID, but I think OSLO and RENO deserve honorable mentions.
DeleteHad Napoli for a while. Both upper rebuses are T /W so wasted time looking for more of the same! Quite enjoyable
ReplyDeleteA pleasant Thursday morning solve, maybe just a skosh too easy. But difficult to find fault with otherwise. Including "SUM TO", which sounds fine to my ear. ("SUM up" would also work as the transitive verb form.) NASTY HABITS is also well within the language and maybe doesn't need coddling from absolutely precise cluing. If I had to distinguish between a bad habit and a nasty habit, I'd guess it lies in how offensive the habit might be to those around you; for example, you could have a bad habit of having midnight snacks when you don't need those extra calories, whereas a habit of smoking, despite frequent complaints from people near you, could be considered nasty.
ReplyDeleteHad Em-DASH before EN-DASH. Other than that, nothing much held me up. Thanks, Gia, for a very nice puzzle!
Violet Beuaregarde thinks spitting is a dirTYHABIT.
ReplyDeleteEM, briefly, before I ran a short dash to EN. Then *EENIE, CAIN, UNI & ARIEL came quickly before *EENSY, CAIT, TRI & URIEL.
ReplyDeleteI did not find the theme as transparent as Rex did. I first encountered it in the NE. Not noticing the WEENSY part of 7A, I borrowed the W of WENT APE to make my TWEED. This was confirmed down in the SE, where WASH DAY borrowed the H from HUME and for some reason, I thought DUMPTY on its own was fine. Finally, in the NW, WALKIE TALKIE led me to the correct interpretation. I guess DOUBLE HEADERS should have pointed out my mistake, but I didn't have any italicized clues in my printed-out puzzle so I kind of dismissed the revealer as irrelevant to my solve.
ReplyDeleteMICROSCOPES and PALINDROMES, those are nice.
Thanks, Gia Bosko, nice Thursday!
The clue for EULER could have been shorter. Great mathematician Leonhard.
ReplyDeleteI’m finally caught up on my puzzles after having very fun house guests for several days, and this was a great one to do given that. I caught on to the concept at WTALKIE, completed the rest of the puzzle, knew my NE was a mess (WeMTAPE), and realized I hadn’t noticed the italics in 7A (I only had TEENSY).
ReplyDeleteYep. Even though I corrected to ENDASH, I stared blankly at WEN TAPE even as my “congratulations” popped up on my screen. I have to believe that for those of us that had that glitch, we had the adhesive property of tape and glue stuck in our brain.
I just caught the tail end of Jeopardy last night and didn’t realize the winner was Paolo Pasco, so thanks @Lewis for mentioning that!
Easy. I caught the theme at 1d and whooshed through this one.
ReplyDeleteNo WOEs and EmDASH before ENDASH was it for costly erasures.
Sparkly theme answers, some fine long downs, and not much junk, liked it a bunch!
I came back to wonder if I was the only one who considered Pompei before NAPLES? There is a modern “city” there, albeit only about 26K population. Oh…then I noticed I wasn’t signed in, so the “house guests” etc comment will no doubt be Anonymous. Grrrr.
ReplyDeleteDang textiles background! Put in Twill and that just gummed it all dang up. There's a new kealoa for you!!!
ReplyDeleteRex is right on 14 a. It should be"goeD Ape
ReplyDeleteNice rebussy ThursPuz, great revealer. ZEN TAPE, WENT APE.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick: BA[R&D]. Crucial puztheme influencer.
Primo quad weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.
some fave stuff: The three longest [11] non-themers ... all gone plural [POC alert, @AnoaBob dude]. NEEDANAP. Buck-toothed Jaws of Themedness. AAA clue.
Thanx for the fun, Ms. Bosko darlin. Shorter themers generated lotsa interestin longer non-themed answers; mighty cool.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
... here's a kinda "timeless" runt ...
"Whenever" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
p.s. We're gonna be on a long roadtrip, for a coupla weeks or so. sooo .. see yah much later.
And congratz to Paolo P. dude on his Jep win. Real sorry I missed the show.
Coming up with ENID whenever a four-letter city in Oklahoma is clued is easy for me. My mother and grandmother were both named Enid. Great-Grandma loved Tennyson's poetry and Enid was his heroine (no radio, TV, or computers back then...today their name might be TECHNICA).
ReplyDelete