According to Plutarch, Caesar originally said the line in Greek rather than Latin, as ἀνερρίφθω κύβοςanerrhī́phthō kýbos, literally "let a die be cast", metaphorically "let the game be played". This is a quote from a play by Menander, and Suetonius's Latin translation is slightly misleading, being merely a statement about the inevitability of what is to come, while the Greek original contains a self-encouragement to venture forward. The Latin version is now most commonly cited with the word order changed (Alea iacta est), and it is used both in this form, and in translation in many languages. The same event inspired another related idiom, "crossing the Rubicon". (wikipedia)
• • •
Struggled more than usual, but I feel like some of that struggle was caused by sleepiness. I mean, it should not have taken me as long as it did to get MEGHAN, for instance (42D: Duchess of Sussex beginning in 2018). I don't care about royals at all and generally zone out whenever they're mentioned, but still, she's pretty famous. The only name I could think of, though, was CAMILLA (sp?), so ... pfft. And then stuff like VERGE (55A: Border (on)) and SEE (48A: Call at the table?) ... seems like these should've come to me instantly, but they didn't, so ... I think it's just taking my brain longer than usual to come back online this morning. There did seem to be an awful lot of "?" and otherwise trick clues today. Ambiguous or deliberately misleading. Some of it worked—the clue on DELETED SCENES is really quite good (33A: Takes in the trash?). But then some of it worked ... less. Or felt more awkward, anyway. The clue on CREASED, for instance, or HATEWATCH. They're clever, in their way, but they are really ... trying. I feel like the clues themselves are going "Get it? get it? See, it's clever because ..." and I'm like "yeah, I see now ... relax." If something's CREASED, it's (arguably? maybe? if you use language in a weird way?) in need of "evening out" (49A: In need of an evening out?). The "an" before "evening" in the clue makes you think "evening" is a noun meaning "night." So I get the "joke." But I also wouldn't say "this crease needs evening out," ever ("ironing out," yes). So ... the "joke" landed oddly for me.
[Stream with a lot of shade?] is a more elaborate "joke," but somehow more transparent. It does the same "trick" that the other two "?" clues I've mentioned do, i.e. make at least one word look like it's a different part of speech than what it is. "Takes" looks like it's a verb, but it's a noun. "Evening" looks like it's a noun, but it's really verbal. "Stream" looks like it's a noun, but it's a verb, and then "shade" ... well, that stays a noun, but it looks like it means one thing, but then means another ("shade" as slang for "disdain, criticism, hate"). I'm now realizing that every "?" clue today stopped me cold initially. Weirdly, there are also three clues that end in "?" that aren't "?" clues—they're just quotes that are interrogative, so it looks like there are more "?"s than there are. I should be paying attention to great fill, but I'm somehow in the weeds on "?" clues, which is possibly just my still-warming-up brain trying to even itself out, or else it's the puzzle being annoying, I can't tell. Maybe a little of both. The only thing I really hated in this puzzle, though, was INNER GEEK (3D: It might be on display at ComicCon). First, not a real phrase, shhh, no, stop. Second, if it's "on display," guess what, it's not "INNER." This whole "ooh, look at me, I'm a geek!" thing with ComicCon, you're not a "geek"! You're there to see some panel about the latest Marvel movie or whatever. Again, shhh. I have "HATE" written in the margin of my print-out. That was one of the last answers I got. Actually, the last answer I got was SWILL, a fitting cross for INNER GEEK.
The NW and SE were the toughest for me. Most of the ink on my puzzle print-out is concentrated in those areas. I don't buy most of the alleged collective nouns for animals. I see lists from time to time and think "no one calls them that, no one says that, just say 'group.'" This is what I felt about the FERRETS clue (22A: Flock : geese :: business : ___). As with royals, FERRETS are things I think about precisely never (unless forced), so "business"? If you say so. I have "F. off" written in the margin of my print-out next to FERRETS. I had 1A: Hogwash as TRIPE at first. Without the "W" from SWILL, WEASELED was impossible for me to see (2D: Talked one's way (out of)). The SE was slightly easier, but only because I got BANANA PEEL right away, off the "BA-." Otherwise, no apparent tennis context made HELD SERVE very hard, even after I had HELD (32D: Didn't get broken). Needed almost every cross, as I did for SPEED GUN (a term that never crosses my mind). A SPEED TRAP is a "problem" if you're going 90 (in a 55 zone), but the speeder would never think "hope there are no SPEED GUNs up ahead." CREASED is in that same corner, and I've already said how tough that was for me. So that's three longish answers where I needed almost every cross to get them, all in the same corner. Oh, and another "?" clue down there too (44D: The works? = OEUVRE). This might actually have been "Medium-Challenging" for me, at least compared to recent Fridays. Played more like a Saturday. I'll be surprised if tomorrow's puzzle tests me as much. This puzzle is really trying to be colloquial and current and slangy (BROHUG! EGOSURF! DEEP FAKES!), and I appreciate that. I just wasn't on its wavelength much of the time.
Bullets:
5D: One receiving monthly payments (LEASER) — I have "OOF" written next to this one. What an awful word. Isn't the term "LESSOR?" (It is). LEASER sounds like someone trying to say "Lisa." One of those awkward ugly legal terms like LIENEE.
10D: Enemigo de un ratón (GATO) — I don't speak Spanish, but I knew enough to get this immediately. Weird to say "enemy." Are we talking about a cartoon? My cat is not the "enemy" of birds, or squirrels, or chipmunks, or that weird bug in the corner, or falling leaves. He's just a vigilant hunter of small things that move. Nothing personal.
35D: Antibiotic used to treat anthrax (CIPRO) — I had to take CIPRO in the late '90s / early '00s for something or other. That's when I learned the term. Haven't thought of it since. Needed many crosses for it to come back to me. This is only the second NYTXW appearance ever for CIPRO. First was in 2019 (which is probably the last time I thought of CIPRO) (crossing my fingers that I don't get anthrax).
59A: Icelandic saga (EDDA) — I swear to you that I had that final "A" in place and wrote in ... SAGA. It was that kind of morning, I'm telling you.
47D: Made some Java, say (CODED) — the capital "J" is the giveaway here, obviously. Coffee "java" would've been lowercase (I assume).
22D: Repeated word in the Star Wars" prologue (FAR) — just started at the top: "A long time ago, in a galaxy FAR, FAR away..." The very best thing I've read about "Star Wars" of late (possibly ever) is this Isaac Chotiner interview of Cass Sunstein in the New Yorker a couple days ago—an absolute start-to-finish must-read. At first I thought "surely the 'Star Wars' they're talking about is the whole Reagan / SDI thing, not ... the movie franchise." But no. They're talking about the movie franchise. And Henry Kissinger. It's ... amazing. You almost feel bad for Sunstein. Almost. (Why anyone agrees to be interviewed by Isaac Chotiner, I will never understand.)
See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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Overwrites: My 41A blowouts were ROmpS before they were ROUTS I thought PeonY might be a violet variety, but it was PANSY at 23D (no gardener I) SPEEDing can be problematic when you're pushing 90, but SPEED GUN is a bigger problem (36D)
Yup - same kind of feeling here that the cluing in places is strained. I appreciate the effort but the resulting grimace on some of them is off. WEASELED, DELETED SCENES and BANANA PEEL are top notch.
Needed all the crosses for FERRETS. Not sure Rex fully understands INNER GEEK - there’s a badge of courage nuance attached - I don’t see it in the pejorative as much as he does. Liked the CARIB x PANSY cross.
I really don’t understand the concept of HATE WATCH. AL GORE - really? My wife tells me that ELENA is a pseudonym - either way needed crosses for that one too.
Splashy in places and fun - an enjoyable Friday morning solve.
Lessor, lessee, then LEASER — that held things up in the NW, but I really slowed to a crawl in the SE with a WOE tennis term and the overly cute clue for CREASED.
Rex, I’m amused that you stuck with that Chotiner/Sunstein interview. I thought it was an embarrassment and bailed early on. “Reagan was a liberal”? C’mon, Cass.
Agree (again) with Conrad's Easy-Medium. Glad to see I was not the only one befuddled by HELD SERVE, which took me almost as much time to convince myself of as the rest of the puzzle took to fill in.
This was a wow, with spark in answer, sweet resistance bringing sweet reward, clues whose answers couldn’t be immediately slapped down, and clues brimming with wordplay.
I’ll focus on that last point, as wordplay hits my happy button. Today’s puzzle had it all: • Simple one-trick-pony wordplay, such as [Didn’t get broken] for HELD SERVE. “Oh, *that* kind of ‘broken’!” Hah! • Double play, as with [Takes in the trash?] for DELETED SCENES. “Oh, noun-‘takes’, not verb-‘takes’, not to mention a new meaning for the full phrase ‘takes in the trash’”. Mwah! • World-class wordplay – [In need of an evening out?] for CREASED. Playing on “evening”, playing on “evening out”, playing on “in need of an evening out”, which brings up loneliness, perhaps, or being cocooned for too long, and deftly misdirects the mind from the actual meaning of this clue. OMG! Clue jackpot! Deep bow.
You wowed me, Larry, with a satisfying solve flecked with a fiesta of humor and play. Thank you, sir, and more please!
Very tough to get started, but once I abandoned the NW it was pretty easy.
'Flock' is a very generic term - applies to a lot of birds, not just geese. 'Business' is a very specific term - just applies to ferrets. I therefore deem that analogy inapt.
Easy-medium for me after yesterday’s utter slog. Liked the cluing a lot. I’m convinced that on Thursday/Friday/Saturday your assessment of difficulty hinges on whether you jibe with the creator’s cluing style.
Needed a cheat for the CODED/BROHUG cross. Had "nene" before NEWT. Clue for "Takes in the trash" was brilliant, likewise the clue for "In need of an evening (even-ing) out." Only possible nit was LEASER. Is one who leases an apartment really a LEASER?
Quickly wrote in HOKUM crossing HEM and almost as quickly erased them, as that was going nowhere. Bounced around looking for a starting point and settled on NEWT, and things moved pretty steadily from there. I had to take CIPRO before a trip somewhere years ago and somehow knew it right away. Nice surprise. I share OFL's indifference to the royals so MEGHAN took lots of crosses.
BAH before PAH, was looking for a number for EENIE, and met ELENA, how do you do. I had a vague notion of what DEEPFAKES are so nice to get a definition. And the global warming guy had to be ALGORE, very helpful. Also learned what to call a group of FERRETS, a total WOE there.
First prize for long-lost crosswordese: EDDA! Welcome back! Long time no see!
I liked your Friday just fine, LS. Learned Some more things the kids (people under 50) are saying these days, and thanks for all the fun.
Definitely a good puzzle. I feel like I spent almost half my time mired in the SE, but the misdirection was very well done IMO -- a tip of the hat to the constructor. I do not agree with Rex's complaints in a number of instances. We've seen this usage of "evening" (even-ing) before, and that's what a CREASE in the shirt is in need of. Glad to have gotten that ironed out. What really held me up in that corner was the string of characters in OEUVRE. I feel like I had the right idea: I really tried to make Opuses (?) work, and certainly the French word traces back to the Latin "Opus". Never mind that "opuses" looks questionable when any Latin student will tell you the correct plural is "opera". I thought maybe the English plural is what people wind up using, because if you say "opera" to mean "works", then nobody will know what you're talking about. HELD SERVE had some mild misdirection in its cluing, but was very fair. I didn't realize at first what this A.Q.I. was (EPA, one of many agencies that have been hollowed out in the first sixth of the way into this goddamn term).
Fantastic misdirection for DELETED SCENES, with "takes" being a noun. Wow. Chef's kiss to that one.
Put in Markle before MEGHAN.
I do not all agree with Rex's complaints about INNER GEEK. A quick googling reveals that it's a phrase people use (it's even the name given to various comic book outlets). Moreover, the whole idea is that maybe some people hide their nerdy predilections in everyday life (like, you know, from guys who make a thing of their BROHUGs and who have historically been unkind to the nerds who walk among us), but then let loose and put them on display when they're in their element and among their peeps. Seems easy enough to understand.
I also sort of dig the really weird and unexpected nouns invented for how animals are GROUPED together, like a "parliament" of owls. A business of FERRETS is completely new to me, and I'm glad to have learned it. Add that to the list.
Thanks, Larry Snyder, for all the fun and the moderate challenge.
Nobody hides their comics predilections anymore. They wear them on t-shirts. Absolute nongeeks and nonnerds do this. Embarrassment at comics fandom belongs to a bygone age.
Nice FriPuz. Got stuck in SE, had GRasPED in for GROUPED, just could not get the ole brain to see either OEUVRE or VERGE, didn't know CIPRO, and REVUP has an odd clue.
So being stymied down there, I decided to Goog for CIPRO. One I filled that in, saw that my GRasPED would be GROUPED, which made OEUVRE easy to see, and done in two shakes of a lamb's tail. Dang, hate when I just can't go any further, and one little thing that I should've got lets me finish. So a FWH, Finished With Help.
manHUG-BROHUG hEdGE-VERGE NEne-NEWT
I just noticed today the if you have ATEA_ in your grid, it can be either ATEAT or ATEAM (or ATEAR.)
Best Friday in months IMO. Loved the review especially “…with ComicCon, you're not a "geek"! You're there to see some panel about the latest Marvel movie …” Ha ha ha ha ha.
That SE corner left me sweating. What the heck - could not see the EVEN-ING misdirect At. All. And never heard of HELD SERVE. That said - so nice to have a week of puzzles with sharp teeth!! Keep ‘em coming.
I thought it was a nice grid to wonder around and just sort of mingle in, kind of like I was a guest at a party - I didn’t know everyone, maybe made some new friends, learned a few things - I wish I could “can” that approach and bring it to every grid - treat it as an to be event to be savored instead of a race to the finish line. What is that saying - something about stopping to smell the roses?
It was a touch nostalgic to see the AL GOR(acle) make an appearance, who decades ago looked at the available data, the consensus of the scientific community, et c at the time and was very prescient in explaining where could plausibly end up absent significantly more intervention than the world was able to muster. It’s also a pretty compelling contrast to the situation in which we presently find ourselves with a president who believes 2 + 2 equals whatever he wants it to equal.
CIPRO really needed some sort of heads up that it was an abbreviation - it’s short for ciprofloxacin. There are no five letter antibiotics that I can think of off the top of my head, unless we include brand names.
This mostly played like a tough Saturday with the exception of the NE which was early week easy. HATEWATCH was the first long entry to fall. This meaning of shade has been used repeatedly. FERRET was my last entry as I fell for that clue until the bitter end.
In the SW I had to overcome a MAN/BRO write over and in the SE GUN hid behind CAM for a long time.
I'm a regular SB player so it was deja vu all over again to see a Thursday pangram appear in the SE. Last night as soon as I got the QB I went right to the Friday puzzle. However I was still slow in getting that answer and when it made OEU show up I wasted time looking for some impossible mistake rather than having OEUVRE just pop up. EDDA was slow coming too as was the spelling of MEGHAN. Over all a good workout with three quarters of the puzzle feeling like pulling teeth.
Flew through 80% then hit the wall in that terrible south east corner. Felt like a totally different experience there. CREASED crossing OEUVRE is a special kind of treachery. Reachy clue + French dropped the solve a full grade from A- to B- Still, the long downs made for light entertainment.
I spent decades as an attorney specializing in leasing transactions. The owner of property who rents that property to others is the LESSOR; sometimes—but rarely—referred to as the leasor, or as a renter—but never as a leaser.
This puzzle has a lot of clever cluing, especially clues involving ambiguous parts of speech, like DELETED SCENES. But the results are sometimes less than spectacular, like DELETED SCENES. Or SPEED GUN (it's called 'radar gun,' isn't it?) And ABODE clued as a 'building' is a stretch. An abode is a relational term, as in 'my humble abode' it's an abode to you, not to a passer-by, and it may be an apartment or a tent.
And then there's CIPRO. Great entry for a puzzle in Veterinary Weekly, but here, not so much.
I did enjoy the quote from Julius Caesar, but I got EST entirely from crosses.
Tough but fair and I appreciated a mild workout after this week of mostly too easies. I applaud Mr. Snyder for constructing a solid themeless with very few proper names and virtually no pop culture. Also much appreciated.
I did find myself bogged down in a couple places. HATE WATCH took me forever because I was thinking of a stream flowing through a shady forest. Had IN USE for UTILE, didn’t know GATO or CENSOR/bowdlerize and for some reason, could not get CHAI to fall into place. Surprisingly, the other trouble spot was BANANA PEEL which was about as straightforward a clue as you could get. As is often the case when I find a puzzle challenging, I look back at the completed grid and wonder why I did.
57A is not necessarily restricted to celebrities. If you want to read about the horrifying potential of AI’s digital alteration capabilities, get The New Age of Sexism by Laura Bates. But be warned, from the very first chapter it will make your blood run cold. Virtually anyone can become the victim of a DEEP FAKE.
I'm pretty sure most of those cute collective nouns for animals were made up by old Etonians hanging out with a bottle of scotch or two; I once read someone's account of one such incident, but I can't remember who it was. And they're the sort who would be ferret fanciers, I should think.
If your landlord rents out two houses (or abodes, maybe) that are not up to code, he's the LESSOR of two evils.
My problem with MEGHAN was with no indicator of a first name, I just wrote in MARKLE and then when crosses didn’t work still didn’t consider the possibility and decided I was just wrong.
Pretty easy, except I had a tough time in the SW. I wanted DEEP TAKES and EGO HUNT, but I knew HEE couldn't be right. Took a few minutes of pondering to get to DEEP FAKES and EGO SURFS.
Don't really like PAH for "Hogwash"; I suppose the constructor wanted to avoid the same old "tuba" clue. I've never heard the term CARIB.
Did anyone put woRkErs before FERRETS for the business: clue? Didn't even think of animal groups until the entire answer was entered and still didn't get the happy music. I changed LEASoR to LEASER and then realized that I had spelled FERRETS and only then understood what was going on. Found this pretty easy - no snags unless you consider that a snag. 16:29
It was not until just reading this blog post that I finally understood the clue "evening out" for CREASED. Like, I made up a whole story for this in my head to justify it... "my shirt is wrinkled, and I'm planning to wear it tomorrow, so maybe I need to hang it 'out' on the line 'for the evening' so that the wrinkles are gone by the next morning?". I was just like... I guess that makes sense? haha
In my case , it was a matter of hitting senior status that I truly embraces my inner geek. As bizarre as it sounds , it was the Big Bang Theory tv show that made me more aware of geeks are cool too (i know an oxymoron for many). But no stranger than my wife becoming a vegeterian after seeing Finding Nemo. My reaction to the puzzle was exactly the same as OFL’s—medium to challenging and trying too hard.
Not sure how I feel about this one. Lots of good stuff, especially 33A DELETED SCENES for “Takes in the trash”. HATE WATCH at 15A was good, as was 2D WEASELED and 44D OEUVRE. Nice words, nicely clued. Not so 10A GUAC. Why would you take the lovely, flowing guacamole and reduce it to the jarring, ugly GUAC?
SPEED GUN at 36D is a bit suspect. I’ve always called it a radar GUN and it’s used in a SPEED trap, but that could be regional.
I am now, and have been for many years, the owner of properties that I rent out, usually on annual leases. (It’s hard to make a decent living as an artist or a small-time farmer.) I am, in all the documents described as the lessor, not the LEASER (5D). So I did a quick search online for LEASER and the hits came back 10 to 1 in favour of lessor. When LEASER was cited it was described as “nonstandard”. Didn’t slow me down too much but it irked me, nonetheless.
Likewise, I had to check about 7 or 8 sites about 35D CIPROfloxacin before I ran into a reference to anthrax. Trying a bit too hard here, guys. How about UTIs? Or is that a “breakfast test” thing?
It’s 11 pm Thursday and, of course, I have yet to read @Rex, but I’m pretty sure he’ll go ballistic about 50A BRO HUG. I don’t particularly like it either but I’m hoping if we just ignore it, it will go away.
Was really stuck in the SE corner for a while until 58A REV UP finally loomed into view. Thankful for all those hot cars I’ve owned in the past. The V got me 32D HELD SERVE (good clue) and I managed to finish.
Lastly, what’s so INNER about the GEEKiness (3D) of attending a Comic-Con? I thought that was all about openly and proudly displaying your geekiness.
Breezy and fun. I especially liked SWILL x WEASELED, SET SAIL, and VERGE and learning that FERRETS form a business; and appreciated having PONDER atop CREASED so that the unlikely OE got me OEUVRE. "Takes in the trash" - I wish I knew the award I could nominate that one for! HELD SERVE was good, too.
Help from previous puzzles: HATE WATCH, INNER GEEK, BRO HUG, EGO SURF. Help from dividing time between royal watching, novel reading, and fascination with AI horrors: MEGHAN, ELENA, DEEP FAKES.
I've often advocated here for this kind of approach. I like your party metaphor a lot. I've used terms like ambling and wandering and I've even refered to myself as a crossword flaneur. We should host a party in a rose garden.
The person who receives monthly payments is the lessor or landlord. The person making those monthly payments is the tenant or lessee. I’ve never seen or heard him or it referred to as the leaser. The confusion may be because Rex misread the clue and said receiving where the clue for 5 down says making.
Well, if Rex struggled what chance do I have? (BTW enjoyed your write-up Rex). WOES - OEUVRE, PAH (I'm still in the EEK club), CREASED, HATE WATCH. CODED & CODAS? I know it's what guys do these days - BROHUG - but it made me think of my Father & since it wasn't done in those days, I couldn't picture him doing it even if it was (shrug).
While I can agree with Rex that the NW and SE were the toughest sectors today, my solve was pure Weintraub-Friday easy. C_EA_ED crossing CIP?O and HELD_ERVE were my last hold-outs for the reasons Rex mentions.
GUAC confirmed by GATO (thanks, Duolingo Spanish!) was my entry into the grid. From there it just flowed with brief pauses (hated channel initialisms crossing sports mascots and 45D Shortzian clues) but otherwise all smooth.
Yes! That's the joy of the morning crossword. I measure my "puzzle time" not in minutes but in cups of coffee. I meander for half a cup early in the week and sometime two cups on the weekend.
Silly business. How many assembled ferrets are needed before a name is obliged to describe the group? I can’t imagine ferrets in any kind of assembly larger than a family group. In which case you’d call it…a family. Perhaps there’s some kind of FerretCon that I’m unaware of?
Struggled in the SE corner, went with held nerve for didn't get broken. Never heard held serve, some kind of tennis thing? So, ended up with creaned & never did sort it out being totally misdirected by evening out!
If you’d read maybe you’d understand. What a bizarre comment . Do you think he posted the interview because he likes Sunstein? The interview essentially shreds Sunstein. THATS THE POINT. Read or don’t, but your half-read is not worth talking about.
Easy-Medium. I felt like a genius at work... until I watched all of Rex's clips from a children's cartoon show. (There can never be too many Simpsons clips. Also pet pics.) Interesting to read that Mr. Snyder sometimes comes up with the clue before the entry. The clues are what make this (a great) puzzle.
I love the word OEUVRE, but I hate how confusing the French language is. Oeuvre, ooh-vruh. Hors d'oeuvre, or-derv (meaning "outside the work"). INNER GEEK was my favorite entry. Reminds me of Triumph at the Star Wars premier. Embrace your INNER GEEK!
Mine on the website says receiving. Would be pretty funny if the editors had no idea one way or the other and changed it at some point after publication.
Great puzzle. Lots of wrong side of the bed energy from Rex today. Weird that he can identify being a bit slower than usual but not being cranky about some perfectly good clues? Love SWILL as the rarely seen literal hogwash, and wanted CREAmED for needing an evening out -- as in tired and needing some sleep!
Hmmm.. I did not find this particularly challenging; remember it being fun and 17 minutes is not that long. Loved many of the tricky clues others have mentioned. Hands up for: LESSOR yes, LEASER no; SPEED TRAP or RADAR GUN yes, SPEED GUN nope.
A few too many names in the bottom: AMC MRRED EDDA MEGHAN CIPRO ALPO ORD ELENA. And at 23 down "Variety of violet" I was thinking colors, so... PANSY is a color?
I collected Marvel comics like crazy in the 1970s. When the first Spider-Man movie came out, I thought it was great. Since then it's been a downhill plunge... I cannot stand any of the recent Marvel movies. Tried watching a few but gave up after 5 minutes. So yes I'm a geek, but no I would not enjoy discussing them at ComicCon; sorry Rex!
In tennis, if you HELD SERVE, that means you won the game you were just serving in. If you lost, then one says you were broken, or your service was broken.
A reason people might HATE WATCH is to to confirm that the show is going to be bad, and why it's bad. For example, someone might hate watch that panel show on Fox with Jesse Watters, just to see what horrible things these people are saying, and to check the pulse of right-wing thinking.
35 minutes for me so definitely challenging! @Rex, check out the reaction of a Rat to a Cat--even a picture of a cat--how fast they run for shelter. The image of a cat is genetically imprinted in the brain of rats--they know to run. So I think, at least from the rat's point of view, the Gato is the enemy of the Raton! : ) Great puzzle, keep it up, thanks Larry!
SPEEDGUN was a new term for me. I have only ever heard of radar gun and like Rex speed trap. That made SE corner harder than it should have been as I had _p__d__n and wanted speed "something" but couldn't get the 2nd word/ending.
My read was take in the trash as in lug the cans back to the garage after they have been emptied. In any event, it’s a question mark clue which indicates that wordplay or something punny is in play. I thought it was a pretty good clue and not at all problematic.
Don’t blame the French. They pronounce both the same since they are in fact the same word meaning the same thing. Both transliterations are pretty amusingly not correct.
Okay. Done. Pretty slow going. CIPRO and ELENA messed with me, but otherwise patience paid off. I read ELENA is a pseudonym for an anonymous Italian writer... in other words, she's perfect for the NYTXW Friday edition. Reasonably clean and reasonably humorous, so it's a keeper.
Just got my flu and covid inoculation, so I might have autism here in a few minutes since I'm grabbing a fistful of Tylenol. Can you believe this is the world we're living in? Made it all the way to 2025 and left a clown car full of numbskulls in front of video cameras and hot mics.
Love two hogwashipodes in the same puzzle. SWILL was tough to see, but fun to write into the final squares, but PAH started his life in my grid as BAH. I also love WANNA, but I don't know why. Such a weird clue for ALONE TIME, even if it's true.
HATE WATCH is soooo funny. I'm hate watching Letterkenny right now. Nice piece of soon to be forgotten trivia on FERRETS.
In case you were wondering, thanks to the helpful scientific research from our commander in chief, there is no global warming and therefore there is no AL GORE.
1 Two questions asked by every hopeful suitor. 2 Activity before asking the two questions asked by every hopeful suitor. 3 What's on the mound after the last out of the World Series. 4 Function of meme-makers. 5 Function of the programming for C3PO. 6 Nickname for Spanish feline comic with too many hacky jokes.
Okay. Done. Pretty slow going. CIPRO and ELENA messed with me, but otherwise patience paid off. I read ELENA is a pseudonym for an anonymous Italian writer... in other words, she's perfect for the NYTXW Friday edition. Reasonably clean and reasonably humorous, so it's a keeper.
Just got my flu and covid inoculation, so I might have autism here in a few minutes since I'm grabbing a fistful of Tylenol. Can you believe this is the world we're living in? Made it all the way to 2025 and left a clown car full of numbskulls in front of video cameras and hot mics.
Love two hogwashipodes in the same puzzle. SWILL was tough to see, but fun to write into the final squares, but PAH started his life in my grid as BAH. I also love WANNA, but I don't know why. Such a weird clue for ALONE TIME, even if it's true.
HATE WATCH is soooo funny. I'm hate watching Letterkenny right now. Nice piece of soon to be forgotten trivia on FERRETS.
In case you were wondering, thanks to the helpful scientific research from our commander in chief, there is no global warming and therefore there is no AL GORE.
1 Two questions asked by every hopeful suitor. 2 Activity before asking the two questions asked by every hopeful suitor. 3 What's on the mound after the last out of the World Series. 4 Function of meme-makers. 5 Function of the programming for C3PO. 6 Nickname for Spanish feline comic with too many hacky jokes.
A long time ago, I was solving this puzzle and got stuck at an unguessable (to me) crossing: N. C. WYETH crossing NATICK at the "N"—I knew WYETH but forgot his initials, and NATICK ... is a suburb of Boston that I had no hope of knowing. It was clued as someplace the Boston Marathon runs through (???). Anyway, NATICK— the more obscure name in that crossing—became shorthand for an unguessable cross, esp. where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known. NATICK took hold as crossword slang, and the term can now be both noun ("I had a NATICK in the SW corner...") or verb ("I got NATICKED by 50A / 34D!")
88 comments:
Easy-Medium. I enjoyed wordplay in the "?" clues.
Overwrites:
My 41A blowouts were ROmpS before they were ROUTS
I thought PeonY might be a violet variety, but it was PANSY at 23D (no gardener I)
SPEEDing can be problematic when you're pushing 90, but SPEED GUN is a bigger problem (36D)
Only one WOE, ELENA Ferrante at 61A
LEASER / WANNA really clunky for NE corner. could just as easily have been LESSER / BANNS, with SEB in 1D.
Yup - same kind of feeling here that the cluing in places is strained. I appreciate the effort but the resulting grimace on some of them is off. WEASELED, DELETED SCENES and BANANA PEEL are top notch.
Prince
Needed all the crosses for FERRETS. Not sure Rex fully understands INNER GEEK - there’s a badge of courage nuance attached - I don’t see it in the pejorative as much as he does. Liked the CARIB x PANSY cross.
Ringo
I really don’t understand the concept of HATE WATCH. AL GORE - really? My wife tells me that ELENA is a pseudonym - either way needed crosses for that one too.
Splashy in places and fun - an enjoyable Friday morning solve.
Now I WANNA Sniff Some Glue
PAH? PAH??? C’mon, man.
Sagas form a specific genre, and the Edda are not examples of it.
Lessor, lessee, then LEASER — that held things up in the NW, but I really slowed to a crawl in the SE with a WOE tennis term and the overly cute clue for CREASED.
Rex, I’m amused that you stuck with that Chotiner/Sunstein interview. I thought it was an embarrassment and bailed early on. “Reagan was a liberal”? C’mon, Cass.
Agree (again) with Conrad's Easy-Medium. Glad to see I was not the only one befuddled by HELD SERVE, which took me almost as much time to convince myself of as the rest of the puzzle took to fill in.
This was a wow, with spark in answer, sweet resistance bringing sweet reward, clues whose answers couldn’t be immediately slapped down, and clues brimming with wordplay.
I’ll focus on that last point, as wordplay hits my happy button. Today’s puzzle had it all:
• Simple one-trick-pony wordplay, such as [Didn’t get broken] for HELD SERVE. “Oh, *that* kind of ‘broken’!” Hah!
• Double play, as with [Takes in the trash?] for DELETED SCENES. “Oh, noun-‘takes’, not verb-‘takes’, not to mention a new meaning for the full phrase ‘takes in the trash’”. Mwah!
• World-class wordplay – [In need of an evening out?] for CREASED. Playing on “evening”, playing on “evening out”, playing on “in need of an evening out”, which brings up loneliness, perhaps, or being cocooned for too long, and deftly misdirects the mind from the actual meaning of this clue. OMG! Clue jackpot! Deep bow.
You wowed me, Larry, with a satisfying solve flecked with a fiesta of humor and play. Thank you, sir, and more please!
Very tough to get started, but once I abandoned the NW it was pretty easy.
'Flock' is a very generic term - applies to a lot of birds, not just geese. 'Business' is a very specific term - just applies to ferrets. I therefore deem that analogy inapt.
Easy-medium for me after yesterday’s utter slog. Liked the cluing a lot. I’m convinced that on Thursday/Friday/Saturday your assessment of difficulty hinges on whether you jibe with the creator’s cluing style.
11:31 compared to 16:45 average so another very easy Friday.....despite the ugly "leaser", which should have been disqualified ab initio.
Needed a cheat for the CODED/BROHUG cross. Had "nene" before NEWT.
Clue for "Takes in the trash" was brilliant, likewise the clue for "In need of an evening (even-ing) out." Only possible nit was LEASER. Is one who leases an apartment really a LEASER?
What Rex said, esp re ferrets & non-word leaser.
Quickly wrote in HOKUM crossing HEM and almost as quickly erased them, as that was going nowhere. Bounced around looking for a starting point and settled on NEWT, and things moved pretty steadily from there. I had to take CIPRO before a trip somewhere years ago and somehow knew it right away. Nice surprise. I share OFL's indifference to the royals so MEGHAN took lots of crosses.
BAH before PAH, was looking for a number for EENIE, and met ELENA, how do you do. I had a vague notion of what DEEPFAKES are so nice to get a definition. And the global warming guy had to be ALGORE, very helpful. Also learned what to call a group of FERRETS, a total WOE there.
First prize for long-lost crosswordese: EDDA! Welcome back! Long time no see!
I liked your Friday just fine, LS. Learned Some more things the kids (people under 50) are saying these days, and thanks for all the fun.
Definitely a good puzzle. I feel like I spent almost half my time mired in the SE, but the misdirection was very well done IMO -- a tip of the hat to the constructor. I do not agree with Rex's complaints in a number of instances. We've seen this usage of "evening" (even-ing) before, and that's what a CREASE in the shirt is in need of. Glad to have gotten that ironed out. What really held me up in that corner was the string of characters in OEUVRE. I feel like I had the right idea: I really tried to make Opuses (?) work, and certainly the French word traces back to the Latin "Opus". Never mind that "opuses" looks questionable when any Latin student will tell you the correct plural is "opera". I thought maybe the English plural is what people wind up using, because if you say "opera" to mean "works", then nobody will know what you're talking about. HELD SERVE had some mild misdirection in its cluing, but was very fair. I didn't realize at first what this A.Q.I. was (EPA, one of many agencies that have been hollowed out in the first sixth of the way into this goddamn term).
Fantastic misdirection for DELETED SCENES, with "takes" being a noun. Wow. Chef's kiss to that one.
Put in Markle before MEGHAN.
I do not all agree with Rex's complaints about INNER GEEK. A quick googling reveals that it's a phrase people use (it's even the name given to various comic book outlets). Moreover, the whole idea is that maybe some people hide their nerdy predilections in everyday life (like, you know, from guys who make a thing of their BROHUGs and who have historically been unkind to the nerds who walk among us), but then let loose and put them on display when they're in their element and among their peeps. Seems easy enough to understand.
I also sort of dig the really weird and unexpected nouns invented for how animals are GROUPED together, like a "parliament" of owls. A business of FERRETS is completely new to me, and I'm glad to have learned it. Add that to the list.
Thanks, Larry Snyder, for all the fun and the moderate challenge.
Awkward
Nobody hides their comics predilections anymore. They wear them on t-shirts. Absolute nongeeks and nonnerds do this. Embarrassment at comics fandom belongs to a bygone age.
As ever, Lewis, I’m grateful for your indefatigable, indomitable positivity.
Hey All !
Nice FriPuz. Got stuck in SE, had GRasPED in for GROUPED, just could not get the ole brain to see either OEUVRE or VERGE, didn't know CIPRO, and REVUP has an odd clue.
So being stymied down there, I decided to Goog for CIPRO. One I filled that in, saw that my GRasPED would be GROUPED, which made OEUVRE easy to see, and done in two shakes of a lamb's tail. Dang, hate when I just can't go any further, and one little thing that I should've got lets me finish. So a FWH, Finished With Help.
manHUG-BROHUG
hEdGE-VERGE
NEne-NEWT
I just noticed today the if you have ATEA_ in your grid, it can be either ATEAT or ATEAM (or ATEAR.)
Welp, have a great Friday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Best Friday in months IMO. Loved the review especially “…with ComicCon, you're not a "geek"! You're there to see some panel about the latest Marvel movie …” Ha ha ha ha ha.
The one making the payments would be the LESSEE, not the LESSOR. Can’t speak to LEASER as I don’t know the word.
That SE corner left me sweating. What the heck - could not see the EVEN-ING misdirect At. All. And never heard of HELD SERVE.
That said - so nice to have a week of puzzles with sharp teeth!! Keep ‘em coming.
Came here for the explanation of CREASED, thank you. Good puzzle, I got stuck in the SW but enjoyed the solve.
I thought it was a nice grid to wonder around and just sort of mingle in, kind of like I was a guest at a party - I didn’t know everyone, maybe made some new friends, learned a few things - I wish I could “can” that approach and bring it to every grid - treat it as an to be event to be savored instead of a race to the finish line. What is that saying - something about stopping to smell the roses?
It was a touch nostalgic to see the AL GOR(acle) make an appearance, who decades ago looked at the available data, the consensus of the
scientific community, et c at the time and was very prescient in explaining where could plausibly end up absent significantly more intervention than the world was able to muster. It’s also a pretty compelling contrast to the situation in which we presently find ourselves with a president who believes 2 + 2 equals whatever he wants it to equal.
It's LESSOR, not LEASER.
CIPRO really needed some sort of heads up that it was an abbreviation - it’s short for ciprofloxacin. There are no five letter antibiotics that I can think of off the top of my head, unless we include brand names.
This mostly played like a tough Saturday with the exception of the NE which was early week easy. HATEWATCH was the first long entry to fall. This meaning of shade has been used repeatedly. FERRET was my last entry as I fell for that clue until the bitter end.
In the SW I had to overcome a MAN/BRO write over and in the SE GUN hid behind CAM for a long time.
I'm a regular SB player so it was deja vu all over again to see a Thursday pangram appear in the SE. Last night as soon as I got the QB I went right to the Friday puzzle. However I was still slow in getting that answer and when it made OEU show up I wasted time looking for some impossible mistake rather than having OEUVRE just pop up. EDDA was slow coming too as was the spelling of MEGHAN. Over all a good workout with three quarters of the puzzle feeling like pulling teeth.
Flew through 80% then hit the wall in that terrible south east corner. Felt like a totally different experience there. CREASED crossing OEUVRE is a special kind of treachery. Reachy clue + French dropped the solve a full grade from A- to B-
Still, the long downs made for light entertainment.
I spent decades as an attorney specializing in leasing transactions. The owner of property who rents that property to others is the LESSOR; sometimes—but rarely—referred to as the leasor, or as a renter—but never as a leaser.
@tht. I agree with your take 100%.
I loved this post, especially the first paragraph.
I disagree 100%
This puzzle has a lot of clever cluing, especially clues involving ambiguous parts of speech, like DELETED SCENES. But the results are sometimes less than spectacular, like DELETED SCENES. Or SPEED GUN (it's called 'radar gun,' isn't it?) And ABODE clued as a 'building' is a stretch. An abode is a relational term, as in 'my humble abode' it's an abode to you, not to a passer-by, and it may be an apartment or a tent.
And then there's CIPRO. Great entry for a puzzle in Veterinary Weekly, but here, not so much.
I did enjoy the quote from Julius Caesar, but I got EST entirely from crosses.
Thanks for clarifying why the clue wasn’t “Take out the trash.” They got me!
As to that questionable answer at 5D, the LEASE said about that the bettor. OTOH, that CREASED clue smacked of irony.
I saw that Jeremy Lin retired from basketball the other day. I guess that LINTROLLER who heckled him mercilessly will have to find a new target.
I'll HATEWATCH a REEL ALONETIME, but never more.
Wonderful cluing. Thanks ATON, Larry Snyder.
Tough but fair and I appreciated a mild workout after this week of mostly too easies. I applaud Mr. Snyder for constructing a solid themeless with very few proper names and virtually no pop culture. Also much appreciated.
I did find myself bogged down in a couple places. HATE WATCH took me forever because I was thinking of a stream flowing through a shady forest. Had IN USE for UTILE, didn’t know GATO or CENSOR/bowdlerize and for some reason, could not get CHAI to fall into place. Surprisingly, the other trouble spot was BANANA PEEL which was about as straightforward a clue as you could get. As is often the case when I find a puzzle challenging, I look back at the completed grid and wonder why I did.
57A is not necessarily restricted to celebrities. If you want to read about the horrifying potential of AI’s digital alteration capabilities, get The New Age of Sexism by Laura Bates. But be warned, from the very first chapter it will make your blood run cold. Virtually anyone can become the victim of a DEEP FAKE.
What @Lewis said, both paragraphs.
I'm pretty sure most of those cute collective nouns for animals were made up by old Etonians hanging out with a bottle of scotch or two; I once read someone's account of one such incident, but I can't remember who it was. And they're the sort who would be ferret fanciers, I should think.
If your landlord rents out two houses (or abodes, maybe) that are not up to code, he's the LESSOR of two evils.
My problem with MEGHAN was with no indicator of a first name, I just wrote in MARKLE and then when crosses didn’t work still didn’t consider the possibility and decided I was just wrong.
As a doctor, I agree with you on this one. No indication it was an abbreviation seems cheap.
Pretty easy, except I had a tough time in the SW. I wanted DEEP TAKES and EGO HUNT, but I knew HEE couldn't be right. Took a few minutes of pondering to get to DEEP FAKES and EGO SURFS.
Don't really like PAH for "Hogwash"; I suppose the constructor wanted to avoid the same old "tuba" clue. I've never heard the term CARIB.
J’agree
Did anyone put woRkErs before FERRETS for the business: clue? Didn't even think of animal groups until the entire answer was entered and still didn't get the happy music. I changed LEASoR to LEASER and then realized that I had spelled FERRETS and only then understood what was going on. Found this pretty easy - no snags unless you consider that a snag. 16:29
It was not until just reading this blog post that I finally understood the clue "evening out" for CREASED. Like, I made up a whole story for this in my head to justify it... "my shirt is wrinkled, and I'm planning to wear it tomorrow, so maybe I need to hang it 'out' on the line 'for the evening' so that the wrinkles are gone by the next morning?". I was just like... I guess that makes sense? haha
The actual explanation makes way more sense now!
In my case , it was a matter of hitting senior status that I truly embraces my inner geek. As bizarre as it sounds , it was the Big Bang Theory tv show that made me more aware of geeks are cool too (i know an oxymoron for many). But no stranger than my wife becoming a vegeterian after seeing Finding Nemo. My reaction to the puzzle was exactly the same as OFL’s—medium to challenging and trying too hard.
Romps is correct.
Hate watch is like doom scrolling
Not sure how I feel about this one. Lots of good stuff, especially 33A DELETED SCENES for “Takes in the trash”. HATE WATCH at 15A was good, as was 2D WEASELED and 44D OEUVRE. Nice words, nicely clued. Not so 10A GUAC. Why would you take the lovely, flowing guacamole and reduce it to the jarring, ugly GUAC?
SPEED GUN at 36D is a bit suspect. I’ve always called it a radar GUN and it’s used in a SPEED trap, but that could be regional.
I am now, and have been for many years, the owner of properties that I rent out, usually on annual leases. (It’s hard to make a decent living as an artist or a small-time farmer.) I am, in all the documents described as the lessor, not the LEASER (5D). So I did a quick search online for LEASER and the hits came back 10 to 1 in favour of lessor. When LEASER was cited it was described as “nonstandard”. Didn’t slow me down too much but it irked me, nonetheless.
Likewise, I had to check about 7 or 8 sites about 35D CIPROfloxacin before I ran into a reference to anthrax. Trying a bit too hard here, guys. How about UTIs? Or is that a “breakfast test” thing?
It’s 11 pm Thursday and, of course, I have yet to read @Rex, but I’m pretty sure he’ll go ballistic about 50A BRO HUG. I don’t particularly like it either but I’m hoping if we just ignore it, it will go away.
Was really stuck in the SE corner for a while until 58A REV UP finally loomed into view. Thankful for all those hot cars I’ve owned in the past. The V got me 32D HELD SERVE (good clue) and I managed to finish.
Lastly, what’s so INNER about the GEEKiness (3D) of attending a Comic-Con? I thought that was all about openly and proudly displaying your geekiness.
The noun-disguised-as-a-verb trick gets me every time. The clue for DELETEDSCENES (33A) is one of the best ever.
Breezy and fun. I especially liked SWILL x WEASELED, SET SAIL, and VERGE and learning that FERRETS form a business; and appreciated having PONDER atop CREASED so that the unlikely OE got me OEUVRE. "Takes in the trash" - I wish I knew the award I could nominate that one for! HELD SERVE was good, too.
Help from previous puzzles: HATE WATCH, INNER GEEK, BRO HUG, EGO SURF. Help from dividing time between royal watching, novel reading, and fascination with AI horrors: MEGHAN, ELENA, DEEP FAKES.
I've often advocated here for this kind of approach. I like your party metaphor a lot. I've used terms like ambling and wandering and I've even refered to myself as a crossword flaneur. We should host a party in a rose garden.
The person who receives monthly payments is the lessor or landlord. The person making those monthly payments is the tenant or lessee. I’ve never seen or heard him or it referred to as the leaser. The confusion may be because Rex misread the clue and said receiving where the clue for 5 down says making.
Great post :)
Well, if Rex struggled what chance do I have? (BTW enjoyed your write-up Rex).
WOES - OEUVRE, PAH (I'm still in the EEK club), CREASED, HATE WATCH.
CODED & CODAS?
I know it's what guys do these days -
BROHUG - but it made me think of my Father & since it wasn't done in those days, I couldn't picture him doing it even if it was (shrug).
While I can agree with Rex that the NW and SE were the toughest sectors today, my solve was pure Weintraub-Friday easy. C_EA_ED crossing CIP?O and HELD_ERVE were my last hold-outs for the reasons Rex mentions.
GUAC confirmed by GATO (thanks, Duolingo Spanish!) was my entry into the grid. From there it just flowed with brief pauses (hated channel initialisms crossing sports mascots and 45D Shortzian clues) but otherwise all smooth.
Thanks, Larry Snyder.
Medium. No costly erasures but a fair amount of staring caused by tricky clueing…DELETED SCENES, EVENING OUT…. Hi @Rex
I did not know - FERRETS.
I did not know how to spell MEGHAN but I did know how to spell AL GORE.
Very little junk, a bit of crunch, and plenty of sparkle, liked it.
Yes! That's the joy of the morning crossword. I measure my "puzzle time" not in minutes but in cups of coffee. I meander for half a cup early in the week and sometime two cups on the weekend.
PAH --- said no one ever!
Silly business. How many assembled ferrets are needed before a name is obliged to describe the group? I can’t imagine ferrets in any kind of assembly larger than a family group. In which case you’d call it…a family. Perhaps there’s some kind of FerretCon that I’m unaware of?
Struggled in the SE corner, went with held nerve for didn't get broken. Never heard held serve, some kind of tennis thing? So, ended up with creaned & never did sort it out being totally misdirected by evening out!
Nice job, Southside.
You really should go back and read the final exchange about his friendship with Dr Kissinger. C’mon Cass, indeed.
If you’d read maybe you’d understand. What a bizarre comment . Do you think he posted the interview because he likes Sunstein? The interview essentially shreds Sunstein. THATS THE POINT. Read or don’t, but your half-read is not worth talking about.
That Chotiner interview is master class stuff. Most journalists have forgotten how to do interviews that aren’t at least semi-fawning.
Easy-Medium. I felt like a genius at work... until I watched all of Rex's clips from a children's cartoon show. (There can never be too many Simpsons clips. Also pet pics.) Interesting to read that Mr. Snyder sometimes comes up with the clue before the entry. The clues are what make this (a great) puzzle.
I love the word OEUVRE, but I hate how confusing the French language is. Oeuvre, ooh-vruh. Hors d'oeuvre, or-derv (meaning "outside the work"). INNER GEEK was my favorite entry. Reminds me of Triumph at the Star Wars premier. Embrace your INNER GEEK!
Mine on the website says receiving. Would be pretty funny if the editors had no idea one way or the other and changed it at some point after publication.
Great puzzle. Lots of wrong side of the bed energy from Rex today. Weird that he can identify being a bit slower than usual but not being cranky about some perfectly good clues? Love SWILL as the rarely seen literal hogwash, and wanted CREAmED for needing an evening out -- as in tired and needing some sleep!
Thanks for the New Yorker link, hilarious that Chotiner left in the last about going "light on the Kissinger part"
Hmmm.. I did not find this particularly challenging; remember it being fun and 17 minutes is not that long. Loved many of the tricky clues others have mentioned. Hands up for: LESSOR yes, LEASER no; SPEED TRAP or RADAR GUN yes, SPEED GUN nope.
A few too many names in the bottom: AMC MRRED EDDA MEGHAN CIPRO ALPO ORD ELENA. And at 23 down "Variety of violet" I was thinking colors, so... PANSY is a color?
I collected Marvel comics like crazy in the 1970s. When the first Spider-Man movie came out, I thought it was great. Since then it's been a downhill plunge... I cannot stand any of the recent Marvel movies. Tried watching a few but gave up after 5 minutes. So yes I'm a geek, but no I would not enjoy discussing them at ComicCon; sorry Rex!
In tennis, if you HELD SERVE, that means you won the game you were just serving in. If you lost, then one says you were broken, or your service was broken.
Yes, terrific post! What have you done with the Southside who complains about foreign words and proper nouns?
A reason people might HATE WATCH is to to confirm that the show is going to be bad, and why it's bad. For example, someone might hate watch that panel show on Fox with Jesse Watters, just to see what horrible things these people are saying, and to check the pulse of right-wing thinking.
The solve was clunky until I hit 25A and slipped into an AL GORE rhythm.
At 33A, the clue's misdirection is problematical, IMO. Why would you take "in" the trash? You take out the trash.
R. Dangerfield: The other night my wife told me to take out the trash. I said I already took out the trash. So she says, well, go keep an eye on it.
@Anonymous 10:51 am: my 5 down clue in Across Lite also says "receiving" which makes sense. The lessee or renter would be making payments, right?
35 minutes for me so definitely challenging! @Rex, check out the reaction of a Rat to a Cat--even a picture of a cat--how fast they run for shelter. The image of a cat is genetically imprinted in the brain of rats--they know to run. So I think, at least from the rat's point of view, the Gato is the enemy of the Raton! : ) Great puzzle, keep it up, thanks Larry!
SPEEDGUN was a new term for me. I have only ever heard of radar gun and like Rex speed trap. That made SE corner harder than it should have been as I had _p__d__n and wanted speed "something" but couldn't get the 2nd word/ending.
I've certainly said, "Put this in the trash."
There is a sea named after the Carib.
I deem your criticism apt
@tht I agree with your take 100%
My read was take in the trash as in lug the cans back to the garage after they have been emptied. In any event, it’s a question mark clue which indicates that wordplay or something punny is in play. I thought it was a pretty good clue and not at all problematic.
I think Duchess is an indicator of first name
Don’t blame the French. They pronounce both the same since they are in fact the same word meaning the same thing. Both transliterations are pretty amusingly not correct.
¿Estás interesada?
Okay. Done. Pretty slow going. CIPRO and ELENA messed with me, but otherwise patience paid off. I read ELENA is a pseudonym for an anonymous Italian writer... in other words, she's perfect for the NYTXW Friday edition. Reasonably clean and reasonably humorous, so it's a keeper.
Just got my flu and covid inoculation, so I might have autism here in a few minutes since I'm grabbing a fistful of Tylenol. Can you believe this is the world we're living in? Made it all the way to 2025 and left a clown car full of numbskulls in front of video cameras and hot mics.
Love two hogwashipodes in the same puzzle. SWILL was tough to see, but fun to write into the final squares, but PAH started his life in my grid as BAH. I also love WANNA, but I don't know why. Such a weird clue for ALONE TIME, even if it's true.
HATE WATCH is soooo funny. I'm hate watching Letterkenny right now. Nice piece of soon to be forgotten trivia on FERRETS.
In case you were wondering, thanks to the helpful scientific research from our commander in chief, there is no global warming and therefore there is no AL GORE.
My INNER GEEK and outer geek are the same geek.
❤️ WEASELED. BANANA PEEL. OEUVRE.
😩 DELETED SCENES.
People: 4
Places: 1
Products: 5
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 17 of 70 (24%)
Funny Factor: 5 😄
Uniclues:
1 Two questions asked by every hopeful suitor.
2 Activity before asking the two questions asked by every hopeful suitor.
3 What's on the mound after the last out of the World Series.
4 Function of meme-makers.
5 Function of the programming for C3PO.
6 Nickname for Spanish feline comic with too many hacky jokes.
1 ALONE TIME? WANNA? (~)
2 PONDER ROMPS (~)
3 BROHUG GROUPED
4 REV-UP DEEP FAKES (~)
5 INNER GEEK CODED
6 GATO BANANA PEEL
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Mockers. EGOTIST ERASERS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@SouthsideJohnny 9:09 AM
Someone has hacked your account.
¿Estás interesada?
Okay. Done. Pretty slow going. CIPRO and ELENA messed with me, but otherwise patience paid off. I read ELENA is a pseudonym for an anonymous Italian writer... in other words, she's perfect for the NYTXW Friday edition. Reasonably clean and reasonably humorous, so it's a keeper.
Just got my flu and covid inoculation, so I might have autism here in a few minutes since I'm grabbing a fistful of Tylenol. Can you believe this is the world we're living in? Made it all the way to 2025 and left a clown car full of numbskulls in front of video cameras and hot mics.
Love two hogwashipodes in the same puzzle. SWILL was tough to see, but fun to write into the final squares, but PAH started his life in my grid as BAH. I also love WANNA, but I don't know why. Such a weird clue for ALONE TIME, even if it's true.
HATE WATCH is soooo funny. I'm hate watching Letterkenny right now. Nice piece of soon to be forgotten trivia on FERRETS.
In case you were wondering, thanks to the helpful scientific research from our commander in chief, there is no global warming and therefore there is no AL GORE.
My INNER GEEK and outer geek are the same geek.
❤️ WEASELED. BANANA PEEL. OEUVRE.
😩 DELETED SCENES.
People: 4
Places: 1
Products: 5
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 17 of 70 (24%)
Funny Factor: 5 😄
Uniclues:
1 Two questions asked by every hopeful suitor.
2 Activity before asking the two questions asked by every hopeful suitor.
3 What's on the mound after the last out of the World Series.
4 Function of meme-makers.
5 Function of the programming for C3PO.
6 Nickname for Spanish feline comic with too many hacky jokes.
1 ALONE TIME? WANNA? (~)
2 PONDER ROMPS (~)
3 BROHUG GROUPED
4 REV-UP DEEP FAKES (~)
5 INNER GEEK CODED
6 GATO BANANA PEEL
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Mockers. EGOTIST ERASERS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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