"Breaking Bad" sister-in-law / WED 10-22-25 / Natural remedy that's used to treat anxiety / David Bowie's astronaut persona / Whirling visual effects in video games / Food spread popular in England / Black prom rentals / Establishes what is, informally / Spots for cozy dates / Young woman, in Australia / Subculture associated with skinny jeans / Idiomatic sticking point
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
Constructor: Jesse Guzman
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
Theme answers:
The FISSION part of this puzzle is confusing to me, and not ... necessary? I'm just not sure what it has to do with foreign numbers (or baseball). I mean, yes, you have a series that you have to account for, i.e. "why this series of numbers?," but FISSION? Just because your "8" answer is the guy who co-discovered it? This feels so arbitrary to me. I'm no longer asking "why this series?" but I am still asking "why?" There's no clear / natural / automatic connection in my mind between the series 2, 4, 8, 16 and FISSION. At first I thought FISSION was totally unthematic, and that the puzzle had decided to do this mutually cross-referencing thing with OTTO HAHN because he and FISSION just happened to end up in the same grid, so why not? But it seemed a big distraction. Why would you cross-reference one of your themers? Why would that cross-reference sit dead center, which is where thematic material might naturally sit? I would've ignored FISSION completely if the cluing on OTTO HAHN hadn't forced me to wonder what the hell was going on. So the (foreign, for some reason) numbers are (I think) supposed to represent a nuclear chain reaction, a splitting and resplitting (of uranium-235?). But I still don't really get why the puzzle goes nuclear at all. Or what the nuclear bit has to do with specifically foreign numbers? Or baseball? Lots of things happening in this puzzle, but their relationship to each other doesn't make much sense to me. The WORLD SERIES does start this week (Friday), so the baseball part, at least, is timely. The part where we celebrate The Bomb? Or the numbers of the world? That, I understand less. I hope you understood and (thus) appreciated this puzzle better than I did.
- DOS AND DON'TS (17A: Some basic guidelines [2, Spanish])
- FIRE OPAL (26A: Fluorescent gemstone [4, Danish and Norwegian])
- OTTO HAHN (44A: Chemist who co-discovered 26-Down [8, Italian])
- SEIZE THE DAY (52A: Carpe diem [16, French])
Fission is the process by which an atom splits in two. Fission can occur spontaneously, via natural decay, or through controlled chain reactions initiated by people. Either way, the process releases a tremendous amount of energy. Nuclear power plants harness this awesome power, but so do nuclear bombs, and there are myriad environmental, social and political concerns raised by human use of this process. // An atom contains protons and neutrons in its central nucleus. In fission, the nucleus splits, either through radioactive decay or because it has been bombarded by other subatomic particles known as neutrinos. The resulting pieces have less combined mass than the original nucleus, with the missing mass converted into nuclear energy. (Live Science dot com)
In nuclear physics, a nuclear chain reaction occurs when one single nuclear reaction causes an average of one or more subsequent nuclear reactions, thus leading to the possibility of a self-propagating series or "positive feedback loop" of these reactions. The specific nuclear reaction may be the fission of heavy isotopes (e.g., uranium-235, 235U). A nuclear chain reaction releases several million times more energy per reaction than any chemical reaction. (wikipedia: "Nuclear chain reaction")
The dominant contribution of fission neutrons to the bomb's power is the initiation of subsequent fissions. Over half of the neutrons escape the bomb core, but the rest strike 235U nuclei causing them to fission in an exponentially growing chain reaction (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc.). (wikipedia: "Nuclear weapon design") (emph. mine)
• • •
The FISSION part of this puzzle is confusing to me, and not ... necessary? I'm just not sure what it has to do with foreign numbers (or baseball). I mean, yes, you have a series that you have to account for, i.e. "why this series of numbers?," but FISSION? Just because your "8" answer is the guy who co-discovered it? This feels so arbitrary to me. I'm no longer asking "why this series?" but I am still asking "why?" There's no clear / natural / automatic connection in my mind between the series 2, 4, 8, 16 and FISSION. At first I thought FISSION was totally unthematic, and that the puzzle had decided to do this mutually cross-referencing thing with OTTO HAHN because he and FISSION just happened to end up in the same grid, so why not? But it seemed a big distraction. Why would you cross-reference one of your themers? Why would that cross-reference sit dead center, which is where thematic material might naturally sit? I would've ignored FISSION completely if the cluing on OTTO HAHN hadn't forced me to wonder what the hell was going on. So the (foreign, for some reason) numbers are (I think) supposed to represent a nuclear chain reaction, a splitting and resplitting (of uranium-235?). But I still don't really get why the puzzle goes nuclear at all. Or what the nuclear bit has to do with specifically foreign numbers? Or baseball? Lots of things happening in this puzzle, but their relationship to each other doesn't make much sense to me. The WORLD SERIES does start this week (Friday), so the baseball part, at least, is timely. The part where we celebrate The Bomb? Or the numbers of the world? That, I understand less. I hope you understood and (thus) appreciated this puzzle better than I did.
Theme aside, I found the cluing hard on this one. My first pass at the NW yielded hardly anything. I'm in CAFES all the time and almost none of them are "cozy" and no one is on a date there, so no luck there. CBD OIL was also a total mystery until I had many crosses. Wanted ETHNIC before FUSION (3D: Kind of cuisine). Well, not wanted wanted, but suspected. Hey, is FUSION in here because it pairs with FISSION? Is that some kind of nuclear physicist in-joke? I feel like this puzzle is speaking a language I don't understand, or, like it's a dog whistle, and some of us are dogs but it ain't me. The colloquialisms GET CUTE (22A: Act smart) and especially "SING IT!" (8D: "You got that right!") were hard to parse. I've never called anyone named Cameron "RON" before, nor did I know that was a thing people did. I only know one Cameron personally, and he goes by "Cam," so even that little answer was giving trouble today. The clue on SUITS was baffling to me. After LIMOS and TUXES I had no idea what prom-related thing could be happening there (38A: Black prom rentals). There's no tight relationship between SUITS and prom in my mind. Of course one can wear a suit to prom. But looks like much (if not most) prom attire is not black at all. So the clue seems defensible but also kind of arbitrary and bad.
I watched all of Breaking Bad but it's been a decade or so, so I couldn't remember MARIE's name without multiple crosses. [Establishes what is, informally] just left me staring. What a weird way to clue IDS. I would've thought MEN were [A little under half of humanity], but instead we've got the awkward plural MALES. I would never pluralize MALE unless I was talking about animals. Livestock, maybe. I like IRISHISM as an answer, but boy I did not get IRISHISM as an answer without help (32D: Expression such as "Top o' the mornin'"). The IRISH part ended up being not too hard, but that -ISM needed help. I thought a second word was coming, not a suffix. The puzzle felt not hard but harder than usual for a Wednesday. That doesn't mean it was bad. I think the longer answers were pretty nice; any time you can get ten (10!) answers of 7 letters or longer into an already heavily thematic grid, and those longer answers are overwhelmingly solid-to-very solid, that's impressive. PROP BET ASTEROIDS COALESCE GROUPIES MAJOR TOM ... I love all those. And I especially love MARMITE, not because I actually love MARMITE (we are a committed Vegemite household), but because I love remembering that MARMITE exists and some (mainly British?) people love it. One person who enjoys MARMITE is the actor Bill Nighy, who has a great new podcast called "Ill-Advised" ("a podcast for people who don't get out much...") where he gives people advice on ... well, anything. Men's fashion. Partygoing (or non-going). Etc. It's short and it's funny and it's British and MARMITE comes up. Oh, and he gives you a little music playlist at the end. Give it a listen. You'll like it, I'm pretty sure.
What else?:
- 39D: Young woman, in Australia (SHEILA) — I've been to NZ many times because that's where my wife was born and where her family lives, but in the half dozen or so times I've been Down there, I've somehow never been to Australia. I'm hoping maybe next time we get over there. Don't think I'll be calling anyone SHEILA, though. Seems like a neutral enough word. Brief online inquiry suggests that the term is maybe less commonly used today, and perhaps seen by some (in some contexts) as derogatory or condescending (the discussion on this Reddit thread is interesting), but again, not having any direct familiarity with the place, I can't say.
- 55A: Picasso's "___ Demoiselles d'Avignon" ("LES") — I knew this, and yet some part of my brain was like "are you sure it's not 'DES'?" So I left the first letter blank and eventually SOMALI confirmed the "L."
- 54D: Subculture associated with skinny jeans (EMO) — is this still true? Feels like a 2004 stereotype, but maybe the aesthetic persists. Wikipedia agrees with me about the '00s-ness of it all. "Emo fashion in the mid-to late 2000s included skinny jeans, tight T-shirts (usually short-sleeved, and often with the names of emo bands), studded belts, Converse sneakers, Vans and black wristbands. Thick, horn-rimmed glasses remained in style to an extent, and eye liner and black fingernails became common during the mid-2000s." (wikipedia)
If nothing else, this puzzle taught we the Norwegian word for "four," which I'm sure to forget by tomorrow, but for now, I've learned something.
That's all. See you next time.
And hey, Daniel. Yes, you, Daniel Studenmund. Congrats on your 1000-puzzle streak. I've written about thousands of puzzles, but I've definitely never had a 1000-puzzle streak (when I take days off I take them off). So, good job. Please say hi to your wife and your puzzle-loving Chicago-area family :)
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117 comments:
Medium Wednesday, but I'm as confused about the theme as OFL
Overwrites:
Ramp before RISE for the slope at 6A
Boa before BED at 29D
tUxeS before SUITS for the 38A prom rentals
WOEs:
Anything Breaking Bad related, including sister-in-law MARIE at 36A
Dora's sidekick BOOTS (60A)
Chemist OTTO HAHN at 44A
I just learned about Vegemite recently (thanks to crosswords) and now you throw MARMITE (48A) at me?!?
And let me add my congratulations to @Daniel Studenmund. I'm impressed!!
Needed one cheat, to get chemist Hahn's first name. If I had looked carefully at the clue I'd have guessed "Otto" from "Italian #8." Lazy me...at 5 am.
Maybe another blogger can explain how the clue "Me!" applies to IDO. i wouldn't dare say it at the altar.
I just saw the fission connection. It’s how the number of splits goes up exponentially. 2 4 8 16. The opening of each answer is that number in a different language, hence “World Series”. This certainly led to some unpleasant grid crossings.
Challenging for me. And I railed (to myself) when I saw that the puzzle wanted SUITS for black prom rentals. No--if you're going to rent something black for the prom it's a tux. And I didn't get the theme at all until I got here, the parenthetical notwithstanding.
A Thursday puzzle, come on a Wednesday. Through the whole thing I felt like I was missing something. Baseball, foreign languages, nuclear fission/fusion . . . What’s the connection that I’m not seeing?
I love the way a good themeless puzzle pings from one area of knowledge to another, lighting up all those different parts of my brain. In a theme puzzle, though, there’s the implication that something ties those areas together—that’s the theme. Today’s theme tries to carry too much weight, IMHO.
I was thinking it’s the answer to a question like, “‘Who wants a cookie?”
Very hard. Not on the same wavelength as the constructor at all. I count at least eight answers that were either unknown (e.g. MARIE, BOOTS) or given a clue that was tortured beyond reason (e.g. IDS, SINGIT).
"Who wants the last piece of pie?"
"Me! I do!"
The theme felt very forced - almost like the constructor had a kernel of an idea, ran with it and ultimately came up short. There’s got to be a more enjoyable way to get to WORLD SERIES as the reveal.
The rest of it wasn’t much fun either. Hopefully, SING IT is regional and somewhat popular somewhere. The clue/answer combination for SUITS is as cringeworthy as they come. IRISHISM is one of those words/answers that the NYT team adores but the rest of us probably won’t encounter again for a decade. I’ll bet SHELIA is wondering how she got talked into this as well.
Hopefully just a wavelength thing and I’m an outlier, but boy I wasn’t feeling it with this one.
A dad says to his children…”who wants to go get ice cream?” [answer]
Hey All !
Only 1000? Har. I've been doing the daily puzzle for many years now, can't recall when I first seriously got into it, 2010-ish? Maybe 2012, but I must have had some long stretches, as I don't/didn't go on vacations much during that time. And now, it's all on your phone wherever you go. So, yeah, maybe if I kept better track ...
Still, Congrats to Daniel.
Anyway, took a minute to figure out what in tarhooties the bracketed thingies in the clues meant. Got the gist at DOSANDDONTS, as I know DOS is Two en español. Figured SEIZE was 16 in French, don't know French. But, the Theme helped me get OTTO for Mr. (Dr?) HAHN, and got a small delight to learn FIRE is four in Norwegian and Danish.
Different type of Theme, several layers as Rex pointed out. Fill pretty good, with all the Theme running about.
My Earth shattering post is done. Har.
Have a great Wednesday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I had that "Simpsons" trading card and "Murder By Numbers" is one of my favorite Police songs.
Both of those are infinitely better than this puzzle, which tried to do way too many things at the same time. Annoying clues, annoying answers, bad themes, bad fill.
I finished it, turned to my wife, and just said, "Ugh, that puzzle suuuuuucked."
I live in Australia and calling a woman a sheila is mildly derogatory. It may have been popular slang about 60-70 years ago, but those days are long past.
Agree with everyone, I got the theme etc. but didn’t love it or the fill. And my pet peeve du jour, the BREATH is not controlled in meditation, it’s observed.
I think my biggest quibble is that the "World Series" of baseball only includes two countries. But while I found this challenging for a Wednesday, I enjoyed it. I saw the fission pair just as a cute combo apart from the theme - didn't make the connection until reading the blog. So thanks Rex!
Now that you point out that FUSION is in the grid too, all I can think about is Hahn/Meitner as a RAP DUO.
1597 days for me at the moment. But congrats to Daniel from me as well.
Omg thank you!!
Why fission, and this series? Well, I wouldn't get my feathers up. 53 Down. Van Morrison. It Ain't Why, It Just Is.
Hello Mr. Speer,
If we get the crossword in under 6.7 minutes, can we please get extra credit???
Best,
The entire class
As disjointed a theme as I can recall, not to mention cringeworthy, with nuclear fission the apparent theme (or one of them). Guess we're lucky FALLOUT isn't there too. Or HIROSHIMA.
Unfortunately spoiled the apparent theme suggested by central placement of WORLD SERIES. (Red Sox fan here...Go Jays!)
Don't favor clues in quotes that (way too loosely, IMO) suggest equivalent phrases. I've heard and used "You got that right" a zillion times; the next time I hear or say "SING IT" will be the first.
PROPBET?? i had cRaPBET for awhile, what is a PROPBET? No one rents a SUIT for the prom, thy rent a tux, they rent a limo. I do not hate many puzzles, but I did this one
En eso tienes razón.
Whew that took some brains, but I got it. And I like the exponential rise in the series.
I love having FUSION and FISSION sharing space.
We rented TUXES to go to prom. Maybe times have changed.
❤️ GET CUTE.
So many grumbled about last Saturday's face melter, but it was the only puzzle in a week with much humor. Today we get another goose egg. I'm going to drop off a rubber chicken at headquarters if I'm ever in New York. We'll start with the basics. They're forgetting how to laugh in the tower.
People: 8
Places: 1
Products: 7
Partials: 6
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 24 of 70 (34%)
Funny Factor: 0 😫
Uniclues:
1 Chuch.
2 Lady serving up a nuclear catastrophe.
3 Pour Guinness into a redhead and listen.
4 My practice is sitting on a toadstool and thinking about a lady serving up a nuclear catastrophe.
5 Sit on the moon and use the knee machine.
1 DOS AND DON'TS ORG
2 FUSION WAITRESS
3 SENSE IRISHISMS
4 I DO FISSION ZEN
5 ASTEROID REHAB
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Angel who rawks hard. HARP AX MAN.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I knew it was Wednesday because I had to get the trash out early this morning, then started in on the puzzle and had my doubts. Finally started on the bottom and worked up, but no whoosh whatsoever. The numbers in parentheses meant nothing at all and I had the whole thing filled in before I went back and saw them in the different foreign languages. Sheesh.
Lots of WOE's here--IDIN, BOOTS, SINGIT, Mr. HAHN, PORTALS as clued and probably some others. I have heard SHEILA used as clued, I think the male counterpart is BRUCE.
Major roadblock up top as I had the central ND and confidently wrote i GROUNDRULES for DOSANDDONTS, which fits and makes perfect sense but is not helpful in discovering other answers.
The Foreign Language Department in high schools is now the World Language Department, at least around here, so the WORLD of WORLDSERIES at least made some sense. Thought the numbers/baseball connection was a real stretch though.
Thorny Wednesday, JG. Just Got my late week fix early. Thanks for some tortured fun.
Scenes from a first-rate constructor’s mind:
• Learning “fire” means four in Danish, and thinking to find other foreign language numbers that mean non-number words in English.
• Noting that 2, 4, 8, and 16 are possibilities, and seeing WORLD SERIES as the theme.
Wow!
This is the second day in a row where the grid had fewer answers than typical for the day. A Wednesday averages 76 words; this grid has 70, allowing for longer lovely answers like COALESCE, MARMITE, and WHY YES.
My brain loved the thorny cluing. Also, hello CBD OIL, welcome to the NYT puzzle. You are popular and you were due.
Jesse, you have a chance to make crossword history. Only one constructor -- Andrew Ries -- has hit the cycle (a puzzle for every day of the week) in their first seven puzzles. You, with Tuesday through Saturday puzzles in your first five, have a chance to become only the second. Go for it!
And thank you for a puzzle that kept me absorbed and delighted!
During a FISSION chain reaction, the number of neutrons produced rises exponentially. So, in the beginning nanoseconds of the process, we have have 1, 2, 4 , 8 neutrons. That is to say, an exponential SERIES. Because these numbers are represented by their names in different languages of the WORLD in the themed answers, we have a WORLD SERIES. A stretch, but I think it’s obvious that’s what the creator was going for. Especially with the bonus answer of OTTO HAHN, the father of nuclear fission and whose first name is Italian for "8". Why anybody would think there was an attempt to link baseball to fission is beyond me.
I guess tuxedos are SUITS, but it’s still a ridiculous clue.
Menzel: And what does your job as a bouncer entail?
Bouncer: IDO IDS IDINA
What are the POLES doing in here without a Polish number?
In the hierarchy of nicknames for Cameron, first was Cam and then came RON.
I just read an excellent book by TC Boyle (The Tortilla Curtain). Maybe next I'll try one by CBDOIL.
Where exactly is one's CRAW?
I suspect the FISSION/FUSION/OTTOHAHN stuff is a serendipitous mini theme, but hope I'm wrong. Thanks for the whirled series of clues and answers Jesse Guzman.
As a physics geek, knew OTTO HAHN and got several of the other answers immediately; nonetheless, this was not a smooth solve for some reason, as I bounced around the grid a fair bit. That said, my time was only a minute above my Wednesday average and the experience was enjoyably challenging. Combine that with the cleverness of the construction and them and the timeliness of WORLD SERIES and the puzzle was, for me, the best Wednesday in recent memory. Kudos, Jesse Guzman!
Yes - clue for SUITS is the worst one ever!
Rex side-eyed the clue for MALES (appropriately), but was it just plain wrong?
According to the internet there are 101 males worldwide for every 100 females. I thought I knew that, so I confidently wrote in WOMEN.
DNF, I could only think of wING IT or maybe bING IT (from bingo!) RISE should have occurred to me but it didn’t. And I never figured out the numbers and countries either.
I did get ASTEROID eventually, but I spent long hours wondering if there was some special term for the holes in my belt. The belt equivalent of “aglet.”
Alice, you may not watch a lot of sports, or else you tune out the ubiquitous ads for sports gambling (in which case, kudos).
While I do know what PROP BETS are, I'll loosely translate as "a more exotic means of losing your money".
Players are from all over the world. Torontonians aren’t playing Angelenos.
Difficult but not fun. Count me in the group that wants the NYT puzzle to be more difficult, but not like this. It should earn it, give you an a-ha! when the answer clicks into place. This was just veering and zagging with clues in ways no one would ever use, that you go ok I guess but that doesn’t really work. Cafes, suits? Like sure but the clues just move way further from the answer than is reasonable rather that come at them from an unexpected angle. Just frustrating that this seems to actively work against its own enjoyment.
Agree with Smalltowndoc . . .and though I felt this puzzle was in a language I spoke, I resisted "fission" because the other reference was "chemist" and fission isn't a chemical reaction. The point? Knowing the language was probably as much of a distraction as not knowing it. My biggest achievement was filling in the name as "ID_NA" and leaving for later whether it's an I or E. The memory of Marmite made me gag (one taste, long ago). And Prop Bet?
I had/have no bleeping idea what is going on in this puzzle, and if Rex can't explain it to me, I am truly lost.
I get the DOS for a Spanish 2, and that's about it. The Danes and Norwegians have 4 FIRE OPALS? FIRE is the Danish and Norwegian word for 4?
CARPE DIEM means SEIZE THE DAY. What does 14 have to do with it?
And of course the SUITS thing, where I initially had LIMOS. I'm pretty sure that a black suit is gauche for a prom. You'll look like an undertaker. The gals won't dance with you. Listen -- you either wear a sharp tuxedo or you wear a great blazer. Black suit indeed.
This puzzle seems like a complete mess to me. My guess -- though I'll never be able to prove it -- is that the young, mostly unnamed Puzzle "Department" that the NYT put together a few years ago handled this from start to finish and that Will Shortz never came within 50 yards of it.
Over the years, amazingly, all of the suits in my closet shrunk. (Both of them.) So when I needed to wear a suit to some ridiculous event and I tried to squeeze into one, it wasn't even close. On the plus side, my wife had a good laugh. That's when I learned that the tuxedo rental place in town also rented regular suits. But I agree that the association of black suits with proms is tenuous.
As in a cheesy Sci-Fi movie, "We're entering the ASTEROID Belt."
If there was a CATORZE clue, The answers would nicely show how the Series (2) comes from League Championship (4), Division Series (8), & Wildcard (14) games.
Tough puzzle - way over my average time.
The number 16 (not 14) in French is SEIZE (pronounced "sehs")
RedSox fan here too, long time. Go Mookie and Kike!
What a bear! And as far as my own attempts at it … what a mess! I’d like to meet the fiendish BRUTE at the New York Times who decided to run this puzzle on a Wednesday.
After slogging through a first run, like RP, I wondered WTH was going on and felt absolutely dazed at the collection of trivia. A musical, a Broadway someone, an astronaut, a Picasso, a chemist, a TV show, another TV show, an African language, rappers, a mysterious subculture, a sports bet, a British snack, Touches and Shuffles (WOE?), with the numbers and foreign references adding to the confusion. After reading the explanation, that part at least makes sense, but it wasn’t much help when I was staring at all that blank space.
Can’t recall ever taking a worse crossword beating in the middle of the week. After this epic struggle, I may need to try some CBD OIL to cope with an already stressful DAY. I look forward to the joy of a simple Thursday in comparison.
Agree completely. Two answers for that clue are TUXES or LIMOS. Even farm kids don’t rent SUITS.
Yeah, the SUIT thing kind of got me thinking and I did a little search. It seems to indicate that in public high schools these days, the suit/tux rental ratio is about even. Other parents said that they BOUGHT their sons their first suit for prom, but renting suits these days for prom is a “thing.” It does kind of figure. These days, how many men do you see out in the wild wearing suits? So having a satin lapel isn’t really necessary to feel really dressed up.
Well, now, that all depends. Breath control is very much coupled with meditation in the classic Yoga techniques developed in India. But in various Buddhist traditions, a basic meditation technique is "following the breath", without particularly controlling it, but attending to it as you say. So it depends on the particular meditation traditions that one is practicing.
Congrats to Dan! I’m at least 1800 - hooked by the pandemic - and this blog!
This *has* to be a South Park reference. Right?
Thanks for the explanation on WORLD SERIES!
This was first puzzle ever where I felt I had to learn more about the creator. Not much on the internet other than he is quite young and is considered a “modern era” puzzler. But there was enough to it pretty clear that having both FUSION and FISSION in this puzzle was not pure happenstance. I blew the numbers theme because I had no idea that FIRE was Norwegian for “four”. That made the rest of the clues with numbers a lot harder than they should have been. Anyway, with help from this blog this puzzle was a kind of physics primer with sports wordplay, not a bad Wednesday outing, tho maybe a bit tough on our solver’s ego.
A PROPosition bet is one where someone, say, bets you they can do something which seems unlikely if not impossible. They know something you don't or they wouldn't make the PROP. The one that comes to mind: hitting a golf ball 100 yards with a putter (across a frozen lake!)
I suppose the fact that the only two countries represented in the World Series are predominantly English-speaking adds a layer of irony to the theme—French and Spanish are of course well represented in both, but not Italian, Danish, or Norwegian.
Concerns about a gendered binary aside, MALES is used instead of MEN because, before they turn 18, a significant portion of that population is BOYS.
I really appreciated having a Wednesday that presented a bit of a challenge. I didn’t know FIRE was four in Norwegian but once I had OPAL I did know there is such a thing as a FIREOPAL. I confess I pretty much guessed on OTTO but it worked, so great! I’ll also confess that for some reason Fibonacci came into my mind (because I don’t even know enough to be dangerous in Math) but then realized that is (I think) a “sequence” and not a SERIES.
My timer indicated at completion that I was a few minutes slower than my average Wednesday, and I thought…”is this an oversized puzzle.” Nah…it just put up some nice resistance.
Interesting to note that this year's World Series actually includes teams from two countries, contrary to the customary American exclusiveness.
@egsforbreakfast 9:30 AM
I'm happy to show you my CRAW if you pop on over with my GROUPIES, but I don't think you're gonna like it,and it might AROUSE "suspicions."
I started my streak the day we found out about the birth of our kid, and kept that going through his birth and toddlerhood and a second kid, but broke it when we all went to Disneyland when he was two and a half and I lost track of the time zone shift (and collapsed in the hotel room, utterly exhausted). 1280 days!
Maybe I’ll get there again. Currently I’m at 66 so it’ll be a while.
1000 is always worthy of celebration! Good job, Daniel!
I got the first theme answer right away with no crosses because of the whole language thing (“hmm…it’ll have something to do with the Spanish for two, which is dos, so…DOS AND DON’TS it is!”) and yet it still played very hard for a Wednesday for me. Didn’t help that I’m unfamiliar with OTTO HAHN, and not knowing MAJOR TOM meant that I left TUXES in as the black attire for the prom far too long and thus gunked up the SW corner where MARIE also lay. Guessing BRA for GPA didn’t help the NE corner (thinking the A’s and B’s were cup sizes, but having no idea why they were good). Oh well. I accepted those as being on me, not the puzzle (which they are), but it was good to come on here and learn that Rex and many others likewise found it hard for a Wednesday.
I was stumped by SING IT as well. Not in my lexicon.
Nancy, I think that's right. Here's what I think looking at it. I don't know how much German you've encountered, but the first few natural numbers there are null, eins, zwei, drei, vier. Where that last, the word for "four", is pronounced something like "fear". That consonant v in German often switches to an f when forming cognates in other Germanic languages, like English, Danish, and Norwegian. For example, Vater in German is Father in English. I don't know Norwegian or Danish, but my SENSE is that "fire" is pronounced like "feareh", more or less, and based on the resemblance to the German one might guess it indeed means "four". We the solvers are instructed by 34 across to ignore the OPALS part, in trying to make sense of the theme.
Let me SING IT - this was awful.
Glad to see most everyone else was confused, frustrated, annoyed, etc., etc. Misery loves company. In spite of it all, I did manage to slog through it.
Good point. And consider that in the NFL, Super Bowl winners are referred to as a World Champions without even a second country involved.
If you're truly interested, you can find out what a prop bet is through an Internet search much more easily than a comment on this blog. Prop bets are in the news every year during Super Bowl time, when people are betting on how long the national anthem is, what color Gatorade will be dumped on the winning coach, etc.
Wrote this late last night. Just read Rex this morning and he sort of cleared up a few things but I'm not going to rewrite.
Not my fave Wednesday. Sorta felt sure about the theme from SEIZE THE DAY (52A, 16 French ), OTTO HAHN (44A, 8 Italian), though I didn’t know his last name for a while, and DOS AND DON’TS (17A, 2 Spanish) though I initially mistyped it, causing me some of the old self-inflicted pain. But FIRE OPAL (4, Danish and Norwegian) was a mystery.
I know the WORLD SERIES starts in a few days. Go Jays!* But I didn’t think the theme really worked. Is 2 x 2 x 2 x2 really a series, mathematically speaking? I’ve confessed here in the past to my total lack of math knowledge but is 2, 4, 8 & 16 a series? In any language? Is it my anumeracy or is it the puzzle?
Three of the four theme entries were fine phrases (sorry, Otto, never heard of you) but I just didn’t get the SERIES thing.
Toughest part of the grid was the top centre where I had to deal with my misspelled DOSANdonots. Didn’t know IDINA Menzel and I DO (as clued) and SING IT didn’t resonate with me. So that was a time-eating mess.
* Don’t tell any of my fellow Canadians, but I was secretly rooting for the Mariners. After all, I like Seattle I have a dear friend there (actually in Issaquah, but close enough) and it’s only about 2 and a half hours down the road. I feel they are more my home team than Toronto is. And the Mariners are, as far as I know, the only team to have never gone to the series.
Very tough for me. Between the WOEs…PORTALS, OTTOHAHN, MARMITE, CBD OIL…a couple of costly erasures…MorphED before MUTATED and oASes before CAFES…and quite a bit of tricky clueing..this one took a while to finish.
Plus I’m still not sure I understand the theme so I’m with @Rex and many of you on this one.
Today I came in a few minutes under an average Wednesday time, so I guess it did not feel that challenging. Although, OTTO HAHN is probably not that familiar a name if you're not a scientific type of person. And I plunked down IRISHISM right away, because... well, I guess my weird brain just works that way. So in some SENSE Mr. Guzman and I must have been on the same wavelength.
Very chemical sort of puzzle. I don't know "Breaking Bad" (I've heard good things), but from what I understand, chemistry looms large in that SERIES, and I expect that the name MARIE, either here or on the show, is a sly reference to Madame Curie, who was a POLE by birth. So we have FISSION, FUSION, ISOMER, MARIE, and OTTO HAHN as has been mentioned.
I lived in Australia for a couple of years, and I can only hear SHEILA in my mind's ear as spoken in the voice of a ruddy-faced man who is in his fifties at least, and who exhibits tendencies towards MALE chauvinism and condescension to women in general. I didn't hear the word much when I was there, but the type of guy who might use it is all too familiar. I'd avoid it myself.
To Rex: I think MALES would be natural in a phrase like "MALES between the ages 12 and 24". You wouldn't say "men" there because 12-year-olds are not men, and "men and boys" seems awkward when you have this perfectly acceptable word MALES just sitting there waiting to be used.
Kudos to whoever commented above that the geometric sequence 2, 4, 8, 16 (I didn't say geometric SERIES; to a mathematician that's something slightly different) is likely a referent to something like neutron emissions in a radioactive chain reaction. I DO not have any better ideas. And why this, as a theme? I don't have an answer to that either. Not a bad puzzle, just A BIT puzzling is all.
@Whatsername: not really in mine either, but I imagine it as being shouted, as in "SING IT, sister!". Similar to "Amen!"
A 70-worder with the Jaws of Might-almost-as-well-be-Themelessness. Tough WedPuz meat.
Saw the possible DOS/WORLDSERIES connection, but FIRE-OTTO-SEIZE weren't in my numeric vocab. Plus, the OTTOHAHN over MARMITE corner was no-know territory, at our house.
staff weeject pick: IDO, mainly cuz of its {"Me!"} clue. Trump's response to the oath of office [with no hand on the Bible, I noticed] = "Me!", sooo ... I guess that at least works, here.
Runner-up: RON ... I reckon as in CamRON nicknamin?
Nice weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.
some fave stuff encountered durin the sufferin: COALESCE. ASTEROID & clue. DURABLE [cuz it had a clue that actually made sense to m&e]. FUSION & FISSION, which also were fishin trip highlights.
Thanx for the feisty solvequest, Mr. Guzman dude. It was "Ground Control to Major Challenge".
Masked & Anonymo6Us
... and now, here's a little more pump for yer kin ...
"Boo!" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
Spooky M&A
p.s. While at the grocery store checkout region, spotted the latest National Geographic mag. Its title and entire contents: "Secrets of the SUPERNATURAL - Dare to Discover the Truth". M&A's reaction: "Me!" [and bought it, of course]. har. Great stuff!
It is 16, which is seize, in French. I liked the puzzle, I liked the theme and I like anything with Major Tom. Bowie made an Italian version of the Major Tom tune, with very different lyrics (Raggazo Solo, Ragazza Sola).
Managed to get it all except naticked on the D of the Idina/Ido cross. Totally did not see any connection between baseball & nuclear fisson
& wasted bunch of time trying to decipher a baseball related something from the starts of the theme clues. Call me clueless today I guess!
Triviafest slog. Why would the constructor clue WAITRESS as a proper in a corner that is jammed with MARIE, OTTOHAHN, MAJORTOM and MARMITE?
Excellent choice of music today! I was lucky enough to meet him
Agree. Should have been tuxes or limos. This was the toughest Wednesday I’ve ever seen, a real workout,
I was with you on ground rules, especially since it seemed we had a baseball theme.
2, 4, 8, 16, ... is a geometric progression. It is also a series of numbers, in the conversational sense. In mathematics, series is an uncommon term having to do with sums. I see the connection to physics, but I think that it got into the puzzle just to get OTTO, the Italian word for eight.
I guess I noticed the theme at 17A when DOS = 2 in Spanish stuck out in the answer. But I was never able to grasp it enough to use it and OTTO would have really helped in the SW. I was having a heck of a time with 44A, 38D, 34D (which is now obvious) and having 36D as MorphED. Yep, that'll gum up the works just dandily.
I kept entering words into the NW while keeping an eye on that CBD filling in at 1D but that eventually turned into something recognizable.
SING IT? Wha?
Cam vs RON? Who would name their child CAMERON and then choose to use RON as a nickname? Unless you really hated your full name and also Cam?
No idea what a PROP BET is. IDS clue was horrible. You're not renting a tux, just any old suit for prom? Sheesh. I was so set to enter LIMOS as that answer (I'm sure that's the direction the clue wanted me to go in) but MAJOR TOM was a gimme (finally one I knew right off. Oh, and LENA I knew also.)
It's been so long since I hate-quit watching Breaking Bad that I couldn't remember MARIE. Seems like that could have been tied into the atomic radiation discussion of FUSION, FISSION and OTTO.
Thanks, Jesse Guzman, for what's probably going to be the most challenging puzzle of the week for me.
Would someone explain to me why we're trying to connect FISSION with the theme? The clue for 26D that I saw was Atomic reaction co-discovered by 44-Across which is a cross-reference to OTTO HAHN. To me, the theme is WORLD (Spanish, Danish, Norwegian, Italian, French) and SERIES (2,4,8,16). No FISSION needed, in my opinion.
You will be disappointed to learn that the holes in a belt are called "belt holes". That's according to the AI overview that always pops up uninvited when I do a Google search. But it added that they could also be called "notches".
Even if the modern "thing" is to rent suits for prom, I can't imagine many rent *black* suits, which are almost exclusively worn for funerals.
To treat it otherwise would be improper.
Doc, you see WORLD SERIES and *don’t* think of baseball?
Did anyone else already remark on the fact that FISSION splits WORLD SERIES?
Thanks for asking and to Anonymice for answers! It turns out I make these bets from time to time with my SO. “Bet you a kiss there are 5 previews.”
Actually, CRAW is what Maxwell Smart insists on calling KAOS villain The Claw, who repeatedly corrects him Not CRAW! Claw! and Max always answers, OK CRAW, OK . I, for one, will always find this funny.
Series elimination games, 16, then 8, 4, final 2.
I'm sorry ... but this was the first time that I wanted to learn less about the 'creator.'
I'd say that FISSION appears to be intentionally connected to the theme, because when you highlight OTTO HAHN in the completed grid, both FISSION and WORLD SERIES light up, crossed in the center of the grid (in the NYT web version, at least). And the geometric progression 2,4,8,16 is characteristic of how a fission reaction proceeds. So while WORLD SERIES is a timely reference to the "climactic baseball event" that begins this week, the theme is really about OTTO HAHN and his discovery.
I'm with you.
Found this as confusing as most others. I believe I grokked all apparent aspects of the theme – the language trick, the exponential series, the timeliness of the WORLD SERIES reference, etc. – but this theme is a total mess.
Sure. I'll give you a 5.
Weird but fun puzzle. It's like 3 different ideas mashed up into a theme.
Only one Unknown Name here (IDINA) but some answers clued using names that don't help (eg WAITRESS and BOOTS). Always annoys me a bit.
Re WORLD SERIES... in 1992 I was living on the downtown peninsula of Vancouver which is a quite dense forest of high rises. When the Blue Jays won, there was an impressive roar as all the neighbors ran out to their balconies to celebrate, which gradually died down. Then about 15 minutes later there was another roar which gradually built up... the streets were filling up with people celebrating. Good times!
I found the RON nickname strange also. I’d say more, but might get in trouble.
Ah, @tht…you hit my “series v. sequence” thoughts in my post. Of course, my thoughts were borne of math ignorance, but I like it!
I love your Jays/Mariners sentiments and totally get it! I dunno. I also can tend to root for teams due to proximity…AND friends!
@tht. Totally agree with your description of the guy who would call a young woman a Sheila. My son, his lovely wife, and my beautiful grandson live in Brisbane. They have also lived in Sydney and Alice Springs (so glad they got out of there), so I have travelled the island continent visiting them. Sheilas does seem chauvinistic but that may just be because old, ruddy Aussies seem generally to be chauvinistic.
But then I recalled my travels in Ireland where young women are frequently referred to as Colleens. But I don't recall it sounding derisive. So I looked it up and found that Colleen derives from Cailin, old Irish for young woman or girl. So Colleen is just a descriptive term, like lass in Scotland, whereas Sheila derives from ... what? And why does it sound dismissive? I shudder every time I hear it.
This is probably why I think language is more fun than math.
@Jared and @Nancy….yes. I guess I “blocked” the ‘black” part of the clue. Touché! But…does anyone these days have suits for funerals? Yikes. Since we’re getting “up there” I may need to make sure my husband has one!
In a class by itself. And not a good one.
My streak is at 2,615 right now. I’m always curious how many longer streaks there are.
Ah, not solving on the NYTimes app, I didn’t get the light up. Thanks.
My thought is that Black in this context is a noun. So it is "Black Prom" you renting a suit for, but I am not an expert in Black culture. Ziggy Stardust was Bowie's astronaut persona, Major Tom is a character in one song. He never did a series of concerts/albums as Major Tom but he did as Ziggy Stardust.
@Beezer -- Don't you worry your pretty little head about it. Not for yourself, not even for your husband. Here's why:
One of the things that my mother, who passed away in 1993, told me about funerals was that only the immediate family needed to wear black. "You can wear any dark color that's not festive, such as yellow or red, Nancy," she said. "Dark brown. Dark gray. Navy. Only the immediate family is expected to wear black." My mother said these words with the certitude of Moses descending from the mountain. Since my mother was the least opinionated and dogmatic person you can possibly imagine, I took her words as Gospel and comported myself accordingly. There was no Google or internet back then, but it never would have occurred to me to try to confirm her statement.
So, this is the first time I've actually looked the matter up. And my mother was absolutely right. Here is one confirming Google citation:
(I've somehow futzed up my cut and paste citation; don't ask me how. If possible, I'll put it in my following post below this one. Or perhaps not...
2. Do you have to wear black to a funeral?
In short, no. When it comes to knowing what to wear to a funeral that’s not black, there are an array of alternatives that men and women can wear. Although black is the most traditional of colors, smart and dark clothing is also acceptable.
Wearing dark grey or deep blue is just as appropriate as black, while brown and lighter greys are suitable for the vast majority of funeral services. However, unless specifically requested by the deceased or their family, you should avoid any bright colors such as yellows, oranges, pinks, and reds.
@Les. I won't comment on language versus math, except to say I love both, as may be apparent.
I just spent the last few minutes looking a little more closely at Sheila versus Colleen (for example), and it seems that "sheila" can be used more neutrally than what I just evoked. But at the very least, it is considered somewhat old-fashioned.
I pretty much hewed to Sydney (where I had a post-doc) and the southeastern coast (NSW, Victoria, and Tasmania). So I never got out to Brisbane, or Alice Springs. But I really loved living in Sydney. The confluence of the beaches with the Blue Mountains (which I experienced as more like canyons; you take a train trip to the top and then hike down and back up), not far away from the city, is really very special. And to this American, the flora and fauna were as if from another planet, enchanting and unforgettable.
Interesting fact about one of the themers
Otto Hahn had a colleague and friend who worked on the theoretical question of nuclear fission with him until she had to flee Germany because she was Jewish. Her name was Lise Meizner. She got little credit at the time , more so now, but my understanding is she was an equal partner. I think they even discussed the question in their exchanges of letters after she escaped.
It does irk me a little when Hahn is mentioned and she is not in reference to fission.
I've heard "Sing it!" shouted out to vocalists from audiences many times, not unlike hearing "Preach!" (sometimes in church, sometimes elsewhere) when someone is agreeing strongly with something somebody said. I don't think that was such an obscure one, at all.
The World Cup is the true "World Series" of sport. Nothing else comes close.
tht and others
Amen is a good reference.
But also specifically the Black American church community.
Whether it has spread much beyond them I wouldn’t know.
There's a tradition in some African cultures to wear red at funeral ceremonies, because the color symbolizes loss or mourning. At least at one time, some people in New Orleans also wore red to funerals, no doubt because the Africanist roots in the city's Black community remained predominant for a longer time there than they did elsewhere. In some versions of the song "Stagger Lee," when Stag died and women came to his funeral, "some come dressed in orange colors, some came dressed in red."
Kazakhstan recognizes the winner of the World Series as its winner.
When Kushnick died, not one person in the whole village had a good word to say about him. He was a schmuck. The rabbi was upset: A man passes and not one of you can come up with one good thing to say as he enters the next world?? What's wrong with this community? Slowly, an old man in the back row gets up and makes his way to the front. He leans over the podium and says: His brother was worse.
Okay. I saw this (and others before about streaks) and I’ve ALWAYS wondered why anyone cares about a “streak.” And, I’m not being flip or sarcastic. Ok. One bizarre scenario that comes to mind for me: Honey, I think I might have appendicitis…can you take me to the emergency room? Okay…but do you mind if I work puzzle while you’re in surgery? (ok…that does sound “flip”) All I know is I’m RETIRED and things happen that take precedence over working the puzzle. And I LOVE working the puzzle.
I misspelled Lise’s last name in my last comment Lise Meitner was Otto Hahn’s colleague who worked on the theoretical question of fission.
I as usual liked the puzzle more than most. Did think it was on the hard side but I get the theme when DOS registered. Also I knew of OTTO HAHN. I know French. And even knew the Swedish word for four which is close. Tht I know about HAHN not so much for my knowledge of theoretical physics ( very little) but because of my interest in WW Ii history, specifically the background if the development if the atomic bomb. Also the fact that Lise Meitner had to flee Germany because she was Jewish as part of the history of how Germany lost so many of its scientists. leading up to the war.
Good catch!
@Les…may I introduce you to @tht and (likewise). I think you have a lot in common…and I say that with respect.
Thanks Nancy! I’ll let my husband buy a black suit if I kick off first! Okay…I will say right here…”Mr. Beezer…PLEASE don’t squander your money on a black suit if I kick off first”! (Just wear the charcoal gray)
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