Calendar month between Sha'ban and Shawwal / SAT 10-25-25 / Especially gratifying, so to speak / Suffix meaning "rule" / Mocap suit components / Geometry term from the Greek for "uneven" / Busby Berkeley musical film that introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You" / British slang for a police car / Slender hospital tools / Oldest four-letter papal name / Printing mark whose name is from the Latin for "is lacking" / 1992 U2 hit inspired by German reunification

Saturday, October 25, 2025

Constructor: Byron Walden

Relative difficulty: Medium, maybe a bit harder


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: PHILO Farnsworth (9A: ___ Farnsworth, inventor dubbed "The Father of Television")


Philo Taylor Farnsworth (August 19, 1906 – March 11, 1971), "The father of television", was the American inventor and pioneer who was granted the first patent for the television by the United States Government.

He also invented a video camera tube and the image dissector. He commercially produced and sold a fully functioning television system—complete with receiver and camera—which he produced commercially through the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation from 1938 to 1951, in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

In later life, Farnsworth invented a small nuclear fusion device, the Farnsworth Fusor, employing inertial electrostatic confinement (IEC). Like many fusion devices, it was not a practical device for generating nuclear power, although it provides a viable source of neutrons. The design of this device has been the inspiration for other fusion approaches, including the Polywell reactor concept. Farnsworth held 300 patents, mostly in radio and television.

• • •

[43A: Brand for which General 
Foods distributed orange-handled
coffeepots to restaurants]
Harrowing. Thrilling. One of those amazing solving experiences where it feels at every moment like the wheels are gonna come off, but somehow I keep moving forward, repeatedly getting stuck and then repeatedly finding the slenderest paths through, bouncing and careering around the grid—more like running for my life than solving a puzzle. Like Indy being chased by that boulder. And somehow I survived, without any marks or broken bones. Pretty much an ideal Saturday puzzle. Hard clues yielded familiar answers, so I just kept trying to get enough crosses so that I could hallucinate some kind of word out of the often meager evidence of the letter patterns. This is how I got RAMADAN (1A: Calendar month between Sha'ban and Shawwal), for instance, as well as B PLUSES (8A: Some solid marks) and SCALENE and many others. And despite being hard, the puzzle didn't contain much that I'd call obscure, or even ... off. RIB SHOT seems a little off (I wanted GUT SHOT, which has the virtue of being a phrase I've heard of before, but the non-virtue of involving the "gut" and not the "chest," as the clue indicates) (1D: Sharp blow to the chest). If I'd ever heard of PHILO Farnsworth, I sure as hell forgot about it—that was the one answer in the puzzle where I was like "... if you say so!" Otherwise, behind the big bad clues were a lot of old friends. SUN RA and MEL Ferrer and Brian ENO. My guys. But the names largely stayed out of the way and let the longer answers shine. The best part was the big-answer collision smack in the middle of the grid. BETTER THAN SEX / "I CAN'T TALK"–if something is better than sex, so much better than sex that it leaves you speechless ... well, that sounds pretty great. I'm happy for whoever got to experience that. In short, the puzzle was hard without being crushing, and it made me work—it made me slip and slide and flail, but not fail. BETTER THAN SEX? Probably not, but still, pretty great. 

[43D: Leader of the Afrofuturistic jazz collective Arkestra for almost four decades]

This puzzle was harder than it should've been for me, in retrospect, because of tiny errors that had big consequences. Challengers is about tennis, so I went for the tennis org., but there are (at least) two tennis orgs. (USTA and ATP) and I stupidly conflated them, ending up with ATA (American Tennis Association? It seemed right!). And that second "A" in ATA made me think that 17A: 46 years? was the BIDEN A... -DMINISTRATION? But that wouldn't fit. But what else was it going to be? “Administration" is what you call the "years" of a president's term. That, or ERA, which was obviously too short. Making matters worse was the fact that I'd written in LOOT for 10D: Treasure hunter's find (LODE) and that wasn't just "confirmed," it was double-"confirmed" (by B PLUSES and "I HAVE TO BE HONEST"), so why in the world would I suspect it was wrong? This is all to say that the PRESIDENCY part of BIDEN PRESIDENCY managed to stay hidden for too long, even as answers filled in around it. (In case it's not clear, the clue is [46 years?] because Biden was the 46th U.S. president). I never got so bogged down again after that, but there was still plenty of challenge to be had. 

[24A: 1992 U2 hit inspired by German reunification]

DAMES is gonna be pretty obscure to most people, but I've seen that damn movie and I still couldn't grab hold of it, grrr (25A: Busby Berkeley musical film that introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You"). I had -CRACY instead of -ARCHY (39A: Suffix meaning "rule") and absolutely no idea what to do with FISHY, despite having the "F"! ("Suspect" means soooooo many things, it turns out!) (28D: Suspect). FISHY -ARCHY ended up being a real hold-out—the very last thing I got. But the only thing besides PHILO in the grid that made me go "????" was PANDA (29D: British slang for a police car). After wanting and then rejecting PADDY (wagon?), I inched my way toward PANDA, which I at first thought was some kind of ampersandwich (P & A?), but then quickly realized was just PANDA, the black & white bear that (I guess) has similar coloring to British (and American) police cars. Although ... when I look up [British police car], literally every example looks like this, so unless there is a kind of PANDA that is blue and yellow, I'm a little confused:


Bullets:
  • 18A: Sudden movement (START) — I had SPASM—like LOOT, double-"confirmed," this time by RIB SHOT and MADAME X (3D: Titular figure in a scandalous John Singer Sargent portrait)
[MADAME X]
  • 20A: ___ Maroni, Gotham city mobster in the DC Comics universe (SAL) — no idea, but SAL does seem a plausible "mobster" name, and the crosses were ultimately easy enough
  • 48A: Where gold "beaver coins" were used as currency (OREGON TERRITORY) — the "beaver" bit was too much of a giveaway. Oregon is the Beaver State, after all. I got the "TERRITORY" part first and OREGON just went right in.
  • 11D: La ___ (leading Belgian French-language TV channel) (UNE) — Didn't know you could do that. Usually if you have a definite article preceding a word that starts with a vowel in French, you get a contraction, i.e. L'UNE. But then if you wrote it that way, it might be confused with LUNE, Fr. for "moon," so ... there we are. La UNE. Asking me to know a Belgian TV channel seems like a big ask, but it's a small enough word, it's a common word, it's ultimately inferable. 
  • 12D: Mocap suit components (SENSORS) — easy if you know what a mocap suit is. "Mocap" = short for "motion capture"
  • 14D: Slender hospital tools (STYLETS) — wanted LANCETS, possibly because that's the name of a famous medical journal.
  • 26D: They might go faster with zinc (COLDS) — so ... "go (away) faster." Is this true? I remember taking Cold-Eeze or some other zinc things years ago when I would get colds, but I think I eventually decided they didn't really do much and that rest and fluids really was the only way through. I'm just getting over a cold and my wife is just getting under one. I love October, but it is definitely the Month Most Likely when it comes to my getting sick.
  • 37D: Even, or nearly so, at Wimbledon (ON SERVE) — had "ON-" and wanted ONE ONE? ONE ALL? Not very apt, and didn't fit. Also, ONE ONE and ONE ALL are exact ties, and the clue says "or nearly so." You can be ON SERVE (where no player is up a break) and have an uneven score (e.g. if it's 4-3 and the "3" is serving, the players are ON SERVE)
  • 47D: Oldest four-letter papal name (PIUS) — PIUS is also the most common epithet for Aeneas in the Aeneid. Just a little classical literature trivia to round out the blog today.

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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115 comments:

Rick Sacra 6:17 AM  

22 minutes for me this morning, I think it was luck. Got BIDENPRESIDENCY and LODE pretty quick. SW corner was the last to fall. Had a very vague impression of SUNRA's name which came back to save me in the end. Had TERRITORY and EXECUTIVE but couldn't figure out what the beginnings were. uno before GIN messed me up, and also BADaura before BADMOJO. The M in MEL helped me out--once I got the L from SCALENE, seemed it had to be MEL. SAL was already in the grid, after all! Loved the long marquis crossers. I agree with OFL that this was a pretty brilliant puzzle from an old hand, thanks Byron!!!!! : )

Anonymous 6:22 AM  

i thought he was Doing a Thing with ONE being related to a bunch of other 3-letter entries (UNE, ENO), so when i got to 49-down, i put in UNO without thinking (which i probably would've anyway). curious if it was intentional!

Scot 6:40 AM  

Tough but fun puzzle! Experienced yet another “living in a poorly designed simulation” moment (all too common lately) when the Sun Ra clue gave me my first answer - I’ve listened to nothing BUT Sun Ra this week, and finally started reading the Szweb bio.

Anonymous 6:59 AM  

You missed a tennis org - ATP is just for men. The WTA is for the ladies

Anonymous 7:07 AM  

What he said.

Anonymous 7:17 AM  

pious

Son Volt 7:18 AM  

I am a little partial to Byron’s work - but this was one of the greats. At first look it’s all white space - 16 black squares - a very handsome grid layout. It wasn’t easy but the longs were workable and it eventually fell. The four spanners are solid and that central down is classic.

The Mystery of Two

Misdirects everywhere - but it is the weekend. A lot of second and third alternate meanings. Loved DOE EYED, TINKERER and SCALENE. Some obscuria for sure but a few educated guesses helped.

There’s A Light Beyond These Woods

The B PLUSES plural really irked me - especially crossed with the ugly BESOTS. Those are the real outliers today.

Southside

Easily in the discussion for POTY - a highly enjoyable Saturday morning solve. David Williams’ Stumper is also solid today but a rare weekend when the NYTXW prevails.

Gonna Put My Face On A Nuclear Bomb

Anonymous 7:24 AM  

The term Panda cars originated when British police cars were black and white. Before they adopted the Battenberg cake design in blue and yellow for the sides of the cars.

kitshef 7:24 AM  

Surprised post-solve to see this was by Byron Waldon, whose puzzles normally kick my BUTTS. But I found this easier than yesterday’s name-fest.

SUNRA was a head-scratcher, although I suspect he/she/they has been in the puzzle before with those friendly letters. [researching ... Okay, it's 'he'. And ten appearances overall, but none since 2021. If it's another four years, I probably won't remember him next time, either.]

Anonymous 7:32 AM  

This took 24 minutes longer than my average Saturday and I loved it. The South came together faster than the North. I had to get over LOOT at 10D and POTSHOT for 1D. As soon as I figured out RIB, I saw the BIDEN and then everything else came together. Great fun!

Lewis 7:36 AM  

Just as with yesterday’s puzzle, I look at the finished grid and there are hardly any answers I haven’t heard of, but to get from the blank grid to that finished grid, I had to break through a barricade of riddles.

But there is a difference. Yesterday, with its effervescent wordplay, felt like a party. Today felt like scratch and claw.

And I like both.

Today for me had a Rollercoaster Moment, where you’ve been fussing and laboring, grinding like a rollercoaster climbing its initial huge hill, then it reaches the apex and is motionless for a precious instant, and then comes the “Wheeee!”

Suddenly, in the puzzle, you fill something in, and from the crosses it produces, the curtains fall, and bam bam bam what was opaque is suddenly obvious, and for a bit, answers cascade in a begat-fest. Heaven.

The grid has the fine Walden trademarks – answers from a wide range of fields, uber-vague clues buttressed by some uber-witty wordplay clues, and a remarkably junk-free grid.

All melding into the experience I hope for on Saturday. Byron, your puzzles after 24 years in the Times, are sharp as ever. You are a treasure. Thank you for another splendid outing!

Bob Mills 7:36 AM  

Maybe the hardest puzzle I've solved without cheating in memory. My breakthrough was OREGONTERRITORY (because of the beaver reference). I was hung up on "-?-residence" before recognizing BIDENPRESIDENCY, which filled out the difficult NW. Took well over an hour altogether.
Question: Why is a blow to the CHEST a RIBSHOT? They're separate organs.

Lewis 7:41 AM  

p.s. – As usual in Byron’s puzzles, there is remarkable freshness. Today, nine NYT debut answers. Debut answers aren’t always good, but this set is, IMO: BAD MOJO, BETTER THAN SEX, BIDEN PRESIDENCY, I CAN’T TALK, I HAVE TO BE HONEST, JUNIOR EXECUTIVE, OREGON TERRITORY, RIB SHOT, TAX FILER.

Raymond 7:59 AM  

As a ex South African l had "MARIA" before "PANDA" for UK police car as in "Black Maria" but now l read in Wiki that "Black Maria" is also colloquial in the US.

SouthsideJohnny 8:00 AM  

I enjoyed the aha moment when BIDEN PRESIDENCY came into focus, but that was pretty much the only highlight up north, which I found to be a real bear to solve.

I had a much easier time down south, where things like BANDS, NURSE and of course the nod to the ubiquitous pot of SANKA made me feel much more at home. I also thought the clue for JUNIOR EXECUTIVE was almost Robynesque, which is high praise indeed.

Andy Freude 8:02 AM  

Just brilliant. Byron’s puzzle, that is, not my solve. Worst error: BIDEN’s RESIDENCe. D’oh. Also thought a mocap suit might be a mohair suit that comes with some headwear.

That whole SW was a sea of white for the longest time, but when things started to fall into place, that was some whoosh. That’s why I do crossword puzzles. Bravo, Mr. Walden!

Man, that “Dames” clip sure has a lot of Ruby Keelers (and hardly any Dick Powell).

Anonymous 8:05 AM  

“Organs”?

Anonymous 8:05 AM  

“Separate”?

RooMonster 8:12 AM  

Hey All !
Toughie today, but I ultimately got through it. Although full disclosure, had I HAtE TO BE HONEST/AtERS in for my Almost There! Argh! I knew ATERS wasn't really anything, but couldn't see AVERS. Ah, me.

Did you know ALASKA and OREGON have the same amount of letters? And both have beavers?
Had garcY for ARCHY. Not even sure if -garcy is a suffix! Thinking maybe Oligarchy. But that has an H thrown in there.
NOOB or NEWB? That is the question.
BUTTS crossing ASS in SW. Har.
Started writing in SCALPELS for 14D, ran out of space.
Clever clue for HAIKU.
Seeing Farnsworth reminds me of the TV show "The Warehouse". Awesome Sci-Fi show. Even had a good Series ender.

Welp, hope y'all have a great Saturday!

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

MaxxPuzz 8:37 AM  

I had a very similar solving experience to Rex's. At times I almost panicked but then would get another toehold. Super Saturday puzzle!
Regarding La Une, Rex was correct to expect L' before the vowel. However, the number is used as a sort of name here, so not using the apostrophe sets it off as such. You hear the expression "à la une" frequently in French referring to page one of a newspaper, equivalent to saying "in top news."

Anonymous 8:47 AM  

Mocap suits don’t have sensors. They have a bunch of ping pong balls that the post processing computer senses. These balls are passive indicators.

Also…wait…there was a president Biden?

Coprophagist 8:48 AM  

Similar experience to Rex but got held up by a stupid answer – obamaPRESIDENCY. Just wasn't thinking. Also had BADjuJu for the longest time, stopping me seeing Oregon. Panda cars used to be black and white, even if they aren't any longer.

Anonymous 8:53 AM  

I found today much easier than yesterday. Another Friday/Saturday inversion by the NYT god of XW chaos?

Christopher XLI 9:04 AM  

From The Young Ones:

Anarchist college student: “We want to blow up a panda in Croydon.”
Rick: “Yeah! Bloody zoos. Who needs ‘em?”

(I think cop cars were black and white in the 60’s and 70’s over there and the nickname just stuck.)

Whatsername 9:09 AM  

Harrowing? Absolutely. Thrilling? Only in the sense of running for my life, as RP said. If I were a dog, my tail would be tucked and my paws would be over my head, hiding my face in shame at the pathetic showing I made. Best now to just curl up for a nap. I never had a chance against this beast.

jberg 9:13 AM  

Well, that was a workout. The only things I knew for sure were MADAME X and SUN RA--and I'm sure many solvers didn't know either of them. Well, SANKA was easy to figure out. But with a few crosses longer answers began to appear. I actually figured out BIDEN PRESIDENCY, but didn't trust it until I had 3 or 4 crosses. And the U made me see AHI TUNA and stop looking for some 7-letter kind of rice.

But then there was PHILO Farnsworth, which took all the crosses (honestly, HILO should have told me, but it didn't). And finally there I was staring at that Gotham City mobster crossing an unheard of (by me) hospital tool. The L seemed more plausible, so I put it in, finishing the puzzle, and looked up STYLETS. Bingo!

But I'm not being as positive as I meant to be. The sheer thrill of putting in OREGON TERRITORY from the O and JUNIOR EXECUTIVE from the JU justified everything else.

I guess UNE and ONE don't count as a duplicate; at least they were obscurely clued (while ENO was handed to us on a silver platter).

Now I'll see what all of you had to say.

puzzlehoarder 9:16 AM  

This was 2 minutes faster than yesterday's puzzle. It was a steady 39 minutes of top notch late week solving. The NW was the easiest part. RAMADAN and RIBSHOT were both first guesses. MADAMEX is a famous painting so my SPURT/START write over was easy to fix. The only other write over I can recall was ALASKA/OREGON. A crucial cross was either NOOB or NEWB. The E was of no use but the O gave me OREGON.

HINDUGOD isn't green paint it's chartreuse paint and a perfect example of this puzzles' high quality fill.

DAVInHOP 9:20 AM  

I'll gladly second your nomination for POTY. Was absolutely confident that Rex would love this one.

Lots of chatter here (deservedly) for puzzles trending too easy; not this one. Lots of negativity (deservedly) when puzzles overflow with short, junky crosswordese; not this one.

A rewarding, pleasurable challenge; I'd buy a book of puzzles by this constructor, if one exists...fantastic!!

Anonymous 9:26 AM  

Not to mention the ITF, which is the global governing body of all tennis.

hankster65 9:27 AM  

Rex's description was spot on. Great puzzle. A wonderful solving experience.

Gary Jugert 9:36 AM  

Tengo que ser honesto.

Another good workout, but not as funny as yesterday. More sloggy than enjoyable, but that's because it's smarter than me and I learned a few things along the way.

I just assume everyone uses the same calendar, so finding out about yet another one in the Arabic world is hurting my brain. How does all this work. Do phones say Ramadan the 25th? It's like learning the Chinese have a version of NASA too. 🤯 How did I not know this stuff? I need to get out more.

And of course I know the Hindus have Gods, but if you said they're named Frank and Estelle I'd believe you.

There was a guy on Earth that went by the name Busby Berkeley. Can you imagine if he'd tried to use Tinder to date? Busby? Swipe. He'd probably need to hang out with MEL Ferrer and SUNRA as they're not going on any dates either.

The Brits apparently call cop cars PANDAS and I kinda wish they wouldn't. It's demeaning to pandas. And cops. And automobiles. And the English language.

❤️ [46 years?]. [Shot-putter?]. [Green suit?]. BAD MOJO. DOE EYED.

People: 8
Places: 1
Products: 5
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 4
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 21 of 66 (32%)

Funny Factor: 6 😅

Tee-Hee: BETTER THAN SEX. BUTTS.

Uniclues:

1 Went to war with bottomless mimosas.
2 How you feel after reading the news these days.
3 Participate in a mass murder.
4 How right-wing Vikings describe village pillaging to the media.
5 Does shots with Ben Franklin.

1 RASSLED OPEN BAR
2 BAD MOJO RIB SHOT (~)
3 ORDER UP AHI TUNA (~)
4 NORSEMEN BARTER
5 BESOTS TINKERER

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: One of two dots next to the swoosh. BASS CLEF NIPPLE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

pabloinnh 9:37 AM  

Solved bottom-up again with JUNIOREXECTUIVE being the foundation, although the ___VE going down led to ____LOVE for too long before SERVE finally kicked in (see what I did there? Wanted HINDUGOD but couldn't think of a good answer ending in U, and HAIKU was one of the last things to fall. Didn't help that I kept reading "Mocap suit" as "Madcap suit", which made about as much sense and had me imagining some pretty zany stuff.

Hello to PHILO, LOOT before LODE, POISES looks funny to me, and I liked seeing FISHY and DICEY so close together. And always fun when those long acrosses come into focus and make a familiar phrase. Bravo.

Nice work, BW, But....Wait for it.... I'm giving this one the coveted Saturdazo!, and thanks for all the fun.

Teedmn 9:55 AM  

I'm so happy that my Wednesday prediction, that the Wednesday puzzle would be the hardest of the week, did not come true (as is usual for my predictions - never bet on any of my guesses for the future!) Yesterday was really hard, and today was merely a perfect Saturday challenge.

I had so much fun coming up with ENO and then ONE. The 3-letter musician of crosswordese opened up my NW with that guess. (Is RIB SHOT a commonly said thing?) I was completely blank on 1A as clued but I trusted that it wouldn't be something totally out of the common ken, and RAMADAN fit that bill.

Write-overs - uno before GIN. Deal before DDAY. I liked the 40A clue for BANDS. I'm assuming that we're talking bicycle GEARs at 36D though I would call it lube, not oil.

CARET crossing COLDS got me into the grid and led to I CAN'T TALK.

Byron Walden, as usual, your puzzle is a Saturday treat, thanks!

EasyEd 9:58 AM  

This one reminded me of standing one early morning on a beach in Hawaii staring at a misty offshore fog for a time when the fog suddenly dissipated and revealed a huge aircraft carrier so close it was awesome and unsettling. Some parts of this puzzle seemed impossible and yet after staring for a while whole words and phrases suddenly came into focus. A few DICEY clues/answers like RIBSHOT, but generally great wordplay and clever allusions.

jb129 10:23 AM  

Not gonna lie - the only reason I solved it is because I cheated. But I'm glad I did. What a learning experience from a real pro & what a gem. Maybe one day I'll be smarter - who knows? :)

Anonymous 10:29 AM  

Word for word what Rex said. Kudos!

Anonymous 10:31 AM  

Rental car in Amalfi was a Fiat PANDA, did the Bobbys have B&W Fiats maybe?

Jnlzbth 10:32 AM  

So many answers I didn't know (Busby Berkeley musical, U2 hit, Belgian channel, someone Farnsworth, Mocap, futuristic jazz leader), but I worked them all out from the crosses—even though it took me 51 minutes—which to me means it's a well-constructed puzzle. Good cluing; I especially liked "Green suit?" forJUNIOR EXECUTIVE. Liked learning that British police cars are called PANDAS. All in all, this was a challenging and satisfying Saturday workout. Thanks, Byron!

Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 10:33 AM  

Yeah, me too, I stared and stared, and had a bunch of s's and four or five guesses two of which turned out to be wrong. In the SE I had PIUS and RCA crossing Rassled, and then I put in at dEucE which did not get me anything more. I gave up.

Anonymous 10:37 AM  

Liked FISHY and DICEY side by side

Nancy 10:37 AM  

A good Saturday tussle, or should I say RASSLE? Much less diabolical than yesterday's, so perhaps the days should have been switched. For every really tough clue, some of them, like BIDEN PRESIDENCY, ESCAPEE, HAIKU and BETTER THAN SEX quite clever, there's an easy one like AHI TUNA, ON SERVE, RASSLED and NOOB. Because I didn't suffer today, I found this puzzle more enjoyable than yesterday's. And while there was some world-class cluing yesterday, I did find today's clues considerably fairer. A nice, well-rounded Saturday.

Anonymous 10:42 AM  

Alas, there was a time when government "of the people, by the people and FOR the people " did stuff FOR rather than TO the people

Jnlzbth 10:43 AM  

My reaction was the opposite: This puzzle was much more enjoyable than yesterday's, and yesterday's was the "scratch and claw." I didn't have that "effervescent" feeling yesterday; today I do!

Rick Sacra 11:01 AM  

Wow, I didn't even notice that. Meta-misdirection!!!!!

jae 11:12 AM  

Medium. This was weird for me. I did an initial pass and had almost nothing. I took a brief break to prep dinner and when I looked at it again RAMADAN bubbled up and I was off and kinda whooshing.

WOEs - DAMES, UNE, ONE, SAL, PANDA, ON SERVE, PHILO, and CARET (as clued).

Costly erasure - bEset before GET TO

More than a bit of sparkle, some clever clueing, very smooth, liked it a bunch!

Anonymous 11:12 AM  

RIBSHOT, STYLETS, ATP — really made 46 years inscrutable.

mathgent 11:17 AM  


Too tough for me, I needed five lookups. My fun was the eight reverse gimmes (see the entry from the crosses and then get that it fits the clue). Notably BIDENPRESIDENCY and BANDS. Emmigs?

Anonymous 11:17 AM  

PHILO T. Farnsworth is undeservedly obscure. He single-handedly invented the core elements of television technology as a sole inventor and then had to spend years fighting with RCA to enforce his patents on the invention. Overall, this was a fun challenge, but I hate POISES, which seems entirely wrong.

Anonymous 11:23 AM  

Can someone explain the clue 46 years? Biden was the 46th president but what does the term “years” mean? Clue should have been just 46th?

Hack mechanic 11:27 AM  

For a while they had a florescent red stripe & everyone called them jam buttie cars because they looked like jam sandwiches

Hack mechanic 11:37 AM  

Tough to get a toehold today.
Ended up in the SE corner, had territory & executive but just couldn't see it cause of uno for gin. Saved by nurse for shot putter (what a brilliant clue) and the whole thing just fell into place, woosh!

Sam 11:37 AM  

Tough one. 30 mins! Really had to piece it together from few early footholds. Loved it. Saturdays are the best.

Anonymous 11:39 AM  

Where precisely are your ribs, Bob? Mine are in my chest.

Anonymous 11:41 AM  

FYI Professor Farnsworth from Futurama takes his last name from Philo.

Anonymous 11:58 AM  

Presidents are sometimes referred to just by the number. So saying “46 years” ends up akin to saying “the Biden years”

Anonymous 11:58 AM  

“Years” collectively = PRESIDENCY. I definitely wanted something ending in ERA after the countless times I’ve seen mentions of presidents in clues for ERA.

Sami 11:59 AM  

Pius Poises. Rightous. So nice, I wish I could solve it twice.

Anonymous 12:00 PM  

I tried UNO, erased it, and then got UNE but I forgot that UNO was wrong. So I kind of rolled my eyes at a dupe that wasn’t there at all.

egsforbreakfast 12:04 PM  

Not much time to post yesterday or today (I can almost hear some of you saying "Thank God") thanks to solo granddaughter weekend while her parents and Mrs. Egs are out of town on separate trips. She's currently watching K-Pop Demon Hunters for the 67th time (look up 67 if you don't know about it), so I'll sneak in a comment.

I loved both yesterday's and today's puzzles, although today's violated the dictum that neither sperm NORSEMEN will be acceptable in the NYTXW.

I just got the new credit card for lunatics -- MADAMEX.

We're going to a barbecue next week. We like our beer cold and our RIBSHOT. Of course if we drank too much beer we'd BESOTS.

Gotta run. Thanks for a wonderful puzzle, Byron Walden.

Carola 12:06 PM  

Gratifyingly challenging, and I have to give myself a DNF (according to my own "rules") because I had to check a square. Unlike others who've commented, I found this one a lot harder than yesterday's and even more fun to grapple with. I did a first pass through the Acrosses and came up with a grand total of HUMS, MEL, and SANKA, having rejected BPLUSES because I couldn't confirm any crosses and HINDU GOD because I didn't believe "Eastern lines" could end in a U. But then, going back up top for the Downs, there came AHI TUNA and MADAME X,and HOPE began to dawn. The LODE of stellar answers kept me in good cheer during the struggle. May Byron Walden return soon for another Saturday.

Sami 12:16 PM  

@Roo are you talking about Warehouse 13? That show is weird as hell.

Anonymous 12:28 PM  

Exactly the same experience and exactly the same time to complete.

Anonymous 12:34 PM  

The contrast in smoothness between yesterday and today is striking. I guess this is why the NYT pays more to veteran constructors; their cluemaking skills are just so much better.

Une can be a pronoun, a number or an article. For some reason, numbers in French don't get the le/la elided in front of them. The soccer team gets called, "le onze." But if une is a pronoun, then the elision would happen.
It's especially tricky, for me at least, with "les unes." Which is pronounced as lay-zoons if unes is a pronoun but lay-oons if unes is a number.
No one said French was easy!

John Hoffman 12:36 PM  

For much of this year, I’ve found that Fridays and Saturdays have not been that difficult. I’ve can finish them! Not so for today. Today was a Did Not Finish, but I appreciated the puzzle as being well-constructed and clueing being fair. Do I need to increase my solving skills? Yes yes!

Sailor 12:40 PM  

@Jnlzbth, I'm with you! This was one of those grand puzzles that seems impossible at first, then miraculously comes together with a series of Aha! moments. Yesterday's, not so much.

Jonny 12:44 PM  

It’s wonderful to come here and find a similar shared experience. Especially at a time when it seems so difficult to relate to so many. Thanks for doing what you do!

beverly c 12:50 PM  

Love this - it was right there!!

Whatsername 12:50 PM  

@Fall River: Along with SANKA and the occasional S, my big breakthrough was I CANT TALK, but it didn’t help much.

Anonymous 12:56 PM  

All three replies, culminating with, “where precisely are your ribs, Bob?” made me laugh out loud. In partial defense of Bob, though, the clue does make me imagine some kind of hit to the pectorals in the vicinity of the heart, and rib shot makes me think of a punch in a boxing match that comes low and from the side and hits the boxer just above the waist. So, I get Bob’s initial confusion.

Anonymous 12:59 PM  

When was that? Not in my lifetime.

Gary Jugert 1:10 PM  

@egsforbreakfast 12:04 PM
I watched the trailer for K-POP Demon Hunters and I gotta say you get Grandpa of the Year Award. Nothing worse than zombie boy bands stealing the souls of the fans. If more grampas turned off the news and took time to hang with their grandkids the world would be a kinder place. B+'s 4 U BRO.

beverly c 1:11 PM  

Rex, I love that first sentence! It was just like that.

My first pass through I had bravely written in DICEY, ONE, ENO, I CAN'T TALK, COLDS, SANKA, TINKERER, RCA and NURSE. I took out and rewrote I CAN’T and DICEY about ten times. I just could not get the crosses.

MOCAP suit - is this men's apparel or maybe musicians rights law suits? No idea. A head slap moment when I got here. JUNIOR EXECUTIVE was a highlight I didn’t see coming. But it gave me the X for the other prize answer, BETTER THAN SEX. Yay!

The north was very slow to show itself. I was stuck thinking the painting was Salome - maybe a French spelling Salomee, Salomen? Then I finally got MADAME X, and I was near the top of the coaster's big drop. Whew!

Very rewarding to solve, and the kind of puzzle that makes me come back for more.

Anonymous 1:11 PM  

What a delightful Saturday puzzle. Just challenging enough that nothing felt like himme and I felt satisfied when I finished. Not so challenging that I wanted to light my phone on fire.

Les S. More 1:12 PM  

Maybe not a tougher puzzle, really, than yesterday’s, but definitely tougher for me, particularly because of the clue/answer combo at 17A. As a non-American, I don’t keep track of my political leaders by number.* 46 years was just a mystery to me. And a great aggravation. NE section took me at least as long as the rest of the puzzle. Aargh!

It really shouldn’t have made me this upset. It’s actually quite clever.

The rest of the puzzle played hard but fair. The grid spanners near the bottom went in quite easily from just a few crosses and those two answers provided the EX that facilitated BETTER THAN SEX. But there was shorter stuff that was quite difficult, like HOPE against HOPE. I’m pretty sure I’ve heard it but I’m not sure what it means. And PHILO. Really? And a Belgian TV station to go with him. Really? I know what POISE(S) in the singular is - a quality of grace and self assurance that I may have possessed for a few short periods in my life - but as a verb it just seems suspect. And speaking of suspect, I loved FISHY at 28D.

Didn’t have a clue about ATP or ON SERVE. Guess I should have spent more time watching tennis and less time listening to SUN RA - a gimme - I’m listening to “Thoughts Under a Dark Blue Light” as I’m typing this.

* I doubt I will ever refer to Mark Carney as 24, Yes, I had to look it up.

JazzmanChgo 1:15 PM  

Isn't a RIBSHOT delivered just BELOW the chest, not TO the chest? Seems that way to me.

JazzmanChgo 1:17 PM  

The Arkestra's longtime saxophonist Marshall Allen is 101 years old, and he's still playing (although he doesn't travel out of town anymore)! Almost as much of a miracle as Ra himself was.

okanaganer 1:25 PM  

@Andy Freude, hands up for BIDENS RESIDENCE!

Mike 1:27 PM  

Absolutely brutal for me. I had to look here for like half the answers, I just could barely make any purchase and had enough mistakes in there that there was no hope for me making any progress. Glad other people enjoyed the high difficulty, but this one wasn't for me.

Les S. More 1:30 PM  

I've always spelled that MARIAh, pronounced muh-rye-uh, as in one of my favourite Tom Waits songs, The Big Black Mariah.

okanaganer 1:35 PM  

So nice to have a challenging Friday followed by a rewardingly challenging Saturday. Pretty much exactly what Rex said; clawing and scraping my way through it but finishing without cheat/errors in 22 minutes... seemed a lot longer!

I knew PHILO Farnsworth but couldn't remember the first name without the help of a cross or two. Only Unknown Names were SAL and MADAME X. Today I learned STYLETS which I have never heard. And SCALENE?... probably knew that 45 years ago but forgot. And BETTER THAN SEX!... got a bit of a... umm... thrill from that.

Don Hood 1:37 PM  

My initial entry for 51 Across: Green Suit?
Jolly Green Giant
I discovered it was a misfire in short order, but I still like the concept!

okanaganer 1:37 PM  

@Les, I'm glad we don't number our PMs; don't give anyone ideas!

Masked and Anonymous 1:38 PM  

Pretty much a toss-up, IM&AO, between the FriPuz and today's 66-worder, for hardest of the week. Reckon I'd give a real slight edge to the FriPuz, as it had more no-know names.

staff weeject picks [of only 8 "hopefuls"]: ENO, MEL, and SAL. The namedropper weejects. Only SAL was a no-know, tho, at our house.

fave thing: BIDENPRESIDENCY. Recalls many fond memories of bygone days of sanity and non-sadism. Coolly clued, too boot.
Also, real partial to the BANDS clue, btw -- threw this math major a slight curveball, at first.

Some longballs fell quickly, which sure helped my solvequest a ton: BIDENPRESIDENCY. NORSEMEN. ICANTTALK. HINDUGOD. The BETTERTHAN??? part of 16-D [had a few choices left over, for the final ??? ... NOT, ANY, SEX, REX (har), POT, ALL, FAB, TOP, TEN, etc.]

Thanx for the fun challenge, Mr. Walden dude. Nice job, as per you-sual. Except maybe for goin all archaic on our BUTTS, with that there mysterious POISES, of course.
71 SatPuzs in the bank, so far? day-um, dude! U are 71 ahead of M&A [unless U count runtpuz themelesses].

Masked & Anonym007Us

... and now, for your further education ...

"New Ghoul in School" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

**gruntz**

Spooky M&A
p.s. Last night's FriNite schlockiest flicks: "Dark Portals" [2001 French flick] and Fritz Lang's silent classic "Dr. Mabuse, the Great Gambler --- Part 2" [watched part 1 last week; cuz each part was 2 hours long; 1922 German flick].

Anonymous 1:42 PM  

The most satisfying challenge from NYT in recent memory. A superb puzzle and solving experience.

Anoa Bob 1:43 PM  

Son Volt
Agree on the very handsome grid layout with lots of open space and good flow. I count 22 black squares which is still very low. The lowest, by the way, is 17 by Joe Krozel. Per xwordinfo.com, there have been 10 NYT puzzles with 20 or fewer black squares, 8 of them by Mr. Krozel!

Anonymous 1:52 PM  

I worked on the puzzle, then got stuck and took a break. I happened to drive by a school with pius in the name. Breakthrough!

pabloinnh 1:53 PM  

In the "tough for me" department, I 'd recommend today's Saturday Stumper, which took me at least twice as long as today's NYT.

Les S. More 2:09 PM  

@Jazzman. Inspired by the puzzle (43D) I decided to dig up some old Sun Ra stuff to listen to while I frittered away my morning here. Currently listening to "Sunrise in the Western Sky" which I think dates from the early 70s. Would that be Marshall Allen? I'm sure some people would find it discordant and uncomfortable, but I find it kind of relaxing.

Les S. More 2:21 PM  

@Lewis. You and I are such different people. I read you almost every day and you are so positive and optimistic and I am Eeyore. Today, I could take your first three paragraphs and copy and paste them and hit PUBLISH.

Anonymous 2:30 PM  

Not a huge fan of this one. Much preferred yesterday’s solve. Also PHILO activated me like a sleeper agent from an old school project hahaha

Les S. More 2:31 PM  

Isn't SANKA an "instant" coffee prepared by the cup? Why would you need a SANKA pot?.
Not a decaf guy and not an instant powdered coffee guy so I am genuinely confused by this.

Anonymous 2:40 PM  

Classic faithsolve - very rewarding!
I thought the villain would be Mac Maroni, a play on Mac-aroni
Just saw an art installation on our group bike ride this morning of a Longboat - 2 of us said “built by Norsemen” and we knew we were fellow xword enthusiasts also:)

SouthsideJohnny 3:15 PM  

SANKA was originally brewed from grounds like “regular” coffee. They sent the orange coffee pots to restaurants as part of a marketing campaign to establish their brand, which eventually morphed into a generic symbol to differentiate caffeinated vs. decalf in many restaurants and diners.

MJB 3:25 PM  

Sankta was ground decaffeinated coffee.

Anonymous 3:34 PM  

I found it very difficult. But poor Brian Eno. He’s such a great songwriter. Before and After Science just a classic 70’s album, and his music never gets a shout out on this blog. https://youtu.be/e3PRnZZaY0I

ChrisS 3:43 PM  

Introduced in the late 1980s, the Data Suit by VPL Research was one of the earliest mo-cap suits in the market. Sensors stitched in the Data Suit were connected by fiber-optic cables to computers that updated the visuals 15 to 30 times a second.

ac 3:55 PM  

wow that was a goodie thanks Byron!

Anonymous 4:05 PM  

I agree with Rex. I kept picking away at it until bingo. I’d get another answer. I actually knew Philo Farnsworth immediately as I just finished watching a documentary about him three days ago

CDilly52 4:43 PM  

@Anon 6:22 AM: I had the same idea and put “uno” at 49 down instead of GIN. Just one of my many errors today.

CDilly52 4:46 PM  

@Jazzman, I’m a huge fan; you beat me to the punch about Marshall Allen. I firmly believe that music is good for our health and longevity.

CDilly52 4:50 PM  

@Sami, I thought you were going for a traditional 5-7-5 HAIKU. Almost!

CDilly52 4:59 PM  

The PANDA was gone during the ‘90s when I worked in London off and on. The “Jam Buttie” wi the its horizontal red or orange stripe was in vogue then - and actually for a very long time, replaced by the “Battenburg.” I love all those names.

CDilly52 5:41 PM  

So much fun reading all the comments just now! How incredibly varied are our frames of reference, bodies of knowledge and experience! The consistent theme here today was that this puzzle was yet another Byron Walden tour de force. I must admit he’s a favorite of mine, but for me, this demonstrates every single good quality any solver could ask for in a puzzle.

And it was a challenge. Suspected RAMADAN only because I guessed that the calendar was Islamic, and RAMADAN is the only word that I know is a celebration and a month in the Islamic year. Thought it was probably iffy but left it.

My first answer was I HAVE TO BE HONEST. Just felt that must be right; I hear it all the time these days - or at least the common “if I’m being HONEST. My answer felt solid.

My first head scratcher was with RIB SHOT. Married to a percussionist and therefore holding the position of if Drum Groupie (which only means that a “DG” helps drag gear for all concerts and gigs) for nearly 50 years, and also being familiar with just how tricky Mr. Walden can be, I was thinking that 1D would be Rim SHOT. Fortunately, the AHI TUNA and MADAME X gave me enough to pull my head out and see BIDEN forming at 17A. I do tend to overthink.

This gave me lots of exciting pushback; I loved it. Such a welcome experience again on a Saturday. Pretty much the perfect puzzle. Deceptive, tricky and clever clues with “knowable” or “gettable” answers. So many answers didn’t come to mind instantly, but just a few letters to clear the fog and I would see the proverbial light.

Thanks Byron for a “real” Saturday. Could we be back to reality here at the NYTXW?

dgd 6:54 PM  

Minor coincidence for me. Last night I went out to eat. Toward the end of the meal, my brother asked for a refill of his decaf coffee. The waitress came out with a glass pot with bright orange trim. Really bright. The trivia part of my brain activated and I said the orange color came from Sanka. Useless info but I couldn’t help myself, I admitted.

dgd 7:03 PM  

Gary
Norsemen barter
Inspired!

Anonymous 7:19 PM  

Anonymous 11:27 AM
Agree about Farnsworth. The reason he appears on a Saturday is precisely because his ideas were STOLEn and RCA and others got the credit. I had heard of him but it still took a while for his first name to come into focus.
Disagree about POiSES
It’s the verb form and one its meanings is balance. (Verb) Part of the trick of crosswords is that secondary meanings are used all the time.

dgd 7:41 PM  

For the Canadians , Les S. More and Okanaganer
Americans have paid attention to the number of presidencies but I think it became more of a thing when George H W Bush’s son became president. Some people started referring to them by number. (41 and 43 respectively) Enough that most Americans can understand the trick in this puzzle.
BTW. I have learned some Canadianisms from you 2 and I appreciate it. One is to or in university Like Les S More story yesterday. Americans say in or to college.(generic for higher education) while university is a subcategory. Americans also routinely refer to college or university as “ school “. I know the British don’t Wondered about Canadians.

Anonymous 7:44 PM  

Jazzmanchgo
Ribs are not just below the chest.

dgd 8:13 PM  

Yesterday was definitely harder for me than today. I liked both but. I made some good guesses on this one. EG what is the go to three letter nickname for other Americans to give to a lower class Italian American, especially a mobster SAL of course. I had no idea otherwise ( Long time solvers know the Pizza joint in Do the Right Thing. Sal’s of course). Had no idea also about the Bugsby Berkeley movie but had the s. All those dancers are dames in ‘30’s lingo. Gave it a try. The only Arabic month I know is RAMADAN which is in the news every year because Muslims during the daytime that month.
The clue, slender hospital tools made me think of stilettos ( a type of knife as well as heels) , confirming SAL. no less. Again never heard of stylets. Lucky solve for me. (But the variations on noob/newb (nube?) are starting annoy me).

Anonymous 8:40 PM  

The only "I Only Have Eyes for You" I knew was the Flamingos song, with those eerie/ magical "doobop-shbop" vocal flourishes.

Anonymous 9:32 PM  

It was heartwarming to come to this website and see so many people having had the same great experience with this puzzle that I did. It is easy to take issue with the many critical comments that appear here. But that criticism provides a background against which the applause for a puzzle like this one can really be heard!

RooMonster 9:43 PM  

Late reply, but yes, Warehouse 13. My wonderful memory again! I thought it was quirky fun!

Roo

Gerry G 12:16 AM  

The term “Panda car” came about as a reference to police vehicles having black bodies with white doors, not unlike a giant panda

LenFuego 12:49 AM  

Rex, there's a word for puzzle that is "maybe" harder than "medium" ... it's "challenging". You've used it before, you can use it again. It's OK to call a puzzle challenging -- nobody will take away your crossword puzzle man card. That's what this puzzle was -- challenging. I admit it, so can you. I got through, just like you, but it was challenging. My time was like double my average. You know ... challenging.

Anonymous 4:17 PM  

Really hard for me - I did not know the names and had to look them up. That helped with the solve but clearly I was not on the same wavelength.

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