The Energy Research and Development Administration was established on January 19, 1975. The first administrator was Robert Seamans, followed by Robert W. Fri.
[Earth goddess in "Das Rheingold"]!? Such a lovely grid, why, why would you drop this bottom-of-the-barrel crosswordese in there? Because it's Halloween and you thought you'd exhume the dead? OK, actually, that's pretty good, I'll allow it. Just think of ERDA as a spooky little haunting, the Ghost of Crosswords Past. How past? Ha ha, check it out:
Man, those 20th-century folks were really hot for Wagner. That's one hell of a heat map—towering columns of ERDA from the '50s through the '80s, and then Will takes over in the mid-90s and you can practically hear the ERDA supply getting choked off. It's been twelve years (!!?) since we last saw ERDA. I would absolutely have tanked ERDA if I hadn't known for sure that Ms. Clooney is an AMAL, not an AMEL—that is, I had ERDE written in there because I'm pretty sure that's German for "earth" and so that seemed the most plausible answer. I hope you all also knew AMAL, and the other ERDA crossings, because it seems at least plausible that many of you will be in my shoes here (those shoes being size "Never Seen a Wagner Opera In My Life And Sure As Hell Don't Know Who ERDA Is"). ERDA? Never ERDA her! This is why you should polish your grids within an inch of their lives, and not an inch and a half—I really enjoyed solving this, but I can't not see ERDA. The puzzle ends up like a fridge full of delicious food and then one small can of half-eaten cat food that you opened a month ago and forgot about (why would it be behind the mayonnaise?! who put it there where I wouldn't see it?). Before I stepped in ERDA, I was having a pretty good time. I had a pretty good time afterward as well. Hard to express how big an outlier that little answer is.
I've never seen a crossword that had its own NEEDLE DROP before (3D: Point in a film when an iconic song sets the scene). No, the puzzle didn't actually start playing music, but my brain did. Specifically, I've been thinking a lot about the NEEDLE DROPs in Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another, which was the first movie I saw with my Moviegoing class this year. Which means that as soon as NEEDLE DROP dropped, the first great NEEDLE DROP of that movie (in fact, the whole scene that it's in) started playing in my head. I can't find any clips of that scene (introduction of Willa, doing her karate forms in the dojo), so I'll just play the song
There's also another perfect NEEDLE DROP at the very end of the movie, but it's so good that I actually don't want to tell you the name of the song—in case you plan on seeing the movie but haven't yet, I don't want to deprive you of the fresh experience of that moment. For more information, here's the episode of Wesley Morris's podcast "Cannonball" where he discusses the movie in detail with guest Sean Fennessey:
The second movie I saw with my Moviegoing class was Roofman, starring Channing TATUM (coincidentally, Blink Twice was the first movie I saw with my Moviegoing class the first time I taught it, last year). Yesterday, I kept pronouncing it like ... like it was a last name, like it rhymes with "Goodman," while everyone else was saying the "Man" part like a separate word, like he was a superhero, Superman or Batman, which is probably the correct way to do it. Also, apparently I pronounce "roof" like a crazy person—my students were all team long-U (i.e. rhymes with "goof"), whereas I ... I don't even know the name for the vowel sound I use, but when I pronounce it, it rhymes with the dog bark sound, "woof." Seriously, the entire class looked at me like "why are you saying it that way?" and then I just tripped all over the title every time I said it for the rest of the class. Anyway, this puzzle made me remember recent movies I've seen and enjoyed, including Sinners (starring HAILEE Steinfeld), and I appreciated that. AYO EDEBIRI (28D: Emmy-winning actress for "The Bear") also stars in a recent movie that I nearly put on the ballot for my Moviegoing class (they vote each week on what we'll see), but it just didn't look that good, so I left it off.
This puzzle played pretty easy, but twice I got stuck at the crossroads of two longer answers. OPENED ... / LAUREL ... no idea what was supposed to follow either, particularly the former. I guessed LAUREL TREE easily enough, eventually, but I don't think I knew a "bay" was a tree. Oh, bay leaves. Is that where they're from? A bay tree? That would ... make sense. Are bay leaves laurel leaves? I was thinking of the horse meaning of "bay," but then couldn't understand why a horse would be "green" (is it envious? inexperienced?). OPENED DOORS was much harder (6D: Provided entrees), as "entrees" = food to me (OPENED ... A RESTAURANT!?!?). The other pair that stopped me for a bit was "LET'S ..." / "THAT'S ..." I really liked discovering "THAT'S SO COOL!" which is bright and bouncy and in-the-language. I really did not like "LET'S BOUNCE" (47A: "We should get out of here"). Feels extremely contrived, even though it's intelligible. BOUNCE on its own as a slang term for "leave" is fine. “I gotta bounce,” “he bounced,” etc. It's the "LET'S" part that feels ... meh [apparently it’s a normal thing to say (acc. to the internet)—not sure why the “let’s” part clanks in my ear]. I had the ending letters (-CE) and all I could think of was ...
The "ZZ"s also got me into a little trouble, as I had HURRAH before HUZZAH at 27A: Old-fashioned "w00t!" Without those "Z"s, EBENEZER and JUAREZ are hard to see, as you can imagine (or maybe as you experienced yourself). I don't think I've ever seen "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol," and if I had, I probably would've thought SCROOGE before EBENEZER (Yosemite Sam is his full name, as far as I know, so nothing indicated to me that I should be looking for Scrooge's first name, specifically) (9D: Yosemite Sam's role in "Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol"). I wrote in SUAREZ at first for 10D: City across the Rio Grande from El Paso and then didn't check the cross and ended up having to hunt down ESECT (?) at the end of the solve (9A: Boot = EJECT). Before that, the only mistakes I had besides HURRAH were CAPRI before CRETE (37D: Island home of what may be the world's oldest living olive tree (2,000+ years)) and of course ... ERDE :(
Bullets:
35A: Cookie marketing units (GIRL SCOUT TROOPS) — I guess they are "units," in the military sense. I could tell the answer started GIRL SCOUT, but then hesitated a bit deciding what should come next.
39A: Opposite of the Latin "odi" (AMO) — "I hate" v. "I love"
41A: Stinky ___ ("Toy Story 2" antagonist) (PETE) — this may as well have been ERDA to me. I don't remember all the Toy Stories. Not sure I've seen them all. It's likely I only saw the one. This puzzle is full of proper nouns, and if that's not your jam, I can see how this puzzle might be less than pleasing.
25D: Apt anagram of GAMES minus M (SEGA) — so dumb. Just an awkward-ass clue. It's either an anagram or it's not. Nothing can be "apt" if you have to "minus" something to get there, come on.
55D: British monarch between William and George (ANNE) — that's William of Orange (of "William & Mary" fame) (1689-1702) and George I (1714-27). William and George are also the names of the likely next two British monarchs as well, as you probably well know.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
P.S. that RUN dupe is very bad (RUN/I GOTTA RUN), but I didn’t see it because I blew right past RUN. Thanks for pointing it out, commenters!
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Normal Friday toughness, but I finished it without cheating. Good for Bob. The SE got me started, and NEEDLEDROP was the last needle to drop. The clue for IRONS was Will Shortz at his best.
Finished the puzzle, pretty easy and worked my way through the hard bits with crosses but it didn’t solve so checked back through my answers and stopped at ERDE. Maybe ERDA? Yep.
Is nobody else annoyed at the double RUN answers? (RUN & IGOTTARUN) I had IGOTTA____ for a long time because I didn't think it could be RUN, and JET just seemed unlikely.
Not only that, but RUN has the same meaning in both clues. Which is impressive because it's literally the record holder for English word with most definitions.
Pretty tough. Not a ton of proper names, but they kept appearing just in time to cut off any momentum I built up. HAILEE an AYO... particularly. AYOEDEBIRI/GIRLSCOUTTROOPS was a little bit of a guess; TROuPS and AYu would not have shocked me.
LAUREL leaf and HUrrAH made getting into the NE hard. Should have abandoned the crosses and hit the downs as ESTA, CHUG and TYPE all came easily.
ERDA ... no problem. What ERDA is to Rex, AYOEDEBIRI is to me.
Is there an ICE WATER/ICED WATER controversy, similar to ICE TEA/ICED TEA? I would say "ice water" but "iced tea", which seems very inconsistent of me.
I had trouble with HALT for “pull up” but I guess if you HALT at a stop sign, you pull up to it as well. Maybe someone has an alternative interpretation that I am missing (and, unfortunately it’s crossing a proper, which are usually the last to fall for me).
The very talented Ms. AYO EDIBIRI has made several appearances this year, but I believe this is the first time for her complete name. Very unusual for me to get a modern day actor or actress with no crosses (I doubt many of us still consider Teri Garr “modern day”).
ERDA was a gift for me (from Uncle Google - I just looked it up).
Hey All ! Kind of an odd puz. The clue for IRONS, e.g., points toward the answer being IRONED. Why isn't it "HandleS press agents?"? And a Green bay? LAUREL TREE? I guess we get bay leaves from LAUREL TREEs, but c'mon.
And OPENED DOORS for Provided entrees? Isn't that Entries? Entrees are main foodstuffs. Just Wiki-ed it, says, "in English and French, can describe the act or manner of entering, freedom of entry or access." Still, harrumph.
At least I can say I'm a GREAT APE ...
And at least TGIF! Today is Nevada Day here in, well, Nevada. A State Holiday to celebrate, I guess, our Awesomeness. 😁 Also, Happy Halloween! My costume is a pumpkin T-shirt. Less is more. Har.
This one played very eazzy-breezzy, like most Fridays of late. I think the names were in my oeuvre, including Ring opener ERDA. - One of my few wrong letters involved a name I see just infrequently enough to forget the spelling and I made the same mistake Rex does in his write-up. AYOEDiBIRI instead of EDEBIRI. - I thought they might be doing a British “boot”, so I had trunk>EJECT - didn’t notice RUN dupe and not annoyed since it’s not a rule, just a common practice. I don’t waste any RAM on looking for dupes, but I have had the experience of noticing and hesitating to use it a second time, hi@Justin. - The W in SAW was my last letter, couldn’t see that from “caught”. Did an alphabet run that obviously took me over 20 letters of thinking something else must be wrong. Waters just seemed too simple. - I’m glad HAILEE and AMAL were fairly crossed. I know who they are, but not their names.
Quick correction, @Rex: her name is AYOEDEBIRI, not Edibiri. I mention only because I entered it incorrectly in my first pass and needed LETSBOUNCE to set me straight.
A normal Friday time for me, but the solving experience felt a bit scattershot. I would take a shot, like "rest" for the thing a workaholic wouldn't likely say (TGIF), and shoot thereby myself in the foot, and then move on to a different part of the puzzle. The "rest" error had multiple consequences, such as putting in tAn instead of FAD, and I'll come to another one in a moment.
Like Rex, I had put in HUrrAH before HUZZAH. Did anyone else have LET'S BOogiE before LET'S BOUNCE? I'm pretty sure I've heard the former, and certainly not the latter. ROmp before ROUT. HAILEy before HAILEE, but that didn't take long to fix. The most hilarious consequence for me -- I said I had "rest" for 1 down -- is victoriously putting in eREcT APES for what turned out to be GREAT APES. I say "victorious" because at the very beginning the clue seemed to beckon for "primates", but that's only eight letters long. Anyway, the mic DROP moment for eREcT APES quickly turned into a NEEDLE scratch moment. (Never heard the expression NEEDLE DROP for the movie thing.) There's also the inner Beavis and Butthead in me that was entertained by "erect" (with SPEEDOS poking through on on the other side of the puzzle).
Can't say I'm a huge fan of CHUG for the adolescent binge-drinking evoked by "kegger". "Adolescent" because it's very hard for me to imagine getting together with dudes my age egging each other on with "chug! chug! chug!".
TATUM took a while because I was looking for a first name to go with Channing, like Carol.
AYO EDEBIRI is great, but it'll be a while before the spelling is nailed down in my head.
I found Rex's write-up hilarious in places, especially his pronunciation of "roof". My wife and I used to catch Holmes on Homes every now and then (he's a fix-it guy who would patch up the mistakes from previous construction jobs), and every time he said the word "roof", which was a lot mind you, it made me wince. Sometimes it's "rough" getting through a class, isn't it Professor Sharp? I'm sure your students love you anyway.
TIL that a NEEDLEDROP is not a place for addicts to get clean needles after a few USES.
Actress/singer Steinfield posts a comment on this blog precisely once every 3 years. Observers are now anxiously awaiting the next appearance of HAILEE's Comment.
Kid 1: Hey, here's a trampoline. LETSBOUNCE. Kid 2: IGOTTARUN.
What do you call that leftover chili that you left in the back of the fridge (next to the half can of cat food) for 2 months? Chili con CRETE. And of course, green chilis are the only thing that makes Albuquerque livable, which makes a riposte to @Gary Jugert's 5:13 pm yesterday parody of my admittedly lame comments seem all too appropriate here. But no. To paraphrase Michelle Obama, when @Gary goes low, I get high.
Of course, addressing @Rex's anti-ERDA stance, it could have been clued to refer to the Energy Research and Development Administration, which I'm sure will soon be as obscure as Wagner's Earth Goddess.
Another one of those technical DNF's today as I guessed ERDE . Oh well, life goes on. Lots of stuff I didn't know that required crosses. Seems like everyone knows NEEDLEDROP, as no one has mentioned it, but it's new to me. See also LETSBOUNCE (?) HAILEE, and the mysteriously named AYOEDEBIRI, which took every cross and the YOU cross was an educated guess because of the "second person" part of the clue.
The top played very easy for me today, I knew JUAREZ which led to HUZZAH and EBENEZER and even filled in GIRLSCOUTTROOPS off the final PS, but the rest of the puzzle required Friday-level cogitation, which is fine with me.
Tomorrow morning we're scheduled to fly out of Boston, unless the air traffic controllers go on strike and all flights are cancelled.
Tough enough Friday here, JTG. Just Took Getting lots of crosses to (almost) finish, and thanks for some thorny fun.
ERDA did me in today along with my lack of Latin. I came to the blog mighty curious as to what a NEEDLE tRaP was with my ERtA and AMa spoiling my grid. Ah well, at least JUAREZ and AYO EDEBIRI were well-known answers.
34D was “apps” first and I had a Deja vu moment for yesterday's gravity defiance only today it was defying sideways, with TROO_p. Naw, 34D had to be wrong.
Thanks for an entertaining Friday puzzle, Juliana Tringali Golden!
Flew through this one. Almost all first guesses were correct, except had EvicT before EJECT which was easily remedied when I started the Downs (I do Across, then Down like a weirdo). I even knew AYO EDEBIRI's name, although initially spelled it with three "I's" but LETS BOUNCE fixed that quickly. Only other minor hiccup was in the SW corner where I had "ILL see" and then "ILL try" before reading the clue again and realizing it was ILL ASK. Voila. 12:42.
In addition to being in a ton of movies and shows in the past couple years, Ayo has been in the NYTXW multiple times this year. And I believe Rex has even pointed out in a post that it’s a name you’re going to want to remember.
Ditto me for ERDA. Needed no crosses. Rheingold was written in something like 1876, it was important enough to be part of general education till apparently the late 20th century. I wonder how long Toy Story and The Bear are going to last?
what the heck is wOOt? anyone else have SaGe before SEGA? I looked up ERDA and saw my SaGe error. Fridays I allow a Google or two. I knew AYO... but was iffy w/ the spelling. Happy Halloween all.
Well, I thank the constructor for an enjoyable puzzle that was mostly on my wavelength (HUZZAH!) except for the intersection of HAILEE/HALT (decided it just couldn’t be malt or salt) and Rex for the Let’s Dance video (which then led me to listen to Young Americans) and his goof/woof pronunciation of roof, which gave me a chuckle. Unlike @tht (at least I think as I read it) I tend to woof, but I ALSO goof. Maybe it’s because I live in the Midwest, but I think folks here are so used to so many different pronunciations of different words (ex. pecan) that not many pronunciations have us sit up and take notice. At any rate, I found today’s write up entertaining. Oh yeah, I DID notice the RUN dupe but it didn’t diminish my puzzle enjoyment PLUS I’m one step closer to nailing the spelling of AYO EDEBIRI! One day I may sign up for Hulu and watch Chef, but from what I read I may need an RX for an antianxiety med to watch it.
HAILEE Steinfeld was very good in "Sinners," IMO. And lest you think Taylor S. is the only NFL-adjacent star, Hailee is married to Bills' QB Josh Allen.
It was a good day to be a fan of Erda tea, grown in Napa Valley by a well-known viticulturist and her winemaker husband. Was able to call up that answer since I knew the tea was named after a goddess.
Some wonderful comments today. The ancient poem from Catullus (9:18) and the great quote about Wagner's music from Anon (8:44). Did Roman poems not rhyme?
Happy Halloween, y'all. Scariest things in this FriPuz: SPIDER. BITE. no-know names HAILEE, PETE, AMAL, AYOEDEBIRI.
staff weeject pick, of a mere 9 choices: RUN. A 2-RUN rodeo ... The LA Dodgers could use a few innings like that, tonite.
fave stuff included: IRONS clue. Bein called one of the GREATAPES. HUZZAH and its clue. LETSBOUNCE. Learnin about the mysterious Bay of LAURELTREE trick. GIRLSCOUT cookie treats. THATSSOCOOL.
Thanx, Ms. Golden darlin.
Masked & Anonymo8Us
... and now, for a little extra spooky boost ...
"Rocky Horror Show" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
SEGA makes arcade games, maybe personal game-playing devices as well, and I guess games themselves -- aren't they the brand for Sonic the Hedgehog? No need to know any of that in real life, but helpful in puzzles.
I think it's because Latin words end with grammatical inflections, like -US, -UM, so the rhyming is both easy to do and very constricting. Mayakovsky said you should never rhyme the same part of speech, but you couldn't avoid it in Latin.
WOEs - LAUREL TREE, PETE, AMO, NEEDLE DROP…I did know ERDA and AMAL
appS before USES was it for costly erasures, but I did struggle with spelling AYO’s last name.
HUZZAH always reminds me of the TV series “The Great” a highly fictionalized account of the reign of Catherine the Great starring Elle Fanning who is terrific. It’s pretty explicit (sex and language) so not for the faint of heart.
Everything was fairly easy except the NE corner, where I just blanked. I spent what seemed like hours trying to remember what was across the river from El Paso, but just blanked--partly because I had LAUREL leaf and the HUrraH/HUAZZAH kealoa. Finally got TREE, and EZ seemed a better ending for a Spanish city -- and immediately remembered JUAREZ, after which the rest was easy.
I followed the same reasoning as Rex for ERDA: German goddess, German for Earth, must be ERDe (as in Mahler), corrected by AMAL.
The most fun thing for me was thinking the thriller author was Carolyn Keene, and thinking maybe Nancy had cutified her surname as drU. Only for a second, but I enjoyed it.
Two clues, 11-D and 45-D, just ask us to translate an English word into Spanish. One clue like that should be enough.
My favorite clues were the Halloween tricks of "Green bay" and "Provided entrees." Opera fandom made ERDA easy, and hearing my daughter use BOUNCE in the clue's sense yesterday helped me there. New to me: NEEDLE DROP; chagrined not to have learned the spelling of AYO EDEBIRI by this time.
This was my comment. Blogger has been signing me out lately, as it has to others here also. What's up with that? (Rhetorical question - I’m sure no one knows.)
Hopefully Gary will ESCHEW adding HUZZAH to the favorite word list, as I personally don’t believe it qualifies. ESCHEW however deserves a NOD (or should that be NOM?) - hopefully between abstain and foreswear.
Toy Story and The Bear will last longer than you my friend! And I still think you are worth remembering and knowing.
Jokes aside, Toy Story will likely not be forgotten for a very long time. Quite an innovative first movie, technology-wise. And part of OG Pixar’s meteoric rise.
Rough one. Couldn’t hack through the middle left without the Checker. I have Das Rhinegold on vinyl but have no idea of anything about its story other than it sounds pretty when Wagner makes it lol
Ah, thanks @tht, I see it now. "Handled" press agents. Agents=IRONS, which have handles. Slow brain day (happening more lately...) @jberg Souch for knowing my Nevada history!
As a retired federal employee, I lived through more than one shutdown. I’ve often said if there is ever an actual stoppage of all government services - including air traffic control, TSA, Social Security payments, etc. - there would be such a public outcry that it would never happen again. That’s why it’s not nearly the effective tool which those in Congress seem to think it is. People now take for granted that things like that will keep running and they barely notice the difference. In the meantime, those employees are now facing their second missed paycheck. It’s a national disgrace in my experienced opinion. Sorry, end of rant.
Yep, what Rex said. Took a wild guess & settled for the improbable needle trip. Also had to cheat on ayoedebiri (now there's a name to conjure with) even though I only needed two letters. Pretty good otherwise.
“Woot” or woot woot has become a popular expression for celebration when your team scores. I often see it just spelled out with letters and not sure why the w00t with the zeroes.
The tree is called a Bay Laurel I believe, hence Bay Leaf. I spelled Edebiri with 3 i’s which confused me for a while, but generally found this pretty accessible. Never heard the term Needle Drop as related to film but it was inferable. As a Bills fan I was happy to see Hailee get a shout out.
Had to look up a couple of people because I didn’t guess STEMMED. But really Rex, how did you grow up in California and not know the Bay LAUREL tree? They are all over the place. And the dried leaves are absolutely essential for cooking.
Had to look up a couple of people because I didn’t guess STEMMED. But really Rex, how did you grow up in California and not know the Bay LAUREL tree? They are all over the place. And the dried leaves are absolutely essential for cooking.
Wasn't meaning to imply that I wouldn't sympathize with any strike by federal employees in our current mess. Just saying we have to be thinking about that possibility. Also, we're heading for Albuquerque so maybe I'll look up Gary J.
HUZZAH! Flew through this one and glad to have a nice break. This week has felt pretty intense and I needed a snoozer. Amusing, but forgettable outing, with only one partial. Nice.
Never heard of a NEEDLE DROP, but it turns out to be a fancy name for playing a song. Parody and SATIRE have, to my great annoyance, the same number of letters.
I headed to eBay to find a Design a Robot badge after learning today it's a thing. Turns out there are robot badges for Daisies, Brownies, and Girl Scouts, and the Daisies have a How Robots Move badge. I presume you do a robot dance or something similar to earn the accolade and I am ready to start practicing. I'll be calling around today to find out eligibility requirements to join the Daisies.
AYO's full name is sure alphabet soup from a blender, eh?
1 Monkeys with messy mohawks. 2 Celebration at the nerd school. 3 Tiny trunks for tarantulas. 4 The feeling astronomers get when visiting the Karl G. Jansky VLA in New Mexico. 5 Skit about a Minoan who couldn't get out of the labyrinth. 6 Reaction of a NYTXW editor upon seeing their favorite word in a new submission.
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Why the shirtless dude on the float in a gold spandex leotard has a bit of a tummy. PRIDE MONTH CRESCENT ROLL.
tht. I'm pretty sure I've mentioned this before but I have a friend from Texas who used to always correct me. "It's peKAHN, Les, peKHAN. Get it right." So now I always say pee-can just to piss him off.
A long time ago, I was solving this puzzle and got stuck at an unguessable (to me) crossing: N. C. WYETH crossing NATICK at the "N"—I knew WYETH but forgot his initials, and NATICK ... is a suburb of Boston that I had no hope of knowing. It was clued as someplace the Boston Marathon runs through (???). Anyway, NATICK— the more obscure name in that crossing—became shorthand for an unguessable cross, esp. where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known. NATICK took hold as crossword slang, and the term can now be both noun ("I had a NATICK in the SW corner...") or verb ("I got NATICKED by 50A / 34D!")
81 comments:
Normal Friday toughness, but I finished it without cheating. Good for Bob. The SE got me started, and NEEDLEDROP was the last needle to drop. The clue for IRONS was Will Shortz at his best.
Nice, clean Friday! Only big misstep was putting LAUREL LEAF instead of LAUREL TREE. Didn't mind LETS BOUNCE - not sure what the gripe is all about!
Finished the puzzle, pretty easy and worked my way through the hard bits with crosses but it didn’t solve so checked back through my answers and stopped at ERDE. Maybe ERDA? Yep.
I was quite surprised Rex didn’t comment on repeating RUN
Sorry about that email. Thought I was commenting.
Is nobody else annoyed at the double RUN answers? (RUN & IGOTTARUN) I had IGOTTA____ for a long time because I didn't think it could be RUN, and JET just seemed unlikely.
Weirdly I just didn’t see it. I blame ERDA.
Not only that, but RUN has the same meaning in both clues. Which is impressive because it's literally the record holder for English word with most definitions.
Pretty tough. Not a ton of proper names, but they kept appearing just in time to cut off any momentum I built up. HAILEE an AYO... particularly. AYOEDEBIRI/GIRLSCOUTTROOPS was a little bit of a guess; TROuPS and AYu would not have shocked me.
LAUREL leaf and HUrrAH made getting into the NE hard. Should have abandoned the crosses and hit the downs as ESTA, CHUG and TYPE all came easily.
ERDA ... no problem. What ERDA is to Rex, AYOEDEBIRI is to me.
Is there an ICE WATER/ICED WATER controversy, similar to ICE TEA/ICED TEA? I would say "ice water" but "iced tea", which seems very inconsistent of me.
I got totally stuck with THATSSOGOOD, which left curious crosses AGED (Easily crushed?) and REDO (Move, informally?).
I had trouble with HALT for “pull up” but I guess if you HALT at a stop sign, you pull up to it as well. Maybe someone has an alternative interpretation that I am missing (and, unfortunately it’s crossing a proper, which are usually the last to fall for me).
The very talented Ms. AYO EDIBIRI has made several appearances this year, but I believe this is the first time for her complete name. Very unusual for me to get a modern day actor or actress with no crosses (I doubt many of us still consider Teri Garr “modern day”).
ERDA was a gift for me (from Uncle Google - I just looked it up).
I was confused by 40 across because I thought it should be IRONED to match the clue tense
I never OPENDOORS for GIRLSCOUTTROOPS. Nostalgia and good marketing notwithstanding, those cookies all taste like the overpriced box they come in.
Wishing you a spooky, sweet and safe All Hallows Eve
disappointed it was not halloween themed.
Hey All !
Kind of an odd puz. The clue for IRONS, e.g., points toward the answer being IRONED. Why isn't it "HandleS press agents?"? And a Green bay? LAUREL TREE? I guess we get bay leaves from LAUREL TREEs, but c'mon.
And OPENED DOORS for Provided entrees? Isn't that Entries? Entrees are main foodstuffs. Just Wiki-ed it, says, "in English and French, can describe the act or manner of entering, freedom of entry or access." Still, harrumph.
At least I can say I'm a GREAT APE ...
And at least TGIF! Today is Nevada Day here in, well, Nevada. A State Holiday to celebrate, I guess, our Awesomeness. 😁 Also, Happy Halloween! My costume is a pumpkin T-shirt. Less is more. Har.
I GOTTA RUN, LETS BOUNCE.
Have a great Friday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
ERDA is fine. A little Wagner knowledge should be fair game in a Friday puzzle!
This one played very eazzy-breezzy, like most Fridays of late. I think the names were in my oeuvre, including Ring opener ERDA.
- One of my few wrong letters involved a name I see just infrequently enough to forget the spelling and I made the same mistake Rex does in his write-up. AYOEDiBIRI instead of EDEBIRI.
- I thought they might be doing a British “boot”, so I had trunk>EJECT
- didn’t notice RUN dupe and not annoyed since it’s not a rule, just a common practice. I don’t waste any RAM on looking for dupes, but I have had the experience of noticing and hesitating to use it a second time, hi@Justin.
- The W in SAW was my last letter, couldn’t see that from “caught”. Did an alphabet run that obviously took me over 20 letters of thinking something else must be wrong. Waters just seemed too simple.
- I’m glad HAILEE and AMAL were fairly crossed. I know who they are, but not their names.
The irons have handles, so handled is an adjective not a verb!
ERDA was a gimme here. YMMV.
Proud of myself for dropping in, from the A alone, AYOEDiBIRI with just one typo. (Looking at you, burtonkd.)
Erda seems just fine.
As someone once said about Wagner’s music: It’s better than it sounds.”
I wish I could take Rex’s Moviegoing class.
Quick correction, @Rex: her name is AYOEDEBIRI, not Edibiri. I mention only because I entered it incorrectly in my first pass and needed LETSBOUNCE to set me straight.
Thanks for the insights, Rex! PS: I always love your video clips.
A normal Friday time for me, but the solving experience felt a bit scattershot. I would take a shot, like "rest" for the thing a workaholic wouldn't likely say (TGIF), and shoot thereby myself in the foot, and then move on to a different part of the puzzle. The "rest" error had multiple consequences, such as putting in tAn instead of FAD, and I'll come to another one in a moment.
Like Rex, I had put in HUrrAH before HUZZAH. Did anyone else have LET'S BOogiE before LET'S BOUNCE? I'm pretty sure I've heard the former, and certainly not the latter. ROmp before ROUT. HAILEy before HAILEE, but that didn't take long to fix. The most hilarious consequence for me -- I said I had "rest" for 1 down -- is victoriously putting in eREcT APES for what turned out to be GREAT APES. I say "victorious" because at the very beginning the clue seemed to beckon for "primates", but that's only eight letters long. Anyway, the mic DROP moment for eREcT APES quickly turned into a NEEDLE scratch moment. (Never heard the expression NEEDLE DROP for the movie thing.) There's also the inner Beavis and Butthead in me that was entertained by "erect" (with SPEEDOS poking through on on the other side of the puzzle).
Can't say I'm a huge fan of CHUG for the adolescent binge-drinking evoked by "kegger". "Adolescent" because it's very hard for me to imagine getting together with dudes my age egging each other on with "chug! chug! chug!".
TATUM took a while because I was looking for a first name to go with Channing, like Carol.
AYO EDEBIRI is great, but it'll be a while before the spelling is nailed down in my head.
I found Rex's write-up hilarious in places, especially his pronunciation of "roof". My wife and I used to catch Holmes on Homes every now and then (he's a fix-it guy who would patch up the mistakes from previous construction jobs), and every time he said the word "roof", which was a lot mind you, it made me wince. Sometimes it's "rough" getting through a class, isn't it Professor Sharp? I'm sure your students love you anyway.
TGIF, as some say. Have a Happy Halloween!
Always nice to see George Clooney’s wife in the puzzle.
Yes! Excellent misdirection.
Irons, as a plural noun.
This gave me fits until I saw it. Great Friday or Saturday clue!
Odi et amo. Quare id faciam, fortasse requiris.
Nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
(Catullus, Poems, 85)
I hate and I love. Why I do this perhaps you ask.
I do not know, but I sense that it happens and I am
tormented.
Toga, Toga, Toga...
Also dropped AubryPlaza, thinking of the film Black Bear. Quick tear down...
Amil, erdi as well...
I raced over here to see Rex’s witty takedown of this lack of tense agreement but then…nothing!?! I found it to be a blindingly glaring error
Worst combo in the world? SPEEDOS and Up Dos.
TIL that a NEEDLEDROP is not a place for addicts to get clean needles after a few USES.
Actress/singer Steinfield posts a comment on this blog precisely once every 3 years. Observers are now anxiously awaiting the next appearance of HAILEE's Comment.
Kid 1: Hey, here's a trampoline. LETSBOUNCE.
Kid 2: IGOTTARUN.
What do you call that leftover chili that you left in the back of the fridge (next to the half can of cat food) for 2 months? Chili con CRETE. And of course, green chilis are the only thing that makes Albuquerque livable, which makes a riposte to @Gary Jugert's 5:13 pm yesterday parody of my admittedly lame comments seem all too appropriate here. But no. To paraphrase Michelle Obama, when @Gary goes low, I get high.
Of course, addressing @Rex's anti-ERDA stance, it could have been clued to refer to the Energy Research and Development Administration, which I'm sure will soon be as obscure as Wagner's Earth Goddess.
Fun puzzle. Thanks, Juliana Tringali Golden.
Another one of those technical DNF's today as I guessed ERDE . Oh well, life goes on. Lots of stuff I didn't know that required crosses. Seems like everyone knows NEEDLEDROP, as no one has mentioned it, but it's new to me. See also LETSBOUNCE (?) HAILEE, and the mysteriously named AYOEDEBIRI, which took every cross and the YOU cross was an educated guess because of the "second person" part of the clue.
The top played very easy for me today, I knew JUAREZ which led to HUZZAH and EBENEZER and even filled in GIRLSCOUTTROOPS off the final PS, but the rest of the puzzle required Friday-level cogitation, which is fine with me.
Tomorrow morning we're scheduled to fly out of Boston, unless the air traffic controllers go on strike and all flights are cancelled.
Tough enough Friday here, JTG. Just Took Getting lots of crosses to (almost) finish, and thanks for some thorny fun.
As Stan indicates, it's not an error. "Handled" is an adjective. IRONS corresponds to "agents" in [Handled press agents?]
ERDA did me in today along with my lack of Latin. I came to the blog mighty curious as to what a NEEDLE tRaP was with my ERtA and AMa spoiling my grid. Ah well, at least JUAREZ and AYO EDEBIRI were well-known answers.
34D was “apps” first and I had a Deja vu moment for yesterday's gravity defiance only today it was defying sideways, with TROO_p. Naw, 34D had to be wrong.
Thanks for an entertaining Friday puzzle, Juliana Tringali Golden!
Flew through this one. Almost all first guesses were correct, except had EvicT before EJECT which was easily remedied when I started the Downs (I do Across, then Down like a weirdo). I even knew AYO EDEBIRI's name, although initially spelled it with three "I's" but LETS BOUNCE fixed that quickly. Only other minor hiccup was in the SW corner where I had "ILL see" and then "ILL try" before reading the clue again and realizing it was ILL ASK. Voila. 12:42.
In addition to being in a ton of movies and shows in the past couple years, Ayo has been in the NYTXW multiple times this year. And I believe Rex has even pointed out in a post that it’s a name you’re going to want to remember.
Ditto me for ERDA. Needed no crosses. Rheingold was written in something like 1876, it was important enough to be part of general education till apparently the late 20th century. I wonder how long Toy Story and The Bear are going to last?
I also tried to make BOUNCE BOogiE, and you are correct…my guess is…”I gotta boogie” more than slightly predates BOUNCE.
The "handled" here is intended an adjective (to wit, a thing with handles), not a past participle. I thought this was really great.
what the heck is wOOt? anyone else have SaGe before SEGA? I looked up ERDA and saw my SaGe error. Fridays I allow a Google or two. I knew AYO... but was iffy w/ the spelling. Happy Halloween all.
Well, I thank the constructor for an enjoyable puzzle that was mostly on my wavelength (HUZZAH!) except for the intersection of HAILEE/HALT (decided it just couldn’t be malt or salt) and Rex for the Let’s Dance video (which then led me to listen to Young Americans) and his goof/woof pronunciation of roof, which gave me a chuckle. Unlike @tht (at least I think as I read it) I tend to woof, but I ALSO goof. Maybe it’s because I live in the Midwest, but I think folks here are so used to so many different pronunciations of different words (ex. pecan) that not many pronunciations have us sit up and take notice. At any rate, I found today’s write up entertaining.
Oh yeah, I DID notice the RUN dupe but it didn’t diminish my puzzle enjoyment PLUS I’m one step closer to nailing the spelling of AYO EDEBIRI! One day I may sign up for Hulu and watch Chef, but from what I read I may need an RX for an antianxiety med to watch it.
Good grief. I wrote a comment above, where I wasn’t “signed in” AND I referred to The Bear as Chef. D’oh! Also replied to @tht on boogie. (Eyeroll)
ERDA, AYO EDEBIRI?
It was nice to see AMAL though. A smart, classy, lucky lady :)
HAILEE Steinfeld was very good in "Sinners," IMO. And lest you think Taylor S. is the only NFL-adjacent star, Hailee is married to Bills' QB Josh Allen.
It was a good day to be a fan of Erda tea, grown in Napa Valley by a well-known viticulturist and her winemaker husband. Was able to call up that answer since I knew the tea was named after a goddess.
Some wonderful comments today. The ancient poem from Catullus (9:18) and the great quote about Wagner's music from Anon (8:44). Did Roman poems not rhyme?
The mayonnaise is supposed to go on the refrigerator door not the shelf!😀
Apparently Nevada became a state on October 31, 1864. You should call it the Halloween State!
Happy Halloween, y'all.
Scariest things in this FriPuz: SPIDER. BITE. no-know names HAILEE, PETE, AMAL, AYOEDEBIRI.
staff weeject pick, of a mere 9 choices: RUN. A 2-RUN rodeo ... The LA Dodgers could use a few innings like that, tonite.
fave stuff included: IRONS clue. Bein called one of the GREATAPES. HUZZAH and its clue. LETSBOUNCE. Learnin about the mysterious Bay of LAURELTREE trick. GIRLSCOUT cookie treats. THATSSOCOOL.
Thanx, Ms. Golden darlin.
Masked & Anonymo8Us
... and now, for a little extra spooky boost ...
"Rocky Horror Show" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
Spooky M&A
And 51 down is I ran.
SEGA makes arcade games, maybe personal game-playing devices as well, and I guess games themselves -- aren't they the brand for Sonic the Hedgehog? No need to know any of that in real life, but helpful in puzzles.
I think it's because Latin words end with grammatical inflections, like -US, -UM, so the rhyming is both easy to do and very constricting. Mayakovsky said you should never rhyme the same part of speech, but you couldn't avoid it in Latin.
JUSTICE
FOR
JUST US
-Don, Pam, Cash et.al.
Easy-medium.
WOEs - LAUREL TREE, PETE, AMO, NEEDLE DROP…I did know ERDA and AMAL
appS before USES was it for costly erasures, but I did struggle with spelling AYO’s last name.
HUZZAH always reminds me of the TV series “The Great” a highly fictionalized account of the reign of Catherine the Great starring Elle Fanning who is terrific.
It’s pretty explicit (sex and language) so not for the faint of heart.
Solid with a hint of sparkle, liked it.
Just for the record, it's pe-KAHN. :-) I'm from the South.
Everything was fairly easy except the NE corner, where I just blanked. I spent what seemed like hours trying to remember what was across the river from El Paso, but just blanked--partly because I had LAUREL leaf and the HUrraH/HUAZZAH kealoa. Finally got TREE, and EZ seemed a better ending for a Spanish city -- and immediately remembered JUAREZ, after which the rest was easy.
I followed the same reasoning as Rex for ERDA: German goddess, German for Earth, must be ERDe (as in Mahler), corrected by AMAL.
The most fun thing for me was thinking the thriller author was Carolyn Keene, and thinking maybe Nancy had cutified her surname as drU. Only for a second, but I enjoyed it.
Two clues, 11-D and 45-D, just ask us to translate an English word into Spanish. One clue like that should be enough.
My favorite clues were the Halloween tricks of "Green bay" and "Provided entrees." Opera fandom made ERDA easy, and hearing my daughter use BOUNCE in the clue's sense yesterday helped me there. New to me: NEEDLE DROP; chagrined not to have learned the spelling of AYO EDEBIRI by this time.
This was my comment. Blogger has been signing me out lately, as it has to others here also. What's up with that? (Rhetorical question - I’m sure no one knows.)
Hopefully Gary will ESCHEW adding HUZZAH to the favorite word list, as I personally don’t believe it qualifies. ESCHEW however deserves a NOD (or should that be NOM?) - hopefully between abstain and foreswear.
Toy Story and The Bear will last longer than you my friend! And I still think you are worth remembering and knowing.
Jokes aside, Toy Story will likely not be forgotten for a very long time. Quite an innovative first movie, technology-wise. And part of OG Pixar’s meteoric rise.
Rough one. Couldn’t hack through the middle left without the Checker. I have Das Rhinegold on vinyl but have no idea of anything about its story other than it sounds pretty when Wagner makes it lol
Ah, thanks @tht, I see it now. "Handled" press agents. Agents=IRONS, which have handles. Slow brain day (happening more lately...)
@jberg
Souch for knowing my Nevada history!
Roo
As a retired federal employee, I lived through more than one shutdown. I’ve often said if there is ever an actual stoppage of all government services - including air traffic control, TSA, Social Security payments, etc. - there would be such a public outcry that it would never happen again. That’s why it’s not nearly the effective tool which those in Congress seem to think it is. People now take for granted that things like that will keep running and they barely notice the difference. In the meantime, those employees are now facing their second missed paycheck. It’s a national disgrace in my experienced opinion. Sorry, end of rant.
Grrr!! Happened to me yesterday.
Oh and I forgot to say, have a wonderful time and safe travels.
Re Blogger, happened to me yesterday. Really quite annoying.
Yep, what Rex said. Took a wild guess & settled for the improbable needle trip.
Also had to cheat on ayoedebiri (now there's a name to conjure with) even though I only needed two letters. Pretty good otherwise.
“Woot” or woot woot has become a popular expression for celebration when your team scores. I often see it just spelled out with letters and not sure why the w00t with the zeroes.
The tree is called a Bay Laurel I believe, hence Bay Leaf. I spelled Edebiri with 3 i’s which confused me for a while, but generally found this pretty accessible. Never heard the term Needle Drop as related to film but it was inferable. As a Bills fan I was happy to see Hailee get a shout out.
I admit I only got ERDA from the Tom Lehrer lyric from Alma, Tell Us - "I'm writing Das Liebt fur der Erde, and you only want to make love" - whoosh.
ha! nice.
I hope you're gonna wear more than just a pumpkin tee, Roo, especially if you've gotta run and bounce.
Had to look up a couple of people because I didn’t guess STEMMED. But really Rex, how did you grow up in California and not know the Bay LAUREL tree? They are all over the place. And the dried leaves are absolutely essential for cooking.
Had to look up a couple of people because I didn’t guess STEMMED. But really Rex, how did you grow up in California and not know the Bay LAUREL tree? They are all over the place. And the dried leaves are absolutely essential for cooking.
Miss Lewis? Often favorite in the comments section!
Wasn't meaning to imply that I wouldn't sympathize with any strike by federal employees in our current mess. Just saying we have to be thinking about that possibility. Also, we're heading for Albuquerque so maybe I'll look up Gary J.
samsies !
Nosotras deberíamos salir de aquí.
HUZZAH! Flew through this one and glad to have a nice break. This week has felt pretty intense and I needed a snoozer. Amusing, but forgettable outing, with only one partial. Nice.
Never heard of a NEEDLE DROP, but it turns out to be a fancy name for playing a song. Parody and SATIRE have, to my great annoyance, the same number of letters.
I headed to eBay to find a Design a Robot badge after learning today it's a thing. Turns out there are robot badges for Daisies, Brownies, and Girl Scouts, and the Daisies have a How Robots Move badge. I presume you do a robot dance or something similar to earn the accolade and I am ready to start practicing. I'll be calling around today to find out eligibility requirements to join the Daisies.
AYO's full name is sure alphabet soup from a blender, eh?
People: 9
Places: 3
Products: 3
Partials: 1
Foreignisms: 4
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 70 (29%)
Funny Factor: 6 😅
Tee-Hee: SPEEDOS. CONE BRA. ASS. LET'S BOUNCE.
Uniclues:
1 Monkeys with messy mohawks.
2 Celebration at the nerd school.
3 Tiny trunks for tarantulas.
4 The feeling astronomers get when visiting the Karl G. Jansky VLA in New Mexico.
5 Skit about a Minoan who couldn't get out of the labyrinth.
6 Reaction of a NYTXW editor upon seeing their favorite word in a new submission.
1 BUSHY GREAT APES (~)
2 STEMMED HUZZAH
3 SPIDER SPEEDOS
4 ARRAY ADORATION
5 CRETE SATIRE (~)
6 ASS? THAT'S SO COOL!
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Why the shirtless dude on the float in a gold spandex leotard has a bit of a tummy. PRIDE MONTH CRESCENT ROLL.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
tht. I'm pretty sure I've mentioned this before but I have a friend from Texas who used to always correct me. "It's peKAHN, Les, peKHAN. Get it right." So now I always say pee-can just to piss him off.
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