Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: none
Word of the Day: ST. DENIS (5D: Bishop for whom a neighborhood in Paris is named) —
Denis of Paris (Latin: Dionysius) was a 3rd-century Christian martyr and saint. According to his hagiographies, he was bishop of Paris (then Lutetia) in the third century and, together with his companions Rusticus and Eleutherius, was martyred for his faith by decapitation. Some accounts placed this during Domitian's persecution and incorrectly identified St Denis of Paris with the Areopagite who was converted by Paul the Apostle and who served as the first bishop of Athens. Assuming Denis's historicity, it is now considered more likely that he suffered under the persecution of the emperor Decius shortly after AD 250.
Denis is the most famous cephalophore in Christian history, with a popular story claiming that the decapitated bishop picked up his head and walked several miles while preaching a sermon on repentance. He is venerated in the Catholic Church as a patron saint of both France and Paris and is one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers. A chapel was raised at the site of his burial by a local Christian woman; it was later expanded into an abbey and basilica, around which grew up the French city of Saint-Denis, now a suburb of Paris. (wikipedia)
• • •
If the marquee fill had been stellar, it's possible that the name parade would've faded into inconsequentiality, but only a handful of long answers today really shined. The first of these was a mercy—I had gotten bogged down in the NW in a way that rarely happens on a Friday, and after giving up on working all the shorter crosses of things I already had in the grid, I decided to try one of the longer answers, for which all I had was the first letter: "S" (23D: "Mind your own beeswax!"). And bam:
Aside from my unusual struggle in the NW, there were only a few other real sticking points. Beating myself up about struggling to get RICK (21A: James in the National Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame). I thought "James" was a first name, and BROWN wouldn't fit, so ... pfft. I can see now how people might've been tempted to try ETTA there, but I already had the "R." Of course it's not James RICK, but RICK James, whose music—and luxurious hair—was very familiar to me as a child (even if his music was not exactly suitable for children).
The other thing that tripped me up was an out-and-out mistake: I wrote in PASSWORD instead of PASSCODE (29A: Alternative to a fingerprint, maybe). What kind of junk food are CHEESE WU--S, I wondered. Bah. Once I got solidly beneath the FAYE line (i.e. the equator), the puzzle got a lot easier. Not a lot of green ink on the bottom half of my printed grid today, except for an angry green scribble through SESH (up there with TROU in my Personal Pantheon of Horrible 4s) (55A: Informal get-together).
Bullets:
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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- 5A: Hustle (SCAM) — realizing now that part of my problem in the NW, besides ROSIE, was the depth of ambiguity in so many clues up there. "Hustle" can mean so many things. And as for 7D: Runs, once again I say YEESH. So many possible meanings. I needed every cross to get AIRS and it still took me a few seconds to understand it (a TV station runs, or AIRS, programs). You've also got the tricky (for me) "?" clue on WORK ETHIC (14A: Drive around the office?).
- 4D: Genre for Toots and the Maytals (SKA) — one thing this puzzle does have is good music:
- 47A: Vegges out (LOAFS) — whoa, is that how you spell "vegges"??? That looks cursed. I don't think that's a word that ever wants to be spelled. Let's agree to never spell it again.
That's all. See you next time.
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ReplyDeleteEasy-Medium Friday.
Overwrites:
My 8D rap figures were djS before they were MCS.
yeS before 'TIS for "Quite so" at 13D.
Crossword favorite etta James before RICK at 21A.
At 26A, "I saw that" was aha before it was HEY.
My 29A fingerprint alternative was an iriS scan before it was a PASSCODE.
WOEs:
Sam's LoTR wife ROSIE (2D)
R&Ber RICK James (21A).
FAYE Marsay (31A).
SETTERS (39A), as clued.
Food brand Jose OLE at 48D
Happy to solve a Friday without cheating. I did look up (Fred) ARMISEN to verify TEEN as an eye-roller. I finally went with DENTS as hailstone "souvenirs," even though it left me with LEE as a guess alternative. When the music sounded I was surprised.
ReplyDeleteLee and Guess are both brands of jeans.
DeleteRex did me a favor and went off about the names so I don’t have to (other than to note that 3 of the first 5 downs were LOTR, a French painting and a French bishop - wow). At least I knew BONO and RORY.
ReplyDeleteThe clues for ENDORSE and TVS were pretty cool. The rest, as OFL mentioned, got pretty tedious pretty quickly.
What I can say is I love George Jones and Freddie Hibberd.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteFell into the ETTA trap. Nice. Not up on Jazz, so ART TATUM last to fill, had it down to AR_T_TUM, and threw in the fill I thought was the logical ones. ARMISEN a who? here, also.
Ended up being a quick FriPuz, although not easy to fill, if that makes sense.
Agree lots of names. Some I knew, some I didn't. Comme ci comme ça.
CHEESE CURLS are OK, but too poofy. I prefer Cheetos Crunchy sticks. If you're gonna be cheesy, it's better concentrated into a crunch. Remember, It ain't easy being cheesy.
Did like the cluing voice. Some fun ones in here.
Hope y'all are getting out of your food comas today! But now, leftovers! Yum!
Have a great Friday. Try not to shop too much today ...
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
If you order the house wine, you don’t really deal with the sommelier, no?
ReplyDeleteHopefully the house wine is better than that clue!
DeleteAgree. I "fine dine" frequently (i.e., where sommeliers continue to operate) and the house wine is typically the cheapest and/or most most basic wine offering to appease most palates. A sommelier is typically only summoned if the drinker needs a recommendation from the wine list. Unless the drinker is a wine neophyte, the sommelier will not push the house wine.
DeleteMy thought exactly!
DeleteOnly when he/she gives you a look and says, “Our wines are out of your league.”
DeleteI love SETTERS' darling Brian Eno's collab with sometime-crosswordeser John Cale about a guy who liked to paint BENEATH the night sky at ARLES.
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/-INeMspNSQ0?si=xd7ZiCaTC8vSI0i-
A pair of answer lists to start:
ReplyDeleteDebut answers aren’t automatically good, but, IMO, six of the seven today were worthy Times oeuvre additions: BAD ATTITUDE, BOOK A ROOM, DANCE TROUPE, HOUSE WINE, STAY OUT OF IT, and VENUS FLYTRAP. Mwah!
A first-name windfall, with NAOMI, RICK, RORY, FAYE, ROSIE, RENE, ALICE, and not-clued-as-names DOTTY, OLLIE, UTA, and LEE (Hi, @Rex!).
Then a pair of banger original clues: [Drive around the office] for WORK ETHIC and [Prepared statement?] for I’M READY. That terrific clue, [Plant eater?] for VENUS FLY TRAP, showed up in June in the New Yorker, but it’s clear from his notes that Jacob came up with it independently.
And thrillingly, a pair of glory moments for me, getting TRIED AND TRUE off the U, and getting VENUS FLY TRAP off the A.
What a beautifully built grid, Jacob, a low-count 68-worder, hardly a whiff of junk, and 14 longs. This takes another pair – talent and grit – to pull off. What a splendid outing you gave me today – thank you!
ART TATUM was The Man. OMG such skill, such crisp playing, such beauty. Here. You owe yourself at least this -- two-and-a-half minutes of pure virtuosity:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35tR9Slmql8&list=RDEM8fz5yQ2L7r9pQAkiolEYgQ&index=4
Thanks for that link. WOW!
DeleteA proper-name packed mess.
ReplyDeleteKnew: NAOMI, RICK, RORY, BONO, ALICE.
Did not know: FAYE, ART TATUM, OLE, ROSIE, Toots and the Maytals, ARMISEN. The cross of TATUM and ARMISON was particularly unpleasant.
Among non-name stuff, YEESH crossing SESH was the worst of it. Puzzle started off poorly, started to win me back in the middle, then kicked away any earned goodwill at the end.
Can't believe Rex found this medium. I thought it was one of the easiest Fridays ever, just whooshed through it. Only initial errors were AcmE for AONE and ARMISoN but both quickly found. Didn't like IDBET, IWILL and IMREADY in same puzzle nor the preponderance of names, but I knew them all except ROSIE and FAYE.
ReplyDeletesame
DeleteJack: HEY, FAYE. I PUT OUT TEA and CHEESECURLS FOR TWO for me and Art. Now all I see is the TEA. Where are the heaping piles of the junk food that, ironically, has an exercise in its name?
ReplyDeleteFAYE: ARTTATUM.
National Finals Rodeo lodging enticement: BOOKAROOM for a BucKAROOM, BucKAROOs.
Very talented dogs that can make crosswords and are gentle with children, those English SETTERS.
Every time I drink HOUSEWINE, I'm hyper-aware that only a typo away sits a housewife.
Now I know what some of you are thinking. Didn't @egs email in his virtual death notice here a couple of days ago? First off, I'd like to thank all of you who offered such wonderful get well wishes. Even @Rex, who usually only responds to me by axing my submissions (I'm just kidding here. I hope you know how much I like and appreciate you). And @Nancy, making a rare-in-crosswords appearance. Thank you to all of you from the bottom of my heart. Which leads me to the odd fact that my bottom and my heart are each playing their role in my continuing hospitalization. Without getting too deep in the medical weeds (or even the recreational weeds), the basic problem turned out to be a large hip infection which yielded what looked to my heavy-lidded eyes like about two cups of fluid when aspirated. Relief from pain (including in the bottom) and returned ability to move my right leg were immediate, but analysis of the fluid revealed infection. Many tests and machines (MRI, Echocardiagram, X-ray, etc) later, the presence of a gentle man beneath a gruff exterior was revealed. But also, bacterial infection in my blood and possibly in my heart . Definitive news on that will come today as specialists seemed to prefer family Thanksgiving to reading test results. So, bottom line, I'm still on my bottom in the hospital. Don't know when I'll go home, but seem to have regained my oft-reviled style. Thanks again for the messages.
And thanks for what I thought was a good challenging Friday, Jacob McDermott.
Welcome back! Yay. Up to speed already too!
DeleteThanks for updating us -- I and I'm sure many others were worried throughout yesterday. A day without egs is like a day without orange juice is like a day without sunshine!
Delete@egsforbreakfast 8:48 AM
DeleteGlad you're on the mend. Of course I'll wait until you're out of the hospital to jest about your ARSE ailment, your BUTT bug, your DERRIERE decrepitude, your HIND horror, your PATOOT pestilence, your FANNY fright, your CABOOSE chaos. Infections these days -- those keister heisters -- are nothing to mess with so I'm glad you're in the right place getting a little heinie help. Get well soon buddy so we can tease you properly. Perhaps we can reframe this event like one episode of Everybody Loves Raymond where his brother was gored by a bull in the "upper thigh."
Thank you for the update. Sounds terrifying.
DeleteGlad you are feeling better, and hope the test results are encouraging, or at least point to an effective treatment.
DeleteWelcome back, and in fine form as well! Best wishes for continued recovery.
DeleteSounds like you're in good hands, at least. Keep improving and good luck.
Delete@egs, glad you're back. I hope the news today is the best possible.
DeleteI doubt I could have written anything that long and detailed, much less amusing, from a hospital bed while waiting for test results. It takes someone with a lot of fortitude and a good, rather than BAD ATTITUDE. But the very good news is that the pain went away immediately and that you can walk again! I wish you positive and reassuring news from your medical evaluations and hope you won't have to wait too long to hear them. --Nancy
DeleteAll best wishes for your continuing recovery!
DeleteThanks for the update Egs. Hoping for good news and a speedy recovery for you, Buckaroo(m)!
DeleteLike your docs, I’ve been distracted with Thanksgiving doings this week and missed your earlier post. Very sorry to hear of your troubles and hope that you will continue to improve.
DeleteDitto best wishes and hopes that, whatever else they may drain out of you, don't let it be your sense of humor.
DeleteWishing you the best. I always love your comments.
DeleteGood to hear from you @egs & great news :) Hoping for the best. Give Mrs. Egs a hug when you can - she's been through hell too :)
DeleteSO glad to hear from you, @egs! I’ll add my well-wishes to the chorus, and here’s musical accompaniment to FAYE’s quip: Tea For Two, no CHEESECURLS - ART TATUM
Delete@egs. Yikes, I'm one of those who missed your earlier comment and didn't know about your situation. ALL THE BEST TO YOU! It sounds like things are on an improving trend, so keep that going, OK?
DeleteNice to hear from you this morning, egs. Glad you're feeling better (still on morphine, maybe?). As for your "oft-reviled style", there is no "reviling". Probably some eye rolling. Some groaning, even. But your positivity is astounding. I hear that's a good trait to have when you're healing. All the best.
DeleteI, too missed your earlier post, but had wondered where you were. If I'm pressed for time, I often just scroll through the comments until I reach yours. All the best and hope you're home soon.
DeleteDitto for everything @Conrad says in his blog opener, and for being uncomfortable with the number of names in this puzzle as Rex points out. I’m guessing LEE is in there as a super-common name. Weird clue. BADATTITUDE is the name of one team in our softball league—love it! Overall, thought this one had a lot of fun in it, and the cluing was definitely Friday level—some good mind-benders.
ReplyDeleteI did notice lots of names in this puzzle, but for some reason they didn't bother me or give me a BAD ATTITUDE. I thought the cluing was quite good and it was fun to learn that the Brirish call crossword constructors SETTERS. CHEESE CURLS and VENUS FLY TRAP were fun. I, too, had RETINA SCAN before PASSCODE.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed ths puzzle! Ended quicker than it started, as STAYOUTOFIT swept me into the SW, my last corner. Medium for me. Loved all the long answers. I'm sure ROSIE was variable....another LOTR answer, easy for those of us who have read all those books more than once.... but that could be a WOE for many. RENE is a gimme as clued, if you know the French. STDENIS was one that required every cross for me. Last entry was LOAFS.... for some reason, couldn't get LOllS out of my head. Enjoyed TRIEDANDTRUE, VENUSFLYTRAP, and CHEESECURLS! Thanks, Jacob, for this fun puzzle! : )
ReplyDeleteYes, a lot of names. And they came in all flavors: well-known, known after a cross or two, and unknown. But I thought the longer answers were much shinier than @Rex did, which redeemed the puzzle for me. WORK ETHIC, TRIED AND TRUE, VENUS FLYTRAP, STAY OUT OF IT, BAD ATTITUDE and DANCE TROUPE – all mwah! I thought there was an underlying intelligence discernable here. You can see it in clue/answer combinations such as [Drive around the office?]/WORK ETHIC, [Trusty]/TRIED AND TRUE and [It’s not constructive]/BAD ATTITUDE. I liked I’M READY as the answer to [Prepared statement?] and ENDORSE as [Back in the race?]. Also, the subtlety of [Picks up]/SENSES.
ReplyDeleteThe Basilica of ST.-DENIS is well-known to art and architectural historians. It’s real Art History 101 stuff: its choir (the apse or east end) is the birthplace of Gothic architecture. It’s very early – the Gothic innovations date from the 1140s. And they include the elimination of interior walls in favor of slender columns supporting rib vaults with pointed arches, and exterior flying buttresses to reinforce the structure, allowing huge windows with large expanses of clear or stained glass. Height, spaciousness and light were all important: filling the church with light was key to a theological position which equated it with the manifestation of God. This new aesthetic was, of course, widely influential in ecclesiastical architecture for the next 400 years and it all came together for the first time at ST.-DENIS.
Thanks for the architectural insight, Barbara. It's also an important Paris landmark because you can see it from far away. And, most important, it gets a mention in the song "Aupres de ma blonde."
DeleteTotally agree with your first paragraph, including the remark about an intelligence shining through. A little surprised by some of the negative commentary.
DeleteAnd thanks for the eloquent commentary on the Basilica! You'd be a great tour docent, if you're not one already.
You beat me to it, Barbara, and with far better info than I would have shared. I’ve seen scores of Gothic cathedrals but, somehow, haven’t yet visited St. Denis. Favorite thus far? Probably Amiens.
DeleteThanks Barbara for the information about the cathedral. I was distracted in the ST Denis story by the headless sermonizing.. Also - I agree with you about the fine clues you pointed out.
DeleteI visited St. Denis about 30 years ago and was duly impressed. But I don't recall ever knowing that this was the first example of Gothic architecture.
DeleteVillager
Ocúpate de tus propios cera de abejas.
ReplyDeleteIf the British are anything like the blog commenters here, they call crossword makers much worse than SETTERS. Today we could use the phrase "guy putting people's names into a grid for fun (?) and profit."
Sommeliers offer fancified wine until they discover your poor and without taste, and then they say, "...and of course we have our HOUSE WINE we pour out of enormous cardboard boxes into fancy little carafes and the profit margin is good for us, the taste is a unique blend of eau de burning building and exploding car battery, and most importantly it'll get you drunk enough to tolerate this loser sitting with you."
I had BATTY as I didn't realize our [Eccentric] was of the DOTTY variety. In fact, I don't know what separates the BATTY from the DOTTY, or even the primary indicators of DOTTINESS.
❤️ VENUS FLYTRAP. STAY OUT OF IT. BAD ATTITUDE.
People: 12 {this is what we're doing now, eh?}
Places: 2
Products: 3
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 0
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 21 of 68 (31%)
Funny Factor: 1 🤨
Uniclues:
1 Dogpiles of bikini clad tourists.
2 What I offered in my younger days, sheetwise.
3 🦖's thought every morning ... only to have his hopes dashed day after day, week after week, month after month, decade after decade.
4 Picasso, according to detractors.
5 My car, according to evidence under the seats.
6 Desire of those with a crush on a fairytale pill popper.
1 ISLANDERS' KNOTS
2 LESSONS BENEATH
3 I'M READY SETTERS (~)
4 ARLES PAINTBALL
5 CHEESE CURLS HUT
6 BOOK A ROOM ALICE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Cannibal's poetic meal. ODIST MEAT.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I went from Nutty to Ditzy to Dotty. It was Loony to overlook Batty!
DeleteI remember when I learned the word "defenestrate," which means, of course, to throw someone or something out of a window, I was surprised that such an act was deemed worthy enough to merit its own term. I could see it coming up, e.g., in mob dealings, but would a mob boss really use it? "Don't waste a bullet on that bum -- defenestrate him." Or on a family road trip: "Sam! Don't defenestrate that peach pit! Here, put it in this bag."
ReplyDeleteAnyway, the same thought occurred to me when I learned the word cephalophore from RP's writeup today. It's a saint who has been beheaded and who carries his head around with him. To be more precise: who is depicted as carrying his head. (Artists struggled with what to do with the halo. (I'm not kidding.)) Apparently it came up often enough to call for a term for it: cephalophore. It's from the Greek for "head carrier." (Duh.) According to Wikipedia, Denis, from today's puzzle, is "an original and perhaps the most famous cephalophore." I'm betting it's not something you shoot for.
Fantastic word, despite the gruesome ruminations. Somehow I want to imagine the beheads as speaking on occasion, wouldn't that be cool. There will be some who tell me, no, that's impossible, the blade slits through the vocal cords. Oh, don't be such a spoil sport! Someone, somewhere, having been guillotined and having his head presented to a cheering crowd, cried out in a clear voice, "aw, go fuck yourselves!"
DeleteNot a saint, but there's a great song about Anne Boleyn
DeleteIn the Tower of London large as life
The Ghost of Anne Boleyn walks, they declare
Poor Anne Boleyn was once King Henry's wife
Until he made the headsman bob her hair!
Ah, yes, he did her wrong, long years ago
And she comes up at night to tell him so!
[Chorus]
With her head tucked underneath her arm
She walks the Bloody Tower
With her head tucked underneath her arm
At the midnight hour
She comes to haunt King Henry
She means giving him 'what for'
Gadzooks! She's going to tell him off
For having spilt her gore
And, just in case the headsman
Wants to give her an encore
She has her head tucked underneath her arm
[Chorus]
With her head tucked underneath her arm
She walks the Bloody Tower
With her head tucked underneath her arm
At the midnight hour
Along the drafty corridors
For miles and miles she goes
She often catches cold, poor thing
It's cold there when it blows
And it's awfully awkward for the Queen
To have to blow her nose
With her head tucked underneath her arm
DEFENESTRATION was apparently popular back in the 15th-17th centuries, but caught on in English with the Defenestration of Prague in 1618. Usually used ad pedantic humor these days.
DeleteI came in here for the hate on UNDERACTS but stayed for HOUSEWINE not being recommended by a sommelier.
ReplyDeleteThis played Super Easy for me, the fastest Friday in I don't know how many moons. And, I really liked a lot of it: VENUS FLYTRAP (which are fascinating plants -- Mother Nature is a mad scientist), STAY OUT OF IT, TRIED AND TRUE, I'M READY (beautifully clued), PAINTBALL. I even liked CHEESE CURLS although those things haven't passed my lips in I couldn't say how many years.
ReplyDeleteDANCE TROUPE I liked (not troop, please). By the way, flash mobs are still very much a thing in this time of protest. Plus, they're fun.
Were there a lot of names? I didn't even notice. The only one that slowed me down in the slightest was RICK. Oh, and maybe LEE which was trickily clued. RORY and BONO I knew no problem. ART TATUM crossing ARMISEN, not hard. And RENE you didn't need to know as a name of any person in particular -- that was merely an exercise in French 101. I'll wait for @Gary to count it up rigorously.
I don't do enough fancy dining to have sommeliers as such strolling around giving recommendations, and normally I think of a HOUSE WINE as being on a cheaper end that the restaurant got a good deal on, and usually not exactly distinguished as wines go, so somehow the cluing for HOUSE WINE struck me as slightly incongruous. But I guess a sommelier is part salesperson, so that could be part of the job. You wouldn't want a sommelier hamming it up over the HOUSE WINE, and so, I'D BET, a sommelier generally UNDERACTS that role. Masters of taste and discretion, and all.
Isn't it usually "veg" out? And isn't it "vegged out"? I'm pretty sure Spelling Bee thinks so. So based off all that, "vegges" seems very much IN KIND. I cannot remember the word for the phenomenon where an ordinary word suddenly looks strange, foreign, but maybe Rex experienced that today. (What is this word I can't think of? Anyone?)
Anyway, I thought it was great, Jacob McDermott. Your puzzle put me in a cheery mood. Thanks!
WTF is a cheese curl? Other than that a very easy Friday.
ReplyDeleteCheese Curls.
Delete(Wait, $31.99, what?!)
A lot of names, specifically ARMISEN. But mostly this was a meh Friday. Left me wanting more :(
ReplyDeleteOof and YEESH! Something’s wrong when I, a deliberately slow solver - a dawdler and meanderer, even - can finish a Friday in under 20 minutes. I know, I know, some of you probably did it in less than half that time but selecting, unwrapping, cutting, and lighting my cigar takes some time and is very necessary to the solving experience. As is tracking down an ART TATUM playlist, but I’m glad I did both these things. Haven’t listened to Tatum in years.
ReplyDeleteAnd there were mistakes and overwrites. Wanted inns for 1A IRAS thinking of small, foreign hotels for pensions. And I hesitated for far too long before deciding Bahrain was indeed an island. Had Etta for a while at 21A before the obvious RENE saved me, allowing me to see the tricky RICK(y) James.
Lots of LOBs in this one, and some questionable stuff, too. Last time I checked, ST. DENIS was not *in* Paris. It’s a separate commune north of the city. It is separately governed. I suppose you could argue that it is part the Greater Paris area, but even then, a commune is not a neighbourhood. I know someone will try to lawyer this by saying that a “neighbourhood” is just an “area” but it’s like calling Yonkers a neighbourhood of New York.
And do you really need a sommelier to help you order the HOUSE WINE? Probably not. Unless you dine in the kind of place where the house red is an off-year Gervrey-Chambertin.
Liked 23D STAY OUT OF IT, 24D BAD ATTITUDE and even the trusty TRIED AND TRUE at 27A. Otherwise, just too easy.
That's Gevrey-Chambertin. I hate it when auto-correct corrects me and I try to fight back and we end up with a non-word.
DeleteThis was Friday Weintraub easy today. A few write-overs, one for PASSwOrd (which had me madly trying to come up with a French "born again" name ending in Nd), then DOofY, DOrkY and DOTTY, and finally PAINT Bomb.
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of VENUS FLYTRAPs and the clue was very nice. I hate houseflies in my house more than any other intrusive insect. Maybe I should get a pet Venus flytrap, though I'd have to find it some food during the winter months - that probably won't work :-).
This was a fun Friday puzzle. Thanks, Jacob McDermott!
I agree it was easy, and not a bad puzzle, but Robin Weintraub’s puzzles are much more delightful!
DeleteJacob's puzzle was his own creation & it was a good one (although I thought it was just "MEH.") But there's only one Friday (or any day) Robyn :)
DeleteApparently we are all getting used to litteral clues, as no one has commented so far, but I was still proud of myself for looking at "Dead ends" and thinking "I'D BET it's gonna be DEES."
ReplyDeleteAnd while I put it in without much thought, Rex's comment brought me back to it: why double the G? By the rules of English orthography, that should make the G hard, as in "bigger," but we pronounce it as a soft G, as in "larger." M-W agrees that "vegges" is the primary spelling, though. Ah well, the other rule of English orthography is that nothing is consistent.
The clue for 31-D should be "like some samples." Those in the supermarket aisle, sure, but go to a paint store and ask for a sample and they're likely to charge youo $6.95.
Lots of names, yes, some I knew and some I didn’t. But all gettable from crosses and therefore I thiught this was an easy Friday.
ReplyDeleteWell, names, for sure. The only real no--know was FAYE. ROSIE, I know from multiple readings of LOTR, STDENIS looked familiar as it's a famous street in Montreal, ARTTATUM I knew, and Fred AMRMISEN I'd heard of. Didn't know BONO's real name but a one-named singer ending in O was easy enough. Nice first name too.
ReplyDeletePASSCODE sounded funny to me and I spent some time trying to figure out what kind of exercise a PUFF was before CURL appeared. Oops. Toots and the Maytals do a great version of "Country Roads". I always do the John Denver one at nursing homes but I may see what kind of reaction the SKA take produces.
I really enjoyed this one, JMD. It Just Might Demand more stars than were awarded, and thanks for all the fun.
I first heard "defenestrate" in something I read by Gore Vidal. I love his writing but I thought that his using that unnecessary word was silly. But it fit his personality.
ReplyDeleteThe tricky cluing gave this one its sparkle for me, and I really enjoyed solving it, that is, I really enjoyed having to work at it, after some easy Fridays lately. Favorite cross: VENUS FLY TRAP x STAY OUT OF IT!
ReplyDeleteEasy-medium.
ReplyDeleteCostly erasures - iriSscan (I did not check the crosses) before PASS CODE and me too for etta before RICK.
I did not know ROSIE and FAYE.
I did know ART TATUM, ARMISEN (Portlandia was delightful), BONO, and RORY.
Solid and smooth with a bit of sparkle here and there, liked it, but I’m with @Rex on all the names.
@eggs - Thanks for the update and am hoping things go well.
If this pup had a lotta names, I musta been able to skate painlessly over most of em. Did notice lotsa feisty [but fun] clues, tho.
ReplyDeleteI gotta go three stars and a planet or two, for this FriPuz.
staff weeject pick: LEE - Total clue of mystery, til I found an explanation in an earlier blog comment, thanx U.
faves included: The Jaws of Themelessness. STAYOUTOFIT. TRIEDANDTRUE. WORKETHIC & clue. CHEESECURLS & clue. PASSCODE & clue. VENUSFLYTRAP & clue. ENDORSE clue. IMREADY clue.
Thanx for the fun and challenge sandwich, Mr. McDermott dude. Very nice job.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
... and now, for just a few more names to please everyone ...
"Colorcast" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Are you accepting pictures of absurdly cute, very floofy kitties this year? !
ReplyDeleteWhat Rex said about all the names. I had problems with all the ones he mentions, with ARTTATUM and ARMISEN being the worst, although I did guess the A correctly. RORY and BONO were the only gimmes. And hands up for ETTA James.
ReplyDeleteRe HOUSE WINE... when I was in Europe, I tried to learn a handful of phrases in the main languages, eg "We'd like a room for two people for three nights, no bath", etc. In Italy, most of our waiters knew some English, but if they didn't, I was like: "Vorrei pizza Quatro Staggioni, con insalata mista, y vino bianco della casa". Always worked! (Hope I got that right; I didn't look it up.)
I hope all you Americans enjoyed your Thanksgiving. Ours was six weeks ago, and boy the weather was a lot nicer. And welcome back egs!
Okanager. Besides the fact that I almost always drink the house red with my pizza, what, in English, is a Quatro Staggioni pizza?
Delete@Les... quattro stagioni = "four seasons" (two Ts and one G; I looked it up). It's just their name for basically a deluxe pizza.. meats, vegetables, etc.
DeleteExcellent turnout for Thanksgiving leftovers in the NYT crossword today! Look at who made it:
ReplyDeleteALICE
ARLES
ARMISEN
BONO
DOTTY
FAYE
LEE
NAOMI
OLLIE
RENE
RICK
RORY
ROSIE
+
DeleteART TATUM
DeleteST. DENIS and ART TATUM would like to have a word with you.
don't understand why anyone has issues with this puzzle - its really good
ReplyDeleteYou crazy bloggers ... From @egs being funny after his brush with death/ paralysis, to @Les going all ASS out in his response!
ReplyDeleteFlying buttress, indeed.
Continue on your getting better, @egs. Blood infections are no joke.
Roo
How do you know that your old? You think the clue for VENUS FLYTRAP should be Tim Reid on WKRP.
ReplyDelete