Showy purple flower / SAT 11-15-25 / Condition of Freud's "Rat Man," in brief / Brand associated with push-ups / Form of literature coined by Sartre / Unable to move while holding a sleeping baby, in slang / High point of 1950s car design? / Westminster Abbey has one named after King Henry VII / L.G.B.T.Q. vacation destination on Cape Cod, for short

Saturday, November 15, 2025

Constructor: Kyle Dolan

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Chick COREA (37A: Chick of jazz) —

Armando Anthony "ChickCorea (June 12, 1941 – February 9, 2021) was an American jazz pianist, composer, bandleader, and occasional percussionist. His compositions "Spain", "500 Miles High", "La Fiesta", "Armando's Rhumba", and "Windows" are considered jazz standards.

As a member of the Miles Davis band in the late 1960s, Corea participated in the birth of jazz fusion. In the 1970s he formed Return to Forever. Along with McCoy TynerHerbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett, Corea is considered one of the foremost pianists of the post-John Coltrane era.

Corea continued to collaborate frequently while exploring different musical styles throughout the 1980s and 1990s. He won 28 Grammy Awards and was nominated for the award 77 times. (wikipedia)

• • •

[mom, me, a long long time ago]

Between NAPTRAPPED and the PUDGY fingers, this puzzle felt like it was written by someone with a little baby at home (1A: Unable to move while holding a sleeping baby, in slang / 48D: Like a baby's fingers, perhaps). Or someone who lives near a baby or has friends who have a baby. Undoubtedly a CUTIE. It was nice to begin and end with babies being babies, though I have never in my nearly 56 years on this earth (11 days to go!) heard the term NAPTRAPPED. I have, however, experienced it, though these days it predominantly involves cats ... which are kinds of "babies." We certainly call them "baby" enough. Well, the little one, Ida the white cat, she's "baby" more than Alfie the tabby, who is more of a "big boy." I often ask them, when I see them after not seeing them for a while, "Who's this baby?" The answer, of course, is them. They're the baby. It's kind of like when you ask your dog, "Who's a good dog?" Your dog, the dog you're talking to, that's who's a good dog. Anyway, if a cat falls asleep on you, you are not allowed to move, this is law. Many an activity (like dinner) has been significantly delayed because one or the other of us is like [points to lap or chest where cat is] "can't move." CATTRAPPED. As for NAPTRAPPED, if it's in the puzzle, I guess someone somewhere is using the term. Because it's adorable, and because it describes a real phenomenon that should have a name, I'm happy to allow it.

[CATTRAPPED]

This puzzle was just as easy for me as yesterday's puzzle, but today is Saturday, which should be much harder, so I feel cheated once again of the struggle I crave on this day. The names that came at me were all very familiar. Not a one of them new to me. We don't have The Mount Rushmore of Crossword Names, but we have A Mount Rushmore: SHEL Silverstein, ERNO Laszlo, Chick COREA, and JET LI. I've seen the real Mount Rushmore, and it's impressive, but if those presidents were replaced tomorrow by SHEL ERNO COREA and JET LI, I'd be planning my trip to South Dakota right now. 


I even managed to remember OTIS Day and the Knights, though I had help from the "O" there. The only thing I had (some) trouble remembering was PHLOX—stared at that "HL" like "uh ... that's impossible," but then it wasn't—and RIYALS (they put the "Y" in there, do they? Well I'll be sure to remember th- nope, already forgotten). That RIYALS / PANELIST / FISH FRY / LLC was probably the stickiest part of the grid for me. I had the -ST at the end of 41A: Game show figure and wanted some kind of HOST. Wanted the [Close of business?] to be ESS (I've been solving too many cryptics, i.e. just the right amount of cryptics). FISH FRY was easier, because I understood the FISH part re: Lent, but I didn't know the FRY was particularly "Lenten" (39D: Lenten event). We have this roving business around here, Doug's FISH FRY, which is basically a truck out of which fried fish is served, usually in some parking lot, always as part of some fund-raising event. It's the only thing I think of when I hear FISH FRY, and it's not particularly (or at all) "Lenten," so ... yeah, hesitated at the FRY part, but it fit, and felt right, so ... there we go. I like it as an answer. 


Other things I liked: the whole SE corner. FLAT-FOOTED / ROLLICKING / "YES, INDEEDY!" goes through a lot of looks and moods for a little corner. And I really like that the crosses keeping the corner together really hold up. I cannot quibble with a one of them. In every corner, in fact, I'm impressed that the short stuff holding the long stuff in place almost never got gunky. I think I let out two "ooh, nice"s. Once early on, as I was just getting my footing:


And then shortly thereafter, when I realized DO DIRTY was going to be an answer (10D: Betray). A wonderful, colorful colloquial expression. With apologies to Sartre, I had no idea the ANTI-NOVEL was a thing—can't say I've read many of those (13D: Form of literature coined by Sartre). But otherwise, everything from SHONDALAND to WONDERBRA was pretty dang familiar to me. Once again, I wish it had all been harder, but that's the editor's fault. The grid is very nice.


[3D: L.G.B.T.Q. vacation destination on Cape Cod, for short]

Bullets:
  • 20A: It's used for hair therapy (HOT OIL) — having no hair myself, hair therapy is not something I think of often ever. This answer was hard to parse because I had -OTOI- and assumed it was one word. I was like "that's not how you spell LOTION." No, no it's not.
  • 25A: Swear off, with "of" (REPENT) — I don't like these as equivalents. Swearing off is much more informal and non-moralistic than REPENT (of). Do you REPENT of sweets, or alcohol? Repenting is for sins and it strongly implies regret. If I swore off cocktails tomorrow, first, please know that it is against my will, that either a doctor or someone with a gun is making me, and second, I would have no regrets. Every cocktail I drank—perfect. 
  • 30A: Win dough? (PRIZE MONEY) —I was trying to understand the "?" here. I get the literal part—"dough" you get from a "win" is PRIZE MONEY, but what was I supposed to be hearing / seeing with that clue? Answer: it sounds like "window." So, you know, if someone was reading the clues to you, you might've been fooled (?).
  • 40D: High point of 1950s car design? (TAIL FIN) — not a part of most FISH FRYs.
  • 50A: Westminster Abbey has one named after King Henry VII (CHAPEL) — Henry VII was the first monarch in the Tudor dynasty. After the defeat of Richard III, it goes him, the wife killer, then it gets choppy—Edward VI for a few years, then Lady Jane Grey for nine days, then Bloody Mary (and Philip, technically), who tried to return the country to Catholicism (sometimes violently, hence her nickname), and after a few years of that we finally get Elizabeth (who reigned for a relative eternity—almost 45 years). Good luck remembering all the bits there between HVIII and EI. 

  • 30D: Places to keep play things (PROP ROOMS) — this makes me think of my daughter, who has spent a lot of time in PROP ROOMS, and who will be home from her Theater MFA program in less than two weeks! My birthday and Thanksgiving and the Girl's Return, woo hoo! That's a hell of a week. Let's end where we began—with PUDGY fingers!:
[Penelope, Ella, me, ca. 2001]

That's enough for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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16 comments:

Conrad 6:15 AM  


Easy-Medium. Do two easy-for-the-day puzzles in a row foretell a real barnburner on Sunday?

Overwrites:
At 28A, I reacted to the scary movie IN hoRROR, not TERROR
My 38A black gem was an Onyx before it was an OPAL
Jin LI before JET at 45D. I don't know who or what I was thinking of
I had roc before ORC for the fantasy monster at 49A
owW before YOW for the 55D hurting expression
I thought nori might be the 58A Japanese umami before MISO
My 60A pot filler was ante before it was STEW

WOEs:
Cosmetics guy ERNO Laszlo at 9D
OTIS Day & the Knights (33D)

Totally missed the "window" aspect of the 30A clue. Thanks, @Rex!

Anonymous 6:21 AM  

I believe re: the "win dough" clue that the "win" is meant to be read as a noun, which is why the question mark was added. Read as a verb, it doesn't agree with "prize money." To put it another way, dough, of course, equals money but, here, win equals prize--not the natural way of reading the clue without the question mark.

Rex Parker 6:25 AM  

I describe “win” as a noun in the write-up. That much is not unclear. The only question was why *this* clue phrasing.

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

I adored NAPTRAPPED, despite never having heard the term before. And thank you, Rex, for the disquisition on cat-trapped. :)

Anonymous 6:40 AM  

Hung up in FASTING as a Lenten event instead of FISHFRY for way too long.

Areawoman 6:48 AM  

Doug's Fish Fry! A finger lakes institution. I'm lucky to live in the town with the original location (Skaneateles NY) and blessed to have met the man who did so much for his community over the years above and beyond providing an excellent very reasonably priced fish fry. It's worth the trip to just see the history on the walls of the restaurant. Typing this currently cattrapped by Umami who is tickled to see her name in the clues as well.

Son Volt 6:54 AM  

This was our Friday - splashy and fun. That entire SE stack - FLAT FOOTED, ROLLICKING and YES INDEEDY is top notch. NAP TRAPPED is inferable - I guess everything has its own cute moniker now.

What’s that brown stuff on top of your head Rex?

Ella and Duke

Love to see PHLOX - add AZALEA and we have a little subtheme going. HOT OIL on top of SEX is neat. GOON TRIAL is better than GO ON - I had GO to first. I have been propositioned in PROVINCETOWN.

Blackberry Smoke

Enjoyable Saturday morning solve. David Williams’ Stumper is a different beast today - highly segmented with a central diagonal stack that is tricky.

Palmetto Rose

Anonymous 6:56 AM  

I think lenten fish fries are a regional thing. I grew up in Buffalo and every respectable corner pub had one (all year, actually, but line-out-the-door crazy during Lent). I now live in a much bigger, highly Catholic city (Chicago) and a good fish fry is hard to find, during Lent or otherwise.

Anonymous 6:58 AM  

Nap trapped is definitely a parenting word, at least among millennial moms. I got it instantly and loved seeing it. Representation! However, this was way too easy for a Saturday.

RJ 7:00 AM  

I predict this blog will have many people who are cat-trapped this morning!

Lewis 7:19 AM  

NAP-TRAPPED. Hah! OMG! One of our sons took forever to go to sleep at night, as a baby. It would never happen without intervention – lullabies, stories, holding while gently swaying. During the latter, he would often, finally, drop into sleep. But that wasn’t enough. You had to hold him longer until he dropped deeper; you were nap-trapped.

Finally, finally he would ever-so-gently be laid down, and you would tiptoe out, and then came the 30 seconds where you waited IN TERROR, because half the time he’d wail anew, and you’d have to do it all over again.

This is a memory now infused with smiles and love, and thank you for triggering it, Kyle.

And thank you for more:
• That gorgeous SE stack of FLAT-FOOTED, ROLLICKING, and YES INDEEDY. Mwah! (Hi, @Rex!)
• Puzzle-sparking Scrabbliness, a Q short of a pangram.
• Five double-O’s, including the lovely dook GOONTRIAL.
• A terrific new clue for ACHOO – [Exclamation made while covering the face].
• PuzzPairs© of PUPU/NONO and WONDERBRA/CUP.

I left this grid feeling good all over – a gift. Thank you for a splendid outing, Kyle!

Anonymous 7:27 AM  

My new granddaughter just naptrapped her mother the other day, so plate of shrimp.

Anonymous 7:35 AM  

LAPTRAPPED and HIPTRAPPED before hitting the fill for NAPTRAPPED. OBVI/S no shortage of slang here. YESINDEEDY a ROLLICKING good Saturday solve. Nice work, Mr. Dolan!

Gary Jugert 7:37 AM  

¡Por supuesto que sí!... ¡Claro que sí!

I am NAP TRAPPED by life and needing to power down for 45 minutes every afternoon when I should be trying to unmask the face of God. Or at least make it to the gym.

Biggest struggles today were all Asian: MISO, RIYALS, and JET LI.

Something you should definitely NOT avoid if you want to have stories worth telling, experiences worth denying, and secrets to savor for a lifetime: NONO.

There's a handful of very different crimes associated with GOON TRIALS. I wish they'd stop outing me as a PUDGY CUTIE.

So crazy how many boat things I've learned doing crosswords. LEE and JIB were gimmes, so I must be ready to hit the high seas and to sing some liner notes.

People: 6
Places: 3
Products: 5
Partials: 2
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 17 of 72 (24%)

Funny Factor: 2 😕

Tee-Hee: DO DIRTY. NASTY. SEX. WONDER BRA.

Uniclues:

1 Wear a cape, according to Edna Mode.
2 The last feeling he had before becoming lunch.
3 Sight at a shirtlessness convention.
4 Adult book stores.
5 A box of Kleenex.
6 Look, I didn't write this puzzle, and I am trying to keep these uniclues out of the sewer, but the tee-hee-ery here is Hall of Fame level juvenalia, so if you don't mind, we'll just move on.
7 Unkind command to heavy-set one headed to the court of public opinion.

1 ACTION HERO NONO
2 AHI IN TERROR
3 PANELIST ABS
4 NASTY PROP ROOMS
5 ACHOO REPAIR KIT
6 WONDER BRA CUTIE
7 GO ON TRIAL PUDGY

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Where one finds leftover feet. OGRE ICE BOX.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Anonymous 7:40 AM  

I’ll be driving there tomorrow, thanks for the recommendation

RooMonster 7:50 AM  

Hey All !
Look at All that hair on Rex ca. 2001!!

Nice SatPuz. Turned out to be easier than when I did my first run-through. Put in a few "maybes" here and there, some were wrong (AWFUL for NASTY, PROPSAREA for PROPROOMS), some were right (PHLOX, ALOE, TOWS). Managed to work through the wrongness in decent time.

As a car nerd, got TAILFIN straight off. Had Rex's ESS for LLC, getting me sTAbEL first for CHAPEL. I guess you can say, naming a stable after the King is kind of shitty. 😁

Good F representation in SE.

Mafia thugs in court? GOON TRIAL
Are there P ROOFS in P TOWN? There's probably P ANELISTs! (Not breakfast test passing? 😁)

Anyway, silliness aside, good SatThemeless, worked the ole brain just enough.

Have a great Saturday!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

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