Saturday, November 15, 2025

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

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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119 comments:


  1. 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!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Stumptown Steve12:39 PM

      Conrad: Otis Day and the Knights was the fictional band playing the toga party in Animal House, filmed on the University of Oregon campus. The song is now part of one of the best traditions in college football, "Shout" between the 3rd and 4th quarters of very Duck home game. Took the grandkids to a game, which was "meh" but "Shout" was the highlight of the game for them.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YURvaV844c

      Delete
  2. Anonymous6:21 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.

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

      Delete
    2. Maybe cause it sounds like WINDOW?

      Delete
    3. I think that's the answer, though: the question mark is there only to alert you not to read the clue at face value, where "win" is a verb.

      Delete
  3. Anonymous6:28 AM

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

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:46 AM

      I entered "totlocked" and went on my merry way clockwise from the NE. When I got back to the NW, Anaheim necessitated reworking the whole quadrant.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:14 PM

      We call it COL in our house (cat on lap). “I can’t answer the door because I’m COL.)

      Delete
    3. Anonymous2:40 PM

      LAPTRAPPED before NAPTRAPPED, which I thought must have been correct (baby in your lap) and was kinda cute, until I got to 1D. But NAPTRAPPED is cute too. don’t know this expression.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous6:40 AM

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

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My first thought too

      Delete
    2. JazzmanChgo11:06 AM

      Well, FASTING is an activity, not really an "event." For that reason, I had FAST DAY for a long time before FISH FRY became obvious.

      Delete
    3. Fish & JazzmanChgo
      I got FISH quickly I am a lapsed Catholic of Italian extraction Lent is from my childhood. I never associated Lent with FISHFRY. which in New England tends to be an outdoor activity in the summer
      (Anyway my family went to clam bakes not fish fries). But it’s a big country with lots of warm places so I assume it may be a thing somewhere?

      Delete
  5. Areawoman6:48 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.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:40 AM

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

      Delete
  6. 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

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous6:56 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.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:19 AM

      You need to go to Wisconsin, where every bar, restaurant, and diner has a Friday fish fry

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:21 AM

      Not to mention supper clubs

      Delete
    3. Anonymous9:02 AM

      Yes INDEEDY re Wisconsin. Here in the Cleveland area, it is always possible to get a FISHFRY, but it doesn’t seem to be the "thing" that it was in Milwaukee, where I grew up. However, Friday FISHFRies are literally everywhere here in the CLE during the Lenten season. They are heavily advertised, featured in numerous listings, rated in the newspapers, etc. It would appear that the many churches that offer them make the bulk of their annual operating budget in the FISHFRY season!

      Delete
    4. Anonymous9:50 AM

      Yep, Western NY has abundant Friday fish fries - we enjoy them in the Chautauqua lake region

      Delete
    5. 2nding lack of fish fries in Chi, worst thing about leaving WI.

      Delete
  8. Anonymous6:58 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.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:08 AM

      agree on all counts!

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

    ReplyDelete
  10. 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!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Lewis, you describe our daughter’s pattern to a T!

      Delete
  11. Anonymous7:27 AM

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

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous7:35 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!

    ReplyDelete
  13. ¡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)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gary
      Great uniclues today. Especially the dissertation on why you left out a clue for 6!

      Delete
    2. @Gary J: Great advice: For exciting tales to share as you age, eschew the NONO!

      Delete
  14. 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

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Roo
      Noticed the F’s.
      I knew you would mention them.

      Delete
  15. No idea what PTOWN is. That first letter could be any of 26. Fortunately, NA_TRAPPED seemed like it had to be a P.

    Actually, that NW corner has four WoEs in NAPTRAPPED, SHONDALAND, PTOWN and ERNO. Very odd that someone Rex has on the crossworld Mount Rushmore is someone I've never heard of. Despite all those unknowns, puzzle was still very doable.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous2:40 PM

      PTOWN is 60 miles ESE of Natick.

      Provincetown, MA at the tip of Cape Cod

      Delete
    2. Provincetown, MA

      Delete
    3. Anonymous6:09 PM

      Not the constructor’s fault that your knowledge of the world is limited. It’s reasonable to assume a degree of worldliness on the part of subscribers to the NYT, especially solvers of the Saturday puzzle.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous11:53 PM

      @Anonymous 609pm Rreir! 😼

      Delete
  16. Another one on the easy-ish side, which I welcome. It’s fun (and a bit of an ego-boost) to actually get some flow going on a Saturday. I understand that Rex and a significant group of us (actually of y’all) yearn for more of a challenge, but I’m enjoying these while they last.

    There were a few tough spots. For those tempted to characterize this one as Tuesday-easy, I would suggest that we wouldn’t see SHONDALAND, PHLOX and NAP TRAPPED all tucked into a single section on a Tuesday. So I’ll stick with my assessment of easy “for a Saturday”.

    Rex teaches literature and he never heard of ANTINOVEL - so I basically had no chance there. Fortunately the crosses were pretty reasonable, with the possible exception of REPENT as clued (depending on your perspective, that clue is either “Saturday worthy” or “really terrible“, so it may not be a NONO, but it wasn’t OBVI to me).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @SouthsideJohnny 8:03 AM
      Crossword synonyms: “Saturday worthy” or “really terrible.“ 😂❤️

      Delete
    2. Anonymous11:37 AM

      Agreed! RENOUNCE seems closer in meaning to the clue as written. (Am CATTRAPPED as I write this....)

      Delete
  17. Your guide to R___L currencies:
    Rial: Yemen, Oman, Iran
    Riel: Cambodia
    Real: Brazil
    Riyal: Saudi Arabia, Qatar

    ReplyDelete
  18. Bob Mills8:32 AM

    Rex calls it "easy," then leads us through a maze of verbiage that even he seemed to find difficult (???). Oh well, it is Saturday.
    Finished it, but needed cheats to get SHONDALAND and COREA.
    If anyone on this blog has ever heard the word NAPTRAPPED, I'd be surprised, and I'd assume it was simply invented and clued as if it were slang. Not fun.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn’t find any of it difficult (???)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:51 PM

      Bob Mills
      Several people prior to your posting mentioned they knew NAPTRAPPED. It’s a Millennial expression. I thought it quite a good one. Internal rhyme and as Rex said a phenomenon in need of a term. Why do you assume it is not a thing just because you never heard of it.

      Delete
  19. A couple of missteps before LLC. Great cluing!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Andy Freude8:44 AM

    With all due respect to Sartre, I remain staunchly pro-novel.

    Thanks, puzzle, for reminding me of the joys of those many hours of being NAPTRAPPED (a new word for me, but an old, familiar phenomenon). Now I’m eagerly awaiting Thanksgiving and a visit with my granddaughter, a PUDGY-fingered CUTIE. With any luck, I’ll be trapped again.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Anonymous9:06 AM

    In our family we refer to the condition as having the "kitty clause". Contractually not obligated to move because of cat-in-lap. Inevitably, when the other person gets up and moves anywhere near the direction of the kitchen, said clause disappears.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Average Saturday solve. The crosswordese made the good material OBVI. Even when I had INC next to FASTING in the south ALOE next to PALS gave me CHAPEL which changed FASTING to FISHFRY.

    I got to do the NYTXW in Ridgwood Queens today. We're at our youngest daughter's apartment after picking her up from work last night. Driving through the Holland Tunnel then Greenwich Vilage and the East Village on a Friday night was an interesting experience.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Anonymous9:11 AM

    This puzzle had serious good vibes. Loved it.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Niallhost9:20 AM

    Started out strong with ACTION star and SHONDALAND going in right away. The star turned to HERO fairly after sussing out NAP TRAPPED (never heard of it but made sense).

    In NE, started with YESIREE BOB which I thought was a clever answer until it wasn't. Was able to piece everything together in fine easy Friday fashion - no big hiccups, just little adjustments here and there. Really enjoyed it, but once again too easy for the day of the week. 14:55

    ReplyDelete
  25. David Grenier9:24 AM

    Thank you for acknowledging Cat Law. In my house I also get trapped by a 120 cuddly rottie resting his head on me, or sometimes laying on top of me on the couch.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous9:26 AM

    About 1/2 the time of a regular Saturday, which is to say Wednesday/Thursdayish for difficulty. Never heard of Naptrapped. My wife and I took my mother to Ptown many years ago. We went to a restaurant. All of a sudden the Maitre'd says "Sheila!". She had met him in Goa, a friend of a gay friend of my sister who lives there. He spent his summers in a Ptown, winters in Goa, It's great to be reminded of that wonderful coincidence. Such events were surprisingly common with my now departed Mancunian mother. The puzzle gets a plus for jogging a fond memory.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous9:41 AM

    For me, this was significantly harder than yesterday. I had a couple of errors that trapped me (LAPTRAPPED seemed right, didn't know SHONDALAND, so I got stuck a bit in the top left), but even the rest of the puzzle was tougher for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous 9:41 AM
      Great story.
      Great town. (I live in New England)

      Delete
  28. What's the difference between an INTERiOR designer and an INTERROR designer? One tries to keep you in horror about what you'll see next and the other is an answer in today's puzzle. For the record, Mrs. Egs is an Interior Designer and she did not approve this message.

    Nice 2001 pic, @Rex. Do I detect some HOTOIL use on that full head of hair?

    What did Paul Bunyan say when a friend asked why he couldn't take some time off? "FIRSTOFALL"

    Can't wait for @Gary Jugert on YON SEX REPENT and WONDERBRA CUTIE. (I wrote this a few hours ago. I see now that I was 1for 2 on whether @Gary Jugert would Uniclue these)

    Gotta run due to granddaughter duties. Thanks, Kyle Dolan.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. FIRSTOFALL!!! Hilarious :)

      Delete
    2. @egsforbreakfast 9:41 AM
      Wow. Brutal. This is the best I can do while avoiding the moderator's scythe:

      WONDER BRA CUTIE: Little orange doing a push up.
      YON SEX REPENT: Altar activity for a holy roller after an unsupervised (and wildly eventful) weekend away in the big city.

      Delete
    3. @Gary. Thanks. I like them.

      Delete
  29. Any puzzle with words like PHLOX, WONDERBRA, FLATFOOTED, and PUDGY makes for ROLLICKING good fun.

    I had to work a little at this one, which is a good thing on a Saturday. Had lAPTRAPPED and tried to convince myself that lArTY could mean "incredibly bad" (and RHONDALAND seemed to make sense) but finally ran the alphabet and settled on NAPTRAPPED, which led to the unfamiliar but corrrect SHONDALAND.

    Thanks for a fun ride, Kyle!

    ReplyDelete
  30. EasyEd9:46 AM

    Found this one fun to unravel, but needed help to get PTOWN and SHONDALAND and WONDER, so far from a clean solve. Agree with those who found the clue for REPENT to be a bit off. Except for the rare Monday, I never find a puzzle too easy, but have to admit this one was less difficult than most Saturday puzzles.

    ReplyDelete
  31. P.U. Litzer9:47 AM

    "Once again, I wish it had all been harder, but that's the editor's fault. The grid is very nice"

    So, if one of the functions of the editors is to edit the clues so that they are appropriate for the expected difficulty of the day of the week on which they decide to run it, it seems that more and more puzzle clues are being edited for Monday-Wednesday difficulty, even if they run later in the week.

    I guess that's, in part, how the NYTimes, whose strategy has been enticing new readers through its ancillary products (Games, Cooking, Wirecutter & The Athletic), gained 460.000 more subscribers in Q3 2025 over Q2 2025, for a total of 12.33 subscribers, and increased its operating profit by 26.1%. With the goal set at having 15 Million subscribers by the end of 2027, might we expect puzzles to become still easier, and for the visual gimmicks to increase until it all feels like the child's placemat at an IHop or Denny's?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I bet they'll adopt a new strategy if they have only 12.33 subscribers.

      Delete
    2. @P.U. Litzer 9:47 AM
      If those numbers are correct, sounds like the Times is doing something right. We might be disappointed if we're looking to them for old-school melt yer face puzzles. Thankfully, we have plenty of other choices.

      Of note, I recently asked one of my beginning ukulele classes how many people do the Times crossword (because that days puzzle included something about Yankee Doodle and I use it as part of my instruction) and half the class raised their hands and many are young people. This is in New Mexico, so obviously the Times is gathering fans far away from NYC, and not just blue hairs.

      Delete
    3. P.U. Litzer2:47 PM

      Gary: Well the numbers are reported in the New York Times by a New York Times reporter relying on a report issued by the New York Times Company, so I assume the are correct - unless the NYTimes is dealing in alternative facts and fake news. The Business section of the paper routinely reports these figures each quarter when announced by the NYTimes Company.

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  32. NAPTRAPPED took several crosses, but was ROLLICKING fun to discover. With a human baby, definitely defensible, as you don’t want to go through the experience @Lewis described. OTOH, if you are claiming to be CATNAPPED, you just want to sit for a while or get out of a chore. In my house, a request to help dry the dishes is met with pointing at a cat on the lap. In jest, of course, as that cat will just find the second most comfortable spot and go right back to sleep if you have to get up.

    Rex, when it is fund requesting time again, put this write-up forward as exhibit ONE. So fun, illuminating and well-written!

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  33. Finished with one error, the result of my overthinking. TET is usually cued as New Year's, so I reasoned that it couldn't be a harvest festival, and I've never seen Animal House, so I went with OrIS, figuring it was a parody of Doris Day. I overthought TERROR, too--since they're generally called "horror movies," I figured the clue had called them scary because the answer was hoRROR. That kept me from seeing DO DIRTY until I had all the other crosses.

    And surely I'm not the only one to have 'ante' before STEW for the pot-filler?

    I vaguely knew something about Sartre and ANTINOVEL, but not what said piece of literature actually is, so I looked it up. If Wikipedia is to be believed, the term was actually coined by Charles Sorel in 1633.

    OK, the REPENT thing. I have often repented having drunk too much wine the evening before, but I have never sworn off wine as a result.

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  34. I forgot to mention "Win dough?" I thought the ? is because one would normally read "win" as a verb, as in "buy a lottery ticket and you can win dough!" I never notice the 'window' sound.

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  35. I took the family up to PTOWN one summer, having heard of it as a vacation destination. Despite having a career in the arts, I hadn’t got the memo about it being an LGBTQ+ destination, and was walking around wondering about the preponderance of kitschy shops, rainbows and couples holding hands until it dawned on me. I guess in a largely LGBTQ+ community, it’s just a vacation destination, not a specialized one.

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  36. Fun! Lapcripple before NAPTRAPPED since spam also comes in cans.

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  37. The NW (starting point) was going nowhere --ACTIONHERO, maybe--so started with SNO and NONO and things progressed pretty smoothyly from there. When I finished in the NW and saw NAPTRAPPED and SHONDALAND,, it was obvious why I couldn't start there. PTOWN is pretty common around here though.

    Another good TIL things--RIYALS, ANTINOVEL, and ERNO. HORROR before TERROR slowed things down but otherwise some nice whooshing.

    Fun Saturday, KP. Keep Publishing ones like this and I'll be a happy man. Thanks for all the fun.

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  38. Fun Saturday (smiles, way below my average, what day is it today?). PHLOX and AZALEA got me missing my Maine garden, and when I learned from the cluing about mad honey I ran down a 2 hour rabbit hole exploring mad honey origins, azalea pollen, and bee keeping and have now found the local chapter of the Maine State Beekeepers Association and the bee whisperer so I can get started. Love when these puzzles do that to me. Not sure HOTOIL, SEX, and others already noted will produce similar further exploration, but keeping an open mind.
    Great start to the day, as is this blog/commentary. Thanks.

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  39. Anonymous10:15 AM

    Every week I look forward to FRI and SAT puzzles … SO disappointing 😕

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  40. Anonymous10:25 AM

    60A ante before Seed before Soil before STEW
    61A YESIreEbob before YESINDEEDY

    I never heard of NAPTRAPPED but I sure loved being NAPTRAPPED. You never really need an excuse for a baby snuggle but who can do the dishes when NAPTRAPPED duty calls. It’s a tough job but a sacrifice I was OBVI up for. YESINDEEDY.

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  41. Two Saturdays in a row I could finish without a cheat. YOW! Not exactly a HOT streak, but it’s a start. WONDER if there’s any PRIZE MONEY to be had. Seriously though, I appreciate an occasional Saturday that provides entertainment instead of teeth gnashing and I thought this was a very good puzzle. YES INDEEDY.

    I can hardly wait to see what Gary J is going to do with all those tee-hees. He’ll have a ROLLICKING good show today.

    Been a long time since I was NAP TRAPPED but I get cat trapped at least once a day. Feline Paralysisis is how I’ve always referred to it though, and it doesn’t usually last too long. She’ll snuggle and purr until I almost fall asleep myself. Then as her ears suddenly perk up at some imaginary sound, she uses me as a launching pad to leap halfway across the room. And I’ve got the scars to prove it.

    RP: Love the family photos today, all the generations. It takes a very secure man to post a picture of himself wearing a diaper but you rocked it.

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  42. Maybe I haven't lost it. Everybody called yesterday's easy, and I couldn't even finish it. Today is called easy (but not overwhelmingly so), and I solved it comfortably. Liked ROLLICKING.

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  43. Anonymous10:37 AM

    As others have mentioned - I prefer the more challenging Saturday, but this one was enjoyable

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  44. A nice enough Saturday outing. Definitely on the easy side but it had its moments. Started badly with awful at 1D. At 8D I conflated “organic” with eco-friendly which the burning of PEAT definitely is not.

    Had finaLIST at 41A before PANELIST and my anti-anagram, anti-fantasy brain couldn’t, for the longest time, cope with a 3 letter anagram at 49A. ORC/roC. Does it get any easier? Stumped this idiot until crosses came to the rescue.

    Loved 10D DO DIRTY and the DOOKish nature of 14D GO ON TRIAL. The clue for 30A PRIZE MONEY - “Win dough” - is so bad it’s good. Was a little leery of CUTIE at 46D because I saw it as sexist at first, but I guess it doesn’t have to be.

    Most of the long answers were good or at least entertaining. Especially liked NAP TRAPPED.

    YES INDEEDY, indeed.

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    Replies
    1. Les S. More
      I wanted to get the 3 letter monster right away. No crosses but the most common one in crosswords ORC ( then ROC) came to mind. Figured they were trying to make an easy answer harder. .lucky guess.

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  45. Holy potential ERNO SHONDALAND nattick, Batman!

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    Replies
    1. The potential was reality for me...

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  46. Anonymous10:52 AM

    Holy cow I did it! Tough for me but I usually can’t finish Saturday without the help of the error checker. Today was not one of those days!

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  47. Elegant write-up today (although I do enjoy "Growling Rex" ["Who's an angry boy? You are!"]).

    Had ESS, then with the final C had INC, then (finally) LLC, then more time on my hands than anticipated from this too-easy Saturday.

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  48. MetroGnome11:04 AM

    Never heard of PHLOX, SHANDALAND, or ERNO, and I have no idea what "hair therapy" is, so HOT OIL (hence, most of the NW) was an utter WOE. And what the hell is a PUPU PLATTER?

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    1. Anonymous4:23 PM

      MetriGnome
      Since you asked, pupu platters (an appetizer)have been hugely popular in Chinese/Polynesian style restaurants and tiki bars since the ‘50’s. Places like Trader Vic’s made them famous. If they are dying out it may be a n age thing. It was a gimme for a lot of people.

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  49. Mostly easy but the NW was a bit of a slog for me. Have never heard the expression NAP TRAPPED, though it’s cute and makes sense, plus PHLOX, SHONDALAND, (odd cluing on NASTY, and ACHOO clued as an “exclamation” (?!) were woes.

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  50. A great Saturday! Really enjoyed it. Thank you, Kyle :)

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  51. Today's paper had an obit for Edward J. Mroszczak. What a grid buster he would be.

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  52. In our house the condition is known as COL (Cat On Lap). For instance: "Can you refill my wine glass? I have COL."

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  53. I'm not known for baby-cuddling - little to no exposure, but there's a picture of me in a boat holding our friends' toddler while he naps. I guess I was NAP-TRAPPED but being in a boat precluded my going anywhere anyway.

    The NW was the last to fill in today. I read all the clues and couldn't come up with a single answer. The NE, on the other hand, started out with SNO/SWAG and I filled the grid clockwise. For a short time, I had 1A ending in lAPPED.

    @jberg, yes, ante before STEW.

    @burtonkd, I have the same philosophy about sleeping cats. I will sit still for a while but when I have to get up, I don't REPENT of my ACTION.

    FISH FRYs are common around here during Lent as are lutefisk dinners around the holidays. No longer Catholic and never having been Scandinavian means I attend neither.

    Kyle Dolan, thanks for the Saturday breeze.

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  54. Easy. Oddly many the long answer were easier for me to come up with than the short ones…e.g. I knew SHONDALAND and ACTION HERO but TINS, PHLOX, ERNO (which was a WOE) and NASTY were less obvious…I did know ANAHEIM.

    Solid and very smooth with plenty of sparkle, liked it a bunch!

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  55. Cheated indeed. I’m not that good puzzles. I shouldn’t be able to finish a Saturday in 6 minutes. In fact, I made my best ever Friday and Saturday times yesterday and today (5:56 and 6:07).

    I’m currently working backward through all puzzles I haven’t completed, and in 2016 Saturdays were sooo hard. I wish we could return to those days.

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  56. Anonymous11:57 AM

    Hey Kyle, very enjoyable puzzle, clues just right , easy medium for Saturday.
    Solved sitting up in bed with my wife, who had a rare sleep in , and came up with Cattrapped on my own - we were both covered by sleeping cats!
    Lots of fun answers and a few shwoshes Yeah this could have been a good Friday but why not pep up Saturday morning once in a while.
    Now out to mulch what's left of the leaves on a nice fall day...

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  57. Anonymous12:30 PM

    Used every letter but "Q" in the answers. First Saturday in a long time I didn't have early-onset panic that I wouldn't finish.

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  58. Loved that photo of you with your family Rex. You look so serious! “I am holding this tie-dye dress and it is Ready.”

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  59. Very easy - like yesterday. Again, a fun puzzle with some fun answers, but more like Wednesday level. I used to rarely finish a Saturday puzzle, and I certainly haven’t improved THAT much!

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  60. Once again, many people are calling this easy, but it wasn't for me. Lots of things I didn't know-- NAPTRAPPED, SHONDALAND, PUPU, the non-Rubik ERNO. Even some of the straightforward clues did me no help, eg "Like a baby's fingers"... SHORT? SMALL? I think I'm getting better at the tricky clues but worse at the easy ones.

    I've certainly heard of LENT but not as an adjective? Once I got FISH it made sense.

    Over 2 years ago there was a major landslide north of us which closed the only highway for ages. They got it open eventually, but haven't been doing any work at all this year. Then just this week they restarted, and the delays will last until... get this... 2027. Arrghh!

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  61. The ACHOO clue got me. Also my lack of familiarity with PTOWN. First I tried “I can't” for the exclamation, (considering and dismissing ACH no!) and Pt Ann. I faintly suspected SHONDALAND but thought the A was reasonable. No.

    Loved NAPTRAPPED and YESINDEEDY, PRIZE MONEY.

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  62. The NW was killer, the rest was easy.

    What’s the point of the question mark in
    40D: High point of 1950s car design?
    A TAILFIN isn’t at the apex of a car.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:41 PM

      PaulFahn
      High point. The clue doesn’t say “the”. Leaving the possibility of “a high point “. ? emphasizes point has another meaniing like the tip of a fin.from the famous’50’s style. Close enough for crosswords, especially Saturday

      Delete
  63. My kids are 12 and 7 so maybe the terminology has evolved since they were infants, but the term I knew was "baby jail." My wife and I would would text each other from the other room things like, "Can you come open the door so the cat can get out? I'd do it but I'm stuck in baby jail"

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    Replies
    1. @Doug 1:25PM. We had “baby jail” too! Only it was way, way, waaay before cell phones - we had to try to call without waking her up. Occasionally, if it was at hand, and Dad was in another room, I’d throw the dog’s tennis ball at the wall a couple times to get some help.

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  64. NatalieF2:47 PM

    As the mom of two small kids, can confirm: naptrapped is absolutely a term in frequent usage among people with small children! I was absolutely delighted to see it in today's puzzle.

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  65. Anonymous2:50 PM

    guessing there must be someone in ny times xword subscriptions sales saying they are losing people because weekends are too difficult only logical explanation for this the whole idea is it gets harder by the day with Sunday being various levels

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  66. Cathy2:50 PM

    This resident of PTOWN was thrilled to see our little resort town by the sea in today's puzzle.

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  67. In our house it’s called furalysis. Or sometimes purralysis.

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  68. As I write, I am catNAPTRAPPED. In fact, I had futzed around far too long before getting in “our chair” (a recliner) for our morning ritual: coffee, puzzle and Pip . She sat blocking my access to my sink so I would quit with the tidying already and yapped at me, then started with the head butts and “the eyebrows look” until I finally got my coffee cup, carafe and tablet.
    The daily drill: she hops up on the back of the chair and the moment I have reclined, the lap is hers. She makes her biscuits, twirls around a couple times, settles and is asleep almost instantly. I cannot get up until she does. As @Rex says, it’s law. I’d share a picture, but my granddaughter is at dance right now and isn’t available to show me how to put a picture into something like this. (Yep, @Nancy, you so kindly wrote very clear instructions for me that unfortunately got lost when I moved to my new tiny house in August. Unfortunately I don’t do that maneuver often enough to have actually “learned it,” and am so lucky that my nearly teenage granddaughter - 10 more days! - is available. Thank you though for the earlier help - and sorry!)

    I have enjoyed Kyle Dolan’s previous puzzles. Today’s themeless was every bit as good and possibly better than his earlier ones. That may be because I love a good themeless Saturday.

    Today was nothing but crunchy fun. Clever clues, fun answers and a wonderful dearth of names or obscure text speak and zero junk! The one “modern lingo” entry was easy. You could say it was even OBVI.

    About the current penchant for kids to truncate words, though. It makes me cringe, and takes me back to Sunday afternoons at Gran’s. That was the only day that Grandfather was home. He was a lawyer in the Ohio AG’s office his entire career. He loathed imprecise, overly colloquial or slang-filled speech and insisted - sternly (and often more than a tad angrily) that we speak properly. Noisy kids were not for him. Complete sentences, no slang and be precise! For example, if I said something was “kind of good,” his response would be, “What kind; how much and define good! Be precise and say what you mean!” As much as Grandfather’s “Sunday Lecture Series” used to irritate us, both my brother and I often wished he had lived long enough for us to have “real” conversations with him. Sadly, he died of cirrhoses of the liver when we were in grade school. Every single time I wrote a brief or made an argument, I thought of him and wished he’d lived long enough to tell me about lawyering in the ‘50s and ‘60s. He was constantly in my thoughts as I wrote my first brief to the US Supreme Court. I would have liked him to read it. Oh, the puzzle . . .

    Had a terrible time with FIRST OF ALL because my solving path took me around the edge of the grid clockwise and at 39A all I had was FALL - hate it when my brain sees something like that and just will not let go! The clue “One, . . . “ was no help whatsoever. And the downs needed way too long to percolate. At 33D, I remembered the scene from “Animal House” but the clue made me think of Gladys Knight and the Pips and my brain wouldn’t let go of “I Heard it Through the Grapevine.” Sheesh! Next, INERT took way too long, and I really needed those two downs to get my brain off the Soul Train.

    Loved the clues in the SW. “Places to keep play things” for PROP ROOMS and “Set for service” for REPAIR KIT - nice! As for the triple stack in the SE, YES INDEEDY, I had to think, but never got caught FLAT FOOTED today, and had a ROLLICKING good time!!



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  69. Nice to hear from a resident of PTOWN
    I live in RI and have visited fairly often. I have always enjoyed it. Like most resorts, it has gentrified and the rising housing prices have changed its character to some extent. For much of the 20th century it was a cheap place for artists and post war not rich gay people to live But it still is in a good way an eccentric place, a crowded old town located in the least developed part of Cape Cod. Beautiful area BTW.
    Liked the puzzle. Did not find it easy mostly up top. As I said,, remembering SHONDA Rhimes got me the first part of the answer but I couldn’t remember the end of the business name. Maybe her last name is different from what I remembered And I couldn’t see do dirty. Finally I avoided dnf when LAND popped into my head.
    On the other hand STEW was my first and only thought. Confirmed by the S on proprooms.

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  70. Anonymous5:56 PM

    Which musician In Otis Day and the Knights went on to fame and critical acclaim in his own right?

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    Replies
    1. DeWayne Jessie. One of the best movies ever!

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  71. BaconJeff6:39 PM

    "obvs" is short for "no duh" in modern lingo. My students submit questions and I get that response all the time. Not once have I ever gotten "obvi". Add "prize money," "lee," and "onto" and you've got FOUR that don't make any sense today. Fire the author and editor. Hire a fack checker.

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  72. That was the sweetest write up this blog has ever known. Thanks Rex. Nice to read a softer side especially after a fun puzzle.

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  73. Anonymous10:33 AM

    Tudor history buff here. Richard III, then wife-killer’s father, then wife-killer. Off topic, sorry, but it’s nagging at me.

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    1. Thanks @Anon10:33AM. On and off during the ‘90s I worked in London and when we weren’t focused only on work, casual talk often turned to talk of the Royals and I learned so much about all things growing up fairly to incredibly privileged in England. One of the things I learned that apparently every British school kid does is the poem to remember the succession of monarchs starting in 1066. Alas, I don’t remember it all but did try to run through it after reading @Rex - at least to wife killer. I was thinking he left one out. That part of the mnemonic is something like. Edwards four five, Dick the Bad (yep, Richard III) Harrys twain and Ned the lad . . (wife killer’s father, wife killer and Edward VI). When Liz II left the throne to Chuck, I texted one of my friends to see what would be added and in very short order learned that “Charlie Three ascends the throne, the first king with a mobile phone (although apparently Liz II had one - encrypted - and only made personal calls to a very limited number of people).

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  74. Eniale3:16 PM

    The puzzle was a breeze, and lots of fun for this Lit major!
    And what the blankety-blank does Sam M think he's doing with the pangrams the last couple of days? C'mon, man!

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  75. Anonymous7:57 PM

    “ I even remembered Otis Day and the Knights”

    And they have a ladies and germs, why I will never be 30-whatever in the world championships. I’m OK with that.

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  76. Don Byas7:55 PM

    "Three Quartets" is a great Chick COREA album. A great combination of composition and improvisation. Tenor saxophonist Michael Brecker is featured.
    Chick COREA's childhood piano teacher, Salvatore Sullo, had studied with Alfred Cortot—thus a direct pedagogical lineage to Frédéric Chopin.
    Also In 2017, Joe Alessi, Principal Trombonist of the New York Philharmonic, contacted Corea and asked him to compose a trombone concerto. Corea agreed.

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