What sfouf is, in Lebanese cuisine / SAT 11-29-25 / Axolotl lookalikes / Nickelodeon series whose episode titles all start with the same letter as the show itself / One of 32 in the country of Kiribati / Musical production that might include grunts, groans, thwops, snorts and barks / The number 4 and the gift of a clock, in Chinese culture / Biblical figure said to have fathered Kenan at age 90

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Constructor: Adrian Johnson

Relative difficulty: Medium

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Goblin sharks (23D: Prominent features of goblin sharks = NOSES) —

The goblin shark (Mitsukurina owstoni) is a rare species of deep-sea shark. Sometimes called a "living fossil", it is the only extant representative of the family Mitsukurinidae, a lineage some 125 million years old. This pink-skinned animal has a distinctive profile with an elongated, flat snout, and highly protrusible jaws containing prominent nail-like teeth. It typically reaches a length of 3 to 4 meters (10 to 13 feet) when fully grown, although it can grow significantly larger—such as one specimen captured in 2000, which was believed to measure around 6 meters (20 feet). Goblin sharks are benthopelagic creatures that inhabit upper continental slopessubmarine canyons, and seamounts throughout the world at depths greater than 100 m (330 ft), with adults found deeper than juveniles. Some researchers believed that these sharks could also dive to depths of up to 1,300 m (4,270 ft), for short periods; footage captured in 2024 suggests that their range could be deeper than previously thought, with a confirmed sighting of an adult swimming at 2,000 m (6,560 ft).

[how is this a shark? this looks like a hand puppet prop from some Alien knockoff]

Various anatomical features of the goblin shark, such as its flabby body and small fins, suggest that it is sluggish in nature. This species hunts for teleost fishes, cephalopods, and crustaceans near the sea floor and in the middle of the water column. Its long snout is covered with ampullae of Lorenzini that sense minute electric fields produced by nearby prey, which it can snatch up by rapidly extending its jaws. Small numbers of goblin sharks are unintentionally caught by deepwater fisheries. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed it as Least Concern, despite its rarity, citing its wide distribution and low incidence of capture. (wikipedia)

• • •


It's so much easier to appreciate a puzzle's finer points when I'm not drowning in gunk. The SW corner gets a little namey there, which might cause some consternation, but otherwise this thing felt smooth as hell and polished within an inch of its life. The eastern half of this grid in particular felt beautifully built, from the TIME MACHINE at the bottom to the BAD OMENS at the top—no cringe, and only a tiny handful of answers I'd even blink at for a second—ESTEE, IDES, ROCHE, none of it apt to make me holler. When your less-than-ideal entries are a. rare and b. holding together good-to-great marquee fill, well then you're doing your job as a constructor. My experience with this puzzle fell into two distinct part—the properly hard part, where I had to work for every inch of progress (NW, SW), where the grid seemed clean and solid, but not particularly inspired; and then the much easier but also much more colorful second half (SE, NE), where the fill really started to pop. I'd put the transition moment right about ... here:


WHALE SONG and SPIDEY SENSE were like "let's go!" and off I went. Big noise ("WHAT A RACKET!"), big adventure (TIME MACHINE! Take it back (in time)!). I vaulted up from there via FAIR GAME and FADERS to the final quadrant, where I hit a little snag—briefly forgot DOLMA (24A: Dish of stuffed grape leaves) and considered DOSHA (a concept from ayurveda), and then also thought the [Know-it-all who might have a ball?] (SEER) was a SAGE, which put the "G" in exactly the right place to make 13D: The number 4 and the gift of a clock, in Chinese culture look like BAD SIGNS (as opposed to the correct BAD OMENS). But luckily I knew enough to pull DOSHA and hold off on SAGE. I must've then remembered DOLMA and then all the long Downs up there fell into place, 1, 2, 3, and that was that. Didn't even see the short Acrosses up there.


All the real difficulty today came early. Looked like I was going to start with a whoosh buuuuuuut despite the fact that I had TRAVEL and RETINA and APOLOG(Y?) all lined up, the following words weren't entirely clear to me. I must've committed to GUIDE, which seemed most likely to work in that space, and then, miracle of miracles, I was able to get a gosh darn Nickelodeon show answer on my first guess (9D: Nickelodeon series whose episode titles all start with the same letter as the show itself). "What shows star with "I"!?!? Well, there was iCARLY, but that can't ... wait, ha ha ha yes it can!" My daughter must've been the right age for her (and thus me?) to know about this show, though I don't think she watched the show herself. Stunned at my good fortune, I went forth ... and immediately fell in a mistake pit. 


Off the "Y" from iCARLY I wrote in PUNNY for 25A: Groan-worthy, say, as a joke, because of course I did, puns are groaners, so groan-worthy jokes are PUNNY, gah and bah! I mean, CORNY is not wrong, but still, bah. And working my way out of PUNNY was no cakewalk because I absolutely could not see CAKE (25D: What sfouf is, in Lebanese cuisine). I had that answer starting with a "P" from PUNNY, and yes I wrote in PITA of course I wrote in PITA. Four letters, Lebanese, starts with "P," cuisine-related, you're damned right I wrote in PITA. I think the only thing that busted me out of that horrible knot of mistakes was the goblin shark, who kept persistently nudging me with his nose, like "come on, you know it's NOSES, write in NOSES and see what happens!" I should add that I wasn''t sure GLYCERIN wasn't something like GLYCEROL (which, it turns out, is also a thing), so I was holding back that "-IN" ... oh, and I had NEIL as NEAL (23A: Drummer Peart). Annnnnyway, PUNNY out, NOSES and GLYCERIN in, then STASIS and TONGUE (eventually corrected to TONSIL) (28D: Neighbor of the uvula), and I finally got through. Still took me forever to see CAKE, though. Went through CALF and CAFE before ever hitting on CAKE.

Bullets:
  • 20A: Preferred piece of commercial real estate (CORNER LOT) — my initial reaction was "who'd want to live on a CORNER LOT? Too much exposure, too much traffic" but then I belatedly noticed the word "commercial" in the clue and the answer suddenly made a lot more sense.
  • 37A: 1988 Best Country Song Grammy winner for "Hold Me" (OSLIN) — as in K.T. OSLIN, '80s country's gift to crosswords. Her name's particular five-letter combination has proven ... durable.
  • 44A: Musical production that might include grunts, groans, thwops, snorts and barks (WHALESONG) — a fantastic clue. I had WHALE in place and had the briefest moment of "what kind of 'musical production' starts WH-" and then I got it. Not a human musical production at all. Side note: THWOPs in the puzzle when!? If it's a real word / sound, why has it never been in the grid (in singular or plural form)? I am ready for a puzzle that groans snorts and THWOPs (although don't go too far down the THWOP rabbit hole or you'll end up at "pornographic manga" and no I'm not kidding)
  • 43D: The "E" of the New York Stock Exchange's "EL" (ESTEE) — the "L" is for "Lobster." Yes, she's best known for cosmetics, but people always forget about her lobstering empire. 
  • 3D: One of 32 in the country of Kiribati (ATOLL) — because ISLE wouldn't fit.
  • 8D: About half of all these are made in Philadelphia, for short (U.S. COINS) — the one answer today that made me wonder "is that a real phrase?" But it is. Or various numismatic websites seem to think so anyway.
  • 21D: Play list? (ROSTER) — the "list" of those who will "play" in the game.
  • 27D: High-level intelligence assets? (SPY PLANES) — "High-level" because, well, they're planes. Me, a genius: "Aha, 'high-level'! I get it! It must be ... SKY PLANES!" (yes, I actually did this, no, I will not be taking any questions)
  • 38D: Axolotl lookalikes (NEWTS) — I love when the clue writer thinks about how the clue sounds. Say this clue fast three times and try not to be delighted.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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71 comments:

Conrad 6:20 AM  


Medium-Challenging. Harder for me than for @Rex (not unusual), but I agree with OFL's rating of * * * * _

Overwrites:
My biggest mistake was RETINA scans instead of RETINAL SCAN at 15A. That took a bit of effort to correct.
My 17A make-up routine was an APOLOGY TOUR before it was a CARD.
I thought a 19A cytologist might study CystS, not CELLS.
I confused my Bakers. 22A was EttA before she was ELLA.
At 25A, my groan-worthies were @Rex punNY before they were CORNY.
My 27D intelligence assets were SPY PhoNES before they were PLANES.
@Rex TONgue before TONSIL at 28D.
I tried lilly (as in crossword favorite Eli) for the 40D Tamiflu maker before ROCHE.

WOEs:
The 9D Nikelodeon series iCARLY, which until I came here I thought was (capital) I (space) CARLY.
NEIL Peart at 23A
I had no idea about Sfouf in the 25D clue
Grammy winner OSLIN at 37A

Anonymous 6:22 AM  

The western half was definitely tougher than the rest of the grid. After my first pass in that area I had only a few answers in place, including PUNNY. Then I really started to make significant progress with SPIDEYSENSE and from there SE, NE, NW, SW in that order, ending with SEASHORE. I figured WHALESONG was an actual, human song inspired by whales. (facepalm)

Rick Sacra 6:27 AM  

I agree with @REX that this was Medium (19 minutes for me on a Saturday) and also AWESOME!!!! Thank you Adrian for a clean and fun grid. The two complete WOEs for me (DOLMA and OSLIN) thankfully fell from crosses, whch were fair if tough. I thought it was going to be APOLOGYtour but held off, thankfully. RETINASCAN wouldn't fit but then I remembered a discussion on this blog about RETINA vs RETINAL and that they were both a thing.... so that saved me headaches, thanks @REX and all of you : ). NEIL and STASIS and KEYNES, along with TITANS on the other side, were pretty close to gimmes so that helped me a lot. Type-overs: Wanted islet before ATOLL and AMD before IBM, so that made the NE take me a while. Terrific Saturday puzzle!!!!

Andy Freude 7:13 AM  

A proper Saturday challenge. Bravo, Adrian Johnson!

kitshef 7:19 AM  

Struggled a bit with NE corner and a lot with SW corner (confidently placing twaIN at 37A, 'confirmed' by TONSIL and NEWTS, definitely did not help), but enjoyed it thoroughly. Lots of good entries, very little junk.

Anonymous 7:23 AM  

What a delight!!

SouthsideJohnny 7:25 AM  

I enjoyed Rex’s write up more than I did solving the puzzle. At least I recognized most of the words that Rex used in his review, which is not the case for Cytologist, Kiribati, Sfouf, Voguing, Kenan, Thwops, Icarly and Scabbards (honorable mention to viva voce).

At least I have a minor moral victory today - I dropped John Maynard Keynes in right off the bat without any crosses.

Bob Mills 7:54 AM  

Saturday tough. Needed two cheats, to get drummer NEIL and the SPIDEYSENSE/RAY cross. Where in the world did "SPIDEYSENSE" come from? If it's a kids' phrase, I'm forgiven, because my grandchildren are all adults now.

Anonymous 7:57 AM  

Rare Saturday when my time is about 2/3 of my average but OFL doesn’t rate it as easy.

tht 8:04 AM  

It played harder than Medium for me, although I'll place the blame squarely on the stupid old brain, which must be a bit sluggish this morning. I SENSEd or knew that the Nickolodeon series was I-something, but it took a while to cough up ICARLY. Where I saw axolotl, I kept thinking "atlatl" which is a sling thingie. Where I saw "Leave no _____", I knew TRAsh felt off, but weirdly TRACE didn't occur to me for some time. Even with the letters CERIN in place, it took seemingly forever to see GLYCERIN. As well as US COINS. I put in opTIcAL SCAN before RETINAL SCAN. Then, DOLMA took a long time to remember. The whole puzzle felt like that. A lot of it should have come rather more easily, but it just didn't.

First time seeing OSLIN. Needed every cross for that.

I think I must need a refresher course or something, but... what's an APOLOGY CARD? Is it a card you silently hold up to your spouse that says "I'm sorry"? How come I don't know this? Should I? (I mean never mind, I look up such things for myself, but it looks like one of those things that everyone knows except me.)

Well, DARN. Yes, it looks like a nice puzzle all right, but for me it was worky, and I felt more relief than pleasure when it was finally done. (And now -- what's that elusive pangram in today's SB? Or is there more than one? Sigh...)

RooMonster 8:08 AM  

Hey All !
NEAL Peart is a Mandela effect. I would've bet money it was the A spelling, not the I spelling.

Got stuck in a few spots, my finger hovering over the mouse wanting to run to Goog, but I stayed steadfast and managed to get puz on my own. Yay me! And no mistakes. *Pats myself in the back* Har

Nice looking grid. Tough, but doable. Four Double-L answers together in NW.

Had tEEn in for SEER, but already had TEENS at 52D, waited to see which one wasn't correct. VIstA-VILLA, nicely messing things up. All the Longs except for GLYCERIN were two-worders.

Good SatPuz, I'd say it was a FAIR GAME.

Have a great Saturday!

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

Gilbert 8:12 AM  

And because Kiribati comprises 33 islands, 32 of which are ATOLLs and one of which is a raised coral island, "isle" not only doesn't fit, but would be an incorrect answer. Your fun fact for the day,

Lewis 8:19 AM  

Are you kidding me? WHALESONG as an answer with “thwop” in its clue? I was hopelessly won over that very instant, hearing the haunting gorgeous music of whales, while jaw-dropping over the onomatopoetic perfection of “thwop”.

A Crosslandia moment to savor.

All this in the midst of quality – an uber-low 66-worder so cleanly filled, so wittily clued, with many answers I couldn’t thwop down immediately, but which came a bit later after crosses or a riddle crack. That space between can’t-put-it-down and slapdown – The Gap – is delicious, and that slapdown almost always comes with an inner fist pump.

Lovely, interesting answers. Look at that top stack, with TRAVEL GUIDE, RETINAL SCAN, APOLOGY CARD – answers from a trio of far-apart worlds. And by the way, they are all NYT debut answers.

Wordplay, TILs, memory prodders, brain grinders, occasional splats – all in this entertaining true-Saturday-level box radiating virtuosity.

Bravo and thank you, Adrian. You’ve got the knack. This was a beaut!

Anonymous 8:26 AM  

SPIDEYSENSE dates back to the original Spider-Man comics as a variation on the hero's "spider-sense" or "spider's sense." Earliest use of that specific spelling was in 1967, but Google Ngram search shows it only became popularly known in the early 2000s with the Sam Raimi Spider-Man movies.

DrBB 8:43 AM  

I sure could have used a Rex bullet point on 50A "Valuable city-building resource in Catan," I mean, I got it from the crosses but I didn't fill it in for a long time just b/c I figured "Catan" was a real place and ORE seems kinda non-specific....? So for anyone else who was befuddled: it's a gamer reference:
https://catan.fandom.com/wiki/Ore

Twangster 8:44 AM  

Greeting card companies like Hallmark have a card for every situation, including when you need to apologize to someone.

pabloinnh 9:03 AM  

Started out as an "oh oh" puzz as the NW was inscrutable--well, TRACE or TRASH, probably, but my best guess at IBM led to at least partial success in the NE and off I went at a steady pace, discovering new things along the way. Voguing? Goblin sharks? Drummer Peart? Alouf? ICARLY??? OSLIN? Kiribati?? Pretty much all filled from crosses. A poor day when you can't learn something, and today I learned a lot. Now to try to remember at least some of it.

Would have had a technical DNF but I was admiring my accomplishment at finishing and noticed RAR down at the bottom, so not SPIDERSENSE. SPIDEYSENSE fixed that. Jackpot. Ah joy. Rapture.

So A Journey of delight, AJ. Enjoy your Saturdazo! pirze and thanks for all the fun.

tht 9:09 AM  

Thanks, @Twangster. So I discovered. Something about the idea seems lame. It seems to me a heartfelt spoken apology or a letter written by one's own self would generally work much better, but yeah, I can see how there's a buck to be made there.

Anonymous 9:10 AM  

As an avid reader and singer, certain phrases' scansion often trigger melodies in my brain. So, "Axolotl lookalikes, doo-dah, doo-dah~!". Thank you for that.

EasyEd 9:13 AM  

I’m with @Southside Johnny on this one—more arcane references than I could handle. Was proud of myself getting SPIDEYSENSE almost immediately but much of the more grown-up vocabulary was a mystery to me. On the other hand, I recognize this as a very sophisticated puzzle, well done, educational and humorous.

Anonymous 9:40 AM  

A little disappointed Rex didn’t include the music video for Glycerin by Bush.

egsforbreakfast 9:44 AM  

Remember: When fingerprints can't do the job, RETINALSCAN.

Dime: Did you hear about Penny?
Nickel: Yeah, I'll miss ol' Abe. Or Demon Copperhead like we been callin' him since that Barbara Greatpuzzler book came out.
Dime: I think you mean Barbara Kingsolver.
Nickel: So what's gonna happen to Penny?
Dime: A guy with brown skin who isn't wanted here? SPYPLANES to permanent vacay at Cecot World in El Salvador.
Nickel: Well USCOINS gotta stick together from now on. Except for Doge Coins. WHATARACKET.

I felt like I was in a maize with CORNY, CORNERLOT and IMALLEARS. I might stop by the IMALL later and see if ICARLY is there.

It might still be the morphine talking, but I loved today's puzzle and @Rex's write up. I'm still lolling in the hospital, but the heart is no longer a concern. Looks like 4 weeks of home administered IV (4 to @Southside Johnny) antibiotics coming up. Thanks again for all the well-wishes. Some whale-wishes with a few thwops would be really nice. Good job, Adrian Johnson.

Mo-T 10:00 AM  

While I always appreciate your commentary, Rex, I really did not need to see the goblin shark. No, not at all, never, at no time. Probably one of the reasons why I am not a deepwater fisherperson. That, and I live in the mountains. Oh, and I'm claustrophobic.

Whatsername 10:02 AM  

I have a great deal of respect and admiration for this puzzle. It was tough without being painful - you know, FAIR - and very little suffering, as Nancy would say. I was able to finish with just a little bit of help (KEYNES, OSLI) which was little enough to feel good about it. Hey look at me! I’ve got the KNOWHOW. I can do a New York Times Saturday crossword … realizing of course, that I could get my NOSE completely kicked out of joint by the next one. Thanks Adrian, a very satisfying puzzle.

jammon 10:11 AM  

I'm always surprised when something that irks me gets no mention at all. PUT OFF is a horrible clue for REPEL. One does not "put off' an attack, nor does one "repel" a decision. They are not synonyms.

tht 10:16 AM  

That sounds like great news! About your heart, I mean, not Penny. (Wow, that took a dark turn, being sent to CECOT and all. Too soon to joke about that, methinks.)

4 weeks of 4 made me laugh, however.

Anonymous 10:28 AM  

Was twice my normal time. Played tough but fair. Couldn’t get the old brain in gear.

Anonymous 10:31 AM  

Axolotls don't look anything like newts. Really. Yes, they're both salamanders, but they don't look alike.

Jeremy 10:34 AM  

Sounds like you found that clue off-putting.

Teedmn 10:35 AM  

A real Saturday solve for me today, yay! Most of the east portion filled in nicely, but I really goofed at 21D when I decided 20A was going to end in pLOT and that pOSTER was a fine answer for a "Play list?", thinking of movie posters. I totally ignored the ? That's something you can never do when solving one of M&A's Runt puzzles!

So C___NE pLOT kept the NW open for more than a nanosecond.

Down in the SW, I couldn't picture how to spell KEYNES (KEaNES?) so I left that open and solved around it. OSLIN, no idea. Also WES a no-know.

Great clue for NAPS and thanks, Rex, for the ESTEE Lobster joke. I thought that was a great new clue for ESTEE, if a bit corporate. And here's the Estee Lauder Lobster you've been wanting to give as a Christmas gift.

Unless that proboscis on that shark is floppy, I don't see how it ever gets food to its mouth.

Thanks, Adrian Johnson, for a fun, tough Saturday puzzle.

@egs, glad to hear there's a relatively benign solution for your woes!

tht 10:37 AM  

It sounds like you're missing one of the meanings of "put off". Here's an sample: "I was put off by his joke, which to me smacked of racism".

Anonymous 10:42 AM  

I think “musical” implies aesthetic intentionality. I wonder if whales are capable of this or if their “song” is us anthropomorphizing what amounts to a basic form of communication.

Anonymous 10:58 AM  

A corny UScoin related joke: three couples are at the Pearly Gates, St Peter denies entry to the first couple saying to the husband "you were so greedy you even married a woman named Penny". He denied the second "you were such a drunkard you married a woman named Sherry." The third husband looks at his wife and says "come on Fanny, it's no use..."

mmorgan 11:00 AM  

This one beat me up, but at least it reminded me of one of my favorite foods, Estee Lobster.

jb129 11:01 AM  

A lot I didn't know - like NOSES (prominent features of goblin sharks) - like, really, who would know that without working through the puzzle which I liked btw (especially
26A SEER) & except for WHALE SONG, FADERS, KEYNES. But not as intimidating as I thought it was going to be when I began. An impressive Saturday, Adrian & thank you :)

Carola 11:10 AM  

For me, easy up top, more resistant below, enjoyable all the way. TRAVEL GUIDE and IM ALL EARS with their crosses, got me down to the TITANS level; then I had to skip to the bottom row and work from SPIDEY SENSE to WHALE SONG and finally tackle the central cluster. Last in: NEIL x I CARLY.

Favorite cross: WHALE SONG x WHAT A RACKET: sperm whales are the loudest animals on the planet; also nice: ROSTER x TITANS. Otherwise, the three I liked best were FAIR GAME, TIME MACHINE, and SPY PLANES, all so nicely clued.

Les S. More 11:12 AM  

Pretty straightforward once I got going in the NW, almost always the toughest section for me. I used to think this was because constructors, fiendish beings that they are, spend more time working up there just to scare solvers. It’s probably because I’m coming in cold and just haven’t found the “tone” yet. That stack of elevens looked daunting until I worked out a few downs. Only real mistakes were trying dEtEr before dEfEr before REPEL at 2D and first trying to spell GLYCERIN with an E on the end. Looked it up post-solve to discover that, of course, the longer version - the one I grew up with - is British. The E-less one American. Also found out that neither of them is correct anymore. It’s now properly called GLYCERol because it’s an alcohol not an amine as the ine suffix makes it seem. I wonder how many people tried glycerol first?

None of the long answers was particularly stunning but they all seemed solid. A couple of names gave me pause. I read the clue at 37A and thought, “How the hell am I expected to know a country singer from the 80s?” (Country’s not my thing.) But then I got the O and the S and said, “Oh yeah, K.T. OSLIN.” Didn’t even know I knew her. ELLA Baker at 22A didn’t give me that same serendipitous feeling.

I’ll leave it to wittier folk to go to town with WHALE SONG, WAILS, and WHAT A RACKET. I’m just going to sit back and enjoy this Wes Montgomery playlist.

Thanks, Adrian Johnson.

Anonymous 11:18 AM  

A bit name-y in spots but overall a great puzzle. Loved it. I'm Canadian and still put NEAL instead of NEIL at first.

mathgent 11:18 AM  

It seems that many of us like to tell of their wrong first guesses. If Rex can do it, I can do it!

Give me comments like Gilbert (8:12). Nice little nugget.

DAVinHOP 11:24 AM  

Totally in sync with Johnny, including wanting KEYNES off the bat, but hesitated starting 33D with a K.

My wife suggested "MILTON" (as in Friedman) which got a %£#¥* out of me. Finally had the KNOWHOW that confirmed my favorite economist.

puzzlehoarder 11:31 AM  

I average around 30 minutes for a Saturday. This came in at 31 minutes so pretty dead on medium. Like most of the puzzle the NW was just steady late week solving. I guessed TRAVELsomething for 1A and TRACE for 1D for a solid start.

I bogged down on the W stair step waffling over GLYCERIN/GLYCEROL and thinking "Viva voce" meant something very loud.

DOLMA got me restarted in the NE and when the E stair step couldn't quite get me into the SE I backfilled it off of RATE. Never read the clue for SPIDEYSENSE as I just dropped in the downs and there it was. That was probably the easiest section.

I was a little concerned the SW might be a hold out but it filled in steadily. This was a very clean and enjoyable solve.

jae 11:37 AM  

Easy-medium. The NW was the toughest section for me. I briefly had APOLOGY tour before CARD and the GUIDE part of TRAVEL took some staring. The rest was pretty whooshy.

I did not know ELLA, CAKE, and BAD OMENS

I did know NEIL and ICARLY.

Costly erasures - Send before SHIP and SwordS before SABERS.

No junk, clever clueing, and plenty of sparkle, liked it a bunch!

Dr Random 11:49 AM  

I think since part of the purpose is attracting mates (among others), it’s fair to attribute some kind of aesthetic intentionality.

Hugh 11:51 AM  

Ended up absolutely loving this one but it didn't start out that way. For a *very* long time all I had was IBM, STASIS, TONSIL and RAY. The only real gimmes for me in the grid. Nothing else was clicking...
Then (and I really mean this) my SPIDEYSENSE started tingling, and the Y from Ray, along with the few S's that I inferred from some short down plurals in the South, gave me (*yes*) SPIDEYSENSE!
After that, many, many things started to fall in the South, including the long stack. And man, it was a joy from there!
Further up, like @Rex, I also had punny instead of the correct CORNY until I had the courage to just stick my NOSE(S) into it for the O to get to where I needed to go.
I have to admit it was then ICARLY that opened the gates for me for the rest of the North. A silly hold up when, as I looked at LOT as the last three letters of 20A (Preferred piece of commercial real estate) I stuck in a P thinking it must end in PLOT. That made the fairly straight forward 11D (ENDED) harder to suss than in should have been. But that was just a short head scratch until I realized it can only be ENDED, and the E gave me what I needed for CORNERLOT.
After that it was a whole lotta of fun for the rest of the ride. I liked the long stack in the NW a bit better than the ones in SW but they were all at some level of great.
All in all, one of the best Saturdays for me in a long time - proper difficulty level that (after a little while) was a joy to solve throughout. Thanks for this Adrian!

Niallhost 11:57 AM  

APOLOGY tour is a better answer than CARD, which usually means that it's right, so that slowed me down for a while. Eventually figured it must be I CARLY so fixed things then. Had tongue and punny before correcting. And laRgER LOT before CORNER LOT.

DNF because of an OLSeN/TONSeL misspelling, which is annoying but my bad. Otherwise enjoyably challenging Saturday.

PH 12:05 PM  

TIMEMACHINE: "I don’t think I’ll ever write a better crossword clue than 51A." I was going to mention how great that clue was, but I guess that would have been stating the obvious. *chef's kiss*

Solid Saturday with diverse entries and fresh clues. TIL: Kenan is a biblical name, and "to give a clock" in Chinese sounds like "to attend a funeral." "I'm not giving you this clock, but you can uh, borrow it... I'll just leave it here."

And I love deep sea creatures:
Axolotl lookalike.
Ziggy lookalike (voted the world's ugliest animal).
Uh... galaxy-brain meme lookalike? (I mean, what the hell.)

beverly c 12:31 PM  

Oh MY STARS! I thought that was one of the highlights of Rex's write-up today. That shark looks like the inspiration for Alien's alien species. I was a-goggle! But if you are also claustrophobic you probably chose to miss those movies.

okanaganer 12:48 PM  

Great writeup today Rex, thanks for that! I found it quite challenging though; almost 45 minutes (yikes). Mainly because of those names in the lower left, I got totally stuck with many blanks. WES and OSLIN were total Unknowns, and I only got KEYNES from the crosses... oh yeah; know the name but forgot he was an economist.**

I also got stuck with HOKEY then HOARY for the groan worthy joke at 25a, crossing HASH for Lebanese sfouf. Another great typeover was FREE BALL at 32 down... I mean, "It's up for grabs" is just a perfect clue for that. But some great longer answers today.

** --- Economics is one of the subjects I really try to avoid. Probably because the year I took it as my required non-science elective was a huge mistake; I just hated it. (Especially the ridiculous pseudo-scientific equations.) Contrast with the next year when I took German... absolutely loved it.

Gary Jugert 12:58 PM  

Estoy todo oídos.

On the upside, it's a funny puzzle garnering the oddly rare clown award, but to get to the good stuff, you have to survive the bad stuff, and I didn't today.

Stabbed myself pretty good with SWORDS and KNIVES before SABERS.

If you open Kiribati in Google maps it is just ocean. Definitely a remote area. There's not even a main town as far as I can see.

I guess rich people rent VILLAS in the country. We tend to rent a room in the HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS, but that wouldn't fit.

Probably the worst existentialist query I've ever seen, but I guess it's defensible.

People: 7
Places: 1
Products: 6
Partials: 2
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 66 (27%)

Funny Factor: 10 🤡

Uniclues:

1 AI Rick Steves.
2 The Hallmark channel.
3 Where antibody toughs hang out waiting for a disease to come strolling in.
4 Know-it-all who does have a ball.
5 The limbo land of forever being one yard short.
6 Various incarnations of sticking your ear in the water.
7 Escort.
8 How I made a perfect turkey on paper for Thanksgiving.
9 Function of a tsunami.
10 Your throat.
11 Rare pennies.
12 Zits.

1 IBM TRAVEL GUIDE (~)
2 APOLOGY CARD ADS
3 CELL'S CORNER LOT
4 CORNY SEER
5 TITANS' STASIS (~)
6 WHALE SONG POSES
7 "WHAT A RACKET" HON (~)
8 TRACE KNOW-HOW
9 REPEL SEASHORE
10 TONSIL VILLA (~)
11 SAINTED US COINS (~)
12 TEEN'S BAD OMENS (~)

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Health care workers in dermatology. SCRATCH THAT RNS.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Anoa Bob 1:28 PM  

Lots to like in this one. WHALE SONG brought back memories of being a Sonar Tech in the Navy. Got to listen to a lot of WHALEs and dolphins. Even shrimp make distinctive noises, sort of a crinkling, cracking sound like you were wadding up a sheet of stiff plastic package wrapping. Never did hear any WHALE "thwops" though.

Alan Hovhaness composed "And God Created Great Whales". I have an old vinyl LP that has actual WHALE sounds intermixed with the human produced ones.

As a card carrying existentialist I was a bit taken aback by 36D "Existentialist's inquiry" for WHO AM I. WHO I AM is the only thing we existentialists can be absolutely sure of, right? Everything else, though, is provisional and open to inquiry.

bertoray 1:44 PM  

Thwop is Mad's Don Martin worthy.

Les S. More 1:58 PM  

@PH. I usually hate those exclamatory clues, but you're right, 51A just clicked. Really nice.

okanaganer 2:09 PM  

@PH, thanks for those links. Gotta love those ugly deep sea critters!

Anonymous 2:16 PM  

Seemed plausible to me:
SPY PHONES — Hugh level because the grunts don’t get one
OSHIN — A rare Japanese foray intro country music
WHOLE SONG — Something Yoko Ono subjected people to in the 1970s in seven-hour marathon performances

Anonymous 2:17 PM  

It’s been around for almost 60 years.

Anonymous 2:20 PM  

Anyone who has ever seen a goblin shark nose…I mean knows.

tht 2:22 PM  

Do you know the album Common Ground by The Paul Winter Consort? The songs of wolves, whales, and eagles are integrated into some of the music; the results are really lovely.

Peamut 2:58 PM  

So glad you’re on the mend. Best news is that your heart didn’t take ATOLL!!

Anonymous 3:23 PM  

Took me a while to erase prime plot

Jnlzbth 3:28 PM  

What a well-made puzzle. It didn't go quickly for me but I was glad I stuck with it so I could appreciate it. The NW corner hung me up the most, as APOLOGY CARD, GLYCERIN, and ICARLY didn't come easily. So glad I finished, though. Thanks, Adrian!

Masked and Anonymous 4:05 PM  

Did this puppy early this mornin, but thanx to TIMETRAVEL, I have now been able to arrive here to comment.
4 stars, indeed. The Jaws of Themelessness with fangs were alone worth the price of admission.
Just a spatterin of no-knows, and oodles of great fillins.

staff weeject pick, of only 8 choices: WES Montgomery. Have an olde LP by him that is really great to listen to, with a cinnamon roll & margarita, when possible.
Wow, still had primo weeject stacks, in the NE & SW, btw.

fave thing: TIMEMACHINE & its clue. Too many others to list without wearin out my solo typin finger. Gotta do honrable mention to CORNERLOT, cuz we live on one. Quiet streets both ways, thanxfully.

Thanx, Mr. Johnson dude. Superb job. [Except maybe for the anemic U-count, of course.]

Masked & Anonymo1U [s]

... now, can you come up with these answers? ...

"Answer Songs" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle"

**gruntz**

M&A

p.s. @egs: Keep up yer excellent recovery efforts.

p.p.s.s. FriNite SchlockFest flicks were unusually harrowin:
1. "Island of the Fisherman" 1979. A Joseph Cotten and Barbara Bach call-for-help flick full of excellent schlock.
2. "The Device" 2014. The whole thing revolved around this little alien black ball. The tension darn near wore us out. Endin left room for a sequel, alas.

Anonymous 4:18 PM  

A few too many names and weird nouns but otherwise I was proud to finish with no cheats :)

dgd 4:21 PM  

DAVinHOP
Agree about Keynes. Great to see his name in the puzzle
Because it is an excuse to reduce taxes on the rich, the trickle down theory (lie) is always with us, and its supporters control the US government now. Keynes showed it didn’t, and doesn’t work.

dgd 4:29 PM  

Anonymous 2:27 pm
SPIDEY SENSE has appeared in the Times but as the other anonymous noted the term got into the popular culture ( as opposed to comic people) with the arrival of the hugely successful movies. But Bob Mills, like me, never saw them. I happened to have heard the term, maybe because I read almost every Times movie review. If you are not interested in these comic book movies, it is very easy not to know the term

dgd 5:26 PM  

Tough puzzle for me. Happy to finish, no cheats. One problem, which often happens on weekends, almost remember a name. So WES came out lES in my brain That kept me from seeing know how until I finally remembered the W. Brilliant clue/answer WHALESONG
That also took me a long time to get
NE & SW , where I finally finished were the hardest.
Great puzzle.!

CDilly52 6:11 PM  

Been freezing in Chicago with family and internet issues. Hope all of you (and of course you too, @Rex) had a wonderful holiday. Especially everyone who had kids home from school or just home - I know how special that is. Now on to all the winter holiday mania!

And in my opinion, we start off with a superb Saturday puzzle. I stumbled with WHose RACKET, APOLOGY CAll and SABreS. Also never heard of I CARLY or NEIL Peart (or the band Rush for that matter). Thankfully, Adrian Johnson’s lively stacks in the NW and SE gave me plenty to work with so I learned stuff! And that’s always a very good OMEN for a fun solve.

I’m not much of an existentialist, but my basic understanding of Sartre and Kierkegarde is that existence comes first; it precedes essence so maybe WHO AM I doesn’t quite work, or maybe the WHO AM I comes after the initial “I am,” and becomes WHO AM I as we explore essence? Whatever, the answer was easy and thrn I went down that Sartre-Kierkegardian rabbit hole.

In the stacks, I really liked discovering that my APOLOGY CAll should really be a CARD. I’m a card sender. I shop for and have a big box of all kinds of cards for all kinds of occasions and no occasion. But today, I assumed that since it’s 2025, most folks would probably text or email an apology before even thinking about sending a card.

Loved TIME MACHINE and SPIDEY SENSE, and lots and lots of clues. Finally, we get a really fin themeless with some crispy crunch! I really enjoyed it.

M and Also 6:11 PM  

p.p.s.s. correction: that’s “Island of the Fishmen”. They were sorta like Creatures from the Black Lagoon cousins.
M&A

Anonymous 7:30 PM  

I find your comment about Kiribati deeply offensive. And the fact that you probably don't see how offensive your comment is compounds the offense.

Anonymous 7:36 PM  

I knew the manufacturer of Tamiflu because I wrote the patent application! (Roche obtained the rights from Gilead in about 2000)

Anonymous 8:42 PM  

138,000 people live in Kiribati and call it their home; the culture dates back to at least the 3rd century AD, and likely much earlier. Between 1957 and 1962, the UK tested 33 thermonuclear devices in Kiribati, resulting in devastating health consequence for the inhabitants and devastating environmental consequences for the land and water. Yet you glibly dismiss the country and the people with ignorant and uninformed nonsense: "...just ocean. Definitely a remote area. There's not even a main town as far as I can see."

You say nothing worth noting about the country and its people. But you say a lot about you.

tht 9:38 PM  

@Anon 8:42PM. I took Gary Jugert's comment more benignly, as saying it was hard to see much of anything via Google Maps. I tried looking via Google Earth, but the resolution didn't seem to be too good there either. "Remote" could just mean hard to get to, in the sense that it would probably involve a number of steps and some determination and some cost, for you or me to get there. Is that incorrect?

I just took a look at the Wikipedia article, and learned it's pronounced KIRR-i-bass. I also learned the possibly surprising fact that where most of the population lives (the Gilbert Islands), it's quite densely populated, comparable to Hong Kong or Singapore, but without skyscrapers. (The resultant overcrowding creates significant stresses like pollution and insufficient sanitation, prevalence of waterborne diseases, and low life expectancy.)

Well, I'm not here to give a well-researched report, just noting a couple of things I read about a place in the world I'd never heard of before today.

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