Sunday, December 21, 2025

2015 chart-topping hit for the Weeknd / SUN 12-21-25 / 51 to the hour / Blue colorant obtained from the indigo plant / Grammy winner Erykah / Prickly denizen of coral reefs / 1950s hangout with a jukebox / Great Dane of cartoons, informally / Kind of cipher in which A becomes B, B becomes C, e.g. / Eponymous British financier James / Duke Ellington classic with the lyric "That was my heart serenading you"

Constructor: David Kwong

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: "Present Time" — "Presents" (circled squares) can be found UNDER THE TREE (69D: Where to find six "presents" in this puzzle?)—that is, each circled square can be found directly under a square that contains the name of a tree. Puzzle notes read: "Once the puzzle is complete, the circled letters, when read from left to right, will spell a punny two-word phrase." That phrase: "FIR YEW" (two tree names that together kinda sound like the phrase "For You," which ... is a "present"-related phrase, I suppose). 

Tree answers:
  • SUPINE / PORCUPINE FISH (103A: Lying faceup / 78D: Prickly denizen of coral reefs)
  • I'M SOAKED / PRELUDE TO A KISS (54A: Comment from someone caught in the rain / 4D: Duke Ellington classic with the lyric "That was my heart serenading you")
  • DANCED AROUND / CLARENCE DARROW (112A: Evaded, as a sensitive issue / 80D: Famed lawyer in the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial)
  • ST. ELMO / "CAN'T FEEL MY FACE" (71A: Sailor's patron / 39D: 2015 chart-topping hit for the Weeknd)
  • PALM OFF AS / ARNOLD PALMERS (46A: Fraudulently make seem like / 13D: Iced-tea-and-lemonade refreshments)
  • SODA SHOP / ASH WEDNESDAY (14A: 1950s hangout with a jukebox / 17D: Fast start?)
Word of the Day: Erykah BADU (10D: Grammy winner Erykah) —

Erica Abi Wright (born February 26, 1971), known professionally as Erykah Badu, is an American singer, songwriter, and record producer. Influenced by R&Bsoul, and hip-hop, Badu rose to prominence in the late 1990s when her debut studio album Baduizm (1997), placed her at the forefront of the neo soul movement, earning her the nickname "Queen of Neo Soul" by music critics. [...] Badu's voice has been compared to jazz singer Billie Holiday.[8][9][10] Early in her career, Badu was recognizable for her style, which often included wearing very large and colorful headwraps. She was a core member of the Soulquarians. As an actress, she has played a number of supporting roles in movies including Blues Brothers 2000The Cider House Rules and House of D.  [...] Badu has won five awards from twenty nominations. (wikipedia)
• • •

The word that comes to mind is "shaggy" (and not just 'cause SCOOB is in the puzzle). I mean "shaggy" in the sense of "confused or unclear in conception or thinking" (m-w). But also in the sense of "lovable," the way a shaggy dog is lovable. Who's a good puzzle!? You are! Yes you are! Neither of my dogs were "shaggy," but they were adorable and I loved them both, even when they hopped the back wall and went on neighborhood adventures or ate entire dish towels (RIP Dutchess and Gabby, respectively). With the puzzle, I kept thinking "what the hell is this puzzle doing!?" but more in amused disbelief than in anger. smh like, "you crazy puzzle!" I think I started feeling this way at just about [checks watch] NINE PAST. Yes, it was 9:09PM when I first realized that NINE PAST was going to be an actual answer in an actual crossword (7D: 51 to the hour). Do we have a recording of my response? We do? OK, roll it: "[laughter] [more laughter] [ongoing laughter] ... I'm sorry, that's the dumbest answer I've ever seen in my f***ing life!" I might have been literally shaking my head (smh). NINE PAST is so outlandish, so absurd, so desperate, so MacGyverishly improvised that it's almost brilliant. You gotta have massive confidence and/or a screw loose to throw down NINE PAST. I mean, NINE PAST ... if the mission was to distract me from TETROMINO (!?!?), well, Mission Bleeping Accomplished. Slow clap. I can't say I like it, but I can say it didn't make me any IRATER—unlike IRATER, which was, as comparative adjectives go, is infuriating). Although ... might make a good name for my inevitable memoir: I, RATER. Move over, I, CLAUDIUS! Take that, I, TINA!


But the theme ... that's the thing. A Christmas theme for the Christmas season. That, I approve of unequivocally. The concept and execution here, though. Wow. So the circled squares—which more than a few solvers hate on principle, hate instinctively—are offered up as "gifts." "Here, I got you a gift! You like circled squares, right?!" Love the trolling, keep going, what else you got, puzzle? Well, the "gifts" are clearly marked, in that they are wrapped in circles. We can see them. There they are. They are the opposite of hidden. So you see circles and you figure, "OK, well, I guess that's where the action is going to be." And you're not wrong, but also you have no idea, because there's this whole other completely unmarked element of the theme—an entire minefield of trees! And not just hidden inside answers, but hidden inside single squares. Yes, it's a stealth rebus! David is a professional magician, and this puzzle feels very much like sleight of hand. Your eyes get distracted by one thing, the thing you think is important, but meanwhile there's a whole other layer to the trick that you absolutely do not see coming. I didn't, anyway. If I might botch a metaphor the way NINE PAST botches all rules of crossword decorum, I couldn't see the forest for the presents. Until I did. So some comedic, non-lethal version of me skiing directly into a tree, that's what I looked like when I hit my first tree. 


I hit that tree in the middle of a song I'd never heard of, "PRELUDE TO ... TO ... TO ...?" What, "PRELUDE TO I.S.S., the International Space Station"? I checked the cross: 54A: Comment from someone caught in the rain. "Uh ... I'M SO ... WET?" Nope, won't fit. It was at that point that I first thought "maybe there's a rebus?" But my first thought was that the rebus square contained "OW"! as in "I'M SO WET!" (also as in "OW, I just ran into a tree!"). But that would make the song "PRELUDE TO WISS!" and as I don't know who or what or where WISS is, I had to abandon that idea. And at that point I thought "'PRELUDE TO A KISS' sounds like a thing I've heard before..." And bam, there it was: the OAK hiding in adjacent dimension, the rebus Twilight Zone. Did I like it? Hell, I don't know. But I definitely felt it, and it's good to feel things on a Sunday. I didn't feel hopeful, exactly, but I felt legitimately curious and kind of excited to see what treasures/horrors awaited me. I think I decided "alright, this puzzle is on one ... let's see where it goes!" And where did it go? Well, one of the main places it went was smack into the Weeknd's "CAN'T FEEL MY FACE" (!!!!) (which, like OW, is also what you say after you run into a tree at full speed). 


Working "ELM" into this puzzle via "CAN'T FEEL MY FACE" was the thing that made me realize that whatever I was going to feel about this puzzle in the end, I wasn't going to be able to hate it. That is some baroque, ornate theming right there. The execution of the rebus squares may be the thing I liked the most, beyond the mere fact of them (which was a total surprise). Such great long answers enveloping those trees. So inventive. What the hell is a PORCUPINE FISH!? Don't tell me, I'll just imagine. I trust you puzzle, keep going! Make up animals if you have to, I'm all in!" "Holy cow, you mean CLARENCE DARROW contains CEDAR!!? Ha! YES, YES, tell me more!" The fill would occasionally make me want to hate this puzzle, but even the bad fill was hilarious to me. ANIL! RONI! ... I THE!? Go very bad or go home, I guess. But the theme was big enough, interesting enough, spectacular enough (in its beauty and its shagginess) to keep me from dwelling on the short fill for too long. And yes, only a couple of these trees are plausible Christmas trees (imagine having an elm in your living room?). And yes, "FIR YEW" (that is, "For You") doesn't really make sense as a message on a present. "Who's that one for, Betty?" "It's for 'You.'" "For me?" "No, for 'You.'" You see how that gets into Who's On First territory real quick. I guess the idea is that you might say the phrase as you hand the gift to its intended recipient. I don't know. I just know that this theme is ambitious and creative and if it doesn't quite stick all its landings, shrug, I'm good, wrap it up, I'll take it!


Bullets:
  • 26A: Blue colorant obtained from the indigo plant (ANIL) — I always glitch on ANIL / ARIL, a crosswordese hazard if there ever was one.
  • 28A: Brightly colored Mediterranean flowers (SUN ROSES) — I assume SUN ROSES are the natural habitat of the PORCUPINE FISH, as I've never heard of either of them. They sound very made-up. But I want to live in this world of random compound-phrase plants and animals. Hey, look, a BUTTER EEL! And a HAM TULIP! And ooh there's a KEYBOARD WEASEL! What a magical world we live in! I love nature!
  • 79A: Eponymous British financier James ___ (BARCLAY) — me, after finally getting this: "Oh, the BARCLAYs Center guy. Huh, that's a guy? I always thought it was a vodka or a watch or something."
  • 94A: Kind of cipher in which A becomes B, B becomes C, e.g. (CAESAR) — baffling. More baffling than PORCUPINE FISH. I'm sure I've come across this "cipher" type before—soaking in puzzleworld, I must have seen it somewhere—but I did not retain that information.
  • 16D: Counterpart of a sub (DOM) — oh, that kind of sub. This puzzle is just full of amazing surprises.
  • 66D: It has lots of secretaries (CABINET) — even after getting this answer, I was thinking "furniture." A "secretary" is a kind of desk, so I was like "why ... would you put desks in your cabinet?" But this puzzle can clearly do anything, so I just let it ride.
  • 72D: Coolidge who sang the theme for "Octopussy" (RITA) — me: "What?" Also me: [starts trying to hum "Octopussy," ends up humming it to the tune of "Goldfinger"]. The song is not actually called "Octopussy," but "All Time High" (a song I do, actually, know).
  • 29D: Great Dane of cartoons, informally (SCOOB) — "cartoons" made me think "comic strips," which had me wondering for a few seconds if Marmaduke's owners called him MARMA. You know, informally. 
Speaking of informal dogs, it's time for more 🌲🐈Holiday Pet Pics🐕🌲 now. Note: PLEASE DO NOT SEND ME ANY MORE PET PICS, I'M ALL FULL UP FOR THIS YEAR, thank you.

Coco has murdered gingerbread Mr. Bill. Thank you for your service, Coco.
[Thanks, Cheryl!]

Lily basks by the fire, admiring her Christmas gift destruction. Good job, Lily. 
Meanwhile, Lily's housemate Jojo poses regally and judgmentally by the tree. Such Christmas gift destruction is beneath Jojo. How uncouth, Jojo thinks.
[Thanks, Jane!]

Find someone who looks at you like Maisie looks at this Christmas tree.
[Thanks, Caitlin!]

Finn came framed, and precaptioned
[Thanks, Jose!]

And finally, here's Tula Moose (actually, just Tula—I added the "Moose" part because that's what I would call her, Tula Moose!)
["But ... but I'm a reindeer"]
[Thanks, Pat and Lisa]

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. a couple very-last-minute Christmas gift suggestions. First, prolific Canadian constructors Desirée Pinner and Jeff Sinnock have a new geography-themed book of crosswords out called Where in the World: A Guess-The-Country Crossword Book. Jeff writes: "Where in the World? A Guess the Country Crossword Book takes the solver on a trip around the world. Each grid contains theme entries that hint to the culture, history, landmarks, and geography of a particular country. After (or during) solving, the solver guesses what the mystery country might be." I've enjoyed their movie- and music-themed crossword books in the past, so I'm sure this one will be equally doable and delightful.


Second, today's constructor, David Kwong, also has a new book out. I know because I own it (got it signed at ACPT earlier this year)! It's a magic book for kids called How to Fool Your Parents: 25 Brain-Breaking Magic Tricks. It's aimed at readers and aspiring magicians age 8-12. It's adorable but it's also the real deal. Actual magic theory and practical projects that any kid can do. Loaded with cartoons and illustrations. Get it here, or better yet, try an actual bookstore!


[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️: 
  • Venmo (@MichaelDavidSharp)]
=============================
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
=============================
📘 My other blog 📘:

93 comments:


  1. Easy-Medium. Liked it less than @Rex, mainly because I don't like rebus puzzles.
    * * * _ _

    Overwrites:
    maRch before APRIL for the 32A zodiac transition
    [PALM] OFF on before AS (46A)
    EdIE before EVIE for the two-letter-sounding nickname at 50D
    twITTER for the bit of birdspeak at 96A before CHITTER

    WOEs:
    Grammy winner Erykah BADU at 10D crossing Kite Runner Character AMIR at 21A
    SUN ROSES at 28A
    CAN'T FE[EL M]Y FACE (or any the Weeknd song) at 39D
    Fleetwood Mac song (and Celtic goddess) RHINNON at 72A
    Singer RITA Coolidge at 72D
    I've never heard of a PORCU[PINE] fish but it was easy to infer (78D)
    CAESAR cipher at 9A
    I've long since forgotten about Bueller girlfriend SLOANE at 100D

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:23 AM

    The rebus element wasn’t too hard to uncover, but it was still a slow-ish solve because of all the trivia outside of my wheelhouse. So many names, everywhere. (BADU BAMA AMIR AMANDA RICARDO cluster, really? I knew 3 of those and easily inferred RICARDO, but that still annoyed me).

    OMNI really made me think that there was something more to this theme besides the rebuses and “FIR YEW”. Don’t get me wrong, the theme is very well done, but OMNI right under a tree + OMNIpresent being a thing + “presents” in the revealer made me think I was missing something. Surely REBRANDED PRESENT couldn’t be a real phrase.

    NINE PAST is crazy. IRATER is possibly crazy-er. But NINE PAST is still an arbitrary, 8-letter, partial answer. Triple the “?!?!” factor.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:13 AM

      RICARDO was the only one I knew, but I still managed to get them all. No annoyance needed.

      Delete
    2. Maybe I'm misreading what you meant, but I think you were indeed missing something if you thought the word "present" was supposed to tie in with the across answers that had a circle in them. (Try and make sense of "PROWLSpresent".) Although if you squint hard, you might think that REBRANDED Present is what people have in mind when they say "regifting".

      Rex explained the theme pretty well in his post, I thought.

      Delete
  3. My first thought was, "Rex is gonna HATE this one!" The fill is abominable (I THE? IRATER?? really???), and one of the themers (PALM OFF AS) doesn't span multiple words, which is usually a deal breaker...

    So imagine my surprise when I saw 4 stars!

    My only real sticking point was in the north, with the BADU/SUNROSES cross, but I made educated guesses there, so no harm, no foul. Overall, I enjoyed it, despite its "failings." Shaggy, indeed.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My sentiments exactly.

      Delete
    2. azzurro2:20 PM

      Mine too. I came here expecting Rex to go off on how atrocious the fill was, especially given the wobbly theme. Rex must be really feeling the holiday spirit.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous6:29 AM

    Couldn't agree with Rex more. Even if some of the fill is clunky as hell, it's got an excellent execution of an excellent theme, and that elevates it to being one of my favorite NYT puzzles in months.

    Also, the sight of a "Borderlands"-themed clue in the NYTXW made my little heart warm in these cold winter months, even if it was in reference to the extremely bad film.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Andy Freude6:36 AM

    Knew the Ellington tune, saw that it wouldn’t fit and that therefore a rebus was afoot, then tried like heck to fit a rebus into the circle (naturally). Delighted to finally catch on that the rebus goes above the circle. Ha! As a longtime rebus hater, I gotta admit that this one was fun.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great puzzle, but I have to object to TETRAMINO crossing SOO. A blind guess on the last letter for me. I loved Rex's comments.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:06 AM

      Tetramini

      Delete
    2. Tetraminos are the pieces in Tetris. So basically, a video game reference.

      Delete
  7. 40 minutes for me last night, while watching the basketball game (go Celtics!). So that was medium-challenging for me. Had the same experience as OFL with getting confused at "IMSO....wet???" and just left it and moved on. Finally got over to the area of the revealer, and figured out "UNDER" and thought, "Oh, it's that the circled squares are UNDER the rebuses! I think my first complete themer was ASHWEDNESDAY, then I went to find the PALM tree, finally back to clean up my mess at PRELUDETOAKISS. Loved discovering the CEDAR in CLARENCEDARROW's name, crossing DANCEDAROUND. Took me forever to remember VENTNOR.... been a while since I played Monopoly!!! Cute that SHRINKRAY is in the puzzle, since those trees definitely got shrunk! The FIRYEW message was pretty silly, but harmless. So I agree, fun puzzle from David Kwong, a terrific and brilliant constructor!

    ReplyDelete
  8. I sensed the rebus pretty early, then made the connection to trees with ASH and OAK. Kind of a neat gimmick, with enough meat on the bones to carry it through a Sunday - so all in all, a pleasant solve.

    The sore thumb for me is the middle north, which is to me very unpleasant when they include a mini trivia test within the larger puzzle. I will give them some credit though - it can’t be easy to squeeze that much junk in such a small section (BADU, AMIR, AMANDA, DOLCE, BAMA, ARNOLD). The Funky Gunkers may present Will with an award for that one, or maybe the key to the city. I wonder if Will is going to go all Clint on us and run for Mayor of Gunkistan. That one section definitely indicates that he would be a worthy and formidable opponent.

    Someday I’ll learn that Zora Neale lady’s name. I think Will has a crush on her (I feel the same way about the lovely Ms. Teri Garr). They are both welcome to stop by any time in my opinion.

    Does anybody prefer “Holiday Rex” over “Ranting Rex” ? It’s been a while since he has obliterated a theme. There must be some good egg nog flowing over at his place. I do appreciate him sneaking in a demolition of FAUXBERGE the other day though. Even though it is the holiday season, the puzzle would be much improved if they take OFL’s advice on that one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Southside, Will Shortz probably doesn’t have a crush on Zora…she died in 1960, but he MIGHT have really loved her 1937 book, Their Eyes Were Watching God. This book is the first time I realized that an audiobook can raise the artistry of the writing even higher. The fabulous actress Ruby Dee (RIP) narrates it and I’ve always highly recommended it. Not to mention that the book had been in, then out, then back in favor due to the writer’s perspective at the time.
      Also…I think you would like Erika Badu…give a listen.

      Delete
    2. I think the term of art here is "gunk", not "junk". Or at least by my definition, "junk", by necessity, excludes people's names. But those can sure gunk up a puzzle!

      You and I are gonna have to disagree about Fauxberge.

      Delete
    3. @Southside. I'm getting nervous about "Holiday Rex". Wondering if we can stage an intervention and have him whisked off to rehab. Also have to agree with tht about Fauxbergé. A really good word.

      @Beezer. I had a friend named Zora. Not a close, close, bosom buddy kind of friend but we often walked our dogs together and stood around chatting in the park. I once asked her if her parents were great fans of Harlem Renaissance literature and she informed me that they were not. Her name is, or was, Zahra, an Arabic word meaning flower but so many people associated her with the writer that she gave up correcting them and just went by Zora.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous1:48 PM

      People bitch about Rex being too mean and then turn around and bitch about him being too nice. If anyone needs an intervention, it’s this comments section.

      Delete
    5. @Anon 1:48. I don't think I've ever bitched about Rex being too mean. I read him for analysis before entertainment. If he wants to go all goofy for a few days, that's fine, it's his blog, but I prefer a critique to a comedy skit. (Though he seems to be good at both.)

      Delete
    6. Anonymous3:41 PM

      There’s a ton of critique here. Agree with it or not, it’s here. Ripping a puzzle to shreds is not the only form of “critique.”

      Delete
    7. My beef isn’t so much with the specific term Fauxbergé. Yes, it is a cheeky hybrid, but at least it serves a professional purpose (and the individuals involved understand the “joke” and the fraud it flags).

      I was more excited to see Rex give voice to those among us who don’t care for the recurring species of fashionable, semi-artificial slang that pops up, circulates for a while, and then either fossilizes or disappears (something like Barbicore or Fauxhemian).

      Delete
    8. JazzmanChgo3:59 PM

      I'm as much an "anti-fan" of obscure names, pop culture trivia, etc. as anyone -- but in all honesty, the works and legacies of some authors, poets, playwrights, composers/ performers, etc. are significant enough that it's reasonable to expect anyone of even moderate cultural literacy to be familiar with them. I would respectfully suggest that Zora Neale Hurston, one of our most highly esteemed African-American writers and cultural historians, is in that category.

      Delete
    9. @Les…Zora and Zahra are beautiful names. I confess. In younger years when I didn’t know of ZNH…I thought Zora was “contemporary” due to name…like Zadie Smith…um…White Teeth(?). And when I say I was younger…not THAT young. It just reminds me of how many things I’ve learned even well into “adulthood.”

      Delete
    10. Hi @Southside. All of these things have to be considered on a case-by-case basis and on their own merits. On the day in question, I disagreed with Rex about Fauxberge; I'm not going to rehash the reasons now (anyone curious enough can look it up). But any critique he has for the word can't rest on grounds of new-fangledness or a general disdain for the suddenly fashionable, but on how much it sucks in its own right, in its specificity. I and some others thought it was clever and apt.

      Delete
    11. Amen, JazzmanChgo!

      Delete
  9. This was a little chaotic at first but warmed up quickly once I realized the rebus TREEs were all located above the circles. Extra tall grid layout was a clunky and added some time - all pretty much pleasant.

    The Junky’s Christmas

    Loved PRELUDE TO A KISS, PORCUPINE FISH and SUN ROSES. The revealer was temporal and apt for the trick. Had to remember VENTNOR and NETSCAPE. The wonderfully evocative CHITTER crossing HURSTON is the highlight of the puzzle.

    Frosti

    Highly enjoyable Sunday morning of Christmas Week solve. I’m really digging Maisie and Tula today.

    Hem

    ReplyDelete
  10. I want to focus on UNDER THE TREE, a phrase known to all, and one lending itself so perfectly to a crossword theme presented just as in today’s puzzle. Yet it has never been done before, in any of the major crossword outlets. Kudos to David, for plucking this out of the ether.

    Then there’s the emotion packed into that phrase, part of that magical feeling of Christmas. Uncovering UNDER THE TREE kindled that feeling and flooded me with memories.

    I remember when our son Jordan was five, how he nervously looked at the meager few presents under the tree before he went to sleep on Christmas Eve, and then when he raced out of bed in the morning and saw the sea of presents spreading out. He looked at us with wide eyes and exclaimed, “Mommy! Daddy! That Santa Claus is a VERY NICE MAN!”

    Loved your puzzle on many levels, David. Thank you so much for this!”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. BTW, this was a triumph in construction, given the symmetry of the theme answers and having the FIR YEW letters fixed in certain squares, OMG so constricting. Somehow on top of this, David managed to create a grid pulsing with pop, with 28 answers having appeared in the Times puzzle only two times or less, half of them answer debuts.

      A bow and a wow, David!

      Delete
  11. I'm always on the lookout for rebuses, but it took me a while to figure this one out. Once I did, I realized the cleverness of the puzzle. (Of course, silly me, I thought for a second the rebuses were in the circles, EVEN THOUGH THEY WEREN'T! - I must've been half-asleep??) The only detractors were a relatively large number of PPP's, including crossing PPP's, as pointed out by others.

    Cluing enjoyed:
    - 58A: "A bit off, say"
    - 66D: "It has a lot of secretaries" (I was initially thinking the desk-type piece of furniture.)
    - But did not like 3D ("Tennis line judge's ruling"): I feel that line judges call "IN" or "OUT" or use those arm/hand gestures. Maybe the sports commentator would agree and state, "Yes, ITSIN."

    Wishing all a warm and love-filled holiday!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hopefully my last rant of the year (but probably not, sigh): The middle north was absolutely fatal...nothing but one PPP answer after another, and no way to get traction. I had to accept the hopelessness and ditch this puzzle. Mr. Shortz increasingly selects puzzles for us that are not about WHAT you know, but WHOM you know. Not that many years ago crossword puzzles took exactly the opposite approach...how I miss those days!

    ReplyDelete
  13. You know what? This was a challenge. After weeks and weeks of "fill-in-the-blanks" Sunday puzzles, this was a pleasure. I love rebuses... the Thursday puzzle is the only other puzzle I do every week .. and the redirection of the circles added to the fun. And I enjoy the neverending torrent of cultural references I've never heard of.
    I'm reading Natan Last's brand new book about crosswords, Across the Universe...I got 2 copies by accident so my brother gets a gift...; terrific book thus far and wonderfully written. And I can inscribe it: fir yew.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous7:49 AM

    Just wonderful. Clarence Darrow and Arnold Palmer…as trees? Yes, please.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Certainly not my cup of tea. Too many names, too much trivia with healthy slog of crosswordese. Throw in a couple of Naticks too for good measure.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Came here to say that the two word phrase was just soooo underwhelming but it was ultimately worth it because this is truly one of the all-time great Rex write-ups. I enjoyed every bit of it!

    ReplyDelete
  17. I wish for once I had printed out the Sunday puzzle because then I would have written in the missing letters and have seen the TREEs more clearly. Instead, I put in the across letters into the circles and tried to imagine the missing letters. Like Rex, I was thinking all of the action was in the circle, which had me mentally sticking PINE and PALM into the circles and then being replaced on the across which meant I didn't see the TREEs when it came to the revealer. A shame to miss the main part of the theme on a cool Sunday puzzle.

    I laughed at I THE, 63D, scowled at IRATER and wondered mightily about VENTNOR. Never heard of it as well as CAESAR as clued.

    Nice job, David Kwong!

    ReplyDelete
  18. I didn’t really care for this puzzle until I read Rex’s write up. Now I love it.

    ReplyDelete
  19. BUTTER EEL is not a thing in real life, but is a thing in the video game The Witch of Fern Island.

    Took me twice the time of an average Sunday. Part of that is probably due having to use the NYT interface, which is both unfamiliar and awkward, necessitating scrolling around and fiddling a bit to get the rebuses in place.

    But I think it was also just harder than usual. Some of that was in the cluing, which was questionable at times. That is a terrible description of SETI. And rodents CHITTER, not birds. And ETHER is not equal to ‘air’.

    And I'm really not convinced PALM OFF AS is a phrase. Feels like it's trying to combine "palm off on" with "pass off as".

    But also, I guessed the rebuses would be in the circles, and the first two I got were ALME from ARNOLD PALMER, and LMY from CANT FEEL MY FACE, so at that point I'm thinking there is something going on with the letters L and M in rebuses. I then spun my wheels trying to figure out what that could be.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous8:54 AM

    I finally spotted the rebus at PINE. Great puzzle. Though the funniest part of today is noticing that OFL decided to go ahead and elaborate on the DOM answer *and to include a link* in doing so. I definitely wondered what he was gonna link to, maybe we’d finally get our nsfw Rex (alas it’s just Wikipedia).

    ReplyDelete
  21. Hey All !
    I had puz completely bass-ackwards. Thanks for that "trick", David. ("Just what do you think you're doing, Dave?")

    I had the Rebusses in the circles, which begat the answer above them to dip down into the circle before continuing Across. But then there was a letter unused after doing that, so I just figured it was the letter that went with the Across the circle was in, and would later find that all those letters spelled something, via the Note. The Down played as a regular Rebus. Then I got the Revealer, and scratched my head at no TREEs being above the circles.

    Came here, and lo and behold, the Rebusses were Above the circles! And they were TREEs. Ah, now it makes sense. So I had the right idea, wrong execution. First one I got was EL(FINE), which sounds like a word, so that started the confusiality. (I can make up words, too!)

    Was stymied in the NW, so after the 50 minute mark (way too long for me on a puz, angstiness sets in), I had to Goog for the Ellington song. After that, saw the odd TETROMINO, and was able to finish.

    An ambitious, tricky, gotcha puz today. And I was got. Thanks for the "gift", David. The ole brain is now sore. Har.

    Have a great Sunday!

    Five F's, One in a circle!
    RooMonster
    DarrinV
    Another book to read, Changing Times by Darrin Vail. Get it wherever you get your books online!

    ReplyDelete
  22. I hated this puzzle. I came to the blog to co-hate it and seek empathy, only to find a 4 star rating. WTF, Rex? Irater is NOT a word! "I the" is not a phrase, even if it's found in a phrase. That's shit construction. And don't get me started with nine past.

    The theme is stupid because the circled letters spelling a pun is nonsense. The circles are a red herring (With which you cannot cut down a tree) during the solve, and the "cuteness" of the pun does not relate but tenuously to any present I have ever gotten. Sometimes I *give* the present. Or at a birthday party *watch* the present be given/received.

    It did have Rex's actual last name in it, which is nice for people with names which are also words, of which there are many.

    I hated, HATED this puzzle. Fie on thee, indeed.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:14 PM

      Wow, that was a downer. Fie on thee.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:43 PM

      He literally criticized IRATER and I THE and this person is still mad.

      Delete
  23. Bob Mills9:17 AM

    Tried solving it in the magazine (a mistake). Needed cheats for BAKU/AMIR cross and forgot ARNOLDPALMERS (would have gotten it 20 years ago). Thought the puzzle was very cleverly designed.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Jodie F.9:19 AM

    I have a vague recollection of this error showing up in the puzzle once before - but maybe it was somewhere else. Anyway...

    67A: SETI does not watch for UFOs. Its mission has nothing to do with UFO watching. Indeed, SETI itself has said that the attribution of UFO watching to SETI is "a huge disservice to the scientific community" since its focus is scientific, and SETI's mission is to monitor radio signal activity and optical phenomena from deep space - other star systems and galaxies - to look for evidence of other civilizations in the universe, seeking insight into the nature and origin of life and intelligence in the universe. Using the scientific method and conducted by real scientists. SETI has no interest in whether alien spacecraft are skulking around earth's neighborhood, and commits no resources to that pursuing that endeavor. Sadly, though, when people attribute such activity to SETI, it seriously hinders its attempts to secure funding for its scientific research.

    So this answer is just plain and simply wrong. And, no, its not close enough for crosswords - unless you are of the opinion that, for example, its close enough for crosswords to assert that the AMA promotes bloodletting and trepanation as viable treatments for human ailments.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The AMA does not, but RFK, Jr. might.

      Delete
    2. Lol @Liveprof!

      Delete
  25. Great write up Rex. I started out “not liking” the puzzle and ended up loving the puzzle because it was SO much fun to crack! Yes. There were some clunkers like IRATER, but there was just so much going on that made it a crunchy treat for a Sunday.
    My favorite thing was the intersection of CEDAR (street) with DANCED AROUND /CLARENCE DARROW.
    Thanks David Kwong!

    ReplyDelete
  26. People having a "he said/she said" argument are in a to-and-FROTHING.

    Monopoly is just a game, so I neither VENTNOR STEAM.

    These jokes are getting OLDMAN, I can almost hear you saying. So should I STAY or say SEEYA? OK. Thanks for this absolutely delightful present under our tree, David Kwong. And thank YEW also to @Rex FIR a gem of a write up.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous9:50 AM

    This morning (Dec 21), I read that on this date in 1913 “The New York World published the very first modern crossword puzzle, crafted by journalist Arthur Wynne.” I did not know this. Will try to save it in back of my mind for a future XWORD or game of trivia.

    ReplyDelete
  28. CAN'T FEEL MY FACE made me think of the late very funny Joan Rivers. She had so much plastic surgery she would sometimes ask "Am I smiling?" (Also said, at her death her body would be donated to Tupperware.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Liveprof…yes. Joan Rivers was ALWAYS very open about her plastic surgery…self-deprecating even. Very sad, though, that a PS procedure caused her unfortunate death. Ooh. I’m not suggesting you were inappropriate. Actually, I think she would love your comment!

      Delete
  29. Anonymous10:05 AM

    Lots of secretaries as in a presidential cabinet. Like the current one filled with buffoons.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Niallhost10:12 AM

    Really enjoyed this one. Tricky adding a circle and then putting a rebus ABOVE that circle (didn't read that clue until late in the game). I figured there was a rebus when I couldn't make a couple of things fit but kept trying to squeeze it into the circle to no avail. Love the creeping aha! feeling I get when I start to figure things out. Yes, there are a few ridiculous answers but would happily endure those for a fun solve rather than a clean grid that underwhelms. 33:57

    ReplyDelete
  31. Cabinet as in US Cabinet - Sec. of Defense, Sec. of State, etc.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Hey, look, a BUTTER EEL! And a HAM TULIP! And ooh there's a KEYBOARD WEASEL! What a magical world we live in! I love nature!
    LOL and LMAO
    Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  33. P. E. Dant10:28 AM

    I will go to my grave insisting that 88D should be RsBI - and will not rest until this scandalous offense against the language is either corrected or I meet my maker - whichever comes first.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @P.E. Dant…your blog handle PLUS comment cracked me up. Methinks you MIGHT be the opposite…

      Delete
  34. Fantastic!!! 1) Loved the PSYCH out rebus above the circles, 2) Cluing slightly harder than a typical Sunday, 3) the Bugs Bunny clip on Rex's post, 4) The James Bond video including the spectacular scenes of the BD-5 Jet flying through the hangar and Bond hanging onto the top of a Beech 18 as it rolls inverted... I gotta watch that movie tonight, and 5) Wrap it Up! I had forgotten that song existed!

    ReplyDelete
  35. Anonymous10:38 AM

    Like others have said, I hated the BADU BAMA AMIR AMANDA RICARDO section. I acknowledge that this could be personal preference. The fun part of a crossword for me is inferring the answer from context, which is usually a combination of the clue and whatever letters I've already found. PPP - especially obscure PPP - is more akin to trivia where you know it or don't, especially with obscure names and/or uncommon spellings. That section being right up top took most of the joy out of this puzzle for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. JazzmanChgo4:04 PM

      Not sure if AMANDA GORMAN, who read her now-famous poem at Joe Biden's inauguration (at age 22!) and has gone on to become a highly esteemed poet (and hero/role model for young aspiring poets/writers throughout the country), really qualifies as "obscure PPP."

      Delete
  36. Anonymous10:41 AM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdP3y4k2KKU

    ReplyDelete
  37. Maddy Son11:00 AM

    66D "Secretaries" refers to members of the President's CABINET. These days, though, a much more accurate clue with far less misdirection would have been, "It has lots of sycophants."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hilarious. In future…you should LEAD with the punchline. Well. As if I ever do…

      Delete
  38. A new low in Sunday rebuses. FIVE letters? Really? I have many other beefs with this mess, most of them ably discussed by OFL, but CEDAR was the worst. I'd love an Xmas present of a gimmick-free Sunday, which might just oblige the constructor and editor to work a bit harder.

    ReplyDelete
  39. One of the best puzzles of the year. After solving I felt certain that Rex would like it, and my hunch was correct.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Aluriaphin11:33 AM

    I enjoyed this solve significantly less than Rex and I am going to hold it against the editorial team that SUNROSES were clued as a Mediterranean plant when they are in fact native to South Africa and have merely naturalized in the Med, among other regions.

    ReplyDelete
  41. After finding the OAK and PALM fairly early on, thanks to their friendly crosses, I really enjoyed figuring out what the other four trees were. Not knowing the Weeknd song and having written in ELMO in the four available squares, I initially missed the ELM rebus. And, getting my holy days confused, I tried to work Good Friday into the NE, and needed crosses to straighten me out about ASH WEDNESDAY. After that, the PORCUPINE FISH was easy to imagine, and then the pièce de resistance: CLARENCE DARROW crossing DANCE AROUND. What a stroke of crossword genius! And...I was sure that WIEFRY was supposed to deliver a message, but I hadn't read the note so didn't read from left to right. DARN! A real Christmas treat of a puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Anonymous11:49 AM

    RBIS is wrong. Runs batted in is plural. Doesn’t take the S.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:36 PM

      It’s not wrong. It’s extremely conventional. It’s in common usage all over the place, including professional sports sites. The slang “ribbies” wouldn’t exist without RBIS. It’s true that RBI as a category means “runs batted in,” but RBIS isn’t “wrong.”

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:59 PM

      And what would we ever do without ribbies?

      Delete
    3. JazzmanChgo4:06 PM

      Some sports writers/editors use RBI as the plural; some use RBIs. Both are pretty common.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous4:13 PM

      I consider that if you're using full words, Runs Batted In is Shirley correct. However, as RBI, the abbreviation becomes its own distinct linguistic thing. So, for instance, "That double resulted in an RBI" uses the article "an" -- however, "a" would be correct for "a run batted in." So, too, the plural of RBI is RBIs.

      Delete
  43. First I gotta say that I'm very impressed, David. You 'almost' made me like a rebus. Got the TREES. Came close with some cheats - DOM, SKATE RATS, TETROMINO & more (too many to mention) but I stuck with it. So in a smaller grid, this might not have me searching for my typo, as usual. But THANK YOU for an intriguing (for me) Sunday. Now I can have a (late) breakfast :)

    ReplyDelete
  44. Easy-medium. I caught the rebus at OAK and didn’t hit any serious resistance after that.

    twITTER before CHITTER was it for costly erasure, fortunately HURSTON was a gimme.

    No idea about the Weeknd song, not my generation, but if you want a song to close out the year here are Dawes and Friends covering “A Little Help From My Friends” on Kimmel’s last show of the year.

    https://youtu.be/Ajx8xTP-LBU?si=YbfY0glnFeG2ohpq

    Fun, tricky, and clever, liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  45. I really had to work to complete this one, but I did and couldn't help but appreciate all that went into it. Yes, IRATER is awful but I won't complain because there were so many other things to like. And what a terrific writeup by Rex! Loved the shaggy dog analogy and everything else. A very fun Sunday-befrore-Christas puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  46. Anonymous12:22 PM

    Not really the forum, I admit, but it would be nice if the circled squares could be bold-faced in the online puzzle. Even if I know they’re there, I can’t find them without enlarging. Or maybe it’s my 69 year old eyes.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Took somewhere between five and ten minutes more than an average Sunday time.

    Well, I got up a bit late this morning and y'all who were here before me have already said it, so I can only MIRROR it: I was sure Rex was going to hate it, and my eyes popped out when I saw four stars, and he (just about) won me over with the exuberance of his review.

    ARSE is bad enough (in my opinion -- I'm afraid you don't know me well enough to be taking such liberties, Mr. Puzzle), but IRATER... I THE... NINE PAST... oh my god. These are acts of desperation in the life of a crossword constructor, I just sense it. Oh, and also: NINER together with NINE PAST is unproblematic, you're telling me?

    OF AN ERA. I thought Rex wouldn't go for that either, but I don't have just the right snappy catchphrase (cf. Eat A Sandwich) for what's annoying about it.

    Re RBIS, this from Wikipedia: "The plural of "RBI" is a matter of "(very) minor controversy" for baseball fans: it is usually "RBIs", in accordance with the usual practice for pluralizing initialisms in English; however, some sources use "RBI" as the plural, on the basis that it can stand for "runs batted in"." (end quote). Say what you will, but here it struck me as a POC. (I got a good chuckle the other day where someone was poking fun at William Safire, imagining him looking over the Burger King MENU board and finally saying, "I'd like three Whoppers Junior, please".)

    The Greek prefix is tetra-, so TETROMINO looks weird except as portmanteau. (But, it's legit.)

    But, let me try to GET OVER IT. (What's done is done, indeed!) I can see the cleverness and hard work, especially where a three-letter TREE name straddles two and even three words, as in PRELUDE T(O A K)ISS. So YES, YES, I can see your points, Rex, and actually it's always nice when you're in a good mood. So I'll try to do likewise, and enjoy the time spent with this shaggy dog of a puzzle, slobbery ball and all.

    Oh, and thank you very much, Rex: I thought I had seen every last DARN Bugs Bunny toon, and really don't know who I'd be without them, but that short clip you embedded had me howling out loud. I did not see that coming! And then I got a second laugh imagining you and that TREE (but only in a cartoonish way; it can't have been funny at the time). Thanks again!

    ReplyDelete
  48. Great writeup today Rex, thanks. However I can't share your enthusiasm for this... it is kind of a nice but groan worthy theme, but totally ruined for me by the area that others have mentioned.

    That horrible cluster from square 10 down to square 46 contains 4 Unknown Names crossing each other, a flower I've never heard of, for 24 across so many options: DANG, DAMN, DRAT, RATS,.... no hope. Then there's ARNOLD PALMER who I've certainly heard of but not as a drink and containing a rebus tree!I cheated to get all the damn names but then was stuck with that rebus and not a clue... totally skunked with my inability to think of PALM. I even googled "tree types", and went through the huge list which unfortunately did not include "palm". Arrrrggh.

    Other issues: 3 down IT'S IN is virtually never uttered by a line judge, right? If "it's in", they say nothing. The only things they say are OUT, LET, or FAULT, so I put in the latter knowing it wouldn't work.

    And hands up for thumbs down for the SETI clue. "E.T.-seeking org.", maybe.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:22 PM

      Started with FAULT there also, the only actual line judge call that would fit. This should have been clued differently.

      Delete
  49. Anonymous1:21 PM

    Most enjoyable Sunday in months! Usually I find Sunday puzzles time-consuming slogs. I have memories of the excitement of the fat Sunday Times 60 years ago. I lived in Virginia and had never been to a big city. I would devour the Arts and Leisure section, and as a family we’d complete the puzzle in the magazine. Even as recently as 30 years ago, I remember challenging and fun Sunday puzzles. I don’t know if I’ve changed, or the puzzle has changed, but Sunday puzzles are probably my least favorite of the week now. Boring and long.
    Today’s puzzle doesn’t really compete with those of my memories, but it was fun to do and it has some very clever spots: OAK in prelude to a kiss, and CEDAR, in Clarence Darrow, for example. I tsked in admiration at both.
    More cats, please

    ReplyDelete
  50. EasyEd1:51 PM

    This one took me forever due to some of the trivia and hilarious clues but it was worth hanging in there to the end. I actually had to read Rex’s comments to get the “present” trees—my brain was too tired after finishing the puzzle to puzzle out the anagram answers. Love the I-Rater to go with I Claudius and I Tina.

    ReplyDelete
  51. SharonAk2:13 PM

    @Rex your riff on 28A had me laughing out loud, way loud by the time I got to" keyboard weasel."
    I found this puzzle more than average difficult because of so many things I hadn't heard of (including sun roses - which it turns out are very pretty) But I enjoyed it. When I finally had so many crosses that I realized where the secretaries were, I thought "of course - secretaries of commerce etc.

    Barclay's Bank - is there a Barclay's Center? When I still had cash in England it was in Barclays.
    Felt good to sit down to this - just spent an hour having furniture moved back to where it belongs, after a house concert Friday night. Even though volunteer muscle was doing the lifting, I still ended up crawling around on the floor looking at things. My muscles have gotten very grouchy with age.
    Happy Solstice everyone.

    ReplyDelete
  52. SharonAK2:32 PM

    I LOVED "nine past" Took me forever to get it because I ( stupidly) persisted in envisioning it as 51 past the hour and" nine to" didn't fit.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Anonymous2:36 PM

    could not get a foothold in the NW.. not a letter, until 27 across. i confidently wrote my name in. then for another 3 minutes...nothing but my name staring back at me. finally got going but ended up with the NW being the nut to crack. a proper hard and entertaing puzzle. on a sunday !??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maybe Sunday is the new Saturday?

      Delete
  54. A bit of the holidays magic in this here SunPuz. Like.
    FIR YEW. har. They share the staff weeject pick honors.

    Fave things: The clever, sneaky clues. Also kinda partial to CHITTER.

    Thanx, Mr. Kwong dude. Primo job.

    Masked & Anonymo8Us

    ... here's a "ClausWord" drawing fashioned by M&A many years ago ...

    http://puzzlecrowd.com/kf/XmasXword.jpeg

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  55. Both loved and hated this puzzle. So much really good stuff and then IRATER, I THE, NINE PAST, TETROMINO, and SETI, as clued. Well maybe not TETROMINO. It was great to learn but it was sooo difficult to fill in.

    Knowing BADU and AMANDA in the top centre section helped, but SUN ROSES, sheesh. They're not even roses. They're succulents, apparently. Plant people should be condemned to the lowest level of hell for their sloppy naming practices. I say this as the spouse of a mad gardener who is always confusing me with these ridiculous names. Granted, no one wants to have to say Mesembryanthemum cordifolium, but there must be a better way.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Solved this one by filling in almost everything around the circles, then moving on, as nothing was occurring to me. Finally got to a section with fewer circles, ran into UNDERTHETREE, returned to things like ARNOLDPALMER and CLARENCEDARROW, which had to be right, and hey presto, there it was. For those of you wishing you had solved on paper try writing CEDAR in on of those little boxes. Got all done and then discovered I had left the TETROMIN__ SO__ cross blank, I thought one missing letter out of (starts counting) um lots of letters was acceptable, since I don't like to look things up and am easily pleased.

    Knew BARLCLAYS from watching lots of Premier League soccer. Same complaints about icky fill that have been mentioned, but I was happy to see old friend ANIL, even if it is not accepted in SB.

    Thought this was the best conception and execution in many Sundays, I Don't Know how you came up with this, but wow. Thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  57. EVIE / VENTNOR was a pretty evil Natick particular since EDIE is equally plausible (and much more familiar to boot). Kwong did the puzzle of the year for me last year, concerning thefts from an art museum, and while this wasn't as fun a solve as last year's it's definitely a step up from the predictable and rather boring stuff we've been getting recently. It would be nice to see more grids from Kwong in the future.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Me too @Benbini!! Mr. Kwong’s “art theft” puzzle was excellent. Made me very excited to see his byline. Today dis not disappoint.

      Delete
  58. JazzmanChgo3:52 PM

    The lyrics of "Prelude to a Kiss" were written by Irving Gordon (with publisher Irving Mills receiving co-credit), not Duke Ellington.

    ReplyDelete
  59. I hate to admit it but I finally got my late week solving fix off of this dad joke themed puzzle. It was one of those so bad it's good experiences. Ignoring the theme as usual I slogged my way down to the SE wondering why so many entries were unfillable. Because HURSTON is so familiar the SE was the first section to fill cleanly. If not for that name I'd probably still be trying to make TWITTER work to say nothing of smoking out SCHEMATA.

    With the help of the revealer I went back over the puzzle. I think ELM was the first rebus I got. Everything should have been a mop up after that but then I ran into that north center section. Luckily I know BADU and BAMA. but even then I had to come up with MIRROR to get that section to crack.

    Too bad every Sunday can't be this good

    ReplyDelete