Saturday, December 27, 2025

Cold bathhouse amenity / SAT 12-27-25 / Extreme music subgenre with heavily distorted guitars / 2021 science fiction novel by Nnedi Okorafor / Fantasy author Bardugo / City west of Knoxville / Best performances by an actor in a short film? / Halves of Hamiltons / Knights of ___, ancient cult in the "Star Wars" universe / Interloper whom no one seems to know, informally / South American monkey with a reduplicative name / John with some groundbreaking inventions

Constructor: Katie Hoody

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: O'SHEA Jackson Jr. (49D: Actor ___ Jackson Jr.) —
O'Shea Jackson Jr. (born February 24, 1991), also known by the stage name OMG, is an American actor, rapper and songwriter. He is the oldest son of Ice Cube and, in his feature film debut, he portrayed his father in the 2015 biopic Straight Outta Compton.
• • •

[CRINKLE-CUT]

Well this is more like it. This is the kind of late-week grid I live for. Just stacked with sparkling long answers—triple stacks of 10 (well, 10-10-9) in every dang corner, plus a couple of gridspanners that cut the grid in half, top-to-bottom as well as lengthwise. It was the central long Down that really cracked things open, sending me whooshing from the top of the grid all the way to the bottom with just a little push from the first few letters:


From there, I had access to the SW corner, and it only remained for me to throw JACK DIDDLY SQUAT across the grid to get a toehold in the SE as well. The long answers really lit up the grid at every turn. Not a dull patch to be found. I particularly loved sinking into the DEATH METAL PLUNGE POOL of AQUITAINE.  Now there's a historical fantasy novel title for you. I would read The DEATH METAL PLUNGE POOL of AQUITAINE. Maybe Bardugo and Okorafor could team up on that one. Got bestseller written all over it. I don't normally care for DEATH METAL, or any metal (29D: Extreme music subgenre with heavily distorted guitars), but man that answer looks good, particularly when paired so incongruously with PLUNGE POOL. Are DEATH METAL PLUNGE POOLs kept at ROOM TEMP? That doesn't seem very ... deathy. 


Once again, there was way, way too little resistance for a Saturday puzzle, and the way the puzzle went about generating what little resistance it offered was the cheap way, i.e. via trivia. NOOR is crosswordese of old, but today the puzzle tried to hide it behind a new clue (11D: 2021 science fiction novel by Nnedi Okorafor)—which, good for them, but also, a recentish scifi novel that didn't win any major awards ... that's gonna be a big ??? for a lot of solvers. NOOR sounds like a cool book, actually, but as book titles go, I don't know how familiar it is. That clue is here to be a speed bump. It's the kind of trivia you either know or don't, and that you can't even infer from the clue. I'd love for this puzzle to be harder, but via clever cluing, not pop culture quizzes. See also LEIGH Bardugo—a bestselling author, for sure, but why are we going to the fantasy/scifi well twice in one puzzle? And going to Superman lore (LARA) and Star Wars yet again (REN). I feel like I should put up a "___ Days Without a Star Wars Clue" sign around here. I doubt we'd ever get out of single digits, and mostly the sign would read "0." Weirdly, I think I'd mind these pop culturefied short answers less if the puzzle was harder generally. Like, you wanna come at me, come at me. Throwing up these little proper noun roadblocks isn't going to do it. They probably aren't tough enough to hold anyone up for very long. You can just blow right through and around them. (Note: I actually knew LEIGH Bardugo, but only vaguely, and I remembered her today mainly because she blurbed the back of R.F. Kuang's new book Katabasis, which I started reading yesterday—when will KUANG hit the grid? Or RFKUANG—now that's got grid potential!)


The hardest thing in the grid for me, by far, was DEMO REEL (37D: Best performances by an actor in a short film?). Could not parse that baby to save my life. Needed every cross. Was it the very last answer I got? Yup, you can see on my finished grid (above) that only after I got that final "L" from SPIEL was the answer complete, and only a few seconds after that did I parse it correctly. Actually, I probably sat there with the last square unfilled until I realized how "L" was supposed to work—I hate putting in the last letter if I'm not extremely sure that I'm going to get the "Congratulations" message. Obviously, it's the "?" clue on DEMO REEL that's causing the problem. First of all, it looks like a plural ("Best performances..."). At first, I thought the clue was kind of forced and convoluted, but now I see it's actually extremely literal. A DEMO REEL will showcase an actor's best performances. Nice. More of this, please! It's Saturday! Whack me with a DEMO REEL or two (or four or nine).


Aside from a tendency to lean into crosswordese in the margins, the one thing that I didn't really care for today was JACK DIDDLY SQUAT. Feels like a conjoined twins-type answer. Which is to say, I know that term "jack squat" very well. Hear it all the time. And I know the term "diddly squat." I don't hear it all the time, but I definitely hear it. JACK DIDDLY SQUAT, though, I do not hear. I'm sure someone has said it, but it seems infinitely more likely that you'd opt for either JACK or DIDDLY rather than try to grab hold of both of them at once. The phrase just didn't ring true to my ear.


Not that it matters much, but this grid has 90º rotational symmetry. That is, usually if you rotate a crossword grid 180º, the black squares end up in the same place (ordinary rotational symmetry), but today, the black squares end up in the same place with every 90º turn. That's, like, twice the symmetry. Double your symmetry, double your fun! Or ... fail to notice or appreciate it at all. Your call!

Bullets:
  • 5A: ___ Seton, author of "Foxfire" and "Katherine" (ANYA) — more of that crosswordese I was talking about. I have seen ANYA's name a lot, but only in crosswords. See also ALOP, yikes. Oh, and ABES—still not a thing.
  • 22A: City west of Knoxville (OAK RIDGE) — What? Where? "Oak Ridge's population was 31,402 at the 2020 census" (wikipedia). The only thing I know about OAK RIDGE is boys. They are famous for their boys.
  • 47D: Hollywood icon Davis (BETTE) — you've heard of the Three-Body Problem? Well, this is the Four-Davis Problem—VIOLA? OSSIE? GEENA? BETTE? The only way you're gonna know for sure is if you get some crosses.
  • 28A: Bussing on the street, e.g., in brief (PDA) — that's "bussing" as in "kissing," not "bussing" as in "sending kids to school on the bus" (which is also spelled "bussing," but also, maybe more commonly, spelled "busing"). PDA = public display of affection.
Continuing with 🌲🐈Holiday Pet Pics🐕🌲 now. Note: PLEASE DO NOT SEND ME ANY MORE PET PICS, I'M ALL FULL UP FOR THIS YEAR, thank you.

First up is Bugle the one-eyed pirate! Look at his sweet tabby face, his cute asymmetrical white markings. If you look only at the left side of his face, he looks like he's sleeping. But no! It's a trick! He is vigilant! A vigilant tree guardian! 
[Thanks, Meredith!]

Lucy, on the other hand, is not really known for her vigilance. Not really a guard dog. More of a lie-around-and-accept-scritches dog. It takes all kinds, Lucy. They also serve who only stand and wait (for scritches)!
[Thanks, Anne and Jacob!]

Remi's like "who is this weird beardo and can I tear him up?" Go for it, Remi!
[Thanks, Tom and Ann]

And now a live shot of me! ... nope, I'm sorry, this is actually Baloo. We apparently have the same interests, the same energy level, the same impeccable typing posture. Also, we enjoy the same holiday-season activities. (R.I.P., you sweet cruciverbalist baby)
[Thanks, Jennifer!]

Mindy the Morkie is ready for her close-up...
[Thanks, Karen!]

And finally there's Anni, who is going back to bed, what time is it even? (R.I.P., sweetheart)
[Thanks, Kat!]

See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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

122 comments:


  1. Easy-Medium.
    * * * _ _

    Overwrites:
    I had the first three letters of 2D and wanted it to be MALala Yousafzai, but she didn't fit. MALIA OBAMA did.
    ANnA Seton before ANYA at 5A.
    11D sci-fi novel NOOR
    I thought Ms. Dickinson said the soul should always stand AfAR before it turned out to stand AJAR at 31D.
    fOmO before YOLO at 38D, "No day but today"
    Hollywood icon gEena Davis before BETTE at 47D
    yoyo before KITE for the 54D wind-up toy

    WOEs:
    Knights of REN at 24A. Also any Star Wars reference after the first three movies.
    Didn't remember that LARA was Superman's mother (32A).
    Author LEIGH Bardugo at 45A

    ReplyDelete
  2. OAK RIDGE best (or worst) known for its role in the development of the first atomic bombs. Great puzzle in two phases. Phase One when I woke up at 1:30 and decided to give the puzzle a poke. Flailed around a bit, filled the SW corner, but had ENJOY at 39A and WALDO at 9A (misread the “whom” as “where”); lost traction and wisely went back to sleep. Up at 5:30 and brain in working order cruised through the rest of the solve.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I found this to be one of the more enjoyable Saturdays that we have had of late. I definitely built up more momentum than I usually do on this day of the week. In fact, I pretty much cruised through the north and struggled a bit south of the equator.

    Although I am not familiar with the AQUITAINE region (I never heard of it until today, in fact), I would rather struggle with that than deal with more Star Wars shit for like the sixtieth consecutive day. I know Will needs to put asses in the seats (or in this case, pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard - aka “subscriptions to sell”), but this is past the point of being ridiculous and well into pathetic territory.

    Similarly, to both Will and Katie - you have a Saturday puzzle published in the NYT. We all know you are both very intelligent, so why resort to the “look how smart I am” arcana like ALOP. You both can do better.

    I was a bit intrigued by the clue for TAPER (What “many” wine corks do.). I was wondering what kind of wine corks don’t TAPER. The ones I could think of are perhaps the corks in Champagne bottles. Maybe that helps them keep in the pressure so we can easily put another dent in the drop ceiling when it comes time to uncork and celebrate.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:44 AM

      You have forgotten Eleanor of Aquitaine?!

      Delete
    2. @Southside…Katherine Hepburn played Eleanor of Aquitaine in A Lion in Winter.

      Delete
    3. I suspect that ALOP isn't to show "how smart I am", but more
      "how desperate I am". Or maybe "how tired I am trying to work out kinks in the puzzle". Happens.

      Delete
    4. tht
      I agree. The constructor wasn’t trying to show off with ALOP. It has also been in the puzzle before because useful letters. It is not a common word but as long it is a word (first recorded use over 160 years ago) I see nothing wrong with it. Especially on the weekend
      So I disagree with Southside Johnny. .

      Delete
    5. @Beezer. With respect, Katherine Hepburn, as she so often did, played Katherine Hepburn playing Eleanor of Aquitaine.

      Delete
  4. JACK DIDDLY SQUAT is emphatically not a thing.

    In an old episode of The Rockford Files, Jim is negotiating a bribe with someone, I think to get him to talk. They debate whether the price should be an ABE or a Jackson before finally deciding on a Hamilton. It may not be a thing anymore, but it was for sure at some point, somewhere--I've gotta think that The Rockford Files didn't coin that usage.

    Too many random names today--@Rex hit them all, I think. Eh. DEMO tape before DEMO REEL.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. WTH on so many levels

      Delete
    2. Heh Standards & Practices probably objected to depicting bribery on prime time TV so they needed to speak in code. The 70’s were fun.

      Delete
    3. DAVInHOP1:01 PM

      Sorry, but ABES and JACK DIDDLY SQUAT did not AMUSE me.

      Otherwise, quite a feat with all the longs.

      Delete
  5. I would guess others like me from far across the pond found it hard because of its surfeit of local color.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh, the entire package. Here. Today.

    A wealth of gorgeous answers. Entertaining wordplay clues. Vibrant stacks. Junk free grid. All shoehorned into a single box.

    The longs – look at the longs! – LOOP DE LOOP! JACK DIDDLY SQUAT! CRINKLE CUT! And more. These three are NYT debut answers, BTW.

    The clues, OMG. So many that satisfied my brain’s work ethic. So many with smile-kindling wordplay. [Gets into a tight spot] for SHOEHORNS, and [Best performances by an actor in a short film?] for DEMO REEL. And more.

    Even lovely serendipities, such as a backward ARAL crossing A SEA. And more.

    Every long stack containing at least one “Mwah!” answer. It’s difficult enough to make a a stack that’s crossed cleanly, especially in a grid with so few black squares, but to do that four times, all with at least one dazzling answer? That’s art and science.

    The whole caboodle. Here. Today. You are a talent, Katie, and this was one extraordinarily splendid outing. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous7:40 AM

    For “appears after dusk and before dawn” I wrote “owl” and I’m very disappointed it’s wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hey All !
    Found top half fairly easy, but bottom half took some work. TITI is not registering in the ole brain. I must've heard of it before. DEMO REEL tough to see as clued. Also, ALOP is not atop the brain.

    SE had me stymied for a bit with unknown AQUITAINE, and DALES as clued. Also, NOAM? Are they any known NOAMs out there? Wait, just remembered NOAM Chomsky, sometimes it takes the ole brain a minute to fully boot up!

    But got puz done in 19 and 1/2 minutes, which puts it in easy territory. Definitely easier than YesterPuz.

    Agree that JACK DIDDLY SQUAT all together like that missed. It's either or, as Rex said. Liked the grid design. A lot of Longs happening.

    The puz could be described as I MUSED TO IT.

    You know, there's another Fantasy/SciFi book out there for something new to read ...
    Changing Times by Darrin Vail. 😁 Get it wherever you get your books online! Start a cult! Send me fan mail! Har.

    Welp, hope y'all have a great Saturday!

    No F's - That's a puz SIN. 😁
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cincinnati Reds fans from the early 90’s would like a word.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous5:07 PM

      There's "Jack s**t" and there's "diddly squat" - there's no such expression as "Jack diddly squat".

      Delete
  9. What Rex said - maybe not Stumper level stuff but pleasant and inviting for late week. The crossing spanners and the corner stacks are all solid - the JACK does feel a bit out of place but I’ll give it a pass - makes it fit. The Gordon cut is fantastic.

    Front 242

    CRINKLE CUT, SHOEHORNS, DOTTED THE I are wonderful. Don’t the love the full proper name at 2d and had to back into OAK RIDGE and LEIGH.

    Done With Bonaparte

    Highly enjoyable Saturday morning solve. For a little more heat try our buddy Rafa’s Stumper today - beautiful puzzle.

    Beat Happening

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous7:46 AM

    I remain puzzled regarding UNTO preceding itself….

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well that is indeed a puzzle unto itself

      Delete
    2. from dusk TIL dawn. But Owl would be better.

      Delete
  11. Anonymous7:48 AM

    Naticked on YwCA/wALIAOBAMA (never heard of her). Liked everything else. JACK DIDDLY SQUAT is in the language here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:25 AM

      This may be the funniest comment I’ve ever read

      Delete
    2. Walia is basically the Rosemary Kennedy of the family.

      Delete
    3. Jeremy10:05 AM

      Yes, a real Mario/Wario stumper.

      Delete
  12. Rex clearly forgot about ESSIE Davis.

    And that the Oak Ridge nuclear plant is where Homer had to ship a T-437 safety command console when Bart, Milhouse, Martin and Nelson got stranded in Knoxville after the sun sphere crushed their rental car. I half-expected him to use a clip of that in today's column.

    Today was much easier than yesterday, so another week where things should have been switched.

    But for an easy Saturday, there sure were a lot of unknown proper nouns: ANYA, LARA, LEIGH, ALTON, NOOR.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:24 AM

      Essie Davis is not famous. Not a “Hollywood icon” in the least.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:47 AM

      How dare he forget about the Australian actress best-known for Australian work who has had small roles in approximately four Hollywood movies when describing "Hollywood icons"?!

      What a stupid comment. Believe it or not, he didn't list every single actor with the surname "Davis".

      Delete
    3. @kitshef 7:59 AM
      The Anonymotis' anti-Essie-ism is electric, eh?

      Delete
    4. My first thought was Sammy

      Delete
    5. @Gary Jugert - yet no one corrected my actual error. Homer orders the T-437 FROM Oak Ridge; he does not send it to Oak Ridge.

      Delete
  13. Andrew Z.8:01 AM

    Not too crazy about this puzzle. Way too much trivia and words I’ve never heard of, such as ALOP and TITI. A 9 letter French town, AQUITAINE, was also totally foreign to me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Andrew Z
      FWIW
      Aquitaine was a region of France , not a town. Its rulers were very important in Medieval times in France The most famous was Eleanor of Aquitaine. A hit movie of the late sixties, Lion in Winter has Eleanor as a major character played by the famous Katherine Hepburn. I think baby boomers and other older people are much more likely to recall Aquitaine.than younger people. But Aquitaine is not as obscure ass many may think.

      Delete
  14. Anonymous8:01 AM

    Oak Ridge Nat’l Lab is very famous.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes if you don’t remember about 3 months in 1981 you’ve probably never heard of the band.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:36 AM

      They’re in the Country Music HOF as well as the Gospel Music HOF

      Delete
  15. Anonymous8:23 AM

    Gorgeous puzzle. I had so much filled in and was still completely bamboozled. Then I turned to the long answers and the “aha” moments just cascaded across and down the grid. It was incredibly satisfying.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Bob Mills8:41 AM

    Not easy. Hard.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anonymous8:48 AM

    Oh I wanted OWL! What may appear after dusk and before dawn.

    ReplyDelete
  18. 18 and a half minutes, after 10 pm, so I think that’s easy-medium on a Saturday for me. The NW corner was pretty easy—so that gave me a good foothold. Couldn’t think of the CUT part of CRINKLECUT, and didn’t know if it was YM or YW, so had to wait on 2 down for that, but YES/NO was pretty obvious, along with SIN, OLINE, ABES and RAT. So that gave me JACK. The SW corner took me a lot longer… had to go over to the SE where IOTA, NOAM, ELLS and PRAMS gave me that corner and then I worked out from there. Loved seeing WATERSKIS, ELITEEIGHT, and DOTTEDTHEI. Also loved imagining the DEATHMETAL band taking a dive in the PLUNGEPOOL. And really loved the colloquial “YOUHEARDMERIGHT”. Terrific. Thanks, Katie, for a fun puzzle!!! Since I’m typing this before I read Rex…. I’m predicting 3.5 stars. Have a nice w/e everyone!

    ReplyDelete
  19. I was musing on the phrase "sing in me" the other day when I snapped out of my reverie and found myself in front of my copy of Homer's Odyssey. When Mrs. Egs asked if I had been talking to that book, I replied, "I wouldn't say talking, but IMUSEDTOIT."

    Spoiler alert! If you haven't read the 2021 Sci-Fi novel by Nnedi Okorafor, it deals with a world where the only logical operators are "if" and "and" - - NOOR.

    Being ALOP while ASEA is ADRAG.

    The perils of Sanskrit greetings are known as namASTERISKS.

    Coach: I think we need one more player to have a great offensive line to shield our quarterback, Bill France.
    Asst: Let's give the Madge a shot. She's smart, she's quick and she's mean.
    Coach: So you think the Madge in OLINE will protect France?
    Asst: My only worry would be the blitz.

    I found this a bit tougher than most commenters seemed to have. A fun Saturday outing. Thanks, Katie Hoody.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Madge in OLINE" -- Hah! Triple hah! And "namASTERISKS" not far behind.

      Delete
    2. It took me a while to hear it, but I agree with Lewis.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous10:17 AM

      Definitely brought your A-Game today Egs - thanks for the amusement.

      Delete
    4. Ditto what tht and Lewis said. I don’t know how you got there, but when it landed it was surely one of your best. Five stars !

      Delete
    5. Thanks for making me look up WWII trivia

      Delete
  20. Andy Freude9:04 AM

    Easy? Easy-medium? I’m happy for the folks who thought so. For me, this was a toughie. So much sci-fi trivia. And someday I’ll stop thinking it’s ANnA Seaton. For the longest time I tried to parse that long down as “No, u heard me right,” which seemed to be a really stupid texting convention. Finally, ANYA came to the rescue.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I mostly came to the blog just to see the pet pictures today. The puzzle had way more trivia than I wanted and left me with no choice except to google in order to move beyond a skeletal beginning. A nice grid and some notable marquee entries, just a tough one for me today.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. DAVinHOP1:11 PM

      Yeah, I thought Rex was a bit generous (3-1/2 stars) with some stuff (ABE, anything StarWars) he always pans. Fortunately AM SO wasn't clued as a playground retort.

      Then I read his write-up, and he won me over. And only he knows whether it might have been four stars, with a mandatory half-point deduction for ABE and REN?

      Delete
  22. Much too easy for a Saturday. Even for a Friday this would have been strictly for fun. It's not because someone dropped the list. The similarities and differences between yesterday and today are a perfect example of what is wrong with the late week NYTXW these days. Both puzzles have central crossing grid spanners but the big difference is that today's are debuts as are many of the longer answers. I don't recall yesterday's having a single one. What yesterday's did have was some late week teeth. Just because something is a debut does not make it inherently more late week. Packing this many debuts in becomes a theme unto itself and a compromise has to be made and it's the solving resistance . There's a lot of short overly familiar material supporting this puzzle and precious little cluing tweaks to try and bring it up to a Saturday level.

    OAKRIDGE is famous for the Oakridge Boys? More LEYTE boomer baiting from our host. Maybe some one will put out a WWII comic book and it will become relevant again.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Puzzlehoarder
      In 1942 the US Army’s Manhattan Project bought land to create a new city named Oak Ridge to create a center for research on plutonium and then to manufacture a plutonium bomb. The original music group had another name , but shortly after being formed, they were asked to perform at Oak Ridge as many residents could not leave the city due to secrecy rules. The newly farmed group decided to rename themselves after the newly constructed city. That surprised me. I never knew there was a connection! Rex would have hated the answer even more if he had known.

      Delete
  23. @rex -- So many of your pet captions nail it. Every year. Bravo, sir!

    ReplyDelete
  24. AQUITAINE is a popular acne remedy. The Times really blew it on that one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:48 AM

      Never heard of it. Whereas Eleanor of AQUITAINE is famous. The Times didn’t blow it at all.

      Delete
    2. As long as they clued it "Var Sp.", right?

      Delete
    3. Ah yes, the famous zitty wife of King Henry II 🤣

      Delete
    4. Anonymous, I take it you're new around here. It's a safe bet he was kidding.

      Delete
  25. DEMO REEL was the toughest part for me, as well, because I thought a popular TikToks might be a dEMo. A malapop interfering with itself. I also get my Setons mixed up, and actually thought ANYA might be the first native-born American saint (actually she is Elizaveth Anne), so I went with ANne for the author.

    IM USED TO IT made me sad, as it sounded like something an abused spouse might say.

    It was harder for me than for Rex (of course). I'm sure he's right about the rating, but I'm still solving online, and the experience is so irritating that it was difficult for me to appreciate it--I really need to see more of the grid to notice all the great long answers.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Loved the crossword, not a fan of your description of symmetry. Flipping the grid top to bottom or left to right is reflection symmetry. If you rotate 180 degrees (rotational symmetry) the result may be quite different (e.g., squares in top left will go to bottom right).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:15 PM

      What are you talking about?

      Delete
  27. Must have been in my wheelhouse because it was over pretty quick. I really liked the clues for ASTERISKS and REDHEADS. As for Wilma and Jane, I’m pretty sure I only knew they were redheads because I sometimes got to spend the night with friends who had color tv. Pretty sure my Dad didn’t want the expense of a color tv and would say to me…”But we see the world in color every day…seeing it in black and white is unique!”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought about including REDHEADS in my list of colorful answers, in this case literally. That was a valiant effort on the part of your pops, but... no. Wasn't there a movie Pleasantville, where things go from black-and-white to color as their lives become more exciting?

      Delete
    2. @Beezer 10:01 AM
      I love your dad's comment even though he was probably being a cheapskate. In college I did a ton of black and white photography and it's definitely a different way of seeing the world. Light matters so much more than shapes. These days most black and white photos are simply desaturated color photos and they're not the same thing.

      Delete
    3. Beezer
      Exactly. By the time my family got a color tv in 1965 the series was almost over. I might have even have stopped watching it. Took
      me a while to figure out REDHEADS!

      Delete
  28. It was around Medium, or maybe a notch harder. But a great puzzle: AQUITAINE, PLUNGE POOL, CRINKLE CUT, I'M USED TO IT, LOOP DE LOOP, SHOEHORNS, WATERSKIS -- just mwah. YOU HEARD ME RIGHT -- that's a chef's kiss to a colorful assemblage of answers.

    Some pretty damn good misdirection as well: Some stream settings (DALES), Bussing on the street (PDA), They may go in for cursing (ASTERISKS).

    Not a hundred percent great, though: ALOP is not my cup of TITI (wonder if that will make Gary's Tee-hee, or Te-hee, or Ti-hi list). I suspect ALOP isn't a case so much of "look how smart I am" -- hi @Southside -- but more a desperation-in-the-corner move. A little of that is forgivable. (Ugh, spell-check, "forgiveable" looks better to me.) JACK DIDDLY SQUAT is not in my lexicon.

    Looking forward to the Gunk Gauge. It did feel name-heavy, and not always in a great way: LARA (god, who cares), REN, LEIGH, NOOR, ANYA, O'SHEA. As far as my knowledge goes, some of the names seemed RANDO. (But not MALIA OBAMA. Right-wingers laugh at the darnedest things!) There was a malapop where I first had ADAM where NOAM is supposed to be.

    Big pile of snow outside our window; better see to it. Have a good one!

    ReplyDelete
  29. What a great Saturday. Except for NOOR, AQUITAINE, PLUNGE POOL it flowed for me (I prefer themeless to some of the recent themed anyway) & I enjoyed it. Loved WATER SKIS.
    And the Pet Pics, of course (Baloo aka Rex - I'm sorry for your loss, Jennifer :(
    Thank you, Katie :)

    ReplyDelete
  30. Growing up in the 1950s in a small town in NE Wisconsin, we had one bookstore, Worley's. They had a SF and Fantasy section, and every time a new book came in, I would buy it (usually for 35 cents). But at some point I stopped reading the stuff (not sure why, as I mostly enjoyed it). The two entries from the genre today were total mysteries to me -- I got NOOR entirely from crosses, without even noticing, and inferred LEIGH from the crosses.

    On the other hand, OAK RIDGE and AQUITAINE were right up my alley. We all have things we know and things we don't know, and for me part of the fun of solving is figuring out the ones we don't know.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Jeremy10:13 AM

    Aw man, hard to read that LEIGH Bardugo wouldn't be tough enough to hold anyone up for very long, as it held me up for quite long before I cracked PLUNGEPOOLS. (They got me with the misdirection on DALES, which made me doubt AQUITAINE, as well, so that corner was a stumper.)

    Still better than my stumble yesterday, where I spent more than half my time trying to see GOTME instead of GeTME.

    (Good puzzles, though--just noting where I went wrong.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:38 AM

      I couldn't get ELENA Verdugo out of my head to conjure LEIGH Bardugo, so I too needed crosses to get it.

      Delete
  32. EasyEd10:21 AM

    Kudos to the folks who found this puzzle easy. Not for me! But on the other hand, found most of the answers great fun to unravel. So mixed feelings on this one. One example of a woe: in the SW quickly filled in “Sales” instead of SPIEL, and could not get ALOP or TITI or REEL to rescue that corner. In the NE, got so caught up in trying to get an answer related to digital streaming that it took forever to think of a natural stream. Also found the dash inserted in the “Wind-up toy” clue to be very misleading, though should have been alerted by the “?”.

    ReplyDelete
  33. If you don't know JACK DIDDLY SQUAT then you don't know JACK DIDDLY SQUAT...that's a fact not an opinion. For me, LOOP DE LOOP and JACK DIDDLY SQUAT are located quite adjacent in my 6-year-old memory brain making race tracks that looped with matchbox cars and arguing with by brothers who always knew nothing. Very enjoyable puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous10:26 AM

    BETTE, Geena, Viola and Ossie have their four-Davis party while Sammy looks in the window and says “why did you leave me out?”

    The word “icon” in that clue signaled to me that BETTE was going to be the best guess here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:29 AM

      He’s a junior

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:32 AM

      Also Viola is definitely an icon. Not many EGOTs out there but she’s one of them.

      Delete
  35. Estoy acostumbrado a ello.

    This did what Saturdays do. Kinda fun longer answers, annoying collection of D-Listers, phrasings I've never encountered, and a hunt and peck slog.

    But it is a very funny puzzle so it earns the coveted and rarely seen clown award.

    LOOP DE LOOP went right in, but after that the brakes slammed on. I know DIDDLY SQUAT (literally) but didn't know JACK (literally). I've never seen ALOP in the wild so that P took forever before SPIEL wrapped things up.

    ❤️ I'M USED TO IT, [Bad singer], and DEATH METAL.

    People: 14 {This is how you quiet the wails of the "Saturdays aren't what they used to be" crowd I suppose.}
    Places: 2
    Products: 4
    Partials: 9
    Foreignisms: 0
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 29 of 70 (41%) {Gunkistani guitar guru Lil Gunk G grabs a glorious G sharp chord and his death metal rings across the land.}

    Funny Factor: 11 🤡

    Tee-Hee: TITI.

    Uniclues:

    1 A series of covetous recordings.
    2 Irish savior.
    3 Eating arsenic.

    1 SIN DEMO REEL
    2 RED HEAD'S EMT
    3 DOIN' DEATH METAL

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Dancer with a gassy tummy. PROM THUNDER GOD.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:10 AM

      Any “gauge” that registers BETTE Davis as “gunk” but gives ALOP a pass is not worth diddly squat.

      Delete
    2. @Anonymous 11:10AM. I'm afraid you misunderstand. "Gunk" here has a technical meaning, and is divided into well-defined categories, as laid out above, today and everyday. A suitable alternative word for ALOP might be "crap". Or, I'd accept "junk".

      What is also notable in the Gunk Gauge is that it often looks like an overestimate. That's because what is technically gunk will often slip past unrecognized as gunk, because it felt easy and familiar. But Gary notates it all, without fear or favor.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous12:10 PM

      @ tht - I'm afraid you misunderstood Anonymous 11:10's comment, or took it much too seriously. He's just making the point that those technical definitions lcan ead to labeling results that need to be taken with a grain of salt. And he's right: Bette Davis can't be considered Gunk! Lighten up a little.

      Delete
    4. @Anonymous 11:10 AM
      Let's fix your ALOP problem, shall we? Let's change it to ALOT (feel better?) creating STIEL [Chaucer's "style"] (I can still hear your sobbing) so let's fix that and make it STEEL and that creates TITE instead of TITI. I personally am a fan of all TITIs, but for you, the wisest internetian, TITE is the price we pay for ALOP-freedom. The clue? [Loc___]. Now we have a gooey product that locks your nuts in place and we can all see the value in that.

      Delete
    5. @Anon 12:10. Anyone familiar with this daily feature will be aware of these points and will find them completely obvious. The thing about obvious points is that they're not particularly worth making. So I was giving earlier Anon the benefit of the doubt, that he (let's presume "he") hasn't seen this before and wasn't aware of how it works. But maybe you're right, that he already knows about it but decided to make the cheap and easy point (with the negative-sounding conclusion) anyway. Meanwhile, nobody else treats the Gunk Gauge as being any more or less than that which it is; we're well past the grain of salt phase.

      Rules is rules! Even the divine Bette Davis goes into the gunk bucket.

      Delete
  36. I think I was in 5th grade when the OAK RIDGE laboratory sent packets of irradiated vegetable seeds to elementary schools across the country. We were supposed to plant them and report on whether we got any mutations. I think all their suggestions on what mutations we might get were exciting and positive. Giant peas, supersweet radishes. Nothing interesting happened with mine. And I don't think they bothered contacting us in the fall for our results.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Anonymous11:07 AM

    I rarely agree with rex, but - yes, way too many proper nouns and star wars trivia and an actor I've never heard of (tho I did see the movie). But Oak Ridge is very famous as a nuclear research facility and maybe was involved in the development of the atom bomb?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Correct about OAK RIDGE; that's the claim to fame that makes it crossworthy. Definitely had a lot to do with the Manhattan Project.

      Delete
  38. Anonymous11:10 AM

    "Interloper who no one seems to know, informally"? Why, WALDO, of course! Waldo might be short for Waldorf or Walpurgis or somesuch maybe? Uh, no.

    ReplyDelete
  39. The puzzle won me over early on with CRINKLE CUT and LOOP DE LOOP, kept me entertained with SHOEHORNS and IM USED TO IT, and flummoxed me for a while with ASTERISKS and DEMO REEL. On the easy side but a lot of fun to solve.

    Do-over: DELLS. Help from being old: ANYA, whom I read as a middle schooler; OAKRIDGE. Resisted writing in: AQUITAINE, because I'd thought it was in....Spain. File under TIL. No idea: LEIGH, NOOR.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Anonymous11:26 AM

    Easy.

    Costly erasure - ANnA before ANYA (brain fart on my part because she shows up with some regularity).

    WOEs - NOOR and LEIGH (hi @Rex)

    This was fun with plenty of sparkle including two terrific 15s, liked it a bunch!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This was me. Apparently I got logged out again.

      Delete
  41. Anonymous11:33 AM

    I agree with @rex about the difficulty of all puzzles of late being way too easy, but I really just wanted to chime in to mention how good Katabasis is.

    Indeed, my only regret about it is that, as someone who decided that thousands of physical books enough, I did not get the absolutely stunning hardcover.

    ReplyDelete
  42. MetroGnome11:38 AM

    What the hell's a YOLO?! All I know is that it's a county in California. Also no clue about Mr./Ms. LEIGH or AQUITANE. Never heard of either ALTON or NOOR (next to each other!), either.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You Only Live Once.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:23 PM

      YOLO - You Only Live Once!

      Delete
    3. Diane Joan12:28 PM

      I think YOLO is You Only Live Once in this case.

      Delete
  43. Like @EasyEd, I had Sales pitches being tuned in the SW, that second S confirmed by the plural performances in the DEMO REEL clue. I certainly didn't like seeing a four letter word for off-kilter both beginning and ending in A at 52D but Sales stayed until I came up with the ELITE part of the EIGHT.

    I have to laugh at the clue for NOAM. Where did those lost FM frequencies get off to?

    I think JACK DIDDLY SQUAT is redundant. I've heard "he didn't have JACK" and "he didn't have DIDDLY SQUAT" but not the three word phrase. It brings to mind my thinking I was clever when I would say things like "everybody and their uncle and their brother and their dog were there". I'm sure everyone who heard that was impressed. (This was my teen years.)

    So tempting to look at my Nook app to see what LEIGH's first name was. I can't remember which book I bought. "The Familiar" according to my Nook library, which doesn't seem familiar in the least. Meanwhile, I waited for the crosses to fill in and didn't cheat.

    18A puzzled me to no end, I MUSED T_IT, huh? Eventually I decided on NOOR and re-parsed that answer.

    So this puzzle started out as a romp and ended up as an average (recent average) Saturday solve.

    I'm jealous Rex has begun reading Katabasis - I've been on the library waiting list for a few weeks now, though I'm #1 now and it shows "in transit". So maybe it'll show up Monday.

    Thanks, Katie Hoody!

    ReplyDelete
  44. JazzmanChgo11:41 AM

    Either JACK or DIDDLYSQUAT (or, for that matter, DOODLYSQUAT) might be a viable answer for 36 Across (assuming that we're not going to use JACK SH*T, which would also work), but I've never seen (or heard of) the two expressions melded together like this,

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Totally agree about JACK and the rest. DOODLYSQUAT is my preference and it always makes me think of Ronnie Hawkins--"My gal is red hot, your gal ain't DOODLY SQUAT".

      Delete
  45. I guess ALOP hasn't been in lately, but it used to be near-crosswordese.

    Very lively. Lots I didn't know. Fun to learn.





    ReplyDelete
  46. (Mostly) wheelhouse puzzle, whee! JACKDIDDLYSQUAT sounds like something Ned Flanders would say. Fast, fun solve throughout.

    ALOP and aroar aren't Scrabble/Spelling Bee-accepted words, but they exist in crosswords. Just add "a" to a word to make a new word! (Commonly seen in the ancient NYT xwords.)

    RIP Baloo & Anni.😞 I'm sure they had a happy life and were well taken care of.

    Bad lookalike for Mindy the Morkie: Joan Rivers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I should have added this pic. (I was a fan. RIP Joan Rivers.)

      Delete
  47. Anonymous12:15 PM

    I don’t usually like misdirects but I must have been on Katie’s wave length today. I loved this puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  48. What a bunch of fun. Very whooshy here, ;LOOPDELOOP off the L, PLUNGEPOOL off the P, WATERSKI off the W, and so on. Hand up for the ANNA/ANYA confusion which made YOU hard to see LEIGH, REN, and OSHEA were today's unknown propers but easy from crosses.

    I hesitate to call TITI an old friend, even though I'm pretty sure I have seen TITI before, but so long ago that instead of a "there you are!" I've got more of a "don't I know you from somewhere?". Anyway, nice to see you again, I think.

    I had a great time with this one, KH. Connected very nicely with my Knowledge Hoard, and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  49. Anonymous12:40 PM

    The clue for 18A could have been “That song was very thought-provoking for me” (I MUSED TO IT)

    ReplyDelete
  50. Three Hidden Diagonal Word (HDW) clues from the Saturday grid:

    1. HoF-er Favre
    2. Time's up, digitally
    3. Galilean currency (Parable of the Ten _____)

    (Answers below)

    My first impulse (foolishly) concerning the potentially de-extinct bird in the Friday puzzle was AUK, not MOA. So I was happy to see a Hidden Diagonal AUK in the Saturday grid. It begins with the A in 42A, RAT, and moves towards the NE. Interestingly, there's also a hidden diagonal MOA in the north/central area of the grid--find it beginning with the M in NO MSG.

    I almost lost a modest streak today when I misremembered the pizzeria's owner as SoL, not SAL. Otherwise, it was a leaning toward the easy Saturday puzzle.

    1. BRETT (Off the B in 47A, BOA) Are you glad I didn't go Kavanaugh?

    2. OOOO (or, in its digital form, 00:00) An unusual diagonal string of 4 consecutive "O's" beginning in the extreme NE corner of the grid.

    3. MINAS (off the M in 46D, EMT, moving towards the NE) Truly a Saturday level entry, that would require doable crosses for most solvers!

    Ok, I think I'm done. YES?NO?

    YES

    ReplyDelete
  51. M&A definitely has a crush on any constructioneer gal that splatzes JACKDIDDLYSQUAT into her SatPuzgrid. Actually, there were quite a few real cool longball entries. And cool ASTERISKS clue, too boot.

    staff weeject pick [of 8 choices]: RAT. With its primo-sneaky {Bad singer?} clue.

    Thanx for the crinkle-cut loop-de-loop feistfest, Ms. Hoody darlin. U must really be a SatPuz specialist [5 out of 6 of em, so far].

    Masked & Anonymo4Us

    ... and now, if U promise not to get cross ...

    "Uncrossedword" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  52. Only slightly harder than yesterday but pretty fast at 15.5 minutes. Yes the long answers were colorful, but once again too many names marred it. ALTON crossing REN was terrible; both Unknowns, though my first guess of N turned out right. And hands up for GEENA before BETTE Davis. And OAKVILLE before OAKRIDGE... so close.

    For the Superman clue, I wondered if it meant his birth mother or adoptive mother. Then I realized I couldn't remember either of their names! I remembered Lana Lang, but that was his girlfriend!

    Bright sunny morning; temperature -7 C (~19 F) the coldest yet, but still no snow at all.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Thanks @Rex for the Robert Gordan vid! Brings back great memories of my Alma Mater and your place of work Binghamton University (well, then called SUNY Binghamton) when he did a concert off the back of a flat bed truck somewhere outside the Student Union...ahh, Geneseo Cream Ale and rockabilly...
    OK - the puzzle - this one had me at "hello" with CRINKLECUT, MALIAOBAMA and ASTERKSIKS - all very pretty long downs. Like @Rex, while not a fan of DEATHMETAL, man it looks nice in the grid. The long across stacks gave me some real joy as well.
    I agree with some others that JACKDIDDLYSQUAT may not be a thing, or what people say, but so what?! I really like it and I'm now psyched to use it next time the situation arises. I think this is a prime example taking appropriate liberties to make the grid work. What a great spanner!
    Going in the other direction, YOUHEARDMERIGHT is also top drawer.
    But the SW - hooboy, that gave me a workout. Not so much the great long acrosses, but like @Rex, DEMOREEL (37D) just would not come to me. I had incorrectly put in sales for 61A (Pitch one might try to perfect) and I thought that worked perfectly - made sense and gave me the S I thought I'd need for 37D. I'm also unfamiliar with ALOP and TITI so that whole area was a real struggle. Again, those lovely long acrosses like DOTTEDTHEI and ELITEEIGHT made the struggle well worth it.
    Enjoyed the NOAM cluing and the PDA cluing and nothing made me wince.
    Other than my problem areas mentioned above, this one had a bit less resistance than what I expect from a Saturday but as long as I had fun, I'm good.
    Thank you Katie for this fun ride!

    ReplyDelete
  54. Okay, since no one else spoke up I have to rib you a little about the T. Rex clip, Rex. I'm assuming you included it because of DEATH METAL. I shared it with my husband and he's still chuckling. He tells me Tyrannosaurus Rex started as a folk duo, but renamed to T. Rex and morphed into a pop group -recall the famous single Bang A Gong (Get it On). The song in the clip, Metal Guru, is about Marc Bolan the songwriter's car obsession and hope that a divine Cadillac will bring him a woman. He says heavy metal didn’t even exist back then, much less all the other metal off-shoots. He says you're probably too young to know, so that's nice.

    P.S. Thanks for posting Rikki's photo - now she's famous!

    ReplyDelete
  55. Anonymous2:08 PM

    Loved Baloo.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Maybe I literally got a little twisted while out with some brahs last night. I solved this when I got back around midnight. I once lived there so when I saw the 22A clue "City west of Knoxville" my first thoughts were Sevierville, Pigeon Gorge and Gatlinburg. When crosses showed it was OAK RIDGE I thought "Oh, the other west." (Yeah, the first ones are east of K-ville).

    Thought I had seen all the Simpsons episode but no, not the one mentioned by kitshef @7:59 where the Sunsphere falls on the boys' rental car. I was there when it was built for the 1982 World's Fair. On a clear day you can see OAK RIDGE from the Sunsphere.

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous2:58 PM

    Halves of Hamiltons was a horrible clue when the answer was Abe’s….if the clue is a last name shouldn’t the answer be a last name!?!?

    ReplyDelete
  58. Anonymous3:05 PM

    I always post nice things, but about a fourth of them never appear. Maybe a computer glitch, but it’s discouraging.
    Loved the Baloo photo.
    Wonder if this will appear.

    ReplyDelete
  59. Anonymous3:16 PM

    The beaches I frequent have oceans and waves and surfers. No one waterskis. Maybe gets dragged along to the lake?

    ReplyDelete
  60. Anonymous3:25 PM

    Don’t have PayPal, don’t have Venmo, don’t want to send a check in the mail (theft)
    Can I contribute with Zelle?

    ReplyDelete
  61. Mixed thoughts about this one. Loved some of the long answers like DOTTED THE I, ASTERISKS, YOU HEARD ME RIGHT, and DEMO REEL,, but wasn't thrilled with OAK RIDGE (a town of 30,000 people somewhere in Tennessee? Really?), another Star Wars clue, ABES, LEIGH Bardugo, and NOOR. And I always associate WATERSKI[S]ing with lakes and beaches with oceans, so that one felt kind of clunky.

    And for the win ... well, not actually a win, the opposite really: JACK DIDDLY SQUAT. You might know JACK, You might know DIDDLY. You might even be so unaware that you know DIDDLY SQUAT. But you needn't fear knowing JACK DIDDLY SQUAT because it's not a thing, no matter what @Matt at 10:21 may try to tell you. ;-)

    @Southside. In my short but fun career as a bar manager I had to teach novice waiters how to uncork Champagne bottles without involving personal injury lawyers. Remove the foil. Remove the wire. Hold your hand over the cork. Give a small twist. Pause and then twist to remove. It still pops, but it doesn't land in somebody's crab bisque three tables away.

    @AndrewZ. Aquitaine is not a small town. It is an Administrative Region in SW France. It was once a kingdom that gave us Eleanor of Aquitaine so badly, or wonderfully, depending how much of her you can stomach, portrayed by Kate Hepburn.

    @Gary J. "These days most black and white photos are simply desaturated color photos and they're not the same thing." True. But I've just charged up the battery for my Nikon DSLR and there's a lot of frost out there so I'm going to try to do my best to nail it in electronic B&W. I don't do film anymore. It's reeeaally expensive.

    Happy post-Christmas everyone. Gird your loins for a new year.

    ReplyDelete
  62. As I said earlier, Rex would have hated the answer OAkRIDGE if he knew what the town is famously known for.
    I liked the puzzle just fine. Fairly easy for me.
    I am usually tolerant of Star Wars clues but my first reaction at the Star Wars knights clue was annoyance but I got the R and guessed REN after the character name often in crosswords.

    Barbara S yesterday made a reference to Boxing Day.
    I learned from her it is a thing in Canada.(is it a full Holiday with most getting the day off in Canada as it is in Britain ? Iknew about the British holiday. In the US it is NOT a Holiday I would majorly of Americans don’t know what it is. (As it happens when the 26th is in a Friday like this year, a high % of employers give their employees the day off because it would be wasted day work wise. No government rule.
    For those who don’t know, Boxing Dayl developed from the tradition of the elites giving their servants (and tradesmen?) ) presents or money the day after Christmas. There were a huge amount of servants in Britain when the tradition arose

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @dgd, in Canada Boxing Day is a "sort of" full holiday. Depending on your province and/or your employer, you may or may not get it as a holiday. I always had it off, but I can't remember if I always got paid for it...

      Delete
  63. Mostly easy, too much pop stuff. Never heard of O’SHEA Jackson. Thanks for the explanation of PDA. Though it was PSA but that didn’t fit.

    But, saved by the Steely Dan DEMO REEL.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Loved it...just hard enough

    ReplyDelete
  65. Just for yuks I n-grammed JACKDIDDLYSQUAT and DIDDLYSQUAT. Of course one wouldn't expect to find these in print often, and JDS doesn't show at all. But DS goes from zip to a small blip around 1900, then back to zilch until around 1980 where it starts a nearly vertical rocket path (probably a 75 degree slope) which continues with only minor deviations to today. I guess that this shows that we're living in the DIDDLYSQUAT era.

    ReplyDelete
  66. Les S. More
    In defense of OAK RIDGE
    As noted above, it is an American History/WW II reference to the Manhattan Project (plutonium in this case) The city was constructed for the Manhattan Project. Not that obscure for many Americans. As someone noted above, there is still government lab sand for decades after the war it sent out propaganda about the benefits of nuclear research to public schools around the country

    ReplyDelete
  67. Any other Oklahoma, Texas area folks here? JACK DIDDLY SQUAT is most definitely a thing in the central south-ish part of the US. Heard it for over 40 years from folks - especially irked citizens complaining to elected county officials - and also from my husband - a native of Norman - when, quite irritated and trying very hard not to say s$#! in pointing out that (usually a Board of Ed member, school administrator or state Legislator was making ignorant pronouncements. Anyway, it’s a thing. Made me chuckle and it did span the grid but it wasn’t nearly as sparkly as most of the rest of the puzzle.

    The only truly (and if it hadn’t been crossed cleverly and fairly would truly should have been red carded out was ALOP. It’s in that stinky category of A-something words that constructors make up when the grid just won’t cooperate: aroar, atilt, ALOP? No. 🤢 Post-solve, I looked it up twice and got a bunch of acronyms the first time, “an obsolete term for a lively dance, suggestions for correcting my spelling from everything from aloof, atop, aloft, and my favorite, alopecia. So, I think the editors laid a gigantic egg by missing that one.

    Otherwise, this was a very sparkly solve with lots of fun and some resistance. My slo spot was figuring out the SW. WATER SKIS took too long; I had no idea about the monkey and refused to believe ALOP until I absolutely had to. Lived so many clues though. The “dusk TIL dawn is my favorite.

    Other than the difficulty level (and I can’t help it, the non-word, this was a superb puzzle. Katie Hoody is making quite a splash on Saturdays. I added her to my official “more, please” list. Let’s hope for a rollicking Sunday tomorrow!

    My cat, Pip says she is going to remind me to send in her holiday pics much earlier next year. All those we’ve seen contributed so much joy to my holiday season. Thanks to all of you who obviously stayin top of thi gs much. Better than I do. Crossworders are: wonderful, creative and kind folks. Of course they have fabulous pets!



    ReplyDelete
  68. Anonymous11:32 PM

    Easy????? Brother how. This puzzle was brutal. But to be fair I am bad at crosswords lol took me a long ass solve today

    ReplyDelete