Ernest in the Country Music Hall of Fame / MON 12-15-25 / On ___ (looking great, in slang) / Colonial-era pirate captain / Sluglike "Star Wars" crime boss
Monday, December 15, 2025
Constructor: Jeff Jerome and Andrea Carla Michaels
Relative difficulty: Medium, maybe a little tougher (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- DISROBED
- SUBBED (18A: Prepared to bathe + 23A: Filled in (for), for short)
- HOBNOBBED
- STUBBED TOE (24A: Schmoozed (with) + 28A: Slight injury from tripping)
- DUBBED FILM
- BEDAZZLED (46A: Foreign-language movie that you don't have to read subtitles for / 52A: Enchanted)
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independent U.S. government investigative agency responsible for civil transportation accident investigation. In this role, the NTSB investigates and reports on aviation accidents and incidents, certain types of highway crashes, ship and marine accidents, pipeline incidents, bridge failures, and railroad accidents. The NTSB is also in charge of investigating cases of hazardous materials releases that occur during transportation. The agency is based in Washington, D.C. It has three regional offices, located in Anchorage, Alaska; Aurora, Colorado; and Federal Way, Washington. The agency also operated a national training center at its Ashburn facility. (wikipedia)
• • •
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| [Henri de TOULOUSE-Lautrec] |
Note: The phrase on fleek originated in a posting to the video-sharing platform Vine on June 21, 2014, by Kayla Lewis, a sixteen-year-old girl with the user name Peaches Monroee. In later interviews Ms. Lewis said that she had made up the word fleek on the spot when the video was shot. However, it has been reported that fleek appeared prior to 2014 on the Urban Dictionary website: in 2003 a contributor defined fleek as "smooth, nice, sweet," with the example sentence "That was a fleek move you pulled on that chic[k]." Another contributor entered the word in 2009, defining fleek as "awesome," as in "That was a fleek game." For background see "How 'on fleek' went from a 16-year-old's Vine to the Denny's Twitter account," by Constance Grady, posted on the website Vox on March 28, 2017; and "Geeking Out On 'Fleek,'" by Neal Whitman, posted on visualthesaurus.com on February 23, 2015. (merriam-webster.com)
Apparently Ariana Grande also did a Vine (is that what you do? Do a Vine? Is that the lingo?), where she basically sang the text of Monroee's original Vine, and that sent the phrase into pop culture stratosphere ... for a while. I can pretty much pinpoint the moment that "on FLEEK" started to die. It's right ... here:
This grid is fine, if not particularly on FLEEK. Lots of cheater squares* today—two of them in each of those Utah-shaped blocks of black squares (the two black squares above PIBB and below FALA), and then the black squares above TBAR and below KIDD. With that many cheaters, I'd expect a cleaner grid—not so much ARTOO ARESO ARI NTSB ENYA TBAR ASA RES INE (!?) IMO DAS THO action. TERM LIMIT feels strange in the singular. There are TERM LIMITS, and a governor / president / etc. might be TERM-LIMITED, but TERM LIMIT isn't as common. "IT'S ABSURD" is colorful but also a bit absurd, in that the clue (3D: "Ridiculous!") is really just a clue for "ABSURD!" The "IT'S" part feels completely tacked on. Plus, "THAT'S ABSURD!" feels like the better, more familiar phrase.
Solving Downs-only, my biggest fail today was forgetting (and I mean forgetting—spectacularly, catastrophically forgetting) how to spell the name of TOULOUSE-Lautrec. When I look at it now, I can't imagine why I wanted to spell it any other way than the correct way. And Yet. TOLOUSSE. TALOUSSE. TALLOUSE, TOLLOUSE. Between that, not being certain of ARESO (2D: "You ___ right!"), and the difficulty parsing "IT'S ABSURD," the NW was certainly the most challenging part today. Elsewhere, I thought FALA was LALA (as in, "FA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA"), and utterly blanked on Tim WALZ, LOL. That was fast. VP candidate one moment, gone from my brain the next. I actually wrote in KANE, thereby misspelling Tim KAINE's name, forgetting that KAINE was a senator (although he had also been governor), and putting KAINE on a presidential ticket eight years after the fact. Triple fail! I also wrongly imagined that a SEDAN and not a COUPE had two doors (50D: Two-door auto). And I thought TUBB was WEBB (38D: Ernest in the Country Music Hall of Fame). Surely there's a WEBB in the Country Music Hall of Fame ... yep, here we go, looks like WEBB Pierce (1921-91) was inducted posthumously in 2001. And then there's Jimmy WEBB, who, despite winning a Grammy in 1986 for Best Country Song ("Highwaymen"), and despite being in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, does not appear to be in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Dude wrote "Wichita Lineman" and "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" and "Galveston"!? And "MacArthur Park"!? That's range.
As for Ernest TUBB—well, among his many accomplishments, he was the first singer to record a hit version of "Blue Christmas."
That's all for today. Let's move on to π²πHoliday Pet Picsππ²! First up is Koko, seen here rooting for my "local" team (nevermind that Buffalo is ~4 hours away—you still see Bills gear everywhere). You can tell this is a "Holiday" photo because Koko is staring down the word "Christmas" like it's a sausage.
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| [Thanks, Anne!] |
Then there's Riley, seen here chewing on a toy, which was the price of getting Riley to pose for this photo in the first place. At least I think it's a toy. Could be a mouse, I guess. Or a meatball, though I doubt a dog would hold a meatball in its mouth that gingerly.
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| [Thanks, Adam!] |
We've got kind of a "Where's Waldo?" situation going on here with Lulu. It's like she wandered into a Home Goods photo shoot and got lost among the Holiday cheer. Where's Lulu? Oh, there she is, on the bed, where you'd expect.
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| [Thanks, Bonnie!] |
Astro does not appreciate your holiday sense of humor one bit.
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| ["Is this a joke? Is this supposed to be funny?"] [Thanks, Amanda!] |
And lastly, there's Moose. Moose knows how Astro feels. Actually, I think Moose just wants to go out and play with the other very handsome dog who would surely be his friend. Poor Moose.
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| [Thanks, Pamela!] |
See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
*Cheater squares are black squares that do not add to the overall word count, usually added to the grid solely to make filling the grid easier for the constructor(s).
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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95 comments:
Expected more from an ACM puzzle but this was one of her worst. Bad start to the week.
Pleasant Monday morning solve. I leaned a new word ("FLEEK"), and managed to stay awake while thinking of all those BEDS.
Carl Reiner originally wrote the part of Rob Petrie for himself, and he played him in the pilot before the part was given to and the show named for Dick Van Dyke. Van Dyke is still alive and kicking (literally) at 100 yo. Carl Reiner died five years ago at 98. Carl's son Rob and his wife were murdered last night.
Medium downs-only solve, good thing I knew both TOULOUSE and CARUSO. Also, good thing that DDE being Down got me JFK. I didn't know FLEEK and 11D could've been an A + 4-letter word partial, crossing JAK (from the game Jak and Daxter, which I wouldn't expect to see in the NYT, much less on a Monday, but it was a possibility).
FLEEK, oh my god. This is a word I never saw, and pretty sure a word I don't and won't ever need. Yeck. Get it out of my puzzle. Shouldn't be there on a Monday. Or any day. And next to JABBA, and weren't we discussing yesterday how overdone Star Wars is?
But those were the worst parts. TERM LIMIT is absolutely fine ("what's the term limit for governors of Virginia?" is a reasonable question, and I'm happy to say it's just one four-year term -- buh-bye, Glenn Youngkin). I also think IT'S ABSURD is completely fine. I had BEwitchED before BEDAZZLED, and I like either. CARUSO, PELE, ASIMOV, ALI: fine names from yesteryear, no longer among the living. DICK van Dyke is still with us, and holy cow he just turned 100 two days ago -- wow! (He used to drink and smoke heavily, too.)
I can't explain why I suffer much less from STUBBED TOEs than I used to. Oh, it hurts the same; I just do far less of it nowadays for a reason unknown to me. Can't be that my brain is improving -- can it?
Re Ernest TUBB, yeah, that name looks sort of familiar to me too, but I would never be sure I'm not mixing it up with Earl Scruggs, another country-western musician. There are some names that just look "Southern" to me, and those are two of them. Forrest Gump, that would be another. (I know, it's silly, but it's true.)
So anyway, I thought it was more or less okay for a Monday (I agree: about medium in difficulty). By no means was I BEDAZZLED, but it was a pleasant-enough diversion and -- yikes, look at the time. I should go. See ya!
I’m just gonna say, your musical selections, great every day, were especially on FLEEK today. I should just start every Monday morning with “Bizarre Love Triangle”. Thank you!
I don’t see why “camp beds” is a particularly apt clue for BUNKBEDS, which could be anywhere - the kids’ room, Grandma’s house, a youth hostel. And if you’re talking about actual tent camping, there are no BUNKBEDS, although if you live in Vermont and call your little summer house on the lake your “camp”, there could be BUNKBEDs there. I guess, on second thought, you could have BUNKBEDs at summer sleep-away camp, so I guess that’s what is meant. But I stand by my opinion that it’s a lousy revealer. Hmph.
Random thoughts:
• Another graphic representation (in a crossword) of a type of bed could be a vertical BED abutting a vertical WALL, for a Murphy bed.
• WOL (Words I Love): HOBNOBBED and BEDAZZLED.
• I also love “balderdash”, from a clue. My TIL is its origin. Long ago, the word meant “a jumbled mix of liquors” (such as milk and beer, or beer and wine), and moved from there to mean “a senseless jumble of words” or “utter nonsense”.
• This is Tim WALZ’s first appearance in the Times puzzle, though he’s shown up a few times elsewhere.
• Regarding KIDD on the eastern edge of the grid, the constructors took the phrase “all kidding aside” quite seriously!
• Lovely PuzzPair© of SOAK and TUBB.
Lovely side trips to enhance a fun solve – thank you, Jeff and Acme. And WTG, Jeff on you NYT debut!
Rex, with you on Lautrec. I spelled his name every which way but Toulouse
Yes, the problem with FLEEK is similar to the problem of using, say, a character from Andy Richter Controls the Universe in your puzzle. You have no idea what the staying power of the slang or show will be, and therefore of your puzzle. Will someone solving in the archives in 2035 be able to make sense of FLEEK?
TUBB made me think of the Simpsons, as the food Homer eats while trying to gain weight. It turns out, though, that that was TUBBB! (third 'b' and exclamation mark part of product name).
Hey All !
B-apalooza! There's 15 B's today! Dang. Only 8 needed for the Theme, 7 others along for the ride. Plus, a happy U day for @M&A, 9 of those. Did sneak in a couple of F's, along with a couple of Z's.
Weird letter following? Possibly ...
Could have gotten rid of two of the Cheater Squares, the ones above TBAR/below KIDD. In NE, just add an S to get KIDDS/SOAKS. In SW, change TBAR to ATBAT, change COUPE to SOUND, and DICK to DECK, you get ASHEN where CHIN is, and ANT instead of APT, TDS instead of RES.
Anyway, neat Theme idea. Nice handling of the doubled letters. Nice to see ACME. Neat opening 1A and closing 68A as fictional beings. Or are they real?
Good ole TSETSE, although cut in half. Missing Q, X, and oddly G for the Pangram.
Almost an ODD DUCK L-shaped in SW, instead we get an L-shaped ODD DICK. ππ€£
On that note, have a great Monday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Surprised Tim WALZ slipped your mind, aside from being VP candidate he’s been in the news a lot lately regarding the Somali fraud scandal in MN.
This was kind of a fun one for me, as I definitely needed the crosses. As I was solving, I was wondering what type of mischief was awaiting the downs only solvers among us. I never would have gotten FLEEK without the crosses, for example. I’m not surprised that Rex was aware of it, though.
I also noticed we have more Star Wars trivia, which pretty much sucks at this point. Not a surprise though - I believe the gunk gauge has topped 40% like three times in recent memory, so there is some evidence that the NYT is flirting with grids that are going to be fully 50% garbage. Impressive - NOT.
I know Rex is not a fan of the repetitive themes - they do turbocharge your solve with the “free squares” though, which can come in handy later in the week.
REST UP and SEIZES UP? Two UPs in the same puzzle how did that skate right past OFL?
Totally agree on the revealer.
I believe ACME comes from Minnesota, so maybe this is a discrete plug for WALZ, who is running for reelection with his main opponent being Mike Lindell of MyPillow.
If FLEEK was replaced with FLEER - the company that invented BUBBLEGUM - the puzzle would be improved IMHO.
Had one hang-up area same as Rex—entered LALA without thinking and blanked on WALZ, but to close the puzzle made adjustment to FALA and saw FILM and WALZ. Puzzle was not in usual ACME tone and guessed it was her mentoring a novice, which it turned out was good guess. Hand up for never having heard of FLEEK, but who can forget JABBA, as much as some of us would prefer.
Did no one but me think that that the subtle funniness was wRY? It gave me the charming BUNK BEwS as the revealer. That was easy enough to correct, but it did make me think of BUNK Pews – they’d be a godsend in an overcrowded church!
I don't think we needed the circles, even on a Monday. You could make sure people got the theme by including the clue numbers in the revealer.
I get Rex's point about ARE SO, but it was nice to see it clued as something other than "playground retort."
But what about that clue for 63-A? Usually "as in" is meant to direct the solver to a more specific sense of a word. Here, however, it is giving a definition of a different meaning of the word clued. APT = suitable, and APT = unit in a bldg. I think the clue has to say "or" rather than "as in."
¿Aceptan tarjetas de crΓ©dito?
Bunk beds, double beds, twin beds, square beds. I had the revealer and several others that would work for a change, but what do those beds all mean? Why are they here being so cozy and grouped together like they're preparing for a bacchanalia. Bunk beds appear lots of places other than camp. It's all quite amusing, perplexing, and possibly salacious, or just extra tiring.
I needed these BEDS to rest after counting gunk yesterday, but then we fired up the gunkomatic machine again today and littered this wee space with 17 names and 11 partials all so we could share a BED or six. (50 names in the last two days).
I like the word HOBNOBBED, but I dislike hobnobbing. I would rather be in BED BED BED BED BED BED.
The German DAS is already in our 14-word German crossword dictionary and we can trace its etymology back to Crosswordese meaning "When you see this word you know the editor's lunchtime was nigh and couldn't be bothered to find real words." DAS is the FLEEK of Germany.
People: 17 {You must have been ill?}
Places: 0
Products: 2
Partials: 11 {You are terribly ill.}
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 32 of 76 (42%) {π The sleepy citizens of Gunkopolis are yet again roused from slumber by the alarm bells ringing across the land.}
Funny Factor: 1 π€¨
Tee-Hee: DISROBED. [Mr. Van Dyke].
Uniclues:
1 Delivered an upper cut.
2 Me counting proper nouns in the NYTXW.
3 Steakhouse delicacy prepared with soda and peeps.
4 Lanternfish bully.
5 The day the NYTXW wearies of Star Wars. (And I think the answer is, "Not until they pry the sacred Jedi texts from their cold dead hands.)
1 BEDAZZLED CHIN (~)
2 IT'S ABSURD HUNTS
3 NEON PIBB RIB (~)
4 DEEP SEA BAD SEED (~)
5 JABBA TERM LIMIT
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Biography of legendary prop comic. MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB: A LIFE.
¯\_(γ)_/¯
Once I saw the theme, I wondered if it was going to give us some interesting double Bs and double Ds on the downs, but as it turned out, the only somewhat interesting double Bs were in the accrosses. Oh well. Pretty name-heavy for a Monday, me thought. Some of them familiar (HERBERT, PETER, SARAH, KIDD, PIBB, WALZ, DICK, DOVER), some of them tired (ARTOO, JABBA, JFK, DDE, ALI, ARI, PELE, ENYA), some of them (by my estimation at least) not appropriate for Monday (ASIMOV, TOULOUSE, CARUSO, TUBB).
Too bad they didn’t consider adding a small tribute to DICK van Dyke since this ended up running right after he turned 100 this past weekend, but maybe that only works when it runs the day-of. Happy birthday, DICK!
The comment about staying power is apt. As a newer solver I go back in the archives quite a bit to get practice to get up to snuff, and I find myself relying a lot on the archives of Rex’s blog for odd things that might have been more familiar in the 2010s or whatnot. At least as long as the blog is there, future puzzlers can look back to today to learn FLEEK, which I also only learned today. Guess that means it’s in the “things I only know from crosswords,” but hopefully it won’t be one I need to remember down the road. :)
I found the puzzle easy and fun. However, I was shocked to read of the brutal murder of Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner in one of the comments. It seemed to be a strange format to learn such distressing news. RIP
A pretty easy solve. At first I thought "Oh no - CIRCLES?" But on a frigid day like this in NYC it was kind of welcomed as I did the puzzle in BED (groan). But I gotta ask - FLEEK??
I remember playing for a 50th anniversary Commemoration of DDAY at my church and offered to play any songs the people who had been there remembered especially well. And one was 'I'm Walking the Floor over you' by Ernie TUBB, which someone in the soldier's unit played over and over in the upright piano in the canteen while they were waiting to go to France.
What is up with "Yes we do"? as an answer.
Agree - enough with Star Wars, already!
If an eeler traps eels, what does a DOVER do?
Mr. Lahr may have been the Cowardly Lion to the rest of the world, but Mrs. Lahr loved HERBERT.
I bought a fabulous print of "At the Moulin Rouge" to fill a gap in my collection because I had nothing TOULOUSE.
Some nice touches emBEDded in this one. Thanks, Jeff Jerome and ACME.
I thought stuff like that was not allowed in crosswords, but it seems like it has happened a couple times lately. Have the rules changed?
We live in NH and definitely have a little camp on a lake with a BUNKBED.
This is the day I knew how to spell TOULOUSE and both Mr. WALZ and Mr. TUBB right away, also looked at the first pair of BEDS and said to myself, "I bet a cookie the revealer is BUNKBEDS", and so it was. In short, easier than average Monday here.
But--just when I thought I had learned a new word that sounded kind of fun to say, thinking Don Martin from Mad-- I read OFL and discovered that that FLEEK has disappeared again. How soon we forget. At least TSE showed up, proving that this is indeed a crossword.
Sort of an entertaining, if obvious, theme JJ and ACM. Just Jolly enough to be Christmasy and A Cute Monday. Thanks for a fair amount of fun. (Note to WS, can we find some constructors whose initials do not contain a J for a while? Thank you)
Awful weekend with the news from Brown, Australia, and LA. Hardly the happy time of year it should be.
I kind of liked seeing those sets of bunks beds and all the double B's, with JABBA and Mr. PIBB and Ernest TUBB all HOBNOBBing together. Just a fun, whooshy Monday, though I have never heard of FLEEK and definitely needed crosses to get it.
I love that Christmas picture of Moose looking so forlorn! The pet pics are great.
I call nonsense at the Eisenhower clue, he was known as Ike, never DDE. And I’m old enough to remember π
single-syllable last names with "u" = Southern?
Large tents often have bunk beds.
@Beezer from Saturday--in the time-honored tradition of people getting older, I have not updated my avatar picture in some time!
Medium-tough for me. No WOEs but I needed more crosses for some of the answers than I usually do on a Monday (e.g. TOULOUSE hi @Rex).
Costly erasure wRY before DRY (checking the across clue would have been helpful).
Cute theme with some excellent long downs, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1070 was an easy-medium Croce for me, or about 1.75 X a pre-2015 NYT Saturday. Good luck!
FLEEK? Crosses were easy so there's that. Otherwise, Rex is right. We need to yeet fleek.
TUBB also worked well with yesterday's Rubber Duckie.
I always think wRY before DRY and I'm always poised to correct it. BUNK BEwS helped.
Easy to confuse the artist in the puzzle with Tollhouse-Lautrec, famous for his Still Life With Cookies series.
Better 11 years late than never, I guess.
Good point regarding the APT clue. I think I had an across or two, saw suitably and dropped in APT without reading the rest of the clue. The full clue does seem a little off.
This is the third time this year and 247th time overall that DDE has been used. And *every single time* it's been a reference to Eisenhower.
A basic BUNK MonPuztheme. On the plus side, it made use of BEDAZZLED as a themer.
staff weeject pick: BED. Times 7.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Loch ___ monster} = NESS.
utterly mysterious MonPuz invader: FLEEK.
some fave stuff: Isaac ASIMOV [greatest of authors, IM&AO]. SAINT Nicholas holiday lead-off answer. RESTUP [omen of BEDs to come]. TERMLIMIT [oughta be a few nanoseconds, for DJT]. The Utahs of Themedness black square hunks.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms ACME darlin & Mr. Jerome dude. And congratz to Jeff J. on his half-bedut... er, debut.
Masked & Anonymo9Us
... and now, for some full [but fleekless] Jaws ...
"Jaws of Themelessness #28" - 9x7 themeless runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
@jberg Funny, I just recently noticed one of your posts from 2012. Recognizable because the photo is the same!!
I’ve noticed that as I get older, I get up more frequently at night to stub my toe, but end up going to the bathroom instead. I hate when that happens.
Lautrec brought back a pair of pants. Taylor said, what’s the matter Toulouse too tight.
@Gary J, once again toooo manyyyy naaaaames!
@CarolBB, yes what a shock about Rob Reiner.
It sure seems as though Will Shortz is lobbying behind the scenes for an invitation to join the Funky Gunkers (the most famous bell choir in all of metro Gunkopolis). I think he would be a fine addition.
Solving downs only, I got the job done without cheating. But all the names!... Andrea, how could you. Look at the upper right: all the downs from 7 to 12 are names! (Well FLEEK isn't, but it may as well be.) Fortunately I knew all of them so it didn't derail me, but man.
And it doesn't get much better elsewhere: SARAH ARTOO TOULOUSE PIBB JFK ALI HERBERT TUBB WALZ DICK DDE PELE DOVER ASIMOV ENYA PETER. Again only SARAH and WALZ were Unknowns. Three presidents!
Hands up for WRY before DRY and LALA before FALA. I can't remember any other typeovers.
Try the Frente! take for those quiet moments
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ISKQDCLpDSY
What must you do to turn
(B)(E)(D)
(B)(E)(D)
into
(B)(E)(D)
???
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
DEBUNK
I thought the theme was about the double Bs. Okay, Monday, double Bs. And I filled in BUNKBEDS without reading the clue. So at the end I look over the puzzle and see that the circled letters spell BED! Not about the double Bs after all. Whaddaya know? But do I try to make sense of it? Noooo. I come to Rex to learn that I am a complete doofus and should not try to reduce my morning caffeine intake. Thanks so much!
Yes, but the clue referenced 10 Across, which called for the initials JFK. That was your cue that this answer would also be initials.
I had the same question!
I liked the puzzle's "ODE to OU as an OO-Sound" - TOULOUSE, COUPE, TOUCAN, as well as the double-B names PIBB, TUBB, and JABBA. I noticed that PETER LORrE almost made it in. Why can I remember FLEEK but can't remember anybody's last name anymore?
Yeah, Flatt & Scruggs. When I was a kid my father would force us to gather 'round the ole TV set to watch the Grand Ole Opry where we would be assaulted by an onslaught of cheap sentimentality. The only respite was the instrumental stuff, mostly blue grass and, especially Flatt and Scruggs and their Foggy Mountain Boys. You can have your Ernest Tubb; I'll take Flatt & Scruggs anyday.
Unless you took up competitive hot dog eating, I stand by my statement!
Sometimes never… is better.
Who doesn’t LOVE Dick Van Dyke? Answer: Nobody. I have to say, several several years ago I had read that he had thought Mary Tyler Moore was too young to be cast as his wife in The Dick Van Dyke Show. (Not that he didn’t like her) Then I think, I was squarely still a CHILD (I was SIX!) when that show debuted. And. I’m 70.5 now. He credits his longevity to “not getting angry about ‘stuff’…general optimism.” We can all say genes play a role for sure, but by Jove, I think he’s got something there.
@Southside. Regarding FLEEK: I did solve downs-only and, with only a slight hesitation, dropped in FLEEK. Never used it in real life. Must have been stumped by it in a previous puzzle. Those small failures are the kind of things I recall. And now, according to Rex, I'm going to have to forget it.
@Les, Flatt & Scruggs: familiar to anyone of my age (country music fan or not) because they did the Beverly Hillbillies theme. I've always liked bluegrass wayyyy more than country.
@anon 11:05…and your point? Can someone say something…then say…it’s silly? I’m thinking you might need to channel some Dick Van Dyke…
Love the use of bacchanalia! And…I think HOBNOBBING was the precursor to “networking.” Because today…you don’t actually have to MEET or talk to a person with “networking.” Hey. As an introvert (maybe an ambivert when I was younger)…very alluring. Not sure it’s good though.
I kind of breezed through the puzzle and found it a welcome respite this morning (yeah…got busy after solve and actually bundled up and went to Y) during “my” part of Midwest deep freeze (good news! 40s in a few days). I dunno. I always find that a puzzle ACME has been involved in to be pleasant. And…@Rex…I note that YOU were pretty chill on the review in spite of the 2.5 stars. Good on you and Happy Holidays!
One day in late-19th century Paris the artist L' Autrec finds it very cold in his rented apartment. He asks his wife, "Who turned off DEGAS, Anne?" CEZ ANNE in reply, "We didn't pay the bill. We were short of MONET." He snarls, "That's because you're TOULOUSE with our checkbook. Now we might have problems trying to RENOIR lease." (apologies to Mr. Egs)
π€£ Good one Bob!
Ok. First. Please don’t send me info on how to create a hyperlink. I can Google and have done in past, but I don’t feel like it…
I saw this YouTube on Rob Schneider in audience with Dick Van Dyke.
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/iepdUTohN1c
For those of you who care to copy/paste.
I did a puzzle tribute to Dick van Dyke in honor of the 100th - not accepted anywhere. If you send me an email I can send it to you.
Glad you stayed away from Picasso.
LoL π
@lewis LoL
A few years ago someone posted here a link (not the hyperlink, but the link) for information on how to create a hyperlink. ;)
A. Geeky people are obsessed with Star Wars (though not ONLY geeky people). B. Crossword puzzles are created by a disproportionately large number of geeks (though not only by geeks).
C. Ergo...
Apparently a memo went out informing constructors that their submissions will have a much better chance of acceptance if they include circles (or shaded squares), since we are seeing so many of them. Sooooooo many.
I think tribute puzzles are generally not making the cut at NYTimes these days, since we are seeing so few of them (can't remember the last one.)
I know. I can Google. Here’s the thing. These days I “one-finger” type on an iPad. Believe me…I have the tools…I’m NOW just lazy. Well…”lazy-ish.” You needn’t copy/paste…I understand ALL aspects of “lazy.”
Nice job. No apology necessary.
Kitshef…you only need press my Avatar…my email there. If’n you were talking to ME! π
Anonymous 10:31AM
& Michelle
About dupes. Shortz and the editoring staff have NO rule against dupes. For years, dupes have frequently, and I mean frequently, appeared. 2 ups are not much. Rex has said that since dupes are so frequent, he only complains about the most “egregious “ ones. And 2 ups do not qualify. Personally, dupes bother me not at all.
Jberg
You didn’t mention that the clue had a question mark, indicating a trick clue in that situation, I thought the clue was fine
Nice Monday - I did not know FLEEK but fairly crossed. I enjoyed the BEDs on top of one another. Tried a bit, but could not solve it downs only - and in fact I felt that trying to solve downs only made the puzzle less enjoyable. For me it doesn’t let the puzzle shine through.
Dr. Random
It’s an age issue and length of time doing crosswords I think. Asimov has been in the Times A LOT but not recently. He is older crosswordese. Anyway for us Boomers Caruso and Asimov are quite well known so not as obscure as you think. Tubb maybe is less well known but for country aficionados (not me) his name is well known. I might be wrong but I always thought Toulouse-Lautrec is equally as famous as other famous Impressionists. like Renoir and Monet. I can’t see famous Impressionists as obscure even for a Monday. Certainly not for older people. A
Carol BB
Just before I did the crossword, I saw a New York Times breaking news email headline saying Rob Reiner and wife stabbed by their son. Misread it to mean they survived so I was almost as shocked as you were
It's not trying to be tricky or anything. Just imagine asking this question of someone running a business where it's not clear whether or not they would accept credit cards, and the answer comes back, "YES WE DO [accept credit cards]".
It was worth the copy and paste! DvD is amazing.
Rather than anticlimactic I found the revealer kind of cute because: "Oh yes, the beds are stacked".
ANd I agree Bedazzled is the best, but I dont find the others so dull.
Agree with @tht. I will add that the lack of trickiness made it trickier!
I liked this just fine, cute theme and while the revealer did not pop and sing, it did its job well.
I especially liked the cluing on APT (kind of a cryptic crossword feel) and I learned FLEEK - never heard the word and I likely will never use it, but fun to know now.
Thank you for a nice, fun Monday!
Yes! Mine are DV. π
Roo
I found Croce 1070 easy, but did have a one-square DNF at the cross of 27A and 28D. Thought I had considered every reasonable letter, but no.
And a prodigious artist and generous human being lost to us. I mourn the lives lost and the state of the world today.
I went down the Flat & Scruggs/country music rabbit hole too. My wonderful husband, a brilliant man, superb musician (percussionist,) adoring father and as near perfect as a human can be had his oddities - two of them to be specific. He loved “The Beverly Hillbillies” and “The Grand Old Opry.” He taught me so much about the history of country music and I have an intellectual appreciation for its place in American music and American history. At least the older country music.
Ernest Tubb was one of the earliest country super stars. If memory serves, he was a Texan, born sometime before 1920. I’m fairly sure that his most famous song was “Walkin’ the Floor Over You.” Why I know that particular song and its author is because it featured prominently in my labor and delivery.
Had medicine believed that women could in fact have Ankylosing Spondylitis back in 1978, I would have had the cesarean the OB nurses snd docs were begging my husband to convince me to have. But “Real Women” in those halcyon days of the Women’s Movement had natural childbirth. Period. Back then, we were downright rabid about it. After all, pioneer women took a break from spinning and weaving and threshing and cooking and cleaning and sewing and farming and milking and boiling the laundry and making the soap and . . . you get it. If they were in the fields when in late stage labor , they just walked over to the nearest tree, gave birth, ripped their petticoat, swaddled baby and went back to work, right? Anyway, I refused.
My poor husband hung in there for almost 40 hours of brutal transition labor trying to do all the things he learned in our childbirth class in between begging me to have the caesarean. He was frustrated. Hell, he was mad at my stubbornness. I was mad at everybody. So he started pacing and humming in between the doc or a nurse dropping by to check that there wasn’t any emergency brewing so they could override my pigheadedness.
I finally yelled at my pacing, humming husband, and asked “What the !$#* are you doing?!” The answer was in song, “I’m walking the floor over you/ I can’t sleep a wink, that is true/I’m hopin’ and I’m prayin’ as my heart breaks right in two/Walkin’ the floor over you.”
Right about then the baby’s BP started to drop and someone yelled “Get me an OR NOW!” Simultaneously, Mother Nature let me know that she was in charge and we were doing this thing. As the hoard of people started racing my bed down a hallway presumably toward the OR, everyone yelling “DON’T PUSH,” I was yelling STOPSTOPSTOPSTOP!! We never got to the OR and our daughter was mostly born in the hallway at Oklahoma University Hospital. We made it to a delivery room to finish the job, cut the cord etc.
Our daughter, Katherine has a stubborn streak. Occasionally when it would become parentally frustrating, Dad would say something to her (so I could hear) like “Ernest, there’s more than one way to skin this cat.” She would just roll her eyes and say, “Dad, I’m doing it my way.” That’s why I know some stuff about Ernest TUBB.
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