Big name in carving knives / TUE 1-13-26 / Birth name of Marvel Comics Black Panther / Angle symbol, in geometry / Segments of earth's lithosphere

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Constructor: Nate Hall

Relative difficulty: very very easy


THEME: "WE WILL ROCK YOU" (53A: Iconic 1977 Queen hit ... or a hint to 19-, 31- and 42-Across) — things that rock (you?) (as in "cause (you?) to sway")

Theme answers:
  • NEONATAL NURSE (19A: Hospital worker tending to newborns)
  • MECHANICAL BULL (31A: Bar attraction with a saddle and horns)
  • TECTONIC PLATES (42A: Segments of Earth's lithosphere)
Word of the Day: CUTCO (33D: Big name in carving knives) —

Cutco Corporation, known prior to 2009 as Alcas Corporation, is an American company that sells cutlery, predominantly through multi-level marketing. It is the parent company of CUTCO Cutlery Corp., Vector MarketingKa-Bar Knives, and Schilling Forge. The company was founded in 1949 by Alcoa and Case Cutlery (hence "Al-cas") to manufacture stainless steel knives for Alcoa's WearEver Cookware division. Alcoa purchased Case's share in the company in 1972, and Alcas became a separate private company in 1982 after a management buyout. In 1985, the company acquired Vector Marketing Corporation.

The company has been the subject of criticism and lawsuits for its business practices, and has been accused of being a multi-level marketing company. The Los Angeles Times claims that Vector meets the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) definition of a multi-level marketing company which is "businesses that involve selling products to family and friends and recruiting other people to do the same" because they sell their product through person-to-person sales. Salespeople are generally young and recruited from high school or college. Students are hired to sell Cutco products (mainly kitchen knives) to customers, starting with their friends and family. Vector's recruitment tactics have been described as deceptive, and they have faced numerous lawsuits over their pay structure and treatment of its salespeople, who are mostly independent contractors instead of employees. Vector claims they are a single-level direct selling marketing company, not a multi-level marketing company or a pyramid scheme as its detractors claim.

• • •


Look at that skinny-ass grid! Yesterday, we got a chonky 16-wide, and today, Jack Sprat. Funny. The funniest part of this puzzle, for me, though, was CUTCO. The answer itself isn't particularly funny, but my reaction ("What the hell is that?") ended up being funny, because I went back to see if CUTCO had been in the puzzle before, and it had, twice, and both times my reaction was ... "What the hell is that?" Apparently no amount of the NYTXW trying to force me to believe that CUTCO is a "big name" in knives is going to get my brain to accept that CUTCO is, in fact, a "big name" in knives. Was elated to discover today that CUTCO is (or really really looks like) a multi-level marketing scheme, LOL (see "Word of the Day," above). No wonder I've never seen or heard of them. CUTCO also has one of the worst, least imaginative product names of all time. CUTCO is the name you go with when the only other options your name guy could come up with were KNIVES 'R' US and THE SLICE BOYS. "Uh ... we'll go with CUTCO, I guess." Anyway, CUTCO stood out like a BEAR CUB on an OIL RIG today, because it's the only answer that made me hesitate for even half a second. OK, THETA made me hesitate for half a second, but only just (4A: Angle symbol, in geometry). Everything else went in as fast as I could read the clues and type the answers. I can see how T'CHALLA might be a name that slows some people down today (4D: Birth name of Marvel Comics Black Panther), and I admit I thought the Pompeo actress was an ELENA rather than an ELLEN (32D: Actress Pompeo of "Grey's Anatomy"). But otherwise, I was a flame and this puzzle was dry grass. Whoosh gone. Didn't even have to read the clue for MECHANICAL BULL. I had fun seeing how fast I could go (if I'd been timing, I gotta believe I'd've come in well under 3), but otherwise, fun was somewhat limited. 


Do these things "rock you?" Well, not me personally, but they rock ... one. I don't think of a NEONATAL NURSE's primary job as being "rocking," but I guess holding the babies and soothing them in some way is probably part of the job, sure. "Rocking," though, seems very specific. Are they rocking the cradles? Do neo-natal wards have rockable cradles? NEW MOTHERS or the equivalent might have made more sense here, but I can't say NEONATALNURSES wasn't an eye-catching answer. I wrote it in thinking "huh, a triple 'N' theme, this should be interesting!" As for the other themers, yes, bulls and earthquakes will indeed cause you to sway, if not fall, if not hurt yourself. Those answers work just fine. And I enjoyed remembering the anthemic Queen song. The rest of the fill was largely filler. TIM WALZ is an interesting full name to squeeze in there, though at the moment all it does is remind me of the Siege of Minneapolis (ongoing). Would be nice if Walz and other elected officials had any kind of answer for the violence being perpetrated by the federal government. Give a bunch of weak, poorly-trained, sadistic CLODS (37A: Buffoons) automatic weapons and body armor, set them loose to terrorize ethnic Somalis and other non-white immigrants (so—virtually any non-white person), and let them know in no uncertain terms that they are above the law ... and presto, you've got yourself your very own Gestapo. That is what ICE is at this point. Bizarre to pretend otherwise. Buncha dudes too incompetent and cowardly for actual war, doing their little war cosplay games in American cities with live ammunition, gleefully, boastfully hurting people. You're either into it or you're not, but ... Gestapo is the correct analogy. As for me: look, I don't even like ICE in my water (12D: Bartender's supply). F*** ICE. Abolish ICE


On to more pleasant things now.

Bullets:
  • 36A: 1985 mystery film with three different endings (CLUE) — this movie is very silly and very enjoyable. I don't think I saw it when it initially came out, but I did watch it just last month as part of my "What Would I Have Seen 40 Years Ago?" movie-watching project. Just to give some structure to my (prodigious) movie-watching habit, I decided that once a week I'd just look at the movie listings for 40 years ago and then watch whatever movie I'd see if those were my options. In the first two weeks of this year, I've watched Ran and Brazil. Which is to say there were some *really* good movies in theaters 40 years ago. As for CLUE, it's no Ran, but it is entertaining. It's got Martin Mull *and* Madeline Kahn (something Ran cannot claim—though why they never remade Ran with Martin Mull and Madeline Kahn, I do not know—I'd've seen that sixteen times)
  • 9D: Yogi, once (BEAR CUB) — this is a hilariously tortured example of successive clue rhyming. You've got 8D: Yogi's pose (ASANA) and then ... this clue, immediately after. If you had to write a hundred BEAR CUB clues, you'd never use Yogi. Only the proximity of this yoga clue is going to suggest to you "hey, what if Yogi was ... little? I know we never ever see him as a BEAR CUB, but ... I mean, he must have been one, right? Cartoons don't have actual lives, but ... still ... it's implied. Let's do it!"
  • 52D: Many men on dating shows (HUNKS) — is this true? Also, do people still say "HUNKS?' Unironically? I was honestly looking for a more modern word. HIMBOS? HIMBI? 
  • 44D: Pet sitters? (LAP CATS) — they are pets who sit (on your lap). I think you are the sitter, technically. Cats rarely sit in laps. They lie. Or flop. I had LAP here and had to wait for crosses, as LAP DOGS is not only a possible answer, but probably the more common phrase (LAP DOGS define a certain kind of small dog, different from most other, larger dogs, whereas LAP CATS ... any cat might be a lap cat. Most cats I know have, at some time or other, been LAP CATS. It's almost redundant).
[Pet sitters?]

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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65 comments:

Bob Mills 6:06 AM  

Easy, yes. I needed a lucky guess for the TCHALLA/HOLLA cross, otherwise smooth sailing. Didn't use the theme; in fact, I only understood it after the fact.

Anonymous 6:07 AM  

Agree with Rex, very easy, but fun. The TIMWALZ clue was amazing, under the circumstances!

Conrad 6:09 AM  


Very easy. No overwrites, no WOEs. I don't know how I knew T'CHALLA (4D) and CUTCO (33D) but somehow I was able to fill both in with out all the crosses.

Adam 6:31 AM  

Caution: Wet floor, which I was confident of until I saw LAP CArS and realized that SLOfS, LMlO, etc were wrong. But that was the only hesitation--when We Are The Champions didn't fit WE WILL ROCK YOU went right in, and all of a sudden the themers made sense. T'CHALLA was not a problem for me. And neither was CUTCO; my brother's friend sold us a set of knives right when they got out of college, and 30 years later I still have a few of them. Good knives--and as far as I know Benji never had to recruit anyone.

Carolbb 6:34 AM  

Easy and enjoyable puzzle! One very very silly mistake had Wall instead of Walz except I'd never heard of GenL.

Anonymous 6:34 AM  

CUTCO, EDGECOM, INTERSLICE, COMPUGLOBALHYPERMEGANET… all extremely valid crossword entries

Anonymous 6:36 AM  

Very easy with hesitation only on CUTCO (?) and MECHANICAL BULL, because I saw the three Ns in NEONATAL NURSE and was looking for some alliteration involving BRONCO.

CUZCO would be a way more interesting entry than CUTCO, but I'd rather have this grid over ADZ crossing MCAT, ELDEN Ring, and CUZCO.

Has ELDEN ever appeared in a NYT puzzle? It looks like prime material for modern crosswordese. All that comes up on Diary of a Crossword Fiend is one instance of ELDEN and one full ELDEN RING, both from Jonesin' crosswords.

JJK 6:45 AM  

Easy, with one exception, TCHALLA crossing HOLLA. I could guess at the former, but HOLLA annoyed me. Who says that, does anyone? It seems so random and made-up. Hola maybe, or Hello, or even Hiya.

tht 6:52 AM  

Agreed, very easy, although I consider the cross between TCHALLA (come on) and HOLLA something of a Natick. Luckily, no other letter besides H seems plausible, so yeah, guess I'll go with it and... done.

The cluing for BEAR CUB strikes me as sketchy. So of course there's Yogi BEAR, but that's a cartoon bear, not a real bear, and as far as I know, not once in the series did he appear as a CUB, so the clue is trying to get us to infer that he had to have been a cub once, being a bear, even if only a cartoon bear. Sorry guys, really not buying it. Not until someone can unearth an episode where Yogi appears as a cub. Otherwise, being an imaginary bear, I can imagine any back story for him I dang well please, for example he emerged from his mother's loins fully formed and wearing a tie, or invented by Martians in a lab and sent to Earth, etc., and it's unfalsifiable. (Sure, I'll humor you and go along with your own back story, just to get the puzzle done, but I think the clue has gotten too cute for its own britches.)

I like many of the grid entries, as words and phrases, but some of those clues are moo-cow simple, and could have been better. I'll leave it there for now.

vtspeedy 6:54 AM  

Right? Surely BUCKING BULL somehow?

Jack Stefano 6:57 AM  

The video that effectively ended Billy Squier’s career. Such a shame. Great 80’s song.

Son Volt 7:13 AM  

Basic - early week offering. I thought NEONATAL NURSES was the highlight - don’t quite understand the shade. Oddball grid layout is not appealing - tends to minimize the spanner.

John and Linda live in OMAHA

Liked BEAR CUB, SCONCE and NICHE. WALZ was unfortunate. Overall fill was workmanlike and mostly clean. Quick to finish this one.

Help Save the Youth of America

Pleasant enough Tuesday morning solve.

Waylon

Anonymous 7:13 AM  

I guess you’re no holla back girl. That’s bananas.

Lewis 7:15 AM  

Side note on ASANA. In a recent puzzle, YOGA was clued [Discipline for the flexible]. Well, yes, it is, so it passes as a clue. But it is misleading, as it implies that yoga is only for bendy people. In actuality, it is also for the non-bendy, medium-bendy, and everyone else. It brings benefits to all.

Ranger Smith 7:22 AM  

9-D Yogi again?! Repeated? I thought, "Surely this must be a constructor Boo-Boo."

Anonymous 7:24 AM  

lol

SouthsideJohnny 7:25 AM  

Rex had it super-easy, I thought it was pretty much standard Tuesday fare. CUTCO is almost comical, even better so because I’m guessing the only people who have heard of it are the people hawking their stuff and the people who are annoyed by the people hawking their stuff.

BATIK was also new to me and of course I needed every cross for TCHALLA.

Jack Stefano 7:32 AM  

Holla has been part of pop culture for, what, 30 years?

Andy Freude 7:42 AM  

Misread the clue for 4 Down as birth *place* of Black Panther and was proud of myself for knowing Wakanda, which of course didn’t fit. Otherwise, a very zippy morning solve.

RooMonster 7:45 AM  

Hey All !
Welp, today we get a 14x16 grid. With 40 Blockers. A wonky grid week? We'll see, I guess.

Anything Queen is good. Liked how the Themers WILL ROCK YOU. A gale force wind will do it, too. A curved base chair. A heavy metal band.

Liked puz overall. Easy, fun theme, light -ese/dreck. A double-L fest, with seven of them in the grid. (Again, weird what the ole brain notices.)

Have a great Tuesday!

No F's - OH NO
RooMonster
DarrinV

Lewis 7:51 AM  

I have to say that Tuesday puzzles have especially shined recently, with sparkling themes that made me go “Oh!” rather than “Oh.” Like today's.

The best kind of riddles, IMO, are those you struggle mightily to crack, but remain impervious to your efforts. Finally, you cave, then get the answer, and it turns out to be SO OBVIOUS, you wonder how in the world you missed it.

That’s the best way to be gotten. And that’s what I got today after leaving the reveal blank and trying to guess what it was.

Speaking of sparkling, three of those theme answers are NYT debuts, and the fourth (MECHANICAL BULL) is a once-before. Nate also beautified the grid, with NICHE, SCONCE, ADEPT, and BATIK.

SERENDIPITY WATCH. Rare sighting of seven double-L’s, plus, a rare-in-crosswords five-letter palindrome (SOLOS).

Creating this theme out of that iconic rock song title – well, that’s prime constructor mind, Nate. Congratulations on your NYT debut, and thank you for this!

mmorgan 8:07 AM  

Yes, very very easy but I found it crisp and enjoyable, overall.

Anonymous 8:08 AM  

Yes, Cutco is everything that Rex says it is, BUT they make darn fine knives! I’ve had mine for 35 years.

Anonymous 8:11 AM  

I bought a set of knives from my daughter’s high school classmate 30 years ago. Still use them.

Anonymous 8:17 AM  

Agree, easy. Always enjoy a non-standard grid, whether wider or narrower, like todays 14x15. I especially enjoyed the range of meanings for "ROCK" put in order... from gentle and baby-size, to rough and human size, to catastrophic and global. Awesome contrasts, all one word!! Fun puzzle, great theme, thank you, Nate! : )

Liveprof 8:40 AM  

My sister-in-law started selling CUTCO knives after college and approached us. I knew our friend Donna had some, so I asked her how she liked them. She said they were great --- that she received them as a wedding gift and they've lasted longer than the marriage. We bought some, still have them, and they are very good.

Mo-T 8:48 AM  

We still have the set of Cutco knives our friends' son sold us when he was in college 30 years ago. We've even bought a few more. Expensive, but worth it. Cutco's policy is: Dull knives? Send them back and we'll sharpen them. Not able to sharpen? We'll send you a new one. The co is located in Olean NY.

Anonymous 8:49 AM  

And even better scissors! We have gradually replaced every pair of scissors in our house with Cutco after being forced to watch a high school friend of our kids demonstrate them. Fortunately, you can just buy them directly from the company.

Anonymous 8:50 AM  

Total Natick for me

Anonymous 8:54 AM  

I sold Cutco knives one summer during college about 20 years ago. I still use the knives, and so do my parents and relatives. I was fired for having a keg party in the office one weekend that got out of hand. I still don't recall why the manager left me with the office keys that weekend. Anyway, it was a delight to see my former employer in the puzzle today!

Anonymous 8:59 AM  

I don’t think it is fair to call ICE the Gestapo. The Gestapo was a relatively small organization that pursued its terror by targeted action. ICE is a bunch of underqualified violent oafs sent into strong areas of opposition to intimidate with more or less random violence. ICE is the SA.

Anyway, thought this was a pretty quick, fun puzzle.

EasyEd 9:09 AM  

Fun stuff when you can stir up conversation over the undrawn childhood of a cartoon icon. Also interesting to see folks come to the defense of a “famous” company that I had never heard of. I recognize the sales pattern tho, having been recruited in my youth at various times to sell encyclopedias, vacuum cleaners, and hairbrushes to my family and friends. Result was one vacuum cleaner sale to my supportive parents…Fortunately I am well versed in the classics and knew TCHALLA and WEWILLROCKYOU right away…

Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 9:29 AM  

It annoyed me that they clued BALI as 'Indonesian getaway spot'. As if it only exists for the resort hotels and the people who stay at them. It also annoyed me that they clued OVAL as 'egg-shaped' as it eggs were two-dimensional. I have to go to two meetings now, I suspect I'll be getting annoyed at everything at those too.

Carolbb 9:33 AM  

Also, I would like to add that I am in complete agreement with Rex on ICE. Such a shameful chapter in our history!

pabloinnh 9:40 AM  

Started out like OFL thinking this would be a triple N puzz or at least three things starting with the same letter, the MECHANICALBULL got rid of that one. Similar no-knows to others--CUTCO, TCHALLA , and HOLLA. I blame not knowing HOLLA for living in the wrong part of the country.

Our first-born son spent two weeks in the NEONATAL ICU and the NURSEs were fantastic. He turned out just fine, gracias a Dios.

Our cat has decided to become a LAPCAT. I figured out his age yesterday which turns out to be 96 in people years. The LAPCAT stuff is understandable.

Nice Tuesday, NH. Not Hard, but with some good stuff --The "Yogi" BE___ was a nice misdirect. Thanks for all the fun.

kromiumman 9:49 AM  

THETA isn't used as a symbol in geometry; it's not introduced until trigonometry.

Tom T 9:51 AM  

A couple of Tuesday morning CLUEs for Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW) in today's grid:

1. Pass out (5 letters)
2. Canaanite fertility deity (4 letters)
(answers below)

Our son got conned into selling Cutco knives when he was i high school, and it definitely was a high pressure, multi-level marketing scheme at the time. He sold knives to family and friends and earned some decent money, but didn't yield to demands to become another stone in the pyramid. But here's another side of the story: my wife and I still have those Cutco knives 20 years later, displayed in a wood block exactly like the one Rex pictured. We use them every day and we have mailed them off to the company several times to be sharpened. They sharpen them AND replace any of them that they deem in need of replacement--all for free (including the shipping back to us). So the marketing scheme sucks, but the product itself has been really good.

I was working with a buddy in my days in NYC on a Broadway musical version of CLUE; we were strategizing about getting the rights when we heard the movie was coming out. Sort of put a damper on that project.

Very easy Tuesday indeed. And I'm not sure cartoons have an infancy, unless a cartoonist decides to give them one (I'm looking at you, Muppet Babies). Never heard of T'CHALLA. Didn't like RUN AT or GET AT, especially since they almost abutted one another. Boo, ICE!

Answers to HDW CLUEs:

1. ALLOT (off the A in 23A, moves toward the NW)
2. BAAL (I'm mostly these days cluing only Hidden Diagonal Words of 5 or more letters, but I was taken today that the last 2 letters of BAAL happen to be the first 2 letters of ALLOT)

Anonymous 10:02 AM  

What is lede? Is that like lead for a journalist?

Beezer 10:03 AM  

I noticed that too Lewis, thanks for bringing it up. You needn’t be able to do full “splits” to do yoga and I find yoga stretches of particular benefit as I’ve gotten older. Heck, there is even “chair yoga” these days.

Beezer 10:12 AM  

I initially heard about Cutco around 2000 from my daughter (in college then) who said a lot of students sold them. She didn’t want to sell them but said they DO sell very high quality cutlery. Interestingly…an actual brick and mortar Cutco store opened within a few miles of me about two years ago. So…maybe they have transitioned from “pyramid” or maybe it wasn’t as “pyramid-y” as others? I mean, good luck on “door to door” sales with demos in this day and age!

Bill Gates 10:16 AM  

Buy him out, boys.

Jeremy 10:18 AM  

Rex, maybe you would remember Cutco next time if you think back to Homer selling Slashco knives door to door. ("Handle first, handle first.")

SouthsideJohnny 10:23 AM  

That’s interesting. I do recall something like ∠ABC being standard notation, but that was 60 years ago. I have no idea what the current state of affairs is though. Maybe Rex could ask one of his colleagues in the Math dept, lol.

jb129 10:34 AM  

Very, very easy. The only thing I think of when I think of Tim Walz (yes, even today) is his son proudly saying "That's my Dad."
Back to the puzzle - thank you, Nate & congratulations on your debut :)

Teedmn 10:39 AM  

Headline in the MN Tribune today is that tribal leaders say ICE is detaining natives. Yes, Native Americans are being treated as illegals. Unbelievable. I suppose maybe their skin was darker than your average Scandinavian.

I thought the puzzle theme today was cute. I dated a mechanical engineer in college and he did a project to design a mechanical bull. I don't remember how well he succeeded but those contraptions always remind me of those days.

Nate Hall, thanks for a fun Tuesday puzzle.

Beezer 10:40 AM  

Yep, fairly easy, breezy, and fun Tuesday with a pretty clever theme. I found Rex’s discussion on HUNK/“himbo” interesting and it set me to thinking…really the only neutral way to express appreciation of physical attributes is to say “he or she is a very attractive person.” So to me, (a woman) I’ve often had female friends say a guy is a HUNK. A HUNK can be super smart or dumber than a box of rocks. Maybe same for calling a woman a “knockout”? On the other hand, terms like “bimbo”/“himbo” imply a lack of depth/intelligence. I hope you enjoyed my VERY important public service announcement on HUNKs/himbos/knockouts/bimbos. But see also…”arm candy.”

Les S. More 10:49 AM  

I wasn’t in the best frame mind when I began this downs-only Tuesday. My hockey team had just lost, again, and I was beginning to think they they were trying to tank in order to get a better draft pick. It was that kind of game. Ugh. And then came the double ugh of the top central section. 4D, a Marvel Universe character named TCHALLA crossing 17A HOLLA. Isn’t it just HOLA with one L? Is there a difference? (I see from a post-solve lookup that the double L version is an old English greeting similar to hello.)

I loved the Yogi clue at 9D. Hated seeing CUTCO at 33D. Weren’t they the company that used desperate students to guilt-trip their parents and their parents' friends into buying overpriced mediocre knives. (Well look at that, Rex has made it his Word of the Day, and I think I got it right.)

And NIA Da Costa? Who? Wasn’t really a problem for me because I just filled it in from the downs, but why not Ms. Vardalos. It’s Tuesday, after all.

Theme was solid enough, though it failed to really rock me. Like I said, not in the best frame of mind. Mea culpa.

Anonymous 10:59 AM  

I enjoyed the yogi's ASANA next to Yogi the grown-up BEARCUB. (Which also led me down a little rabbit-hole. Did you know Yogi Berra's real name was Laurence? https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/the-yogi-bear-you-dont-know/ ) And I was surprised the author was so judgmental about dating show guys that he called them all PUNKS... until I looked at the Across clue. I think the only time I've come across that type of HUNK lately is on the side of a pickup truck for College Hunks Hauling Junk.

Anonymous 11:01 AM  

Agree about Gestapo. ICE is more like the Brownshirts but with Gestapo authority. Great puzzle-- fast, clever, good revealer. More Tuesdays like this one, please

Bob Mills 11:03 AM  

I'm 84. I've never known what brand of knives I use. They've always been "...the ones in the drawer over there."
CUTCO has just received millions worth of free advertising without paying a nickel. I'm going to stick with the ones in the drawer over there.

Anonymous 11:06 AM  

All rather cute and chuckled at the revealer. But entered Neonatologist before neonatal nurse.

Sam 11:07 AM  

Solved downs only. Rare Tuesday feat for me.

jberg 11:10 AM  

So why had every woman ever to win the Democratic nomination for President picked a running mate named TIM? I hope the next one learns from this.

I'm not hip enough to see the link from HEYO to HOLLA, but once I had the TCHALL, it had to be an A where they crossed.

Having two large Indonesian island in the puzzle was nice. Less so was the RUN AT / GET AT dupe.

I'm with Rex and THT on Yogi; there's no evidence he ever was a BEAR CUB.

Anonymous 11:13 AM  

They are great knives. We broke the tip off a 30 year old one and they replaced it for free.

egsforbreakfast 11:14 AM  

Is an MCAT one of them LAPCATS? I don't know 'cuz I ain't familiar with no MCAT. Now scat, that's a horse of a differnt color. You might ask, is scat a logical humor? Seems funnier than MCAT.

I guess after GENZ we had to go to a number + a letter, hence GENOA.

Who takes over when the professor is absent? THETA.

I'm already dreading TV during the months before the midterm elections with all those RUNAT ads. They're enough to give you a heart RUNAT. And speaking of RUNAT, what's GETAT doing in the same neighborhood?

Turns out Melville was ambitious and high energy as well as very dismissive of cows. Hence his South Seas bromances, TYPEA and OMOO.

Remember, a cook with a CUTCO is just OK.

This puzzle rocked! I understand that the constructor has turned over a new leaf. Thanks, neo Nate Hall.

Jnlzbth 11:19 AM  

That was my experience also, except that I have never, ever heard of CUTCO, so it's a good thing it came easily from the crosses.

Is HOLLA supposed to mean "Holler"? I was hesitant to put in HOLLA because I'm so used to putting in the Spanish HOLA.

Jnlzbth 11:29 AM  

The opening sentence or prargraph containing the main idea (for a journalist) is indeed spelled LEDE.

pabloinnh 11:45 AM  

I sing "Hello in There" with a woman who plays cello, which makes a nice duet with guitar. Lately she won't do it though. "Too sad".

Anonymous 11:52 AM  

My money is in ConhugeCo.

Stillwell 12:03 PM  

Bear Cub struck me as just the right amount of cute. Not technically accurate, I suppose, but certainly parsable, and required a tiny moment of thought, with (for me at least) almost a chuckle. Give me clues like that over “Awards for ad agencies” any day!

Stillwell 12:07 PM  

Exactly! From much earlier days in journalism, but still used today. The theories as to its etymology are worth looking up!

Terry Sadowski 12:14 PM  

I appreciate and respect that you made your position on the Renee Good murder public. It’s not a surprise that this is your take - not at all. Public figures, especially those with an audience like yours, often remain silent. So kudos to you. On the other hand, I doubt you have many magats among your readers. They are getting stumped by the solitaire tic-tac-toe game on foxnews.com.

Kath320 12:20 PM  

Not every MLM sells trash. While the business model is suspect, products like Tupperware, Pampered Chef and Cutco made really innovative, high-quality products that LASTED!

PH 12:22 PM  

"F*** ICE." I felt that. Thanks for saying it for us.

Nice debut by Nate Hall. I had JAVA for BALI at first, then later put in JAVA for 58A (Coffee, informally). Is there a term for that? Deja clue? Fun puzzle, thanks and congrats, Nate.

In other news: IU won, da Bears beat the Packers, and Aaron Rodgers lost. I take my joys when I can get them, no matter how small or inconsequential. (@Beezer Yay!)

Dr Random 12:26 PM  

Was checking the comments to see if anyone else made that error, and I see you beat me to it! Who knew they had the same amount of letters?

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