Five train in Brooklyn / THU 1-29-26 / Like a listening device made out of a paper clip, a plastic straw and seven Lego blocks / Busiest French airport not serving Paris / Bum's place in a bar / Michigan's historic 1991 basketball team, familiarly / Texter's declaration of affection / Villain portrayer in "Rocky III" / Clubber ___, "Rocky III" villain
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Constructor: Kit Sheffield
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG (20A: Expand => GROW = "G" ROW (i.e. a row of "G"s))
- SORSORSORSORSOR (37A: Sadness => SORROW = "SOR" ROW (i.e. a row of "SOR"s))
- TOMORTOMORTOMOR (52A: Day after today => TOMORROW = "TOMOR" ROW (i.e. a row of "TOMOR"s)
to make, form, or repair (something) with what is conveniently on hand
Angus MacGyver, as portrayed by actor Richard Dean Anderson in the titular, action-packed television series MacGyver, was many things—including a secret agent, a Swiss Army knife enthusiast, and a convert to vegetarianism—but he was no MacGuffin (a character that keeps the plot in motion despite lacking intrinsic importance). In fact, so memorable was this man, his mullet, and his ability to use whatever was available to him—often simple things, such as a paper clip, chewing gum, or a rubber band—to escape a sticky situation or to make a device to help him complete a mission, that people began associating his name with making quick fixes or finding innovative solutions to immediate problems. Hence the verb MacGyver, a slang term meaning to “make, form, or repair (something) with what is conveniently on hand.” After years of steadily increasing and increasingly varied usage following the show’s run from 1985 to 1992 (tracked in some detail here), MacGyver was added to our online dictionary in 2022. (merriam-webster.com)
• • •
And then there's the fill, which is a little on the weak side. It's not just that the grid is built in such a way that we get a lot of short stuff, it's that the short stuff is too often OOF-y. That "X" may be the most unnecessary and costly "X" I've ever seen in a grid. A partial pharma answer???? (GLAXO-) crossed with a partial French phrase?????! (-À DEUX). Yeeesh and yikes. I feel like the (understandable) commitment to MACGYVERED created a kind of tight situation, as did the fact that the grid is built in such a way that the G---O pattern (where GLAXO is now) is immovable. It cements the first and second themer together. You cannot change that "G" or that "O" and so ... options get very, very limited. So you get this very MACGYVERED solution. GLAXO / À DEUX is the equivalent of ... trying to build a listening device out of a paper clip, a plastic straw and seven Lego blocks. Crazy emergency move. Just somehow not as cool as anything MacGyver ever did (probably—again, never seen the show). There had to have been other options (?). Not much else made me wince outright, except "I DIG," which crosswords have falsely caused us to accept as a thing people ever actually said (also, I've never heard "Capisce" used as anything but a question ("Capisce!?")—as merriam-webster dot com says, it's interrogative ("used to ask if a message, warning, etc., has been understood"). No one would say "Capisce" to mean simply "I DIG" (just as no one but a caricature of a beatnik on TV would say "I DIG" at all). The last real wince was that NETS clue (66A: Five train in Brooklyn). I think it's trying for a subway pun (???). I don't know why that clue doesn't have a "?" on it. The only way I can make sense of the clue is that it refers to the Brooklyn NETS, a professional basketball team. Since professional basketball teams have five players on the court at any give time, I think that's where the "five" comes from. Presumably, these five players "train" (in the sense of workout / practice) in Brooklyn. So it's "Five (who) train in Brooklyn" (!?). Tortured syntax on that clue. (If the clue is somehow not basketball-related at all, you'll let me know, thanks)
Bullets:
- 31D: Bum's place in a bar (STOOL) — "Bum" is your ass. Well, someone's ass. Don't mind asses in the puzzle at all, but trying to make us think of "bum" in the pejorative sense of a down-and-out alcoholic, that I could do without.
- 28D: "Toodles!" ("I'M OFF!") — I wrote in "I'M OUT!" at first. "I'M OFF!" is better. Except it's still bad because it means you've got two "I'M"s in the grid (see 46D: "Leave this to me" = "I'M ON IT")
- 33A: Folie ___ (À DEUX) — probably should've defined this phrase earlier, for those not familiar with it. It's a French phrase (literally "madness for/of two") that refers to shared delusion or psychosis. People who do crazy things as a pair that they would (probably) never do on their own.
That's all. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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42 comments:
Loved this puzzle, Kitshef! And congrats. Unfortunately, I DNF'ed it. I agree most of it was pretty easy, but I saw "Love, love, love" and plopped "AmORE" right in and never questioned it. Had no idea about the Folie ____ clue, so the cross didn't help me. I figured the problem was in that corner somewhere, but I just couldn't see it. Funny how once I'm reviewing the grid for my mistake, at least 1/2 the time I just can't see my problem. Oh well. Congrats again, and thanks for a clever Thursday morning theme!!! : )
Long time reader, first time poster posting first! Good morning, and thank you all!
Déjamelo a mí.
All those Gs started showing up and I just laughed. Took until the end of the puzzle to understand why. Fun revelation. A nice OHO puzzle.
We are living through an age of folie à plusieurs and I kinda wish we'd get our act together. We need a GONG-of-life to ring on society. GONGGGGG, "Okay everyone, I know it's been a little crazy around here, but we're all gonna straighten up and stop acting like a pack of hyenas. And if you don't have something nice to say, don't say anything at all."
❤️ MACGYVERED.
I think I might have another kidney stone this morning because my spine is feeling like it's trying to exit my body, either that or my wife made me a poison frittata last night (and I wouldn't blame her with the way I run my mouth) so I needed a 4 am cheering up and this fit the bill. Thanks @kitshef.
People: 7
Places: 5
Products: 4
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 23 of 76 (30%)
Funny Factor: 2 😕
Tee-Hee: Moistens.
Uniclues:
1 Sound heard prior to a hangover.
2 Great Clips.
1 GGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
2 DOS MARTS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: 1. Helps with hacking. 2. Gets you high if you drink the whole bottle, allegedly. 3. Tastes like a poisoned iced tea. 4. Who doesn't like a slime? 5. It's neon colored. 6. Whatever the closest store is to your house, they probably carry it. 7. A pimply-faced boy running the self-check-out is required to inspect your identification if you try to buy it. 8. Those caps are not coming off unless there's a kid in your house. 9. Not one person has ever read the booklet of warnings and directions it comes with. 10. And to repeat, it gets you high if you drink the whole bottle, allegedly. COUGH SYRUP TOP TEN.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Great work Kitshef, I enjoyed it enormously. Congratulations.
Congratulations to debut constructor Kitshef...I caught on to the trick with tomorrow-tomor row and went from there, needing one cheat for the MCGYVERED/ADEUX cross. Great achievement to find so many words ending in "G" that made sense with the crosses.
Congratulations @Kitshef! Great debut puzzle!!
Easy, ignoring the theme clues. Cute theme.
* * * * _ (would have been five stars if it had a little more "bite")
Overwrites;
@Rex lyon before NICE for the French airport at 17A
At 28D, I said "I'M Out" rather than "I'M OFF"
When I break down in tears I cry before I SOB (39D)
dIsc (or dIsk) before MINI golf at 60A
No WOEs.
I had the same problem, but I questioned other spellings elsewhere in the puzzle. Finally, I looked at the clue again and changed AMORE to ADORE.
Love the puzzle! SLOG SLAG SWAG: a nice trio. Also like the OOF/GRR combo, and how the FAB FIVE (Go Blue!) worked with the NETS. Totes agree with Rex on the theme too. Well done!!
Yep, me too. Did not help that the moment my eyes landed on Love, love, love Pharoah Sanders began belting out “Love is everywhere” in my headphones. I was in the big big love zone, and you know, that’s amore…
Nar. Clever!
Unfortunate on Five train in Brooklyn clue and FABFIVE answer to have the Five already in a clue, and in a basketball-specific clue at that.
Other than that, wow, I did not think this puzzle was easy. Felt appropriately Thursday-ish to me.
Fastest Thursday solve ever! Hate hate hate the clue for NETS.
Going into my quest to publish a puzzle, I envisioned the three parts of construction as follows:
- Coming up with a theme would be essentially just a flash of inspiration.
- Building the grid and filling it with as little junk as possible would be work – polishing and reworking until you get it right.
- Cluing would be fun, and would be where your ‘voice’ as a constructor would come out.
The first two were pretty much correct. The third was not. Of the 76 clues today, only 26 were mine. I’m sure for regular constructors there is not so much editing, but a lot of the time spent on cluing was for naught as it turns out.
Some of the changes were minor alterations. For example, my clue for 14A was “First lady’s husband?”, which was changed to “First lady’s partner”. But many are significantly different. Most changes I am sure were for the better (the atrocious clue for NETS excepted).
Well I finished it (with one cheat for Folie A DEUX and another for the Simpson’s dude in the SW), but I didn’t fully grasp the theme until Rex explained it.
Rex thought the fill was easy, but I would characterize it as just about right. I felt like it put up some resistance but there was enough there that I could keep moving and at least get comfortable with the repetitive theme answers.
Congrats to @Kitshef. Definitely an unusual take on a Thursday theme. It was a fun one to parse together.
That’s interesting that they accepted your puzzle and then changed two thirds of your clues. I’m curious - are you willing to share what your original clue for NETS was ?
I liked the puzzle theme a lot but thought the clueing for the non theme clues was very straightforward and made it too easy. But reading people’s comments, it seems like I got lucky with this one being on my wavelength
Congrats, @kitschef! What was your clue for NETS? And is Rex right on the basketball explanation? Because it makes no sense to me!
Congratulations, Kitshef!
Way to go @kitchef - elegant theme and well filled all around. I tend to agree with the big guy that it slanted less than Thursday level difficulty but that’s a wheelhouse thing. The three unrevealed spanning themers are the stars here.
Man of Constant SORROW
The theme is restrictive to the grid but the two long downs are both top notch. Some of the short stuff inside is rough - OOF, DOS etc but overall the fill is solid and smooth. I liked the misdirect on the Nets as I spent a lot of time designing and working on the 4 and 5 train.
Let It GROW
Enjoyable Thursday morning solve - looking forward to more from our buddy in the future.
TOMORROW Is Forever
Hey All !
@kitshef
Well now I know where you get your BlogName from ...
Laughed at your Cluing predicament. I'm often fascinated how/why/who-thought-they-were-so-mighty-as-to-completely-change-clues that the clues are so radically changed. As a constructor myself (although my rejection pile is pretty high 😁), I know it takes time and creativity to come up with clues that would work perfectly fine. Only to lose your "voice" to someone else's voice.
Took a minute to figure out what in tarhooties you were getting at. Got the SOR ROW first, couldn't figure it out. Then got the TOMOR one, said to myself, "Ah, it's a ROW of TOMORs, TOMOR-ROW!" Then still took a second to attach ROW to SOR, thinking it might be something else. After the ole brain finally saw SOR-ROW, was able to fill in all the G's in the first one. Had the last six G's in, but had trek for SLOG and LANe for LANG messing up the (as Rex so eloquently said) G string.
Nice to have a FRONTFRONTFRONT seat to your puz. Made me FURFURFURFUR an EYEBEYEBEYEB at first, but solved on the straight and NARNARNARNAR.
Oh, and thanks for throwing in some F's! (Although FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF would've been awesome! 🤣)
Hope y'all have a great Thursday!
Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
The theme is fabulous.
First, while it was easy to fill in, it still left a capital-R Riddle to figure out – what do those answers mean? I’m sure I’m not the only one who exulted when the answer hit me.
Second, in a 15-wide grid, those theme answers are limited to one-letter, three-letter, and five-letter repetitions. What a terrific touch to have the theme answers, from top to bottom, go in that order.
Bravo, Kit, on that, and high props for those colorful long downs – LESS IS MORE and MACGYVERED.
There were other pings of joy that serendipitously showed up. SLOG and SLAG. Symmetrical corner alcohol clues. The rare sighting of a 15-letter palindrome. STOOL echoing yesterday’s LOOTS.
I was also highly inspired, after reading your notes, to learn that you kept on, didn’t turn away, even after 30 puzzle rejections. Wow!
Your debut, Kit, pushed many happy buttons, and thank you for that. Regarding your puzzlemaking future, I see by your name a definite UPARUPARUPARUPAR!
Sweet to see DERRY/AREA sharing the grid with what sits on the STOOL.
Bravo, Kit! A most entertaining Thursday. When I saw all those Gs stretching across the grid, I had absolutely no idea what was going on, and frankly had to stare at the finished puzzle for a while before the penny dropped.
Thursday is typically my least favorite day of the week, and I usually complain when there are non-words in the grid, but today is a big exception to both. A good brain teaser, and those rows of partial words are actually lovely to look at. Congratulations!
Whenever I hear Mcgyver, I think of the SNL Magruber skits where the hero always fails with his rigged solution. 🤣. PS Another day without a Star Wars reference (4th day?)
Nice job, Kitshef! As a confirmed non-Gen-Xer, this was trickier for me than it was for Rex, but it was all pretty gettable once I gave in to the undeniable fact that the themers were repeaters rather than rebi (is that the plural)? No idea on Macgyvered, I vaguely thought that was a cartoon dog detective (which is now see is McGruff. Well, that’s close.).
It’s fascinating that they changed that many of your clues. Please please please tell us how we can see your original version!
Exactly the same. AmEUX seemed ok to me.
"Fifteen letter palindrome" - hah!!
My original clue for NETS was "Brooklyn's pro sports team". My biggest (but not only) complaint about the clue used is that the NETS are not just five players. NBA rosters are 15 people (17 if you count two-ways), and all of them train.
Back for a day to say how much I loved this puzzle by my blog pal, Kit.
My "Aha Moment" was huge. And it didn't come until the TOMOR-row -- which is exactly as it should have been. The G-row baffled me completely -- though having worked on a Cryptic puzzle at one point with Kit -- which, alas, wasn't accepted by the NYT -- I was looking for a Cryptic-like trick, because Kit is a Brit and that's the sort of puzzle he cut his teeth on at a formative age.
But I still didn't see it. I sensed it at the SOR-row, but it was the TOMOR-row that nailed it for me.
This is SO original, so clever and so imaginative! I will write it down on my list for P-O-Y. I just loved it!
I did have to semi-cheat to finish it. Having never heard of MACGYVERED, and missing the C, I had to make sure that 17A was NICE. I had LA?G for the Rocky III villain, typed into Google "Lang in Rocky III" and was thrilled when "Clubber" filled in. That's much less of a cheat then typing into Google "Clubber villain in Rocky III" -- yes? Please tell me it is.
Congratulations, Kit! Very well done!!! But where's the photo of you that I was hoping to see at xword.com?
Dang. I was hoping for Lewis panning.
I have no idea how xwordinfo gets photos of authors. I've certainly never been asked for one.
A long time reader first time poster. Ca somebody please tell me where the themer “gently down the stream” was? I got the puzzle and identified that each row was just missing the word row. But only when I read the blog did I see that the theme was “gently down the stream”. It doesn’t show up anywhere on my puzzle. What am I missing?
The Times seems to have forgotten to include the title of the puzzle in the app! Still solved it, but I had no inkling of the theme till I came here. Overall fun though, if easy.
Nice puzzle! Congrats, Kit, and I’m fascinated to learn that so many of your original clues were changed. I found the puzzle harder than Rex did. I hardly ever watched the Simpsons and usually don’t know things Simpson-related, and also paid no attention to any Rockies after movie #1. Really liked LESSISMORE and MACGYVERED. Also, fun theme!
I liked your puzzle too, Kit. But Nancy: Coming back regularly to remind people you quit the blog isn’t really quitting the blog. Just suck it up, admit you overreacted, and come back.
It’s just Rex’s description—not an official one
What a special treat to read the experience of a constructor! This makes my morning!
This puzzle needed a lot more polishing to be worthy of its creative and interesting theme. I'm surprised to read that so many of the constructor's clues were changed, because some of the cluing was very poor. I still don't understand the NETS clue, and the "'Too many cooks spoil the broth' principle" for LESS IS MORE is terrible; for one thing, you would say FEWER cooks, not LESS cooks, and fewer cooks doesn't clearly illustrate the concept of less is more. Then you have NICE listed as an airport, IDIG for "Capisce," ADEUX crossing GLAXO, two different Rocky clues, etc., etc. I think it could have been an excellent puzzle, but it just made me go GRR....
Didn't understand the theme until I saw Rex's explanation. I like it! Nicely done, Kitshef.
Hey, @kitshef – well done! And how’s this for an OMEN: you made your debut on International Puzzle Day!
I thought the theme was clever, although it took a moment to process. I initially made the “trek” mistake at SLOG, so didn’t immediately see the unbroken line of Gs. Ditched “trek” pretty quickly, thinking that [Arduous journey] should start with an S to make the answer to [Jokesters] plural. And then when SORSORSOR… began to form in the middle row, I thought, “Yes! SOR-row and G-row.”
One amusing error I made was to think [Jokesters] were dAds. (Well, they often are, with regrettably cheesy results.) Liked the subtle nod to one of our blog compatriots in LESS IS MORE. And smiled at the opening picture of tippling in a LIMO and the closing resolution to give up alcohol for LENT.
Well, @kitshef, you did it. And I hope this is the first of many.
I seemingly only come here for Italian complaints but "capisce" is "he/she understands" not "I understand". It would be capisco for this cluing. They can't keep getting away with this!!
For Anonymous 8:21 "Row, row, row your boat...gently down the stream."
The NYTIMES does not publish the theme for daily puzzles (at least in the print version)
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