Novel feature of the 1974 Olds Toronado / TUE 1-20-26 / Skill shared by bats and dolphins / Hellenistic storytelling / Sports grp. for Coco Gauff / Fight night souvenir, perhaps / Historic destination for Pueblo pilgrimages / Modern pickup sport for delivery drivers / East coast convenience chain with a reduplicative name / Tour overseer, for short / Mayberry boy of '60s TV

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Constructor: Jonathan Raksin

Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (just a bit harder than the typical Tuesday)

[23D: "Star Wars" princess (LEIA)]


THEME: ECHOLOCATION (53A: Skill shared by bats and dolphins ... or, when read as two words, what 19-, 26-, 34- and 44-Across each is) — locations of four different "Echo"s:

Theme answers:
  • NATO ALPHABET (19A: It begins with Alfa and ends with Zulu) (Echo = letter "E")
  • GREEK MYTHOLOGY (26A: Hellenistic storytelling) (Echo = Nymph in love with Narcissus)
  • AMAZON WAREHOUSE (34A: Modern pickup sport for delivery drivers) (Echo = some stupid A.I. thing you allow to surveil you in your own home for some reason)
  • THE GRAND CANYON 44A: Historic destination for Pueblo pilgrimages) (Echo = sound repetition)
Word of the Day: Echo (of GREEK MYTHOLOGY) (26A) —

[Echo and Narcissus by John William Waterhouse (1903)]
In Greek mythologyEcho (/ˈɛk/GreekἨχώĒkhō, "echo", from ἦχος (ēchos), "sound"[4]) was an Oread who resided on Mount Cithaeron. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and often visited them on Earth. Eventually, Zeus's wife, Hera, became suspicious, and came from Mount Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs. Echo, by trying to protect Zeus (as he had ordered her to do), endured Hera's wrath, and Hera made her only able to speak the last words spoken to her. When Echo met Narcissus and fell in love with him, she was unable to tell him how she felt and was forced to watch him as he fell in love with himself. [...] [According to Ovid's Metamorphoses], when Narcissus died, wasting away before his own reflection, consumed by a love that could not be, Echo mourned over his body. When Narcissus, looking one last time into the pool uttered, "Oh marvellous boy, I loved you in vain, farewell", Echo too chorused, "Farewell." // Eventually, Echo, too, began to waste away. Her beauty faded, her skin shrivelled, and her bones turned to stone. Today, all that remains of Echo is the sound of her voice.(wikipedia)
• • •

There's something regrettable about the fact that this theme has to go through Amazon. I guess that since the Amazon Echo exists, you gotta use it, but ... do you? I just find it so depressing to see the puzzle shilling for Amazon, a behemoth that does not need the free advertising. And I can't think of many places on earth more depressing than an AMAZON WAREHOUSE, nor any grid-spanning answer I'd less like to see splashed across the center of my puzzle. After I finished the puzzle and grasped the "Echo" theme, it actually took me a few beats to understand how AMAZON WAREHOUSE worked. I thought, "yeah, they are pretty vast, your voice probably would echo in there... but... that's the same kind of echo that you'd experience at THE GRAND CANYON. You can't repeat echoes like that ... [two seconds later] ... oh. Right. It's a 'smart' device. <sarcasm> Great </sarcasm>." I think this would make a very nice three-themer puzzle. It's ridiculous that you've got the the Echo in a warehouse anyway. Most people only ever see the Echo in their homes (if they see them at all). AMAZON WAREHOUSE does have the "virtue" of making clear the Echo in question (it's got AMAZON in it, after all). Honestly, from a purely structural standpoint, the answer works fine. It's just that my personal distaste for all things Bezos and the anti-free trade, anti-union behemoth that is Amazon prevents me from really liking this puzzle as much as I'd like to. It's amazing (and heartening) to me that BEZOS, despite having a five-letter name with a very attractive "Z" in it, has appeared in the grid only once, and not for 15 years now! Let's keep that trend going!


The theme concept is a winner. Nice wordplay on the revealer. Really delivers on the aha. The fill on this one I liked less. Easier to fill a puzzle cleanly with fewer themers—just sayin'! The cramming together of three themers in just five rows makes the crossing fill veer sharply toward SLOP (40D: Unappetizing food). The puzzle is definitely at its crosswordesiest through there, from AGRA through LEIA ORG WTA WAWA HAR LAH to the ETNA SLOP and the always regrettable UEYS. Just not a pleasant place to spend time. But alarm bells were going off much earlier, actually. I was just POSIES PGA ORD-deep in the puzzle when I paused and thought "ORD? Already? Uh oh." It's an airport code, it's a Fort in California, it's short for "ordinance" (or "ordinal"), it's [checks database] a river in Australia!? OK, take it easy, 1989 Thursday puzzle. Anyway, ORD is some top-shelf crosswordese. OOXTEPLERNON (the god of bad short fill) always flies through O'Hare, both because it is a hellish place where people often get stuck (apt!), and because it has the crosswordesiest airport code of them all. What about SFO and LAX, you say? At least those have the cities they serve embedded in the codes themselves. ORD is some nonsense you just have to memorize (O'Hare's original name was Orchard Field Airport). I don't mean to pick on ORD too much, but every time I see it, I wonder what's making the constructor so desperate. It felt like an omen, seeing it right away. 


But the most regrettable fill today wasn't the short common stuff. No. Instead, it came when someone LIT A FIRE IN A RUT. That takes the EAT A SANDWICH answer type to a whole new level—the EAT A SANDWICH IN A DINER level. This is the first time this level has ever been achieved, to my knowledge. It's one thing to roll out a weak "[verb] A [noun]" phrase, but quite another to follow that phrase with a "[preposition] A [noun]" phrase. Truly horrifying remarkable. What happens when you light a fire in a rut under a WHALE POD? You don't want to know. Also, WHALE POD felt redundant. A group of orcas is just a pod. Or it's an orca pod. If you know they are orcas, you are going to call them an ORCA POD. I think the clue is bugging me here more than the answer, actually. Check out this ORCA POD in Wellington Harbour:


Speaking of Wellington, or New Zealand, anyway: Split ENZ! (27D: Split ___ (New Wave band whose name sounds like a hair problem)). Seeing ENZ was a moment of deep ambivalence for me, as I love the band but hate to see just ENZ all on its own. Full-name bands > partial-name bands. And the clue was disappointing as well, since there was every opportunity to mention the band's country of origin (the "NZ" is embedded right in the name!), but they chose instead to go for "hair problem" as their hint. Boo. But yay for Split ENZ. They mean a lot to me. So funny to have loved Split ENZ as a kid, and then Crowded House after them, and then to discover (and love) the Dunedin (NZ) bands the Bats and the Chills as a young man, and then eventually, ten or so years later, marry a woman from Dunedin. It's a pretty small city, on the other side of the world! What are the odds!?


Bullets:
  • 43A: Fight night souvenir, perhaps (WELT) — "Fight night" makes me think of the audience's experience, not the fighter's. I wanted something like "ticket stub." Also, this answer was hard because I spelled the (hateful) crossing, UEYS, like so: UIES. Sadly (very sadly), both are acceptable, per NYTXW tradition. 
  • 37D: Sports grp. for Coco Gauff (WTA) — once again, I cannot come up with the tennis org. abbr. ATA? UTA? All sports org. abbrevs. are slowly turning into one ball of gelatinous goo in my head. 
  • 11D: Novel feature of the 1974 Olds Toronado (AIR BAG) — one of the clues that made this puzzle harder than the usual Tuesday. I was looking for something "novel" in the sense of strange or eye-catching. Like tailfins or a dome or laser beams or something, I dunno. Needed many crosses to see the plain-old AIR BAG.
[1974 Olds Toronado]
  • 20D: Prefix for element #8 (OXY) — LOL that I know the Periodic Table that well. I still don't know what element this is. Is it "Contin"? Hang on ... wait, what? Oxygen? So the "prefix for" is actually a "prefix already in"!?!?! If you say "Prefix for" something, I assume (logically) that it is a prefix that you can attach to whatever thing you're talking about, not one that's already part of the word. Unless there is an "oxyoxygen" I know nothing about, I hate this clue.
  • 12D: Visibly disdainful (SNEERY) — I am visibly disdainful of SNEERY. I know you can't see me, but trust me: visibly.
That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. shout-out to my mom, out on the streets protesting fascism (that's her with the "Democracy Depends on Rule of Law" sign) (shout-out to the other lady too!)


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113 comments:

Anonymous 6:17 AM  

Definitely a bit harder for a Tuesday. I didn’t understand the Echo theme until reading the post.

Bob Mills 6:19 AM  

Very enjoyable Tuesday. Didn't know all the meanings of "echo," so it proved a bit of a challenge...even though _____ALPHABET, ______MYTHOLOGY and _____WAREHOUSE were evident from the crosses.

Conrad 6:23 AM  


Easy, but I enjoyed it. Cute theme. I was much less offended by the Amazon and O'Hare references than OFL was.
* * * * _

Overwrites:
When I was behind at 30D I lagged before I OWEd. Quickly fixed because there's a WAWA (33A) on every corner in my area.
My 38D lease alternative was buy before it was OWN

WOEs:
New Wave band Split ENZ (27D)
Coco Gauff's grp. WTA at 38D

Anonymous 7:04 AM  

If it makes you feel any better Amazon Echo has lost them about $25B! No one uses them to buy stuff: just alarms, reminders and trivia queries.

Alice Pollard 7:08 AM  

we have 6 amazon echos in our house, and I still thought the Amazon Warehouse answer related to an actual echo.

Jack Stefano 7:09 AM  

Best Tuesday in recent memory. Just challenging enough to make it interesting.

Son Volt 7:20 AM  

Decent early week puzzle - cute enough theme and overall well filled. Liked THE GRAND CANYON and ECHOLOCATION. Not sure I’m down with the cancel crossword culture - if so CHE and LENIN etc will have to go also.

World PARTY

The Finn brother thing never worked for me - add The Triffids to the Chills grouping and we have something. Don’t WHALE PODS ECHOLOCATE also? SNEERY is pretty cool and overcomes UEYS. The short stuff today is gluey.

The Revealing Science of God

Pleasant enough frigid Tuesday morning solve.

John Doe

Rick Sacra 7:21 AM  

Enjoyed this puzzle a little more than @REX did.... though I don't actually Rex's star rating this morning. Rex--please add your gold stars! I'd give this 3.5. It's a great theme, well done! And.... there's a shout out to OFL in the grid, which is always a nice touch. (Should make a grid with Patrick, Robyn, Will, Joel, and Rex all embedded sometime... see if anybody notices!). The innovation I remember about old Olds Toronados had something to do with front wheel drive... Yeah. Those 4 long themers plus the revealer strain the grid and forced a grid with a LOT of 3 letter flll (21 three-letter entries, I think?). Kind of enjoyed the scene as we lit the fire in the rut (to reduce the wind and let the tinder catch). While the TEENs played their new song in CSHARP to the rhythm of the HIHAT. Thanks, Jonathan! : )

Lewis 7:28 AM  

I love me a good riddle, so after I filled in the three theme answers, having left the reveal blank and not reading its clue, I stopped the fill-in and started trying to crack the big question: What did those four answers have in common?

It turns out that all I had to do was focus on the first two, finding a Greek god in the NATO alphabet. That never occurred to me. But oh, the places I went! First letters of the theme answer words, commonalities among the last words, descriptors of the Grand Canyon …

The point is my brain was pinballing all over the place, looking at letters and words, visualizing warehouses and canyons, and spending much time, to paraphrase one of the puzzle’s answers, going, “WA?” “WA?”

Finally, I uncle-d, having been gotten good, read the revealer’s clue, and immediately underwent an aha moment for the ages that included the mighty riddle-crack, awe over the brilliant repurposing ECHOLOCATION, all on top of post-workout-odyssey brain-glee.

To which I say wow, thank you, and bravo, Jonathan, not to mention congratulations on one terrific debut!

Lewis 7:28 AM  

Serendipity watch. Rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (ENOLA), LEFT in the appropriate side, and a lovely nonet of long-E-sounding enders (MARY , MYTHOLOGY, ROTI, NEWLY, TECHIE, OPIE, OXY, SNEERY, PARTY).

Anonymous 7:31 AM  

A quick solve but theme eluded me.🤔🤔

Eric nc 7:31 AM  

Wish there were WAWAs down here in NC. Miss their shorties terribly.

Eric NC 7:33 AM  

You’re so right. Just another piece of junk in my home spying on me.

Sideshow Ben 7:35 AM  

Instead of Amazon Warehouse, how about ____ And The Bunnymen. I know, it’s 1 letter short. But that’s your generation too, right @Rex?

Anonymous 7:38 AM  

Similar experience but managed to like it more. GO MOM!!!

Anonymous 7:41 AM  

we do. and music too. betting odds, weather etc etc great invention

Anonymous 7:42 AM  

ORC in the grid and then…orca clue?? Tsk.

Carolbb 7:42 AM  

I really enjoyed the puzzle albeit it was unusually challenging for a Tuesday. My overwrites:
4d Iwin for Imin
30d buy for own
27d end for enz(my age is showing through)
39d uees for ueys(duh)
57d Omen for Aden
42a Naan for roti
Took awhile to see 50d as newly
Rex, I completely agree with you about Amazon. Unfortunately, since our daughter is in Africa, Amazon is one of the only places that ships things(embassyaddress) for free. I hate everything they stand for! Contrast them with Costco which has a very good union and runs very efficiently with content employees. It's a pleasure shopping there.
I loved the sign your mother was wearing and feel inspired to make my own for the next rally.
Somehow, I stumbled across your blog several months ago. Now, it's a morning ritual!! I appreciate all your time and creativity!




James 7:47 AM  

Enjoyable. I appreciate that there are four different types of echoes, even if they all are named for the one from GREEK MYTHOLOGY.

The OXY clue is saying that, when you use OXY as a prefix on a thing , it is referring to the thing having oxygen, so Rex interpreted that wrong.

RooMonster 7:54 AM  

Hey All !
Rex forgot to mention REX! He's in the running for "name often seen in the NYT puzzle" with myself and @pablo! We all have 1 point each.

Knew the ECHOs, except the GREEK one. Probably was in a small space in the ole brain, but got kicked out by some other small bit of info. Now it needs to find somewhere to settle. I guess some other trivial piece of knowledge will get the boot.

The Tornado also had front wheel drive,, another innovation back then. Go Oldsmobile!

Liked the puz overall, good theme, neat almost all straight Blocker pattern. Nice handling of the 14-15-14 Themers.

Seemed a lot of answers you'd know from doing crosswords every day. Wondering how this would play for a newbie.

Hope y'all have a great Tuesday!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Andy Freude 7:56 AM  

Thanks, Rex for the link to “The Grand Canyon Suite.” First time I’ve heard “On the Trail” since I was a kid. Not earthshaking music, but extremely well crafted and attractive. Light, but not kitschy, say I. Let’s bring back Ferde Grofe, or at least musicians as skilled as he was.

Anonymous 7:59 AM  

A pod of orcas is also not a whale pod as orcas, despite the common name killer whales, are not whales, they are dolphins.

Anonymous 8:09 AM  

Oxy is a prefix for oxygen-containing compounds. The clue works fine, although one could argue it takes a bit more chemistry context than usual for a Tuesday.

thfenn 8:11 AM  

Thought this was a great theme - 4 places you can find an Echo. Great idea, el3gantly done, tho yes, quite a bit of crosswordese fill. Enjoyed learning more about Echo the nymph.

Agree that an AMAZONWAREHOUSE isn't where I'd go to find an Echo, but of course they are full of them. But what I'm having the most fun doing this AM is imagining what "modern pickup sport for delivery drivers" (at the top of the write-up) could entail.

Anonymous 8:11 AM  

Speaking of tailfins, today's Spelling Bee doesn't accept the word. Boo.

Anonymous 8:18 AM  

i found this one to be relatively easy. didn't have to do any lookups. the nod to split enz made me smile. one of my favorite bands.

Anonymous 8:20 AM  

So, is the difficulty level pattern of Monday (easiest) to Saturday (hardest) & Sunday longest being overhauled? I am noticing a shift in the last few months

jberg 8:21 AM  

Oh look, there goes a WHALE POD of orcas, said no one ever. Yeah, I know they're whales, but really....

I was feeling overly literal--to EMBARK is to board a boat, while to set sail is to run your sail or sails up the mast--but then I realized that they are both used metaphorically for beginning one's journey. And until looking it up just now, I thought Pennzoil made motor oil, while STP made additives-- but they've diversified, it seems.

My niece, who is totally blind, taught herself ECHOLOCATION -- she makes little clicks and hears their echoes, just like a bat. Just one of the many impressive things about her, but I'll stop there.

LIT A FIRE under and IN A RUT are common metaphors, so not like 'eat a sandwich,' IMO.

Bill 8:35 AM  

Ever since being forced off my, apparently ancient, iPad due to forced obsolescence, I’ve been moving slow on the laptop solving. Any tricks/tips/etc on best methods for quickly moving around the grid, techniques, yada yada? Just practice? I know the shortcuts but end up not where I want and spending all this time with arrows moving around, reentering letters etc. thanks!

SouthsideJohnny 8:44 AM  

I wasn’t aware of the Greek ECHO, and I’m wondering if the Grand Canyon might be too big to support an ECHO (if the energy propelling the sound waves dissipates). Does anyone have any real life experience with that one? I’ve flown over it, but unfortunately have never been there.

I’m guessing that a SONATINA is something akin to a baby sonata, which a quick consultation with Mr. Google just confirmed. It also occurred to me that I don’t really know what a sonata is - apparently it is a musical composition designed for only one instrument. I’ve heard the term for probably 50 years now but never bothered to learn what it means.

It’s very appropriate that they placed UEYS next to SLOP. UEYS makes today’s foreign contingent, which includes TEAMO, NEIN, and ROTI, look downright attractive.

DAVinHOP 8:52 AM  

Anon, assuming what you say is true, it does make me feel better. Schadenfreude. I assumed Amazon would incur Rex's disdain.

Adrienne 8:54 AM  

I entered AIR BED at 11D with such confidence... It was the 70s! I don't know what y'all were getting up to in your Olds Toronados!

EasyEd 8:54 AM  

My feeling exactly same as @Rex that this one was just a tad harder than usual for a Tuesday, but enjoyed it more than he did. My younger son has Echos and related gadgets all around the house and enjoys giving orders like “Alexa turn on the kitchen lights” or “now turn the lights red”—we seem to have a disco parlor for a kitchen…The Grand Canyon is to me one of the most awesome sights on earth. Be sure to see it if you haven’t already visited. I looked at that ORCA video with a mixture of laugh and cry—the poor guy on that raft was a sitting duck, really in hair-raising danger. At least that was my impression.

Anonymous 8:58 AM  

Solved downs only. Finished and was told there was an error. Couldn't find it so asked the app. UIYS! I hate that answer with the heat of a thousand suns.

Anonymous 9:02 AM  

More than a little harder than usual for a Tuesday for me. But if I think of it as a Wednesday it was still doable and fun.

Amy 9:05 AM  

Loved this one. Too easy for me though. Finished in 30% less time than normal. Really liked the theme and the answers and the less-than-thrilling fill just held it together for me. I also think “lit a fire” is colloquial and in the language enough not to count as “eat a sandwich”.

I am not a Bezos fan but think Rex probably gave him more publicity than was merited by spending a third of the review on him.

gregmark 9:09 AM  

Nothing like a DNF on a Tuesday to remind a person how cruel and arbitrary and absurd is life, and that however far away the final oblivion may be, there will be no shortage unbidden, unwelcome sneak peeks in between to ensure that you don’t enjoy the delay too much.

egsforbreakfast 9:14 AM  

As they say in podiatry, a bunion's a bunion and ACORNS a corn.

I sometimes wonder, is my SONATINA Fey fan? No better way to find out than with him and me in ADEN with a TV.

Back in the good old days I would fly TWAIN first class out of ORD.

Flipping your chip behind your back into the poker pot while playing at the top of Europe's highest volcano is a neat ETNA ante.

Knowing that Alexa (the Echo Dot lady from Amazon for those who haven't met her) is serving as a spy and reporting back to HQ, I like to ask her things like "Alexa, what can you tell me about Jeff Bezos' homosexuality." I'm a bit of a sellout when it comes to my principles. I refuse to subscribe to the Washington Post because of you-know-who, but we harbor his Mata Hari device and welcome his deliveries on a near-daily basis. But I'm absolutely all in on @Rex's mom's protest and have gone to every local one that we can find.

I liked how the puzzle carried ECHOs of past puzzles, like white squares, black squares and clues. Kinda a meta-theme. Kidding aside (or SIDE B, take your pick) I thought it was a very nice theme, well executed. Congrats and thanks, Jonathan Raksin.

DAVinHOP 9:17 AM  

Enjoyed the theme and having to think how each of the four long answers fit the revealer. That said, the solve whooshed along so that there was no need to get help from the revealer to ascertain the four longs or vice versa. But it's Tuesday.

What could, in 2026, say more authoritatively "I'm so proud of my mom" that the picture Rex posted of his. Thanks, Rex...and mom.

Anonymous 9:21 AM  

Inane theme todsy

pabloinnh 9:31 AM  

Easy here, as the long answers only needed a few letters filled in to become obvious. No luck guessing the connection but part of that is not knowing about the Amazon ECHO thing, not that I mourn this ignorance.

Got WAWA from crosses without looking at the clue and was hoping it might be "guitar pedal", but I guess that's wah-wahl. No WAWA stores around here. Never remember ORD, although we were stuck there for a while a couple of months ago. Guessed wrong on the UEY spelling. Always guess wrong on the UEY spelling.

Years ago we drove to Colorado to visit a dear friend and came back via Arizona. My wife summed up the GRANDCANYON viewing experience thusly--"It's too big to look at.".

Nice enough Tuesday, JR, a Just Right connection between themers and revealer. Thanks for all the fun.

Jnlzbth 9:39 AM  

This was an impressive debut puzzle and I really enjoyed it. Congrats to Jonathan Raksin! I can't stop reading WHALE POD TROOPS LIT A FIRE IN A RUT—so funny!

I wish I could remember how to spell the princess's name: Is it Leya? Laia? Oh yes, LEIA. You'd think I'd know it after doing about a million crossword puzzles. At least I never mess up OPIE. But the uee / uie / uey conundrum does always give me pause.

Anonymous 9:50 AM  

I agree that "lit a fire [under]" is completely legit. It's an idiomatic phrase, not a random sentence crammed in to make the fill work. I was way more mad at the "THE" in The Grand Canyon. That's some eat a sandwich baloney right there! (Pun unintended but now that I've typed it, I'm leaving it.)

Jennypf 9:55 AM  

Thanks for the laugh!

Anonymous 9:58 AM  

LEIA - You forgot your “Days Without a Star Wars Clue” - 0

Beezer 10:11 AM  

Actually it threw me because orcas are actually dolphins…
Your niece sounds amazing.

Teedmn 10:21 AM  

HAR (not sarcastically), I never thought of the AMAZON ECHO, I was certain it was that theme answer referred to an echo in the WAREHOUSE. As REX says (albeit with a bit of an anti-AMAZON rant), the ECHO apparatus makes the theme answer better than a mere echoey warehouse. It did make me remember when I would make an echo in the warehouse where I used to work (when I was there alone). I would sing the Three Dog Night song "Black and White". Try it sometime when you're in an echoey place - you get to make a triad all by yourself.

I liked this puzzle, didn't notice the crosswordese, (didn't like WAWA but it was fairly clued) and I think the theme and revealer are great, especially on a Tuesday.

Thanks, Jonathan Raksin!

Jack Stefano 10:38 AM  

My dad had a car in the ‘70s with swivel bucket front seats. For all those times you want to turn and speak directly to your passenger.

Anonymous 10:52 AM  

Way to go Mom!!!

Les S. More 10:55 AM  

By the time I wake up and post in the morning - unlike a lot of you I’m not an early riser and I live way out on the west coast - at least a handful of you will have posted that orcas are not really whales. Well they are, sort of. They are toothed whales, but they’re dolphins. Any zoologists out there? I bring this up because 59A seemed wrong to me but I am unable to justify that. But it still seems redundant. We don’t say “a WHALE POD of orcas”, we just say “a pod”. Although some people apparently say “a gam”. Ain’t taxonomy and its constant battle with common names fun?

I did this as a downs-only solve, as I usually do on Mondays and Tuesdays. Wednesday is when I stop being contrarian and get back in line with the constructors’ wishes. It was fun because all the marquee/theme answers just sort of welled up and presented themselves to me. The theme was cool - all those places to encounter echoes. Nice. Some of the short stuff tripped me up but the themers came to the rescue. For instance, for a lease alternative I initially had “buy” but the long acrosses were pretty clear and I was able to pivot to OWN. That kind of thing just kept happening, so it was a delight.

Had a good time, Jonathan Raksin. Thanks.

@Rex. YES! Shout-out to your mom, and “the other lady too”, and all the people trying to face down fascism.

Anonymous 11:09 AM  

Love me a pencil and paper

Beezer 11:10 AM  

Yep Rick I think it was the first front wheel drive vehicle that came out for a long time…or maybe first one mass-produced. I remember being with my Dad in our car on an icy road behind a Tornado and it almost spun out. My Dad kinda harumphed and said, that driver needs to learn how to get out of a skid with that front wheel drive.

Anonymous 11:12 AM  

But u have Buc-ees!

Anonymous 11:15 AM  

Challenging Tuesday!

Beezer 11:16 AM  

Haha…I might be the only handful that brought up the dolphin biz. Hey…I guess I can go with whale AND a dolphin. I just call them the giant “evil” cousin of Flipper…

Anonymous 11:23 AM  

I don’t get the “or read as two words” part. Aside from The Grand Canyon being 3 words they are all read exactly as clued, so why the “or?” There is no wordplay at all.

Beezer 11:26 AM  

I enjoyed the puzzle quite a bit and was glad to see Rex confirmed it was somewhat more difficult than normal Tuesdays. And for the record…while I NOTICED it, the WHALE part didn’t really bug me, because they ARE called killer whales.
WAWA has WAWAed its way all the way to the Midwest. Buc-ees has an assault coming from the South soon near me and you know…we ALWAYS need another gigantic gas station/convenience store combination out/up/over here. 🙄

jae 11:30 AM  

This was on the easy side for me. AIRBAG and ENZ were it for WOEs and no costly erasures.

I definitely needed the reveal to get the theme. A couple of those LOCATIONS are not the first thing that comes to mind when you think about ECHOs.

Liked it but the fill was a tad cringy in places…SNEERY, LOITERER…

LorrieJJ 12:06 PM  

A big shout out to your mom, Rex ... Go Girl!

SouthsideJohnny 12:19 PM  

ECHO LOCATION as the reveal is what they were getting at with that clue.

Carola 12:22 PM  

Very clever! I whizzed along through the NATO ALPHABET, GREEK MYTHOLOGY, and AMAZON WAREHOUSE and then hit a wall: what could possibly be the destination for Pueblo pilgrimages? It took a lot of crosses before THE GRAND CANYON came into view. So I got a kick out of that dunce-cap moment. I really liked the combination of the two-word ECHO LOCATION(s) and the one-word ECHOLOCATION of the WHALE POD.

Anonymous 12:27 PM  

Echolocation as two words: echo location

Tom 12:42 PM  

Does no one remember SAAB automobiles? They were pretty popular for the latter part of the last century as an alternative to BMW and Audi. All were front wheel drive. Suffered the same fate as Oldsmobile. Long gone from the auto landscape. So Olds wasn’t such an unusual innovation after all.

okanaganer 12:44 PM  

@Easy Ed, when I first saw the Grand Canyon I just stood there for about 20 minutes and let it sink in. It amazed me that everyone else walked up to the edge, looked for about 20 seconds, then left.

Tom 12:44 PM  

Try SAAB as first FWD mass produced.

Anonymous 12:45 PM  

"Echolocation" is one word. To apply the theme revealer to the other theme answers, you must read it as "echo location."

Marty 12:47 PM  

I came here to say that. Go Rex’s Mom!!

okanaganer 12:54 PM  

Like @Les I solved down clues only, but had to eventually "cheat" and look at some across clues where I had multiple downs that I had no idea for. Especially 2 and 3 down; I knew O'Hare but put OHA, and no idea about SAL. Then at the end I had to change WBA to WTA.

And then after all that, it took a couple of minutes to figure out the theme. AMAZON was baffling... isn't that ALEXA? And then NATO ALPHABET... E is ECHO? Interesting.

Hands up for UIES before UEYS and hating both. And once again seemed like too many stupid names... never heard of PUR. Brita I've heard of. Bizarre clue for TWAIN! And annoyingly awkward clue for 47 and 35 down... the DOT should come first!

Anonymous 12:58 PM  

kind of a non-issue

Masked and Anonymous 1:07 PM  

Sneaky good puztheme. I like sneaky. Also like good.
Tough-ish TuesPuz, I'd agree. Especially tough themer clues.

staff weeject pick: Debut entry ENZ. Total no-know, but cute sound-alotlike clue. honrable mention to HAR, of course.
Primo weeject stacks, NW & SE, btw. Also some nice such stacks, mid-grid.

fave thing: The "Wa-WHAT...?" chain store. WAWA was another no-know of interest.
Also partial to the LITAFIRE clue.

Thanx for the fun, Mr. Raskin dude. And nice debut ... debut ... debut ...

Masked & Anonymo2Us

p.s.
runt puzzle:
**gruntz**

Beezer 1:20 PM  

Alexa is the AI that “resides” in Echo.

Beezer 1:34 PM  

I may be getting ready to offer you unsolicited advice, but is your problem that you no longer can install updates because you don’t have enough space? If so, you MAY be able to get rid of a ton of stuff in your iPad taking up space by going into settings. For instance, each browser you have takes up a lot of space…iPad comes with Safari, but many people will also install Chrome and Firefox. Documents attached to emails, GIFs sent to you, are often still there. Also, photographs often take up a huge amount of space (unless they are “clouded.”)

thfenn 1:49 PM  

In 1949. We had a 1963 Saab when I was a kid. Had a lifetime guarantee on the engine. Think we went through 3-4 of them. Learned to drive in that car, loved it.

ChrisS 1:54 PM  

Good catch +1

Anoa Bob 1:57 PM  

I had no idea that ECHO was some AMAZON WAREHOUSE device. I was thinking that "EMPTY" or "ABANDONED" WAREHOUSE would be a place where an ECHO might be heard.

What stuck out like a sore thumb for me was that GREEK MYTHOLOGY has 14 letters but its symmetrically matching GRAND CANYON comes up 3 letters short. Letter count inflation (LCI) to the rescue, here an article of convenience. No other noun or noun phrase in the grid has an article in front, only THE GRAND CANYON. Bingo, the needed letter count boost from 11 to 14.

I think that's too easy of a shortcut to make a theme entry work. It makes the artful arrangement of words crossing one another less artful and diminishes the overall quality of the puzzle, if you ask me.

Anonymous 2:00 PM  

I hated sneery, that doesn't seem real to me (spell check always changes it). Also hated it cause I had sneers so mythology was hard to see also had Oxi not oxy so my(i)thology(s) went in late.

ChrisS 2:06 PM  

When I encountered my first Buc-ees 7 years or so ago I loved them. Now they are too popular and overrun, they turn a 10 minute gas & bathroom break into 30 minutes of searching for an open pump and stall.

Lynn 2:11 PM  

Here's a bit more about the Tornado:

The Oldsmobile Toronado is a personal luxury car manufactured and marketed by the Oldsmobile division of General Motors from 1966 to 1992 over four generations. The Toronado was noted for its transaxle version of GM's Turbo-Hydramatic transmission, making it the first U.S.-produced front-wheel drive automobile since the demise of the Cord 810/812 in 1937. Similar cars were the Buick Riviera and the Cadillac Eldorado.

Lynn 2:23 PM  

I've never been to a WAWA but I've been to Wawa, Ontario many times. (east shore of Lake Superior)



I






Rick Sacra 2:34 PM  

Thanks for the information about SAABs being front-wheel drive over 15 years earlier; we never had a SAAB, though I had classmates whose parents had them in the 70s.

Anonymous 2:37 PM  

Love his hates.

Anonymous 2:41 PM  

Liked the Mcintosh/Macintosh cluing. Smiled when I got that one.

Beezer 2:58 PM  

Sorry Tom…sure. I left off in U.S. I will say in 1966 when Tornado came out, you didn’t see many SAABs in my neck of the woods and many people (like my father) thought you were close to being unpatriotic unless you bought a ‘Murican automobile. So no…I did not think of Saab.

Anonymous 3:42 PM  

Go Mom!

dgd 4:06 PM  

Carolbb
I learned naan (the one I have eaten) and then the Times puzzle also had ROTI so I now wait for at least one cross before putting either one in.

Anonymous 4:11 PM  

For me this was a nice straightforward puzzle, possibly a Monday! Very cute revealer. I like Amazon and O’Hare more than Rex does. My son had a very good violin teacher from Dunedin once! People from Dunedin get around.
Loved your mom’s sign, Rex - so true

dgd 4:21 PM  

James
I agree that Rex read the OXY clue wrong. But OXY. itself is more complicated. Oxygen was a misnomer as it meant in scientific Greek acidic source or the like. Oxygen was named before its properties were understood. The OXY prefix appears in words based on the original meaning as well as in others a reference to oxygen
To this day, the German word for oxygen is a literal translation of the scientific Greek meaning. Sauerstoff Sour stuff.

Anonymous 4:27 PM  

Anonymous 7:59 AM
This is a common clue/answer combo
Abd every time someone makes a similar comment
Orcas are dolphins BUT dolphins are a type of whale, toothed whales. Nothing wrong with the clue or answer

SharonAK 4:31 PM  

I don't understand the comments about a "whale pod of Orcas' No one says that, but if you consider Orcas to be whales then a "group of orcas" is a "whale pod". (tho actually "pod of whales" sounds better )

dgd 4:35 PM  

thfenn
I had the same reaction about “modern pickup spot “!
One thing I was happy about, the Amazon term for warehouse “fulfillment center “ wasn’t used . I hate when big corporations invent a new longer unnecessary term to replace a perfectly good word!

dgd 4:58 PM  

Beezer
FWIW
Dolphins are whales so orcas are whales. Dolphins are part of the toothed whale group as opposed to baleen whales who eat plankton etc. Whether people look at a group of orcas and call it a whale pool is another question!
Jberg. Embark has an etymological connection to bark an old sailing ship. So there is a literal connection to sailing. Both are from French.

CDilly52 5:02 PM  

So, how many percussionist, drummers or “drum groupies” (like me) do we have today who knew “sock cymbals?” So many amusing, intriguing, odd, “makes sense once you know what it is” or just plain fun names for percussion instruments and equipment.

Mike Udow, one of our best friends and retired percussion prof/composer from U Michigan (in ANN ARBOR - part of the source for my ridiculous limerick last Sunday) could wear a person out in a hardware, auto parts store or a garage testing the sound of absolutely anything struck with absolutely anything just to find new sounds.

He often played with the opera in Santa Fe (one of our favorite placess), and we met up with Mike and his wife Nancy many summers during opera season in Santa Fe.

Some of Mike’s compositions became very well known in modern music circles for his use of incredibly unusual, diverse and beautiful sounds he could create by tapping on different parts of his body. If you would enjoy seeing beautiful dance and music together, check out any of the YouTube videos of Equilibrium, duo dance/percussion team of Mike and his wife Nancy. Sorry for the commercial, but once I saw “sock cymbals” my heart couldn’t help itself and jumped back into my blissful musician life.

Speaking of commercials, we have yet another specific brand! Like OFL, I understand the origin and its relationship to the theme, but really? Aside: I had no idea the company had a product called “ECHO,” and thought the theme connection was that the warehouses are so huge that vocalizing in an empty one produces an ECHO. My age and disdain for TECHIE gadgets is showing.

The best part of this puzzle was indeed the theme. Fresh, and so well handled. I would have left the WAREHOUSE entry out, but that’s the cranky old woman who really wants to enjoy her crossword without commercials.

I flew through the dull stuff while I searched for the very entertaining theme clues. As debuts for early week themed offerings goes, this theme sings. Excellent debut for Jonathan Raskin. I look forward to your next one!

dgd 5:21 PM  

Okanaganer
It might be an age thing about Twain. When I was young (I am in my 70’s.) I remember reading about that bit of information. A big thing was made of it. And I have seen many references to it since. I think Twain.himself made reference il to the fact arrived on Earth with the appearance of Haley’s Comet. A long way of saying it was a gimme for Haley’s Comet comes every 75 years and he died close to the time it returned.

Jim 5:39 PM  

At least with the Amazon reference we get one day without some Apple product mention... aw nuts.

Gary Jugert 5:43 PM  

Me compadezco del tonto.

When you start thinking about all the places to go for an echo, some of them are rather hard to reach, but an underutilized tiled bathroom in most any office building is a wonderful place to get your reverb on. Acoustic guitar concerts should be held in those bathrooms. When you record music, you do it in an echo proofed booth and add echo in afterward using a robot. It's why people don't know what real music sounds like.

Speaking of days without Star Wars, one year ago I wrote it was the last day of the Republic and the first day of the Empire. And here we are. Of course our Darth Vader is a child with a fan club.

I spent five years on piano playing sonatinas. They were wonderful. I butchered them up pretty good.

People: 11 {sigh}
Places: 3
Products: 7
Partials: 9
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 33 of 74 (45%) {The Gunkopolis weatherman warned it would be raining buckets of gunk today and boy he wasn't kidding.}

Funny Factor: 4 🙂

Uniclues:

1 Bread bump.
2 Website for a comedian.
3 Went to the 🦖 garage, moved aside the T-follower blow-up lawn ornament, grabbed a can of green paint, stopped on Tatooine for a litre of petrol and to say "Hey" to Leia, took everything to a well worn road leading to Mauna Kea (or Natick) and set the thing ablaze.

1 ROTI WELT
2 FOOL DOT HAR
3 LIT A FIRE IN A RUT

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Instruction manual with four distinct sections: Flattering Flannel, Fierce!, Flip-Flops for the Flexible, and Unorthodox Fox. LGBT STYLE GUIDE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Anonymous 5:48 PM  

Me too!!!! Go mom!!

pabloinnh 7:15 PM  

compadezco". Very nice irregular present tense first person singular.

okanaganer 7:15 PM  

@Beezer, I did not know that! Learned something today.
@dgd, I also don't remember hearing that, and I am mid 60s. I do remember looking at Halley's comet in 1986.

beverly c 7:24 PM  

The revealer is read as two words, so ECHO LOCATION instead of echolocation, which bats do.

thfenn 7:27 PM  

More chuckles. Two things going on. Yes, a modern pickup spot for delivery drivers certainly sparks the imagination. But so does a modern pickup SPORT for delivery drivers, perhaps in similar fashion, which is how OFL captured it above in the theme answers. It's still up there like that, at the top of the blog.

Cyndi 7:33 PM  

Love the picture of your mom!

Bill 8:25 PM  

I appreciate the help, unfortunately your logical advice is not in line with Apple and the NYT’s approach. I, admittedly, have an old iPad (basically a crossword/browser machine at this point), but the NYTimes decided that the games app only works with iOS’ past a certain update that my old iPad is not supported to update to. Oh well. But thank you!

Hugh 8:52 PM  

Nice Tuesday. Theme was beyond clever and the revealer nails it even thought after completion I was still trying to figure out what was going on. My brain loved the effort of trying to make sense of it all. It finally did with THEGRANDCANYON but still had to think hard of why the other themers fit the bill. That was one of the better aha moments I've had in a while.
Even if I never grocked the theme, I would have liked this - a cool spanner (though I don't disagree with @Rex re: Bezos, etc...) and plenty of nice looking long fill. Nothing really bothered me other than I naticked on the ROTI/WTA crossing and had to guess at the "T". I never let the short fill bother me too much so I thought this one was a winner.
Nice work Jonathan, I look forward to seeing more from you.

Victor Poleshuck 9:23 PM  

Didn’t see many but Citroen was FWD also

Anonymous 10:11 PM  

Rare puzzle that I really hated. I would say it made me "sneery" but that's such a crap word.

No, I rejected "NATO Alphabet" until the very end... in ground school, in the Navy, it was, "Alpha". "Alfa" with an F is an Italian car not a letter.

Anonymous 12:13 AM  

Had the puzzle finished just fine except for A MADONNA HE HOUSE across the middle and of course no happy music. Had to come here to figure out what was up lol.

Gary Jugert 12:52 AM  

@CDilly52 5:02 PM
Thanks for the percussionist tip. Good stuff. And opera in Santa Fe ain't all bad either, eh?

Gary Jugert 12:56 AM  

@pabloinnh 7:15 PM
Imagine my surprise when I finally tossed in the towel trying to conjugate that infinitive to have the ZC appear!

Anonymous 1:46 AM  

Simply here to comment in support of your mom.

Anonymous 6:04 PM  

I’m almost positive we don’t have Buc-ees, but they’re planning on opening one on I40 outside of Mebane (I used to pass the coming soon sign all of the time)

CDilly52 7:17 PM  

@Gary J, how I envy you over there in ABQ. Thanks for checking in.

Anonymous 8:32 AM  

They're having a reunion tour this year!!

kitshef 7:05 PM  

Wonderful, clever, fun theme. POY candidate.

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