Symbol of transformation in "The Silence of the Lambs" / SUN 1-25-26 / Triangular sail / Property of curium, but not cerium / Either side of a cheerleader's "A" / Cable co. that was purchased by AT&T in 1999 / Canning package? / Prosthetic facial feature of Peter Falk / Sneaker brand that popularized cantilever heels / Pete who co-wrote "If I Had A Hammer" / N.H.L. team with the longest Stanley Cup drought, familiarly
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Constructor: Mark MacLachlan
Relative difficulty: Medium
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| [59A: Sci-fi princess] |
Theme answers:
- OUT OF DISK SPACE (23A: "That cabinet with plates looks awfully full")
- RUN-TIME ERROR (43A: "It's saying you completed the marathon in under two hours, which can't be right")
- VIRUS DETECTED (51A: "Is that a cough I hear?")
- WINDOWS UPDATE FAILED (70A: "Sorry, we'll have to put the old panes back in")
- STACK OVERFLOW (91A: "Those pancakes are piled way too high!")
- FILE TOO LARGE (98A: "Your emery board will never fit in this tiny toiletry bag")
- SEVER NOT FOUND (122A: "Your waiter's nowhere to be seen!")
Prince Edward Island is an island province of Canada. It is the smallest province by both land area and population, and has the highest population density in Canada. The island has several nicknames: "Garden of the Gulf", "Birthplace of Confederation" and "Cradle of Confederation". Its capital and largest city is Charlottetown. It is one of the three Maritime provinces and one of the four Atlantic provinces.
Historically, the island has formed an integral part of the Mi'kmaw homeland, Mi'kma'ki, comprising one part of the district Epekwitk aq Piktuk (also spelled Epegwitg aq Pigtug, lit. 'PEI and Pictou'). Come 1604, Epekwitk would be colonized by the French as part of the colony of Acadia, where it became known as Isle St-Jean (St. John's Island). It was later ceded to the British at the conclusion of the Seven Years' War in 1763 and became part of the colony of Nova Scotia. In 1769, St. John's Island became its own British colony and its name was changed to Prince Edward Island (PEI) in 1798. PEI hosted the Charlottetown Conference in 1864 to discuss a union of the Maritime provinces; however, the conference became the first in a series of meetings which led to Canadian Confederation on July 1, 1867. Prince Edward Island initially balked at Confederation but, facing bankruptcy from the Land Question and construction of a railroad, joined as Canada's seventh province on July 1, 1873. (wikipedia)
I'm generally a big Jodie Foster fan, and (according to my Letterboxd account) I watch hundreds of movies a year, so even I'm surprised I've never seen this movie. I think the reason I didn't see it originally was I was horror movie-averse, or certainly serial killer movie-averse, and then, even after all the Academy Awards and everything, I just ... never got around to it. Maybe this year. Yeah, I think I'll put it on my Watchlist now. Jodie Foster has a new French-language (!) movie coming out soon (I just saw a trailer for it last week). It's called A Private Life. Wikipedia calls it a "French black comedy mystery thriller film." Too many words, wikipedia. Those are words I like, but ... too many. Anyway, I'm gonna see it.
- 20A: Home of Diego Velázquez's "Las Meninas" (PRADO) — I once did a jigsaw puzzle featuring Las Meninas. Fascinating, I know. I had the PRAD- here and without looking at the clue instinctively wrote in "A" for the last letter (as in The Devil Wears ___), but then remembered the museum existed and decided to actually read the clue (good general advice: read the clues).
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| [1656] |
- 47A: Sneaker brand that popularized cantilever heels (AVIA) — I ... did not know these were "popular." Or that they were a thing at all. AVIA is, of course, brand name crosswordese, just like ARIA and AIDA are opera crosswordese, "ADIA" is pop music crosswordese, ODA Mae Brown is Ghost crosswordese, etc. etc. etc. (101D: ___ Mae Brown (Whoopi's role in "Ghost"))
- 127A: Chips may go into it (ONION DIP) — would've loved something a little more ... onion-specific here. Chips might go into literally any kind of DIP.
- 17D: Pete who co-wrote "If I Had A Hammer" (SEEGER) — this one made me laugh because there was so much folk singer drama yesterday, when half the world seemed never to have heard of Phil OCHS. And since the "H" in OCHS was crossed with yet another singer many solvers also didn't know (Charlie PUTH), there were many cries of "Natick!" I did not cry that, but some did. So when SEEGER showed up today I was like "here we go again!" But no Charlie PUTHs today. There is a Bob SAGET though (30A: Bob who hosted "America's Funniest Home Videos"). If you don't know Pete SEEGER or Bob SAGET, lord help you, you are stuck in Natick. By the way, I hope you do not literally get stuck in Natick today—if you live in the eastern 2/3 of the country, you should probably just stay home today; the storm looks like it could be Devastating.
- 29D: Either side of a cheerleader's "A" (ARM) — somehow I can imagine only a "V"—gonna need a visual, hang on ... well, here's GIF but ... that isn't an "A," it's a "V," so I don't know what we're doing here.
- 46D: One of Adolf Anderssen's sacrifices in the "Immortal Game" against Lionel Kieseritzky (QUEEN) — blah blah sacrifice blah blah game ... I got this fairly easily while understanding almost none of it. Luckily the "Q" was already in my head because I was in the process of trying to make an IRAN/IRAQ distinction (45A: Persian Gulf nation).
- 57D: Animal whose name sounds like a pronoun (EWE) — this is rebus puzzle 101 stuff, but that didn't stop my brain from going "EEL!" and then "No, EMU!" EEL kinda sounds like a pronoun. "Where's your brother?" "He went to the store but EEL be back soon." EMU has the "you" part down, but the "me" part is backward. Meanwhile, EWE = "you." Just like EYE = "I."
- 74D: N.H.L. team with the longest Stanley Cup drought, familiarly (LEAFS) — this is an iconic Canadian franchise so I was kind of stunned by this fact. Then again, I don't really follow hockey. I know that Mike Myers is a LEAFS fan because he was wearing a LEAFS jacket when I saw him in Kate Mantilini (a Beverly Hills restaurant) one time in the mid-'90s. Jon Cryer was also there (separately, gently swaying to Culture Club's "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?" while he waited for his date to return from the restroom before they left). It was all very surreal. But the LEAFS jacket, I remember.
- 108D: Property of curium, but not cerium (HARD C) — a "letteral" clue, in that it refers to a letter in the clue. The letter here is the initial "C" in "curium." It's hard ("k"). As opposed to the one in "cerium," which is soft ("s").
- 123D: Illegally interfere with, as an election (RIG) — not now, puzzle! I got enough horrifying political things on my plate at the moment, thanks.
14th ORCAS Puzzle PackThere’s something special about the 14th ORCAS.
Sure, we added five new awards (did someone say cryptics?) Yeah, the ballot contains 15 categories comprised of 124 nominations from 59 different outlets. But, this year, you can solve these spectacular ORCA-nominated puzzles in our first-ever puzzle pack!
All funds raised support The Trevor Project, a suicide hotline for LGBTQ+ youth. Although suicide rates for LGBTQ+ youth are surging (39% seriously considered suicide in 2024), HHS terminated its contract for FY2026.
The puzzle pack includes 76 ORCA-nominated puzzles from 44 outlets plus five original puzzles from the Constructor of the Year nominees. Along with the puzzle pack, donors will receive early access to the ORCAS ballot, which will be posted publicly on February 3.
For information on how to make a donation and receive the puzzle pack, email: theorcaawards@gmail.com.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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119 comments:
Quiero oír hablar de eso.
I've been hoping lately my subscription to these silly puzzles is helping pay for reporters at the Times. I've lost my naive faith in this country, but I am holding out hope for truth.
Fun puzzle despite an ocean of small stuff. I wonder how many times I've been VEXED by those phrases in real life. Going forward, I will try to be more sympathetic with robot errors as they're apparently real-life uniclue opportunities.
Those cheerleader ARMs required every cross. I am not complaining, ya know, cuz who hates thinking about cheerleaders? But that clue's "A" was VEXing.
Go Broncos.
People: 15
Places: 4
Products: 13
Partials: 12
Foreignisms: 7
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 51 of 140 (36%)
Funny Factor: 4 😕
Uniclue:
1 Why the gallery held its latest charcuterie night in the parking lot.
1 NEON SEMI ART SCENE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: My rap name. NOVOCAINE ZADIE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Rex, you've never seen The Silence of the Lambs? That is indeed weird. It's on cable TV several times every single year.
I thought this was an OK puzzle but agree the appeal may be kind of niche. Didn't quite understand "Alert! Alert!" but sussed out the computer error messages at some point. I had initially thought there would be some *twist* to it, and had OUTOFDISHSPACE at first. But, no. Other bugaboos:
- 12D: ACEPAIR before ONEPAIR
(ACEPAIR prevented CLUEMEIN for a while. Methinks CLUEMEIN might be "Chinese noodle dish for detectives?")
- 54A: PREVIEW before PRESALE
- 60A: NYLON before LYCRA
(The Star Wars alarm really is too funny. There is also possibly an oblique Star Trek reference: "Garbage SCOW" (62A) was how a Klingon described the starship Enterprise to get Scottie riled up on "The Trouble with Tribbles" episode.)
Typically Easy for recent Sundays. I worked with computers my entire life (working life; computers didn't exist for me before college) so I wasn't put off by the tech jargon and I have encountered most of the error messages in the wild. But I object as much as OFL about the disc/disk interchange. In my lexicon, a computer storage device is a disc, while a flat, circular non-computer object is a disk. The clue for 23A should have been something like "That toy chest with Frisbees looks awfully full."
* * _ _ _
Overwrites:
TEARAble before TEAR AWAY at 37D
Crossword favorite OMAN before IRAn before IRAQ for the 45A country
MITER box before SAW at 42D
My 67A haunted house moaned before it HOWLed
Thought Whoopi might have played aDA Brown before ODA (101D), before I encountered ADA Lovelace at 66D
ETHaNE before ETHENE for the organic compound at 102D
WOEs:
Former cable company TCI at 6D
The LATEEN sail at 25A
ADAM Brody of The O.C. at 119D
I liked this much more than @REX did.... I'll give it 3.5 stars. Easy-Medium for me at 23 minutes. I loved the idea of repurposing all those really awful blue-screen type messages into "IRL" messages. However--I do agree that 1st one, a clued, was kind of lame. Plates in the cupboard??? Maybe do something with Ultimate Frisbee? Or Disk Golf? Could have been more medical on the third one..... You're in the ER, and a little red light starts flashing over the door to your room, announcing.... "VIRUSDETECTED". Liked the last one, when your waiter goes on their break half way through your meal.... I find myself wondering if Will and Joel and Sam read this blog.... they're probably thinking "Let's make sure EVERY puzzle has at least one thing clued as a Star Wars reference for awhile, until Rex takes down his counter". Thought the collection of AV words today was interesting... AVIA, AVIV, AVEC. Too bad they left out the Chevy AVEO, we saw that a few days back. The word CARTRIDGE is very strange.... when you have CAR_RID__ and you just can't see that it's gonna get a G down there, so CART RIDER????? thought it might be CARDRIVER at one point. Love seeing DOODAD, CHEVRONS, and UVULAs in the grid today. What was with the clue on AEIOU.... I think we've seen that before, and I never, ever get it until later. Oh well. Thanks, Mark, for a fun Sunday morning puzzle! I think all the IT nerds out there will love it!
I’ve seen virtually all these computer alerts either at work or home, and I’m hardly a tech expert- so the theme was fun for me.
I laughed as soon as I realized that the theme answers would all be computer messages - I knew OFL would hate it. I've seen all these messages in my lifetime - we still have instrument software that runs on DOS. We saw "lateen" recently in another puzzle - I had to ask my husband because he knows these things. There will be moans today.
Bang - Rex nailed it. Why not a theme on going to the DMV or the dentist or any other unenjoyable task while we’re at it? A big grid of computer error messages? DETEST is the word of the day for sure.
Depeche Mode
Take a Sunday-sized grid and force poor fill into it as a result of the highly restrictive theme and bad things occur. The computer error messages are what they are - but the shortish fill here is brutal. I guess it was easy enough so it only took a pass or two through the grid to finish but not a redeeming quality.
Bad Brains
WS has to have better Sunday submissions than this.
You Make Me Die
I got AEIOU, but i don’t get “trade discount.” From a game?
32 across: Private investigator, informally = TEC? I assume that's short for detective, but I've never heard that before and I read mystery novels all the time and was in law enforcement for twenty years. Am I missing some wordplay?
I had no problem with the error messages but can certainly imagine that a significant percentage of crossword solvers/normal people wouldn't have ever come across a few of them.
Agree with the DISK/disc-ussion but the weirdest thing for me was cluing ADAM Brody with an O.C. reference. I loved that early 2000s show but he's currently the star of one of the most popular streaming series of recent years, Nobody Wants This, which I imagine Rex was muttering throughout his solve today.
Fun Fact: My superpower is the ability to finish a (large) bag of Ruffles at the exact same time as a (small) tub of ONION DIP.
When you take Sailing at camp, or earn the Sailing Merit Badge, you learn about Lateen sails.... they are the most common ones, like on Sunfish and other little knockabout boats.... I have one in my garage (don't ask me how long it's been since I took it out.... )
Okay. I’ll start by saying the error message theme is so out there that I liked it right away. I liked that the showcase center entry is WINDOWS UPDATE FAILED. I’ve never seen anything like that before.
Then there’s body-part trio of LIVER, UVULA, and GLASS EYE, just waiting to be the start of a walked-into-the-bar joke.
I don’t know. Maybe it’s this strange weather event going on, but my brain kept riffing on answers. It imagined a uvula being featured on that hot tv medical drama, in an episode called “The Pitt and the Pendulum”. UNEXPECTED JERK tripped off the image of Mr. Rogers lambasting a neighbor. Hah! [Easily detached] had me thinking “no-fault divorce”.
And then the common error message “404 not found” popped into my head and had me wondering, “Why 404 of all numbers?” I learned there was a popular myth that 404 was a room number at CERN. And, dear reader, just the fact that something as random as a 404 myth exists at all keeps me in love with this world we’re living in.
So, your puzzle took me to divine places, Mark. Just one sensational outing – thank you!
Will someone please explain Trade Discount 48D? Many thx.
Very easy Sunday. Because the themers were so easy to come by, I'd have appreciated some more grit to the clues.
I worked in telecoms from 1987-2007, and have never heard of TCI. That is some pure back-shelf desperation.
As for the Immortal Game - that is probably the single most famous chess match in history. I'm not saying that alone makes it worthy of inclusion, but given that there is probably a fairly large chess/crossword crossover audience, I have to imagine lots of folks are at least familiar with it - at least enough to know it's chess-related.
Hey All !
Don't have the disdain for this puz as OFL. Thought the Theme was good. Computer Alerts clued as different meanings. Kind of like Phrase-Scrabble. Instead of rearranging letters to make words, ala Scrabble, you rearrange phrases for the same meanings. If that makes sense.
Relatively easy out here in "no snow from that huge system" land. We do get snow occasionally, but I haven't seen more than three inches in one fall since being out here after 19 years. We get chilly, 30's for lows this time of year (in the city. When I was driving, I had to go to Primm [there are a couple of hotel/casinos out there and a mall, that's it. On the border of CA and NV], and once out of the city, the temp in the car reader thingie said 19°F!) So, brr.
Uniclues: Full moon over Italy?
REAL ROMA HOWL CUE (Might need a ~ per @Gary!)
Welp, hope y'all have a good Sunday, good luck all you snow bombed people. Been there, done that!
Seven F's - *Pounds chest* Respect.
RooMonster
DarrinV
Not just the DMV or dentist, imagine if it was something as boring as baseball trivia!
I, for one, would take computer error messages any day of the week. Give me more geek humor please.
Conrad, Regarding your disc/disk distinction, as counter-examples, there's disc golf and floppy disk.
AVEENO is a brand, not a company. This is an easy error for an editor to detect and correct.
And, no, it's not good enough for crosswords. It is poor editing,
Thank you for the Star Wars counter. I really enjoy seeing it!
I thought this was funny and clever. Still too easy, but the computer errors made me laugh. Not my favorite puzzle ever but I enjoyed it WAY more than Rex (which is usually the case!).
Sorry I should’ve written about this: AEIOU are just the vowels you find (in order) in the phrase “trade discount” 🤷🏻
It’s terrible. I’ve griped about it before, which is why I didn’t gripe again today, but every time you see it, please imagine me griping, thank you 🙏
Trade discount is a phrase which contains all 5 vowels, so it's a "quintet" that's in Trade Discount. I've seen that clue/answer combo before, so it came to me quicker this time (like only 2 hours after I finished the puzzle, instead of not until I asked here! : )
I suspected that Rex would not be pleased, lol. I’m familiar with all of the computer phrases, so after I parsed together the awkwardly clued DISK SPACE answer I had a leg up.
Unfortunately I succumbed to a DNF at the OPERANDI/ODA cross (I guessed a “t”). It would have been more enjoyable if the clues and answers were more “in the language” - I don’t “pitch a CAMP”, for example. Nor do I remember TCI, or know who/what LATEEN/SAGAT are. But that is all pretty much normal for the Times, so it’s not like I didn’t know what to expect. I think my “solving persona” is much more geared toward the LAT or Evan’s Sunday WaPo offerings. Even after all of these years, I’m still punching above my weight class with the NYT.
Stay warm and safe everyone.
The quintet are the five vowels in order in the phrase trAdE dIscOUnt
A little cranky today...catch something in your zipper this morning?
I’m with @Amy—thought this puzzle was funny and clever and added to a relaxing Sunday morning. Even the ambiguity over how to spell DISK was familiar. No puzzle is ever really easy for me, but this one had a ring of familiarity as I pecked my way through it. There are probably very few potential computer errors I have not encountered.
Rex, the only movie that upset me more than The Silence of the Lambs was The Deer Hunter. You better be in a morbid state of mind when you watch it. You certainly will be after you watch it. Things are disturbing enough. Perhaps wait until January 21st of 2029?
The advent of AI winemakers has meant expanding the Cru system to include Premier Cru, Grand Cru and ECRU.
If you're looking for a hip guy, try running a DOODAD.
Reporter: Hey, I just realized that the story I submitted on CURIUM referred to Marie Sklodowska, which was her maiden name.
Editor: Relax, INEEDIT.
I thought I'd be different and ask a girl over to have the evening meal while sitting on the sill of my 40th floor apartment and gazing at the view while our feet dangled. But, as she was acrophobic, my WINDOWSUPDATEFAILED.
I made 404 errors in solving this, but still thought it was a fun theme. Thanks, Mark MacLachlan.
Thank you Mo-T, for looking after Rex’s mental health. We all depend upon it.
First Sunday I've finished without a Natick or a cheat in quite a while (maybe doing it in the magazine helped). Not surprisingly, I enjoyed it while Rex didn't.
See the geese in CHEVRON flight
Flapping and racing on before the snow...
They've got the urge for going
And they've got the wings to go
J. Mitchell, "Urge for Going"
(Tom Rush does a nice job with it too.)
I taught the history of media institutions for years, and I’m probably one of the four or five solvers who knew TCI. It was a Very Big Deal in its time. But even I had to work to remember it.
Disk was used for floppies and hard drives, whereas disc was used for optical media (CD, DVD, etc.). So disc wouldn't make sense here
Counterpoint--Go Patriots!
Think of the arm movements to YMCA and you’ll understand how a cheerleader’s arm can make up the side of the letter.
The Silence of the Lambs clue was easy for me! I like to watch the credits at the end of movies, there is good stuff in there sometimes! I especially like oddball credits (e.g., Malcom X had a "Stunt Waitress" credit). One of my favorite odd credits is actually a separated pair in Silence of the Lambs: someone is credited as "Moth Wrangler and Stylist" (which would be pretty good on its own!), but if you wait another minute or so, after umpteen intervening credits, they list an "Assistant Moth Wrangler and Stylist"! Why is the one not listed directly after the other????
Feel like I'm in the minority here but I liked it quite a lot. The computer messages didn't bother me, felt like everyday life. Although, it took me about five tries to get STADT/TORA.
Yeah, disc is/was used only for optical (laser-read) media whereas disk was used long before for hard drives, floppies, etc., which had electromagnetic disks inside
Rick Sacra 6:47 AM
"I find myself wondering if Will and Joel and Sam read this blog...."
I think we can say almost with certainty they do not. Why would they? By the time a puzzle appears, it's sat on a shelf for weeks since their final edit and months since its original acceptance. So on a basic level, it's dead to them. Additionally, if they want to read the unwashed masses (and they do not), they have their own blog where they can catch up on half-baked ideas by those of us oddly eager to jump into the "it's too easy/hard conversation." And most importantly, @🦖 has a predictable outlook on puzzles and the only time we're surprised is when he loves a puzzle or when he neglects to rant on one of his usual rantable topics. The things he cares about are obviously not the same as what the editors care about, so reading him would be like listening to a teenager tell you about the music they like. You would only be waiting for the moment for it to end.
I bet this was fun and interesting for all of you who have spent lots of time working with computers. I have not and pretty much all the themers were--oh. That sounds like a computer term, I guess. So no ahas! an no smiles at filling them in. That's a me problem though.
The TEDLASSO thing went in last, as of course I've heard of the show but didn't know it was on Apple TV. TCI? And hiding in plain sight were the card abbreviations that became ONEPAIR. Come on man.
"Las Meninas" is one of my favorite paintings by one of my favorite artists. It's displayed in the PRADO with a mirror in front of it so you can turn your back and see the scene as Velazquez di--he's in the painting too. Great stuff.
I did like seeing old friend LATEEN, vintage crosswordese, and MIA for too long.
OK Sunday, I guess, MM, but not My Metier at all. So it goes, and thanks for some fun at least.
@RooMonster 7:54 AM
Nice! Finding uniclue topics on Sundays with so many little words and so much gunk is brutal and I was desperate for at least one more and couldn't find it. Then you swoop in for the lay-up while I'm standing in the paint being sorrowful.
I certainly didn’t love all the fill (LATEEN, for instance), but then it’s a Sunday.
As for the theme, I’d view this as the tech-inclined person’s version of the Wicked theme from a few months back. As someone who dislikes everything about Wicked, I found that one tremendously annoying. But as a longtime software developer, I loved today’s theme — every single one of the themers made me grin.
Btw, none of those errors are esoteric in the least. I get that if you have *zero* exposure to computer programming, the two that Rex called out (stack overflow and runtime error) might be totally unfamiliar…but again, this is just like the Wicked abomination (from where I sit).
For what it's worth, STACK OVERFLOW and RUNTIME ERROR are legit error messages, though they are more relevant for programmers -- a relatively narrow subset of solvers. You can Google them.
86- Across pretty much sums this one up. Can’t imagine why Rex spent so much time on TCI . . . The crosses filled it right in. Would have preferred another rant on “Tex”.
I have no issue with the theme, but even in the moment, DISK made no sense. I found this puzzle to be very easy- 11 minutes on my phone to fill everything in- but when I got the "something's wrong" prompt, I immediately assumed it had to do with DISK or TCI and wasted 3 minutes before realizing I'd simply mistyped elsewhere.
I like the puzzle. My wife has never worked with computers other than to do online research and games and knew most of these messages from the clues.
I was impressed at how much computer related material was incorporated and thought the clues were fun.
Maybe it's because I am in Florida and we're at least 7 months away from a catastrophic storm.
Empirical evidence, certainly, but I was well-aware of both and filled them in from very few crosses despite knowing nothing at all about programming.
Always come here first on Sundays for fear that it's a rebus. When I saw what the theme was, I was determined not to like it. HATE ANYTHING that goes wrong technologically. But I was surprised & I liked it a lot - except for TCI. Thank you, Mark :)
Mr Parker you are quite wrong. I’m not a computer geek at all but I still found this puzzle mildly challenging and reasonably clever. And Newfoundland is a Maritime province as well.
I'm with Rex. "Wholly unlikeable " succinctly describes my feelings for this puzzle. Oh well. Maybe next week...
I usually disagree with RP but not today. Same experience. Great write-up! Would've given one star though....
I found this to be quite easy for a Sunday. However the cluing for PRESALE really threw me. “Event for V.I.P. customers” made me expect an abbreviation in the answer. Isn’t it a standard rule of crosswords that an abbreviation in the clue means an abbreviation in the answer?
Pleasant enough, I suppose, but way too easy. I liked LATEEN at 25A but that might just be sentimental on my part because it brought back memories of an afternoon sailing on the Nile, but the clue was pretty straight forward.
I have worked on Macs since about 1985 so some of those warnings/admonitions seemed foreign to me. Others sounded vaguely familiar and I managed to nail most of them without much trouble. I once bought a PC because the company that produced our tax prep program decided it would no longer produce a Canadian Mac version. (My memory’s kind of dim on this but it might have been called Quick Books, or something similar.) So off to Best Buy I went and returned home with a Sony Vaio. After 4 or 5 days of misery we decided to hire someone to format our filing for us and I took the Sony back. Painful experience. I still have the scars. Just ask my psychologist. Might explain why I smoke and drink too much.
Aside from all the compu-pain, I have few other nits, randomly selected: I pitch a tent. I set up a CAMP. I’m not a great camping aficionado, but my late long time fishing buddy, Bags, was and so I bowed to his preferences. When you’re up in the Alberta foothills you can’t always find a decent motel so I know a bit about camping and I don’t think I have ever heard anyone say pitch CAMP.
And TCI???
On the other hand, the clue for 80D SEVERANCE was excellent. (Canning package). I got misled because I actually can things, that is, I preserve food in jars and call it canning. Specialized knowledge can get you into trouble in Crossworld.
This theme was entirely on my wavelength, and I enjoyed the wackiness. It also made the puzzle easy for me. (As opposed to one with movies, pop musicians, and baseball / basketball players, all of which leave me cold. One man's meat...
I addition to the disc / disk thing, which made me wince, I should say that Stack Overflow is a legitimate error, but 99% of the time when you see it, it's referring to the technical community Stack Overflow (https://stackoverflow.com/)
Very easy. I put in ID TAG, TED LASSO, and EGG SAC with no crosses and just kept whooshing.
FLuR before FLOR was my only costly erasure.
Clever, breezy and fun, liked it a lot more than @Rex did.
Best puzzle of the week.....SYDLI (sorry you didn't like it)!
The only thing I liked about this puzzle was the growing feeling of anticipation as I went along at getting to see Rex rip it to pieces. Wish fulfilled!
Gary is probably right in every respect that NYT puz editor pays no attention to this column's useful feedback.
Today's puzzle was a natick-lover's feast: TCI/TEDLASSO, TEC/ERIC, and the the brilliant four-way smash-up LATEEN/SEEGER/AVEENO/SAGERin the northeast.
For those in the opposing camp, it was a characteristic disappointment...
Easiest Sunday in weeks!
Thanks for the quote from the ethereal Joni Mitchell. And, yes, Tom Rush's rendition is memorable. You have brightened my mood this snowy morning.
Rex: SEVER NOT FOUND is not found.
Wow, I loved this puzzle!! One of my favorites among the recent ones.
While I'll agree with Rex that seeing computer error messages in one's grid is less than appealing, I thought the clever clues made up for that. I'll give him the DISh/DISk/DISc diss though. But that's the only theme clue/answer I didn't like. I thought the others were cutely clued.
TED LASSO, I really liked the show but the 3rd season was not as good as the other two. It was a show you could feel good about watching because you knew it wasn't going to bring you down. Sunny optimism is something you can't get too much of, can you? I will say that after we'd seen the whole series, we dropped Apple TV because there wasn't much there we were interested in.
This was a very easy Sunday puzzle. Looking at my erasures, I see nothing that was hard to fix or silly enough that I wondered what I was thinking.
Thanks, Mark MacLachlan!
A mediocre puzzle with a really boring theme. How does a DISK mean a plate? Nobody orders a DISK of french fries...
The Immortal Game: A History of Chess by David Shenk is a delightful read even if you know nothing of chess.
For me, squeezing humor out of computer frustrations was a heavy lift, but I have to give the puzzle a nod of appreciation for the clever repurposing of VIRUS DETECTED, WINDOWS UPDATE FAILED, and especially SERVER NOT FOUND.
Do-over: namES before DUKES. Help from previous. puzzles: SAGET. Batted 50%: I wrote in AEIOU right away but needed 4 crosses for HARD C (do we have a word for this type of clue? [48D and 108D]). No idea: TCI.
I didn't mind this puzzle nearly as much as Rex did; in fact, I liked it fine. I think the theme is quite clever. My one complaint is that the clue for 22A (Makeshift replacement for a Kleenex / SLEEVE) does not pass the breakfast test! Ick. And I had been enjoying my coffee and croissant. :-(
This is good advice. I will never watch that movie again; I think it's harder to watch than The Deer Hunter. About the only movie that bothered me more is Volker Schlondorff''s The Tin Drum. I had nightmares after watching that.
@Kate 7:20 am and Rick, my favorite AEIOU word is FACETIOUS. And if you like calling Y a vowel, there's FACETIOUSLY.
Liked it. Computerese, repurposed for laughs. Gotta do the humor, for the SunPuz solvequest treks.
M&A worked in a computer department for many many years, so that mighta helped out a wee bit, with the solvequest. Altho I worked mostly with yer "mainframe" computers. Did publish an educational self-study course there on the new technologies, tho -- it was subtitled: Brother Can You Paradigm?
staff weeject pick: TCI. Also known as: WOE or WTF.
faves: SEVERANCE [cool schlocky TV series, btw] & clue. GETACROSS [goin Down]. GLASSEYE. CLUEMEIN. DOODAD.
Thanx for the fun, Mr. MacLachlan dude. Nice big job.
Masked & Anonymo10Us
p.s.
runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
p.p.s.s.
Runtpuzs are soon to be retired, btw. Server is on its last legs.
No refunds.
M&A
HASANU (certainly an acceptable answer) for HARDC slowed me down for a while, but this retired chemistry professor's real SNIT is with ETHENE - the technically correct, never used IUPAC name for ethylene - which may/might be the most produced - even that is debatable, but I don't see how else to clue it.
TCI/TEDLASSO was a WOE too.
Overall, a much higher rating than REX.
I didn't mind the theme too much. And Rex, anyone into computers for a few decades will know all those phrases; I think I've seen all of them except perhaps FILE TOO LARGE. The error I have gotten is "Insufficient disk space" or something like that.
Typeover: for 13 across I started with TWO ACES, and when I realized the second word was actually PAIR I thought: what is wrong with them; that's not TWO PAIR!
Seemed like a lot of names but that's always true on Sunday because the puzzle is so large. The only real Unknown for me was SBARRO; it's a darn good thing that S was already there... that spelling is ridiculous.
And as for the poor old LEAFS, our local Penticton Vees are currently on a 13 game winning streak... in their first year in the league! (the WHL).
I read Rex every day and thank you for your service. But, brother, you are getting more and more grumpy. I enjoy a solve and then read your anger. I hope you can find more joy in the process soon.
Surprised by Rex's vitriol for this one. I thought it was kinda funny and cute. Not the strongest puzzle I've ever seen but I enjoyed it and smiled a lot as I solved. That's all I ask for!
Loved this puzzle! Loved the theme!
Loved it. Great fun. Wackiness was clever and amusing. Lots of interesting clues with a bit of crunch. I resisted CAMP as long as I could but 'tent' certainly wouldn't work. (short deliberation) I'll allow it.
@Anonymous
Never saw The Tin Drum, but if its title appears in a post about Silence and Deer Hunter, I won't. Thanks for the warning.
I get your take on this Rex - it could have been a real gem if the puzzle was loaded with Alerts most could relate to let alone the fill which didn't capitalize on the theme itself - fact is most people never see those kind of alerts on a computer I've had one since the Day.
Spinning Wheel of Death or something we can all relate to would have been a lot more fun
I don't think you had to be a programmer or a techie in any way to solve this puzzle and appreciate it. I've never encountered STACKOVERFLOW or RUNTIMEERROR, but they certainly made sense as computer-alert messages, so I went with them. It wasn't that hard.
Union Craft Brewery in Baltimore produces Zadie's Lager, named after a founder's grandfather (zadie in Yiddish) who worked there until he was 101. Three or four cans function pretty much the same as novocaine.
I'm totally with you!
Server not found! Rex, you have an error in your blog about the puzzle theme. I enjoyed this puzzle. Clever theme. I easily got all the theme answers.
I liked the clue, and the answer. I immediately got aeiou, and then, although I know nothing about "trade discount", I saw the aeiou in the phrase just as quickly.
I just saw this in an Agatha Christie novel (read two recently so can't remember which one) and I immediately thought of of you, Rex!
Couldn’t agree more with Rex that this was an unpleasant experience. Here I am in my new apartment watching the snow fall, so happy that there’s no more shoveling for me, looking forward to a cozy hour with a cup of coffee and the puzzle, and then I couldn’t wait to be done with it. It was grim. I so disliked the joylessness of it.
I've known the term "ten" meaning "detective", thus "private eye", for decades. I probably came across the term reading mysteries, or watching a movie.
Saw Silence of the Lambs over 30 years ago and it still gives me nightmares!
I think it's from pulp novels from the 1940s or something.
Rex got off on the wrong side of 4he bed. Thought it was a pleasant puzzle and liked the theme. As a casual computer user I am familiar with all of the error messag3s. Hang in there Minnesota. Heaven save us
Interesting. Do you know what a stack is?
Anyone not liking foreign words crossing foreign words crossing words should not do the LA Times puzzle today, where 80D, 86A, and 97A do that, with 102A, a familiar term but also foreign, also added to the mix. Sheesh! I don't usually find that in the LA puzzle.
Come on. Lighten up. A dentist puzzle could be great. Gas passing...Alfred the butler in a new Alfie movie....NovoCaine. trumps instructions....drill baby drill. Could be great. And if they can do a sitcom about DMV why not a puzzle?
p.p.p.s.s.s.
Proposed alternate clue for STACKOVERFLOW: {"Hey, Dolly Parton! Wardrobe malfunction alert!"}.
Just sayin. Mighta cheered @RP up, more?
M&Also
I think the movie is meh, overacted, overdirected, overly mannered. The face switch scene is ridiculous. The book was better, not great but better. Red Dragon, the 1st in series, is a better book and movie. Puzzle was boring, as a retired actuary I did lots of programming at work so themers were all familiar and all were aggravating and annoying at the time. So 2 thumbs up for Rex's criticism.
Silence of the Lambs! My brother Josh’s only appearance in an Oscar-winning movie. He’s the ambulance EMT who gets offed by Anthony Hopkins during Hannibal’s daring and bloody escape from imprisonment. Josh tells the backstory of his scene on The Moth MainStage, because it was terrifying for an entirely unexpected reason. Enjoy.
https://themoth.org/stories/cut
Prof, I had ethane for awhile. Why is this wrong?
Rex is a critic, so he criticizes. He's not a fan boy applauding a nice effort. I enjoy his witty to acerbic writing and some day I'll send him some money to show my appreciation
Agree with Rex. Major nerd vibes. Not fun.
TICKS??!!
At least three ways to enjoy recorded music -- a vinyl record, a CD, or via computer. If you can remember which of these might be referred to as a DISK and which might be referred to as a DISC, you're better/savvier/cooler-and-trendier than I.
I'm no horror enthusiast, but Silence of the Lambs is a GREAT movie. Book too, (though it's literally been 30 years since I read it, so I'll offer that with a grain of salt.).
Had no difficulty with any part of this puzzle. To the point I got a new Sunday PR! Though also didn't enjoy it. So here we are.
"The things he cares about are obviously not the same as what the editors care about, so reading him would be like listening to a teenager tell you about the music they like. You would only be waiting for the moment for it to end."
That's true of me too, Gary.
Some Apple TV shows that might be worth a look - The Morning Show, Dickinson, Hijack, Pluribus, Shrinking, Slow Horses, Down Cemetery Road, Loot
Grow up. The “side of the bed” thing is stupid. Lots of people agree with him. State your opinion without being insulting. It’s possible, Paul.
Liveprof
Thanks for the explanation about zadie. Might have seen it, after all these years reading the Times Certainly didn’t know it meant grandfather. I can imagine the howls of protest if Shortz let it be say a Saturday answer! ( Both my Italian immigrant grandfathers died before I was born. Nonno is the standard Italian word Now that has probably made an appearance here!).
Chris S
I am like Rex. Never saw Silence of the Lambs. But I also have no plans to see it. Rarely see movies these days.But if I do, that type won’t be one of them
Might see the new French language Jodie Foster movie Rex mentioned. Got a good review in the Times. She did most of the movie in perfect French. To make sure the French movie goers were aware that her character was supposed to be an American, the French director had her swear in English! (Her mother was an American “stage mom” who took her to France to get work).
Gary
Excellent analysis of Shortz probable reaction to this blog!
Southside Johnny
M O is certainly in the language no? I think the underlying Latin phrase is fairly well known. Not obscure trivia.
Anonymous 11:30 AM
FWIW
In the Times puzzle certain abbreviations are treated as words in themselves. So they don’t signal an abbreviated answer. For example, the words in VIP are almost never written out or spoken unless the person is being humorous or ironic. There are many in this category.
Oh my goodness! I had to force myself to complete this puzzle. To start with, I was in no mood for anything related to technology difficulties today. We have had neighborhood electrical issues. Additionally, our internet has been having the IT equivalent of psychotic breaks - an on again/off again tantrum that always occurs right in the middle of something for which the net is mandatory. The final frustration derives from the seemingly unnecessary Apple “update” to my phone that forced me to spend an entire afternoon organizing what the new program “reorganized.” I loathe feeling that phone programmers think they know what I need and force me to use it. For example, are the stupid “bubble effects” really necessary? They badly distract my astigmatism. I have my granddaughter looking for a way to turn off the “befuddling bubblism” (her description). She will succeed, I’m confident.
I started the puzzle hoping for the Sunday equivalent of yesterday. The puzzle’s byline barely rang a bell so I dug in. My hopes dwindled at contemplating one eschewing a tissue for a SLEEVE, and if not completely dashed at OUT OF DISK SPACE, were certainly on the rocks with the tide coming in and me stuck like one of the flightless RHEAS - no escape in sight. It’s taken me about 6 hours in short, cranky and very unenthusiastic spurts to finish. I think I’ve been active here for about a decade, and until today I don’t believe I have ever agreed so completely with @Rex as I do today. Lots of my dearth of enthusiasm is the theme, but the fill had no sparkle or humor that ameliorated the drudgery.
Not my cup of tea and nothing at all to ease the soul-crushing ennui. The good news? The answers were easy and I’m finished.
The Morning Show, that was good too but I'm going to miss the newest season due to too many TV subscriptions already. Maybe it will show up on Hulu, Tubi or Netflix someday.
Not only saw Silence of the Lambs, years ago spent a week with Roger Ebert analyzing it! I think some of our group observations ended up in a commentary track. Totally worth it. Good times
I didn't like the "disk" clue either. I can't think of a better one right away, though. Maybe, "My spine is inflamed, the pressure is getting to me!"
We solve Sundays in the evening, so late to the party here.
100% with Rex on this one; literally groaned with each interminable tech reference...ENOUGH!!
Wondering, after reading the write-up, why this didn't warrant the (heretofore unawarded) one star; will it ever happen? I remain obsessed with whatever rubric and nuances Rex uses to grade each puzzle.
Enjoyed the stream of consciousness riff on EWE. My only disconnect, obviously a matter of personal taste, is re Ted Lasso, a series we have watched and re-watched, and heartily recommend to friends as something that will make you feel good about people. In this day and age, and not to go into horribly awful territory (Minneapolis), Ted Lasso provides a welcome respite, even as fiction.
I loved this puzzle! I could hardly believe my eyes when I saw "runtime error" emerge from the fill. Too bad Rex thinks "computer stuff" is "boring." Maybe now he knows how some of us feel when we slog through grids full of PPP/naticks demanding knowledge of 80s one-hit wonders, French vocabulary, obscure authors and playwrights, etc.
Says one who won't reveal it's name.
Hated this. Totally agree with Rex. Total slog.
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