Saturday, February 21, 2026

Clip-on mic, for short / SAT 2-21-26 / Pink-furred "Garfield" character / Certain slip-on / Overseer of the Erie Canal, in brief / "Star Trek" villain played by Ricardo Montalbán / Film subgenre exemplified by "The Thing" and "The Fly" / European city on the Bay of Angels / The third primary chakra is located just above it

Constructor: Josh Knapp

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Heated Rivalry (41A: Rachel ___, author of "Heated Rivalry" = > REID) —
Heated Rivalry
 is a 2019 gay sports romance novel by Canadian author Rachel Reid. It follows a secret romantic relationship between rival hockey stars Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov. The novel is the second in Reid's Game Changers series of gay-themed ice hockey romance novels. A television series based on the novel was released in November 2025. // Rachel Reid's Game Changer was published by Carina Press, an LGBTQ+ imprint of Harlequin, in 2018. It was followed by Heated Rivalry (2019), Tough Guy (2020), Common Goal (2020), Role Model (2021), The Long Game (2022), and the forthcoming Unrivaled (2026). Reid, a hockey fan, said in 2023, "Game Changer came from a place of me being angry at hockey culture and how clearly homophobic it was and is, and all the other things that made me really ashamed to be a hockey fan. That whole series attacks the NHL and hockey culture quite a bit." Writing the series, Reid questioned what would it mean to be a closeted player in a league with such a homophobic culture. "I thought a lot about what it would feel like to come out. And then I started thinking about the ripple effect—what would happen to the other players?" (wikipedia)
• • •

There's something about a JKQXZ fetish that can start to feel excessive. Like the puzzle is doing a bit, a little show-offy thing, instead of just trying to get the best and most interesting fill into the grid. The puzzle felt at times like it was being driven by unusual letters rather than interesting words and phrases. Despite this semi-annoying tendency, the grid is really very good in places, particularly the NW, which has one of my favorite stacks in a long while—just a strange assortment of strong answers. BLANK STARE and BODY HORROR pair well (1A: Look to give nothing away? / 15A: Film subgenre exemplified by "The Thing" and "The Fly")—you might stare blankly at BODY HORROR, or stare blankly at human beings after experiencing the trauma of BODY HORROR—but then the QUESADILLA drops in as the third member of the trio and makes the whole corner delightfully absurd. Now instead of imagining staring blankly into the void after witnessing horrific gore and bodily mutation, I'm imagining what would happen if Taco Bell did a tie-in with the next Cronenberg movie and offered a BODY HORROR QUESADILLA. What would be in that? Pieces of ARLENE and LOUISA, no doubt. Considering what it might do to your digestive system, perhaps every Taco Bell Quesadilla is already a BODY HORROR QUESADILLA. Anyway, I like the phrase BODY HORROR QUESADILLA, just as I like the opposing energies of ROCK BOTTOM and EXHILARATE down below. MYSTERY BOX, I don't love so well. Where / when would I "purchase" one of these? Sounds made-up. But otherwise, the NW / SE stacks are really strong. The rest of the 8+ answers are holding their own as well. And POP QUIZ manages to make the whole JKQXZ fetish seem almost worth it ... and yet POP QUIZ is also involved in this puzzle's one real crime, which is the absurd doubling up of "POP" (POP QUIZ, POP TAB). You can double little words like UP and ON and IN and NO and the like, but doubling a word like POP feels like a violation. Too conspicuous. Unless it's an article or a preposition, I'm generally against duplications. Feels sloppy / lazy / disrespectful. One of those. But I can't say I didn't enjoy this puzzle, because mostly I did.


Once I got my initial traction in the NW (KHAN to NAVEL to ROLL (OVER) to ERA etc.), the puzzle seemed pretty easy. The one area I struggled with a bit was in the east, where Rachel REID's name was unknown to me (you can't go anywhere without hearing about Heated Rivalry the TV show, esp. with so much (Olympic) hockey in the air right now, but I was unaware of the book series it's based on). I was able to piece her name together from the crosses without too much trouble, but just above that I ran into more serious trouble in the whole PONCHO area. First of all, that clue on PONCHO, yikes (25A: Certain slip-on). You do slip one on but no one in the history of sartorial discourse has ever called a PONCHO a "slip-on." That's obviously a shoe term. So even after getting the "PO-" and the terminal "-O," I was left wondering. "POTATO? Can you slip that on? Maybe you slip on it ... no, that's a banana peel." 


When crosses eventually got me PONCHO, I was left with just one (big) issue: the CAR SHARE / LAV crossing. CAR SHARE had a clue I didn't really understand at first (13D: Many key changes take place in it) (I might've considered CAR STORE at some point...), and LAV ... what the hell is this clip-on microphone business? (31A: Clip-on mic, for short). Not familiar to me. No idea, right now, what LAV is short for, or what it stands for (is it an acronym??). I know about lapel mikes and so definitely considered LAP at one point, but the "OVER" (from ROLL / OVER) was never gonna budge. Not knowing LAV—or, rather, knowing LAV only as a toilet—had me second-guessing CAR SHARE, but once you've plugged in all the other vowels there (CAR SHORE? CAR SHIRE? LOL, "Where do the Hobbits park their cars....?"), it has to be CAR SHARE. So in went the "A" and "Congratulations" went the solving software and [extreme shrug] went me on finding out LAV was the correct answer. Strange ... as soon as I went to search [lav mic] just now, I thought, "I think it's short for 'lavalier,' how do I know that?" And sure enough:

lavalier microphone or lavalier (also known as a lavlapel micclip micbody miccollar micneck mic or personal mic) is a small microphone used for television, interview and other studio applications to allow hands-free operation. They are most commonly provided with small clips for attaching to collars, ties, or other clothing. The cord may be hidden by clothes and either run to a radio frequency transmitter kept in a pocket or clipped to a belt, or routed directly to the mixer or a recording device. [...] The term lavalier originally referred to jewelry in the form of a pendant worn around the neck. Its use as the name of a type of microphone originates from the 1930s, when various practical solutions to microphone use involved hanging the microphone from the neck.(wikipedia)

I have enjoyed learning about the history of hands-free microphones. I did not enjoy LAV while solving, as I didn't know it and it was impossible to infer. 64 total NYTXW appearances for LAV, but this is the first microphone clue. As I said, every other time: toilet (e.g. [Loo], [W.C.], [Head], [John], [Facilities, informally], etc.).


Bullets:
  • 4D: Overseer of the Erie Canal, in brief (NYS) — I live in NYS and still couldn't get this. Wrote in EPA at first, I think.
  • 5D: "Star Trek" villain played by Ricardo Montalbán (KHAN) — I still struggle with the KHAN v. KAHN thing. KHAN is a central / south Asian honorific. KAHN ... isn't. It's Madeleine KAHN, Wrath of KHAN.
  • 59A: How low can you go? (ROCK BOTTOM) — read this as "How long can you go?" and really wondered what the clue was trying to ask me.
  • 13D: Many key changes take place in it (CAR SHARE) — still not sure I get this. Car shares involve multiple drivers, obviously, but are "keys" really "changed?" Do most carshare cars even use keys? Don't you unlock the car with your app or something? I'm out of my depth here, but it seems like the desire for the "key change" pun has led to a certain iffiness in the clue.
  • 8D: Pink-furred "Garfield" character (ARLENE) — tertiary "Garfield" characters are really bottom-of-the-barrel stuff. ROCK BOTTOM, you might say. You gotta know ODIE, obviously, and JON, I suppose, and I guess I can give you JON's girlfriend LIZ (how do I know this stuff!?), but once you get down to ARLENE and IRMA and NERMAL, I think you've gone too far (actually, no one has ever attempted NERMAL, but who knows what horrors the future holds...). ARLENE is Garfield's love interest, I'm told. I'm also told that Garfield has a great-grandfather named OSLO Feline. I doubt that will ever be part of an OSLO clue, but if it is, now you're prepared.

That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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116 comments:


  1. Easy-Medium, but not insultingly easy. Nice Saturday.
    * * * * _

    Overwrites:
    I thought the 4D Erie Canal might be a national park, overseen by the NpS (National park Service) instead of NYS
    KahN before KHAN at 5D
    lOafer before PONCHO for the 25A slip-on
    A lot of great athletes play with paIn, but I guess most play with GRIT (32A)

    Only one WOE, Rachel REID (41A)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I had loafer for a slip on too. When that didn't work I briefly considered condom. Of course neither worked with roll over, but I don't accept that a a "basic" instruction to a dog. Basic is sit, stay, come. Roll over is fancy!

      Delete
  2. A little slower than my average, so I’d put it solidly in the medium category. Really nice construction with a mix of old and new pop culture. And your basic crosswordese. Enjoyed it more than most Saturdays.

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  3. Anonymous6:52 AM

    I couldn't get a grip on this one. @Rex, you can come over--Heated Rivalry has never been mentioned in my presence here in NYC. Apparently you and I hang out with different crowds. Pluribus, Severence, lots of other shows and books, but not that one. I found it quite a slog and while it was appropriately difficult it was also, for me, completely unfathomable in places. Not a fan.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:55 AM

      agree, a rare dnf for me due to the new corner

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:30 PM

      Wow! All anyone I know talks about is Heated Rivalry.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous3:21 PM

      For me, this grid was a MYSTERY BOX.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous6:59 AM

    I think the constructor deserves some credit related to scrabble-ness. He could have pretty easily swapped LAV/OVER for LAW/OWER to get a pangram, but I think we’d all agree that would be a worse puzzle.

    Something else I appreciate about this puzzle is that even the shorter things were interesting/well-clued. All in all I thought this was a very enjoyable Saturday.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:17 AM

      I saw that possibility, too. I would've loved it. I was rooting for the pangram all the way. There is a bias against X,Z,Q,J,K on this blog. @Rex calls their use a fetish. Personally, I hate N and R and am not very fond of C.

      Delete
    2. Not that I care about pangrams, but NO WIN/WORK/PINS seems as good to me as NO FUN/FORK/PUNS and would have completed it. Agree avoiding OWER is a plus.

      Delete
  5. I tend to agree with Rex on the scrabbly slant - although today once those odd letters start showing up I think it provides the leap of faith further on. Looks to be a W short of a pangram.

    Come on ARLENE, take me by the hand,
    Let me know you understand,
    Who do you love


    The true highlights here are AMBLED and IRON CLAD - tier 1 fill. The oddball letter string stuff held it back - CCED, BBQ PIT, whatever a TRIVIA TEAM is. In general well filled and smooth to work. Liked the “Free spirits” misdirect. Couple of gimmes here and there for me but I can see many having a struggle with this one. Hinted at = TACIT?

    MYSTERY Dance

    Enjoyable Saturday morning solve. Our pal Rafa has a fantastic Stumper today with similarly huge corner stacks - highly recommended.

    The JAM

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:10 AM

      I too was irritated by the [Hinted at] clue. TACIT is a silent understanding. No "hints" to guess at. Or in music, just "silent". [Hint at] is certainly not a "tacit" clue or in this case a clue for TACIT.

      Delete
    2. Son volt
      I looked TACIT up. And the first two definitions were variations of hinted at. Silent was the. third. Obviously, the constructor or the editors looked it up beforehand.

      Delete
  6. Anonymous7:11 AM

    I didn’t know Rachel Reid either… but I did get Lav! I also have a totally wasted broadcasting degree that finally came in use today to get this answer.
    I went with DoT first for the canal, because I couldn’t think of what other agency would even apply… maybe the DEC for fishing? I live in upstate NY and still had no confidence. SAL the donkey came to mind too!

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  7. I have been eating latkes at Hanukkah for 30+ years and have not once put lox on them. Apple sauce or sour cream, yes. But lox? Am I alone here?

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    Replies
    1. Andy Freude8:05 AM

      Apple sauce? Yes. Sour cream? Yes, please. Lox? Whaaaa?

      Which was also my response to Rex’s “easy-medium.” For me this was a TOUGH NUT to crack—one of my longest solve times in ages. Not complaining—on the contrary. Felt like my early days of solving.

      Delete
    2. Nope, never encountered lox served with latkes. Not in my home, nor any friends/family gatherings, not at Chanukah parties.at my shul. Not a thing in my world.

      Delete
    3. DavidB8:48 AM

      Never have I ever in my 69 years put lox on a latke! I’ll take mine with apple sauce!

      Delete
    4. @JLG, it definitely isn't just you. When the answer LOX appeared from the crosses I had to reread the clue to make sure I hadn't read the word bagel and somehow turned it into latke. It wouldn't amaze me. On the ROCKBOTTM clue I initially misread "low" as "far."

      Delete
    5. I too was stymied by this one until the x went in and I was working back up from SW. I've never put lox on a latke.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous8:59 AM

      Seriously. I know it is being pedantic about a thing one knows about but no one immediately associates lox with latkes. Bagels? Yeah! But as you say sour cream, apple sauce, sure. There is no reason to go with latkes here. Just an unforced error and a lot of the misdirects in this puzzle were like this. Not really witty oh yeahs! But, hmm that isn’t what that really means. Made for an annoying solve.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous9:02 AM

      I often serve small bite sized latkes with lox, garnished with a dollop of sour cream, a sprig of fresh dill, a few capers, or a little caviar. They are always a hit at parties.

      Delete
    8. Anonymous9:32 AM

      Thank you. I came here to make this exact point. You are not alone.

      Delete
    9. Anonymous9:51 AM

      No Jew on earth has ever put lox on latkes. Shortz has to know this.

      Delete
    10. Anonymous11:51 AM

      💯 to the 2 anons above. Delicious.

      Delete
    11. walrus12:39 PM

      my exact question as well. what a misstep. i wouldn't mind lox alongside latkes but not on top of.

      Delete
    12. JLG
      And a whole bunch of other people.
      About Lox and latkes
      I am not Jewish. I have only occasionally had latkes But the comments show how some people rush to criticize too quickly. The clue did not restrict the answer to the Jewish tradition. Saying I never heard of such a thing is fine. Saying it doesn’t exist just because I never heard of , is not. As several commenters show, it is a thing. There is nothing wrong with the answer. Sometimes in crosswords it hurts a solver who knows too much about a subject. Me I thought traditional Jewish food, three letters, let me try LOX. I never heard of this combination but it worked.

      Delete
    13. Anonymous5:39 PM

      Literally not a thing. Two unrelated Jewish foods.

      Delete
    14. @dgd: By that logic, the answer could be "ham" and we'd need to accept it because someone has probably done it. But that's not the point.

      Delete
    15. Anonymous10:43 PM

      Hahaha. I thought of that too!

      Delete
  8. It’s a pull TAB or a POP top. Not a POP TAB.

    Tough one today. No idea what the clue for CAR SHARE is trying to say. Ditto for LAV. stAlkED before TRAILED, shush before ZIP IT, and LOUISe before LOUISA were my only overwrites, though.

    Rex today: “you can't go anywhere without hearing about Heated Rivalry the TV show”. I very much beg to differ, as this is the first I’ve heard of it. And I’ve been watching Olympics pretty much for two weeks solid.

    Also Rex today: “There's something about a JKQXZ fetish that can start to feel excessive”.

    Rex yesterday: “REVERSE ENGINEER is a fine phrase, but with all those common letters, it's actually boring as hell to my eye”.

    Make sure you get your rare letter/common letter juuuuuuust right.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @kitshef, POPTAB is strictly artistic license but today's it was earned.

      Delete
    2. DAVinHOP9:16 AM

      Like kitshef, I had POP top, stalked, shush and Louise.

      I do know/have used a LAValier mic, and for 13D, having ARE at the end I tried a W, thinking "key changes" referred to software updates.

      Pretty good for a Saturday and also for the Big Scrabble Value letters not ruining things. Rex is generally not a fan, but I anticipated he would "allow it" here. So I predicted 3-1/2 stars, and happily was right "on the button" (been watching a lot of Olympic curling). 🥌





      Delete
    3. I completely agree that it's "POP top" So does Jimmy Buffett

      Delete
  9. Danny7:26 AM

    I’m fairly certain sure there isn’t a rule somewhere that that says the point of writing a crossword is “trying to get the best and most interesting fill into the grid.”

    Crosswords can be constructed with lots of aims in mind. I thought today’s offering was a great balance.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree! I was a few seconds slower than my average, which includes me figuring out how to do Saturdays, so this felt a bit constipated for me. I stepped away to get fresh eyes and had a much whooshier experience when I returned. It was nice after yesterday's breeze to feel some struggle but also be able to keep moving forward, then a whooshiness once something cracked open the quadrant.

      Delete
  10. 26 minutes for me this morning, so I vote for medium challenging. And I think it's been.... a WEEK since the last starwars clue???? I'm almost ready for one. We did have Star Trek today, so that was.... a close scrape. But just because of word and genre adjacency. I didn't know KHAN as clued, had no idea what company new ERA was, didn't think of ROLL--OVER until later. so I left the NW pretty quickly. First answer in the grid was SIN. After that I think I got NOFUN put put in NomE instead of NICE (conveniently overlooked the "European" in that clue).... drifted down to the SW where VESPA got me started down there. I'd much rather experience an italian scooter than a hornet, but .... Got ROCKBOTTOM right away and so was able to really get going in the SE. gradually then pieced together the puzzle and ended back in the NW. Puzzled what MET____ was going to be for a while before METHANE came into my mind. I just don't usually measure gasses in pounds, you know? TIL Abigail's DIL's name... LOUISA. Nice. Thanks, Josh, for a truly Saturday-worthy grid!!! : )

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:29 PM

      8 days without Star Wars!

      Delete
  11. I thought this was extremely tough, even by Saturday standards. The word play for BLANK STARE zoomed about thirty thousand feet over my head, and as far as genres are concerned. I still don’t understand how Joan Jett cannot be rock and roll, so I have no chance at getting a sub-genre of science fiction.

    The SE at least played like a self-contained mini-puzzle with STARTER KITS, EPOCHS, TEXMEX, FOXY, etc all lending a sense of normalcy to that section.

    The “mess with my head” situation for today will be trying to get my brain wrapped around how one goes about weighing the amount of METHANE produced by a cow in a year. Do you collect it in a giant balloon, then freeze it and weigh it? Am I confusing mass with weight ? Any physical chemists in the crowd? Unfortunately, I never earned the right to own one of those “Honk if you passed P-Chem” bumper stickers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. After further contemplation, METHANE is a carbon compound, so it would fall under the umbrella of Organic Chemistry. Do those GENRES overlap? I suspect I’m hopelessly adrift here.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:40 PM

      To calculate the weight of methane produced you determine how much food a cow consumes, how many moles of methane are produced by that food, and then its mass and weight from that. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas that’s a contributing factor to climate change (although not nearly as important as the carbon dioxide produced by fossil fuels) so scientists are keen to understand it. Does that help?

      Delete
    3. @anon - yes, that makes sense. Start with a small but significant sample size and scale it up. I assume that once you know the volume/mass it is easy to calculate the weight at whatever the force of gravity is at sea level.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous1:51 PM

      That's right, although I got a kick out of the idea of scientists attaching balloons to the backs of cows!

      Delete
  12. MYSTERY BOXes are a thing. I've walked past a Mystery Box store (albeit in Germany, though a quick Google search suggests you can find them stateside). It was literally just shelves and stacks of boxes with question marks on the side.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:08 AM

      Yes! Mystery Boxes are also all over youtube influencers - Mr Beast etc. If you have kids 10-16, they are all the rage.

      Delete
  13. In previous constructors’ notes, Josh focuses on changes he made in drafts to improve his puzzles. He’s not a “This is good enough” type of puzzle maker, rather, he sets a high bar and sticks to it.

    Look at today’s puzzle, so polished in answer and clue.

    I’d like to think he didn’t succumb to making this a pangram, by changing LAV to LAW (the puzzle is only missing a W), as that would have made a wince-worthy cross – OWER. I’d like to think he decided to opt for solver experience over pangram glory.

    A lovely crop of vague clues today, making many answers un-slap-downable. Clues like [Campaign leader, informally], [Certain slip-on], and others.

    This engages the brain like a playground engages the body.

    There's also feel-good. Wordplay such as [Free spirits?] for EXORCISE, and beauty in answers such as BLANK STARE, TACIT, EXOTICA, EXHILARATE, AMBLE, and IRONCLAD.

    Just a prime Saturday by a talent who puts in the work. Thank you for a splendid outing, Josh.

    ReplyDelete
  14. MYSTERY BOXes have been a major thing for many years. They're sold in major retail chains, there are vending machines, and my local indie bookstore even sells mystery book boxes. In what I thought was a relatively difficult Saturday, that was one of the few longer answers I got instantly.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:32 AM

      There’s also the related BLIND BAG, for smaller items.

      Delete
  15. Hey All !
    Haven't heard of the BODY HORROR genre vis-a-vis movies like The Fly. 8 suppose it is, but just HORROR in general sums it up nicely.

    The NW my downfall. Just couldn't see ADEXEC or TACIT as clued. Had PIc for PIX, NtS for NYS (National Transportation [System?]), which left me A_ECE_ for 3D, and BO_THORROR for 15A. Did manage to get either LOUISA or LOUISe (was leaning towards the A). Finally broke down and Googed ADEXEC.

    Pangram, obvs. Wait! I don't see any W's! That's weird. It's actually almost a Double-Gram, but only one J, one Z, and obviously no W's.

    Didn't ZIP through today. Proper tough SatPuz here. A lot of X's, 6.

    That's about it from me. Have a great Saturday!

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  16. EasyEd8:45 AM

    BLANKSTARE pretty well describes my reaction to getting started on this puzzle. For a what seemed forever, despite being a Star Trek fan, I could not remember KHAN even tho I could picture the entire episode in which he was introduced. Too many proper names in this one for me to ZIP through, but it was fun to untangle clues like the one leading to METHANE that led me to recall Mad Max movies.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Andy Freude12:56 PM

      Ricardo Montalban as KHAN is seared in my memory from the experience of watching that movie on VHS with my kids when they were much too young. Bad judgment on my part. Nightmares ensued. I experienced the wrath of Mrs. Freude.

      Delete
  17. Anonymous8:50 AM

    I liked this one. Flew through the NE-SE-SW but struggled when I came back to the NW. Just couldn't get my head around the BBQPIT / QUESADILLA crossing, LOUISA was no help to me, and I avoid social media so the Insta clue was useless. Finally made it through, so thanks for the challenge!

    ReplyDelete
  18. I don't know,, I thought all the Scrabbly letters were fun and constituted a mini theme. Got my start in the bottom with REM leading to MAYSTERY something and solved counter-clockwise, making steady progress. Only real WTF was REID
    Today's coup was knowing LAValier from somewhere, which proved helpful.

    I thought your Saturday was a snooze fest JK. Just Kidding, I really enjoyed it. Thanks for all the fun.

    To my Canadian blog mates and fellow hockey fans--tomorrow is the big one and I have a singing engagement so will have to record it. I know you out west would have to get up way early to watch it live so maybe you're recording too. Anyway, lets hope for a great game that's not too chippy and doesn't get decided by some fluke goal. Good luck to everyone.


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:32 AM

      6 to 3. canada.

      Delete
    2. DAVinHOP10:36 AM

      "Hope for a great game"...agree.

      "Not too chippy"...um, we're talking about a team with the Tkachuk thugs, I mean brothers, so good luck w that.

      The one that plays for Florida (yes, non hockey fans, there's a NHL team from FL...two in fact) already visited the White House to present Dear Leader with a memento from their championship win. Disgusting.

      So Americans rooting for USA in the gold medal game are in effect hoping for a reprise of that sycophancy.

      Assuming that the US Women's gold medal win over Canada doesn't come with the same aftereffect, as I can't imagine that team caring to be in the same space as him, and vice versa.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous1:02 PM

      What on earth are you talking about??

      Delete
    4. FWIW. I am no fan of either of the Tkachuk brothers or their tactics and wish the NHL would do away with fighting. The Olympics seems to be just fine without it. Nor am I in any way supportive of the abomination occupying the White House or any tributes to him. I'm just hoping for a great game with "no shenanigans" as the announcers are fond of saying.

      Delete
    5. @pabloinnh. Canadian blog mate here and, of course, fellow hockey fan. I'm torn; I'm on the far west coast and wonder should I record it - it airs at 5 am and I don't usually open my eyes until about 7 - and then avoid all radio and internet for most of the morning, or should I just bite the bullet and crawl out of bed at game time. And, yes, it probably will get chippy. You have the Tkachuk brothers and we have Tom Wilson and Sam Bennett.

      The 2 best teams in the world. It should be fun.

      Delete
    6. @Pablo & @Les, I record most sports, so I've just gotten used to avoiding the news until I watch it. But half the time I hear a spoiler somewhere... especially for golf, where I record the Saturday and Sunday rounds, which is like 10 hours long which takes me several days to watch. So I've also kinda gotten used to knowing who wins beforehand... and it's not that bad.

      Delete
    7. DAVinHOP8:39 PM

      Les, you are correct about "your" two (Bennett and Wilson). From a game standpoint, they balance the goonery factor of the Tkachuks, since you didn't include long time agitator Brad Marchand (Bruins fan here).

      But fast forwarding to the potential WH photo op (DT needs all the distractions he can get these days), I'm rooting for Canada (which will obviously impact the result haha). Next week, back to "Go Bruins!".

      Further hijacking a crossword blog for sports talk, we rarely watch sports live anymore; waaaaay too many, mind-numbing commercials. If being unspoiled is critical for enjoyment, to me it's worth the news blackout.

      Delete
  19. Sorry, but you need to untap the sign for LAV. Too bad you didn’t know it, but I’d much rather think about audio and film production that the other kind of LAV production…

    I was also looking for some kind of government agency for the Erie Canal, not just the state of New York.

    Also embarrassed to note that ARLENE was in the old noodle somewhere, slightly more so than LOUISA. I wanted some form of ABIGAIL, but that’s the wrong ADAMS, (as was our last mayor, hehe).

    NW was the last to fall for me despite having the ends of all the longs. Couldn’t get past cigarette smoking locations (veranda?), didn’t know LOUISA, AD campaign instead of political, and coming from the other direction was the number EIGHT, which I couldn’t see (wanted LIGHT, imagining the beautiful red lanterns at doorways).

    I had HORROR, but couldn’t figure out which kind of 4 letter horror it was until my d’oh moment: The Substance could have been a more timely clue. This movie was marketed as a meditation on aging and the unfair focus on beauty in the public industries, so my wife (who can’t do horror) wanted to see it - of course it turned into straight up gory blood spattering by the end…

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous9:29 AM

    Rex—- lav has bewildered you in previous puzzles. Suprised it didn’t take.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:47 AM

      As the write-up says, this is the first time LAV has been clued this way

      Delete
    2. Anonymous11:07 AM

      Shocking no one with film or video production has chined in. Lav is common. In fact, even if you’re not employed as a filmaket /shooter/soundman, if you’ve ever been filmed for a sit down interview, like as not someone had said lets get a lav on you.

      Delete
  21. I wanted poker face for the first across and when that was too short I stubbornly kept the face part in. I thought the clueing was off today. Grit is not exclusive to greatest; crappy athletes can show grit. If you undid something I guess its ruined, but those don't seem to fit. People command dogs to roll over? Ok, sure. I enjoyed the puzzle but multiple answers I solved based on inferring from the surrounding letters, not the clues provided.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Dan.Yes, people command dogs to roll over but the clue asks for basic instruction. Come, Sit. Stay. Heel, Off (when you have a dog that likes to greet people by jumping up), Leave it (if your dog is inclined to investigate every every smelly piece of crap on the street) - these are basic. ROLL OVER is a "trick" command. It's useful insofar as it keeps your dog's mind engaged, but it's not really basic.

      Delete
    2. Dan
      About your criticism of GRIT
      The clue for GRIT did not specify that the thing in question was only for great athletes. Crosswords do this all the time. The fact that most athletes have grit is irrelevant. Do great athletes have grit? Of course they do. Nothing off about this clue or answer

      Delete
  22. This one defeated me. I don't allow myself lookups for the NYT, but I gave in and looked up rachel REID, where the chakras are, the Phoenix Mercury, ARLENE, and what you talk about on Yon Kippur. There may have been more. I tried to look up "The Fisherman and his Flute," but didn't get any hits to those words--there were some for a Vietnamese folk tale, which may or may not be a version of the same story. I needed the SOP to see AESOP.

    I think I might have worked out all, or at least most of these if I had not committed to swamp GAS for H2S. Crossing that answer with METHANE was a nice touch.

    As for genres and subgenres, BODY HORROR is pretty good, but not as good as"gay-themed ice hockey romance novels."

    I got LAV from crosses without noticing, but once I saw it I knew what it stood for. I think at one point in my youth there was a thing where a couple would become "lavaliered" as a step up from going steady, but it didn't involve microphones.

    My favorite wine maker has a sale every year where they cut a lot of prices, but also offer a MYSTERY BOX--12 bottles of wine, usually a mix of their own products and bottles they have purchased. I always look forward to it.

    Looking back at it, I think it was a pretty good puzzle; too much trivia, but a loot of answers that I should have seen but just didn't.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Would that be NAKED wines? I think it is a mystery case…

      Delete
  23. Tranquilo tú.

    Much more challenging for me today. I wiped out on chakra, so I read the Wikipedia entry, and let me summarize it for you. Chakra: Gobbledegook. I am reasonably sure the clue assumes some white-girl yoga class chakra-ism because "third primary chakra" seems oddly specific and check-listy and out of character with the mayhem chakra seems to have engendered over the decades and in various practices and several regions. Of course the puzzle needed the rather pedestrian level gobbledegook NAVEL and once I wrote that in the chi of my yin and yang rebalanced my SINS (no idea what happens on Yom Kippur but I figured listening to heavy metal from the 80s was wrong) were forgiven.

    Right side of the puzzle dropped in gormlessly easy. {Thesaurus obviously.} But the left side was bratty. What the heck does being great have to do with GRIT? Complete buffoons play with GRIT too. GRIT is not a skill-based quality. I use grit every day to read the comments here all the way to the bottom patiently waiting for @Hugh and @CDilly52 to save the blog. Some days it takes a lotta grit and some days it's buffoonishly easy. Great athletes' GRIT. Bah. You spend one day trying to unpack an @egsforbreakfast comment and you'll know GRIT.

    You're staring at NICE and clue it via the Bay of Angels and then maybe you see why I include places as gunk. First order geographic trivia there.

    Whoever decided we'd call it BODY HORROR was a horror-able person. Aren't those just BUG MOVIES?

    Architects use computers. Architects OF YORE used T-squares. I also thought the question mark itself was on its side on the side of a MYSTERY BOX. It is not.

    I like QUESADILLAS. In Napoleon Dynamite they pronounce the L's. It's first class comedy.

    ❤️ Right, right, right. Free spirits.

    😩 UNDID.

    People: 6
    Places: 1
    Products: 4
    Partials: 7
    Foreignisms: 0 {whaaa?}
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 72 (25%)

    Funny Factor: 3 😐

    Tee-Hee: EXOTICA METHANE DOPE.

    Uniclues:

    1 What happens when you ask 99.99% of Americans where the Bay of Angels is.
    2 What your dental hygienist is dealing with.
    3 Eatin' stick for Yankees.
    4 Line from a Sixth Sense adjacent film about making babies in the rain.
    5 What many great architects play with.
    6 When you do the Hustle(s).
    7 Purpose of Red Bull.
    8 An apparently abandoned Chevrolet on fire west of Albuquerque.
    9 Literally everything emitting from his mouth.
    10 Really smart contestants open to eating a dead rabbit after the meet.
    11 What my belly was in the '90s.
    12 That time before Jeff Bezos ruined everything when old folks would walk the mall.
    13 What might have helped us avoid listening to Margaritaville for the last five decades.
    14 What Colorado bears prefer.

    1 NICE BLANK STARE (~)
    2 ORAL BODY HORROR (~)
    3 QUESADILLA FORK
    4 I SEE SIN PONCHO
    5 T-SQUARE GRIT (~)
    6 ROCK BOTTOM JIGS (~)
    7 EXHILARATE ASAP (~)
    8 MESA MYSTERY BOX
    9 AD EXEC TOXIC GAS
    10 FOXY TRIVIA TEAM
    11 ROLL STARTER KIT
    12 AMBLE POSSE ERA (~)
    13 IRON CLAD POP TAB
    14 ELK OVER TEX-MEX

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: How you build sandcastles in the sky. OUTERSPACE PAIL.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Two thumbs up to everything (comments and uniclues) today!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:04 PM

      OMG LOL Thanks for that. I got skunked in the NW. It was a blank slate.

      Delete
  24. I'm going to add TRAILED to our series of popping in an extra letter to make something fit. If you followed someone surreptitiously, you "tailed" them. Nothing surreptitious about trailing, whether it's trailing behind or following a trail.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous9:50 AM

    What a lovably dorky Men Without Hats video. It’s always great to pop back to the 80s!

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  26. Terrific Saturday solve. It's rare to feature so many high value letters and combine it with above average resistance. I almost completely whiffed on my initial pass through the NW. ROLL and SIN were the only answers I felt sure of. KNOWITALLS has the same number of letters as TRIVIATEAM and it also confirms SIN.

    ELK got things started in the NE. NOFUN settled the ORAL/ANAL issue. OVER fixed my PENCAP/PONCHO write over. When I returned to the NW ROLL changed LIVER into NAVEL.

    LAV was the biggest outlier today. It's a debut form of cluing for this otherwise common bit of fill. I've never heard of the term "lavalier" so I needed every cross. SHARE was the only thing that made sense and I thought it was referencing one of those partner swapping games like in "The Ice Storm" movie.

    My ESCAPEES/EXORCISE write over caused me to take out EXOTICA. It wound up going right back in.

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  27. Anonymous10:08 AM

    This is the first time I’m hearing that some solvers don’t like the Scrabbly letters like J,K,,Q,Z. Why is that? I think they make the puzzle pop. What am I missing?

    ReplyDelete
  28. Garfield is a newspaper cartoon, isn't it? Therefore black and white. Maybe it gets licensed to be in ads for things? That might turn ARLENE pink.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She's pink in the Sunday comics, which around here are still in color (and have Doonesbury!)

      Delete
  29. If youve been watching The Pitt (which I would highly recommend) you've seen plenty of BODYHORROR this season.

    I think I'll start showing my erudition by saying, "Excuse me but if I don't find the clip-on mic I'm going to urinate in my trousers."

    I found this to be very tough at first, then a few whooshes plus a WHIRR or two made it an overall joy. Thanks, Josh Knapp.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And there’s the scene in NAKED GUN where he wears the LAV to the LAV;)

      Delete
  30. Uniclue options:

    Minnie has a super cool legume
    DRIVER PEA DOPE
    Consequence of dancing in a tiny Irish boat
    JIGS ROCK BOTTOM
    Paper and pot
    ROLL STARTER KIT

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Tom T 10:17 AM
      There it is. I had a chauffeur taking a legume to a pharmacy before I decided I just wasn't taking things seriously. NICE job Tom.

      Delete
  31. Lav is short for lavalier microphone

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  32. Needed several cheats to finish this "easy medium"(??) puzzle. My fault, because I couldn't transfer the familiar "exorcism" into the less familiar EXORCISE and didn't know BODYHORROR or CARSHARE. The constructor did an impressive job of using Qs and Xs.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Nothing like falling asleep with your phone in your hand while doing the puzzle to really mess up your average time. A solid five and a half hours for me today! )c:=

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 5 1/2 hours is either a really long nap or unfortunately short night of sleep

      Delete
    2. @Chuck 10:28 AM
      🤓 I too have many multi-hour solves. They help you feel smart because beating your average time is pretty easy.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous2:25 AM

      Ditto!

      Delete
  34. For me, a good old-fashioned challenging Saturday puzzle. Tough to get many early footholds and even then, had to really piece it together bit by bit due to tricky/vague cluing. Enjoyed! Inapt (incorrect?) clue for LOX, though.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Medium-Hard, plenty of BLANK STAREs in some spots. A proper, enjoyable Sat.

    Had plenty of Garfield books and watched the cartoon, back when Saturday morning cartoons were a thing. I never liked how ARLENE looked. Looking it up again now, she definitely looks "weird." I'll leave it at that.

    6D SODAS reminds me of a 1995 NYT from the archives. "Hot, dry Arabian wind" (SIMOOM) crossing "Faceup cards in faro" (SODAS). What a d*** clue. Constructor: Bob KLAAAAHN!

    The Vancouver 2010 hockey final was such a heartbreaker for the US, but it was nice to see Canada win on their own soil. Hoping to see an equally exciting game tomorrow. GL to both teams!

    ReplyDelete
  36. What I would say to anyone complaining this puzzle was ______ingly easy: “Okay now you’re just showing off.”

    Challenging for me from start to finish. After a couple of run-throughs, I abandoned any hope of a cheat-free solve and looked up a couple of names. After all, why prolong the torture? The hardest section for me was the northwest where I had mostly blank space. But looking up LOUISA and KHAN was enough to get me started. So while the names did give me trouble, that’s not what this made made this puzzle difficult. For the most part, it was very good tough clueing which resulted in a most satisfactory Saturday experience.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Just a skosh tougher than medium for me.

    I did not know REID, EIGHT, NICE (as clued), and PHX

    Costly erasures - canY before FOXY and dms before PIX, plus I’m never sure about spelling KHAN.

    Quite a bit of sparkle with no junk and some welcome crunch, liked it a bunch!!

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  38. Canal. In the 1820s, when it was constructed, there was an obvious need for cheap freight transportation from the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes; but there was also a pretty universal belief that the Constitution made "public improvements" a strictly state function. As a result, any projects involving more than one state required intricate negotiations. NYS had the great advantage of a feasible canal route lying entirely within the state, and it was a rich enough state that the expense was not insurmountable. (There was some reason Pennsylvania couldn't do it more easily -- there may have been too many mountains.) So it got built, and New York City became the center of the national economy. Eventually the idea that the federal government could provide grants to the states caught on, but it took a few decades.

    ReplyDelete
  39. That was fun! Starting out, I was stymied right and left in the top half, after getting only KHAN, SODAS, and SIN. I finally found my entry in the SW at METHANE x TOXIC GAS, with LUMET providing the bridge into the other corner. From there it was a slow and very enjoyable climb to the top. I especially liked the clues for EXORCISE and TACIT and the cross of IRONCLAD with ASUNDER.

    ReplyDelete
  40. DavidCT11:37 AM

    I had mostly the same troubles as Rex. My first entry for the overseer of the Erie Canal was one I haven't seen posted by anyone else: DWC. I was thinking of the building of the Erie Canal, which was at least championed (but maybe not "overseen") by former governor DeWitt Clinton. Oops.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous11:41 AM

    Do even die hard MLB fans know who makes the cap!?! Finally had to look it up to crack the NW corner. There are about a hundred preferable other clues for ERA.
    On the other hand , as a retired TV producer LAV popped right in. So… wheelhouses.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. New Era should be well-known to baseball fans, IMO. I prefer caps by 47 myself, but New Era is big.

      Delete
  42. walrus12:36 PM

    as i was nearing completion i thought "this could have been a fine friday" and then i hit the not-a-thing POPTAB which refocused me on the over abundance of QXZ; generic clunkiness of TRIVIATEAM; inaccurate CARSHARE clue; and questionable LOX clue. i'm only aware of sour cream, crème fraiche, chives, and/or applesauce, so i'm hoping to hear if LOX on _latkes_ is an actual thing. in the meantime i need to have breakfast.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Just the right level of challenging for a Saturday; 30 minutes but finished clean. It was a sloowww start; I think KHAN was my first entry. Several Unknown Names to make it even harder: LOUISA ARLENE ERA REID PHX.

    I was quite embarrassed at 34 across "Architect's tool"... I was one for years (an architect, not a tool) but drew a total blank for ages. When I realized it was T SQUARE I thought: jeez, I even used one in architecture school! Of course, in the working world we had parallel rules or drafting machines, and then 3 years after graduating, I was on the computer for good. 35 years ago!

    I think I'll mention that METHANE is basically natural gas... the stuff that comes into my house underground. Butane and propane are similar fuels that usually come as liquids in pressurized tanks.

    ReplyDelete
  44. I bogged down in the northwest, because of BODY (HORROR). And I didn’t see AD campaign! I thought Adams was Abigail. Tried IMs instead of PIX. Also I guessed that maybe the National Park Service oversaw the Erie Canal. I know of the canal because of a mule named Sal, so whether it still exists or is in use for shipping or boating is a MYSTERY BOX to open later. At the moment it's both and neither.
    I think of TACIT as understood without needing mention, rather than a subtle hint, so I didn’t fill that in until I had no other choice.

    The scrabbly letters eased the solve, providing guidance - when in doubt what answer to fill in, try the word with rarer letters.

    ReplyDelete
  45. [1] SatPuzs without The Jaws of Themelessness.
    But there was a bit of a puztheme today, I reckon: The X Fills.

    No pangrammer? Coulda had it, if 11-Down had been NOWIN, btw. But that woulda sacrificed a precious U and a Roo-precious F, sooo ... ok, as is. Best not to exorcise the good stuff.

    staff weeject pix: LOX, PHX, & PIX. Gives a whole new meanin to EX-OTICA.

    fave stuff, from a mountain of pretty neat fillins: BLANKSTARE. QUESADILLA. METHANE/TOXICGAS. IRONCLAD. STARTERKIT. ROCKBOTTOM. EXHILARATE. ASUNDER. EXORCISE & clue. POPQUIZ clue. And coulda kept goin ...

    Also found BODYHORROR interestin, even tho this Friday SchlockFlickFest dude has never heard of that term before. Definitely superb schlock flicks in its clue, too boot.

    Thanx for the rare More-X-than-U puz, Mr. Knapp dude. [snort]

    Masked & Anonymo5Us6Xs

    ReplyDelete
  46. You know you've hit Rock Bottom when all you need is Dubya

    ReplyDelete
  47. Anonymous1:26 PM

    Lox on latkes is a thing. But in those circles where it's served it's referred to as smoked salmon on potato pancake.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So, I'm not Jewish and latkes are not a regular part of my diet, but I have had them. Then I read @Anon 9:51 and thought maybe I shouldn't be eating them at all because they make them sound exclusively Jewish and imply that there are rules to eating them. But @Anon 9:02 am's comment talks about it as a party treat with sour cream, dill, and capers. Sounds delicious. And your comment sort of backs this up, so now I don't feel so bad. Except I'd probably use creme fraiche.

      Delete
  48. I'm glad the "slip-on" didn't turn out to be ice.

    ReplyDelete
  49. From what I gather, Arlene is one of those cartoon characters that stirred confusing feelings in young 'uns in the 80s & 90s, similar to Disney's Robin Hood :D She seems to come up a lot in GenX/Xennial discourse.

    ReplyDelete
  50. I'm firmly in the poptop/pulltab camp; rolled my eyes at POPTAB (and also LOX). I'm pretty sure I still own a T-SQUARE but I haven't used or even seen it in decades. Just too much trivia and too many questionable clue/answer combos for me today. I unashamedly googled for REID to wrap this one up and get on with my Saturday.

    ReplyDelete
  51. TIL I learned OSLO as a Garfield character - I grudgingly read Garfield comics daily and could easily come up with Liz, Irma and Nermal but OSLO I do not recall seeing. Can I ever remember a Garfield comic making me laugh? I cannot.

    Yes, a Saturday NYTimes puzzle that had a bit of zing, FUN! The east side of the puzzle gave me some trouble - I certainly considered Rex's thought of POtatO for 25A and POP Top and "sue me" down in the SE created some issues.

    Overall, I liked it a lot, thanks Josh Knapp!

    ReplyDelete
  52. A fun Saturday. Made me work a bit but, strangely, mostly in the short stuff like LAV. Never heard this before. Looked it up post solve and discovered Americans tend to pronounce it lava-leer instead of la-vali-ay. JIGS, MESA, the anAL/ORAL thing all took a bit of time.

    The MYSTERY BOX thing was a mystery to me. Seriously? You'd fork ove cash for something you have no idea about? @jberg's comment awbout buying a mystery box of wine made soe sense to me because you are buying a box from a vintner you trust and that vintner may throw in a few interesting extras but to enter a shop with boxes labelled with question marks??? No thanks.

    Lastly, what is this thing with Scrabble? I don't dislike the game. I play it occasionally. But I like setting down long, luscious words only to get destroyed by severe tacticians who plop down a 3 or 4 letter crossing word with a Q, Z, or X in it. So, fine, That's Scrabble; this is a crossword. There are no high point letters. There are words, and *clued* words, at that. At least the Scrabbleist nature of this one didn't destroy it value as a crossword. Nicely done, Josh Knapp.

    And f**k pangrams. They just ruin good puzzles.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Anonymous4:15 PM

    Hard for me!! TIL EIGHT, LOUISA BODYHORROR, TSQUARE and LAV as a microphone! I had to look up LOUISA BODY and TSQUARE. SW first then SE — the NE was brutal. This is an excellent puzzle thank you

    ReplyDelete
  54. Fun fact: before he started Garfield, Jim Davis did a comic strip in which the main character was a gnat.

    ReplyDelete
  55. More challenging in spots than a host of recent Saturdays, and I love for a challenging Saturday.

    I thought a few clues were a bit sketchy rather than being the “oh wow” I like to see in a tough puzzle. Implied, for example would have been better for TACIT, but fine. The really weird ones for me were clues for CCED and UNDID.

    Even after getting it, I have trouble thinking of CCED as part of an”chain.” Could be one of those age factors. In the eons before texting, the only common “chain” communications were chain letters, which were extremely annoying and I never participated. Soon as I had the CC though, no more confusion.

    Following my post-completion review, I still have a big disconnect between “ruined” and UNDID. I keep trying to make it work, and just can’t get there. “That just UNDID me” is an expression, but to me being undone it is a far cry from ruination. At least to me. Fortunately, with T SQUARE, ASUNDER (I love that word!) ZIP IT and DOPE already in, no way the odd clue UNDID me. See? Awkward to use and a far cry from being ruined. For me it’s the degree of difficulty being described that doesn’t work. If something UNDID me, the very word implies I can redo it, so I’m not ruined. Enough already, I’m ready for my latkes and LOX, lots of sour cream and chives please.

    So, I’m being nit picky because this was the best Saturday in quite a while. Lots to love starting with (as @Rex mentioned) the humor in the NW. After my all night BODY HORROR binge, I looked at my QUESADILLA with a BLANK STARE, not quite ready for the pool of blood-like salsa on the plate. I decided to stare in the direction of my NAVEL instead.

    Starting wIth ZIP IT, the SE allowed me to get my whoosh on. It signaled the end of my enjoyable solve. Not only did I avoid hitting ROCK BOTTOM, I had a MYSTERY BOX to further EXHILARATE me!



    ReplyDelete
  56. Alice Slater4:56 PM

    I’ve never ever seen or eaten lox on a latke! Sometimes served with applesauce but never lox!

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous4:59 PM

    How do i cimmentt

    ReplyDelete
  58. Thank you for doing the leg work on LAV.

    ReplyDelete
  59. Don Byas8:11 PM

    13D: Many key changes take place in it: YOU'RE THE INSPIRATION by Chicago, this 80's hit is weirder than you think, listen to it again! Go to YOUTUBE
    "Larry Goldings Breaks Down Iconic Pop Song Modulations" start at 3:30 for You're the inspiration. pretty bizarre!

    ReplyDelete