Coinage of the early 2000s? / FRI 2-27-26 / Adjoining, in a way / Illuminating point / Car requirement beginning in 1998 / Pantheon feature / Heroine in the "Fifty Shades of Grey" books / Travel safety grp. at school / Jeans material for a worn-out look

Friday, February 27, 2026

Constructor: Caroline Hand

Relative difficulty: Medium

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: DEBI Mazar (36D: Actress Mazar) —

Debi Mazar Corcos (/ˈmzɑːr/; born August 13, 1964) is an American actress and television personality. She began her career with supporting roles in Goodfellas (1990), Little Man Tate (1991), Singles (1992), and Batman Forever (1995), followed by lead roles on the legal drama series Civil Wars (1991-1993) and L.A. Law (1993-1994). She portrayed press agent Shauna Roberts on the HBO series Entourage. She starred as Maggie Amato on TV Land's Younger, and alongside her husband Gabriele Corcos in the Cooking Channel series Extra Virgin. [...] 

In the early 1980s, Mazar was part of the downtown club scene in New York City, socializing with artists Jean-Michel BasquiatKeith Haring, and Kenny Scharf. // While working at Danceteria, Mazar met Madonna, who hired Mazar to do her makeup for her first music video "Everybody" (1982). She appeared in five of Madonna's music videos: "Papa Don't Preach" (1986), "True Blue" (1986), "Justify My Love" (1990), "Deeper and Deeper" (1992) and "Music" (2000). Mazar originated the hair and makeup for the 1988 play Speed-the-Plow. // As a teenager, Mazar was a b-girl in New York City. Her first television appearance was on the pilot for the hip-hop television dance show Graffiti Rock, in 1984. Her first major role was playing a character on Civil Wars in the early 1990s. When that series was cancelled her character was brought over as a recurring role between the 1993 and 1994 seasons of the TV drama L.A. Law. // Mazar has played a number of minor supporting roles in a variety of films, including Sandy, a friend of Henry Hill's mistress in Goodfellas (1990); The Doors (1991); a small role in Spike Lee's Malcolm X (1992); Bullets Over Broadway (1994); and as Spice (of Sugar and Spice, with Drew Barrymore as Sugar) in Batman Forever (1995). (wikipedia)
• • •

[Point of illumination?]
Really liked this one. Stacked 15s aren't always my favorite late-week grid feature—at least part of the stack tends to be weak, and the crosses can be rough. But I like every element in both stacks, and as for the crosses ... I dunno. They hold up OK. I think what I liked most about the puzzle was that it put up a real fight at first. That's because I attack stacks by coming at all the crosses first and then seeing what I can make out of the letters that I pick up. Today, when I attacked the crosses, I whiffed a lot. Like ... I went coast to coast with those Downs up top and by the end had only four, and only two I was sure of (LANKA, REMY). So I felt like I was in trouble. I had better luck with some of the short Acrosses just below the stack (URSA, KEY, TIC, SWAN). But it turned out that LANKA and REMY alone were enough for me to get the DENIM part of DISTRESSED DENIM, and from there I was able to build the back ends of the long Acrosses, which allowed me then to whooooosh back across the grid—once you've got DOLLAR, PALE ALE, and DENIM, their front ends aren't that hard to imagine. But some of those crosses were legitimately tough. EN SUITE! (8D: Adjoining, in a way). APERÇU! (9D: Illuminating point). Yipes! Adjoining (!) French answer. Never would've gotten those with considerable help from crosses. And I thought I was so clever when I read 9D: Illuminating point and, off just the "C," wrote in SCONCE! I was so proud of that answer. "Good clue!" I thought. But no. APERÇU. Not as fun, but accurate enough, I suppose (Def. 2: "An immediate impression / Insight"). I also had some trouble spelling SACAGAWEA (really thought that "G" was a "J") (1A: Coinage of the early 2000s?). Once I finally had that top part nailed into place, I felt like I'd worked for it, which felt satisfying. Also, the stack seemed worth the work.


The puzzle was much easier from then on. Swooped down the east coast, got the back ends of all the long Acrosses down below very easily (helped to have heard of DARIUS, 51A: ___ the Great, king of ancient Persia), and from their back ends, those stack answers are all very easy to pick up. Well, two of them were. I could see I was dealing with KANSAS and thought of MANHATTAN before ever looking at the clue, and while I thought that top long answer was going to be some kind of REFERENCE at first, one look at the clue and RUN INTERFERENCE was easy to see (54A: Create a distraction, so to speak). As for ANASTASIA STEELE, lol, no idea (57A: Heroine in the "Fifty Shades of Grey" books). When I say "lol" I mean I literally laughed out loud. That is such a florid name, such a perfect erotic romance novel heroine name. I've never read the books or seen the movies, but I was weirdly just thinking about 50 Shades earlier this week because I watched Mike Nichols's Working Girl (1988) for my Movie Club on Monday. That movie famously features Melanie Griffith in her breakout starring role. Griffith's mother was Tippi Hedren (of Marnie and The Birds fame), and her daughter is Dakota Johnson, of ... 50 Shades fame (of other fames as well, now, but initially, it was 50 Shades). Anyway, I fell down a bit of Melanie Griffith rabbit hole, which means that I was reading about her relatives, which is how I discovered that Dakota Johnson was the star of the 50 Shades movies (not something I knew before this week). Hey, you know who else was in 50 Shades movies (50 Shades: Darker and 50 Shades: Freed)?: Rita ORA! (29A: Rita on "The Masked Singer"). Fun fact! So I laughed at ANASTASIA STEELE 'cause it's kind of a cheesy name and I laughed at the coincidence of having just read about Dakota Johnson and 50 Shades earlier this week. And so a totally unknown-to-me pop culture name, the kind of thing that could've been irksome, didn't bother me at all. Good fortune.


The puzzle runs a little heavy on partials—fill-in-the-blank stuff, stuff that makes no real sense on its own. MAUNA LANKA CARTA! That's a hell of a partial trio. There's also CUL and RUH (not great) and not one but two Chinese menu fragments (PAO, TSO'S). But this uglier shorter stuff largely stays inconspicuous and holds together some good-to-great medium and longer fill. OLD AS DIRT! (wanted OLD AS THE HILLS or—more likely, since it fit in the space allotted—OLD AS TIME) (11D: Antediluvian). DEAR SANTA ... BASSLINES! (32D: Funk music features). Love a puzzle with a good bass line. BRAISES (41A: Prepares, as coq au vin) and KINDEST (35A: "___ regards ..." (letter sign-off)) and ROTUNDA (27A: Pantheon feature), all solid mid-sized answers through the middle. The puzzle is very sturdy. Thumbs up. 

[funky BASSLINE(S)]

Bullets:
  • 1D: Travel safety grp. at school (S.A.D.D.) — "Travel safety" absolutely threw me for a loop in the S.A.D.D. clue, even though it shouldn't have (S.A.D.D. stands for "Students Against Drunk Driving," although that second "D" might also stand for "Distracted" these days ... oh, no, now it's "Students Against Destructive Decisions." So it's not even travel-specific any more. Time to change the cluing!). "Travel safety" just sounded like something to do with remaining safe while traveling ... like, on a bus or plane or whatever. The "Drunk Driving" context never entered my head. This clue isn't much different from other S.A.D.D. clues, so I should've seen right through it. Shrug. Sometimes your (my) brain just glitches.
  • 23A: Bird that Zeus disguised himself as in a much-told Greek myth (SWAN) — kind of white-washing the whole gods-raping-mortals context here. So many ways to come at SWAN, not sure this would be my top choice.
  • 31A: Car requirement beginning in 1998 (AIR BAG) — do they not require more than one? Feels weird to say that only a single bag is required.
  • 39D: Neighborhood in New York City where Zohran Mamdani lived before being elected the city's mayor (ASTORIA)—first Mamdani reference (that I can remember) in the NYTXW. Expect many more once post-election puzzles finally make it through the pipeline. Both ZOHRAN and MAMDANI are gonna appear before year's end, for sure. Maybe we'll get the full name. You don't get unimpeachably famous new names every day, and also it's NYC, so Mamdani references in the NYTXW just make sense. This clue is just the beginning.
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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111 comments:

Carl 6:12 AM  

Liked it - in just about every way.

Loved OLD AS DIRT (perhaps the APERÇU of the puzzle)

Dreading the morning when I wake up to find the Crossword rebranded as the MAXI.

Conrad 6:21 AM  


I agree with @Rex!! Medium, decent Friday, enjoyed it.
* * * * _

Overwrites:
I guess ENSUIng could be a way of adjoining at 8D (EN SUITE)
nehi before DAD'S for the 10D soda from 1937
cOlUmns before ROTUNDA at 27A, wrong from the start because it was plural
deT(ective) before SGT for the NYPD rank at 40A
My 55d standoff conclusion was a TIE before it was ISH, confirmed as wrong when TIES showed up at 37D

WOEs:
APERCU (9D) was not part of my vocabulary until today. And it probably won't be tomorrow.
Actress DEBI Mazar at 36D

Rick Sacra 6:30 AM  

11:54 for me today, so that is definitely easy for a Friday. The big stacks definitely made it whooshy! Couldn’t get going up top initially, so the short stuff in the middle helped me get started. mARk before WART held me up… ROTUNDA, AIRBAG, KINDEST, TARTARE all gave me good footholds in the midsection. CARTA at 47 down was kind of a gimme, and that whole section fell pretty fast (DESK, TUREEN, UCLA). DARIUS confirmed that corner…. RUNINTERFERENCE is a great expression! Took me longer to see ANASASIA and MANAHATTAN. Then I had to come back up top…. Removing Tug at 22A finally let me see my way into the top (along with OLDASDIRT…. That clue (antideluvian) has been used before, so my archival reps got me some help there. Anyhoo—3 days now with no StarWars! Loved seeing famous MAUNA without even having to face the KEALOA challenge! Caroline, this was a bouncy fun Friday, and seemed to be right up my alley. Thanks : )

Rick Sacra 6:30 AM  

On another note…. Wondering what people think of the new “MIDI” puzzle???

Alistair Crowe 6:57 AM  

This was fun.

An ex giving me 50 Shades Of Grey to try opened up the bottom section of clues for me. I gave it a shot, and to be fair she gave House of Leaves a shot, but it didn't really click with me until it provided a shortcut to today's puzzle. Big fan of people reading though, so I can appreciate the book for that.

Anonymous 7:01 AM  

When I saw all those empty spaces, I knew it would be a good puzzle. I was right. It was 8 down.🎈🎈🎊🎊

Anonymous 7:02 AM  

Oops 6 down

REV 7:14 AM  

Loved it. So much tooth! Had TUG for TIC (jerk) which really threw me.
My only gripe is that *most* songs have BASS LINES. A (non-adjectival) bass line alone does not make it funky.

Lewis 7:17 AM  

I always love never-give-up backstories, so a success like this Friday themeless that’s well-liked (even by Rex Parker!), as a debut, after 20 years – 20 years! – of rejected submissions, well, that warms my heart and inspires my soul. Congratulations, Caroline!

This puzzle led me through food and drink, architecture, the arts, myth, sports, and more. It pinged beauty in shorter answers such as ARPERÇU, TUREEN, and ARTFUL, and longer ones such as RUN INTERFERENCE, DISTRESSED DENIM, and OLD AS DIRT.

It presented, for me, swooshy fill-in areas for the “Whee!”, as well as effortful ones for brain happification.

And some lovely serendipities. A PuzzPair© of DRAFTS and FAN. REEL to cap off two appearances of JIG this week. STRESSED in the third spanner – our language’s longest common-word semordnilap.

Simply a box lush with lovely. Thank you for making this, Caroline, and thank you for sticking to your vision.

Andy Freude 7:18 AM  

Right with the big guy today, from SACA(j/g)AWEA to that absurd heroine’s name, which sounds like a character on a 1980s prime-time soap opera. Falcon Crest, maybe. But I wasted time and effort trying to make acid-washed DENIM a thing. That was DISTRESSing. All in all, a fun Friday with lots of clever clueing and interesting answers!

Lewis 7:18 AM  

What a terrific week of puzzles so far! Today’s wide-ranging beauty, preceded by:

ROLE REVERSALS Monday, to
"e.g.," Tuesday, to
BREAK DANCES Wednesday, to
ROMAN NUMERALS Thursday

Thank you, constructors and NYT team!

Liveprof 7:22 AM  

Thought APERCU was a drink. Must be confusing it with aperitif. My Yiddish has gotten rusty.

Nice to see DRAFTS near that PALE ALE.

While my sister was still out from her CESAREAN, my brother-in-law named their twin girls ROTUNDA and TUREEN. I'll merge 11D and its cross at 31A and call him a DIRTBAG.

Son Volt 7:26 AM  

Nice end of the week puzzle. The wide open stacks are daunting to start - the crosses were fair and assisted nicely. It wasn’t until LANKA that the top stack fell.

I Feel Like Being A Sex Machine

SACAGAWEA brings back memories of scout camp. The Sierra Nevada green label has always been a go to for me - I especially like it on DRAFT. Loved RUN INTERFERENCE, DISTRESSED DENIM and OLD AS DIRT. Needed most of the crosses for ANASTASIA - I’ve seen the movies but really didn’t focus on the names. Learned MAUNA. APERÇU is a little harder to parse not seeing the cedilla.

Cry to Me

Highly enjoyable Friday morning solve.

It’s always KANSAS

Kent 7:26 AM  

Very enjoyable. Similar experience as Rex up top, with struggles to get a foothold. Thanks to LANKA and REMY I could guess pretty well at the end of the long acrosses — DOLLAR, DENIM and ALE. But it took a while to get the front end of those answers. I kept trying to make ACID WASHED or ACID RINSED (is that a thing?) work for DISTRESSED DENIM.

The bottom stack was much easier with the whoosh whoosh we like. RUN INTERFERENCE took just a couple of crosses, and MANHATTAN KANSAS is well known to me.

GTwelve 7:34 AM  

ACIDWASHEDdenim instead of DISTRESSEDdenim slowed me down in the NW.

Kurt 7:36 AM  

I don’t think I have ever seen, read, or heard the word “aperçu”…

SouthsideJohnny 7:39 AM  

A fun Friday. I had no clue about 1A (the coinage) so I started in the middle and carried that momentum into the bottom, then struggled a bit up north.

RUN INTERFERENCE and the DENIM answer were at least discernible. I needed lots of crosses for the three long propers (a literary character, a location and a brand name), but I held my own.

At least it was a tough, but fair excursion today. I’m not at all surprised that Rex gave it a pretty enthusiastic review.

RooMonster 7:41 AM  

Hey All !
Stack puzs are often difficult to near impossible. This one fell into the easily-figureoutable category. Did have trouble at SGT, however. Had DET in, making the Downs strange things. Erased TSOS, thinking that might be wrong, but still couldn't get the Downs. Tried ARes for ARGO, finally threw in the towel, and came here to view completed puz.

So a bald-faced cheat to complete. It happens.

Surprised Rex gave such a glowing review. I did like the puz, but Rex being Rex, it was unsuspecting.

Nice Stack Puz, good crossers, left a few brain cells intact! Can't ask for much more.

Have a great Friday!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

DAVinHOP 7:49 AM  

Thought 3-1/2 stars was a little light, but I guess all the partials got a mandatory 1/2 point deduction.

The six spanners were relatively easy with a few crosses in place, but all were great. And four 9-letter words running through, two each at the top and bottom. Brava!

Jeremy Driesen Photography 7:53 AM  

Agree about the bass lines, though I suppose you could argue that bass lines figure more prominently in funk. I'm not sure I agree with TIC meaning JERK. Sorta but not reallly?

Anonymous 7:54 AM  

Having recently been in Manhattan, KS...was nice to have a gimme 15

Todd 8:07 AM  

14.13 for me which is very quick for me on Friday. I was surprised Rex called it medium.

DAVinHOP 8:15 AM  

I only get the puzzles' back stories from participating here. Thank you, in this case Lewis, for providing it today.

Talk about resilience. Twenty years of rejection! Heart warming, yes. But I'm imagining a theme for a murder mystery or, better yet, a Perry Mason episode ("The Case of the Continuing Cruciverbalist"). Perry enlists the help of a crossword puzzle expert, Rex Sharp, who spots an irregularity in a clue's wording which cracks the case.

DeeJay 8:25 AM  

I resent it. The archived Crosswords puzzle link is obscured.

Bootsy Collins 8:29 AM  

A clue for BASSLINES doesn’t have to include every example of music with a bass line. The bass plays a prominent role in funk, so leads easily to the answer.

burtonkd 8:34 AM  

CHICAGOILLINOIS has the same number of letters as MANHATTANKANSAS. In terms of art, commerce and culture, it certainly qualifies as NYC adjacent, i.e. “second city”. Manhattan, KS merely shares the name of one of the five boroughs. Still works…

Great solving experience with the top and bottom providing resistance, but the relatively easy middle giving just enough of a foothold to solve.

David Grenier 8:35 AM  

I’ve never read 50 Shades of Gray nor seen the movies, so it kind of bothered me when after a few seconds ANASTASIA STEELE popped into my head. How do I know that? Were those books and films so much in the zeitgeist that I absorbed the names of the characters? (I know the dude is CHRISTIAN GRAY).

I confidently had WAIST as the tailors measurement, so even though I wanted SACAGAWEA DOLLAR for 1A, it didn’t fit and I refused to see my mistake for far too long.

Had a double DNF on the TSOS/TUREEN cross (I’m not classy enough to know my serving pieces) and the TIC/APERCU cross. I had TUG originally and never figured out what could replace it.

Loved the stacks. Agree both Rex, the downs (crosses) are going to suffer but I don’t think they got in the way. Great Friday puzzle.

Beezer 8:39 AM  

I have no interest in even opening that puzzle. It shall sit unused like much of the other filler junk they keep adding. I don’t even get why people do the mini.

burtonkd 8:45 AM  

Just noticed it today. Hopefully this can serve as a starter puzzle for people and return the main puzzle being more challenging.

Zero days without a Star Wars clue in the midi, lol.

Whatsername 8:48 AM  

Haven’t tried it yet. Looked at it and keep thinking I will, but that’s as far as I’ve gotten. So I’d like to hear what others think too.

Anonymous 8:52 AM  

APERÇU = 19 appearances is modern era, four in the 2020s. If you’ve been solving for any length of time, you’ve seen it.

Anonymous 8:53 AM  

4 stars from me. Well below my average time, so easy, but I have so much respect for putting in so many grid-spanners that aren't shoehorned-in phrases or have tons of bad abbreviations as crosses. Brava, Caroline!

Beezer 9:00 AM  

This was just a totally delightful puzzle! The top-half took most of my time because I was stuck on the concept of cryptocurrency for “coinage” (too short and post-solve found out 2009…not early) and after counting boxes confidently plopped in acidwashedDENIM (it fit!) so took a little time to sort out that fubar with crosses. The bottom half crunchy enough but much more whooshy while I patiently WAITED for the grid spanners to have enough to figure them out.

I keep forgetting that MANHATTANKANSAS had the gall (jk) to appropriate the nickname Little Apple. IMO that honor should go to Indian-APPLE-os or Minne-APPLE-los.

Whatsername 9:00 AM  

Yes I think those books/films probably were that prevalent for a few years.

egsforbreakfast 9:03 AM  

I once had to CARTA hundred QTS of raw steak to a hoity-toity party where I served it in little pieces. When I told people that they were sourISH, they asked, how TARTARE these?

Mrs. Egs to the kids: Go easy on him. DADS OLDASDIRT.

What did Jason say before the crew rowed off with the Golden Fleece? All systems ARGO.

I had a guy out to inspect my crawl space. He said there's so much ROTUNDA the house I might as well abandon it and let whoever has ALIEN on the place worry about it.

Having a UNSEAT doesn't mean much unless you're on the Security Council.

I liked this a lot. Congrats and thanks for the ARTFUL debut, Caroline Hand.

jberg 9:09 AM  

@Beezer, I started doing the mini because I used to do everything in the NYT. But then I started to expand to the New Yorker, American Values Club, Out of Left Field cryptics--and I didn't have time anymore. But I stuck with the mini because by now my wife was doing it too, so I tried doing it in my head, which was more of a challenge--it's just small enough that one can remember everything, usually. Now we've cancelled our home delivery, but I'm still doing it out of habit. I may quit, and am certainly not doing the midi.

Whatsername 9:11 AM  

Lovely, lovely Friday themeless. I rarely whoosh but I did come very close to it today. I loved OLD AS DIRT and seeing my former stomping grounds in KANSAS. Terrific grid-spanning stacks combined with smooth, polished clues and a reasonable amount of trivia. Not too easy, not too hard, no junk. Congratulations Caroline Hand, on a solid debut. Well done! And now that you’ve established yourself as an honest-to-goodness NYT constructor, hopefully we’ll see your name on a themed puzzle soon.

Wikipedia apparently doesn’t tell the full story about the role of DEBI in Goodfellas. While it’s true she did play “a friend of“ Henry Hill’s mistress, she then later became his mistress and was arrested as an accomplice in his cocaine operation. Although it was not depicted in the film, I always assumed she took a plea deal and spilled everything she knew about Henry. But of course, Henry got the last laugh because he told everything he knew about everybody else and lived the rest of his life eating egg noodles and ketchup someplace where it’s warm.

Anonymous 9:12 AM  

Great Friday. Always a fan of triple stacks late in the week, they promise at least a little of the “whoosh” and “aha” that Rex loves, and this one did not disappoint.
I originally put in Bass SLAPS which would have been a better answer and got an audible chuckle from me… but alas, it was not to be.

L E Case 9:12 AM  

Thanks for causing me to look up Walter Egan to see if he is still living. He is! Hooray! Now back to listening to Magnet and Steel.

jberg 9:24 AM  

This one seemed harder than it turned out to be. A big part of that is that I counted the D twice and tried to put in STONE-WASHED DENIM. I got as far as the H before I noticed it wasn't working, and it took REMY to help me see that it still ended with DENIM. So I was hacking away at the shorter downs, not getting very far, until I got GIRTH, which somehow unlocked the whole top--gave me SACAGAWEA and helped me see that PALE ALE didn't have to be Indian. So a whole bunch of stuff filled itself in, until I was looking at 47-A with no crosses, and thinking that this was do-or-die time. Then I looked at the clue, a complete giveaway, and that was it.

defEAT before UNSEAT, but that didn't last long. And the only Persian emperors I know are DARIUS, Cyrus, and Xerxes, and only one fit.

My former in-laws formerly lived in Manhattan KS, but I was thinking of a cultural center, so I tried to make Chicago, Minneapolis, or even Omaha fit. But once I got enough of KANSAS, I could see what they meant.

Steve 9:26 AM  

Loved 44d and the nod to the kealoa.

Beezer 9:42 AM  

Yes…Bootsy should know as premier funk bass player. Btw Bootsy, give my regards to George…;)

pabloinnh 9:49 AM  

Similar to others in doing the right-hand side of the top and working backwards, although I gave up and went elsewhere, where things proved to be of a much higher whoosh content. Only slow downs were the unknown women, DEBI, RONAN, ANASTASIASTEELE, and SACAGAWEA with a G. Knew that was wrong when my measurement was JIRTH.

I think the expression I've always heard is "Older than dirt", so that took a beat. And I had most of the letters for a word ending in U, wrote in APERCU because I know it's a word, and then looked at the clue to find out what it meant. Nice learning experience.

I do the Minis every day just to see if I can beat my own record, which is 23 seconds. Today an almost with a 24. I imagine that this is about how long it takes OFL to do a Monday puzzle.

Hearty congrats on the long-awaited debut, CH. I can't imagine the Countless Hours you've spent on these, and thanks for all the fun,

Carola 9:51 AM  

Carl, LOL on the MAXI!

Carola 9:58 AM  

@Rick, I tried my first MIDI yesterday, but won't do more. I think it could be fine for those wanting to graduate from the MINI into something more substantial.

@Beezer, my spouse does the MINI in the paper every morning; it's just the right difficulty for him - usually solvable but not always. The regular puzzle, even after months of "training" on Mondays and Tuesdays, is still too challenging for him to finish. I've been pounding on "check your crosses" but....

Carola 10:01 AM  

@Kent - you said it all, i.e., just about exactly what I was going to write. The only difference is that I didn't think of "rinsed."

Beezer 10:03 AM  

I ALMOST did what you did on stone washed! So easy to do. I didn’t like acid washed but it WAS thing so put it anyway. I think DISTRESSED must be the pre-ripped version.

EasyEd 10:03 AM  

Wow, seems like everyone in the works except me knew about SACAGAWEADOLLARS. The name was familiar from history courses but have never before run across mention of the coins or their background—a fascinating read in Wikipedia, since the basic practice continues today. I guess I lost track after Ike’s and Susan B’s…Anyway, thought this was an excellent puzzle with many rich answers—even though I also have never read 50 Shades the woman’s name jumped out from the crosses because it seemed so apt. I like Rex’s write up for it’s energy and like him I found the lower part of the puzzle easier than the top—so I started they and worked my way back up. Two little guys gave me grief: had Tug for TIC for a long time, and mADD for SADD.

Beezer 10:07 AM  

@jberg…I get ya…I used to do Wordle then simply decided “Why do I do THIS every day? Same with Spelling Bee, but that is more of my “wait for my coffee to kick in” thing. But…I think Ive gotten to saturation point with that also.

Teedmn 10:08 AM  

One of my Dad's favorite dad jokes was, "Where was Caesar stabbed?" "Right in the rotunda." So in my family, one's belly was sometimes referred to as a rotunda, although it seems we were wrong anatomically - it should have been the back, not the belly.

I tried to put Minnesota on the map at 6D by entering Lynx but crosses wouldn't bear it.

Caroline Hand, thanks for a relatively challenging Friday puzzle!

Bob Mills 10:09 AM  

Bottom half easy, top half hard. Can someone confirm that DISTRESSEDDENIM is truly descriptive of clothing (it sounds made up)? I also had "Sacajawea." I've enjoyed other Friday puzzles more than this one.

Carola 10:17 AM  

A real treat of a Friday. Like others, I had tough time getting a foothold up top, making the same mistake with "acid-waShed" but also "nehi" instead of DADS and a vain attempt to stretch "indian" across the squares before PALE ALE. Eventually I decided to trust SADD and URSA...and there appeared DISTRESSED and AMERICAN. Ahhh. A nice flow after that. Loved APERCU, DARIUS, ROTUNDA, TUREEN, ASTORIA. What a gem!

Michelle 10:35 AM  

Liked OLD AS DIRT. Tried Millenial Dollar and Acid Washed Denim before getting it right, so really struggled in the NW.

Why, why, why is there a question mark on the 1A “coinage” clue???

Michelle 10:37 AM  

It was even more distressing if you tried Millenial Dollar above Acid Washed Denim…. What a mess. And then American before pale ale? I was trying to get Artisinal or some such in there. Really struggled in the NW.

Alice Pollard 10:53 AM  

I wanted Wichita KS - and tried to get Faded into the DENIM answer. Never saw or read the 50 Shades stuff but somehow ANASTASIASTEELE came to me. I did look up how to spell SACAGAWEA's name - I knew the answer just unsure how she spelled it. I visited the Pantheon not long ago, so ROTUNDA was easy APERCU I got from the crosses. RONAN Saoirse seems to be a lovely lass when I catch her on the talk show rounds.

jrstocker 10:56 AM  

One box off, couldn't get it finished...was sure something was wrong in the APERCU area, but I had ANASTASIA and RONAN both filled with an 'I' rather than an 'A'. D'oh!

jae 11:05 AM  

Easy-medium. I got off to a quick start by putting in SADD with no crosses.

Spelling SACAGEWA was an adventure (hi @Rex).

I did not know DADS as clued and tried nehi at first.

DARIUS was also a WOE.

APERCU is old time crosswordese.

Solid, low on junk, more than a hint of sparkle, liked it a bunch!

DAVinHOP 11:08 AM  

On line content says the Sacagewea (spelled thusly) was intended to "replace the unpopular Susan B Anthony" dollar coin.

I use one as a golf ball marker.

Les S. More 11:09 AM  

Tough one for this non-American, starting with the coin at 1A. SACAGAWEA DOLLAR. Sure, if you say so. Doesn’t have the friendly, folksy ring of Loonie, but … And AMERICAN PALE ALE from a brewery whose products I never see. Sheesh. MANHATTAN KANSAS hove, as @Barbara S. likes to say, into view solely due to Crossword Memory Syndrome. And CESAREAN just looks wrong. Isn’t the procedure named after Julius Caesar, supposedly the first surgical birth? Why would you purposely misspell his name?

Got some traction in the middle and worked my way down to the much easier bottom but still had to climb back to the top and try again. That was rough.

Anonymous 11:09 AM  

I started solving last night around 10pm. I'm slightly embarrassed to admit this was challenging for me. I simply could not parse SACAGAWEA, whose name I know well. I had MADD at 1D instead of SADD, and I couldn't make heads or tails (no pun intended) of MACAGAWE_DOLLAR. The fact that it was late and APERCU eluded me didn't help. I slept on it, and when I woke up this morning my first thought was "It's Sacagawea!" I opened my laptop thereupon, filled in the letters, and reveled in the congratulatory music.

Les S. More 11:25 AM  

Me too for acid-washed. It was "a thing". Just not the right thing.

Beezer 11:41 AM  

Yes it is. People pay big bucks for rips in their jeans.

Masked and Anonymous 11:43 AM  

First entry [and staff weeject pick]: RUH-roh. Second entry: GIRTH. Third entry: SACAGAWEADOLLAR.
fave entry: OLDASDIRT. Opens up a whole new universe of future NYTPuz answers, such as OLDERTHANSNOT. Like.

Also liked: CESAREANS & URSA clues.

Not too hard, not too easy solvequest, overall. ARTFUL without bein fearful [or fartful]. Gotta rate it at least 4 URSAs.

Thanx for the fun, Ms. Hand darlin. Nice 15-stacks. And congratz on yer primo debut.

Masked & Anonym007Us

Anonymous 11:47 AM  

I was thrown off by the question mark in 1A. The Sacagawea Dollar is the Sacagawea Dollar. No question about it. Why the "?"?

DIRT DUSTED DENIM blew the North. Everything south of that was very easy.

Anonymous 11:57 AM  

Minneapolis is nicknamed the little apple. mini-apple-us, ffs

Anonymous 12:20 PM  

I got tired of trying to guess at APERCU so I gave up. In my opinion, TIC was very poorly clued considering it was crossing such an obscure answer. Being next to ENSUITE, which was also horribly clued, and all crossing the impossible-to-spell SACAGAWEA just made it frustrating enough that I didn't care to keep guessing.

JLG 12:30 PM  

Why does 1A Coinage of the early 2000’s have a question mark? Isn’t a Sacagawea dollar literally a coin minted in the 2000’s? Is there a play on words I’m missing?

Anonymous 12:44 PM  

I am nowhere near as good as many of the people who write in. I did it in 24 minutes today and for me that was quite good. I’ve only been doing crossword puzzles like these for a few years. There was a time when I wouldn’t even think of doing Fridays and Saturdays, now I look forward to them. Getting better and better

okanaganer 12:53 PM  

Not too easy; not too hard at 17 minutes. I like the stacks but three of the grid spanners were names, so that was a bit annoying. Fortunately I vaguely remembered the SACAGAWEA coin (if not how to spell it) though I've never seen one. And I've also heard of MANHATTAN KANSAS so that helped.

A few too many names all together, but I knew most of the short ones: LANKA REMY ARGO DARIUS ASTORIA RONAN. Never heard of DEBI Mazar, or that STEELE girl.

For 27 across "Parthenon feature" I immediately knew it was OCULUS. Except it didn't fit, so I thought: what, does it have more than one, and is the Latin plural something like OCULAE? It was certainly the feature I remember best; what an awesome little building. I also remember the little old Italian lady who yelled at me for taking her picture, even though I was trying to photograph the building, not her.

PH 12:55 PM  

Slow start. 11D LEE was my first toehold, but things started to fall into place from the NE. APERÇU is a great word, with its fancy cedilla. The fill is as good as it gets for a double triple-stack puzzle. Stellar debut, congrats Ms. Hand.

AIRBAG PSA: Takata's exploding airbags are still being recalled. "Do Not Drive" warnings are in place for specific 2003-2016 Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram vehicles. Enter the VIN or license plate at nhtsa.gov/recalls to see if the car needs a recall. Takes less than 1 minute. (Corporate greed at its finest.)

MetroGnome 1:04 PM  

What the hell is a PALEALE?? And how dose someone DISTRESS a piece of fabric?

jb129 1:05 PM  

Running a little late today, I cheated when I saw 1A SACAGAWEA DOLLAR (what a way to begin!) & it kinda intimidated me. I didn't let it though & I'm so glad. This was a great Friday!
I had Kindest for FONDEST wishes, BASS LINES was a WOE. Another one of my favs in addition to "The Godfather" is "Goodfellas" so Debi was a given. Also never heard of OLD AS DIRT. But all in all, a great Friday & congratulations on your debut & 3 1/2 star review from Rex, Caroline. Hope to see you again soon :)

Mary Jane 1:12 PM  

I do the mini to find a start to Wordle.

Anonymous 1:47 PM  

lol

Beezer 2:33 PM  

Reading this I now know I should’ve been a little bit miffed by that since the question mark led me to think “cryptocurrency” OR some phrase that was coined in the early 2000s….oh well.

ChrisS 2:45 PM  

Or an 80's detective show, Remington Steele (I think no terminal e though). When I heard about the characters names in 50 Shades I was a bit alarmed, my name is Christian & my daughter is Anasatsia. The puzzle was good, Rex's write up was excellent as always. Also not loving BassLines as a plural, do most funk songs have multiple bass lines? I'm skeptical

Peamut 2:46 PM  

OMG. I’m a big FAN of Mr. Egs. He is the god of puns - not AMIR mortal!!

Adam Levav 2:47 PM  

Looking forward to your 2/5 review of my puzzle tomorrow!

ChrisS 2:52 PM  

Chicago already as a NYC related nickname, Second City

Beezer 2:52 PM  

@Carola, jberg and many others…I stand corrected on the mini! I was focused on the fact that I (bolded I) spend WAY too much time on puzzles. Haha…@Carola…I hear ya! My husband is more of a sodoku and ken-ken person but has taken to doing the (I think) Universal Sunday puzzle and quite often gets me to weigh in. I say…I have to SEE it. What do I see? Him being “married” to a wrong answer OR not checking crosses. :) Hey…I get it…but these days I’m just “engaged” to my wrong answers…no need for divorce.

Anonymous 2:54 PM  

Dang!!! That’s a big marker. My crew uses dimes.

Beezer 2:59 PM  

Well look at you two racecar drivers! I’m just kidding you both and (maybe) I’m just envious since my PB is 15 for a Saturday…I say MAYBE only because I don’t TRY to go fast…but maybe you don’t either! I know Rick has said he’s fallen asleep during a solve, so I think I’m envious.

okanaganer 3:00 PM  

@MetroGnome... seriously Pale Ale is new to you? How about crossword staple IPA (India Pale Ale).

egsforbreakfast 3:16 PM  

I'm guessing that the question mark is there to make you think that coinage is possibly being used in the sense of invention of a new word or phrase.

Anoa Bob 3:33 PM  

Sometimes a puzzle will win me over early in the solve and it can do no wrong afterwards. I was looking through that upper stack trying to get a foothold when I came across 17A "Jeans material for a worn-out look" and wondered if that might be DISTRESSED DENIM. I just typed that in without even looking at the monitor and it fit! From there it was all smiles through the rest of the puzzle.

To follow up on @Lewis pointing out that this was the constructor's first puzzle accepted after 20 (!!) years of rejected submissions, she said that all her previous efforts had been themed puzzles so she decided to take a page out of Robyn Weintraub's book and try a themeless. After this top notch gem, I bet we will see more puzzles from Caroline Hand. Some fine constructioneering (™M&A) on display here.

I nominate country star Alan Jackson as the king of DISTRESSED and torn DENIM. Here he is in a YouTube video of "Chattahoochee".

Beezer 3:54 PM  

Good one @Peanut!

CDilly52 4:23 PM  

@Rick S, I am a crossword purist and don’t do any other puzzles. I do a bunch every day, but the NYT is my oldest consistent solve. I always root for people who say crosswords are “too hard” and advise them to start with a Monday and keep at it and use the internet to help you learn things. So, in the spirit of sharing my passion with newcomers, I guess the little puzzies (I’m guessing that’s what @Roo might call them - Hi @Roo!) might help someone build some chops to move into the realm of full sized grids.

CDilly52 4:34 PM  

@burtonkd, great observation. Had my sister not attended KSU (and frequently worn a “Little Apple” tee), I would have insisted on Chicago because The Second City is the best comedy club I’ve ever attended and Chicago is my favorite “big city.” Oh well, it’s a crossword.

Anonymous 4:41 PM  

I got a laugh because I solved wart immediately after getting tort.

CDilly52 4:58 PM  

I just watched Goodfellas for the first time and wondered how I missed it! Loved Godfather and Sopranos and that genre.

egsforbreakfast 5:01 PM  

Judging by your previous three, I'm betting on 3.5 - 4.

CDilly52 5:37 PM  

Good old King DARIUS; haven’t seen him for a while. I devote his ancient crown to Caroline Hand and her very Friday worthy debut. A second in a row debut is unusual. Two excellent consecutive debuts is hen’s teeth territory. We are the beneficiaries.

My only nits are a couple clues that were a bit meh: WAS for “happened” just tried a bit too hard just to be a tough clue. It was tough, only because of its inaccuracy. WAS doesn’t really mean occurred or happened; it’s a state of being. I guessed it though simply because I could think of no other three letter word that more accurately means “happened.” Sometimes a more accurate yet easy clue is probably the correct choice.

SEES also fell in with a bit if a clunk - no, just a clank. The NYTXW uses archaic fill all the time, and again, I understand the impetus to up the clue difficulty just because it’s Friday. Speaking of archaic, “carriage” and in “Coventry” rather than anything pointing toward Europe is too cute. But all OK; it’s a worthy debut and we learn by doing. I am very happy, Caroline, that you “did.” She’s been added to my “excited to see more” list.

The 50 Shades craze thankfully passed me by. However, it amazes me how many unwanted details and mental pictures from those books occupy space between my ears just from existing within its sphere of influence. I cannot imagine watching the film. Ugh! Alas, Mr. Grey’s surname is the only name I know. I hope not to remember the (in my opinion, the unfortunate) ANASTASIA STEELE. Thankfully, the bottom stack contained 2 of 3 that were far easier than the top stack.

I think I will open an AMERICAN PALE ALE. It actually BRAISES well in a pot roast. Never tried it in coq au vin. Oh, and stare at the name SACAGAWEA IN HOPES i might remember how to spell it next time.

Another please, Caroline!

Eniale 5:59 PM  

I never know when people are joking. You were kidding about Yiddish, right? Apercu is French-derivation, with the c soft. It means noticed.

Anonymous 6:29 PM  

Agreed. That plus the fact that I had TIT as the cross for Jerk, well, made it hard to get past.

Gary Jugert 6:46 PM  

Viejo como la tierra.

Nice. Probably about as good as you can make a themeless after loading it up with gunk. It's a big number today. APERCU and AMIR were rough, but otherwise very pleasant. I solved bottom up because it was easier down there for me mainly thanks to MANHATTAN KANSAS.

All music has a bassline. Sometimes it's standoffISH.

People: 10 {unnecessary}
Places: 4
Products: 8
Partials: 6
Foreignisms: 5
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 33 of 70 (47%) {Grandpappy Gunk and the Gunk urchins danced jigs and reels to the fiddle afire with songs of Olde Gunkistan.}

Funny Factor: 4 🙂

Uniclues:

1 Square dance in a round room.
2 Number one ganga mon.

1 ROTUNDA REEL {~}
2 ACES RASTA STAT

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Work pants with a really big loop for a hammer. THOR TROUSERS.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

dgd 7:45 PM  

Chris S
Maybe you read the clue too fast as features of funk songs but it is Features of funk It is talking about the genre with many songs. It is a bit awkward because of, as Anoa Bob says, plural of convenience but it works.

Anonymous 7:52 PM  

Aperol is a drink

dgd 7:53 PM  

egsforbreakfast
UNSEAT took me a few beats to get it. A very good one

Don Byas 7:55 PM  

Fine puzzle for a Wednesday. Way too easy. Sri LANKA, Magna CARTA? C'mon , don't patronize me! I'm here for the struggle. I think I need some booze and Chinese food.

Liveprof 7:57 PM  

Always kidding (it's a curse), but thank you.

Gary Jugert 8:00 PM  

@Eniale 5:59 PM
If the comment starts with @Liveprof, you should assume he's kidding.

Anonymous 8:14 PM  

It gave me a headache to open up to those all those options. Just seemed like I was handed a task list. So much so that, after years of doing the Mini as a warm-up, today I ignored it and skipped right to the Crossword. So it's backfiring fin my case (your mileage may vary).

Only redeeming feature is if it reduces the pressure to offer easier Crosswords -- the recent strategy for getting new subscriptions. If there is a mid-level and easier puzzle, maybe there will be less need to dumb down the real puzzle in order to entice people. But who knows? I'm sure NYTimes Puzzle is just doing whatever their highly paid marketing consultants tell them what to do - because it's not about the puzzle; it's about sales and subscriptions.

But for me, no more MINI and no MIDI.. I'm going straight for the MAXI.

dgd 8:15 PM  

Les S, More
This spelling is part of a pattern of Americans simplifying most of the Latin words that have ae in them (or Greek words via Latin) to e. There are many other spelling changes where we simplified like que to k and so on. It was part of an early American effort to simplify our spelling. The Webster in the dictionary name had a lot to do with it. Caesar was so famous his name was kept as was But the derivative was not. It doesn’t bother me. At least it sounds like same.

dgd 8:24 PM  

egsforbreakfast
I agree with you The clue for Sacagawea was made Friday level tricky not by the question mark but by -age added to coin. Coinage is much more often used in the figurative sense, so they added the?

Hugh 9:02 PM  

Like this one a lot for much of the same reasons already cited here. Looking at a grid with two stacks of spanners top and bottom both terrifies and elates me. What a way to start a Friday!
The stack were all very solid and gave me the resistance a good Friday puzzle should. I must admit I was today years old when I learned APERCU, happy to have that little nugget now.
I think AMERICANPALEALE was the last to fall. PALE and ALE next to each other, while in real life makes total sense, played tricks on my brain in the grid - that letter combination did not compute for me for quite awhile. Wonderful "DOH!" moment when it came together.
I understand that this is a debut after 20 years of submissions!! Congratulations Caroline! Thank you for sticking with it and giving us this gift of a Friday! Hope to see many more from you!
I agree with @Lewis - this week we had 5 days of top notch puzzles! Happy stuff!

Anonymous 10:50 PM  

Even worse, I wanted stone washed. Kept erasing it and putting it back. Thought, maybe I need washt or something.

Anonymous 11:18 PM  

💯

Anonymous 12:30 AM  

The top three rows were hard for me - I had PALEALE, had to look up AMERICAN. Had DENIM had to look up DISTRESSED - wanted stonewashed but it didn’t fit. Had DOLLAR, finally figured out that it was SACAGAWEA (not J!)
I had to google AMIR and TIL APERCU and SADD. A very nice Friday, thank you!

CDilly52 8:12 PM  

Another hand up for acid washed DENIM; forgot to mention that one. Being incorrect DISTRESSED me!

CDilly52 8:15 PM  

@Liveprof, i’ve encountered odder names than ROTUNDA and TUREEN in my 40 some years of volunteering to represent neglected and abused kiddos.

kitshef 7:40 AM  

Odd puzzle. Basically had to skip the top. Finished the rest in a flash, then came back to the top which was still hard.

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