Combatant in an octagon-shaped cage / WED 2-25-26 / So-called "melting pot," in brief / Tribal home, maybe, informally / Tick doc / ___ hair (edgy 2000s trend)

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Constructor: Brad Lively

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: BREAKDANCES (60A: Emulates the three figures in this puzzle ... or what the figures do within the answers to 17-, 27- and 46-Across?) — each theme answer features a little breakdancer in the shape of a letter; these human-shaped "letters" appear inside (i.e. "break") the names of "dances" (found in shaded squares inside the theme answers). Thus the the little breakdancers "BREAK DANCES":

Theme answers (blue letters represent the little breakdancing figures, red letters spell out the dances):
  • CREDI[T] SCORE (17A: Failing to pay bills on time may affect this)
  • VINCENT [V]AN GOGH (27A: "Self-Portrait With Bandaged Ear" painter, 1889)
  • HANNIBAL LE[C]TER (46A: Villain ranked #1 on A.F.I.'s "100 Years ... 100 Heroes & Villains" list)
Word of the Day: Steven YEUN (57D: Actor Steven of "Beef" and "Nope") —

Sang-yeop Yeun (Korean연상엽; born December 21, 1983), known professionally as Steven Yeun (/jʌn/ YUHN), is an American actor. He rose to prominence for playing Glenn Rhee in the television series The Walking Dead (2010–2016). He earned critical acclaim for the films Burning (2018) and Minari (2020). For the latter, he became the first East Asian-American nominated for the Academy Award for Best ActorTime magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2021. For the Netflix dark comedy series Beef (2023), which he produced and starred in, Yeun received Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Limited Series and Outstanding Lead Actor.

Yeun has also appeared in the films Okja (2017), Sorry to Bother You (2018), The Humans (2021), and Nope (2022). He has also voiced main characters in animated television series such as Voltron: Legendary Defender (2016–2018), Tales of Arcadia (2016–2021), Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters (2017–2018), Final Space (2018–2021), Tuca & Bertie (2019–2022), and Invincible (2021–present). (wikipedia)

• • •

The only thing keeping this puzzle from four-and-a-half stars is the fact that the breakdancing letters themselves are meaningless. That is, they're random letters. They don't spell anything or have any significance beyond their shape. That said, these are probably the three letters of the alphabet that most closely resemble breakdancer positions (try making yourself into an "H," for example—actually, esp. if you're over 50, definitely do not try this). The first two breakdancer-letters (the "T" and "V") make a nice sequence—handstand into a backspin. I can definitely see that happening, breakdancing-wise. That "C" is iffier, though. Whatever that little dude is doing to make himself a "C" seems the least "breakdancey" of these figures. So the breakdancer-letters have no larger significance and one of them seems more contrived (from a visual standpoint) than the others. Beyond that, though, this theme is kinda brilliant. Little dancers inside dances inside longer answers! Extreme nesting! And the dances are all solid, familiar, recognizable, and they touch every element in the overall theme answers. That is, every word in every themer is part of a dance—no words left hanging. That is how you do "hidden word" themes. The rest of the puzzle had its strengths and weaknesses. It's a very choppy grid with maybe more than its share of repeaters (NENE IKEA SSNS INRE ADE ORA EKED etc etc), but the clues were far more interesting than normal, and the theme was so strong that I didn't care so much about the weaknesses in the fill. I'm not normally a big fan of picture gimmicks in my puzzle, but this one is truly inventive, and from a craftsmanship standpoint, it's very solid. Ambitious and well executed. I had a good time.


I was entertained from the very first clue. 1A: [Taps casino table] is a fantastic (visual! audio!) clue for "HIT ME." There just seemed to be more color and pizzazz than usual in the clues today. More "?" clues. More details. The theme answers themselves were inherently interesting—well, not CREDIT SCORE, no one likes thinking about CREDIT SCOREs, but the others, for sure. I never saw the clue for either Van Gogh or Lecter—I really do work the short stuff first, since that tends to be higher-percentage (easier to get at first glance than longer stuff), and sometimes, by the time I even consider looking at the clue for a longer answer, I've already got enough letters in place to infer it. With HANNIBAL LECTER, I had the end worked out and the letter combo was so unusual that HANNIBAL LECTER was the only answer that made sense. Coincidentally, after the death of actor Tom Noonan last week, I watched the fantastic Michael Mann movie Manhunter (1986), in which Brian Cox (of Succession fame) plays ... HANNIBAL LECTER! A good five years before Hopkins! It's a bit part, but he's very good. Tom Noonan plays the main serial killer in the film, and he is extraordinary. 

[Cox]

[Noonan]

The puzzle was very easy, but that didn't bother me so much today, since the easiness allowed the theme to unfold and pop in a fast, energetic way, which seemed appropriate. Who wants a breakdancing puzzle to be a slog? There were only two answers that gave me any trouble. One is embarrassing: I have seen and enjoyed many Steven YEUN movies, but when I read his clue (57D: Actor Steven of "Beef" and "Nope"), I had the "YE-" in place and reflexively wrote in YEOH—a different actor altogether. Wrong ethnicity, wrong gender, wrong wrong wrong. Bah. My (extreme) bad. The other hold-up I don't feel nearly so bad about. CMD!? Is that short for "Command?" Yeesh, that is ... not pretty. Astonishingly, this abbr. was used only twice in the pre-Shortz era, but has (comparatively) flourished under Shortz, almost always with the same boring clue: today's clue: [Mil. authority] (16 appearances under Shortz, 10 of them with this clue, zzzz). This is the first appearance of CMD in ten years! It can go back into retirement now, I won't mind. Anyway, I spun out a bit on DOD today. I had the "D" in place and wrote in DOD (Dept. of Defense). That's a "Mil. authority," isn't it? 


Bullets:
  • 11A: ___ hair (edgy 2000s trend) (EMO) — got EMO easy even though I can't really tell you what this hair looks like. I'm picturing Bill Hader as Stefan on SNL, but Stefan wasn't exactly EMO:
  • 33A: Tribal home, maybe, informally (REZ) — a perfectly good answer (short for "Reservation"), but "maybe, informally" felt like one qualifier too many.
  • 35A: So-called "melting pot," in brief (U.S.A.) — enjoying the shade this puzzle is throwing around today with "So-called." See also the clue on MADONNA (4D: So-called "Queen of Pop"). I've heard Michael Jackson called the "King of Pop," but this "Queen of Pop" moniker is less familiar to me, which is strange, as I grew up in peak Madonna Times, and even saw her in concert in Minneapolis a couple years ago.

  • 30D: Tick doc (VET) — I was not aware that VETs treated arachnids. (Seriously, what is happening here? You take your dog to the vet when he gets ticks? Is that it?) (wait, is this a "Tik Tok" pun???) 😦
  • 12D: Combatant in an octagon-shaped cage (MMA FIGHTER) — not a fan of MMA, but am a fan of this answer, which is bright and original and (most importantly) helped me figure out CMD.
  • 11D: Sound-track? (ECHOLOCATE) — good answer, great clue. That NE corner really hums. I will say that even though CMD sucks, it is holding together the best part of the puzzle—which is the only reason cruddy fill should ever show its face.
  • 29D: Cyber punk? (TROLL) — nice wordplay—reimagining the literary genre (cyberpunk) as an actual punk (i.e. asshole) online. Good stuff. I also like 37D: Bear's heirs? for CUBS. No real wordplay at work there, just a funny little rhyming clue. It's nice for easy clues to have a little personality sometimes.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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126 comments:

Son Volt 6:05 AM  

Fun I guess - the graphics never really hit for me - they don’t seem to translate well on my phone. CREDIT SCORE is pedestrian but the other two themers and the revealer were neat.

WAITS

Overall fill was solid and carried the grid - Rex highlights a lot of the good stuff. Loved ECHOLOCATE, I HAD NO IDEA and HIT ME. MADONNA and STANNED were unfortunate for an otherwise clean puzzle.

Brian Fallon

Enjoyable Wednesday morning solve.

WAITS

Conrad 6:11 AM  


Easy, and not my thing. Way too much crosswordese, and I didn't like the prefilled squares concept.

Overwrites:
Soap before SUDS for the 41A bath bubbles, and off the "p", pesT before SNOT for the 42D brat

WOEs:
REZ as a shortened form of Reservation (33A)
Steven YEUN (57D)

I resisted SCOOTER (36A) as an e-bike alternative because I figured it would have to be e-scooter, which didn't fit. A scooter is an alternative to a bike.

Anonymous 6:13 AM  

The only little, small gripe I had with this puzzle is solving in the app, I had the puzzle finished but it didn’t give me the solve until I figured out I hadn’t put the C over the dancer in HANNIBALLECTER. Took me a while to figure out what I was missing,

Anonymous 6:23 AM  

We’re just going to let STANNED go by without comment?

Bob Mills 6:36 AM  

I had the opposite reaction from Rex's concerning the NE, which gave me a DNF. Didn't like CMD (for "mil. authority"), and didn't know EMO as a hairstyle or ECHOLOCATE.
I also disagree with REZ as a legitimate abbreviation of "reservation" (where has this appeared in print...ever?). And I agree that "e-bike alternative" should be an "e-something." A better clue for SCOOTER might have been "Phil Rizzuto's nickname."

Anonymous 6:37 AM  

Completely legitimate word

Cakes 6:43 AM  

Every time I like a puzzle (usually because it's easy enough that I can do it without hints), Rex generally dislikes the puzzle (usually because it's so easy that even I can do it without hints). So I was shocked today when I opened the blog and found 4 stars.

Jack Stefano 6:48 AM  

It’s been a ubiquitous synonym for super-fan for quite a while now. Probably 10-15 years.

Brendan Curran 7:03 AM  

For the military authority I began with CMJ and thought ‘that’s an odd way to abbreviate UCMJ’. After getting ODDS I thought ‘oh CMD, I guess that works’.

I think there are a lot of more interesting ways to use this clue. There are a lot of military authorities. Would they be too niche? Absolutely not, if I am supposed to learn 1970s gymnasts you all can learn some military acronyms.

JJK 7:08 AM  

Easy and fun, although I kind of disapprove of the trend toward graphics and shading in the puzzle. And you couldn’t get the happy music until you put the actual letters into the breakdancers’ squares.

I also had the most trouble with the NE, as CMD and EMO were total guesses, but ECHOLOCATE is a great answer.

REZ is commonly used to refer to reservations on tribal land.

Twangster 7:17 AM  

I thought those were vultures for quite a while.

Rick Sacra 7:19 AM  

Medium for me, enjoyed it a bunch. There are dogs called Tick Hounds, I think.... Like the Bluetick Coonhound. Thanks, Brad!

Anonymous 7:20 AM  

Thank you! I finished, but didn’t get the credit until I entered the letters overtop the little dancing figures! I thought those figures stood for themselves!

RooMonster 7:25 AM  

Hey All !
Rex surprised me today with his liking/ranking of the puz. Didn't think he'd be all that huzzahing of it.

Nice Theme. A BREAK in DANCES by a BREAK DANCEr. Although, peak BREAK DANCE time was like, late 80's, 90's? I know it never really went away. Heck, everything eventually comes back into style.

Nice 10 stacked pair in the Downs. All 4 go through the two Themers. Tough to get any kind of clean fill, yet those answers are good.

Fun WedsPuz. Nice construction job. Hopefully bodes well for your day.

Have a great Wednesday!

Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Lewis 7:44 AM  

This is Brad’s second NYT puzzle. His first (3/27/25) was remarkably clever – felt like it was made by a pro and showed great promise. This follow-up shows that it wasn’t a one-off. This is a crackling good Wednesday puzzle.

Break dance moves, pictured visually, actually breaking types of dances spelled out? That is a brilliant constructor-mind stroke for a theme.

Truly, it's a virtuoso leap from BREAK DANCES to break-dance-images-within-dance-names-within-larger-words.

No unclued or gibberish theme answers. Everything works. Just a masterful concept and design. Bravo, sir!

Lovely wordplays in [Demo graphics, maybe] for VISUAL AIDS, [Signs of treble?] for CLEFS, and [Sound-track?] for ECHOLOCATE. And a prime non-wordplay clue in [Taps casino table] for HIT ME.

I hope to see your name atop a new puzzle, hopefully soon, Brad, and when I do, my anticipation will soar. Thank you for today’s splendid outing!

Anonymous 7:46 AM  

Exceptionally fun puzzle despite being very easy- that's a nearly-impossible trick to pull off. Usually, when I'm breezing through, I don't have time for frivolity, but today was a delightful exception.

Also, my wife and I have a framed picture of one of Steven Yeun's characters. Always makes me happy.

Todd 7:47 AM  

Another puzzle which I solved in better than my average without needing to have any idea what the little images were. Boring!!

Anonymous 7:47 AM  

I liked the puzzle.Not as much as Rex did.It took me awhile to get echolocation but it was a fun puzzle.🎈🎈🎊🎊

SouthsideJohnny 7:50 AM  

Surprisingly easy after yesterday’s tough-ish adventure. I didn’t even notice the shaded squares until I got to the revealer, which elicited a slight chuckle.

It seems like we are drifting into a kind of binary pattern, where the puzzles are either extremely easy or flirt with being prohibitively difficult. I kind of miss the gradual escalation of difficulty throughout the week. I suppose that is still the objective, but the results seem to be more erratic.

This one gets bonus points in my book for the paucity of proper names (and for the presence of MADONNA - one of the very few single named pop stars that I would be aware of if it weren’t for CrossWorld).

Lewis 7:50 AM  

Hey Brad! I wondered if VISUAL AIDS was just a happy coincidence or a sneaky second revealer. Can you chime in?

Rick Sacra 7:51 AM  

Yes, me too.... it wasn't clear at all that you were going to have to manually fill in those letters on top of the graphics to get the happy music. Took me a couple minutes to figure it out

Anonymous 7:52 AM  

Same!

Kate 7:59 AM  

A flaw that Steven YEUN was not clued with Minari, a terrific film for which he received a best actor Oscar nomination. Also, Burning, a Korean film, is jaw-droppingly great.

Anonymous 8:04 AM  

Scooter as in moped

Liveprof 8:05 AM  

ECHOLOCATE drove me batty.

It means to emit a sound and determine location based on the sound that returns. I often use echolocation myself. The sound I emit is "Linda! Where the hell are my f*cking keys?" and based on the sound that returns I'm able to locate my keys!

Mike Duchek 8:06 AM  

Little gripes I had were "really awful" being ITS BAD - that only gets you the "bad" not the "it's". Why is a CT scan "healthy"? Only if they don't find anything. And a single "hi-hat" is not a pair, as the clue suggests, right? Minor complaints but just seemed like faulty/lazy cluing that would have bothered me more if it wasn't Monday-level easy, which is not a typical complaint for me. The theme answers were so easy and the pre-filled squares ended up being nothingburgers, they were just... pre-filled letters. I didn't even notice the shaded squares/theme until I went back.

DrSparks 8:11 AM  

I thought the "Tick" in "Tick doc" might refer to a Bluetick Coonhound, but internet research found no such connection. To be clear, Bluetick Coonhounds get ticks but are not called "ticks."

Ann Howell 8:13 AM  

Same! I didn't put letters in any of the squares with graphics in them - I tried one, but the graphic stayed, so I figured you were just supposed to skip those squares. But then couldn't get the solving jingle at the end! Finally figured it out, but very annoying!

Wanderlust 8:18 AM  

Oh come on, they couldn’t have animated the break dancers when you finish?

crwdfwtx 8:20 AM  

Solving this on the app was perplexing because we were expected to fill in the pre-filled squares with the letters represented by the figures already occupying those squares.

Also I was surprised not to see the symmetrical HUSH (HUSH) and HEAR (HEAR) answers remarked upon. A nice, touch, I thought even though not theme related.

mmorgan 8:21 AM  

No little dancers in Across Lite so I didn’t fully get the theme but still enjoyed the puzzle.

Joe 8:22 AM  

Had CIC for mil. Authority…couldn’t grasp the clue for the ratio.

Anonymous 8:23 AM  

annoyed that one had to enter the letter for the break dancer.

Anonymous 8:34 AM  

Agree with Rex—great fun today!

Beezer 8:38 AM  

I thought STAN was more like stalker-fan combo.

tht 8:38 AM  

Except I found they were not pre-filled: the software didn't think I was done until I put in the T, V, C where the dancing figures were.

Beezer 8:40 AM  

I know what you mean but I think it’s because he thought it was playful and fun.

tht 8:44 AM  

Funny -- MADONNA is so far back in my rear-view mirror (i.e., so far in the past) that I had some trouble seeing it. I had put in ariaNNA [Grande] even though something looked off with my spelling there.

tht 8:46 AM  

No, a HI-HAT consists of a pair of cymbals.

Anonymous 8:51 AM  

Yep. Definitely thought we were dealing with a bird theme.

Beezer 8:55 AM  

My solving method is different than Rex’s (not saying mine is good…just habit) and I was pleased to see the extra stars for the fun-factor today. Hah! I pretty much got the entire theme angle EXCEPT I thought there MIGHT be a new workout routine called yoga DANCing…d’oh…but I pretty much immediately saw the light once I got to 60A.
Yeah, I guess with all the “preventatives” these days you don’t see too many dogs with a fully engorged tick, but unless you wanted to risk possible infection…highly recommended to have a VET remove. People used to say to light a match and hold up to tick…which always seemed pretty stupid given…FUR.

Anonymous 8:59 AM  

Weird. For me it was the opposite. I didn’t get the music until I deleted the letters I had typed in the breakdancer squares. It’s so annoying trying to figure out how exactly you are supposed to enter the answers on these gimmick puzzles

Anonymous 9:14 AM  

So glad I wasn't the only one! Thank you!

egsforbreakfast 9:18 AM  

A Mr. I told me that CTSCAN kill you.

I don't bend too well anymore, so any dances are BREAKDANCES.

Negative votes by a Hawaiian goose? NENE NAYS

What do you call a BREAKDANCin' Canis Lupus? STEPIN wolf.

Brilliant theme, great cluing. I don't think the shaded squares were a good idea at all. I'd like to have something to figure out. Thanks, Brad Lively.

Grandy 9:29 AM  

Thank you! I would never have gotten the music without your hint! I even ruined my streak by using autocheck, which still didn't indicate what needed to be done. Very enjoyable puzzle except for that.

Anonymous 9:32 AM  

Entered the letters. The puzzle looks done. Only available option is Reset Puzzle. But the stupid clock won't stop!

Anonymous 9:34 AM  

It might be a Canadian thing, but the "Rez" is definitely a thing. It was even a TV show for a while.

Gary Jugert 9:35 AM  

Esto es nuevo para mí.

Solid puzzle. Fun, funny, nice theme, lower gunkiness. It has pictures of people falling down. Just nice.

Those lists are generally compiled and published to create a little gossip fodder, and I suppose in 2003 it might have made a defensible argument to put HANNIBAL LECTER as a #1 movie villain, but the list gets a little fishy on the other side. The top three heros are Atticus Finch, Indiana Jones, and James Bond.

Speaking of vets, I took our old lady to the oncologist (hardly a Tick Doc) yesterday about a mass forming on her side, and the doctor looked so young I would've assumed she worked at Starbucks. I think this is how getting old works?

❤️ Tic Doc.

😩 POOFS.

People: 8
Places: 0
Products: 3
Partials: 8
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 76 (26%)

Funny Factor: 5 😄

Tee-Hee: SNOT.

Uniclues:

1 Swipes a free job in a box with Allen wrenches.
2 Line from every coming of age movie script.
3 Why the Material Girl keeps Kleenex in her purse.

1 LOOTS IKEA
2 TEEN: I HAD NO IDEA
3 MADONNA SNOT

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Why Frankenstein's monster had flexible wrists. JAZZ HANDS DONOR.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

pabloinnh 9:37 AM  

Easy enough, I guessed at the M in CMD/MMA, checked in here and gave myself the happy music. The VISUALAIDS were not readily apparent on my print out but I didn't try writing over them as it was clear that was unnecessary.

It's another one of those days when I feel out of the cultural loop--filled in Mr. YEUN from crosses but he was still a complete unknown, then I find that there are folks here he love his work and can name several things he appeared in. Live and learn.

Interesting concept and execution, BL. I may have had Better Luck if the graphics were bigger but that's on me. Thanks for a reasonable amount of fun.

Teedmn 9:39 AM  

I'm certainly glad I went back, post-solve, to see exactly how the revealer worked with the theme answers. While solving, I was so distracted by the dancers that I missed the grayed squares. So although I recognized the dancers as forming letters, it wasn't until later that I saw DISCO, TANGO and BALLET. So glad I didn't have to come here and admit I'd missed the better half of the theme.

I thought the 2000s trend in hair was "bed head" hair but BED in at 11A got me nowhere.

I like the clue and answer pair of VISUAL AIDS for Demo graphics, maybe but while solving, my reaction was "WHAT?"

Brad Lively, nice Wednesday puzzle, thanks!

tht 9:43 AM  

Medium. I didn't enjoy it as much as Rex. The dancing figures I find slightly gimmicky; worse, in the case of the "T", it looked like a Y to me. There was also no indication (and I HAD NO IDEA) that you still had to fill in the squares with dancers in them with the letters they are illustrating, something that ate up not a little time sorting out.

Then again -- these complaints are about things the editorial team and graphic designers are doing to the puzzle with their hot little hands. At least, that would be my guess. They are not the fault of the constructor. I thought the theme entries were good in their way, and I liked the slim colonnades. The fill not as much, although I wouldn't say IT'S BAD.

I thought STAN referred not just to any old fanboy or fangirl, but one who is dangerously obsessed. (I've also never seen the verb form.) The clue isn't wrong, but it did seem a little anodyne to me. Some of the clues seemed to be a little unsure of themselves ("so-called" in two of the clues, and a "maybe, informally" in another). You can dispense with the hedging "maybe", because as I keep saying here, clues needn't embody universal truths -- the only requirement is that the answer fit the clue as a possibility. That's why they're called "clues" and not "definitions". (HEAR HEAR to Joaquin's Dictum.)

That's it for now. Glad to be back (I was virtually internet-less for a while).

jberg 9:47 AM  

I noticed the little figures right away, of course, stared at them for a while, and decided that they were divers, doing various maneuvers as they zoomed down. It didn't seem like much, and TVC didn't mean much, maybe a cable channel? When I got the revealer I still had to think, but it finally broke through to me. Very nifty, in retrospect.

I had to laugh at the clue for 51-A, specifically "ready-to-assemble" which I read as "easy to assemble." I haven't verified it, but I recall reading that the number one task requested in Taskrabbit was assembly of an Ikea purchase.

I shared Rex's reaction to "Tick doc" at first, but thinking it over -- a "cancer doc" is a doctor who treats people cancer, so a "tick doc" can be a doctor who treats animals with ticks.

Rachel 9:48 AM  

This was the most fun theme I've seen in a while! I loved it. And some of the clues (Rex pointed them out) were really fun too. I also loved the visuals of the dancers. Loved the theme, also love dancing itself so that was fun. For me, this puzzle was a standout.

JazzmanChgo 9:50 AM  

REZ is definitely a term for "reservation" among a lot of Native American people, roughly the equivalent of 'HOOD in the Black urban community.

Meanwhile, though, for the life of me I couldn't decipher those tiny little visual images. I thought they were sloppily-rendered letters (i.e., "Y," "V," and "C"), and I was looking for an appropriate solution with that in mind.

Gary Jugert 9:52 AM  

@Bob Mills 6:36 AM
I live in New Mexico and REZ is extremely common. It's mostly used in a fond way, like you might refer to your home town, "My gramma still lives on the rez," but sometimes a little sarcastically like, "What happens on the rez stays on the rez."

Anonymous 9:55 AM  

Tik doc reminded me of the dick dock stories my coworker used to tell about the piers in the Chelsea area of NYC. It made an already fun puzzle that much more fun lol.

JazzmanChgo 9:56 AM  

By the way, for sheer unadulterated evil, I still think Robert Mitchum''s Max Cady in "Cape Fear" is hard to beat, all the more so given his masterfully unforced portrayal -- never has a monster looked and acted more like a "normal," everyday human possessed by demons..

Anonymous 9:58 AM  

Scooters and mopeds are nit the same thing. Scooters do not have pedals fir one thing.

Anonymous 10:00 AM  

Really? Explaing what “in a my rearview mirror” means?
What rlse voukd it posdibly mean?

Whatsername 10:00 AM  

Last week we had a similar theme in the Tuesday Baroque/BA-ROKE puzzle, and on Wednesday we had symbols in the clues. Today’s, with it’s “broken” theme answers and symbols in the grid, seemed like kind of a combination of the two. For me, all three played at about the same Tuesday difficulty level. I have to say though, I liked this one much better than either of the previous two. It just seemed more polished all around and more fitting with the symbols actually representing the revealer. Original, clever and fun. When it comes to crossword puzzles, I don’t ask for much more than that.

JazzmanChgo 10:02 AM  

HI-HAT (a.k.a. "Sock Cymbal') = two cymbals controlled by a foot pedal.

Liveprof 10:03 AM  

Hoping for good news from the doc.

Whatsername 10:06 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous 10:07 AM  

Me too. Maybe saw a little yellow and overwrote all three and heard the magic sound.

SouthsideJohnny 10:16 AM  

@t - that’s interesting. MADONNA in her prime was as big as Tay Tay.

EasyEd 10:23 AM  

Fun puzzle! Had same trouble as many had with the NE. Got ECHOLOCATE easily enough but blanked on MMA and CMD. Got the happy music without entering the letters, so guess the NYT folks fixed the program after a lot of complaints. Can’t believe I totally ignored the shaded squares until I came to the bog! As one earlier blogger mentioned would have been icing on the cake if the dancers were animated at the end. Well, maybe would have been overkill, but what the heck…

Anonymous 10:24 AM  

Isn't the DOD the DOW now? I'm soooo confused . . .

Anonymous 10:24 AM  

I'm just screwed here, the first T in credit score, if I put in the T it changes it to an A. I tried Rebus and Just typing over. When I check Rebus there is always an A. The C and V dancers are either blank or what I entered.
To top it all off the Check Puzzle function is grayed out for me, not giving me that option. I'm just going to leave it. I probably need to "clear the cache" or something

Anonymous 10:28 AM  

I got the Congratulations screen w/o filling in the graphics squares. Is that what is meant by the finished music? I keep my sound off.

jb129 10:30 AM  

I was enjoying it until I completed the puzzle & didn't get any music or anything that there was an error ???
Check, checked & rechecked - has the ever happened to anyone else?

Mike Duchek 10:39 AM  

I see, I relent on that one

Anonymous 10:44 AM  

Everything about the original is better than Scorse’s ham-fidted remake. And you’re dead right, Mitchum is superb.

Anonymous 10:46 AM  

Well, if you say it, it must be so.
The Tomes is lucky to have the benefit of your acumen.

jae 10:53 AM  

Easy. Almost no resistance and easier than yesterday’s for me.

Costly erasure - MIcro beforehand MILLI

Spelling problem - LECTER - I tried an O at first.

I did not know YEUN

Cute, clever, and fun with some fine long downs, liked it.

jae 10:54 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous 10:55 AM  

"It's bad" is a colloquially expression used in response to a question to mean "really awful" Q. "How bad is it?" A. "It's bad."

Whatsername 10:58 AM  

I agree completely. I had to stop watching that movie because he was just too creepy.

Whatsername 11:01 AM  

I have to agree with Gary about REZ. It may never have appeared in print anywhere but it’s common usage.

Anonymous 11:04 AM  

The NYT crossword turned into an IHOP kids menu so gradually nobody even noticed.

Lewis 11:05 AM  

BTW, a similar theme was made by Paolo Pasco on a Sunday in 2021, but it was clear from today's constructor Brad Lively that he hadn't known of it when he made this puzzle.

Anonymous 11:10 AM  

Thanks! Was driving myself nuts trying to figure out what I was missing.

JazzmanChgo 11:22 AM  

"Notorious lip-synching boy band Vanilli" might have been a better clue for MILLI, given the pop-music subtext of the theme.

Anonymous 11:24 AM  

REZ is more or less the rural/Native American equivalent of 'HOOD (as used in urban African-American culture).

Carola 11:29 AM  

My first impression was that the three figures might be Olympic Games-related gymnasts (oops, wrong season), and then that they could be "square" dancers. So the reveal was a delightful surprise. Impressive constructing feat, too, with those break dancers breaking dances in two. Overall, this was a harder than usual Wedneday for me and fun to figure out.

Anonymous 11:30 AM  

i never get music and dancing using a pen.

Anonymous 11:34 AM  

Using the NYT app to solve, I noticed that leaving the breakers as-is meant that the theme answers were thought of as unfinished (normally, the tab function will take you to the next clue for an unfinished answer and skip over any clues for which the answer is complete, but it would still stop on "CREDI[T]SCORE" and the other theme clues). So, I tried typing a T into that square, but no T appeared, and the clue still registered as incomplete. Based on that, I didn't fill in the V or the C, but the music came on as soon as I was done, even without filling those in, unlike what happened to many others. They definitely need to work on making it seamless when it's an odd grid so that it's not so annoying!

L E Case 11:37 AM  

Great write-up! Thank you!

Anonymous 11:47 AM  

Lost my streak as well, since I thought the dancing figures represented the letters themselves and finally hit the check puzzle – very frustrating!

Anonymous 12:04 PM  

Hey @Roo - thanks for the info on your book! Funny, time travel is the only sci-fi genre that I really like. In fact, the last thing I put into Chat GPT was, "please explain the concept of Einstein's spacetime so that a 10 year old would understand" :o) Anyway, I'll give yours a read!

Hugh 12:05 PM  

That reply was from me, I think it's gonna come up as anon (?)

Beezer 12:08 PM  

You have to actually type the letters over the “breakdancing” positions.

Beezer 12:15 PM  

Yes…I agree with your take on STAN…I thought it was a combo of stalker and fan. That may not be exactly right but I’ll either give Marshall Mathers a ping OR consult my too friendly (STAN?) search engine…;)

Masked and Anonymous 12:21 PM  

Clever puztheme revealer & clue. Lotsa clever clues, thru-out. Mostly smoooth fillins. Puztheme was pretty imaginative, too boot -- still tryin to get T,V,&C breakers to mean somethin more snazzy than [groan] TV Commercials.

staff weeject pick: REZ.

some of the fave stuff: HITME clue, right outta the chute. ECHOLOCATE & clue. IHADNOIDEA. VET clue. MILLI clue. SSNS's POC puz wrap-upper.

Thanx for givin us a break, Mr. Lively dude. Fun stuff.

Masked & Anonymo4Us

Beezer 12:26 PM  

Well…can o’worms here! @Southside…I getcha on Taylor Swift BUT to me, the frenzy and fandom with Taylor Swift is a much different phenomenon that (might be?) unparalleled and I respectfully submit it is bigger than MADONNA (sorry Madonna). @tht…I getcha also…but due to the way I solve, MADONNA was obvious. But usually I can get fubarred on the whole royalty + music genre titles. Then again…is there really any “pop” these days?

Anonymous 12:33 PM  

Easy to complete while completely ignoring the "theme".

Beezer 12:35 PM  

Bob, I’m a person who lives in a state that basically kicked out, killed, or whatever… the Native American population but REZ is a thing. If you read some Louise Erdrich novels (very good!) you will see.

Rick Sacra 12:37 PM  

You have to fill in the spaces the graphics are in with letters. I had the same problem

okanaganer 12:38 PM  

@Carola, me too thinking Olympics at first.

Beezer 12:42 PM  

Well, research conducted and YES, while the term was probably coined by Eminem around 2000 to be a portmanteau of stalker/fan, I found this:

Originally used to describe a negative or obsessive, stalker-like fan, the term has evolved into a more general term for intense, dedicated fandom, often used as a badge of honor for fans, or as a verb (e.g., "I stan").

okanaganer 12:50 PM  

For the second day in a row, I missed the most fun part of the theme. Opening the puzzle in Across Lite, I saw the little note icon "This puzzle uses features which are not supported in this file format". So I took a screen shot of the NYT web version and saw the little figures, which looked like gymnasts to me. So I forgot all about them, and at the end thought: this is pretty lame; the hidden dances have "breaks" in them?

Then this morning I read Rex and it's: oh, they form the "break"ing letters! Nice! Although as Rex said, it would have been really great if those letters (or their words) stood for something... like say if BALLET was crossed by PLIE?

Several names but mostly known; excepting YEUN and ONEAL (as clued). I certainly got MADONNA, VINCENT, and HANNIBAL pretty quick. So all in all, pretty good puzzle (after reading Rex).

Anonymous 1:06 PM  

Thanks very much for Manhunter shout-out (and clips!). A fav! Plus Stefon and the overall write-up—mwah!!

Stillwell 1:18 PM  

Beezer, you’re right, it’s a portmanteau via Eminem—but like so much of American culture, what was insane behavior 20 years ago is now considered ordinary.

Anonymous 1:18 PM  

Second for yoga (and fur burns :)

Tom T 1:21 PM  

Enjoyed this puzzle. Solving time considerably quicker than the Tuesday puzzle, but not a problem for me. My first thought, post-Olympics, was the visuals were ice dancers. But I suppose the V would indicate a skater who failed to execute the quad.
Saw street break dancers on the sidewalk in Honolulu a couple of weeks ago.

Debra 1:25 PM  

Me too, thanks!

Anonymous 1:45 PM  

Is that what happened? I ended up hitting ‘reveal’ because I could not figure out what I had done wrong,

Michael 1:47 PM  

CMD clue was especially bad, considering that everybody knows this stands for Connor McDavid. :-)

Les S. More 1:52 PM  

I liked this one even though I’n no fan of tiny graphics in my grid. (Don’t get me going on emoji-based puzzles. Grrr.)

REZ at 33A was no problem because there is a well known indigenous rap duo up here in the North Country called Snotty Nose REZ Kids. I don’t really know how much of an impact they’ve made south of the border. (Which reminds me of one of the best putdowns I’ve ever heard. I think it was the late, great Mordecai Richler who, in an interview, referred to another author as “internationally famous in Canada”. Oof.)

As for CT SCAN at 6D, someone earlier in these comments questioned the word “healthy”. I just read it as “health-related” and it works. The clue for 16A just baffled me - I know very little about military terms - so I just left it alone and discovered later that I had filled in CMD for command. That worked. Kind of typifies my solving approach some days.

Liked I HAD NO IDEA at 28D. Dropped it in off the H in HI HAT and the A in USA. NEON at 53D was similarly simple. Had the two Ns, read “sign” in the clue and - bingo - NEON. I don’t think I’ve ever seen the Radio City sign.

Interesting concept, if a bit annoying, but not without sparkle and fun.

Anonymous 2:23 PM  

One instance of it appearing in print is “On the Rez,” a 2000 nonfiction book by Ian Frazier. (He’s also a humorist — I highly recommend his “Lamentations of the Father,” a very funny essay about a dad’s rules about table manners written in a biblical style.)

PH 2:34 PM  

Solving on computer (Windows), the puzzle allows either typing the letter or skipping the figure square (I checked to confirm). I'm guessing many people had a typo on the dancer which wouldn't have been noticeable, but I can't speak for the other platforms. No problems here. Loved the puzzle and graphics, quite unique.

The C-figure looks like a move I could do, right before breaking my hip. I'm no b-boy, far from it, but I couldn't not comment without posting a Morning of Owl vid: Breakdancing competition (5:30-6:45). As someone who can't dance, this is one of the greatest things I've seen on the internet.

Also in Rex's screenshot of the puzzle, why does the V-figure have 4 legs (or is that just me)? Weird.

Hugh 2:35 PM  


Fun, fun puzzle, some great cluing and an impressively architected theme. Liked it for all the reasons @Rex did but one of those rare times when my enjoyment level didn't quite match up to his. Nothing bad about this puzzle, it's solid all around, the "ahas" for me were just a little on the quiet side. A Hugh thing, not a puzzle thing.
Like @Rex, I did get a kick out of the couple of "So-called" clues today. I also saw Madonna - at Madison Square Garden in, hmmm....'85? So I was a fan back then, not as much now and likely we are not as familiar with her being "Queen of Pop" as it's a tag she very likely gave herself :o)
Had to shovel again today as New Jersey got another inch or so this morning, maybe my enjoyment level was corrupted by my crabby post shovel mood (???) Anyway, thank you Brad. This was an impressive piece of work!

Matt G 3:23 PM  

I thought they were dinosaurs

Anonymous 3:32 PM  

Cute

Anonymous 3:52 PM  

Like most everyone here I really enjoyed this puzzle - cute theme reveal. I solved it as themeless although I did see the broken dances. Beyoncé before MADONNA, but what do I know? I guessed at MMA, which yielded EMO and CMD. Some great clues - eg 6D and 11D. Fun!

ChrisS 4:23 PM  

The clue was off to me as well. Aren't all ratios calculated? Seems fundamental to the concept.

ChrisS 4:26 PM  

I think as used "stanned" is a bit of hyperbole

tht 4:28 PM  

I saw that too. I think Rex is using different software, so that you see a superposition of an actual V on the dancing figure. You can also make that out with the T and C.

ChrisS 4:31 PM  

Lector is a reader in a cigar factory, usually in Cuba. Manhunter by Michael Mann is superior to Silence of the Lambs and the remake Red Dragon is also better.

Andrew Z. 4:48 PM  

I had ECHOLOCALE instead of ECHOLOCATE. Never heard of an ASTER, so I had to hit check puzzle to finish.

tht 5:54 PM  

Agree with your take on the tick. A VET would also be in a better position to determine whether the tick is infected by a bacterium that could be transmitted to the dog.

dgd 7:44 PM  

I fell asleep apparently just after I finished the puzzle ( well I hadn’t put a letter over one of the breakdancers. but I consider the puzzle finished) But again one of those puzzles which became easy once I got the gimmick
Not too much reliance on names, which I prefer. Also I noticed the nitpickers were having trouble finding them!
Good point that best of lists usually become dated. : never seen Silence of the Lambs.for a reason That type of story doesn’t appeal to me so I was annoyed at the old list (not the puzzle) it is interesting that several commenters agreed that other movie versions of the same story were better. Didn’t see them either.
One point about the themers Van Gogh was a gimme for me.That’s a lot of real estate. And it explained part of the gimmick at the same time. Maybe harder if it took you time to get to a themer?
Agree nice puzzle

PH 8:37 PM  

I see, thanks @tht. Correction: breaking instead of breakdancing.

DAVinHOP 8:59 PM  

Rex said "I'm not normally a fan of picture gimmicks in my puzzle". Knew that and, on that basis, predicted three stars (maybe 2-1/2). More like stunned than surprised to see four stars (and borderline 4-1/2).

Never saw the break dancers until reading here, which gave me a better appreciation of the puzzle.

CDilly52 12:48 AM  

This puzzle is the poster child for why I loathe grid “art” and grey or circle squares and absolutely detest IT gimmicks at the end of a puzzle - especially when they don’t work well. It took me at least six times to try to use the rebus button to change the little silhouettes to letters. The pictures never permanently changed but lit up with the yellow rebus box around them, did the same thing five times and finally got my happy music.

CDilly52 1:06 AM  

I got the gimmick immediately at the CREDIT SCORE/TIDE cross. The grey squares told me the theme was dance-related although with a blank grid, I thought the pix were gymnasts doing floor exercise routines. The puzzle would have had some oomph without the dang “neon grey” signs advertising split dance style words. Styles that have nothing to do with BREAK DANCING.

To be fair, I did show the silhouettes to my granddaughter (who, at 13 was just invited to audition for “The Company” at her dance school (enrollment between 500-600 young dancers). Because I know zero about BREAK DANCING and she studies it, I asked her if the “art” accurately represented specific dance moves. She said “Gah, Grandma, can you even see those little icons? (Ouch!) I guess they could be breaking moves.” So fine, an up and coming expert recognized the art.

This demonstrates how very differently a bunch of folks can interact with the very same thing - kind of like the old blind man describing an elephant - example.

Also to be fair, I had a dreadful three hour oral surgery adventure this morning, so am obviously cranky and this puzzle is not one I would likely enjoy were I in tip top shape. So, ignore me today.

Anonymous 2:36 AM  

Pleased to have run into this puzzle right after listening to a newly-purchased Madonna CD in the car. I think it gave me superpowers to set a new personal best time in a Wednesday puzzle :)

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