Friday, February 6, 2026

Derisive term for unattractive public sculptures / FRI 2-6-26 / Classic mixed drink developed in Singapore / "Hearts are ___ for the breakin'" (Taylor Swift lyric) / Dwelling that epitomizes simple living / Phenomenon through which luxuries become necessities / Home improvement site, after a 2021 rebranding / Simone Biles or Tom Brady, acronymically / Stage name of South Korean rapper Park Jae-sang / Finishes a season, say

Constructor: Geoffrey Schorkopf and Rafael Musa

Relative difficulty: Medium


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: TINY HOME (35D: Dwelling that epitomizes simple living) —

The tiny-house movement (also known as the small house movement) is an architectural and social movement promoting the reduction and simplification of living spaces. Tiny homes have been promoted as offering lower-cost and sometimes eco-friendly features within the housing market, and they have also been promoted a housing option for homeless individuals.However, the lack of clearly defined features and legality in many cases can cause issues for ownership, including being more expensive for the amount of area, vulnerability to natural disaster, lack of storage, difficulty hosting, smaller or lacking traditional home appliances, and legal and or zoning issues.

There is some variation in defining a tiny home, but there are examples and they are usually based on floorspace. However, tiny homes do not have clearly defined features and may be mobile and may or may not have traditional home features. One definition, according to the International Residential Code, a tiny house's floorspace is no larger than 400 square feet (37 m2). In common language a tiny house and related movement can be larger than 400 ft2 and Merriam-Webster says they can be up to 500 ft2 . One architectural firm used a threshold of 600 ft2 to define a tiny home. (wikipedia)

• • •

There's lots to like in this, but there is a largeish rectangular patch in the NW that ended up being both ugly and alien to me. And hard. Harder than the rest, anyway. The rectangle is bordered on the south by HARD HAT (32A: Mason, e.g.) and on the east by GIN SLING (8D: Classic mixed drink developed in Singapore). Actually, it's half that rectangle. It's more of a triangle, with the three points being the "H" in HARD HAT and the "G"s at the front and back of GIN SLING. Everything inside that triangle (roughly) was a (tiny) nightmare for me. The epicenter of the nightmare was the completely off-putting (and completely unknown to me) PLOP ART (7D: Derisive term for unattractive public sculptures). It's like a bird shit all over the puzzle. At least, I'm assuming that's what the "plop" part of PLOP ART refers to, right? Bird shit? Don't birds shit on all public art, not just the sculptures you think are "unattractive?" I get that it's playing on the term "pop art," but the shittiness of "plop" is ICK on every level. [wikipedia says that the "plop" part refers to sculpture that seems to have been "plopped" thoughtlessly where it lies, but wikipedia also says the term PLOP ART "holds connotations to excrement"]. I was left wondering what horrid, rotting wordlist that answer crawled out from under. 


That second "P" in PLOP ART took forever, because ...  well, primarily because of WRAPS (20A: Finishes a season). I had no idea what sense of "finishes" (or "season") the clue wanted, and was getting no help from 1, 2, 3 of the crosses. PLOP ART, obvs, no help. Then there's the "Taylor Swift lyric." God knows I have been more than accommodating to the general enSwiftification of the puzzle over the past decade or so, but you're not even giving me the song titles now? Just ... "Taylor Swift lyric?" Are hearts HERE for the breakin'? HELD for the breakin'? I don't know. In retrospect, HERS seems obvious, but while solving, no, that was not the case. The last answer keeping WRAPS from going in was GPS WATCH. I had the GPS, but ... I didn't even know GPS WATCH was a thing, so I was stuck. I also don't really get what "word play" is supposed to be happening in the clue (5D: What gives you the time and place?). Is that just a straightforward question? I've heard people say "name the time and place" or something like that, but the phrasing here evokes nothing very clear. So, yeah, now that I've written this out, the real killer for me in the NW was WRAPS—an answer I'm not actually mad at at all. But its vagueness made GPS WATCH, HERS, and PLOP ART (none of them appealing to me) tough for me to come up with.


GIN SLING was easy but clanked a bit in my ears. I know the SINGAPORE SLING. In fact, that's the only way I got SLING—by inferring it from the "Singapore" in the clue. SINGAPORE SLING would be a great answer. GIN SLING ... fine, but less great. As for HARD HAT, somehow in my head a "Mason" is either really old-timey (laying bricks and mortar with a trowel in, like, Dickensian times) or else belongs to a secret society. I don't picture him (or her, but in my mind's eye, def him) with a HARD HAT at all, and then there's the fact that I haven't heard a person referred to as a HARD HAT in I don't know how long. But yeah, def. 1b. at merriam-webster dot com = "construction worker." Anyway, getting from the clue to the answer there, rough for me. Once I exit that HARD HAT / GIN SLING Bermuda Triangle, though, things get a lot cleaner and more entertaining. IT'S A SMALL WORLD is solid, as is the bank of 8s it runs into (CONTRACT / TOTAL LIE  / STOP DEAD) (those last two aren't just solid, they're strong). I love the highs and lows of modern living represented by the crossing answers TINY HOME (35D: Dwelling that epitomizes simple living) and LIFESTYLE CREEP (49A: Phenomenon through which luxuries become necessities). Real yin/yang action there. "I don't need much" vs. "I need I need I need." Good stuff. BOSS BATTLE is boring and by now old (used four times already in the 2020s, including once just six weeks ago, by one of these same constructors (?!)), but "I'M SO SCARED" made me laugh (it could use and "ooh" on the front in order to be fully sarcastic, but I still like it). The SW corner is as solid as its NE counterpart. A real joy to move through about 3/4 of this puzzle. It's only the stuff ... emanating ... from PLOP ART that made me at all unhappy. 


Bullets:
  • 59A: Home improvement site, after a 2021 rebranding (ANGI) — seen this before and am never gonna like it. Feels like the puzzle's doing PR work on this "rebranding." The site used to be "Angie's List." Now it's this awful adspeak / app-ified four-letter nightmare that evokes angina and angioplasty more than home improvement, imho. It's neo-crosswordese to me and I hate it.
  • 56A: Simone Biles or Tom Brady, acronymically (G.O.A.T.) — Greatest Of All Time. I think it's weird to just state it as fact that the acronym applies. A "to some," is probably in order. This is esp. true with Tom Brady (I think Biles is pretty objectively the greatest to ever do it).
  • 21D: Parliament constituent (OWL) — the collective term for OWLs is a "parliament." Because I studied Middle English literature in grad school, I knew Chaucer's poem Parlement of Foules (i.e. "Parliament of Fowls") before I ever knew the term "parliament" applied specifically to OWLs. Fun (and semi-timely) fact: Parlement of Foules is the likely origin of the association of St. Valentine's Day (Feb. 14) with lovers. 

The Parlement of Foules (modernized: Parliament of Fowls), also called the Parlement of Briddes (Parliament of Birds) or the Assemble of Foules (Assembly of Fowls), is a poem by Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1340s–1400) made up of approximately 700 lines. The poem, which is in the form of a dream vision in rhyme royal stanza, contains one of the earliest references to the idea that St. Valentine's Day is a special day for lovers.

Oruch's survey of the literature finds no association between Valentine and romance prior to Chaucer. He concludes that Chaucer is likely to be "the original mythmaker in this instance." (wikipedia) 

  • 23D: Entered a bear market (SLID) — first thought: "Ew, why are you going to a bear market, why are they selling bears, what do you need a bear for, bears should be free!" Then I thought of the stock market. And wrote in SOLD.
  • 44D: Stage name of South Korean rapper Park Jae-sang (PSY) — as far as I know, PSY is known in this country for precisely one song ("Gangnam Style"), which was indeed mmmmmaaaaaasssssssiiiiiiivvvvve ... in 2012. Since 2012, I have thought about PSY and that song only when crosswords have forced me to.
  • 51D: Modern name of the first National League champions (1876) (CUBS) — in 1876 they were the White Stockings. When they became the CUBS (around the turn of the (20th) century), the name "White Stockings" was adopted by the new American League team on the South Side of Chicago—this team became the modern Chicago White Sox.
[37D: Bring three suitcases to a weekend trip, say]

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

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. my bird-of-the-day calendar has entered the crossword chat

[OWLs … and they’re URAL (4)!]

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76 comments:

  1. Nice - our pal Rafa on a frigid Friday. Had some of the same qualms as the big guy but I trended the overall experience a little flatter. LIFESTYLE CREEP is the highlight - then other longs just didn’t hit.

    The Honeydogs

    HOOLIGAN - RED FLAGS was solid. The rest of the grid is fine - just not that interesting. GPS WATCH, APPLET, GHOSTED etc don’t check the boxes.

    A Dying CUBS Fan’s Last Request

    Well made and professional - could have used a little more juice but a pleasant enough Friday morning solve.

    Send Me the Pillow That You Dream On

    ReplyDelete

  2. Easy-Medium. Nice, serviceable Friday.
    * * * _ _

    Overwrites:
    My picture files were gifS before they were JPGs
    HERe before HERS in the 15D Taylor Swift lyric (not a Swiftie)
    ugh before ICK for the "awful" answer at 28A, quickly fixed by KARAT at 29D

    WOEs:
    I've never heard a JICAMA (6D) called a "Mexican turnip."
    PLOP ART at 7D
    Isabel Allende's EVA Luna at 42A

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:18 AM

      Mmmm... Jicama, slightly sweet, very crunchy addition to salads. I just bought one last week, and I still managed to swap the vowels when I entered it.

      Delete
  3. Anonymous6:24 AM

    I also put in SolD before SLID and HERe before HERS. And "as if I CARED" before I'M SO SCARED--I had the back end and it fit. I enjoyed this one and found it easier than @Rex did--I was close to my Friday best time with very few sticky places. A nice Friday.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. “I had the back end and it fit”

      Look man, this is a family show. Kids are watching.

      Delete
    2. Andy Freude7:59 AM

      Someone selling would be exiting a bull market, I.e., getting out (and probably making a bad investment decision too).

      Delete
  4. Stuart6:41 AM

    “23D: Entered a bear market (SLID)“ — somebody please ‘splain this to me. I also wanted SOLD. Is “slid” referring to prices? (I might have just answered my own question.)

    Otherwise, loved this one.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:44 AM

      The market itself is sliding (downward). Opp of bull market = bear market

      Delete
  5. UK perspective here:
    - bewildered by HARDHAT, as this means nothing more than a hard hat here
    - confused by HOOLIGAN, as I never in 50 years heard 'rowdy' used as a noun here

    Otherwise an enjoyably challenging Friday :-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mason, as in stone mason working on a construction site would be wearing a hard hat.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:12 AM

      Ditto on the noun/adjective issue of HOOLIGAN/rowdy, that seemed weird and I was confused

      Delete
    3. Anonymous8:39 AM

      40 years in the US and I’ve never heard rowdy as a noun, either.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous1:15 PM

      An old Doonesbury with a mason wearing a hard hat! https://readingdoonesbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/17july71.gif

      Delete
  6. Anonymous7:08 AM

    My British great-grandfather was a Master Mason in NYC during the early-mid 20th century and wore a collar and tie every day to work in. No hard hat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That was one dapper great-grandfather! My father worked in a big power plant in the 50s/60s. He would wear “street clothes” (dress shirt and slacks) and change into work clothes (all gray shirt/pants) shower at end of day at work, change back and come home in his street clothes.

      Delete
  7. Andrew Z.7:24 AM

    Ugh. Not a fan. Is anyone supposed to get excited about OENOPHILIA, TEATRO, or APPLET? I had drOPDEAD before STOPDEAD, which I like as a better answer. While it obviously didn’t fit, I thought YOUANDWHATARMY would be better than IMSOSCARED.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:47 AM

      As an avid fan of the grape, yes, oenophilia is a good word to see in a puzzle....

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:59 AM

      Agree. DROPDEAD is much better answer. STOPDEAD is what you do when you suddenly stop not conk out. That one and LETSON for divulges (45d) annoyed me. Isn’t it “let’s in on”. Sounded off to me to be letson. Maybe I’m in the minority. Obviously didn’t bother Rex.

      Delete
    3. Sure, I'll be that someone. I like OENOPHILIA and TEATRO. Now if you had asked whether everyone is supposed to like them, I'd say obviously not.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous 7:59 - LET ON as in "The detective let on that he knew who had stolen the money."

      Delete
    5. Anonymous11:57 AM

      Thumbs up for teatro and oenophilia

      Delete
    6. DAVinHOP1:12 PM

      Andrew, I'm with you re APPLET (to me, tech speak in puzzles is at the level of Star Wars anything to Rex); but I didn't mind either of the others that you found ICKy.

      While I usually find Rex's musings the highlight of my daily crossword, your mention of "you and what army" was today's GOAT for me. The phrase is so ridiculously absurd and inviting of a retort in clever wordplay, versus fisticuffs or the like. Loved it!

      Delete
  8. Loved this puzzle! Agree that the NW was the hardest, but I think "PLOPART" is a pretty funny term and does seem to express the feelings one sometimes might get about certain big abstract sculptures--though I usually like them more than those who call them PLOPART might. I think using negative or displeasing terms in the grid is OK-it keeps it real, right? Like Les McCann and Eddie Harris, right (checkout "Compared to what"--Rex shared it here sometime years ago, and I have loved it ever since!).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdDZXKe9QPA

    14 minutes for me, so yeah, medium I think. Definitely had enough crunch to make me feel I was SLIDing, and like I might get stuck.... but then I started sipping on my GINSLING (which I had no idea about) and felt better. The 2 marquis answers were REALLY nice and made it all worth it! Thanks, Rafa and Geoffrey, for a really great Friday!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:44 AM

      I had PoOPART and was stuck because I had no idea the word oenophilia existed. Apparently autocorrect doesn’t either. I had to force it to stick in this comment.

      Delete
    2. Alexscott688:49 AM

      Yeah, I liked this one too. PLOP ART was definitely one of the highlights for me.

      Delete
  9. Lifestyle creep is so good. The rest of the fill could have alternatively been cat and dog and the puzzle would still be a C+

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  10. Hey All ! Agree NW was a toughie. Last to fill in. Luckily, know of the OENO prefix meaning wine. The ole KEALOA of JPGs or GIFs not helping. JICAMA rings a very (very) faint bell.
    But, got it all in the end. Yay me!

    Nice Themeless. No real ICK. Finished rather quickly, even with the NW hold-up.

    Have a great Friday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  11. This week my times for Wednesday, thursday and friday are all about the same in the middle teens. So I guess at least for me today was easy. I didn't get what plopart meant until Rex's little melt down over it. Now I think that it is pretty funny. And I didn't get it till oenophile came together which finished the puzzle.

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  12. Brendan Curran7:57 AM

    Am I the only one to have trouble with OENOPHILIA? I got the rest of the puzzle without much trouble.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:34 AM

      My last word.

      Delete
    2. Agree with Brendan. I had to look the word up afterwards. I'm a little surprised Rex didn't comment on it . Oenophilia isn't exactly a very common word.

      Delete
  13. LIFESTYLE CREEP – Oh, perfect term! Gorgeous! Many TIL’s are instantly forgettable. This one is now etched in and I will think it when I see it. Mwah!

    Freshness: Nine NYT never-seen-before answers with their never seen before clues, including LIFESTYLE CREEP itself, as well as its antithesis (Hi, @Rex!) TINY HOME.

    Skilled cluing: Look at the one for OENOPHILIA, which in lesser hands would be given a direct clue, but here the clue is a misdirect, sounding baseball related -- Mwah again!

    My sheesh moment was when, with [Word with wax or butter], I fixated on the answer preceding those words, so when BEAN emerged, I actually spent more moments than I’d like to admit wondering what bean butter and bean wax were.

    I liked ICK sharing the grid with PLOP ART, as well as a trio of lovely smaller answers JICAMA, INLAY, and HIT UP.

    Lovely, skilled, and fresh – a satisfying jewel of a puzzle. High props, Geoffrey and Rafael, and a big thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  14. MaxxPuzz8:08 AM

    I had POOPART during most of the solve. Same wavelength as Rex, thought of pigeons doing their artistic enhancements.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Me too! Needed OENOPHILIA to fix it.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:37 AM

      Me, three! Seemed perfectly correct.

      Delete
  15. Nessa8:12 AM

    Lol that I had "PLOP ART" as "POOP ART"

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous8:25 AM

    A couple decades from now, I can only imagine that anyone who encounters this puzzle in the archives is going to have a *very* hard time with that GOAT entry. That’s gonna read like one of those preposterously obscure trivia or vocab entries of yore…

    ReplyDelete
  17. Kind of a fun one with enough trouble spots to keep it Friday-worthy. I was wondering why someone would need a GPS WATCH if they have a cellphone. Do they even make standalone GPS devices anymore?

    The SE was a trouble spot with the gamer clue and the useless TEATRO contributing to the difficulty. I wanted an Oyster Bar instead of a BED and didn’t have enough crosses to discern APPLET there. I’ll take it though, as I had pretty good luck elsewhere.

    I’m familiar with WRAPS a season as a phrase and align myself more with @Gary than OFL, as I think the term PLOP ART is more of a Tee-Hee than a cause of consternation.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. GPSWATCHes are very popular in the exercise communities. You can chart and track your route as a runner or cyclist, follow your courses and altitude while skiing, calculate distances on a golf course, etc.
      To be fair, for many of these you also have your phone with you…

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:34 PM

      Out of curiosity, do you call them GPS watches? I’ve heard smart watch (or Apple Watch or whatever), but I’ve never heard the term GPS watch.

      Delete
  18. Anonymous8:34 AM

    It's Tiny house. Home and house aren't interchangeable.

    ReplyDelete
  19. There is a sculpture of a dog urinating in front of the MOMA in Orange County, CA, so "plop art" isn't that far off. I didn't find "wraps" to be vague at all, given that it's one of the most hackneyed cliches to be heard on sports talk radio.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And then there's there's this fountain in Brussels.

      Delete
    2. The fountain is appropriately named the MANNEKEN PIS.

      Delete
  20. What happens when guest host Clare's dog gets tired? REDFLAGS.

    Could "Letter from Birmingham Jail" be considered a CONTRACT?

    You know how the Mini is a small crossword? Well, the NYT is coming out with a game where you try to guess a three letter word in 6 tries, building on info gained from each successive guess. The name will be Wordlet because ITSASMALLWORdle after all.

    In his day, Hugh Hefner might have seemed glamorous, but today he'd be viewed as a LIFESTYLECREEP.

    I'm BEAN serious when I say I liked this puzzle. Thanks, Geoffrey Schorkopf and Rafa.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I thought this was great! Notice there is so little junk that comments are all about personal preferences for words and categories.

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  22. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  23. Anonymous9:04 AM

    A not every debut is a good debut all star puzzle. GPSWATCH? With a ? clue? What are we misdirecting from here? PLOPART? I guess I’m just not on the wavelength of this puzzle. Just made me go “ok, I guess that can be an answer” over and over. Lifestyle creep, sure, but I dunno. Whole thing was going for new fun but the answers/clues didn’t match that, just feels forced and ugh.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Given Rafa's expressed likes from his guest columns, I'd have expected more WoEs today. But it was just EVA, and a slight misremembering of jicama as jacana (which is a bird).

    ReplyDelete
  25. Slightly north of Medium. HARDest part was probably the NW. But I found much to like (such as OENOPHILIA, also spelled ENOPHILIA, where the OE was originally one of those ligature things that you'd have to look up the html code for to render correctly). I can't get my dander up about PLOP ART; I didn't think of it in terms of "shit" so much as the idea that some art has been plopped indiscriminately without due consideration for surroundings, etc. -- a sore thumb thing. Among the entries plopped down in that region, SAD looked a little sad and anemic, lacking the specificity of "lachrymose" which to me means "teary". I think it might have been clued better.

    But this puzzle has more sizzle and pop than yesterday's. I've never heard LIFESTYLE CREEP, but that one is good, as is I'M SO SCARED (I hear George Costanza saying this to Jerry when George, speaking for them both, declined the network's offer of piloting their series because he thought he could negotiate higher pay). TOTAL LIE and STOP DEAD (in their tracks) and GHOSTED and RED FLAGS and HOOLIGAN: all good. TINY HOME pairs well with IT'S A SMALL WORLD and contrasts well with LIFESTYLE CREEP. Very neat, Geoffrey and Rafa.

    This one feels more like a proper Friday and I appreciate it. Happy Friday, everyone!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think the same thing with PLOPART, and speaking of sore thumbs, my first entry was “eyesore” [note there are NO letters in common. :)]

      Delete
    2. Just what @tht said. Minus the Seinfeld parts.

      Delete
  26. Harder, for a Friday, than they've been lately, which is fine with me. I'm with Rex on the NW being the stickiest but not for the same reasons. GPS WATCH seemed a gimme once I had the WATCH part which was early on. For some reason, JICAMA never comes to mind. I had the AMA and was blank on vegetables. That's possibly because I am not a JICAMA fan - it seems quite tasteless so not turnip-y to me.

    HOOLIGAN went in last, with that tricky "it's a noun, not an adjective" misdirection.

    BOSS BATTLE - I've successfully added it to my vocabulary list though not to my real LIFE experience.

    Doesn't the clue for 57D need the exclamation point to indicate it's one of those clues?

    Geoffrey and Rafa, thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous9:27 AM

    The northwest did me in.I kept thinking of the Ohio team. Also, I didn’t like’not’ for kidding.☹️

    ReplyDelete
  28. EasyEd9:28 AM

    I know OENO refers to wine but could not intuit it and POLE would just not come to mind. Add that to JICAMA (never heard of it) and had huge problem with the NW. Other problems were with two names: PSY and MELISSA. Could have been POOP or PLOP ART, but the crosses fixed that. Unlike OFL found that a lot easier than JICAMA. Anyway, aside from these blind spots thought this a relatively easy Friday and fun to work out.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous9:30 AM

    Rex—
    The reference to excrement in the Wiki article has nothing to do with bird shit. It refers to the object as being shit itself. And of course, so much that passes as art is in fact pure plop.

    ReplyDelete
  30. I was pretty sure that GIN SLING was going to be ginaling (like dingaling, but with gin?). Someone needs to invent this cocktail!

    ReplyDelete
  31. Actually "plop art" is a well known term in some places. A most famous example was in Berkeley where an artist dropped off a huge and heavy sculpture of a Malaysian temple guard at the marina. No permission, no permit. It remained a controversy from 1986 until it was removed i think in 2020. It was always called the plop art as he had plopped it down. https://www.berkeleyside.org/2016/01/04/how-quirky-is-berkeley-fredric-fiersteins-gifts-to-the-city

    ReplyDelete
  32. This was more like a Saturday than a Friday. In the NW I had several write overs. The first was STARID/REALID because they do have a star on them. Then there was HERE/HERS and JICATA/JICAMA.

    The NE must have been the easiest section as I filled it without reading the clue for STOPDEAD.

    The rest of the puzzle was steady late week resistance. I was a little slow on HOOLIGAN and I've never heard of the term BOSSBATTLE. I'm not even sure what kind of a "gamer" the clue refers to.

    Bantu KNOTS was also new to me.

    If ARIAL weren't a proper noun it would be and SB classic. Gangnam too.

    While the solve was on the tough side the names in the puzzle were rather early week, especially ETTA. ANGI was the only outlier and that wasn't too hard to infer.

    ReplyDelete
  33. I really resisted GIN SLING because I've only ever heard of the Singapore sling, but I was wrong--apparently people have been drinking slings for centuries.

    But the Taylor Swift lyric and the Disneyland ride, both complete unknowns to me, made this puzzle difficult. What made it even harder was that I had "dull," thinking of a pencil that needed sharpening, before MOOT.

    I had drOP DEAD, too. From hindsight, people drop dead, but your snow thrower might STOP DEAD just as you are starting to clear your sidewalk.

    As for lachrymose, here's Mozart's version..

    The Allende novel was tough for me, as well. I even considered uVA, thinking it might be about a nighttime tryst in a vineyard.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous10:21 AM

    New personal best for Friday on today's puzzle: 5:38!

    ReplyDelete
  35. Estoy tan asustado.

    Took awhile to get started, but then the long answers stopped fighting back and everything came along fine. Maybe not exciting, but well made and enjoyable with a good sense of humor.

    HARD HATS equals Masons, and HOOLIGAN equals Rowdy each clank in my brain, but I guess they're okay enough.

    ❤️ GHOSTED. PLOP ART.

    People: 5
    Places: 1
    Products: 8
    Partials: 3
    Foreignisms: 1
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 70 (26%)

    Funny Factor: 6 πŸ˜…

    Tee-Hee: POLE dancer.

    Uniclues:

    1 When beerophilia rules the day.
    2 Adenaline junky turns essay in at 11:59.
    3 Billy butts Bezos. (Definitely rooting for Billy.)
    4 Stripper with a credit card reader yelling, "Tap it. Tap it."
    5 First date: He orders decaf and a salad.
    6 Where the old woman in the shoe moved after becoming vegan.
    7 Truth Social.
    8 Slabs in the morgue.

    1 OENOPHILIA MOOT
    2 INTO LAST SECOND (~)
    3 GOAT BOSS BATTLE
    4 POLE HOOLIGAN
    5 ON-SITE RED FLAGS
    6 JICAMA TINY HOME
    7 TOTAL LIE APPLET
    8 STOP DEAD BEDS

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Advice for Republican wannabes. TOADIES LAST.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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    1. I know what you mean on HARDHATS =masons. I don’t typically think of the stone and brick construction that they do as particularly needing a HARDHAT just as I don’t think of that with a carpenter on most jobs. On the other hand, even a visiting CEO from [insert big company] will have to wear a HARDHAT and steel toed boots to visit one of the steel mills.

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  36. Loved OENOPHILIA, the word and the clue. ITS A SMALL WORLD (not the ride but the concept) and LIFESTYLE CREEP make an interesting pair, and NEST goes right along with them. The APPLET/TEATRO/KNOTS crossing cost me a little time, as did BOSSBATTLE, which I've never heard of. But I liked the puzzle; it was a satisfying if not overly taxing Friday.

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  37. This puzzle played a little harder than medium for me except the NW area that Rex spoke of which I ALMOST gave up on, but hung in. I was unfamiliar with the term PLOPART (I liked it), could not (and cannot) hear someone say they have a GPSWATCH (um…smartWATCH sure), and similar to @kitshef I just cannot seem to commit to memory JICAMA so played around with JACANA/JACAMA and other things kinda sorta similar.
    Sounds like I’m beefing, but I’m not…I REALLY appreciated many of the clever clues and the overall crunchiness of the puzzle.
    Thanks Geoffrey and Rafa!

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  38. Pretty much on OFL's wavelength today, right down to having WRAPS as my last entry. Plenty of stuff that was unfamiliar--PLOPART, PSY, KNOTS as clued, APPLET, even LIFESTYLECREEP as it seems we're going in the opposite direction. I have never GHOSTED anyone or been GHOSTED (how would I know?) but at least I finally remembered BOSSBATTLE.

    GOAT was timely as I was watching the Olympics this AM and had just seen Simone Biles interviewing Michaela Schiffrin. Couple of GOATs right there.

    Nice chewy Friday here, GS and RM. Took a while to Get Started and Really Made me use some xword experience. Thanks for all the fun.

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  39. Medium for me too. The top was pretty whooshy but the bottom took some work.

    A very costly erasure was MELindA before MELISSA and I know better, “The Heat” and “Bridesmaids” are among my favorite movies.

    PLOP ART was also a WOE.

    No junk, plenty of sparkle, liked it a bunch!

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  40. Kinda hard for me. I knew Rafa wouldn't disappoint so I stuck with it.
    WOES = BOSS BATTLE, LIFESTYLE CREEP, PLOP ART. Rex's mention of "the enSwiftification of the puzzle over the past decade or so" brings me to the Bonus Puzzle of the month where Ms. Swift is the "theme" (sheesh - why did I even bother? I complained (a lotta good that'll do).
    Thank you, Geoffrey & Rafa :)

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  41. Anonymous11:32 AM

    I thought the play on "pop art" was in fact POPFART, which also has more explicit connotations of excrement.

    So yeah, struggled with that section as well.

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  42. Surprising way that I was on Rex’s wavelength today: since OENOPHILIA gave me horrendous trouble (only when I looked the word up post-solve did I realize that it did in fact exist in some dark corner of my memory), that L of PLOP ART was my very last letter. My first guess, since the cross seemed a cluster of Greek gibberish letters? POOP ART.

    Hurray for the second reference to Middle English literature on the blog in one week! I too had to get past “fowls” in my brain before I came up with OWLS.

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  43. I'm at the Sweetwater brewery almost every Wednesday with friends, so it was nice to see 420 show up in the grid. Also, a total gimmie.

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  44. Being on a vacation in Hawaii sure makes for very late postings on the East Coast! I was happy to see the slightly broken string of blocker squares running through the middle of this grid, because it allows for more uninterrupted strings of letters for potential 4 & 5 letter Hidden Diagonal Words (HDW). Here are three HDW clues:
    1. Bind up the bird (5 letters)
    2. Where the cheese stands alone? (4 letters)
    3. Hops in it! (4 letters)
    (Answers below)

    Finished this Friday puzzle in what for me felt like a bit lower than Friday time--25:39. So, Easy/medium. Would have been quicker but for the untangling of OENOPHILIA, caused by my inability to remember how to spell JICAMA and --more importantly-- my disappointment that my answer to 7D, Derisive term for unattractive public sculptures was incorrect. I sensed that it must involve a play on words around the pop art genre, so I had very confidently "PLOPped" in PoOPART. I think poop art fits the clue nicely!

    Answers
    1. TRUSS (off the T in 38D, SATE, moves toward SW--a clue best suited, perhaps for the holiday season)

    2. DELL (the D in 23D, SLID--from the lyrics of The Farmer in the Dell)

    3. OAST (the O in the aforementioned 7D, PLOPART--a kiln used to roast hops in the beer-making process)

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  45. Pretty smoooth &e-z sailin, for a Friday rodeo event, at our house.
    Had no big prob with gettin OENOPHILIA -- I have no excuses for that; knew OENO from xwords and -philia from other xwords, and my mind just splatzed em together.

    Did, tho, have oodles of nanosecond trouble-brewin in that JICAMA/JPGS/PLOPART region. That J was the last thing splatzed into my half of the solvequest. [My Puzeatinspouse and I ganged up on the puz, cuz of the two constructioneers havin ganged up on us.

    staff weeject pick: TAN. This runtpup had one of very few ?-marker clues in this here FriPuz, for some reason. Need to get friskier, Shortzmeister dude!

    some fave stuff: LASTSECOND. ITSASMALLWORLD. STOPDEAD/GHOSTED. HOOLIGAN. ACTS clue.

    Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Schorkopf & Musa dudes. Enjoyed yer boss xword battle.

    Masked & Anonymo1U [s]

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  46. With all respect to Tom Brady, I might suggest Muhammad Ali, along with Simone Biles, as the other G.O.A.T. I'm pretty sure he's the first one who was ever granted that title; in fact I believe he and/or his wife actually incorporated "G.O.A.T. Inc." in the early 1990s to manage his estate -- but maybe that's a matter of opinion, too.

    ETTA -- "soul" music? Well, it wasn't really called that yet when she had her first hits (mid-1950s); it was still considered R&B, and I think that's how she was categorized until the end of her career. But maybe that's too small a nit to pick.

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  47. I remember HARD HAT[S] being used as a kind of epithet directed at construction workers who (sometimes violently) confronted anti-war demonstrators in the 1960s (yes, I'm THAT old!) -- haven't heard the term since then. I don't believe I ever heard it applied specifically to masons, though.

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  48. This was pretty challenging for a Friday; over 25 minutes although the first 15 minutes seemed like foreeeever. Yes that upper left was tough; I've heard of "oenophile" but not this version. Plus I had typeovers at LAST MINUTE before SECOND, JACAMA before JACIMA, and as Rex mentioned "Hearts are" HERE.

    In weather news, well, not much. No snow since Dec. 4 (64 days) and none in the forecast. The temperature hasn't been below freezing yet this month.

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