Sunday, February 15, 2026

Fashion designer Carolina / SUN 2-15-26 / Duchess of ___ (noted Spanish title) / Certain public transit network / ___ Winter, basketball coach who famously innovated the "triangle offense" / Photo-editing technique used to create a smooth transition / Video game character aptly celebrated in Mar. 10 / Made younger-looking in an editing studio, say / Reality TV franchise created by Tyra Banks / Science-and-nature magazine familiarly / Sarcastic response to a show-off / Horn contents at a Viking feast

Constructor: Michael Lieberman and Rebecca Goldstein

Relative difficulty: Easy

THEME: "Good to the Last Drop" — theme answers "drop" (merging with separately clued Down answers) just after the letter string "HERE," as hinted at by the revealer, IT'S ALL DOWNHILL FROM HERE (73A: "Things are only going to get worse" ... or a hint to answering the seven italicized clues in this puzzle):

Theme answers:
  • BLOW TO SMITHEREENS (24A: Completely destroy with a blast)
  • MOTHER EARTH (27A: Gaia, by another name)
  • TEACHER EDITION (40A: Version of a textbook designed for instruction)
  • FEATHER EDGE (96A: Photo-editing technique used to create a smooth transition)
  • ETHEREAL (93A: Delicate, as beauty)
  • AT THE REAR (123A: In back)
  • IS THAT ALL THERE IS? (125A: "Wait, are we done?")
Word of the Day: TEX Winter (60A: ___ Winter, basketball coach who famously innovated the "triangle offense") —

Morice Fredrick "Tex" Winter (February 25, 1922 – October 10, 2018) was an American basketball coach and innovator of the triangle offense, an offensive system that became the dominant force in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and resulted in 11 NBA Championships with the Chicago Bulls in the 1990s and the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2000s. He was a head coach in college basketball for 30 years before becoming an assistant coach in the NBA. He was an assistant to Phil Jackson on nine NBA championship teams with the Chicago Bulls and the Los Angeles Lakers. Winter was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011. In 2016, the NBA created the annually presented Tex Winter Assistant Coach Lifetime Impact Award in his honor. (wikipedia)
• • •

This one rides entirely on the revealer. It's a clever, extremely literal use of the phrase "IT'S ALL DOWNHILL FROM HERE"—it got a big "aha" out of me, for sure—but the theme itself is very one-note, with nothing particularly interesting or funny or clever to show you. Words contain the letter string "HERE," and after "HERE," they head ... down. Over and over and over (seven times). Kind of a shrug, and an easy one at that (once you know the "HERE"s are out there, you're basically given those four letters for free every time you see an italicized clue). Obviously the execution of this theme involves some intricate architecture. Those themers not only have to drop after the "HERE," but they have to merge seamlessly into Down answers. But from a solving standpoint, filling in those answers just wasn't that interesting. There's just not enough cleverness or humor to carry this one over a huge Sunday-sized grid (slightly oversized at 22 wide). It all works fine, but aside from the revealer, it lacked pop. My main feeling at the end was that it was all kind of dull. And, relatedly, once again, the puzzle was terribly easy. I've got red ink here and there on my grid print-out (signifying various snarl-ups), but it's pretty sparse, and none of the snarl-ups held me up for very long. The puzzle had just one answer that seemed particularly original, but sadly it was one of the answers I liked least: WEED TEA. I am clearly behind on the whole THC beverage craze (my only experience with edibles being sleep gummies). WEED TEA? It's really called that? Yeah, it looks like "cannabis tea" is indeed sometimes called WEED TEA. I wish that answer did something for me. I needed something in this puzzle to do something for me. I have to give that answer credit for trying, at least. The rest of the grid just kind of lies there. RESPELLED? Hmm. I'm making a very grimacey face right now just looking at that word. You will be shocked (shocked, I say!) to discover that both WEED TEA and RESPELLED are debuts. I'll say it for the billionth time: Not All Debuts Are Good™. But if it's WEED TEA vs. RESPELLED, well then, WEED TEA wins by TKO, for sure. 


By far the hardest part of the puzzle for me was this little knot in the upper middle, where (off of "-IT-") I had written in BITE for 47A: Sharpness (WITS). This left me with TRAM BAY in the cross (26D: Certain public transit network), which I was on the point of rationalizing: "You gotta keep the trams somewhere, I guess." Since "bay" has various architectural / structural meanings ("bomb bay," "cargo bay," etc.), I was ready to accept TRAM BAY ... but the clue says [Certain public transit network] and TRAM BAY (if such a thing existed) seemed like it would be *part* of a network, not the network itself. Annnnnyway, I left the mistake in place and would have kept it there til the end if it weren't for the unlikely help of U.S. STEEL (37D: World's first billion-dollar corporation). I thought, "that's gotta be U.S. STEEL," and a couple of crosses confirmed it, but I had "USE-" at the beginning (because I still had "BITE" for 47A: Sharpness). Eventually U.S. STEEL became undeniable, and after a second or so of trying to make BITS work for 47A: Sharpness, I took out the "B" from TRAM BAY and TRAM-AY / -ITS became TRAMWAY / WITS. Maybe I've heard the term TRAMWAY before but I don't know that I've ever been anywhere with a TRAMWAY. Disneyland, maybe? No, wait, trams are like streetcars or trolley cars? Public transport that runs on a network of rails integrated right into the urban environment. Well, I've been to San Francisco, and I've been on cable cars (which are a type of "tram"), so I guess I have seen a TRAMWAY. I don't remember anyone's calling it that. Thanks to wikipedia, I now know that San Francisco (where I was born) was the first city to operate cable trams, and Dunedin, NZ (where my wife grew up) was the second. Clearly we were fated to be married! Brought together by public transportation history! Ah, destiny! Happy belated Valentine's Day, everybody!


The other toughish part for me was FEATHER EDGE, a term I don't really know as I don't spend a lot of time editing photos. I put the "HERE" into that answer and it did virtually nothing for me, even after I got the "EDGE" bit (from WEDGE) (91D: Shoe with a thick sole). The impossible (for me) clue on ALBA (104A: Duchess of ___ (noted Spanish title)) and the very weird colloquial clue on "ABOUT TO" (98D: "Next on my list"), kept the FEATHER EDGE corner (SW) dicey there for a bit. But then (for the first time in my life) MARIO came to the rescue! Usually I'm tripping over myself trying to answer clues about the vast Mario Universe (about which I know nothing except what the puzzle tells me), but today, I got that MARIO clue easily (110D: Video game character aptly celebrated in Mar. 10). I don't think I've ever been so happy (or happy at all) to see a MARIO-related clue. MARIO ... MAR10 (i.e. Mar. 10, i.e. 3/10) ... you see the resemblance. Very cute. 


Bullets:
  • ___ Winter, basketball coach who famously innovated the "triangle offense" (TEX) — I'm gonna dispute "famously" here. When you say "triangle offense," I say Phil Jackson. Phil Jackson ran the triangle offense "famously." This TEX guy may have "innovated" it, but I'm not sure "famously" applies, since this is the first I'm hearing of him. He was Jackson's assistant coach on nine championship teams (all six Bulls championships plus the Lakers' threepeat of 2000-02).
  • 105A: Made younger-looking in an editing studio, say (DE-AGED) — a very real and (to me) very creepy thing. I associate the process with Scorsese's The Irishman, for which DeNiro and Pacino and Pesci were all digitally DE-AGED in order to play their younger selves.
  • 107A: Reality TV franchise created by Tyra Banks (TOP MODEL) — as an enthusiastic non-watcher of so-called "Reality TV," I only know the names of shows from hearing them discussed ... wherever. I really thought this show was called America's Next TOP MODEL. Where am I getting that from? Oh ... well, that is its name. TOP MODEL is just how it's known familiarly (also ANTM, put that in your grid and smoke it!). Really could've used a "familiarly" here. But knowing the full name of the show made getting the partial name of the show pretty easy, actually.
  • 62D: N.Y.C. neighborhood that's home to the Grey Art Museum (NOHO) — should've made "Grey Art Museum" my Word of the Day because that name meant absolutely nothing to me. You tell me "N.Y.C. neighborhood" and it's four letters, I'm going SOHO, maybe NOHO. So I waited for the cross. No problem. I've been to a lot of N.Y.C. museums, but I've never even heard of the Grey. Ah, I see, it's NYU's art museum. It's called the Grey Art Museum because of a 1973 gift of one thousand works from someone named Abby Weed Grey. So there's some more WEED for you, if you're into that.
That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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

  1. Peggy6:03 AM

    Right down the middle for me. Just fine.

    But all through the solve, I kept thinking:
    Is that all there is? Is that all there is?
    If that's all there is, my friends, then let's keep dancing. Let's break out the booze, and have a ball.
    If that's all... there is.

    ReplyDelete

  2. Easy, but I liked it more than @Rex did. I got a *BIG* "Aha!" when I realized the HERE part.
    * * * * _

    No overwrites, except for a typo that kept me from getting the happy music at first.

    Two WOEs, TEX Winter (60A) and WEED TEA (85D). I might have had trouble with FEATHER EDGE (96A/91D) and ALBA (104A), but by the time I read the clues I had enough crosses to infer the answers.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous6:25 AM

    62 down was actually NOHO not SOHO, which I recall because it was one of my stumbles.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous6:49 AM

    This puzzle was neither here nor there. ๐Ÿคช Paradoxically, I liked it. ๐ŸŽˆ๐ŸŽˆ๐ŸŽŠ๐ŸŽŠ

    ReplyDelete
  5. I liked this puzzle a lot: thought it was the appropriate skill level for a Sunday. RESPELLED was kind of clunky, but otherwise I enjoyed the longer answers. I've definitely heard the word TRAMWAY used. And I smiled at the last theme answer being IS THAT ALL THERE IS.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Any grid that is forced to use RESPELLED, SPHEROID, WEED TEA etc due to an overstuffed theme is a big no in my book. I don’t think the revealer is apt - DOWNHILL implies a gradual slope - the themers drop or fall vertically.

    The SMITHEREENS

    Body parts central - TUSHIE, KNEE BENDS, ARM RESTS. Liked STEEPED, DEARTH, LOOSE ENDS and our SB friend TOMTIT. The overall fill is so constricted by the density of the trick that the whole things fails miserably. At least it wasn’t overly complicated and time consuming.

    FEATHERED Indians

    Sundays have really been on a downward spiral recently.

    The day my mama socked it to the HARPER Valley P.T.A.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:10 AM

      I think you've been watching too much skiing! :-)

      Delete
    2. Son Bolt
      To each his own
      I noticed other people liked SPHEROID. I did too. Weed tea A popular term for cannabis tea. Never had it. Probably never will. But why is it the answer. so bad?
      Natch I thought downhill was close enough for crosswords. So I liked the puzzle. Rex didn’t dislike it. He just thought it was on the boring side except for the reveal.which he liked.

      Delete
  7. The American Show is called "America's Next Top Model". But it's only one of a raft of similar shows around the world. Australia's Next Top Model, Canada's Next Top Model, Caribbean's Next Top Model, Top Model Norge...you get the idea. TOP MODEL is the franchise linking all those shows.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:50 AM

      100% agreed. Tyra was a producer on all of the Top Model iterations. Who can forget the groundbreaking Slovenski Top Model?!

      Delete
  8. Took me a LONG time to understand the theme.... I just didn't understand about the right angle "down"-turn, until finally way down at the bottom of the grid, I was looking so hard at ETHERE and I was like.... is it about the letters falling off the edge of the grid--but what does -AL falling off the edge do.??? But then I was looking at FEATHERE and WEDGE and... I looked back over at ETHERE and saw the AL going down from DEAL and.... "aha"-- I had the moment. I'm just not ready for tricky Thursday-like themes on Sundays. It is a wide grid. And I don't think there was a star-wars clue, was there??? Loved MARIO saving the day in that SW corner for all of us though. SPHEROID is a nice word; LOOSEENDS looks weird but always makes me think of gangsters offing people so they don't leave any LOOSEENDS.... 29 minutes for me, which is probably easy medium for me with the wide grid. Thanks a bunch, Michael and Rebecca, for a terrific Sunday puzzle!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Well, the star of the puzzle, to me, is the word HERE.

    I remember thinking, at some point during the fill-in, that this was simply a rehash of a crossword tricky-trope: the turn-down or turn-up of an answer. It was well executed, but rather ordinary and disappointing, coming from the two pros that made this puzzle.

    Until HERE. That changed everything.

    It changed the revealer from just signaling a downward turn to making it marvelously specific. It brought the amazement that comes when seeing something that was right in front of my eyes, but was blind to.

    Plus, my appreciation for the skill behind this build soared. That HERE constricts so much -- the words that can come above and below it, and the number possible theme answers and dropping words. That on top of how those dropping words constrict the surrounding answers. Wow!

    As cream, there was the marvelous SMITHEREENS!

    Totally charmed by your puzzle, Rebecca and Michael. What pros you are. I loved this. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:52 PM

      The HERE rebus and the DOWNHILL spanner made me think of Pogo: "From here on down it's uphill all the way!" Walt Kelly's best line: "We have met the enemy and he is ICE."

      Delete
  10. Change of direction puzzles can be repetitive and bland. This one particularly so. The fill didn't help either. Never once did I feel that an entry was so obscure that I thought I might Natick on it. This pushed no envelopes and it had YEET in it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think of YEET as a feature, not a bug!!! : )

      Delete
  11. Tramway is the Roosevelt Island Tramway in NYC. I suppose.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haydn
      Maybe tramway at ski resorts ?
      Tram itself is used in England for what we call a trolley Americans use tram in a lot of different ways. That applies to tramway also.

      Delete
  12. Once you understand the theme, you have ready hints for each themer (HERE at the end), so I acknowledge Rex's criticism. But the challenge of constructing seven such themers paired with an Olympic concept (downhill, drop) made this very enjoyable for me. Yes, it was easy but in a very fun way.

    More:
    - 47A: I too had BITE at first.
    - 26D: TRAMWAYs are a thing! In San Francisco of course (with another link to SF in 103D) but many other places in the world. This brought up memories of the Peak Tram in Hong Kong.
    - 13D: LOL, I had HEMS at first... You pay the seamstress or the folks at the local dry cleaners to have a hem made and pressed!
    - Juxtaposing DEAGED (105A) and TOPMODEL (107A) is brilliant.

    And that's all there is, @Peggy (Lee?!)!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Easy or Easy-Medium. But it was a big Aha! only post-solve, reading Rex's review, where I hadn't noticed that the horizontal portions all end in HERE; I only saw the drop-offs. I might have shaved off ninety seconds had I noticed that, so it wasn't a big deal. But a very nice revealer, once revealed.

    DEAGED is ugly-looking to me, even uglier than UGLI (actually, I don't mind that last one so much). WEED TEA is ugly-sounding. Never heard it before. It doesn't sound like it would taste good. But I guess the taste is the secondary consideration. You're drinking it basically for one reason only.

    WRIER looks weird. Or is it just me? It looks like it needs to be RESPELLED as "wryer". See, spell-check approves of that last spelling. Not the first.

    Veterans of SB will know TOMTIT. First time I saw it, I had to look it up. Cute little bird. The name brings back a college memory, where one of my friends had spotted a book in the carrels, titled The Feeding of the Great Tit, which he found uproariously funny. I didn't ask him what he was picturing exactly, but I vaguely thought of some MOTHER EARTH goddess with large breasts and I guess your imagination can supply remaining details. Little fairies or cherubs floating around and making sure that the mammaries are plentifully supplied, perhaps. Isn't there a Greek myth about how the Milky Way came into being? Something about a baby god nursing, maybe at the teat of RHEA, when suddenly there's an interruption and the baby detaches, or something like that? I forget exactly.

    Something ABOUT the clue to ABOUT TO looks slightly incongruous ("Next on my list"). I get it, but here's a linguistic challenge to illustrate what I mean by "incongruous": construct a plausible partial phrase where either clue or answer can be inserted into a blank, i.e., where either can be seamlessly swapped out for the other. It's a parts of speech thing I'm concerned ABOUT here. That used to be an important consideration of crosswords. That standard has become more LOOSE as time goes on.

    Okay, that'll do it for now. I bid you good day!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Just wanted to add thanks to @Whatsername, @GaryJugert, @CDilly52, and an Anonymous for support after yesterday's rant. I had had second thoughts, like "maybe you went too far that time, tht", and thought I'd postpone looking at reactions for fear of rotten tomatoes hurled in my direction, so it's heartening that I'm not alone in my feelings. (I think I knew Gary's feeling on the matter!)

      Delete
    2. Always nice to see TOMTIT, as it comes one letter shy of being my full (first and last) name.

      Delete
    3. Thanks to SB & Sam, now that I know it, I will always remember TOMTIT. Tallit, however, is another story.

      Delete
    4. 100% right there with you... WRyER went right in.

      Delete
  14. I managed to get the reveal pretty easily and it was all downhill sledding after that. I thought the degree of difficulty was just about right to keep it enjoyable, but I’m usually in the minority with that opinion.

    No clue who MOTHERE and GAIA are (or maybe they are places). Ditto for TATIANIA. I see our friend YEET is clued as “modern” slang - note to the folks at the Times - if I know the slang word, it’s not “modern”.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:05 AM

      GAIA is MOTHER EARTH. It’s one of the theme answers.

      Delete
    2. MOTHER EARTH = Gaia. TITANIA from "A Midsummer Night's Dream."

      Delete
    3. Jnlzbth
      I was annoyed at myself because I knew Oberon but couldn’t remember her name. It came to me only after some crosses!

      Delete
  15. Hey All !
    Did notice grid was 22 wide, the ole brain awake this AM. Actually needed to be today to support the Revealer.

    Awesome construction feat. Turning down Themers which needed to be part of other words, some quite long (SEDITION, DEARTH), plus one needing to cross the Revealer, and making the surrounding fill still be actual things. Impressive. Or, well LAH DI DAH, you two. Har.

    I do have a nit, though. Only one Themer (Across) ends with CHERE, all the others end with THERE. I thought we had a THERE Theme, but it's only a HERE Theme. But, I guess that's neither here nor there. ๐Ÿ˜

    SMITHEREENS is a fun word. Wondering if it's on @Gary's list.

    Finished with errors (FWE), had TRAMcAr/cITS/SATAr, even though they made no sense. And SEAm for SEAS, figured the Moon might have seams. MEDITION, SEDITION, ah me.

    Nice SunPuz, Michael and Rebecca. Took a bit of time, wasn't done IN A FLASH.

    Have a great Sunday!

    Four F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Roo
      For the Moon and seas, I always remember the Sea of Tranquility where the astronauts first landed on the Moon. Don’t know if that would help in the future. I was a teenager then so etched in my brain. People once thought the flat areas on the Moon were seas. They didn’t change the names when they found out otherwise.

      Delete
  16. Anonymous8:09 AM

    "It's all downhill from here" generally means things will be getting easier not more difficult. It's a good revealer but the clue is wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:47 AM

      Thank you!

      Delete
    2. Not wrong, just different uses for the same phrase: Think “this is the best it is ever going to be, we’ve reached the peak”. Or “I’m 24 years old in peak physical condition”. It’s all downhill from here:(

      I know your meaning too, “the end of the hiking trail is at a lower elevation, and has no more boulders to cross, all downhill and smooth sailing from here”

      Delete
    3. Anonymous9:12 AM

      Interesting point. I can see it easily fitting either concept.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous10:16 AM

      Nope. I'm super old. It's all downhill from here.

      Delete
  17. One-square DNF with EtA crossing HERtERA. Never heard of Caroline, and ETA seemed just fine for part of a timeline. The only other area that gave more than token resistance was ALBA(??)/ABOUT TO (terrible clue)/CSU(???)FEATHEREDGE(?). Oh, and I did put in earth mother initially, before needing to reverse that to MOTHER EARTH.

    I suppose having gone to the poetical well twice for OER and OFT, they didn’t want to do so for EER.

    Surprised we are still going to the Valerie HARPER well.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous8:40 AM

    IS THAT ALL THERE IS?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Then let’s start dancing.

      Let’s also remember that a sac fly only results in an RBI with a runner on 3rd.

      Delete
    2. It's not a sac fly if no runner scores as a result of it. So a sac fly must result in an RBI.

      The runner does not have to score from third; he can score from second or first, which would be unusual (highly unusual from first).

      Also, TIL if the fielder drops the ball (and the runner scores), the batter may still be awarded the sac fly if the ump determines the runner would have scored after it had it been caught.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:10 AM

      I believe that’s the only time they are credited with a Sac Fly.

      Delete
    4. @Liveprof - I never knew that, but it makes sense. Although I would think that would be the official scorer, rather than the ump making the call. Hold on, I'll check ... Yep, official scorer.

      Delete
    5. @Liveprof 11 am: I had always thought it was a sac fly as long as it advanced the runner(s), similar to a bunt. Was I wrong?

      Delete
    6. Yes this is incorrect and I was totally wrong. Or rather, I believe my father was wrong when he explained this to me 50 years ago or so. So I’ve been thinking advancing a runner from second to third on a fly ball was a sac fly all this time. Every day is a school day.

      Delete
    7. Thanks for the correction, @kitshef! And @okanaganer, it differs from sac bunts -- a run must score for it to qualify as a sac fly.

      While we're on the topic, a runner tagging up may leave his base as soon as the ball touches the fielder's glove: he does not have to wait for the catch to be complete. This prevents the fielder from intentionally bobbling it as he moves closer to the infield.

      Delete
  19. Alice Pollard8:57 AM

    I did not even realize until now that all the themers ended w/ HERE. I had NOb instead of NOE for the longest time, thinking of Nob Hill. I have to red the clues more carefully. Was wondering what YbET was all about. Finally corrected, but I dont really know YEET either

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Alice
      FWIW
      YEET has appeared a lot lately in the Times puzzle. It is already overused! So it would pay to remember it.

      Delete
    2. Alice Pollard8:24 PM

      OK, thanks. I do the puzzle everyday but somehow it has not sunk in yet. It will now.

      Delete
  20. Anonymous9:16 AM

    I liked this one. It was easy enough yet interesting and clever. Favorite -Bicyclist's setting/GEAR. There's a tie for last place. Deck out/DEAL and the horrible YEET.

    ReplyDelete
  21. In Philip Roth's "Portnoy's Complaint" a young man commits suicide. His mother finds him with a note pinned to his shirt that says: "Mrs. Goldberg called. She wants you to bring [something] to the mah jongg game tonight." And Roth wrote: How's that for good to the last drop?

    ReplyDelete
  22. If the subject is narcotics, the instructor uses the WEEDTEACHEREDITION.

    I once caught a prehistoric-looking fish with a GARNET. Turned out to be a CHAR.

    The Thrilla in Manila. Now that was ABOUTTO remember.

    Making loud noises in the Grey Art Museum is a NOHO NONO. I love that there is a museum for Grey Art.

    The puzzle was EASIER than a KNEEBEND, but I loved the revealer. Thanks, Michael Lieberman and Rebecca Goldstein.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Why does Rex Parker always say the puzzles are “easy”!?! Easy for him maybe !!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Fifi 10:05 AM
      Every puzzle is easy for him. He's king of the nerds table.

      Delete
  24. I saw that the answers "dropped down," but I didn't get that they all had the word "here" in them until I read Rex's writeup. Still, the puzzle was easy but I didn't mind. It was a nice enough solve to go with my morning coffee.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That was my experience as well, which makes this one of the many days that coming to the blog increases my enjoyment of the puzzle. Thanks Rex!

      Delete
    2. Add me to the list.

      Delete
    3. Stillwell9:08 AM

      +1!

      Delete
  25. I appreciated this one. Very clever.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous10:19 AM

    The TEX Winter clue was a gimme after watching the Amsterdam episode of Ted Lasso recently where that tidbit appears in a vision of Ted’s; interestingly after drinking some mushroom tea, which is at least WEEDTEA-adjacent (note, at the end Beard tells Ted the tea was a dud, thus maintaining that these wholesome characters weren’t actually hallucinating from drugs).

    ReplyDelete
  27. EasyEd10:36 AM

    Maybe I’m just too easy to please, but thought this puzzle was well-constructed fun, with a perfect revealer. I know YEET only from crosswords and had two crosses before I recognized it. Thought the clue for ABOUTTO was a bit off but it’s kinda in the ballpark and fit easily. TEX Winter was written up many times as the guru behind the triangle offense that Phil Jackson made popular, but in the end most folks I think attributed its success to having one Michael Jordan at one of the points.

    ReplyDelete
  28. There's a 5-letter HDW (Hidden Diagonal Word) today; here's a clue for it, especially for regular partakers of the RP blog:

    1. Per @Rex, what Jesus' AXMEN might do
    (Answer below)

    This puzzle decided to write its own review late AT THE REAR with EASIER crossing IS THAT ALL THERE IS

    136A, SASS, is joined by a duplicate Hidden Diagonal SASS, beginning with the S in 8D, SLID, moving toward the SW. Also, a Hidden Diagonal RUSE at 36A and a glimmer of Hidden Diagonal HOPE at 95D.

    Answer: SHRED (off the S in 9A, moving toward the SW)

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous10:47 AM

    46 Across. I confidently entered IMSODEAD. Wrong, but a better answer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:24 PM

      I thought the same about IMAGONER.

      Delete
  30. It's getting to be a habit with me - noticing only part of the theme. Today I got the "drop" but managed to overlook the HEREs. Rats. I agree with others that SMITHEREENS was the STAR of the show.

    Do-overs: CHasten before CHEW OUT, dRIER. Help from the Spelling Bee: TOMTIT, TRAMWAY. No idea: FEATHER EDGE.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Wow, I'm the only one to call natick on HARPER/HERRERA ? Thanks to this crossing of an actress with a fashion designer, I had no way to correct my misguess of STEamED for STEEPED. So, so sick of naticks...I think Will Shortz keeps a bowlful on his desk to sprinkle in every Sunday.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Ken Freeland 11:26 am, it wasn't a Natick for me because I remember Valerie HARPER so well. She was Mary's best friend on The MTM Show, then she got her own series "Rhoda".

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:57 PM

      Wouldn’t ERA tip you off?

      Delete
    3. Ken Freeland
      It’s an age thing. Younger people often don’t know HARPER but to older people it is a gimme (It was for me even though I never watched the sitcoms that made her famous). I don’t think she can be part of a natick if to
      half or more of the solvers it is in fact a gimme. Rex said a natick name must be obscure to most people. I don’t call it a natick just because I don’t know the name.

      Delete
  32. Enjoyable enough. I have a personal nit: gingerly as an adverb. I know, I know, gingerly has been interchangeably an adjective or an adverb for a couple of centuries. But I put it alongside lovely and comely, two very nice adjectives that can't be used as adverbs. She sang lovely? Her singing was lovely. I can't even think of a way to use comely as an adverb. Costly? Lively? Oh well...

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  33. I did notice all the heres in the puzzle and I did finally see the turned down answer (at MOTHER EARTH) but never put the two together even after getting the reveal answer. That definitely adds a welcome new aspect to the theme.

    At first, I thought the title just meant that the end of the answer just got dropped and I was dismayed to see there didn't seem to be anything tying the dropped parts together in order to discern what that would be. This meant I was very sure 40A should be TEACHER's, making SEDITION quite difficult to see. Thanks, Rex, for showing me the error of my ways.

    Best clue/answer pair for WITS is 42D, ARM RESTS for "Where jet-setters may rub elbows". That elicited a smile from me but that was all I can remember for humor.

    I had to delete evincED early on from 22A. ATMS helped there. Speaking of ATMS, Rex's ANTM initialism looks like it came from someone who is anti-ATM.

    Learning YEET has been very helpful this year. RESPELLED could have been clued as a witch's failure.

    Thanks, Michael and Rebecca!

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  34. Anonymous11:48 AM

    WHEW before PHEW and DRIER before WRIER. Otherwise, a clean whooshie grid.
    When will WHOOSHIE debut in the NYTXW?

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    Replies
    1. When you get Wordle on the last guess, the screen says "phew". Although I think it should say whew.

      Delete
  35. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  36. Anonymous12:14 PM

    Figured it out from mother Earth… Got the middle revealer… But missed the fact that they all came down from

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  37. Anonymous12:14 PM

    “Here”

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  38. I wouldn't say it was "Easy" but it did hold my attention (not in frustration) & was gratifying (mostly because, thank God it wasn't a rebus). I liked it a lot & a gratifying solve for me. Thank you Michael & Rebecca :)
    And LADIDAH - a wonderful tribute to the one & only Diane Keaton, always Annie Hall to me.

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  39. upstate george12:32 PM

    Have to disagree with OFL about Tex Winter, but then I probably watched a lot more basketball than Michael. But he had it dead right about nine championships, six with the Bulls and three with the Lakers, all alongside Phil Jackson. And Wikipedia had him at 11! WRONG! And not for the first time ...

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:16 PM

      Wiki has him, correctly, at 9.
      Interestingly his head coaching record in the NBA is pretty lousy. ( 13 1/2 games under .500)

      Delete
  40. Easy. I caught the theme almost immediately and ambled through this with almost no hesitation. I spelled BREECHES wrong at first and had to wait for the crosses on SEAS, but that was it for pauses.

    Clever and breezy, liked it more than @Rex did.

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  41. I liked this theme! Better than an average Sunday for me. But Across Lite didn't show the theme clues in italics, which actually made it more fun... every so often I would get a nice surprise: "hey, this answer ends in HERE!". They should have left the theme clues un-adorned, I think.

    Only a few Unknown Names: HERRERA, TEX ALBA, CSU. But I'm finding all the company names annoying lately; just grumpy old age maybe.

    Another sunny mild day here. The average this month has been 7.3 C (45 F), and the coldest day so far it still got to 5.7 C (42 F).

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  42. Anonymous1:59 PM

    enjoyed todays puzzle...but is anyone else having problems with the website showing the wrong date in the archive for feb 13? and having the wrong count for their streak? even the mini didn't finish properly today...

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    Replies
    1. Me, me, me! It has Friday as an incomplete, even though I finished correctly. Streak whooped away.

      Roo

      Delete
  43. Good news from the coast, @Okanagener. It's presently about 3 C out side my studio and the forecast for the next week is about -3 C every night. So that means I can finally overseed the north pasture. Yay! Unfortunately, I took a nasty spill a few nights ago and torqued my knee so I don't look forward to hiking around with a seed broadcasting device strapped to my torso. On the positive side, the north pasture is our flattest. Could be worse.

    Oh, the puzzle. It was pretty good. My first thought about the theme was, "Oh yeah, another of those direction change things. (Deep sigh.)" But it turned out to be crisply constructed and, therefore, rather enjoyable. Did this late last night and didn't make notes si I've just scanned the completed grid and I don't see anything that really annoyed me. Was reminded of the good stuff, though:
    BLOW TO SMITHEREENS, IT'S ALL DOWNHILL FROM HERE, and IS THAT ALL THERE IS. Well done.

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    Replies
    1. @Les, good for you. We have also had overnight temps well below freezing for the last few days, after never going below zero for the first week of February. But it is so crazy dry! 4.2mm (0.16") rain so far in 2026.

      Delete
  44. Anonymous2:53 PM

    As a Chicago Bulls fan from back in the day, every one of us knew who Tex Winter was. That made the center of the grid a lot easier.

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  45. Anonymous3:11 PM

    If you ask 1000 people to explain what the phrase “it’s all downhill from here” ZERO of them would say that things are going to get worse.

    ALL of them, 1000 people out of 1000 will say something to the effect of “the hard part is over” or “things are going to get easier now”.

    I feel like waking this puzzle writer up at 2AM just to say “it’s not what it means”.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No. It's one of those expressions that works both ways.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous5:48 PM

      Anonymous 3:11 pm
      I suggest you read weblog and/ or look up the expression. Look up before you criticize. 350 million people in this country. No one person knows everything about how people talk here. It is absolutely positively etc used to mean what it is to the puzzle.

      Delete
  46. I thought the first two theme answers, BLOW TO SMITHEREENS and MOTHER EARTH were top-notch. Things kind of went DOWNHILL FROM tHERE themerwise, bottoming out with AT THE REAR.

    I nominate YEET as the UGLIest word in the English language.

    For 85D "Beverage infused with THC" I was thinking some kind of tincture. WEED TEA, if it's made with water, would have no psychoactive effect. THC is not water soluble. You need some kind of fat or alcohol for that.

    A word that I heard growing up was "britches", a Southern dialectal term for BREECHES. It also means "pants" and was used chiefly in the expression "too big for your britches" meaning that someone was being arrogant of too full of themselves. It was most often said of a child or adolescent. Perhaps they were "struttin' around like a banty rooster".

    Got to look into this DEAGED thing. I could use some of that.

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  47. Anonymous4:04 PM

    For some reason, this puzzle irritated me. I saw the theme at a certain point but didn’t need it at all for the solve.

    My next-to-last entry capped off the irritation: I myself limp (walk with a limp), but I don’t walk “gingerly” at all. I sometimes limp “recklessly.”

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  48. Boston also has a TRAMWAY by rex's definition, though I never heard anyone refer to it by that term. Surely you've been to Boston Rex? We call it the Green Line.

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  49. Mi vida se acabรณ. Estoy arruinado.

    Nice-ish puzzle. Great reveal. LOTSA gunk. I always like a turn-the-corner puzzles. I'm in late today because last night I went to a comic ballet (yeah, that's my level of culture) so just getting around to the crossword now.

    I made a million typos and took every cross for the Duchess of Alba (while Jessica was sitting out on the front stoop weeping at being ignored). Then I read up on the duchess and she seems pretty groovy. Her and TITANIA would probably have been friends.

    I've never heard of the lunar maria before, but it's cool to learn about them.

    I also did not know Bert likes pigeons. We'd be friends. I get plenty of white winged doves and mourning doves at our feeders, but mostly I have a crush on the finches and juncos.

    I get a little flak over place names being included in my gunk count, but when you're staring at NOHO vs. SOHO and an art museum even New Yorkers haven't heard about you start to sense the aura of gunk. Toss in a county name and phew that's the kind of cluing we could hope someone upstairs would veto.

    I drive on a street named TRAMWAY every day and it leads to The Tram, and yet I had TRAMCAR in the boxes until the very end.

    At my next Viking feast, I'm serving mead, not ALE.

    ❤️ NABOB. LOTSA. FATCAT.

    ๐Ÿ˜ฉ DEAGED. RESPELLED.

    People: 10
    Places: 6
    Products: 10
    Partials: 17
    Foreignisms: 2
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 45 of 147 (31%)

    Funny Factor: 6 ๐Ÿ˜

    Tee-Hee: Children in Charge -- The Endless Sequel: Joel must be filling in as slush pile editor. Taking another page out of yesterday's LEWD smutapalooza: BLOW TO SMITHEREENS. Brain fart. AT THE REAR. TUSHIE CLENCH. TRIB. WEED TEA. TOM TIT. NONO ORAL.

    Uniclues:

    1 What the Vogons do after Zaphod Beeblebrox signs the order.
    2 Plug used to stop a flood of rebellion against tyranny.
    3 Alcohol necessary to enjoy white-girl tunes.

    1 BLOW MOTHER EARTH TO SMITHEREENS (~)
    2 SEDITION DAM WEDGE (~)
    3 ADELE AFFINITY ALE

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: When god smacks you upside the head. DIVINE TREMOR.

    ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:21 PM

      WTF are you talking about? Every New Yorker knows NOHO and SOHO.

      Delete
    2. @Anonymous 7:21 PM
      I think what I'm talking about is rude people who can't read. Not all of them know the Grey.

      Delete
  50. I never did get on the right wavelength for this piece of work. It stopped being fun and I stopped aggravating myself with it.

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  51. Way late to the party after morning and afternoon singing things and then late afternoon overnight duties with our grandson, who is now asleep and sleeping the deep sleep of a very tired three-year old.

    So I didn't start his one until after dinner. Not on the constructor's wavelength and skipped around and around, finally got to the MOTHEREARTH themer and saw the "last drop", but I was very relieved to find that others missed the HERE part too. I feel better.

    Not many unknowns. The Duchess of Alba I knew, she was allegedly the model for Goya's two 'maja" paintings, one dressed, the other not. The story was that he had one on display in hia homw until the Duke was coming, at which time the other appeared. Probably a myth.

    I enjoyed the discussion of sac flies. Played years of slo-pitch softball on fields with no fences and it was not terribly unusual to see a runner score from second base on a really deep fly. Of course the bases are only sixty feet apart so much easier. I did see my older son really get a hold of one on a fenceless field with a jet stream blowing straight out to left field, and I think a runner could have scored from first if the ball were caught, but there was zero chance of that. I would have had to hit a ball twice for it to go anywhere near that far. Good times.

    I thought this was above average for a Sunday with some good sideways cluing and a neat feat of construction. Good on you, ML and RG. Might've Liked it better if I had Readily Grokked the whole trick, but that's on me. Thanks for all the fun.

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  52. I just wanted to add myself to the list of those who missed the HERE

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  53. A perfect Sunday solve. The theme was top flight, even though it was an old school, done before, classic one. But only the bones of the theme were “classic.” This one had more!

    My solve started out with a bang. I zoomed all the way across the top quarter of the grid enjoying the clues for simple answers but ones that made me think just a bit rather than going at full throttle. So, I ambled, checking the downs as needed and loving things like “TROTTED out” at 22A, an expression I hadn’t heard for a long time. In fact, the puzzle had lots of answers that reminded me of words and phrases from my earliest solving days when I sat like a sponge and listened while Gran taught me new words, had me look up the occasional one she wanted to check in either her Dell paperback Crossword Dictionary circa 1950 or the “real dictionary.” What really took me back was the “bendy word theme.” I will always remember being amazed when I first learned that it was kosher for a constructor to have a word either “climb a ladder” or “slide down a snake.” That’s how Gran explained why it wasn’t “cheating,” it simply was like the kids’ game Snakes and Ladders (I know in the US, it’s “Chutes,” but mine was Schlangen und Leitern because it came from Germany).

    Anyway, Michael’s and Rebecca’s wavelengths (or collective wavelength?) were (was?) broadcasting with crystal clarity. When I hit 24A I ready had BLOW and thought BLOW TO pieces. Tried it out but had two extra squares. That intrigued me because it made me think “Huh, no rebus, well all right!” I got to work on more downs and DAM, SLID, TRAMWAY and SPHEROID gave me the obvious correct answer BLOW TO SMITH, . . . what? It was obviously SMITHEREENS, but was I back to Rebusland? With a big fat Sunday puzzle, Gran ways told me to just keep going and the trick will become obvious.

    So I kept on going across and the answers kept falling into place. 27A Gaia is where I got it. Not sure in the thousands of puzzles I’ve done how many different Gaia clues and answers I’ve encountered, but I was 100% certain, the answer was MOTHER EARTH. So, with the SMITHEREENS issue remaining unresolved, I got to work on the MOTHER EARTH problem. It was the DEARTH of rebus possibilities that gave me the first of my big AHAs today. I said, a tad louder than necessary (it dislodged my cat, Pip from a very deep sleep) “Yes! It’s a bendy word theme!”

    My noise violation cost me 4 kitty treats. Once those were delivered and consumed, we returned to “our chair” and I eagerly returned to the SMITHEREENS problem to see if the bends were going to be Schlangen oder Leitern. And when I saw that both the first two themers ended at HERE, I committed a second feline comfort foul in less than 20 minutes with a big “Wow, Pippy, this is so cool!”

    I very cheerfully wended my way on, Pip in my lap again, forcing myself not to go looking for the reveal because I haven’t enjoyed a Sunday solve this much in years - lots of them. Didn’t want to rush my enjoyment. Imagine my surprise at a middle of the grid reveal. And what a reveal. All the fog cleared, the sun came out and I was dying to yell for my husband (who had no patience for big fat Sunday grids) to come see a good one. Instead, I just said “Wow!” Again, louder than necessary.

    Pip is very tolerant, but three feline comfort fouls in less than 15 minutes is unacceptable. She received her apology treats and removed herself to her electric warming bed with that flat eyebrows scowl of disgust cats give you that is the feline equivalent of a teenage girl justifiably rolling her eyes and flipping her hair at a bad Dad joke.

    What a puzzle. So dense, so clever and such a feat of construction! Michael and Rebecca, you have delivered on every level: theme, language, clues, and most of all surprises. I love an expertly crafted Sunday puzzle. We have not had one in a long, long time. For a Sunday puzzle fan, this is . . . well, . . . the cat’s meow.

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  54. kind of sadistic those athletes are doing things mere mortals can barely imagine timing wise this puzzle is not in the olympic spirit its like Seinfeld taking over the olympics very New York City.. anyhoo!

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