Ferruginous pigment / FRI 2-13-26 / Tiny nation claiming over 1,700 years of self-governance / Polite, friendly stereotype from the Midwest / A red plastic one might be worn on Halloween / Poke accompaniment, at times / Goddess often depicted with peacocks / Provincetown catch / 1976 Fleetwood Mac hit said to be inspired by a Welsh witch / Cold drinks often topped with evaporated milk / Canyon with a much-hiked section called the Narrows
Friday, February 13, 2026
Constructor: Evan Mulvihill
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
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| [46A: "Andor" actor ___ Luna] |
Word of the Day: SAN MARINO (6D: Tiny nation claiming over 1,700 years of self-governance) —
San Marino, officially the Republic of San Marino (RSM), is a landlocked country in Southern Europe, completely surrounded by Italy. Located on the northeastern slopes of the Apennine Mountains, it is the larger of two microstates within Italy, the other being Vatican City. San Marino is the fifth-smallest country in the world, with a land area of just over 61 km2 (23.5 mi2) and a population of 34,042 as of 2025. Its capital, the City of San Marino, sits atop Monte Titano, while its largest settlement is Dogana, in the municipality of Serravalle.
San Marino claims to have been founded in AD 301 and to be the oldest extant sovereign state and the oldest constitutional republic. It is named after Saint Marinus, a stonemason from the Roman island of Rab (in present-day Croatia), who is supposed in mythic accounts to have established a monastic community on Monte Titano. The country has a rare constitutional structure: the Grand and General Council, a democratically elected legislature, selects two heads of state, the Captains Regent, every six months. They are chosen from opposing political parties, and serve concurrently with equal powers and preside over several institutions of state, including the Grand and General Council. Only the Federal Council of Switzerland also follows that structure, except with seven heads of state, and different responsibilities and functions.
San Marino is a member of the Council of Europe and uses the euro as its official currency, but is not part of the European Union. The official language is Italian. Its economy is based on finance, industry, services, retail, and tourism, and it ranks among the wealthiest countries in the world by GDP (PPP) per capita. San Marino was also the first existing state to abolish the death penalty, and in 2025 was ranked 29th on the Human Development Index. (wikipedia)
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- 4A: Poke accompaniment, at times (PSST) — got this easily, but am now wondering if the clue wasn't trying to make me think of "Poke" as a culinary thing (like a "poke bowl"). Poke = raw fish salad. "Accompaniment" makes me think the clue was trying to get me to think of food. But I didn't. Maybe some will. Did you?
- 22A: It's what you should take, in brief (RDA) — Recommended Daily Allowance (for instance, the RDA of ZINC is 11mg for adult men and 8mg for adult women)
- 23A: Lundi ___, festive Monday observance in New Orleans (GRAS) — back-to-back GRAS days. Weird. Also weird—Fat Monday? Couldn't you get a different adjective for Monday?
- 40A: Goddess often depicted with peacocks (HERA) — should've been a gimme, but I had the "A" in place and briefly considered RHEA ... possibly because a RHEA is a bird, and a peacock is a bird. Sometimes making a lot of quick associations among words does not, in fact, help you. Fun fact: RHEA is actually HERA's mom. So I was ... close. Ish.
- 46A: "Andor" actor ___ Luna (DIEGO) — for some reason, the name DIEGO Luna comes trippingly off the tongue. It's a mellifluous name that I know well. Weirdly, I have no idea why I know it and absolutely could not pick DIEGO Luna out of a line-up. Also, I'm now just realizing: we're back to Zero Days without a Star Wars reference. [pardon me while I go put the sign back up]
- 11D: Poem so beloved by Abraham Lincoln that he carried it in his pocket and memorized it ("THE RAVEN") — the guy did have a good ear for the poetic quality of the English language. Did you know there was a 2012 movie based on "THE RAVEN" starring John Cusack (!?!?!). I think that when it comes to "Raven" adaptations, I'll stick to the classics.
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13 comments:
Can't believe Rex didn't mention ICEARENA- which isn't a thing anybody says, ever- intersecting THAIICEDTEA. A phrase with any word crossing with another phrase using that word is so bad. Rhen there's CIRCA, and moving over to the very next word going down, CIRCE.
I totally agree on there being some really good long answers (and some fun clues), but they're only accomplished with subpar fill.
Lots of good stuff here! Some good slangy answers - NUTSO, HELLYEAH, NOLIE, THINGY, and enjoyed the back and forth between the corners and the long whooshy center BUT…I can’t take my eyes off MINNESOTANICE. Since I wasn’t familiar with the term I can’t help parsing it differently and for me ICE isn’t welcome anywhere. YMMV but a buzz kill for me.
Thanks for posting RHIANNON, @REX, one of those very haunting early Fleetwood Mac tunes.... take me right back to high school.... Great puzzle. Got ever-so-stuck in the NW.... I put in PYRO and crossed it with PROD (poke and prod???). Then off that R, read the clue and plopped "RiNk" right in, that seemed obvious. And then.... nothin'. went over to the middle MIFFED and FIFE and SANDBERG and got my traction there to start to get into that whooshy middle of the grid. Funny to have both CIRCA and CIRCE in the grid, nice to have MAHALO, which I only know cuz I was in Hawaii last year. Because of my RiNk up top, I was wondering what either eskImo drink there was, or later maybe TiKI ICED TEAS???? Thank God for some easy straightforward things like ZINC, RHIANNON, EGGDONOR to get me going in the SE, and MAHALO and INARABIC on the SW. Having spent more time in Omaha than Minneapolis, I'm way more familiar with NebraskaNICE than MINNESOTANICE, but I'm sure their similar : ). And now you're making me want to visit SAN MARINO, Evan! Thanks for a great puzzle, and now that you've done 2, I hope we don't have to wait too long for #3!
Not as much love as Rex for this one. It was a decent late week puzzle - but that main tri-stack in the center fell flat. The corner downs were the redeemer here.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MTb_XlmTdXM
FLAT EARTHERS is the highlight - liked DIVE BARS, THE RAVEN and SIENNA. ICE ARENA, EGG DONOR, ALE TAP etc don’t hit.
Beach in Hawaii
Would have been really cool to have SANDBuRG adjacent to the Lincoln clue. Had to reach for AVANT. SCORNS, BATED and even THINGY are wonderful midlengths.
Iration
A workmanlike - enjoyable Friday morning solve.
Island Style
Also highs and lows for me - the northwest was Monday-easy, so was pleased to see things toughen up and get so much better as I moved through it.
It was definitely a high to see Diego Lune in the puzzle - a great actor/director/producer and advocate. I think I have seen Y tu mamá también - in which he starred with his life-long best friend Gael Garcia Bernal and the transcendent Maribel Verdú and which was directed by the the brilliant Alfonso Cuarón - twenty times. A real masterpiece. If you've since this film you would never have trouble picking put Diego Luna from a line-up ever again. Only downside is that the cluing for him was a freaking unnecessary Stars Wars reference (almost as bad as cluing Alex Guinness with a Star Wars reference)
A four-letter accompaniment to poke? Uh . . . NORI?
RHEA was the mother of HERA, you say? Was her daughter named ERAH? AHER?
Glad to learn more than I ever knew about SAN MARINO. Maybe the U.S. should try having two Captains Regent, with elections every six months!
Medium. Nice Friday themeless with a little crunch.
* * * * _
Overwrites:
My 10D group of reps was a SEn(ate) before it was a SET
Crossword regular oboe before FIFE for the 15D wind.
NUTty before NUTSO for "Bonkers" at 19A
WOEs:
I'd never heard of Lundi GRAS (23A) but it was easy to infer
Actor DIEGO Luna (46A, sorry @Luisa). I didn't even realize that Andor was in the Star Wars universe.
GIA Coppola at 50D
The 52A Fleetwood Mac song RHIANNON
Yo voto no. No miento.
It's Friday. It was fine.
Public service announcement: In 2026, those of us with a calling, an urge, a hankering if you will, those of us born with a need to wear red plastic FIRE HATS know it's okay to be who you are and go for it even when it's not Halloween even if society jeers us and even if we get dirty looks in the grocery store.
As a member of the Flat FIFES, a leading rat serenading orchestra, I take offense at calling our beloved instrument sharp.
Mercredi gras is a lesser known festive hump day observance in New Orleans.
People: 8
Places: 2
Products: 5
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 4
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Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 23 of 71 (32%)
Funny Factor: 4 🙂
Tee-Hee: HELL YEAH.
Uniclues:
1 Dating qualifier? (Or, this year, one way to delay fascism.)
2 "Just FYI, I am six feet tall and blonde."
3 Holes with bouncers.
4 صنبور بيرة
1 ICE ARENA? I VOTE NO.
2 EGG DONOR LAB NOTE (~)
3 SECURE DIVE BARS
4 ALE TAP IN ARABIC
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: If it's made out of murdered cow... NEVADA EATS IT.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
A little something for everyone today. Personally, I liked the clues for ALE TAP and DIVE BAR. Also, between the BEATLEs and Fleetwood Mac, this one sure does account for a large number of record sales.
ICE ARENA probably is to today what CLAM SOUP was to yesterday. I doubt many of us have ever uttered or heard someone say ICE ARENA, and you would be hard pressed to find a single restaurant in the country with CLAM SOUP on the menu.
I’ll give the answer IN ARABIC in English a pass, as I thought it was well clued, but agree with OFL that it’s a slippery slope, and I definitely VOTE NO to any more Star Wars clues (c’mon Will, read the room).
The Fairfax Ice Arena would disagree with you https://www.fairfaxicearena.com/ (about the use of 'ice arena'; I think they would agree with you about crossing phrases with the same word although I could not find an official position from them on the subject).
Pretty tough for a modern Friday, although I dozed off briefly mid-solve which is not normally a good sign. I think that was more about me than about the puzzle, though. Olympics have been keeping me up later.
Some ugly glue towards the bottom, like IN ARABIC, SAYS HI, and RAN A LIGHT, hold together an overall nice grid.
WoEs: MINNESOTAN ICE, LIVED, GIA, SANDBERG. Aren’t all experiences LIVED? If you didn’t live it, you didn’t experience it, did you?
For poke accompaniment I went with prod. Poke and prod is a standard phrase. Poke and psst, not so much. Psst is for getting someone’s attention when they’re too far away to poke. To do both would be so aggressive you might as well say “Hey, you!”
Talk about lovely bones … the three-stack across the middle and its crossing vertical two-stack – All five answers are NYT debuts. And excellent ones!
That is tough to pull off, and it pays off – it lifts the puzzle out of same-old-same-old; gives it a fresh-off-the-press feeling. There are actually ten NYT answer debuts in this grid.
Lovely short answers that I like as well – THINGY, MAHALO, MIFFED, SCROD, CIRCA.
By the way, if your time was a little longer than usual, could be because the grid is one column wider than usual.
I like BEATLE crossing EYES, tripping off “The Fool on the Hill” (And in the eyes in his head / see the world spinning ‘round) and “Come Together” (He got joo joo eyeball).
I also like the rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (LIVED), along with an almost six-letter one (ALETAP).
Your puzzle, Evan, was not only made well, but it played well. This was one sweet outing. Thank you!
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