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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| [delicious] |
- 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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160 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!
Love your blog. If you support the resistance in Minnesota, you will love watching Andor!
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
--
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!”
Agree with OFL on all the EATASANDWICH junk in the grid.
If the great DIEGO Luna makes an appearance, can do better than Star Wars refs. How about Y tu mamá también!?
TIVO!? That tech is 25 years old and did not quite reach Q-Tip, Xerox, or Kleenex branding status. Weak stuff and apologies to younger solvers.
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!
I definitely thought of the Hawai'ian food first when I saw "poke"
*Alec Guinness. 😁
Go watch Andor, a brilliant show about the rise of fascism. Apropos to current events. No need to dismiss it as just another Star Wars thing.
Am surprised no one mentioned IN GOOD for "Close (with)". Inscrutable! Took me a good ten minutes after finishing the puzzle to understand it means "in good (with)"...
Hey All !
FLAT EARTHERS run rampant on Facebook, and are absolutely steadfast in their belief. They offer proofs and everything. I'm not one, I often poke fun at them.
I also detest RAN A LIGHT asshats. Here in Las Vegas (the actual city, not the Strip), when the light legitimately turns red (not yellow, Red) at least two cars, sometimes three to four, just don't care, and keep driving right through them. If I'm first in line at the opposite light, I will lay on the horn while pulling out, looking like I'm going to hit their car, then flip them off. There are so many accidents in this town because of these ignoramuses.
But back to the puz, decent FriPuz. Can't seem to get to Rex's 3 1/2 Stars. Maybe 3. DNFed at cHAIICEDTEA, because what in tarhooties is THAI ICED TEA? And SEE as clued was a Huh? So had PySC, a nonsensical answer.
Down in SE, IN GOOD was another strange clue. Plus, two unfamiliar names there, DIEGO and RHIANNON. Wanted RIHANNah for a minute.
MINNESOTA NICE is also a new one here, but easily figureoutable. Did like THINGY, although I like to spell it THINGIE.
Welp, hope y'all have a great Friday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I was stuck because I was convinced it was CHAI ICED TEA and there was no returning from that.
Oh SV! I was hoping for a Thomas Dolby link. Maybe too low-hanging. But such a great song. https://youtu.be/S5cWMF46jwo?si=zL6l6lM3rmFVgvZ-
I had chai iced tea and then definitely thought poke was fish related - p_sc - not a chess guy, so thought the _ee could be that bishop (see is also not part of my vocabulary) - not a regular Friday solver, but was able to get this one!
It’s an expression that’s used a lot in my field. Meaning “not what you read, not statistics, or studies, what you have actually seen with patients in clinic and dealt with” which is very different. Or from the patient’s perspective what it is like to deal with all the frustrating things one encounters in cancer treatment say. We can read about it, but personal lived experience is a game changer. Just something that is said frequently.
Agree with you on ICE ARENA
Can only agreed with you on CLAM SOUP if you eliminate all the Japanese. Filipino and Italian restaurants in the United States, quite a few of which of which commonly feature clam soups on their menus. Italian restaurants, in particular, may feature several varieties of clam soup - Zuppa di Vongole (clams in a white wine broth); Clam Posillipo (Light red broth using tomatoes) and Tuscan Clam Soup (made with white wine AND a light tomato sauce). None of these are what would be defined as a chowder, nut are light brothy soups featuring fresh clams in a shell with foe or none of the other additions you would find in a chowders
Can someone explain why SEE is the answer to “Bishop’s Locale”? I got it. But I don’t get it. Thanks.
Fabulous Friday.🎈🎈🎊🎊
I also had HIVOS and really couldn't see TIVOS out of it, despite it looking absolutely definitely wrong. Rex's write up made me LOL about this.
I LOVE ALL SHOUTOUTS TO ROBYN WEINTRAUB, THE GOAT!!!!
I made so many mistakes along the way, that I barely scraped in at my average Friday time. For example, in the upper center I had tendEr for MIFFED [A little sore, say] and ensuED for TAILED [Went after]. That started the answer to [Ones who don’t believe in global revolutions] with NU! Huh? But fortunately that clue got me back on the straight-and-narrow, because I thought the answer had to be FLATEARTHERS, and as soon as I realized that it fit the available squares, I took out my two errors.
But it kept happening: oboE for FIFE, NOt for NOR, juno for HERA, "miss" for STAY and, in a fit of redundancy, cHAI ICED TEAS. Sheesh. Although I still think "miss" is quite a reasonable counterpart for "hit." Does anyone know: do hit and STAY in this clue/answer refer to terms used in the sport of curling?
I’ll leave you with Mischief, the talking RAVEN (or is he a crow?).
YTMT is a great movie, but Andor is a masterpiece. You should watch it. He and Stellan Skårsgard are amazing, as is the writing.
"My expected experience of middle age were to be swanning about in a nice car and growing a moustache, but my LIVED experience has been mainly feeling tired and doing crosswords."
I had "fart" for sharp wind for way too long!!!
To a MINNESOTANICE is the enemy. To me as well. Sorry to be the 12th one to point out this parsing, but it bears repeating.
You should try Alex Rodriguez' restaurant in Provincetown, AROD's SCROD and ALETAP. It's right up there with @Zs DIVEBAR place with a name that now escapes me. Someone please help me out here.
And now our Goddess of the year, let's give HERA a big hand, HERA.
My first thought on [Poke accompaniment, at times] was rice.
I'm pretty much with @Rex on this one. Thanks, Evan Mulvihill.
SEE the noun here.
SEE as a noun: The seat of a bishop's authority; the jurisdiction of a bishop. As in the Holy See.
It’s Minnesota Nice. F*** ICE.
I also had thought oboE for a moment, but since I often feel like the living embodiment of Murphy's Law when it comes to these things, I held back from entering it in. Same for cHAI vs. THAI.
I believe STAY as counterpart to "Hit" refers to the game Blackjack, as in what you ask the dealer to do.
The Vatican is also known as the Holy See
The Vatican can be referred to as the Holy See, so a Bishop can reside there....
I was thinking it referred to “The Holy See” which is another name for the Vatican.
Hit and STAY mean blackjack for me.
I had never heard of it either. According to the internet: An episcopal SEE is the area of a bishop's ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
1A went right in, was thinking food for "poke", nothing there, went to LASTS for the shoe-shaping tool (Shoemaker, to thy last! Does anyone say that anymore? Interestingly enough it's a saying in Spanish too--Zapatero, a tus zapatos! But I digress.) Proceeded clockwise, guessed THERAVEN, didn't know SANDBERG but guessed that, and off to whoosh town.
Today I met GIA and DIEGO and was reminded of how to spell RHIANNON. Also showed off my language chops by remembering MAHALO. I also know aloha and lei.
Finally returned to the NW which was now easy, as THINGY and ICEARENA went right in. Tried PSYC, for the "poke" clue, forgetting its final H, changed CHAITEA to THAITEA and saw SANMARINO going down and that was that.
Nice Friday indeed, EM. Pushed the needle way over on the Enjoyment Meter, and thanks for all the fun.
Same here. I had CHAI TEA as well but insisted that poke was salad greens related. LOL
Interesting that you mention ICEARENA that because it was the first answer I plopped in the puzzle. I didn’t really notice the ICE dupe until now.
@Gio - good catch. I’ve actually had Zuppa di Vongole several times, although I interpreted it as translating to “soup with clams”, but that is splitting hairs. I’m less familiar with the Japanese and Filipino versions, so I’ll have to do a little research on those.
Yes lots of light runners in Houston and left turn idiots = CRASH
Hand up for Prod
Rex, Re: yesterday's clip of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. When I first opened it, I though Holy Moly - They inserted George into the video. But then I realized I was looking at Dhani Harrison. Wow. I had forgotten what a spitting image he was of his father. Then, after I listened to Prince's solo (mind blowing), I searched his DoD, and came across the Rolling Stone list of 100 greatest guitarists, and he ranks 33. Mind blowing.
4.9 stars. (not trying to begin a stars war)
I was trying to figure out what they meant by “sharp” for the piccolo. Playing in a high register is not equal to playing sharp. Maybe a sharp, penetrating, piercing sound?
I am watching season 2 of Andor, and while I appreciate the quality of production and writing, I’m a little fatigued by all the Machiavellian plotting in this fictitious Star Wars universe. Anytime they ever get around to any action, it is really exciting. I suppose I’m inclined to be happy they are writing for adults, but my adult brain would really rather be watching Sentimental Value or Y Tu Mama Tambien.
Hands up for falling for the Poke Bowl reference, leading to TUNA and wondering if that was not in fact the poke in the poke bowl. Also fell for the cHAI ICEDTEA.
Thanks for sharing the internet search results RP:) Now, go clear your browser before your wife wonders about all the Swedish women appearing in every ad on your screen for the next 3 months.
I also forgot the Fleetwood Mac song ended in -ON, making that corner tough.
@Roo Monster - while driving in the DR, so many cars went through after the light changed that it basically took the whole green at which point your line starts to go through and continues through the red. When in Rome…
to clarify the GRAS being used on multiple days — it’s because you’re (supposed to be) using up your rich, fatty, perishable goods before Lent since you’re (supposed to be) giving them up for forty days of fasting. So there’s a lot of rich, fatty baked goods and foods being served and enjoyed on those days (for example, paczki, fasnachts, and others)
I'd rate this as Easy. Nice puzzle! I liked just about all of it, esp. those long luscious Down entries, with a signal exception made for RAN A LIGHT where the more common expression is "RAN A red" or "RAN A RED LIGHT". Oh, also I suppose I would say just DIVEs instead of DIVE BARS. But those are trifling nits. The cluing, too, had moments OF INTEREST (entry from a few days ago) where I learned how they say DDAY in French, and the trivia about the DIAMOND EARRING, and the peacocks of HERA, and one of Lincoln's favorite poems (THE RAVEN). [I like just about any trivia about Lincoln because he's in my family tree!]
They are not all MINNESOTA NICE when it comes to resisting MINNESOTAN ICE -- and well they should not be. (I've heard ICE ARENA by the way. But honestly, I wish they'd cool it these days with having ICE in the entries.)
Lundi GRAS is new to me. But I see that it's the day before Mardi Gras (seems logical), and it's a day of partying in advance (AVANT, as long as we're getting all French-y here) of the bigger day of partying to follow. So it's a bit more obscure than the big fat day in advance of Lent, but hey, it's Friday, not Monday, and obscure is permissible. (Also, this is more pleasantly clued than GRAS was yesterday.)
Re IN ARABIC. I'm divided on how I feel about Rex's nit. On one side, I can respect his insistence that puzzles should be polished to a high sheen, and that includes the cluing. On the other, there's something called Joaquin's Dictum, carrying the notion that clues are there to nudge you in the right direction, not there to counter all objections and edge cases. I'm imagining a discussion at the editor's desk where someone asks whether the clue ("How the Quran is written") ought be qualified with an adverb like "often" or "typically", just to counter such any such anticipated objection, and a more senior editor dismisses that as just an unimportant superfluity, extra clutter, and not to bother. I honestly can't decide where I land here. I'll just say that it didn't bother me a whit.
Happy Friday, everyone!
Hot and cold here, some areas very easy but others a bit challenging. I did a lot of erasing, particularly in the NW where I was held up primarily by what I thought was a salad green crossing CHAI TEA, which left me wondering what kind of poke ends with a C and having no idea there was something called a SEE where I might find a bishop. The SE was even worse thanks to the actor I never heard of and the song I thought was the name of a singer. I finally gave in and looked up DIEGO which thankfully let me finish there. Other than those two frustrating [for me] areas, I thought this was a great Friday.
ICE ARENA was hard for me to parse but I don’t understand people’s objections to it. I’ve heard it used numerous times this week while watching the Olympics. Perhaps we all are just somewhat averse to looking at anything with those first three letters right now
"Hit's counterpart" = STAY? Huh?!!
@Luisa, your post reminded me of going to the theater with another couple to see Y tu mamá también when it came out. I was 46 and our daughter (who was in her first semester of college) recommended it. It IS a masterpiece but- well, I remember thinking the whole time- my daughter saw THIS!? [for those who haven’t seen it, “sexually explicit” might be somewhat of an understatement] I may watch it again…my daughter is 42 now, so I think I can concentrate more on its artistic qualities…
Words have meaning IN CONTEXT. This "ice" refers to frozen water, not the DHS abomination. What's next -- we're going to be "offended" by OREO, SHEEN, or the name MICK because they have sometimes been used as racial/ethnic slurs?
I haven't read Rex or any comments yet--but just had to say how much I loved seeing MINNESOTA NICE, which we've seen a lot of in the last month or so. Not nice as in meek, but nice as in everybody caring about their neighbors, showing up and standing with them when needed. Very appropriate timing just after the administration announced that the ICE/CBP surge would end. Or as Mammy Yokum used to say, good is stronger than evil because it's nicer.
Thanks @ anon 8:25am…I haven’t yet posted (and possibly will not because I’m packing for a trip) but I thought the same thing as @kitshef on LIVED experience. What you say makes a lot of sense in the medical field and probably has other applications.
I once met a woman of seemingly normal intelligence who had worked for an international airline for 30 years, coordinating cargo flights all over the world, and she was a FLATEARTHER!
Wish I know how to post an actual link here, but the GOAT "Rhiannon" of the world, as far as I'm concerned, is vocalist/multi-insrumentalist Rhiannon Giddens. I won't try to describe her or her music; I'll just suggest that you check her out -- inspiration of the highest order (even if so-called "folk" music isn't your personal forte).
More content featuring the Bryant Lake Bowl. And F ICE from a MINNESOTA NICE native
https://youtu.be/VgS54fqKxf0?si=MizL7zEL0smzD3Zs
Running red lights has become a national pastime in the U.S. these days which is why big brother in many cities install red light cameras. Given how many times I almost turned left (and thankfully didn’t) in front of people who barrel through an intersection on the red (not yellow) in front of me, it’s one of the few devices that I reluctantly accept today that I think make drivers cool their jets when driving.
I did think food for poke and came up with lime for awhile. Then silos instead of tivos, otherwise blew through it. Enjoyed the long clues.
I also had chai iced tea, but then the PSSC at 4A didn't look right.
@Pablo…I bet you could add luau and hula to your list…:)
I agree on the Quran clue. It’s a reference to the original version…like most of the Old Testament was in Hebrew with some parts being Aramaic [yeah, I had JUST looked that up]
I wonder if the day after Mardi Gras is "Skinny Wednesday," and if so, what the French/Creole word for that might be?
Almost Saturday average for me. The resistance mainly came from the corners while the center stack was early week. LASTS and STAY caused me the most hesitation. I'm just not familiar with today's definitions for those two simple words.
Seeing ICEARENA unparsed I can't help but think of MACARENA.
ALETAP, RANALIGHT and INARABIC stood out as weak entries but the good easily outweighed them.
Love the Mammy Yokum quote!
My tough spot today was the NE. I couldn't remember Sheryl's last name and had no idea about Abe's favorite poem (though I agree with him that's a good one) so SET was all I had up there with a suspicion that TOASTS belonged in 16D. I'd already scribbled out I haTe it for 18A so I wasn't doing anything in that sector without more confirming crosses.
FIRE HAT - I've never seen a kid dress up as a fireman for Halloween. The F of FIFE had me thinking Fake something. I eventually filled in the NE by coming up from the bottom and that's fine.
I'd swear that some MOVIE TRAILERS really do show the whole movie. I went to see Hamnet last week (really liked it) and the trailer for Wuthering Heights just wouldn't end. I like Margot Robbie but I'm not going to see that movie. (Hated all the characters in the book.)
Why would you put a 14.54 carat diamond into an EARRING? So you get one earring with a huge stone and what about the other ear?
Thanks, Evan Mulvihill, for a rather chewy Friday puzzle.
I grew up in Wisconsin, where the custom was to start into the intersection as soon as the light for the crossing street turned yellow, a practice known as "jumping the light." There was a publication called "the unofficial guide to graduate student life" that included an explicit warning about this, letting us Midwesterners know that the custom in Boston was to keep running the light for 10 to 30 seconds after it changed.
But my problem is that the clue says "the" and the answer says "a." They are not equivalent.
The Pope is the Bishop of Rome, so the Vatican is a see.
MINNESOTA NICE was a thing long before ICE was doing horrible things, and I made the puzzle way before the recent issues in MN. I also never had the intention to touch upon ICE and it's just an unfortunate mirroring in the word NICE. Just to be clear, MINNESOTAN ICE is just a misguided parsing of it.
I am sorry that the entry was a buzzkill but that's more to do with our government than me or the NYT.
Medium. The top half was medium, the SW was pretty easy, and the SE was tough….or just about right for a Friday.
No costly erasures, but THAIICEDTEAS and DIAMOND EARRINGS were easily inferable WOEs.
Very low on junk with plenty of sparkle, liked it a bunch!
I've always heard it as "shoemaker, stick to your last," the equivalent of today's "Stay in your lane!"
Thanks for this. I was baffled.
A lucky start got me into the "just enough crosses to get the next one" mode: SEE + SANMARINO -->PSST, HELL YEAH, ICE ARENA, THAI..,. and LASTS with its crosses got me going down the right side. Favorites: MINNESOTA NICE, DIVE BARS, RAN A LIGHT. Resisted until I had to write it in: THAI ***ICED*** TEA crossing ICE ARENA.
I liked this one a lot. Nothing clicked,at first., Reminded me of years ago when I'd wish "Let me just find one I'm sure of and then maybe just maybe I can build,on it." Four minutes slower than average.
As a transplant to Minnesota, many of us view the term Minnesota nice as Minnesotans being cold, judgmental and unfriendly, but believing that they are nice.
yes please. anyone ?
This puzzle left me with a couple of questions. Why do the pigments SIENNA ant burnt Sienna have two ns each, when the city and province they are named for have only one? Why and when did we start calling what used to be "previews" or "previews of coming attractions" TRAILERS? And what is it with the FIFE? Do they really play sharp? Someone suggested it meant a penetrating sound, but I don't think you can use it that way in a musical context.
I had to look up SCROD. The local legend is that the word was made up by a chef who wanted to serve a filet of white fish on a plank, but didn't know whether the cod or the haddock would be the best buy at the fish market, and so put "Planked SCROD" on the printed menu. But I looked it up, and that turns out to be wrong. It originally meant cod that had been sun-dried and salted, but has evolved to mean the smallest size of cod, haddock, or other white fish (the smallest size you can keep legally, that is), so the clue is correct -- they can be caught in Provincetown. Learning from crosswords!
Blackjack card game
Think 21, the card game
Nice to have a 5-letter Hidden Diagonal Word today; here's its clue:
1. Sounds like a gaze?
Answer: STAIR (begins with the 2nd S in 45A, SAYSHI, moves toward NE)
And a Uniclue:
1. Response to "Wait, you think that's a decent Halloween costume?"
Answer: "HELL, YEAH! FIREHAT!"
This flet ike a Friday puzzle—made me work—so I appreciated it. I was sure the answer to 32A would be [something]DIAMOND instead of DIAMOND[something], so that held me up a little. Yes, Rex, I did thin of a oke bowl for that clue. "Dating qualifier" is a great clue for CIRCA.
Isn't saying someone is MINNESOTANICE sort of a diss? I always think it implies fake niceness.
Just okay for me. I was surprised at CIRCE/CIRCA in the same puzzle.
THAI ICE TEAS took me forever.
MAHALO, DIAMOND EARRING, TIVOS (no one does that anymore), GRAS (didn't that just appear this week) = WOES. DJT really ought to make "Minnesota Nice" already.
Best of all was Rex's shout out to Robyn!
Stellar Friday. Some nice long answers. Never heard of THAI ICED TEAS but inferable. Interesting bit of trivia on RHIANNON. Love MINNESOTA NICE, but I guess that doesn’t applies to people who storm church services. Of course , most of them were imported agitators. Loved the clue on BEATLE.
Thanks, @tht and @pablo. I'm sure your blackjack interpretation is right. (I must be overly preoccupied by the Olympics.)
Got through this one successfully in (for me) a "normal" time, just under 30 minutes. Favorite rewrites of the day: SAN MoRItz and, for the end of 32A, EmeRald--the clue wanted a large precious stone, I had that E and R in place, and thought, "Hey, maybe some emeralds are blue."
And yes, Rex, having just returned from a trip to Hawaii, I definitely had to get the food poke out of my mind for PSST. (I did the hokey-pokey and I turned it right around.)
SE was slow, mostly because I went through several attempts at the correct spelling of RHIANNON.
Evan, thanks for weighing in here and providing some context. Never before heard of MINNESOTA NICE, but get it implicitly. And certainly telling that, if it's a genuine thing, what despicable ICE has done to transform "Minnesota Nice" to "F*** ICE" is all you need to know re what side represents decency.
Evan Mulvihill - I think this commenter probably stands alone in considering that answer buzz kill. It's a fine Friday puzzle!
Mercredi Gras--lol.
I too enjoyed writing FLAT EARTHERS in the grid with scorn. Speaking of my scorn, a fun fact I like to tell my students: among the myths of flat-earth theory is that it existed in the Renaissance. No educated person thought Columbus would sail off the edge of the earth (get eaten by a sea monster, maybe!). I entirely blame Bugs Bunny (the 1951 “Hare We Go) for promulgating the myth that Columbus proved that the world was round.
Personally, can't wait for the inevitable clue, "How Hamlet was written." :-)
"Polite" and "friendly" have not a damn thing to do with Minnesotan ICE, nor do they have any thing to do with AG Bondi or MAGA generally
Oh yes, and guilty as charged for going culinary on the poke accompaniment—I first guessed NORI. For a two-year-old solver, I found the clueing to be delightfully crunchy. I thought “really fancy” would be a fancy word for “really,” needed every cross for TIVOS, took embarrassingly long to see MIFFED and FIFE, and had to utilize this comment thread to understand IN GOOD. Also, even though the clue was perfectly straight-forward, I learned that THAI ICED TEA has the same amount of letters as IRISH COFFEE…so yeah, you don’t want me mixing any drinks at your local DIVE BARS (another clue I enjoyed).
@Evan Mulvihill - Dude, I LOVED this this morning! Thanks for a fun solve. :)
Aha! Thanks for this—I had hoped Rex would give that one a bullet, since I couldn’t understand how that made any sense. Comment thread to the rescue!
Thanks pabloinnh and tht—STAY made no sense to me, so I had to cull the comment thread for it. I don’t feel bad for not knowing blackjack terms, but at least I now know why that made no sense. Hand up for initially guessing MISS on that one!
That one gets my vote for best plausible wrong answer of the day!
My only error was misspelling San Moreno, for which I blame Lovely Rita!
I went with the Poke Bowl assumption, as Rex predicted. Led with RICE!
Well said, jberg. When I was living in Green Bay as a homesick southerner, I disliked the term “Midwest nice” for a number of reasons I won’t publicly pick on Midwesterners about, but I love redefining the MINNESOTA version of it in light of the events of the past month. Nothing but respect!
@Lewis 7:45 am, you remind me that my favorite two word semordnilap is "God lived" which becomes DEVIL DOG.
@Beezer-Right you are, and lanai, now that I think about it. @jberg--In Spanish at least it's the equivalent of "Time to get at it", "Work to be done", something like that, which is the way I've always thought of it in English.
Pretty quick for a Friday at under 15 minutes for me. Very few Unknown Names... yay!
ICE ARENA is something you don't hear in Canada; it's just "arena". For the same reason we never say "ice hockey".
Typeovers: hands up for CHAI ICED TEAS. At 30 down I had RAN THE RED which is not a phrase I hear much, but then RAN A LIGHT is even rarer (besides, it could be the yellow light).
THE RAVEN must be a great poem if the Baltimore fans named their football team after it.
Stealing from a movie, you can hear that a ripe pear tastes like sweet juicy sand that melts in your mouth, but until you eat one you won’t know what that is like. LIVED experience applies everywhere I think.
I really don’t think so. I am from the Midwest and I think it’s probably the exemplar of the idea that people in the Midwest are generally nicer. Not sayin’ it’s as true as it used to be generally in Midwest but I think it is a compliment.
Rice for me…
I wondered the same thing and found out the “matched” earring is a pink diamond.
I just had to come back after reading all the FIREHAT action which made me chuckle. I’m obviously on the old side, but people I figure who are in my age group have commented. Don’t y’all older peeps remember they used to sell cowboy hats (and unfortunately Native American headdress), little policeman hats/badges, and FIREHATS in the toy departments? (see also “princess tiaras”) They may not have been sold exclusively for Halloween, but they would often serve as a relatively cheap Halloween costume! Ok. That’s it. I loved the puzzle btw…back to making sure everything done on my travel checklist.
I must be getting old, cuz packing was done last minute when I worked, and at one point I was getting my kids stuff packed too! Ah, the good old days.
When I started this puzzle it seemed there was a definite lively voice in the NW, which was a treat. Also nice to see THAI ICED TEA , MOVIE TRAILERS, MINNESOTA NICE, MIFFED. Alternate clue for FIRE HAT - Hot-head protection ?
Surprised by the factoid about THE RAVEN. Time to re-read it. Thanks Evan!
Thanks @beverly c (and Teedmn for mentioning) I wondered about that also!
I love it too!
As the flute players used to say back when I was in music school, “Better sharp than out of tune.”
@jberg…didn’t know you grew up in Wisconsin but yeah…in Indiana it USED to be an “art” (and a science?) to figure out if you were close enough (ie can you stop without a rear-end collision, am I CLOSE enough…such that tail-end will at LEAST be under the light going through?). Those days are over where I live, and I suspect in Wisconsin, also. And…we won’t mention (ok I am) that many people don’t know HOW to do a left hand turn without a dedicated signal now…[me (in my mind): pull up, pull UP…!] Lol…good thing I’m retired and “chill” now…I’ve been behind people many times that NEVER made the turn.
I wasn't as thrilled with this one as some of you. Found it kind of straightforward and, therefore, dull. Best answers were FLAT EARTHERS and HELL, YEAH. Have to agree with @Okanaganer that it's not ICE ARENA because it's not ice hockey. It's just hockey and arena. Arena if you're going as a spectator, rink if you're going to play with your beer league team.
Re ICE ARENA, I'll just note that anyone who attended a university with a strong ice hockey program (as I did), or who lives in a community where winter sports are popular, will likely be very familiar with this term. But I have no idea what percentage of Rex's readership that would be. So while I will acknowledge having encountered Zuppa di Vongole (and loved it!), ICE ARENA is much more familiar to me.
This old timer well remembers the classic joke about the Boston cabbie who was asked where he could get SCROD
Huh. Not Washington Irving? Bild choice.
Wish someone had explained THAIICEDTEAS. I live far from urban areas and Thai restaurants and have never encountered these and may never do so. Assume they are infused with Sriracha or peanut oil
Two yearrs old? You doctor, put Doogie Hauser to shame.
How could I have forgotten MINNESOTA NICE, which I originally parsed as MINNESOTAN ICE (hadn't really read the clue properly) and thought, "That's a sh**ty thing to put in your puzzle." But, yes, NICE, not ICE. Much nicer.
Anonymous 6:29 AM
To each his own. I really liked CIRCA abd CIRCE near each other in the grid. I do not consider them a dupe at all. CIRCA is of course Latin and CIRCE is a completely unrelated Greek mythology name. Pronunciation of the second syllable pushes them even further apart.
As noted since places are named ice arenas, it obviously is a term that people say
BTW Shortz likes dupes and they are in the Times puzzles a lot. Rex has said because of this fact that he would only mention dupes which he considers “egregious “ ( his word) Apparently, this one didn’t bother him much. Dupes actually don’t bother me. I didn’t even notice the ice one.
In short, to me what you mentioned was not subpar. Of course every puzzle contains subpar fill. I just don’t see an overload of it
DIVE BARS and “It’s handled at a bar?”
Bar meaning the exact same thing?
So sloppy.
The other day there was a clue “Play callers?” for REFS. Why the question mark? This is one of many recent straight clues that oddly sports a question mark… due to lack of other clever clues, perhaps? Gotta throw a question mark here or there when the editors can’t think of actual clever clues. The trite “burning desire/passion” PYRO clue being used for the 7th time.
That’s what happens when you have non-passionate, uncreative staff. The over half dozen crossword editors couldn’t come up with something fresh?
Sad.
@tht. I think you might be overthinking Rex's complaint about IN ARABIC. My take on this was that he thought this form of clue/answer was a bit lazy and opens the door to a flood of "In (choose a language)" sort of clues. I, for one, am not looking forward to grids filled with IN URDU, IN FARSI, IN ERSE, IN GAELIC, etc.
Minnesota Nice I have seen frequently in the Times when it discusses Minnesota politics. Traditionally Minnesota politics was supposed to be less nasty than most other places. But the takeover of at least part of the Minnesota Republican Party by MAGA has gradually made things much nastier. I am not sure, but I have never seen the term used outside of a political context.
In my view, the constructor has nothing to apologize for! Liked the puzzle BTW Mr. Mulvihiil.
Took me way longer than it should have to get 41A "Someone singing 'Something'". Had the B in place from 41D BATED breath so I was thinking Baritone or maybe some opera singer like Brito or Bouhy. Oh, it's BEATLE. D'oh!
Can't say I was MIFFED but I did notice, and not in a NICE way, that the grid fill leaned rather heavily on the POC (plural of convenience). There are some of the two-for-one POCs where a Down and an Across both get a letter count boost by sharing a final S.
Two of those are run of the mill at EYE/ORIOLE and SCORN/AD. The third involves a marquee long at TOAST/MOVIE TRAILER. THAI ICED TEA, FLAT EARTHER and DIVE BAR also needed some POC assistance to do their jobs.
Maybe misremembering here but I think that in Okinawa SUSHI is called SAYSHI.
Not necessary surely. But it is surely true that it is part of the insipid Star Wars ambit.
Rex, you are so right about internet searches these days. What used to be a simple request ends up with AI giving me garbage information that has nothing to do with my actual question. So incredibly frustrating. I feel like punching my computer!
Beezer
I think you would like the movie Y tu Mama Tambien without the distraction of worrying about your daughter. The movie is both very serious and very funny. ( The plot involves an obvious tragedy but also deals with Mexican class tensions which affects the central relationship between the 2 young men. I will say I am so terrible at remembering actors names that I had no clue he was n YTMT. Even though I had seen it several times.
Lewis
Andy Freud alluded to Rhea being an anagram (only in English of course) of Hera, something I didn’t notice until I did the puzzle today. Was hoping you would mention that fact about these very common crossword answer.
MetroGnome
Several people mentioned hit and stay are terms in blackjack. I had no idea.
Excellent Friday puzzle . I did have to look up LASTS and ZION and DIEGO and came here for the B of DIVEBARS. But FIFE and LIVED experience came easily.
Thank you for your views on the modern search engine, Rex - I totally agree!
No idea on the bishop clue, which I have to assume is crosswordese. It's a chai latte and you will never convince me that a THAI iced tea exists. On every cafe menu I have ever been to, it's CHAI. Not Thai. Needless to say, DNF for me because I had P_SC. Also needless to say, didn't like the puzzle at all.
Actually, though, Islamic scholars generally feel that the inspired Quran must be read in Arabic--thus Arabic schools for children even in countries where the lingua franca is different. You can't say "I know the Quran well" if you haven't read it in the original Arabc. So in a sense, this clue/answer really is more definitive, moreso than for other writings/literature.
Okanaganer
Edgar Allen Poe died in Baltimore and while not born there spent time there also the baseball team is named the ORIOLES so that fact encouraged a bird name. for the relatively recent team. We boomed all knew the poem. Not sure if younger generations do?
@jazzmanchgo--Wow, I just listened to a couple Rhiannon Giddens tunes on youtube--Fabulous! I agree she's terrific. Any favorite tunes or albums I should check out???
“See” is an ordinary word and every Thai restaurant has Thai iced tea (and iced coffee). Grow up.
I wanted the poke accompaniment to be sake, but i never wrote sake in because it didn't work with any of the downs. So I held off and got Psst after i had some of the downs.
Fireman’s hat - yes
Fire chief’s hat - yes
Fire fighter’s hat - yes
Fire hat - NO NO NO NO NO NO NO
Minnesota Nice will be around long after Dr. Evil and his minions have departed.
Wondering what the bar is for a Star Wars reference? Certainly not the first thing that comes to mind when referencing Diego Alina.
The bar is a direct reference to the Star Wars universe (“Andor”)
Too much SANDWICH EATING in this puzzle for my liking. Rex forgot to add "SAYS HI" and "I VOTE NO"
RICE was my initial 'poke' accompaniment
Started with sake then moved to rice before settling on PSST
My friend has a TiVo that she still uses to this day. She’s a bit of a TV fanatic so it makes sense I guess. Also back in the day, she joined a TiVo fan group online and she to this day goes on vacations with the Members of the group.
Very late solve today and so much has already been said. I very much enjoyed this I had a good time with the hard work. Some lovely long fill (MINNESOTANICE and DIAMONDEARRING went down with virtually no letters at all so I did get a whoosh whoosh feel to this at the beginning which, for a Friday for me, is very, very rare.)
Like @Rex and others, my brain went right to food with poke. I did not know 5D - SEE, so PSST took some time.
I'll just also say quickly that I like how THINGY looks in the grid, that put a skip in my solving step.
Thanks Evan - this was fun.
TIVOS is unacceptable for me... someone else said 25 year old tech. I agree. Not a part of anyone's lexicon these days! Held me up for a while. DNFed this one. Oh well... fun bits in there. Loved THAIICEDTEA - one of my favorite beverages and got it with only one cross. FLATEARTHERS was a great one too :)
@vtspeedy, I agree with you on the slang. MINNESOTA NICE is one of a pair. It’s partner, the “Minnesota long goodbye,” always makes me laugh. It’s too long for anything but a Sunday 21.
@Rick Scara for me Fleetwood Mac’s “Rhiannon” is grad school, but that song and the music from that iteration of Fleetwood Mac still resonate deeply with me.
And @jazzmanchgo, YES!! Re Rhiannon Giddens. I have loved her for her enormous talent both vocally and instrumentally for quite a while. She blew me away though with the opera “Omar” written with Michael Abels. It’s the story of slavery in America through the eyes of Omar, an Islamic Black man sold into slavery and is based on the autobiography (written in Arabic) of the slave Omar Ibn Said. I saw it in San Francisco and have never been so moved by the genre in my long opera-loving life.
Hey there @Amdy Freude you’re dissing flute players is misplaced. That comment - heard often in my days in the pit (as a flautist, I might ad) generally applies to opera singers!
@Anon 7:45AM . Hand up for putting in “tuna” instead of PSST. Buggered that part for a good long while.
Loved it Minoridreams!
@Panlo, don’t forget poke! That’s my giant wiff of the day; I had tuna and then rice at 4A instead of PSST!
After plopping in tuna at 4A, then re-reading the clue (‘cause as we all know, if it’s poke, the answer is typically ahi, I went strike two and thought “accompaniment to a poke bowl, hmmmm rice? Yeah that’s it.” And had to come back at the end to fix that mess.
It’s late as usual, no stories today, just a welcome, crunchier than usual Friday puzzle with some really good clues.
TIVOS is infuriating. no one in the world ever says that anymore. it’s so old and clunky.
Guilty as charged - I'm one of those people who first thought Poke was Hawaiian food. But - Lincoln liked Poe? Totally new fact for me! Sometimes one learned the most fascinating factoids doing crosswords. All in all, great fun. I liked Circe too - reminded me of the Strauss opera.
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