Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Toy company behind Frisbees and Hula Hoops / TUE 2-3-26 / Burger chain with custard-based drinks / Exceptionally good, in Gen Z slang / The ___ Project (mental health organization for LGBTQ+ youth)

Constructor: Nate Cardin

Relative difficulty: absurdly easy

[3D: Pair orbited by the fictional planet Tatooine]

THEME: INSIDE VOICES (62A: What children should use at the library ... and a literal description of the circled letters in this puzzle) — singers (i.e. "voices") can be found "inside" four answers (in circled squares):

Theme answers:
  • TUNNEL VISION (18A: Narrow, focused perspective) (Elvis)
  • WET PAINT (38A: Sign near a freshly applied coat) (T-Pain)
  • SHAKE SHACK (12D: Burger chain with custard-based drinks) (Kesha)
  • GRADE LEVEL (30D: Stage of education) (Adele)
Word of the Day: WHAM-O (16A: Toy company behind Frisbees and Hula Hoops) —

Wham-O Inc. is an American toy company based in CarsonCalifornia, United States. It is known for creating and marketing many popular toys for nearly 70 years, including the Hula hoopFrisbeeSlip 'N SlideSuper BallTrac-BallSilly StringHacky Sack, Wham-O Bird Ornithopter, and Boogie Board, many of which have become genericized trademarks. // In 1958, Wham-O, still a fledgling company, took the idea of Australian bamboo "exercise hoops", manufactured them in Marlex, and called their new product the Hula Hoop. The name had been used since the 18th century, but until then was not registered as a trademark. It became the biggest toy fad in modern history. 25 million were sold in four months, and in two years sales reached more than 100 million. "Hula Hoop mania" continued through the end of 1959, and netted Wham-O $45 million (equivalent to $485 million in 2024). // Shortly thereafter, the company had another huge success with the Frisbee. In 1955, inventor Fred Morrison began marketing a plastic flying disc called the Pluto Platter. He sold the design to Wham-O on January 23, 1957. By June they had learned that students back east were calling them a "Frisbee." In early 1958, Wham-O added the name "Frisbee" to the top of the Pluto Platter – and once again a Wham-O toy became a common part of life through the 1960s.
In the early 1960s, Wham-O created the Super Ball, a high-bouncing ball made of a hard elastomer Polybutadiene alloy, dubbed Zectron, with a 0.92 coefficient of restitution when bounced on hard surfaces. Around 20 million Super Balls were sold that decade, and the NFL named the Super Bowl games after it.(wikipedia)
• • •

A perfectly ordinary theme inside a childishly easy puzzle. I think I paused for the first and possibly only time when trying to parse "EYES ON ME" (39D: "Look this way, class") with very few letters in place, but the "Y" from YEAR eventually took care of that. Otherwise, it was read clue, write answer, as fast as my fingers could type. I don't time myself any more, the way I did when speed-solving mattered to me, but I know I was well under three minutes on this one, probably closer to two-and-a-half, which is lightning-fast for me on a Monday. On a Tuesday ... this might've been a record, which is especially stunning given that today's grid is over-sized (16 wide). The theme is somewhat interesting, but those "voices" are entirely arbitrary—why these voices? What do they have in common except being five letters long? Is there a roman numeral vision pun? "V"oices? Five-letter-long voices? Seems like I'm reading into things there, possibly, but this theme could really use something to enhance its general coherence. There are so (OH SO?) many singers you could hide inside longer answers that the "feat" here just didn't seem that impressive to me. CAMDEN YARDS. EPIC HERO. Even if you restrict yourself to mononymous singers, seems like there are lots of other options left on the table. 


As for the fill, like the theme, it is perfectly ordinary—not cringey or rough, rarely interesting either. The most original parts of the grid are the themers, two of which (GRADE LEVEL and SHAKE SHACK) are debuts. The revealer is also a debut, but in the plural, a slightly awkward one. I guess a teacher talking to a class might use the term in the plural. "Let's use our INSIDE VOICES!" But the singular seems like it would be infinitely more common than the plural. But back to the "children" part of that revealer clue—first of all, why "children"? Yes, it's a phrase you would use with a child, but everyone should use their INSIDE VOICES in the library (unless you're in a part of the library dedicated to cooperative or group activities). This is not a special rule for children. The clue got me thinking about how much of this puzzle seems to have been written with a grade-school class in mind. It's not just the puzzle telling kids to be quiet in the library. There's the teacher telling their (presumably grade-school) class, "EYES ON ME!" The term GRADE LEVEL keeps us in elementary school. Kids are playing musical chairs at one point (12A: Advanced to the next round of musical chairs, say (SAT)). Parents are barking nonsense at their kids (31A: Parent's curt response to a kid's "But why?" ("BECAUSE!")), probably because the kids aren't putting their WHAM-O toys away quickly enough. It's a weirdly grade-school-oriented puzzle. Appropriate, I guess, since it was grade-school easy. Ok, actual grade-schoolers would probably struggle with this puzzle ("Mommy, who's T-PAIN?"), but even novice solvers probably won't. Not much.


Notes:
  • 53A: Beyond well done (BURNT) — this got me thinking "what the hell is the difference between 'burned' and 'BURNT'?" and it turns out merriam-webster dot com has some answers:
If you're describing things—that is, using the past participle of burn as an adjective—you very well may find that burnt sounds better to your ear. Burnt sugar and burnt toast, for example, are both significantly more common in published, edited text than burned sugar or burned toast are. (Burnt also features in the color names burnt umber and burnt sienna. // But if you're using the past tense of burn as a ho-hum verb, talking perhaps about the toast you've just overtoasted, burned is likely to be your choice. Unless you're a speaker of British English or have been binge-watching "Sherlock." In American English, burned is usually past tense. // Usual or not, though, both burnt and burned are acceptable forms. // There was a time, by the way, when brent was a legitimate past tense too. That form seems to have peaked in the 1500s, but if you want to throw it into conversation just for fun we won't criticize. (merriam-webster dot com) 

They're right about "brent," you know. Here's the opening of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (ca. 1400):

SIÞEN þe sege and þe assaut watz sesed at Troye, 

Þe borȝ brittened and brent to brondeȝ and askez ... ("Since the siege and assault was ceased at Troy / The city destroyed and burned to brands and ashes ...")


  • 70A: Feel remorse about (REGRET) — came at it from the back and before looking at the clue thought "EGRET!" then realized "nope, R-EGRET," which now has me thinking about a Republican Egret. (Sung to the tune of "American Woman" by the Guess Who): "Republican egret / Stay away from me! / Republican egret / Mama let me be!"
  • 56A: Exceptionally good, in Gen Z slang (FIRE) — I've heard this a lot, but still paused slightly at "-IRE" thinking "... wait, do they say DIRE now?"
That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. since the TREVOR Project is in the puzzle (51D: The ___. Project (mental health organization for LGBTQ+ youth)), I will once again plug the puzzle pack that has been produced in association with the upcoming ORCA Awards (the crossword equivalent of the Oscars). The (massive) pack of puzzles is available to anyone who donates to the TREVOR Project. Here are the deets. 
All funds raised support The Trevor Project, a suicide hotline for LGBTQ+ youth. Although suicide rates for LGBTQ+ youth are surging (39% seriously considered suicide in 2024), HHS terminated its contract for FY2026. // The puzzle pack includes 76 ORCA-nominated puzzles from 44 outlets plus five original puzzles from the Constructor of the Year nominees. (from crosswordfiend.com)
To donate to the TREVOR Project and get your puzzle pack, click here. And here's some more information on the ORCA Awards themselves:


[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️: 
  • Venmo (@MichaelDavidSharp)]
=============================
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️=============================
📘 My other blog 📘:

66 comments:

  1. Bob Mills6:13 AM

    Agree with Rex about the simplicity of the puzzle, with its very straightforward cluing. Hardest part was connecting "inside voices" to the singers, two of whom I'd never heard of.

    ReplyDelete

  2. What @Rex said. Super easy, no overwrites or WOEs.
    * * _ _ _

    ReplyDelete
  3. Republican Egret sung to the tune of "American Woman" -- Hah!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Easy, yes But a clever clue here and there. Enjoyed the solve.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Andy Freude6:35 AM

    Now I’m going to have “Republican Egret” playing in my head all day.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Maybe not actually easy for an elementary-aged kid, but someone who’s never done a crossword in their life would have found this easy. I did enjoy it, but never heard of TPAIN.

    ReplyDelete
  7. InDOOR voices where I come from.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Solved as a themeless - enough with the circles. Sub-Monday level difficulty.

    Robin Trower

    We learn from limits that O and infinity to the Oth power are undefined. Liked SECRECY and EYES ON ME.

    At the Zoo

    Cute little puzzle I guess - hard to latch on to anything given it was over so quickly.

    English Beat

    ReplyDelete
  9. Brendan Curran7:13 AM

    “ Ok, actual grade-schoolers would probably struggle with this puzzle ("Mommy, who's T-PAIN?"), but even novice solvers probably won't. “

    As a novice solver I think this comment hit the nail on the head. As I finished the puzzle my first thought was ‘wow that was pretty easy I wonder how easy Rex Parker thought it was’.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Monday-easy. Hard to choose a favorite moo-cow easy clue today.

    I don't really like 'voice' being used to mean 'singer'.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Had a meal" certainly qualifies. :- \

      Delete
  11. My favorite answer is INSIDE VOICES, which threw me back into elementary school, where teachers admonished us to use them as we walked in a line to the library, and if one of us spoke too loud while there, the teacher would sternly repeat the phrase.

    Then I fondly flashed on – actually saw in my mind’s eye -- the two elementary school teachers I adored.

    That was followed by vivid elementary school memories, such as in second grade, when my teacher and another teacher were flirting. All the kids tittered about it, and I was proud to be chosen to relay her love notes to him.

    Crosswords, they wake things up, no?

    In today’s puzzle, I like how the circled singers connect both words of two-word phrases rather than being simply embedded in one of the words. I like the cross of IAGO and the homophone of “vain”. I also like the abutting of high and low art with SONATA and SMUT.

    So, Nate, your puzzle was simply a lovely interlude beautifying my day. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:57 AM

      Lewis, I think even you had to "reach" for some positive comments today.

      Delete
    2. Hoping you glanced at a love note or two? If so, can you share?

      Delete
  12. Anonymous7:32 AM

    The “Inside Voices” answer contains “Devo” but they didn’t bother to emphasize it. Too obscure?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Anonymous 7:32 AM
      Nice catch. Whip it good.

      Delete
    2. Oh that's so funny! Not too me -- not too obscure! Lost opportunity!

      Delete
    3. Excellent catch. The circled voices are all soloists where Devo is a band - maybe that's why it wasn't included.

      Delete
    4. The others are all five letters long.

      Delete
  13. Not much of a step up from yesterday, difficulty-wise. Personally, I would just use a quiet voice in a library, but I guess the more cutesy INSIDE VOICES is consistent with the grade school sub-theme.

    I guess it is difficult to toughen up the clues on stuff we have seen thousands of times like SPA and PEDI, but seriously - can’t we do better than “E, on a compass” for EAST? I deplore PPP in the puzzles, but even I have heard of EAST of Eden for heaven’s sake.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous7:49 AM

    Personal Best for a Tuesday here. Very woosh

    ReplyDelete
  15. Angie7:52 AM

    When the biggest challenge is my own clumsy use of the app, “Can’t type fast enough,” “I typed an o not an i,” “Why has the keyboard changed direction?,” then the puzzling isn’t puzzling. I didn’t see the circled cluing maybe that would have made it more fun today. On the plus side, I beat my average solving time by nearly all of it giving me time to read the blog and do connections before my alarm went off to get up. Have a safe and happy week!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't know if I'm responding to the right place since it took me longer to find where to comment than it did to complete the puzzle. Anyhoo (like Clare would say), I agree with you all about the simplicity of the puzzle. It used to be a 'badge of honor' or something you would brag about to complete the NYT puzzle. "Times" have changed.

      Delete
  16. Sus palabras exactas fueron, y cito: ¡Ay de mí!

    It's the fashion of our blog participants to append an adjective to the word easy prior to launching into a tirade of thinly veiled contempt for the perceived tragic state of affairs at the NYTXW. Today it's absurdly easy, but my favorite phrase, usually voiced by one of our beloved Anonymoti is insultingly easy. These plaintive cries from the barnyard of our fickle flock have been ongoing for years. The weeping juxtaposed next to the inconvenient fact the puzzle is more popular and more profitable than ever leaves me curious why a narrow band of highly experienced solvers keep showing up, keep complaining, keep sharing their apocalyptic adjectives next to "easy." Occasionally, I wonder aloud, how long will you keep doing over and over the same thing and expecting a different result? With the obsessive need to do the Times it appears the insane addiction is permanent, and unlike Cnut, we will be yelling at the tides day after day in our petty way until our candle is snuffed out. Darned you brain for being able to do the puzzle produced by this venue. I can imagine an old man standing in the magazine aisle of the grocery store holding a book of Dell Fun to Solve crosswords above his head and yelling at passers-by, "These are too easy! They're not fun to solve. Damn you Dell and Albertsons for letting me buy these puzzle books." I picture a kind-hearted grocery clerk with one of those giant brooms swooshing up to him, patting the maniacal man on the back, gently saying he understands, letting him know everything will be fine, and saying, "Maybe these puzzles aren't for you anymore."

    It's Tuesday. It's a perfectly Tuesday puzzle. At least solve downs-only and then cry about that.

    ❤️ What're you doing? NOTHING.

    People: 1
    Places: 2
    Products: 9
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 0
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 81 (22%)

    Funny Factor: 0 😫

    Tee-Hee: SPEEDO SMUT.

    Uniclues:

    1 Why I don't walk down the closed aisles at Home Depot anymore.
    2 Purpose of a tryst.
    3 What liars at the pool hear.
    4 Experienced crossword solvers.
    5 Rue the errant wand flip intended to fix your bad haircut.
    6 Commitment of the prim.

    1 OVENS HIT ME
    2 SECRECY STROKES
    3 SPEEDO FIRE HAHA
    4 ONE SMILE OWNERS
    5 REGRET GEL HEXES (~)
    6 SMUT NOTHING

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: How to get from 51st and Fizzy to your flat on 2nd. COLA'S CAB RIDE.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don’t know if I’m one of the fickle flock, as I only complained about one clue and not the whole puzzle. Maybe an honorary membership - it’s a tough call, as I don’t think I’m really qualified. I frequently praise the Saturday puzzles for being more fair and accessible to solvers at my level. So, upon further contemplation, I think I will stick to my lane and just complain about the proper nouns, popular culture and foreign math tests.

      Delete
    2. Two thumbs up for your comment. You might have BURNT a few bridges to nowhere.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous9:06 AM

      Very well spoken, Gary. In fact, insultingly so!

      Delete
    4. Golly, Gary. Usually I enjoy your flights into oratory, but today you seem a little twitchy. :-)

      The complaints usually seem to boil down to a perception, that the NYTXW has been dumbing it down, more and more. That would also be a simple explanation for why the puzzle becoming more popular and more profitable. Some people are not going to like that, and will signal their displeasure in whatever way, including overuse of hyperbolic adverbs, and misery loves company, etc. (Sorry -- I know all this is obvious; I just hope it's not insultingly obvious!)

      You're probably right that it *would be* insane if someone comments with an expectation that people on the NYTXW team are paying attention to this blog. (Oh, I suppose some of them might read it, and then ignore it.) But, to trot out another cliche: hope springs eternal.

      Meanwhile: this puzzle was moo-cow easy. :-)

      Delete
    5. By the way, do we actually know how profitable the puzzle is? And if we do know, how? Does the Times publish this data?

      Delete
    6. @tht: Well said. And I agree that if the puzzle has become more popular, the dumbing down has been a significant factor in that trend.

      Delete
  17. Hey All !
    Noticed the 16 wide grid, noticed it was super easy!

    From YesterComments,
    Har to Les S More! You have 2, which ties me, both @pablo and Rex have 1. Keep it up! 😁 (Only taking credit for ROOs of some sort in the grid, not in the clues ala 19D.)

    Neat Theme, singers inside normal phrases. I'm sure all you creative types will come up with a bunch more. The ole brain isn't being creative right now!

    Hope y'all have a great Tuesday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Awww, I think 1/2 a point for clue entries is reasonable.... 19D was a double! : )

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:43 AM

      Maybe Gary. But you didn't append an adjective to easy. You used an adverb.

      Delete
  18. I was going to say “way too easy” but Rex’s “absurdly easy” is better — even though I’ve never heard of TPAIN and I’m not sure if I’ve heard of KESHA. Tuesdays are unusually difficult but they often require at least a little effort. But I’m all for making some easy ones so novices don’t get discouraged

    ReplyDelete
  19. Anonymous8:12 AM

    Thanks for restoring the Star Wars meter to your blog today! And may the force be with you.😎

    ReplyDelete
  20. Berndo8:26 AM

    PB for a Tuesday today, and I'm pretty sure it was by a pretty wide margin, like almost 30 seconds. My wife has started trying her hand at crosswords the past few weeks. Mostly Mondays. Its a good reminder that if you haven't been doing these things for years even the easy ones can put up a good bit of resistance. This feels like a good one for someone not yet comfortable with crosswords to try.

    ReplyDelete
  21. All the T-Pain drama here is lolz. He’s been popular for 20 years. And I thought I was the old, out of touch white guy. Perhaps I’m hip.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:00 AM

      Two people saying they don't know T-Pain is hardly 'drama'.

      Delete
    2. Make that three.

      Delete
  22. Did this last night but I was TOO sleepy, so I was drifting off. So the timer says over 20 minutes. But I agree it was Monday easy. I definitely imagine "Inside voices" as something said to kids in the plural--as a reminder from a parent or teacher on they way into a museum or a library... I always love a puzzle that has Elvis in it. Enjoying listening to Elvis Costello as I write this : ) thanks Rex! . Straightforward, well executed and consistent theme, a nice puzzle for novices--this would be a good one to share with a friend who hasn't solved much before. Thanks, Nate!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  23. My cousin Mel worked for many years in the Brooklyn Public Library system as a shusher.

    Alternative clue for 4D (CONTOUR): Prison visit.

    I think Rex discovered an Ogden Nash poem today:

    The Republican egret
    Has much to regret

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Love your poem. Here’s hoping it’s a forecast of a regret-full November. I swore that after I retired I’d never work again, but if I was offered a job as an honest-to-goodness shusher, I’d be very tempted. Because how fun would that be - going around telling people to shut up. And I’d be great at it.

      Delete
  24. At this point I strongly suspect Shortz and company are purposefully adding Star Wars clues just to tweak Rex. Because there is no way that that Tatooine clue was the first thing ANYONE would think of for SUNS. Especially given there's an NBA team by that name. :D

    ReplyDelete
  25. Agree with Rex, very fast and simple. But I don't understand giving it three stars, I don't think this puzzle really has a theme...I mean, just some singers' names...how is that a theme? They're "inside" the puzzle? How lame can you get. Now if the names were inside some other kind of consistent answer, like singers' names found inside of names of towns, or something like that...but this is just lame. I hesitated a second over FIRE crossing TREVOR, because I am not familiar with either of those, but FIRE was the only thing that made sense. I think this puzzle belonged in the round file.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I wouldn't say I'm a full-on radical, but I'm RADISH.

    Yesterday we had ground hog, today we get BURNT BOAR.

    What Trump did after he lied -- RELIED.

    I remember well the days when I'd have to tell my boy, "SONATA library we use INSIDEVOICES."

    @Rex - I loved Republican Egret. Can't seem to remove it from my little cranial turntable. Puzzle was fun enough. I wonder why it didn't run on a Monday. But thanks, Nate Cardin.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Just plain enjoyed it

    ReplyDelete
  28. Paolo Pasco cleaned up last night in the Jeopardy tournament!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh wow! Didn’t know that was on this week. Thank you!

      Delete
  29. EasyEd9:11 AM

    I guess it’s fair game to comment more on the easiness of this puzzle than on its content, in line with what seems to be a trend towards a broader popularization of the NYT puzzles. Yesterday’s puzzle was about the same level of difficulty as today’s but had a funny approach to an easily identified feel-good theme. Today there seemed to be an attempt at a more complex theme but the clues and answers were even simpler than yesterday, so Rex put up the wet paint sign. I just hope this blog continues with Rex and members of the blog continuing to hold the NYT puzzle staff to a high standard.

    ReplyDelete
  30. DAVinHOP9:29 AM

    Saw the "Zero days without a Star Wars reference" and wondered if Rex was going to count SOLO, despite the clue being sans Hans. So thanks for the info about the fictional (obviously Star Warsian) planet Tarhootie, or whatever.

    This was neither a slog nor a masterpiece, and I expected a three-star (meh) rating. But what makes this blog so enjoyable is, despite a tepid solve, and Rex's complete description of its tepidness, he brings such entertaining tidbits as the origins of Wham-O (Super Bowl/Ball?...really??), the lively discussion flowing from INSIDE VOICES, and thinking out loud curiosity re BURNT. The puzzle itself sometimes disappoints, but the write-up seldom does.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Mel Arky9:33 AM

    Guess it's just me.. initially filled SMOKESTACK. Not up on fast foods and that seemed likely. Evolved to smokeSHack which also seemed plausible

    ReplyDelete
  32. Seems kinda wrong to have Elvis in there today if you’re not gonna mention Buddy. It is Feb 3rd, y’know.

    ReplyDelete
  33. I thought the puzzle was enjoyable enough for Tuesday fare but after seeing “absurdly easy” and some other comments to that effect, I went back and checked my time. Yep. It was a personal best…either that or it tied my prior personal best. Still, I didn’t really feel I flew through.
    So @Rex gave it 3 stars and that’s fine by me, even though he may have thought that WETPAINT was a touch of green paint. I still have the vinyl of The Best of the Guess Who and, like others, Republican Egret will be an earworm for a while today. I will say I was a TAD confused when I played Rex’s link because I’d not heard that “mellow” intro to the song in the past before the rockin’ starts. I don’t think it was included in radio play and wasn’t in my album.

    ReplyDelete
  34. I love having WHAM-O in the puzzle! And I love the word "monomynous," which I just learned from Rex. But only 3 of the 4 INSIDE VOICES are. ELVIS, whether we are talking Presley or Costello, has a surname. If we hear ELVIS we tend to assume the former, but his records and movies were released as by ELVIS Presley. I consider hat a fault.

    But TAI, as clued (9-D) was a big plus. The clue is wrong; the two TAIs are different words in different languages (or if Wikipedia has it right it's actually the second half of a word in the language of Tahiti), but makes me love it even more.
    I also liked OH SO coming a day after EVERSO.

    But what is it with this trend to clue an abbreviation as an expansion of a letter in an initialism? Twice today! If you don't like the original abbreviation, just spell it out!

    And a very minor quibble -- probably the majority of the American public FILEs in order to get a refund, not to submit one's taxes.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don’t quite get your last statement…you file the form and documentation to show the taxes you have paid, so whether one gets a refund or owes additional taxes (or came out even when all said and done) you are submitting (for scrutiny) your taxes.

      Delete
  35. Agreed, very Easy even for a Tuesday. Beat yesterday's time by over a minute. And yes, there was a perceptible schoolchild vibe to it. I can't imagine saying "EYES ON ME" to any group of people except small children INSIDE a classroom, and that's only if I were the teacher. Same with INSIDE VOICES. (By the way, "But the singular seems like it would be infinitely more common than the plural" doesn't really ring that true to me -- in my imagination, the typical use would be in addressing more than one child at a time when their noise level gets above "a dull roar". More efficient that way.) Musical chairs (SAT), WHAM-O, GRADE LEVEL -- all of them contribute to the vibe. So does the easiness of the puzzle. And do adults ever cry "UNCLE" when their friends get them in headlocks and apply noogies? Seems more a schoolkid thing as well.

    I QUOTE: "But back to the "children" part of that revealer clue—first of all, why "children"? Yes, it's a phrase you would use with a child, but everyone should use their INSIDE VOICES in the library" <--- It's children because you would never say "use your INSIDE VOICES!" to a group of adults. Except maybe ironically or to be funny.

    Re "brent" -- the German word for "to burn" is "brennen". Rex quotes a fragment of Middle English where it appears, and I wonder when that word was phased out, along with all the thorns (the funny-looking characters that look a bit like a "p") and eths and other exotica from earlier forms of our language. What's that, a yogh I see there?

    I'm afraid this puzzle did not excite me. I didn't feel insulted (hi @Gary), and I don't REGRET the short time spent on it, but as I said elsewhere, it was indeed moo-cow easy, and the theme answers amounted to a shrug, not aided by the fact that they seemed sort of random. Oh well. On to the next thing, then.

    ReplyDelete
  36. I got the first ELVIS and thought he might be in all the theme answers, so I checked 40-D, and nope, different singers. I've seen T-PAIN before, probably in an earlier puzzle, and I've heard of KESHA but never saw her written down, so I had assumed she had an I between the E and the S; had to get that mostly from crosses. Live and learn

    ReplyDelete
  37. Anonymous10:50 AM

    Brennt - maybe it would be fun someday to find an all - or mostly - early English puzzle. A puzzle yclept Chaucer?

    ReplyDelete
  38. Thank you @Lewis and @Gary. In all the years (plus archives) I’ve been solving the NYTXW there has only been one time I didn’t love or appreciate a puzzle. And yes, I love how they evoke a memory or, especially, how they coincide with something you are doing or thinking about just then!!

    ReplyDelete
  39. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  40. I'm with @kitshef - I wrinkled my nose when I got the revealer. I don't like that singers have been minimized to a mere VOICE per the clue.

    I saw ELVIS in the circles early on and then lost track of the circles' contents so I stared for a while at the row starting with 37A. A TPAIN A seemed ripe for anagramming but I didn't bother. Only after finishing and reading the reveal clue to its end did I see the other singers besides ELVIS and then remember that I have heard of T PAIN though I've heard nothing he has VOICEd. So I decided to remedy that by checking out his music. I had to quit after he rhymed "mansion" with "Wisconsin" in "Can't Believe It". Ouch.

    Tuesday easy, thanks Nate Cardin!

    ReplyDelete
  41. Yes, pretty easy. There was a theme?

    ReplyDelete
  42. NUMBER OF DAYS WITHOUT A PEWIT REFERENCE: 758

    An insider puztheme. And with The Circles. [Number of days without The Circles: 0] [Number of days since an insider puztheme: 0] [Number of days without a ?-marker clue: 0].
    Well-made above-average-sized TuesPuz. With ELVIS in the buildin. Nice. Was it easier than snot? -- heck if I know ... I was too busy enjoyin it.

    staff weeject pick: TAI. Primo clue, that combines two different common clues for TAI.
    fave moo-cow eazy-E clue: {8-) or :-D} = EMOTICON. [since @kitshef posed the question]

    other fave things: BURNT over FIRE. Only 2 off from a pangrammer. TVGUIDE/VIEW. More puzgrid squares for yer moneybucks.

    Thanx for the fun, Mr. Cardin dude. Always fun, bein in-voiced.

    Masked & Anonymo6Us




    ReplyDelete