Yellowish color for old computer graphics / TUE 2-24-26 / Tiny swine / Brew that's a little cloudy and fruity / Utter rubbish / President of China beginning in 2013 / Supermodel Hadid
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Constructor: Adam Aaronson
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (**for a Tuesday**)
Theme answers:
- ETHNIC GROUP (17A: Nuyoricans, e.g.)
- ELECTRIC GUITAR (24A: Fender Strato caster, e.g.)
- EL GRECO (36A: "The Disrobing of Christ," e.g.)
- ENDOCRINE GLAND (50A: Thyroid, e.g.)
- EVENING GOWN (59A: Dress for a soirée, e.g.)
Nuyorican is a portmanteau word blending "New York" (or "Nueva York" in Spanish) and "Puerto Rican," referring to Puerto Ricans located in or around New York City, their culture, or their descendants (especially those raised or currently living in the New York metropolitan area). This term is sometimes used for Puerto Ricans living in other areas in the Northeastern US Mainland outside New York State as well. The term is also used by Islander Puerto Ricans (Puerto Ricans from Puerto Rico) to differentiate those of Puerto Rican descent from the Puerto Rico-born. (wikipedia)
• • •
Feels like it's been a while since I thought the editors misjudged the level of difficulty in this direction—that is, since a puzzle felt harder than average for its day of the week. But this one, yeah, this one felt like a Wednesday, for sure. Spelling XI JINPING alone was a total adventure (31D: President of China beginning in 2013), then there was the toughish (for me) clues on EL GRECO and AMBER (I had OCHER (?)) (6A: Yellowish color for old computer graphics) and BOO (8D: Honeybun) (so many three-letter "Honeybun"s out there), and then the supermodel I don't know (GIGI), the ARM/AIM thing (43A / 33D: Asset for a thrower), the WHEAT part of WHEAT BEER. All of this was gettable, it just took more time than most Tuesdays take. More "what?," more hacking around until the letters fell into place. And it didn't just take more time to solve—it also took more time for me to understand the theme. Not a ton of time, just ... some. At the end, I could see that all the themers had "E.G." as their initials, but ... why? I kept looking for a revealer, but ... nothing. "E.g., e.g., where would you put the 'e.g.' in a puzzle like this?" Well, duh. The clues. I had not noticed that every clue ended in e.g. because crossword clues end in e.g. all the time—it's not a distinctive feature. So that little twist—turning a perfectly ordinary clue element into a theme element—was surprising. Clever. Again, more characteristic of later week puzzles. But I appreciated the "oh!" moment.
'Mainly I was just relieved that there was a revealer (of a sort). Because before that, I was thinking "uh ... just having E.G. initials is not enough. Not themeworthy." The cluing conceit gives the E.G. stuff purpose. It's a neat little trick. During the solve, my ideas about what the theme might be were all over the map. At first, I noticed that both ETHNIC GROUP and ELECTRIC GUITAR feature an "ICG" letter string broken across their two words. But then EL GRECO broke up that pattern. By the time I got ENDOCRINE GLAND, I was like "is there 'CRINGE' in every answer? Anagrammed? For some reason?" But no, that didn't check out either. I don't necessarily enjoy fumbling around like that, but I did think it was kinda cute the way the "e.g." in the theme clues was eventually like "hey, hey there ... you missed me. I'm right in front of your damned face."
Bullets:
- 36A: "The Disrobing of Christ," e.g. (EL GRECO) — using the artist's name as a descriptor of their work is completely conventional ("Is that a PICASSO!?"), but I was still expecting a general category here (like, I dunno, OIL PAINTING).
- 11D: Brew that's a little cloudy and fruity (WHEAT BEER) — I think the "fruity" part threw me. I didn't know that about WHEAT BEER. Of all the things that are "fruity" in this world, I'm not sure I would've placed WHEAT in that category. The "fruity" had me thinking "sour," but SOUR BEER wouldn't fit.
- 6A: Yellowish color for old computer graphics (AMBER) — as I said earlier, my first guess here was OCHER. What I did not say earlier: after MARDI gras forced OCHER out, my next move was not AMBER. It was UMBER. I don't even really remember what color UMBER is. I just remember the name from the "Burnt UMBER" crayon color among my Crayola crayons when I was a kid. Burnt umber is reddish. Straight up UMBER is pretty brown. If you squint and wish real hard, you can kinda see "yellowish" in there, but nah, it's pretty brown.
- 15A: Actress Watts of "The Friend" (NAOMI) — Easy (what other "Actress Watts" is there?) but my first response was "That's a strange way to clue her. What the hell movie is that?" Then I remembered: it's the NAOMI Watts / Bill Murray / Great Dane movie from a couple of years back that I really meant to see and never did. Read a whole (fascinating) article about that dog, and what it took to cast the dog and care for the dog during filming, etc. It was in the New Yorker, I think. (Yep, here it is). Really made me want to see the movie. And then I didn't. I hate when that happens. Guess I'll watch it now. On to the Letterboxd Watchlist it goes!
That's all. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️:
Venmo (@MichaelDavidSharp)] =============================
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
📘 My other blog 📘:
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️:
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
- Boswords Spring Themeless League (online) (starts Mon., Mar. 2, 2026)
- American Crossword Puzzle Tournament (Stamford, CT, Apr. 10-12, 2026) (registration closed!)
📘 My other blog 📘:
- Pop Sensation (vintage paperbacks)






















109 comments:
Easy, although I didn't grok the theme until I came here, because I didn't read the clues until after I had solved.
* * * * _
One overwrite, Riot before ROFL for [Hi-lar-ious] at 28D (RIOT did appear later, at 42D)
One WOE, supermodel GIGI Hadid at 38D
I’m literally in the middle of rewatching the Ken Burns “Jazz” documentary, but still put in MUDDY first for “Blues Legend Waters” instead of ETHEL, even though she’s featured in several episodes.
As one who continues to miss LMS’s unique contributions to this site, I was happy to learn of (and now to share with other fans) her recent https://a.co/d/099rRWpl
i found it easy, even without noticing the theme and without ever having heard of a MINIPIG. Maybe that's someone who eats more than one's fair share of a meal, but only a bit more.
I noticed the EG initials but not the "e.g." endings in the clues. The clue for EL GRECO looked odd, why wasn't it simply ["The Disrobing of Christ" painter]? Now I know.
"Using the artist's name as a descriptor of their work is completely conventional." That gave me Art Heist flashbacks (https://rexwordpuzzle.blogspot.com/2024/12/plunder-archaically-sun-12-15-24-old.html).
Two pretty hard puzzles in a row.It’s OK. I liked them.🎈🎈🎊🎊
Oh, Adam got me and got me good. I was thinking this was a weak tea theme, especially from such an a-one constructor, and then… and then… I came here, read the “e.g.” connection, experienced a filled-with-kapow “Hah!”, and wanted to shake his hand for flimflamming me so good.
That’s the topper to what was already a solve filled with interest. Lovely-to-learn no-knows MINIPIG (which may not be so mini, as they can be up to 300 pounds) and “Nuyoricans” (which I will remember), and the adventure of spelling the head of China.
Not to mention the classic dook NOONE and its terrific clue [Whom a diary is often shown to], never seen in any of Crosslandia’s major outlets before. Also, OVAL, clued [Avocado-shaped], next to GUAC. Plus, a doubly-rich box (7 double EE’s).
I love when something is right in front of my eyes, and I simply don’t see it – it’s amazing and funny at the same time. You gave me that, Adam, and lots of sparks besides. Thank you!
For the life of me I can't figure out any reason whatsoever why I would show my diary to the former lead singer of Herman's Hermits - even once, much leas often. Any help here?
My experience mirrored OFL’s pretty closely. I even had some of the same difficulties with things like MINIPIG, AUTOBIO, GIGI and the WHEAT part of the BEER answer. It definitely didn’t seem like a Tuesday when I was solving it.
I also had trouble with (what should have been) some of the easy stuff like NO ONE and DOWSE side-by-side. Not a terrible puzzle, it just seemed out of sync. It will be interesting to see how tomorrow’s grid stacks up vis a vis today’s.
Agreed. Northwest corner started off, well, off, and the whole puzzle felt like a Thursday to me (not Wednesday).
Hated El Greco as an adjective.
Selfbio rather than Autobio?
But at least it made me wake up a bit.
Minipigs are often used in pharmaceutical research since their physiology is closer than other species. While it will be great when we can get rid of animal testing (e.g. computer modeling, in vitro testing) we're not there yet
Definitely trended towards a late week difficulty level but I liked it. Saw the repeated revealer but it didn’t really aid in the solve. ENDOCRINE GLAND is a load of real estate for a dud of a themer.
Life Turned Her That Way
In addition to the e.g. play - I sensed an overload of “slangily” and “for short” cluing that gave an informal feel to the grid. The XI - I CAN DIG IT stack is fantastic. The word of the day is CONDEMN.
Depeche Mode
I can thank @Gil for turning me on to PEETS Major Dickinson blend - just finished a cup and still delicious. Digging out of nearly 30” will require another cup or two.
London Girl
Enjoyable Tuesday morning solve that teetered on feeling more like a themed Friday.
I will not CONDEMN you
Nor yet would I deny
I would ask the same of you
But failing will not die
The Dodge Colt I drove back in the 70s that said Dodge on the outside and Mitsubishi on the inside.
The AMC Pacer I traded to an Azerbaijani guy for two carpets. The carpets lasted for decades, the Pacer probably not.
The used car I bought cheap because it had been in an accident, which ran great until the hood flew open while I was bombing down the Interstate.
Read more about these and all my other cars in my forthcoming AUTOBIO.
I think this is two stars at best. I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Tuesday is the worst day for crossword puzzles.
Hey All !
ME TOO for thinking puz was a bit crunchier for a Tuesday. Which is a good thing. (Apologies to those who don't like "crunchy" as a puz descriptor!)
Isn't AUTO BIO an oxymoron? Or is it used more to differentiate it from a BIO written by someone else?
Liked this EG-e.g. puz. Thanks Rex, for pointing out the e.g.'s in the clues, as they whooshed right over the ole noggin. If the clues were a snake, they would've bit me. (An old adage, yes, but have the Gen Zers or Millennials heard it?)
@pablo
Chalk up a point to me! 😁 That's 3 so far this year, you have 1 3/4. C'mon, constructors, we need more pablos!
Hope y'all have a great Tuesday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I also missed the e.g.’s in the clues! Ha! and Duh!
Also thought it was easy. Using vee, eve, levee and levies in one spot seemed amateurish
Not an English major, but isn't EL GRECO a noun in this case? "Did you see there's an EL GRECO on display at the museum?"
We gave it a side-eye at first for the same reason, but Rex's explanation, and more importantly the theme, made it work.
Thanks for sharing this. Ima buy it.
To all who lament about how easy NYTXWs have become, I respectfully suggest that today's...rather challenging, cleverly-themed, somewhat junk-free, and (bonus) two sets of fairly interesting nine-letter side-by-side downs, is a refreshing counter to that opinion.
As admittedly obsessive as I am with Rex's rating system, I was in total agreement with his awarding of an additional 1/2 star.
And Nuyorican as a clue (IMO intentionally obscure) was a nice choice for WOTD, though I doubt the word will appear (in a positive sense, anyway) in the SOTU tonight. Not a fan of gambling, and its proliferation into seemingly every aspect of life, but I do wonder, is there's a book on this topic, what is the over/under on the total number of demonstrable lies in the speech.
Well, he was into something good.
I made the same MUDDY vs ETHEL mistake! Glad to see I wasn’t the only one.
@Andy
🤣
Roo
Drexel U, in Philly, an excellent school, is sometimes unfortunately referred to as DRECK Tech.
Whenever I see NAOMI from behind I moan.
I don't know if I've caught up with the Pancho and Roo sitings (and there is a ROO today) but there are sure a lot of EGs for breakfast this morning. And I might add an ROFL (Rex Our.....).
I think that ICANDIGIT is a polite way of saying "let me flip the bird at this guy".
I'm enjoying AJAR of PEETS as I write this. I didn't experience the difficulty that others seem to have, but I sure whooped (albeit silently) when I spotted the revealers lying in the clues. This was a RIOT. Thanks, Adam Aaronson.
Very generous of you to only take one point for an indefinite number of ROOS. I was afraid you would claim, I don't know, lots. Whew.
Medium for me, time-wise, because I can't remember the last time I needed so many stupid overwrites. It's as if I forgot how to type for a few minutes.
Love the theme of this puzzle- fresh, funny, and not overly contrived.
Took me a moment but that's clever.
"Hated El Greco as an adjective"
Huh? That piece is an example of an El Greco, just like a Strat is an example of an electric guitar.
Thought this one was easy as I filled in the themers from just a few crosses. Just felt right. Then found I had completely botched the NW with cRoCK instead of DRECK and the rest a mess I had overlooked in my haste to move on. Enjoyed Rex’s write up this morning—I feel I was just lucky to escape some of the mental hoops he jumped through. But he got the theme, that went totally over my head, so kudos to him.
Thanks to everyone who admitted to missing the obvious e. g, 's. Me too, and I feel better.
Pretty much what OFL said--AUTOBIO? MINIPIG? Also, how do you spell that Chinese leader anyway? Didn't know GIGI as clued but I am familiar with WHEATBEER, which is indeed " a little cloudy and fruity", which is why I don't like it. I thought DRECK was a great start, and I always like thinking about ELGRECO and Toledo, but not many other real smiles.
@GILLI, if you're out there, thanks for PEETS. Still not around here though.
Nice enough Tuesday, AA. Sorry I didn't Entirely Grasp your Adroit Assembly of EG's and thanks for a fair amount of fun.
Solved 99% downs only. Died at the Chinese President.
Yup, saw the E/G in the grid but not the clues.
I had to get a few crosses in the NW before I could decide on iMED or DMED for 1D.
Aren't MINI PIGs those house pets that start out so cute and end up at 200 lbs and huge?
I thought the crossing of LEVEE and LEVIES was cute. And I spelled XI JIN PING right, yay!
The first El Greco piece (and maybe the only) I ever saw in real life must have been "The View of Toledo" in the Met. I say "must have been" because I remember it was a very dark yet awesome landscape and Google says that painting is one of only two surviving landscapes by El Greco. The paintings that show up in a Google search show that El Greco didn't see many blue skies.
Adam Aaronson, thanks for a trickier than usual Tuesday!
Que sean dos.
Tribute puzzle for @egs.
Northwest put up a lot of fuss, and I had fun hunting and pecking. I forgot about those old yellow computer screens. Kinda miss those.
Love the AIM/ARM and LEVEES/LEVIES combos.
Every time I see LEVEES in the puzzle I'm reminded of the Led Zeppelin song and then I am reminded not one person on my staff of 20-somethings has ever heard of Led Zeppelin. I guess that means we can start playing Stairway to Heaven again.
I'm often a little cloudy and fruity, Does that make me WHEAT BEER?
😩 AUTOBIO.
People: 9
Places: 1
Products: 7
Partials: 11 {not great folks}
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 30 of 76 (39%)
Funny Factor: 4 🙂
Tee-Hee: Squishy balls. HEE.
Uniclues:
1 A waltz?
2 Onus of Chinese president's dominatrix.
3 Say comedian isn't funny.
4 Why the king of the jungle is plugged into a USB.
1 EVENING GOWN JIG
2 RETIE XIJINPING
3 CONDEMN RIOT
4 LION CHARGER
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: What the current said to the resistance. ENGARDE OHMS.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I screwed up my NW by entering MUDDY instead of ETHEL, and my SW by entering PIGLETS instead of MINIPIG.
Could have run this on a Wednesday and I'd have believed it but kind of wild for a Tuesday.
Rind? no Peel? no Pits? no Pith. Seriously, Pith?
Back when computer monitors were monochrome, and mostly CRTs (though there were very expensive monochrome plasma screens available too), they came in essentially three colors of phosphors: green, white (more of a bluish-white) and amber. Many found the latter to be easier on the eyes, and sometimes.
@N. Joad 9:53 AM
Pithed you off?
When peeling an orange I keep a bowl nearby so I'll have a pot to PITH in.
The doc said I need more grains in my diet so I picked up a case of wheat beer on the way home.
Can we combine 15A and 38D for GIGI Watts?
Your first comment (which I love) reminds me of how Ed Norton described his mother-in-law to Ralph Kramden: From the front she looks like you from the back.
It's funny, I found Sunday to be a struggle and this one was super easy - but I'm in roughly the same demographic as Adam and I think that matters a lot.
I still struggle to believe the "puzzles are getting easier" things, just Rex is more in the target demographic most days
After an initial struggle between iM and DM (I chose wrong), it wasn't too hard. I wanted lambic BEER at 11-D, but I couldn't actually remember the word, and it wouldn't have fit if I had--but then coY didn't work with REN FAIRES and I saw that it could be WRY, so WHEAT BEER it was.
For most of the puzzle I thought that the ArM/ARM crossing would be the revealer, somehow. GIGI set me straight on that--not that I knew her, but I thought it unlikely that she would be GrG_.
My experience with the theme was like rex's--struggling to see any common elements, noticing that 2 started with EL, eventually realizing they all had teh same initials, searching for a revealer to make sense of it, then finally noticing the "e.g." in ONE of the clues, thinking it was an unfortunate dupe, then realizeing that they ALL ended that way. Wow!
As for the Chinese president, I did know he was XI, and the rest kind of filled itself in. Quite a nice little Tuesday, in retrospect.
Thanks to the anonymous commenter for the news of Loren's book -- I just bought it.
Just a skosh north of medium for me, but it seemed tougher.
Costly erasures - getting ARM and AIM in the wrong squares and Riot (which showed up later - malapop?) before ROFL.
I did not know EL GRECO, AMBER, LEAH, LION (as clued), and GIGI.
Needing a lot of crosses to spell - XI JIN PING (hi @Rex).
Slightly cringy - AUTOBIO and PC HELP
Cute and clever, liked it.
I watched The Friend just a few weeks ago! It felt long and mostly aimless. Not a "I hated this" experience but I'm so-so on having watched it or recommending anyone else do.
Great info! I'm buying it, too!
Live, you're on fire today 😂😂
That last one was powerful
ME, TOO: I found it hard for a Tuesday, and I missed the e.g. "reveal" hiding in plain sight in the clues. Thank you to @Rex for pointing it out. Here I thought the puzzle was weak for only having a sort of list of theme phrases, whereas what was really weak was my powers of observation. Ouch.
OMG!! So that’s what she’s been up to. Interesting thing about this for me personally is that I was a classmate of a Lefler mentioned in the write-up and we figured out that we met in junior high when LMS came to visit our school for a day. This feels like a brush with fame - will be happy to sign autographs:)
Just put my order in…
Come up with an handle and publish non-anonymously, otherwise we have no idea what you said before.
Played more difficult than your average Tuesday for me, for sure. One of those grids where I feel like there must be a surplus of a given letter, only to give a thorough look and discover that it's just a preponderance of that letter in one section. (I'm looking at you, VEE.)
Great comments from the gang this morning! If the puzzle is a 3.5, the comments are a 4.
If Wednesday puzzles had names, I would call this one, "For Example ..." (but if you saw that title before you began to solve, it would make the theme too easy to see).
If you happen to have "squishy balls" you might need medical attention, but not from an ENT.
Yep, today would have been the day to start counting your EGS. And who is this "Pancho" of whom you speak?
Pretty tough for a Tuesday, especially downs-only.
Not a lot of DRECK, AUTOBIO excepted. (Apparently MINI PIG is a thing so I’ll admit my ignorance and move on regarding that one). But all in service of what? EG phrases? Huh? Oh wait! There’s e.g. in the clue. I’m not sure if I should be impressed or insulted by that.
Lots of good fill - definitely Wednesday level - including the themers but for what? EG? Really?
Jeez, I found that to be "crafty" and craftsman ish, also the aim/arm intersection
I surprised myself & solved pretty quickly as a themeless then came here for the theme. I liked it. And I can remember when "I can dig it" was a 'cool' thing to say - thanks for the 'reminder', Adam (I think).
OCHER before AMBER, ME TOO.
MUDDY before ETHEL also.
Otherwise, whoosh!
I guess I'm the only one bothered by the puzzle having both OVAL and OVA today, but for me the cluing on OVAL really drove home the fact that the word means OVA-shaped. So basically two (relatively) adjacent answers are "egg" and "egg-shaped."
The fact that it was so close to the LEVEE/LEVIES cross really raised my hackles.
A 7-letter theme answer? And the theme seemed pretty basic.
El Greco did a series of etchings, Los Caprichos, as political social commentary. Saw them at the Prado. One is startlingly resonant/relevant today: The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters! I have no clue how to give you folks a link, but you should look it up before the monster's speech tonight!
The northwest corner was a bit of a challenge for me also. Problem was I had Muddy instead of Ethel.That threw me all off until I went back to it at the end and filled in the across answers I originally thought were correct, but didn’t insert because I still kept Muddy. Once I removed Muddy, it all fell into place
I imagine Aaron making this puzzle while watching an exhibition game, listening to Edvard Grieg, and sipping on Earl Grey tea from an emerald green cup made long ago in East Germany.
Oh, have mersey...
@pabloinnh. Must have been autocorrect (who is currently working on his AUTOBIO). Hope all is well with you in New Jersey!
My doctor told me to cut my carbs, so I switched from beer to gin.
Amusing question coming from you, the lead singer of Gerry and the Pacemakers!
If you solved everything with no difficulty, but didn't realize that there was a theme, does that mean you didn't successfully complete the puzzle?
Hand up!
Paolo Pasco did today’s NYer puzzle, which reminded me of how unbelievably good he was on the Tournament of Champions Jeopardy. The only previous time I caught him was when he lost in his earlier appearances, so this was a real tour-de-force! It is rerun on Hulu, I believe
Thank you so much! I've missed her comments, will order the book today!
Hands up for not getting the "e.g."s in the clues. It does make the theme a little bit fun.
At 31 down, I had to get everything after XI from crosses. And I'm not sure if I hated or liked LEVIES crossing LEVEE.
Several Unknown Names, ETHEL NAOMI LEAH. I've certainly heard of EL GRECO but the clue didn't really help. And Jennifer EGAN was on the tip of my tongue but I needed some crosses there too.
Well, I'm off to sit in the sun on my back deck. Mild again today!
No one has mentioned the cross of “levee” with “levies”.
Happy for a puzzle with less junk fill.
Enjoyed this one but didn’t catch the themer until I read Rex.
me too
I too didn't notice that all the clues ended in "e.g.". Not sure if that's kind of thin soup for the overall theme or if I'm just miffed that it was too subtle for me to say I CAN DIG IT.
I did a brow-raised side eye when COTS filled in for 18D "Beds that might have wheels". I've seen my share of COTS over the years and none of them had wheels. I searched images for COTS and didn't see any there either. Aren't beds with wheels called "rollaways"?
Extra good, e.g. And pretty smoooth solvequest: only one no-know...
[0] days without a no-know, right outta the chute.
That'd be DMED. Social media-speak, I presume.
staff weeject pick: BOO = Honeybun? Shoot, I need to watch what I say to Trick'r'treaters, in the future.
some fave stuff: ICANDIGIT. MINIPIG [=har]. CONDEMN. CHARGER clue.
Thanx, Mr. Aaronson dude. Nice revealer-less TuesPuz. A rarity.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
@Anoa, yup we called them rollaways (although my spell checker doesn't like the word).
Where I grew up, the word dreck did not exist. It was pronounced ddeck with the r 90% absorbed by the second d. Anyway I missed it.
Yep
The best I CAN DIG IT song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aU8yDcEjAqg
Thank you! I'll ask my local store, Lemuria Books, to get copies.
Although trundle beds have wheels and they ate definitely neither cots nor roll aways
Funny, I came here expecting OFL to say this was easy for a Tuesday. Yes, there were a couple of mysteries, like the AMBER clue. But most were more than fairly crossed. Once I saw the theme pattern it was fun trying to get them with minimal crosses. Seeing the “revealer” was much trickier than filling in the grid, and I was one of the trickees.
To clear up the muddy Waters, I’ll add a second Word of the Day: ETHEL Waters: (October 31, 1896 – September 1, 1977) was an American singer and actress. Waters frequently performed jazz, swing, and pop music on the Broadway stage and in concerts. She began her career in the 1920s singing blues. Her notable recordings include "Dinah", "Stormy Weather", "Taking a Chance on Love", "Chlo-e (Song of the Swamp), "Heat Wave", "Supper Time", "Am I Blue?", "Birmingham Bertha", "Cabin in the Sky", "I'm Coming Virginia", and her version of "His Eye Is on the Sparrow". Waters was the second African American to be nominated for an Academy Award, the first African American to star on her own television show, and the first African-American woman to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award. -Wikipedia
I CAN DIG this: Down Home Blues
MINIPIG was - eh. Never saw the theme. Muddy before Ethel for 10 secs
Kilogram is not a base unit; GRAM is the base unit, just like METER and LITER. "Kilo" is a prefix meaning "one thousand". Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Definitely worth seeing Los Caprichos, but they were done by Goya.
To quote the President in "Independence Day"--Not bad. Not bad at all.
Maybe someone else (above) caught this but amber wasn’t yellowish color for *graphics* on old PC monitors (6A). It was only color for text on the display, either that or green, depending which you bought. There were no graphics, just text.
As noted above, AMBER (6A) was not the color of *graphics* on old PC monitors, it was simply the display color for text. There were no graphics. Only text. The other choices were greeen (think IBM PC) and white.
Enjoyed this fine Tuesday puzzle - there were names, but gettable. No difficulty with XIJINPING for me. I solved it as a themeless and did not notice the e.g.s in the clues - thanks, Rex! TIL MINIPIG and also Nuyoricans, so time well spent
Ditto on Muddy Waters!
Anonymous 12:15 pm
Everyone has their own rules. Personally, if all the letters are correct, the puzzle is solved I didn’t pay any attention to the theme while doing it. I went directly to Rex, forgetting to figure out the theme. I might have figured it out
DAVinHOP
I had exactly the same reaction to the puzzle you did
There is so much betting going on, on virtually anything these days, it wouldn’t surprise me that bet( how many lies in the dictator wannabe’s speech ) is available somewhere!
Haha…Anon 12:16…I think that’s a “personal thing.” I tend to not pay much attention to early week themes unless they help me solve. The concept here was VERY clever, but (for some reason) today I kind of flew through the puzzle (according to my timer) and I felt like it was a themeless.
🤣 Pith definitely pithes me off! (I mean peeling OFF the pith)
@Ron…I guess I should look at Adam’s demographic but I’m ALMOST 71 and this was a fast day for me. Wheelhouses are strange.
Omg. Random but hilarious!
I dunno Les…it’s pretty clever and elegantly simple.
My solving experience was very similar to @Rex…and I think my only “side-eye” was on AUTOBIO. Of course, this comes from a person who ALWAYS wants to pronounce (in my head) biopic similar to myopic. A fairly DRECK-free solid puzzle with a clever theme I didn’t need to figure out to solve and THAT’S okay!
I’ll have to look into Loren’s book and glad I got back to blog today (vacation…or whatever you call going to a warm beach when you are retired). Did I miss any drama?
Not to mention ova and oval. It was just a dump of similar crosswordese and very groan inducing
Seth
OVA , plural Spherical shapes a little larger than a tenth of a mm across in women . Reproductive cells
Oval a geometric 2 dimensional shape of any size. Also an adjective
Ova and oval while stemming from the same Latin word are far different in meaning and shape
It is a matter of opinion of course but when the words are so different, I don’t look at them as dupes.
M & A
FWIW
I learned solely from previous crosswords, that there are more terms of affection starting with B than I thought Bae is short for babe but BOO is , like so many words, from Black American slang and ultimately comes from the word beau.
Great to have you back Beezer
Not too much drama. A bit about how easy some puzzles are. Then Gary likes satirizing those comments in his inimitable way. But then there were a few more difficult puzzles that came along.
I liked the puzzle too
Ah yes, @egs vaults into the lead! I'm gonna need a bigger piece of paper ...
Do we award 4 or 8 for @egs?
Roo
Hey everybody. I put in that link for @LMS that was discussed earlier, I got some makeup site thingie. But, some say it was a book. Which is it?
If it's a book, that makes two here who wrote one! (Me being the other one, in case you didn't know 😁)
Roo
Like @Rex and many, I got the EG thing very quickly, I mean ELECTRICGUITAR went in with no crosses, but for the life of me could not figure out the significance. I probably spet 10 minutes after the solve staring at the grid trying to discover *something*, *anything* that would make EG interesting. I finally gave up and came here and it was one of my most joyous AHA moments ever. Like @Lewis, I love when somethig is right in front of my nose and still manages to escape my attention - it makes the discovery (even thought I didn't do it on my own) that much sweeter. I thought it was absolutely brilliant.
I also found this cosiderably harder than most Tuesdays but an early week challenge is always welcome. Like many, the NW was particularly hairy for me - the whole Muddy/ETHEL, Imed/DMED thing took a while.
I liked the fill just fine, some nice long downs and nothing at all groan worthy. Thanks Adam - one of the most clever themes I've come across in a while!
@Roo - I did not know you wrote a book - how cool! Tell us more!
@Jack Flanders 3:21 PM: Probably nobody will see this, but no. In the International System of Units (abbreviated SI, from its French name), "the world's most widely used system of measurement" (per Wikipedia), the base unit of mass is the kilogram. SI expands on the meter-kilogram-second (MKS) system, used extensively in mechanics.
The gram IS the base unit of mass in the centimeter-gram-second (CGS) system, which is used only in a few fields anymore. However, the CGS system thrives in crosswords due to its crossword-friendly units of force (the dyne) and energy (the erg).
FWIW, the SI unit of force is the Newton, and the SI unit of energy is the Joule.
Oh, and the liter is also not a base unit in the SI system.
For further reading, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_System_of_Units
@Hugh
You might be the only one who didn't know. 😁 Har.
Changing Times is the title. A sci-fi time travel-ish/parallel world/adventure type book. Search for Darrin Vail wherever you get your books online. Quick read at only 125 pages!
Roo
OVA literally means egg. OVAL is literally OVA plus the suffix -AL, thus meaning egg-related or egg-like. Their similarity isn't a coincidence, one is literally the adjectival form of the other. Yes I'm overusing the word "literally" but in this case it's apt. They are *much* more closely related than LEVIES and LEVEE, which Rex groans about. It doesn't invalidate the whole puzzle or anything, but let's not pretend it's good practice just because we can construct an arbitrary rationalization for it.
Post a Comment