Law enforcer in Leicester / THU 3-5-26 / CVS Health subsidiary / Replay technique, informally / Winning hit at Wimbledon / Gomez's cousin on 1960s TV / Leif, to Eric the Red / One-named artist who sang the U.S. national anthem at the Paris Olympics closing ceremony / Performs at a Thunderbirds show

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Constructor: Hanh Huynh

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (this will vary widely depending on when you pick up the gimmick)

[17A: User of the Force]

THEME: DARK / HORSES (66A: With 68-Across, long-shot candidates ... or a hint to six squares in this puzzle) — six black ("dark") squares actually contain letters (H, O, R, S, E, S, respectively), which you must supply in order to make sense of twelve answers that run through them:

Theme answers:
  • ORCHESTRATE / OVERTHROW (5D: Choreograph / 19A: Remove from power)
  • DISHONOR / RAMONES (35A: Bring shame upon / 22D: "Blitzkrieg Bop" band)
  • EVERPRESENT / ORCHESTRATE (38A: Always there / 5D: Choreograph)
  • EVERPRESENT / PASSING SHOT (38A: Always there / 26D: Winning hit at Wimbledon)
  • ALIENATE / LIVES ON (42A: Estrange / 28D: Endures)
  • CONSTABLE / PASSING SHOT (61A: Law enforcer in Leicester / 26D: Winning hit at Wimbledon)
Word of the Day: NATE Archibald (44A: N.B.A. great ___ Archibald) —

Nathaniel "TinyArchibald (born September 2, 1948) is an American former professional basketball player. He spent 14 years playing in the National Basketball Association (NBA), most notably with the Cincinnati Royals/Kansas City–Omaha Kings and Boston Celtics. In 1991, he was enshrined into both the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the New York City Basketball Hall of Fame.

Archibald was a willing passer and an adequate shooter from midrange. However, it was his quickness, speed and shiftiness that made him difficult to guard in the open court, as he would regularly drive past defenders on his way to the basket. This versatility helped Archibald lead the NBA in scoring and assists in the same season (1972–73), making him the first of only two players in league history to achieve such a feat.

• • •
[Dark Horse Comics presents... TALES OF THE [17-Down]]

This is architecturally spectacular, but only on review. The solve itself, while not very difficult, was chaotic, and yet underneath all that chaos the puzzle itself, at the basic clue/answer level, was actually kind of lifeless. So I was very impressed, ultimately, by the structure of it all, and somewhat bored by the act of moving in and around that structure. If you look at the clues, there's nothing very interesting happening at all. There's nothing you would consider entertaining or eye-grabbing answers, no particularly tricky or clever clues. Everything here is in the service of the theme, which (revealer aside), is an entirely structural theme. The clues, the meanings of words, none of these have any relation to the theme. Letters are building blocks. There's no engagement with solvers at the level of word meaning, really. Words are broken up, but breaking them up is purely an act of the physical manipulation of letters. I don't have to figure anything out at the level of word meaning or wordplay. At the ends of puzzles like these I always feel like I'm supposed to clap (and I am clapping) but more because the constructor made a really intricate contraption than because I particularly enjoyed myself while solving it. So it's a very well made puzzle ... just not one that thrilled me as a solver. 


It's possible that the thrill was gone quickly for me today because I picked up the basics of the theme very, very early, at ORCHESTRATE, when I had an undeniable ORC that made no sense for the clue (). I had already been thinking "Orchestrate" was a synonym for [Choreograph], so I just experimented: if I were a "-HESTRA," where would I go??? Tried the most obvious place first: directly through the black square at the end of ORC. And that turned out to be right. Let out a little "ooh" when I realized that ORCHESTRATE would have to go through two different black squares. And that was that. Well not that that. I had no idea what the black "H" and "R" were doing, but ... hidden-letter gimmick, unlocked. I went through the following black square and it was just a regular black square, with regular answers on the other side. Very quickly, I ended up all the way at the bottom of the grid:


I realize now that part of what made the solve feel chaotic was that I had no way to mark those squares as I was solving. On paper, you could write on those squares or indicate their specialness in some way, but online, you just have to keep imagining the letter there, and since there are so many black squares in a puzzle, those special squares were really hard to keep straight. Lots of bumbling around not because I didn't understand, but because I kept losing track of squares I'd already sussed out. So ... fussy, not hard. BAH. Anyway, the revealer phrase came shortly after ORCHESTRATE, and while that let me know what letters would be in play, I still had to go find them. A kind of Easter egg hunt. There was some fun in that, some challenge. But actually solving the clues themselves wasn't too hard (or too interesting). But you do have to admire the structural elegance of this thing. "H-O-R-S-E-S" all appear in order, when reading top to bottom, and all the regularly-filled elements of the puzzle are plausible crossword answers even when they are unclued (i.e. ORC is a real thing and ALI is a real thing and CON is a real thing, etc.). That is, no gibberish. Having three different answers that traverse two "dark" letters also struck me as impressive. It's quite a machine, this puzzle. Wish I'd enjoyed driving it more. The only real challenge this one presented for me involved holding those hidden-letter black squares in my mind. Everything else felt Tuesday. Tepid Tuesday.


Bullets:
  • 1A: Replay technique, informally (SLO-MO) — a gimme. SLO-MO to OPER, MEETS, and ... ORC? Oh, ORCHESTRA. While I didn't fly through the puzzle (because of all the black-square business), I cannot find another place in this puzzle where I struggled in any way with the actual clues. Oh, except ...
  • 36D: One-named artist who sang the U.S. national anthem at the Paris Olympics closing ceremony (H.E.R.) — I keep forgetting H.E.R. exists. I know H.E.R. won a Grammy, because the puzzle tells me so every once in a while, but for whatever reason H.E.R.'s name keeps falling out of my bag of one-named artists. In three letters, I think SIA, SZA ... ??? You gotta go to four and five letters to get to the real one-named titans: CHER, ENYA, ADELE. Part of the issue is that I know actual songs by all the other one-named artists. I can't hum a thing by H.E.R.. Let's see if I can begin to change that today:
[255M views on YouTube]
  • 38A: Always there (EVERPRESENT) — the first three letters here were probably the toughest part for me today, or the part I stumbled over the most. I couldn't figure out the Down cross (LIVES ON) and because I was focused on that trick square, I did not expect another trick square to be so close by, which means I kept assuming the answer to 38A: Always there was just three letters long. E'ER? E'ER seemed very close to [Always there]. But no. .... ERE? No. Colder. 
  • 46D: Big Dutch bank (ING) — bank names made solely out of random letters. Not my idea of a good time. I think I wrote GNC here at first, but that's a vitamin and supplement store chain.
  • 52D: Typewriter feature (TAB SET) — more unappealing fill. Do the keys actually say "TAB SET"? I have a typewriter here and it's just got a right-facing arrow on its "tab" key. This formal name for a bygone thing wasn't hard, but it wasn't pleasant either.
  • 2D: San Diego suburb (LA MESA) — if you're in the San Diego suburbs, I'd say you're in the weeds, fill-wise. If you're in the city, great, everyone knows cities. If you're in the suburbs, yikes. Only locals know suburbs. You should probably avoid suburbs. Remember: NATICK* is a suburb. 
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*NATICK is the term for an unfair / uninferable crossing, esp. of proper nouns

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81 comments:

Conrad 6:05 AM  


Easy. I didn't get the theme until I was nearly done, but I was able to get most of the theme answers with, "That word doesn't fit the clue but I'll write it in anyway." Two exceptions were 22D, where I figured RAM was a band I'd never heard of and 61A where I figured CON might be an abbreviation for Constable.
* * _ _ _

No overwrites, other than a lot of typos. I was particularly bleary this morning. For example, I read the clue at 36D as "One-armed artist ..."

One WOE, the tennis term PAS[S]ING S[H]OT at 26D, 46D and 68D

Anonymous 6:16 AM  

What??!? A Dark Horse theme analysis and no mention of George Harrison?

Rick Sacra 6:20 AM  

Yeah, I spent a few minutes wandering around that middle maze of 3-letter answers, success here, success there, and then, no answer. Success again, and then--looking in the list of clues for those "-" clues that tell you it's a continuation. But none of that. Finally got down through what I could do of the middle to the SE and .... voila... the revealer. Thank God for that. Then when I got over to NATE Archibald, and then... the clue was "Estrange" and it was.... oh, obviously ALI(E)NATE! Then I was onto it!!! Felt like it took a long time but then I ended up the puzzle at 12:02 which is in easy-medium territory for me on a Thursday. Yes, elegant architecture! And I've always loved the phrase "Dark Horses".... check out the Switchfoot song... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IyRR_i0FAU
Enjoyed all the long answers--especially sussing out CON(S)TABLE. And EINSTEIN. Thanks, Hanh!!!!! Beautifully done! : )

SouthsideJohnny 6:45 AM  

A bit of a strange one today, where most of it was Mon/Tues easy, and the convoluted theme gives you a headache. It may have been more fun if we were able to enter the DARK HORSE letters into their squares in the app. Forcing the solver to attempt to keep track of all of that in their head was a bit over the top, no?

I have a feeling that this puzzle may impress people who have some experience with constructing, but the 95+% of the rest of us will pay the price in terms of a diminished solving experience (it may be slightly better for those who solve on paper). We all know that Thursday is gimmick day, so instead of complaining, I chose to just shut up and eat my peas.

Philander C. Knox 6:50 AM  

I like this puzzle very much. Very very much.

And always good to see The Ramones make a periodic appearance.

57G AGS does not sit well with me, There is only one DOJ. And only one attorney general. There are former attorneys general, but they are are just that: former. Though once "bigwigs" at the DOJ, they are no longer. This, then, is poorly clued, as if there were several of these bigwigs running around the halls of the Justice Department at the same time.. Yes, I'm sure you can lawyer this (no pun intended) to somehow make the clue correct. But why? It's still a poor clue.

(On this matter, I have intentionally not mentioned that the current AG is anything but a "bigwig," and is, instead, a small-minded and petty disgrace to the profession and to the DOJ - but will continue to say not a word about this.)


Carolbb 6:53 AM  

Easy enjoyable puzzle. Enjoyed the dark horse theme. Two goofs had dish instead of dishonor as I misspelled pe(a)led with 2 e's & thus missed Ramone. Enjoyed Einstein clue.

Andy Freude 6:56 AM  

Well, this DARK HORSE was a bit of a Slow Horse this morning. Like Rex sez, a brilliant feat of construction that was not particularly fun to solve. Somehow it made me think of the two types of Scrabble players I’ve known: those who go for maximum points and those who like to make long and/or interesting words. Fortunately, Mrs. Freude and I are in the same camp (the second). Making lovely words appear on the board is so much more fun than racking up a big score. (Though sometimes both things happen.)

From the constructor’s point of view, I can see the attraction of devising a puzzle such as today’s. What a feeling of accomplishment that must inspire. And from the solver’s perspective, that “aha” moment when I grokked the theme was pretty sweet. But there wasn’t much for me beyond that moment.

Anonymous 6:57 AM  

This was much harder for me than for @Rex--I'd say Medium-Challenging. That said, I enjoyed it a lot more than he did. I got the theme with the RAM(O)NES and thought I was looking for hidden Os and looked at REC and PTA expecting symmetry. But then I got ORC(H)EST(R)ATE and realized there were different letters. DIdn't get the theme until late but it did help me make sense of the blacked-out letters. Never heard of H.E.R. (or if I had I've completely forgotten), don't care, but the crosses were fair. I was impressed as well.

Bob Mills 7:11 AM  

Thursday's puzzles are always quirky. I saw ALIENATE early on, so it was obvious from the revealer that six black squares represented actual letters. Then it became easy. Very impressive job of construction, I'd say.

kitshef 7:16 AM  

ING = International Netherlands Group, so the "Dutch" part of the clue helped.

Super-frifly easy Thursday. It is a shame that such a brilliant concept was wasted with Daily Jumble-level clues.

Son Volt 7:18 AM  

Fantastic puzzle - finally an elegant and technically complex grid that is actually a blast to solve. Figured the trick with RAMONES - went to the revealer and verified. Some of the themers were a little flat but I’ll give that a pass.

DARK End Of The Street

EINSTEIN, ONE EYE, BE SILENT etc - the grid is well filled given the theme restrictions. MOJO x MAMA sticks out. A lot of 3s - some gluey but I’m good. Knew the LA but needed the crosses for MESA.

So Sad

Highly enjoyable Thursday morning solve. On the list for POTY.

And it's EVER PRESENT everywhere
Warm love

Anthony in TX 7:19 AM  

Yeah, this one did nothing for me. I didn't pick up on the theme at all because the revealer was such an insanely easy clue that I filled in and didn't think twice about it after thar. A bunch of stuff around the grid with a few things that didn't make sense. Figuring it out was less an "a-ha!" moment and more a "what? So we're just using the black squares for fill-ins?" situation. Glad y'all liked it if you did, but this one didn't strike me as particularly clever or fun. Sorry to be a grump early in the morning.

Anonymous 7:21 AM  

I hated this puzzle. It wasn’t terribly difficult, but it WAS difficult to keep track of while solving online. The fill is not exciting, and the massive jumble in the middle is lifeless.

JJK 7:25 AM  

Really easy except for all the HORSE areas, which were really hard. I didn’t get the theme at all until I went to the blog. Maybe it should have been obvious when I got the revealer but it wasn’t, I was trying to make this a rebus puzzle, and it all went right over my head.

SouthsideJohnny 7:28 AM  

I’m wondering if the more “intellectually limber” of those among us will be able to perform the mental gymnastics required to keep track of all of those DARK HORSE squares and be up for a good old fashioned Thursday challenge. It will be interesting to see how the consensus among our group of pretty experienced solvers emerges today.

DAVinHOP 7:47 AM  

If there was ever a puzzle where Rex could make two ratings, it could be this one:

From a constructor's point of view- 4 stars
From a solver's point of view- 1 star

37 (count 'em) three-letter words (if I ignore the dark HORSES); yuk.

I look at the finished puzzle and wonder how much better it would have been if the dark HORSES squares weren't "hidden". All of the long answer clues remain relevant but about half of the three-letter fill is OVERTHROWn.

Expected a "who says that?" comment about BE SILENT which, with EINSTEIN were the only two non-theme long answers. ING and AETNA, two corp behemoths; thumbs down.

Impressively creative construction; BAH to solving it.

RooMonster 7:48 AM  

Hey All !
Standing O for the construction of this puz. What a neat feat to have the letters spell out HORSES, and also getting real words in your the partials.

I was wondering why there were so many Blockers when I first set the ole eyes on the grid, 44 of them! Thought to myself, "Rex is gonna go ballistic over all the short fill!" Found out later, the Blockers came into play as hidden letters. So subtract the six Blockers/Hidden Letters, you get a normal 38.

Thinking more about this Theme idea, it'd be the same as if the Blocker-Letters were circles. Although, there is the extra layer of all the parts of the longer things being words. As in, for PASSING SHOT, you have PAS, ING, HOT, as opposed to non words like KRI or something. Which is tricky to do.

Finished with an error, forgot about the hidden O in DISHONOR, so my band for Blitzkrieg Bop was REM, getting me PEeLED for PEALED. Ah, me.

Good ThursPuz, Hahn. Felt like something @Gary might've come up with! Speaking of which:
Before a Garden of Eden resident was transmogrified into a tree creature?
EVE PRE ENT

Have a great Thursday!

No F's - Two days in a row! BAH!
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 7:48 AM  

TAB SET is a feature on some typewriters where you literally set how far across the row you move when you hit the tab key, just like setting tabs in a word processor.

Carolbb 7:52 AM  

Definitely easier for me to do on paper! It was a lot of fun and you could see the theme fairly quickly. Must admit, my bias is Paper and pen rather than online. Maybe a function of age.

Anonymous 7:58 AM  

Agree. Wasn’t that impressive to this non-constructor. Couldn’t you just make the puzzle without the black squares and then make them black? I get that the short answers when the black squares are added also are words but there has to be plenty of words that would do that. I’ll just have to take Rex’s word for it.

Anonymous 8:04 AM  

with regard to "tabset" the clue says feature, not key. on a typewriter (and is suspect on a computer keyboard tab as well) it is how you set the tab key's interval.

Anonymous 8:07 AM  

I’m really surprised Rex liked this one as much as he did. I kept thinking as I was solving, “He’s going to go OFF on this one: Why THESE black squares and not THESE ones?” But no. Disappointed. I didn’t mind the puzzle, but I was definitely frustrated as I was solving with the seeming randomness of which squares were chosen for the letters.

Dr Random 8:25 AM  

Somehow, despite crosswords constantly trying to convince me otherwise, I can't manage to get it in my head that an AD REP is a thing. I'm sure it's common usage in the world of marketing, but alas, I always draw a blank on the clue and have to come back to it later. If I were to write a short story set in the world of crosswordese (no doubt in OSLO or AGRA), the villain would surely be an AD REP.

That to say, I died a bit inside when AD REP had prime real estate right down the center.

Anonymous 8:28 AM  

Bass ALE (59A), sadly, hasn't been sold in the US for years since Anheuser-Busch bought them

Phillyrad1999 8:29 AM  

The mini called. They want their answers back. Not a Thursday puzzle.

Liveprof 8:40 AM  

Apart from his ballplaying, which got him into the Hall of Fame, Pee Wee REESE was a mensch of the highest order. He was the team captain when Jackie Robinson came up to the Dodgers. Robinson, of course, encountered vicious racism from other players, even teammates, and fans outside of Brooklyn. In an iconic moment that still rings down through history, during pre-game warmups in Cincy with racist taunts cascading down from the stands and the Reds dugout, Reese went over to Jackie, put his arm around him, and stood there until his statement was clear. There's a statue in Brooklyn capturing the moment. Blacks felt Reece played a big role in opening the major leagues to them.

Mike Duchek 8:41 AM  

I had 85% done but couldn't figure out the pattern as to which black squares were letters and which were actual black squares. Was something in the shape of a horse that I wasn't seeing? I got so frustrated that I quit this one and wanted to see the answer. Well, turns out there was absolutely no pattern to which blacks were blacks and which were letters, though I now see they worked both ways and spelled "horse". Didn't care for it. Didn't help that I never heard of "Her" or passing shot

Barbara S. 8:52 AM  

I both admired and liked this one, although I admit keeping straight what was going on in the six letter-filled black squares was a tad confusing. But overall, I enjoyed it and thought the straightforwardness of most of the clues/answers was justified because (unless you’re @Rex) the theme was pretty challenging to suss out. In fact, I’d filled in the revealer and was practically finished, before the light finally dawned and I saw EVE(R)PRE(S)ENT running through the center. And then DISH(O)NOR. And then CON(S)TABLE. And then – OMG! – it works in the downs, too! Very nice AHA.

Before that I was prepared to be annoyed at all the 3s inhabiting the middle: they seemed excessive even to me, though I don’t usually take note of how many words of various lengths a puzzle contains. But I came to see they were all in necessary service to the theme.

A funny misconception I had involved SHAPER. I’d never heard that term for a [Woodworking machine]. And I hadn’t yet located the hidden H in OVERT(H)ROW and ORC(H)EST(R)ATE. So, for one brief moment of muddle-headedness, I thought the hidden H might link SHAPE_ (whose last letter I didn’t have) and ONUS to become the woodworking device. SHAPEC(H)ONUS? SHAPET(H)ONUS? SHAPEP(H)ONUS? No, dear. Wake up and realize that the black-square H is two rows down.

Thanks, Hanh Huynh! This brightened up my Thursday morning.

burtonkd 8:58 AM  

It was so (hold place for adjective) easy, that I only had to think about 2 or 3 of the DARKHORSE answers. I did a few across clues, and figured I’d go back and turn to crosses when I got slowed down, but it never happened. Same with downs such that there were only a few white squares left. The theme helped fill in those. Pleasant enough. I got stuck on the HER/DISH crossing, thinking DISs was better for bringing shame than DISHing.

I thought it would be some kind of a red/white wine theme for a bit.

Possible Easter egg: Will EMMA STONE be a DARKHORSE at the Oscars. Probably the most famous and decorated of the candidates, but role in Bugonia so odd that she’d be a surprise winner.

INRE HER: Okay, I listened to the song, but would still be hard pressed to sing it other than the descending pentatonic riff.

Anonymous 9:05 AM  

Really? only 4 comments? On a puzzle like this? For the first time in about 30 years, I was unable to figure out the trick. Even having gotten the DARK HORSES clue.

I can't be the only one...

Anonymous 9:08 AM  

Well it is the Year of the Horse

EasyEd 9:14 AM  

Agree with Rex, not an entertaining solve but a very well-constructed brain teaser. Did have a sense of satisfaction in figuring out the gimmick and seeing the longer answers come to life.

Chris 9:20 AM  

I think TAB SET refers to the “feature” that allows you to “set” various “tab” stops, where the typewriter carriage then moves to when you press the tab key.

ChrisS 9:21 AM  

Solved as a themeless with a lot of partial answers. Pretty easy but a little confused, thanks to Rex for illuminating me

Teedmn 9:23 AM  

How many solvers will have never done a TAB SET on their typewriter? With TAB___ in place, I could only come up with TABlET, at least momentarily until I remembered the feature. I haven't done one of those since...the 90's maybe?

It's been a while since we saw la SCALA.

Meanwhile, I never got the trick. I found where the answers didn't make sense but the revealer was opaque to me. At first, when finding clue/answer pairs that didn't match, I went to @Nancy's maxim that in those situations, the trick is in the clue. Except it wasn't today no matter how I tried to reparse "Remove from power" into OVERT. Now I feel like I really should have looked harder at the grid. Instead, with the revealer revealed, I was seeing if bay, or roan, or Arabian could be added.

Hanh Huynh, thanks for a really challenging (for me) Thursday puzzle!

Anonymous 9:28 AM  

The difficulty level was a solid "medium" for me. The solving experience was mildly enjoyable in that it felt satisfying to discover the trick. Unlike many Thursday and non-Thursday trick-oriented puzzles these days, the clues for the trick answers were not spelled out in italics or otherwise marked in the grid. To my mind, that's how a Thursday should work. You know something funny is going on, but you have to figure it out yourself.

Whatsername 9:31 AM  

I finished the puzzle without much of a problem and without knowing what was going on with the theme. After figuring out the revealer, I immediately knew ORC and OVERT were involved. However, since I only vaguely noticed the other suspect answers, finding the remaining secret DARK squares proved to be something of a challenge. As RP said, like an Easter egg hunt, only the eggs were all the same color as the grass. Anyway, the more I went bumbling around the grid looking for them, the more annoyed I got, so I just let it go at that. It’s a nice day, and I have other things to do. Puzzle was a fine art of construction, but my frustration with finishing sort of put an unpleasant tarnish on the art of the solve.

Lynn 9:43 AM  

The theme revealed itself slowly. I knew something was amiss. I looked into possible rebus but nothing there. And then, even after I grocked the black square element, it was challenging (and fun) to sort it all out.

Anonymous 9:43 AM  

Shouldn’t the clues for the first part of each theme answer have been italicized?

Anonymous 9:43 AM  

Found it very wacky that “evert” means “overthrow.” Killed me.

Anonymous 9:45 AM  

Never heard of H.E.R. Had “diss” instead of “dish”

pabloinnh 9:54 AM  

Saw with ORC that we were dealing with partials, and I had virtually everything filled in before I saw the chopped-up answers. DARK HORSES was a gimme but solving on paper didn't let me write the answers in the black squares, so no help there. Finally made a list of the missing letters, and guess what, they spelled DARK HORSES. Oh.

So many three and four-letter answers in this one that if felt a little like trying to eat peas with chopsticks. Hard to get any kind of flow going. Didn't know Baby MAMA or H.E.R. but easy from crosses. Liked seeing granddaughter EMMA, as we dropped her off at school this morning, but otherwise not many smile-inducing answers.

Brilliant feat of construction, HH, probably a Hundred Hours worth, and impressive but a tad tedious to unravel. Thanks for a fair amount of fun.

Stu B 10:11 AM  

So...some of the dark squares contained the letters of HORSES, but some didn't...and there's no obvious reason why...? One of the lamest gimmicks I ever experienced :-D

Couple that with the resulting mess of three-letter answers... nope.

Also, maybe just me, but in the UK, DARK HORSES would be candidates who came out as surprisingly competent, which is different to "long shot",

i.e. "he's a DARK HORSE, I didn't know he could paint daffodils so well to win today's painting contest"

not

"well, he's still in ITU, so he'd be a DARK HORSE if he won today's painting contest"

jb129 10:19 AM  

Great puzzle & worthy of the 3 1/2 stars, for me, mainly because I was able to solve it as a themeless & then the theme came easily, which doesn't happen often with Thursday (gimmick) puzzles. This was no DARK HORSE, Hanh & thank you :)

Anonymous 10:29 AM  

On TABSET. It isn’t the key itself. That is just tab. The TABSET was the mechanism in the typewriter that would set the sequence of horizontal positions the carriage would next move to when the tab key is hit.

So if I were typing a three column list I would set two or three tab positions (the set of tabs) to ensure proper alignment of the columns.

So more that just replacing hitting space five time to start a paragraph.

This functionality is replicated in word processing software but over the decades I’ve seen very few people who know it’s there.

Les S. More 10:29 AM  

Have to agree with Rex this morning and with SouthsideJohnny who seems to be channelling Rex vibes today. So, yeah, let me jump on my horse with you guys and ride off shouting, "Impressive but finicky!"

Anonymous 10:33 AM  

This played somewhat harder for me, largely because I didn't even see the clues on several of the long theme words. ORC looks perfectly fine just sitting there and there's no indication that the other answers are part of a theme answer. It's a very strange experience, I think it might have been better had the continuations just been "-" clues.

Anonymous 10:40 AM  

Same

Carola 10:50 AM  

Enjoyed it. It helped that I saw ORCHESTRATE x OVERTHROW early, so that I knew I had to look out for word segments that could be bridged via the black. squares. It also helped that I solved the puzzle using the app on my iPad - when I had filled in all but the reveal area, I took a screen shot and then marked up the relevant black squares with a white "pen." There were the H-O-R-S-E-S, nicely confirmed. by the reveal. I liked the word pairs ORCHESTRATE OVERTHROW and DISHONOR + ALIENATE, and I thought EVERPRESENT and CONSTABLE were very good stand-alone. Thursday wants and needs satisfied!

Smith 10:51 AM  

Hand up for struggling to keep track of what was in which black squares on the app...
Had no idea of the theme and hadn't gotten to the revealer but a random glance at some point and I saw EVE(R)PRE(S)ENT. And then I knew. My son calls it "puzzle solving mentality" - the brain just needs it to make sense.
Impressive construction!

egsforbreakfast 10:53 AM  

I'm jammed for time, so today I can't inflect a bunch of painful puns and horrific wordplay on you. Just wanted to say a big thank you to the editors for not using circles, shading or anything else to make it easy to grasp and retain what's happening with the theme. An even bigger thanks to Hanh Huynh for a tremendous puzzle!

Anonymous 11:01 AM  

“I realize now that part of what made the solve feel chaotic was that I had no way to mark those squares as I was solving.”

Exactly this.

jae 11:10 AM  

Easy except for tracking down a typo. I didn’t need to pay attention to the theme until after I finished.

RAM was a WOE and a costly erasure as I had ReM at first.

Whooshy and clever, liked it.

A 11:12 AM  

Ha! Pen and paper rules - especially handy today printing with the ink saver feature. Made it easy to write HORSES in the gray squares and I could actually see the full answers. I did not, however, get the trick as quickly as @Rex, even though I knew there had to be one. Was definitely puzzled at the nonsense answers and multitudinous blockers. Needed the revealer to spell it out for me, as it were. Liked how the DARK letters were symmetrical.

Corrected ReM/PEeLED once the O went in (Hi, @Roo) and had to change redS to VINS (didn’t notice the clue had “et” instead of “and.”

Didn’t care for the remainder of huge pharmacy/insurance conglomerations.

BE SILENT remanded me of a memorization assignment in junior high (back when everyone knew about TAB SET). We had to chose one speech from Julias Caesar. Most chose Marc Antony (“Friends, Romans, countrymen”) but I went with Brutus. I can only recall the first line now but it’s permanently embedded in my brain: "Romans, countrymen and lovers! Hear me for my cause and BE SILENT that you may hear." I thought I was being daring saying the word lovers aloud in class in 1970’s Alabama.

Fun Thursday puzzle - thanks Hanh Huynh!

Stumptown Steve 11:16 AM  

Did not get it, at all

Barbara S. 11:30 AM  

I meant to quote Sherlock Holmes as played by Robert Downey Jr. in the utterly madcap movie Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows. Commenting on the characteristics of the HORSE, he says, "Dangerous at both ends and crafty in the middle."

Anonymous 11:34 AM  

Me(e) too, accepted R.E.M. as the band and DISH as "shame" and then didn't go back to look for the O

Anonymous 11:38 AM  

I really liked this puzzle. It might be my favorite of the year. Then again, I usually prefer logic puzzles to ones based on wordplay, so the “brain teaser” aspect of this puzzle was right in my wheelhouse. I figured out the hidden letter thing pretty quickly, but I didn’t get the revealer until much later, so I got a very satisfying second aha.

Whatsername 12:01 PM  

Nice baseball story. Thanks for sharing that.

Whatsername 12:03 PM  

It would’ve made all the difference to me in finishing the solve. However, I guarantee there would have been a chorus of “too easy” from among this crowd.

Whatsername 12:06 PM  

I had no idea there’s actually a tool by that name. To me, a SHAPER is Spanx. 😄

Anonymous 12:25 PM  

This puzzle provides no hints to which clues/answers were impacted by the theme or which dark squares might hold something other than my feeling of grand ignorance. Not satisfying at all!

Jnlzbth 12:27 PM  

I worked out everything except the move from DISS (wrong) to DISHONOR. It didn't help that I don't know the performer HER.

I disagree with Rex about the cluing being boring; the clues for INSOLE (Puma's pad) and ALLEYS (Spots where pins are dropped) were terrific. All in all, a fine Thursday puzzle.

SharonAK 12:32 PM  

Since I solve on paper and could write in the missing letters and caught on with 19A 5D I enjoyed the puzzle.
BUT, did not know the Ramones and for some reason had a huge brain freeze on Wimbledon so had something else that seemed to work in the white squares and COULD NOT find the O for horses.

Even after looking up Wimbledon and correcting, (last night) I can barely remember this AM that Wimbledon is tennis.
And I don't get the phrase "passing shot" for tennis.
Still, good puzzle.

okanaganer 12:48 PM  

I knew something was afoot but couldn't quite see it, so I just carried on solving. Once the grid was totally full (well the white squares, anyway) I pored it over and got the trick. But how to put the missing letters in? So I took a screen shot, pasted it into Photoshop, then added the white letters. It was actually quite fun!... a meta puzzle after the regular puzzle. But if I didn't know Photoshop, it would have been not so fun.

A few Unknown Names: NATE, EMMA/STONE, LA MESA, the band RAM (before I got the trick), HER, ING, IAN (as clued), and ARES (as clued). But no circles, so yay!

jae 12:57 PM  

Oh RAMONES - DOH!

Juanita 1:33 PM  

I really liked this puzzle. I suspect I was slower than Rex to figure out what to make of ORC, and when I did get it, I was delighted. And unlike Rex, I didn't mind that most of the fill was on the easy side. Then again, I always solve on paper--and with a pencil that has a good eraser.

Anonymous 1:40 PM  

I'm 62 and I haven't used a typewriter since 1986, so I had forgotten that you had to set a mechanical stop to position the carriage (or in the case of an IBM Selectric, the type ball element) when you hit the tab key. Good times.

I didn't catch on to the gimmick at ORC. I figured it was some new slang for ORCHESTRATE. Can't be bothered in the 21st century to type/tap all those extra letters.

It wasn't until I got to Blitzkrieg Bop that I caught on, because the only thing that could be was the RAMONES.

Katie Sievers 2:00 PM  

Theme not cute enough to justify so much short fill and crosswordese, imHo.

Masked and Anonymous 2:02 PM  

Some mighty cool horsin around with black rebus[-ish] squares. And endorsed by EINSTEIN.
But ... has this hidden in the black rebus[-ish] squares theme mcguffin been used before somewhere? Looked kinda vaguely familiar, to m&e. Must do some research ...

@Gary Jugert dude could use this puztheme schtick trick to help generate some "super-uniclues" ... makin up whatever letters lurkin in the black squares works best for him to connect things up.

staff weeject picks: Well ... there were 30 choices, but some had them black rebus[-ish] square connections. I'll go with a mix of: REC+ENT+IRE, which yields somethin EINSTEIN would surely clue up as: {All totally happening within light speed??} = RECENTIRE.

fave stuff: Well ... not much long stuff, sans black rebus[-ish] answers. And the two ?-marker clues weren't too deep. M&A will go with LINEUPS & MUD, cuz they had the puz's two U's.
And, of course, was relativity-ly impressed with the EINSTEIN visit.

Thanx for the game of H-O-R-S-E(-S), Mr. Huynh dude. M&A was always best at TAPINs, with that game, btw.

Masked & Anonymo2Us

Karl Grouch 2:38 PM  

@Harryjugert where art thou?
Don"t tell me you missed nyt's official endorsement of the
Uniclue ?

Anonymous 3:06 PM  

Thank god the theme clues weren’t italicized. We don’t need our hands held Every Single Time.

Karl Grouch 4:01 PM  

Sorry, Gary

Anonymous 4:47 PM  

Yay paper solving! However I did not notice that the dark squares spelled HORSES until Rex - thank you! A very fine Thursday puzzle

Anonymous 5:48 PM  

How does one complete the puzzle in the app, when one can't type into the black squares? The rebus feature doesn't work for the missing letters. (Picture my hands thrown in the air in exasperation!) GRR

Anonymous 6:21 PM  

Agreed. Diss means to cast shame upon; dish means to gossip. Gossip could be about something shameful, but diss is always about casting shame. Bad clue. And who on earth knows who sang the U.S. national anthem at the closing ceremony of the Olympics? Who sang the Ugandan national anthem? Ridiculous. What or who is Her? Other than that, a fair and reasonable puzzle.

dgd 6:36 PM  

Southside Johnny
I usually use the app most days, like today. I am not sure but the Art section has bigger squares and may have made it easier. Note that Rex had trouble keeping track of the dark squares!
I found it awkward to do. I rarely lose interest but did today at DIS- (DISH dark square NOR). It was a work of art that tired me out! So dnf.

dgd 6:45 PM  

Philander C Knox.
Agree about the current situation at the DOJ
I am responding to your criticism of AGS.
Since our country’s founding there have been x number of AGS. (DOJ bigwigs. ). The clue is not limited to any one time. A crossword answer doesn’t have to fit all possibilities.

Androonicus 6:54 PM  

Anyone else thrown by the implied A in the down OPER(A)LIV(E)SON. I started rethinking DARK HORSES and lost a lot of time.

Gary Jugert 7:55 PM  

No temas el terror de la noche, ni la flecha de día.

Giddy up. I thought this was a pretty fun gunkfest. I knew something was fishy, so I stayed focused on the things I knew and ended up bumping into the reveal and then the jig was up. Trying to keep track of the hidden letters was a bit of a task, but all good in the end.

REZ last week. RES this week.

Just when you're sure "Places" shouldn't be part of the gunk gauge, they drop the legendary Jewel of the Hills LA MESA on us.

❤️ Fiddlesticks.

People: 11 {whoa}
Places: 2
Products: 10 {double whoa}
Partials: 13 {triple whoa}
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 37 of 86 (43%) {Friends and neighbors in Gunkopolis open their windows and doors and wave to one another shouting "happy Gunk Day to you!"

Funny Factor: 3 😐

UPS "Where's my guitar?" Day 13. Could've used a bicycle delivery service at this rate.

Uniclues:

1 Remind Addams family member there's a Great Clips in the strip mall down the street.
2 What I post in this blog comments section every day.
3 (Un)willingly goes bowling.

1 DISHONOR ITT (~)
2 MUD PASSING SHOT
3 AGREE TO ALLEYS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: That je ne sais quoi evoked by pink chandeliers, disco balls and snarky judgmentalism. GAY BAR ESPRIT.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Hugh 8:17 PM  

My experience was very much like that of @Rex. What an impressive feat of construction that I appreciated only after the solve. At first glance at the blank canvas, I thought, "what a cool looking grid!" I understood right away that we were dealing with partials when I started, but I really couldn't make sense of it. It didn't help that it took me way to long to get the revealer due to a couple of mishaps in the SE. I had NOW instead of the correct HOT for 68D (Trendy) and TABKEY instead of the correct TABSET for 52D (Typewriter feature) which left me with NO_KES for the second word of the revealer and my brain wouldn't let me figure it out for a good minute or two.
Even when that clicked, I still had no clue what was going on until I got the happy music and saw all the coolness.
As all that short fill were real words, I just figured they were slang that I hadn't heard of for the kinda bland clues. Seeing HORSES in the DARK squares was a very happy surprise, and that made up for any less than exciting fill. Nice one Hanh! Thank you for this.

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