Political commentator Piker / FRI 3-20-26 / Kachina-carving people / Dramatic outerwear for the theater / Participant in the Jacobite rebellion of the 1740s / Athlete nickname "O Rei" / Some scenery in "The Road Runner Show" / Viral 2010s dance that Hillary Clinton performed on TV / It has more than 4,000 islands off its coast
Friday, March 20, 2026
Constructor: Rafael Musa and Rebecca Goldstein
Relative difficulty: Very easy
Word of the Day: HASAN Piker (5A: Political commentator Piker) —
Hasan Doğan Piker (born July 25, 1991), known online by the name HasanAbi, is an American Twitch streamer, influencer, and left-wing political commentator. His content primarily consists of political and social commentary and media consumption. As of 2026, Piker's Twitch channel ranks among the platform's most-subscribed. Piker has been described as one of the biggest voices on the U.S. left. Piker started streaming on Twitch in March 2018, while working at The Young Turks (TYT). [...] His uncle, Cenk Uygur, is a political commentator and co-founder of The Young Turks, a left-leaning news network.
In January 2020, he left TYT to focus on his career as a Twitch streamer. Piker has regularly spoken about the Gaza war by advocating for Palestinians and criticizing the Israeli government. [...]
Piker has been most commonly identified as a leftist, socialist, and Marxist. He has advocated in favor of workplace democracy, universal health care, LGBTQ+ rights, anti-Zionism, and gun control. Andrew Marantz of The New Yorker described Piker as anti-Trump but "hardly a loyal Democrat". Instead, Marantz classified Piker as an "old-school leftist," critical of the "American empire". In an interview with GQ magazine, Piker stated that his goal was to push the Democratic Party to be more progressive. Intelligencer called Piker "the AOC of Twitch".(wikipedia)
• • •
This puzzle has some lovely long answers, particularly the crossing grid-spanners (SURPRISE PARTIES, "JUST SO WE'RE CLEAR...") and the plea "GO EASY ON ME." But that plea felt deeply ironic, as this puzzle went easy on me from the first clue and never stopped going easy on me, and so with no real challenge and no other really sparkly answers, I ended up feeling a little disappointed. The grid is perfectly solid and smooth, it just came in a tad dull from me. Several of the longer answers, while completely unobjectionable, felt disappointingly listless. E-SCOOTERS feels like 9-letter crosswordese to me by now. I see AMINO in the grid So Much that AMINO ACIDS was not a particularly welcome sight. Hard to think of a longer answer plainer and ho-hummier than HOME SALES. All the other longer answers hold up, but the great stuff is basically offset by the duller stuff, and so I was left feeling just so-so about the whole thing. It's possible that I'm being unfair, that I expect so much from these constructors (two of my favorites) that anything short of stellar ends up seeming mildly disappointing. At any rate, I definitely enjoyed parts of this, and I think it's well made. I just wanted more sizzle. And a lot more challenge.
There is easy and there is Easy, and then apparently there is also Easy, a new, italicized level of "easy" I had to invent just for this puzzle. Do you know how fast I got to here?:
The one part of the puzzle I did have some trouble with was immediately adjacent to the GAME REFUGE—despite his being "one of the biggest voices on the U.S. Left" (wikipedia), I—an extremely tiny voice on the U.S. left—have never heard of HASAN Piker (5A: Political commentator Piker). This may have something to do with the fact that I try as hard as possible to listen to zero political commentators—go out of my way not to hear any of them—and also something to do with the fact that except for the few times I've live-streamed cryptic-crossword solves with my friends Rachel and Neville, I have spent almost zero time on Twitch (which is apparently where HASAN Piker reigns). This is because I am old, and I have no interest in gaming (which is mostly what gets streamed on Twitch). I cannot imagine watching political commentary on Twitch or YouTube. But then, as I've said, I can't really imagine watching it At All at this point. The rise of the "political commentator" has been concomitant with the death of journalism and the rise of fascism and I don't think these phenomena are unrelated. So I will read political commentary, sometimes, but all the camera-facing, look-at-me, for-the-Likes performance ... it's not for me. I would prefer not. The pivot-to-video moment in our culture has not had any discernible positive impact that I'm aware of. What we get is fragmentation and polarization. And profit, presumably, for some few people. It would be great if all the video "engagement" resulted in a better world. I mean this world, actual world [reaches out and touches desk and lamp and other objects in three-dimensional space]. So far ... Well, you tell me how it's going. Sorry, where was I? Oh, right, didn't know HASAN, and the "N" cross was wild. Wildly vague, anyway: 9D: Basic ___. I had the "EE" and thought FEES and even TEES before the "D" from DINERO made "NEED" clear. After the HASAN/NEED moment—whoosh, puzzle went up in flames so fast that I barely remember the experience.
[SCOT]
- 44A: Danish money (KRONE) — managed to avoid all the "which spelling is it?!" drama by getting that terminal "E" first (from 41D: "Get it?").
- 47A: Word repeated in "With a ___ ___ here and a ___ ___ there ..." (MOO) — this is maybe the greatest clue in the history of crosswords. Certainly the greatest fill-in-the-blank clue. Maximalist bovine lunacy. Love it.
- 12D: Dramatic outerwear for the theater (OPERA COAT) — cannot believe I got tangled up in competing operawear terms, but isn't OPERA CAPE a thing? I feel sure that it is. When I think olde-tymey operagoing, I think top hats, lorgnettes, and capes! Coats? You can wear a coat any old time. But a cape!? Well, unless you are COSPLAYing a superhero (36D: Be a hero, say), there are very few options. Looks like OPERA COAT outgoogles OPERA CAPE by about 5-to-1, so I reluctantly withdraw my objection, which was never really an objection in the first place, just an enthusiasm for capes.
- 42D: Viral 2010s dance that Hillary Clinton performed on TV (NAE NAE) — first of all, dated crosswordese, boo. Second of all, I would've been perfectly content if this clue had stopped at "dance." More than content. Happy. In retrospect, thrilled. You wanna know what piece of video I won't be looking up today? ... Sigh, now I feel like I have to look it up, as a public
disservice. Let's see ... hang on ... alright, I got it, and ... oh, OK, I saw three seconds of it, and I wish I'd stuck to my initial instincts. (I wonder why the clue didn't say she performed it on Ellen — "on TV" is weak—unless she performed it on multiple shows, in which case, no wonder she lost (I kid! I voted for her, relax...))
- 47D: It has more than 4,000 islands off its coast (MAINE) — damn that is a lot of islands. Who counted? Give that person a raise. Unless a computer counted. Please do not give the computer a raise.
That's all. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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104 comments:
Easy. Not a bad puzzle, but too easy for a Friday.
* * * _ _
One overwrite:
reP before LAP for the 38A gym circuit
WOEs:
@Rex HASAN Piker at 5A
Guessed at the 45D poker hand, but NINES wasn't hard to infer.
Didn't know the chess trivia at 61A, but had it filled in before I saw the clue.
Rex is spot on with the GO EASY ON ME reference - a harbinger of things to come. @Lewis’ elegant post yesterday becomes even more relevant today. Our blog pal Rafa builds a sweet grid here - but single layered cluing and loads of gimmes make this simpler than this week’s Wednesday offering.
Noah Kahan
The intersecting grid spanners are the highlight. Liked OPERA COAT and GAME REFUGE. PUB TRIVIA, JACKPOTS, AMINO ACIDS etc are throwaways. Needed the crosses for HASAN but no issue here. E-SCOOTERS have become the bane of downtown life in Manhattan.
MAINE
Two pros no doubt who clearly know what they’re doing. I sense that this was heavily edited post construction. It was pleasant enough - just not for a Friday morning solve.
No phone, no pool, no pets
I ain't got no cigarettes
I agree it was (mostly) easy. Had to change "tromp" to TRAMP to get NAENAE, which I didn't know because I've never danced with Hillary Clinton. The NE was the toughest area (HOPI, SHOD, OPERACOAT).
Very easy but enjoyable Friday! I changed tromp to tramp as well. Definitely had not heard of NaeNae.
Liked going against the grain(glutenfree)17a and justsowereclear(33a)
100% opera CAPE - as in worn by Phantom of the Opera. But when I look it up I see opera COAT is something people wear to watch the opera. That's not nearly as interesting.
Got me thinking Hemingway, with the OMEN and the SEE.
Hey All !
Nice, easy FriPuz. Fun clues for PUBTRIVIA and COSPLAY, I'm sure there are others, but the ole brain can only store so much!
Only 30 Blockers, quite low. Ends up as a 70 worder.
Not much else to say. Un-verbose this morning. It happens. 😁
Have a great Friday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
It was what, a week ago? that I swore here I’d stop complaining about too-easy puzzles. So I’ll just say this was a terrific Tuesday puzzle today. Lots of fun while it lasted. Only two brief sticking points: Like Rex, I assumed that OPERACapes were a thing, and I assumed that anyplace with 4000 islands would have to be really big, maybe chINa.
Very easy, pleasant puzzle -- close to a PR. As a celiac, I have to put in a good word for 17A GLUTEN FREE and its clue [Going against the grain?]. With no crosses in place I realized with a giggle that GLUTEN FREE would fit that space, so hoped that was the answer and was delighted when it turned out to be right!
I’m also on team CAPE. Took me a while to get off that.
I had CAPE before COAT as well. Only nitpicking is that’s a terrible clue for TRAMP.
For Carolbb: "...tromp" fits the clue far better than "tramp." I suppose any other clue for "tramp" would have sounded too derogatory. I had "just so were close" at first, but "just so were clear" is more accurate.
Easiest Friday puzzle I ever remember. No idea about Hasan but crosses were fair to figure him out
Same re the Northwest - perhaps even 9.5 seconds. At that point I wondered if I had slept through the weekend and it was Monday already.
Began to slow a bit after that, but not all that much , except for a few snags along the way. The puzzle was fine, but never got even close to Friday.
While the Hillary video is cringe, it was sweet to see Twitch (Ellen’s dj/dancer) who was so joyful and sadly died of s*icide a few years ago.
As for the puzzle, I crushed my previous Friday PR by 5 minutes so either I’m getting crazy better or this was way too easy for a Friday.
I can't give any Friday THIS easy more than 2.5 stars, because it's not doing its job as a Friday.
“Two pros no doubt who clearly know what they’re doing. I sense that this was heavily edited post construction. It was pleasant enough - just not for a Friday morning solve.”
This was exactly my thought. I usually don’t look at the constructors’ names during the solve, but the answers were so in the language and enjoyable I got curious, and was surprised Rafa had served up something so easy. Enjoyable, but easy - I didn’t get the NW corner in 10 seconds like Rex but it was way too quick for a Friday.
Random thoughts:
• What a lovely addition to the crossword answer oeuvre – JUST SO WE’RE CLEAR. It’s not only its first appearance in the Times puzzle, but in all the major outlets.
• Two echoes to yesterday’s puzzle: NAE NAE after yesterday’s neighboring NAY NEE, and ASSET, which backwards is yesterday’s TESSA.
• I liked the fauna sub-theme – GAME REFUGE, SOW, MOO, RESCUES, EWE, and DINOSAUR.
• There was a sports related undercurrent as well: Soccer (PELE), baseball (ALOU), swimming (LAP), auto racing (TIRE), and football (IT’S A SNAP).
• [Giant Jesus] immediately triggered the image of one in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade.
• PuzzPair© -- DINOSAUR / OLD ME.
• NAE NAE and the moo-moo clue got me seeing SEE as “si-si”, and EYE as “aye-aye”.
Congratulations on your fourth collab in the Times, R&R, and thank you. I had great fun with this!
I rarely think of a Friday puzzle as “too” easy, and this one certainly provides ample opportunity, but no complaints from me. I enjoy making slow, steady progress and this one fit the bill.
I thought the Devil’s Advocate clue was the highlight of the bunch, and the HOPI carvings had me stumped.
So I thought it was pretty good. Hopefully Rafa will stop by. It would be interesting to learn what percentage of the clues were modified by the editors, and the extent to which the published version was made “easier” v.v. their original submission.
New Friday solving record of 6:56. Easy indeed.
The crazy thing is that they make an easy mode for Fridays online - and then make the Friday puzzle so easy. Here’s hoping for a decent weekend.
I zipped through this but then it took me a while to find my mistake ... which turned out to be several mistakes: REP, WETT and ORA instead of LAP, WATT and OLA.
What’s crazy is that they send out an email for a Friday easy mode - and then make Friday so easy. Here’s hoping for a decent weekend.
Another Friday without a single cheat, not even a stumble. I'd like to think that's because I've become a much more proficient solver. However, I'm fairly certain it has a far more to do with what Lewis addressed in his post yesterday. [Sigh] But as Fridays go these days, this was a pleasant one. Nice stacks and I loved the center grid spanner.
Happy first day of Spring!!
YEes; easy. Never heard of Piker? Lucky you.
LOVED Giant Jesus!
I took up your challenge in Ernest, but this was the best I could do:
AFFAIR Well To Arms
HASAN Also Rises
For Whom The Bell TELLS ALL
Going against the grain? for GLUTEN FREE is one of the best clues I’ve ever seen.
I won't be able to post until late (you're welcome), but today is your day to join the Hall of Fame-LY by digging deep into those... what are they? adverbs?....
I'm also rooting for at least one "I've been thinking of quitting" moment. Looking forward to reading y'all tonight.
-LY EASY Hall of Fame
absurdly, childishly, definitely, insultingly, disappointingly, disconcertingly, extremely, embarrassingly, eventually, fairly, frifly, laughably, mind-numbingly, painfully, preposterously, relatively, ridiculously, really, surprisingly, terribly, trivially, and unusually.
What Rex said, mostly. There were some great clues, and I kinda liked the crossing farm females. I can't decide about BUS RIDES--my first reaction was that it was boring, but I am coming to love the wacky clue.
HASAN sounds like an interesting commentator, but if it's video, I don't want it--it takes two or three times as long for someone to say something than it would for me to read a transcript.
It took me at least 12 seconds to get the NW corner because, unlike Rex, I checked out STAT before ASAP. But AGGIE settled that very quickly.
Question to ponder: is SATANISM a philosophy or a religion?
The puzzle did not really do what Friday’s should do
Very good puzzle. Very easy but that’s ok. I follow StopAntisemitism so HASAN Piker is very familiar. He defended the rapes and murders of 10/07/23. Never knew HENNAS could be a verb.
I thought Giant Jesus was one of the more clever clues I've seen in some time.
We went through a period about two years ago where Fridays were pretty consistently harder than Saturdays. That has reversed with a vengeance. This really, really felt like a Tuesday themeless. It's not just that there wasn't much that was hard, but there wasn't much that even tried to be hard. Except for HASAN, which was unknown.
Hand up for thinking of SATANISM as a religion, but after research it seems for many Satanists, it really is more of a philosophy. In fact, it sounds very similar to libertarianism.
@liveprof -- Excellent, especially the first two!
I woke up this morning thinking it was Friday, but after doing this inoffensive and pleasant puzzle I had to check it wasn't Tuesday. I may end up biting my words, but it seems to me that Fridays have generally been far easier than they used to be. This one was statistically almost a record time and I really wasn't even pushing it. Fridays need to be more of a challenge.
Thought this was a very fun Tuesday or Wednesday puzzle, although I did fall for the cape/COAT trap and gambled and lost on KRONa/E situation. Really enjoyed the clues on GLUTEN FREE and SATANISM.
Amen to your second paragraph
I feel bad for all those most-welcome new solvers who will never experience the hope that comes with your first no-cheat Monday solve, believing that if they apply themselves enough and work their way patiently and diligently through the successive weeks, they just might be able to solve a Tuesday, then a Wednesday and then (do they even dare think it?) a Thursday without help and, perchance, even a Sunday - but never letting their minds even once toy with the ridiculous notion that they may someday be bright enough, clever enough, skilled enough and persistent enough to complete a Friday and (gasp!) a Saturday. They will never know that moment in the journey when, having conquered Thursday and finally daring to stick their toe in a Friday and then even a Saturday solve, they experience that glorious moment of ecstatic revelation: ¡Sí, se puede!
New York Times bottom-line gain. New solvers loss.
Terrific puzzle even though I felt a tad prudish about “ Be gentle - Go easy on me “ 🎈🎈🎊🎊
After commenting yesterday about all the recent appearances of LSD in the grid, I find myself wondering "AMINOACIDS fan?"
I find that, generally, HASAN HASAN interesting take on things.
Erato, Clio, Terpsichore... They're all fine as far as muses go. But Loren Smith. Now that's AMUSE I'd love to see more of.
A bunch of us guys went to La Scala on March 14. Under our OPERACOATs we wore PITIES.
Same take on this as everyone else. Thanks, Rafael Musa and Rebecca Goldstein.pp
Too easy, too many terminal s-es
I’m a massive football fan and I’ve never heard Pele referred to as any except Pele…just saying
NearLY alphabeticalLY! FrifLY?
What.! No outrage over the missing accent in Senor Alou’s name?
If anyone cares the three Alou brothers (Marty, Felipe, and Jesus) once played in the same outfield at the same time. September of 1963. Pretty nifty in my opinion.
I had the exact same mistake. A guy I never heard of next to a foreign language. What exactly is this editor doing?
Who decides it's a Friday puzzle? Somebody goofed on this one. This was easier than the Tuesday or Wednesday this week.
I solve with pen and paper, had CIO at 40A, chief Information officer, when pubTrivia made me change it a quick swipe turned the I to a T. Does that count as an OVERwrite? Cross your I's and dot your T's?
Very smooth but not a very difficult Friday. I finished it in 18 minutes, which is pretty quick for me, especially considering I was watching a hockey game while solving. I don’t race the clock but I finished it, heard the little ditty, and said, “Oh, already?”
I wanted more. It was a pleasant distraction from my team’s dismal performance. (Nothing like a rebuild to test my faith.) And it had some nice clue/answer combos - Going against the grain/GLUTEN FREE for example - and some not so good ones like Modern urban transportation options for ESCOOTERS. Both clue and answer are dull there.
Hard not to like the two grid spanners and the generally friendly, informal tone.
Thanks, Rafael and Rebecca.
When ASAP (Rush order) is the first answer on a Friday puzzle, my heart sinks a little. Really wanted it to be related to the band in some way. Way too easy for a Friday.
Like others, I thought of @Lewis's eloquent plea to the puzzle editors yesterday - to which this puzzle seemed to respond, "Sorry, but no." A lovely grid for sure, but, to echo @Lewis, so easified. It even had M&A's MOO cow.
This!
On 47D: It has more than 4,000 islands off its coast (MAINE) - I first thought of STOCKHOLM which has 30,000 (!) islands, but of course that wouldn’t fit.
NW--No Way this is a Friday. Does it get harder, No, Easy NE too. Same Way in the SW and Still Easy in the SE and bang I was done, and left wondering if I could have done this downs-only or acrosses -only and decided probably either, but that was hindsight.
HASAN was a total unknown, and I dislike the notion of "influencers" in general. Would have preferred a clued like "_____ idea". I agree with everyone who said OPERACAPE, because that's the right answer. BUSROUTE before BUSRIDES , liked seeing OLA with PELE (Ola Pele!) Spanish keeps the H in HOLA, a Spanish OLA is a wave, an in "ocean wave", but a wave is still a greeting if you like homonyms. Sort of thing I would point out to a Spanish class who would mostly respond with. "OK. Is it lunch time?"
And I do know the extremely crossword-friendly NAENAE from, well, crosswords and that's it. I wouldn't recognize it as a dance if I tripped over Hillary while she was doing it.
Very (too?) smooth, RM and RG. A Reasonable Model of a Really Good Tuesday and thanks for all the whooshy fun.
Yes. A fun start to Shabbos. /s
Who's ever going to find fault with a Rafa/Rebecca collaboration?
Had this run earlier in the week everyone would be saying "What a great puzzle."
Thank you both :)
Can't blame the puzzle. It was a very fine puzzle. Blame Friday.
This would be a good day to do my Boswords Spring League STORMY puzzle in order to get my hard themeless puzzle basic NEED met. This puzzle couldn't do it.
Like Rex, that HASAN/NEED cross was the hardest today since I feel the same about online video content as Rex (and podcasts also for me) - no interest, so Piker who?
Then there's the fact that ESCalators didn't fit at 30D so E-SCOOTERS needed crosses.
Yes, the clue for 57A makes grammatical sense but it sounds odd to me.
On the other hand, "Going against the grain?" for GLUTEN FREE was a great clue!
NAE NAE did help me change TRoMP to TRAMP so there's that.
Thanks, Rafael and Rebecca.
This was a very nice puzzle in so many ways - and yes easy - on my wavelength. Perhaps if the editors didn’t insist on the rigid sequence of puzzles (theme on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, rebus etc Thursday, themeless Friday and Saturday) they could better assign puzzles according to difficulty. Forgetting that it is Friday today - I really enjoyed this puzzle.
Charmingly
You learn something new every day, if you’re living right. Now you know James Watt. Critical figure in the Industrial Revolution and namesake of the watt, a commonly used measure of power/energy transfer. Change a lightbulb? You probably needed to check the watts.
Fastest Friday I can remember. And a break from a three-day (Tue, Wed., Thu.) run of LSD trips- if you were to try that hoped to maintain the psychedelic experience for three days, you'd have to double the dosing on each successive day. BTW, you'd be exhausted by the time you finally came down.
Yes, very easy…more Tuesday than Friday.
No costly erasures (although I did try Cape for a nanosecond) and HASAN was it for WOE
re: HASAN - I’m with @Rex on political commentary/commentators.
Smooth grid with just a soupçon of sparkle or exactly what @Rex said, liked it except….
If you want a tough puzzle the LAT Thursday gave me run for my money!
Easy for me too. Was feeling pretty good about myself until I came here and saw people comparing it to a Tuesday. More like a Wednesday for me. Oh well. Hasan Piker was a gimme, just heard him discussed on the Ruthless Podcast this morning where they revealed their brackets for the annual Hack Madness tournament. Piker is a three seed. Great clue on perennial crosswordese Alou. Thanks Rafael and Rebecca.
Indeed easier than this week’s Tuesday and Wednesday which were hard (for a Tuesday and Wednesday)! Personal best and easily 15 minutes or more less than my usual Friday solve. A nice puzzle but …
When it comes to sheets, pillowcases, pajamas, etc., my wife is a SATINIST. But that's very different, I hope.
I did not like the “game” dupe at GAMEREFUGE and the “drinking game?” Clue for PUBTRIVIA, and ME crossing ME at the M in GOEASYONME and OLDME felt very lazy
Yes…what anon 11:25 said. Also OLA has been in more than a handful of past puzzles. “Rep” didn’t occur to me but I did hesitate with LAP because the last time I remember running laps in a gym was in p.e. class in the high school gym.
That had me going too!
Educators are now using twitch effectively. See for example Paleontologing, some times out in the field looking for bones, sometines from his office in Berkeley. https://www.twitch.tv/paleontologizing
Funny you say that but I only look at news items online that are written. And, for better or worse, I’m just not into podcasts. I DO listen to many audiobooks when the narrator’s delivery adds to the pleasure.
This!
Ah, yes, I forgot to mention Giant Jesus. Great clue. My first thought was Cristo Redentor in Rio, and wondered if it had a short nickname.
Rex did a good job with his review, and many people have already said this was a pleasant but “too easy for a Friday” and I agree. I always like what both constructors create for us.
I WILL say that I had one of the biggest “side eyes” in my solving experience with GAMEREFUGE. I guess I’ll look to see if they actually exist, but the term seems like an oxymoron to me…because GAME is/are wild animals hunted for food. Is the REFUGE referring to the hunters?
@egs: I think you wisely left these alone:
Diners A-N and P-Z have left. The only one left is DINERO.
JACKPOTS: Where to cook Jackrabbits.
@Anon 10:28. I'm so glad they didn't clue the band. I'm pretty sure Geddy Lee's voice triggers my migraines. But fear not for me. My doctor has prescribed anti-Rush meds, though that's not what she calls them. She's probably too young to have ever heard Rush.
I have to stop talking about this. My vision is beginning to fracture and I'm feeling dizzy. Where's my Immitrex
I would by no means rate this puzzle as easy. Except there were no writeovers, because it was easy to make no mistakes. But time after time, the obvious answer, the one that first came to mind, was not the one I ended up with. Example: PUBTRIVIA instead of PUBquiz. The unfamiliar to me Portuguese in the clue.
I was delighted over and over by the clues and answers. But yes, this is a rare example of a Friday being easier than a Saturday, so tomorrow may well be a bear, or if you will, an URSA OURS or OSO,
Lots of guesswork and a cheat or two - I've never known anything about sports that didn't come form crosswords, but given A--U even I could come up with ALOU, and naturally PELE too. The cheat came from HASAN because I stay far away from social media and commentators in general. But yeah, I used to be so proud of myself for finishing a Friday puzzle.....
Best graffiti ever, found on bathroom stall at Hungarian Pastry Shop. First scrawl: “Jesus is the answer!” Second scrawl underneath: “What is the question?” Third addition: “Who was Marty and Felipe’s brother.”
I think quite a few people have said it's a fine puzzle, while also noting that it is a misfit for a Friday level challenge. Those are two different things that ought not be conflated. Once the work of the constructors in complete and the puzzle is submitted, it is the editors who decide upon which day it will run, and it is the editors who play with the clueing to either make it more difficult or easier. I heard few, if any, substantive negative critiques of the work that Rafa and Rebecca did, and many good things The negative critiques are mainly focused upon the things under the editors' control. At least, that's how I have read the comments.
Very easy NE corner for me as well, kept it going bc I'm familiar with HASAN, I listen in occasionally for background noise
Yes this went fast, 12 minutes for me and I am not a quick solver. In fact, at 8 minutes I was finished everything except the upper right corner which seemed to take forever, with some tricky clues.
I too loved "Giant Jesus" when I finally thought: oh, the Giants sports team? But when I tried ALOU I also heard... in the back of my brain... Moses ALOU! Giant Moses! But no, Google says it was Moises Alou with an i. But he was a Giant!
Of course I know PELE, but that clue?... never heard of that. However WATT was pretty obvious.
Warm weather is here... temps in the low 20s C (70s F). Not looking good for any more snow. Precipitation so far for 2026: rain: 5.5mm (0.22"), snow: 4.8CM (1.9"). Death Valley dry!!
There were a couple of nice spots to AMUSE me but overall I'm in the too easy camp.
I did notice an early trend that continued throughout the grid. Yeah, there's a bumper crop of the plural of convenience (POC).
RESCUE, MESA, HENNA (!), NINE, PITY and MO needed bumping up to fit their slots. The ultra-helpful two for one POC where a Down and an Across both get a letter count, grid filling boost by sharing a final S saved the day for IM/BUS RIDE and BLT/ABC.
There's a stealth POC where the letter count boost comes from a POCifying S that occurs within rather than at the end of an entry at TELL ALL.
Five of the longer, marquee answers, SURPRISE PARTY, HOME SALE, ESCOOTER, JACKPOT and AMINO ACID got boosted. Those are especially glaring in a themeless grid.
Both SURPRISE PARTY and PITY got two letter boosts when the final -Y got dropped and replaced by -IES.
The POC Committee was unanimous in giving the grid a POC Marked rating.
I will never complain about a puzzle being "too easy", that's tempting fate. Long-time solvers all know this. This one WAS easy, so be it. The only thing that gave me pause was 5A HASAN Piker - no idea . got it from the crosses. on to the weekend.
When there are a bunch of clues I didn't even read because so many answers just filled themselves in from crosses - that's not a Friday-worthy puzzle. JUST SO WE'RE CLEAR.
I thought it was more like a Wednesday also…:)
Ends in S. Wednesday Puzzle.
Another reader here - I don’t have enough patience for the video commentary. Let me read it at my speed. But there must be lots of people who prefer video, for whatever reasons. So I guess we readers are DINOSAURs.
Am I supposed to know Hasan? Every jamoke with spare time has a site, so many 'influencers' it's laughable. Also used to seeing basic needs and not basic need so it threw me off. I don't like escooters any more than ebooks but I'm a dinosaur
I remember when I could pretty much count on solving Wednesday puzzles, and Thursday was a wacky surprise box that required waiting for the next day to learn what was going on. Sundays could take two days…. It was oh so thrilling to complete a Friday, and a long time coming. Saturdays? As if!
🤣Yep!
There is a National Elk Refuge in Jackson Hole. I once walked there with a client in one of the more scenic business meeting settings I've ever experienced.
I always refer to him as Edson Arantes do Nascimento.
But the "O Rei" goes back to a nickname he picked up following1958 world cup, when he won with Brazil when he was just 17. It was the common way to refer to him in Brazil throughout his career and after.. But as his international celebrity grew even beyond the soccer world, the nickname Pelé, which he picked up as a child, predominated internationally.
Too easy! Please! Give us a wooshy Friday challenge! Finished in less than half my average time, which is slowly decreasing anyway because the puzzles are TOO EASY!
Can’t believe I blanked on it. The baseball reference to the Alou brothers used to be a NYT crossword staple. I thought it was long gone!
@Les S. More, lyrics from the song “Stereo” by Pavement:
What about the voice of Geddy Lee
How did it get so high?
I wonder if he speaks like an ordinary guy?
(I know him and he does!)
And you're my fact-checkin' ′cuz
Easy for everyone but me. Just not on my wavelength. Giant Jesus had me cruising the mountains around Rio. That should have helped me get PELE quicker, but WATT was I thinking??? In hindsight a breeze, not so much going forward…Didn’t know HASAN’s name, didn’t know Wayne’s number…one dunno after the other…Maybe on a Tuesday morning I might have been more alert than on Friday afternoon…anyway, did enjoy the solve, as leisurely as it was…
Hasan Piker is rather controversial - big feature in the NYTimes not that long ago. Currently he's on his way to Cuba with humanitarian aid
Thank you
The conspiracy theorist in me thinks this was super easy because it is a holiday today. The puzzles always seem to be easier than they should be on holidays.
I get what you are saying. Really I do. But I guess my point is, that if wild animals are in a refuge, they are no longer GAME, and many animals can be GAME. When I searched GAMEREFUGE, I got two hits, (Game Refuge and Game Preserve) which either involve online video games or board games. And yes, I rarely pick nits, but today it just kind of hit me in the face.
When i do this well on a Friday i think i must be getting so good at crosswords. I come here to learn im still average.
Only trouble was NE because i was very attached to Joseph and his technicolor dreamcoat. Once i lost that it was home free.
Gee, thanks, Teedmn. I may now have to go find a dark room to lie down in. ;-)
Haha!!!
Typos are fun!!!!!
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