Throws spray, in surfer lingo / SAT 3-7-26 / Dry streambed / Makeup of a plot / You might dance on one / Like the crescendo in Ravel's "Boléro" / Controller of floods in the video game Pharaoh / Low notes, but not the lowest /
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Constructor: Fritz Juhnke
Relative difficulty: Medium
Word of the Day: wadi (which was somehow not the answer to 28D: Dry streambed (WASH)) —
the bed or valley of a stream in regions of southwestern Asia and northern Africa that is usually dry except during the rainy season and that often forms an oasis : GULLY, WASH (merriam-webster.com)
• • •
KRONA / LAND / NOPE wasn't great either. Never know which vowel ("E" or "A") is going to end KRON-, and then LAND ... yeesh, that vague clue (24A: Makeup of a plot). A plot of LAND, I get it, now, but I wanted, like ACRES or DIRT or, I don't know, something, anything more specific than just LAND. Even with "L" and "N" in place, I didn't know. Started thinking of other "plot"s (like, conspiracies). I wish the difficulty on this one hadn't come so much in the fussy short bits of the grid (or, as this crossword insists on calling them, the DOTTED bits). I much prefer to struggle with longer stuff and then have a moment of revelation where a (preferably great) answer bursts forth and really opens up the grid. I got that feeling—struggle, struggle, pow!—only once, really: when I hacked my way to ELM ST. (45A: Location of a notorious 33-Down: Abbr.) and then realized that the answer I couldn't get earlier—the long answer starting with "N" (33D: Cause of a cold sweat, perhaps) was NIGHTMARE! That was fun. About as much fun as I've ever had with cross-referenced clues. No other moment of the solve was so thrilling, though I do think the corners are generally very strong. Loved "SPIT IT OUT!" over "HOLY MOSES!" It's like one half of a dramatic conversation. "SPIT IT OUT!" "[unheard but obviously shocking statement]." "HOLY MOSES!"
OMNIVERSE is a stupid word since "universe" already means "Totality of everything," but whatever, I got it easily from the "M." CARD SHARK (1A: One who makes a living from fish), is always tricky, esp. if you know that the term is actually CARD SHARP. Actually, both terms get used now, but SHARK is the mutation, I'm pretty sure.
Phrasefinder puts "card sharp" (or "-sharper") as the slightly earlier usage, with an 1859 citation for "card-sharper" and "card-sharp" in both Britain and in the US, while "card-shark" is cited to 1893 in the US. (wikipedia)
As for the "fish" part of the clue, those are the marks. Was the "fish" bit supposed to clue me in to the fact that the answer was going to involve marine life? Perhaps. That never occurred to me while solving (I actually didn't struggle much with this one because I had the "K" from KRON- before I ever knew that 1A had anything to do with cards).
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| [Caravaggio, The Cardsharps, c. 1594] |
I had to think for a bit to understand how STAR POWER fit the clue (15A: Screen grab?). I guess the people on the "screen" who "grab" an audience are said to have STAR POWER. Yeah, that must be it. Saw a couple of movies with a lot of STAR POWER over the last two days: On Thursday, there was Crime 101 (Halle Berry, Mark Ruffalo, one of the Hemsworth brothers (please do not ask me to keep them straight), Nick Nolte, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and the great Barry Keoghan (best thing about the movie by far)), and then yesterday there was The Bride! (Bening! Bale! Buckley!—the three B's!—plus Penélope Cruz, Peter Sarsgaard, and Jake Gyllenhaal). Neither film has been particularly well reviewed but I enjoyed both and really liked The Bride! STAR POWER is actually an important component of that movie, as Frankie, the monster (Bale), has an obsession with a 1930s movie musical star (J. Gyllenhaal), whose movies he goes to see obsessively, living vicariously through the star as a way of combating his own profound loneliness. That's STAR POWER.
POCO A POCO is pretty tough, as musical terms go (17A: Like the crescendo in Ravel's "Boléro"). I can hear Boléro in my head very clearly right now, but I had to infer POCO A POCO from crosses. The phrase is at least vaguely familiar to me. "Little by little"—which is how Boléro builds, at least in volume. The term POCO A POCO does not appear at all on the wikipedia page for Boléro. Someone more musical than I will tell you whether the term is apt. "NO, I INSIST" as an intriguing "OII" string (don't see those too often). Weird lot of first-person business today ("NO, I INSIST," and then "AM I NUTS?" crossing "I'M AN IDIOT"), but I don't have a problem with it. The pun on "smoking" in the RIB JOINTS clue, though (13D: Establishments where smoking is allowed)—that seems kind of forced. Smoking is not "allowed" in RIB JOINTS, it's one of the primary activities of RIB JOINTS. It's essential to RIB JOINTS. Permission is not a relevant issue. Boo to that attempted misdirection, for sure.
Bullets:
- 19A: What travellers typically have in America? (ONE "L") — a "letteral" clue! Did not see that one coming. I guess if you have to use ugly crosswordese like ONEL, you may as well go ahead and try to make it interesting. As long as "interesting" doesn't mean "awkward and unnecessarily difficult," I don't mind.
- 29A: Controller of floods in the video game Pharaoh (OSIRIS) — had the "O," saw "Pharaoh" in the clue, wrote in OSIRIS. No video game knowledge required.
- 37D: R&B's Braxton (TONI) — I really enjoyed her music in the '90s and early '00s. Listened to this one a lot. Real Anita Baker vibes (extremely complimentary):
- 40A: Sémillon rouge and Médoc noir (MERLOTS) — had the "M" and those seemed ... red ... so guessed MERLOTS. No sweat.
- 62A: Woman central to electioneering? (IONE) — never saw this clue! Weird how you can struggle in some places and absolutely blow through others. Anyway, this is a hidden-name clue: "electioneering."
- 10D: Throws spray, in surfer lingo (SHREDS) — I know this as guitar-playing slang, but I was able to infer it easily enough today (thanks, RABBI and EMOJI!).
- 63A: "Big Little Lies" author Moriarty (LIANE) — a five-letter version of Veronica ROTH, in that she's a popular author whose name I cannot for the life of me remember, ever. I had to leave the final vowel blank here and wait for the cross, as LIANA is also a name one might have.
- 39D: Low notes, but not the lowest (TWOS) — definitely had TENS in here at some point. Completely forgot TWOS existed. I have a bunch of them stashed in the house somewhere, courtesy of someone who decided to make their annual $$$ contribution to this blog in ... unusual fashion. I should just deposit them, but they’re such weird, crisp little curiosities that I feel strangely compelled to hold on to them.
That's all for today. See you next time (and a "Happy" Daylight Saving Time to all of you) (I hate "springing forward" so much, esp. when it happens in winter and not in *&$%ing spring like it's supposed to)
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132 comments:
Medium-Challenging, thanks mostly to @Rex WAdi. Nice crunchy Saturday. Liked it.
* * * * _
Overwrites:
loan SHARK before CARD at 1A
C-note before SPOT at 1D
My 28D dry streambed was a WAdi for a very long time before it was a WASH.
oN TEMPO before IN for the speed compliance at 44D. This plus 28D made WHIM hard to see at 43A.
HOLY MOlEy before MOSES at 69A
WOEs:
POCO-A-POCO at 17A
WASH as clued at 28D. I was surprised when I typed the H in desperation and got the happy music.
LIANE Moriarty at 63A
Thanks, @Rex, for explaining the clue for IONE (62A)
Seemed Saturday-hard at first, but ended up doable after I changed "natant" to LATENT, which gave me ENHALO, and made a lucky guess that Icelanders spend KRONA. The clue for IONE was so illogical that it had to be a "letters" trick; that got me started in the SE.
My only nit is the clue for #2...it should indicate the answer is an abbreviation.
This was not on my wavelength at all...the cluing felt tricky but not enjoyable, and some of the answers felt a bit off. AM I NUTS? feels more jokey than a sense of impending doom would imply.
At first I I confidently wrote in SPORT at 3D and PROLONGED at 17A, which seemed a more accurate description of the crescendo in Bolero. I'm a classical pianist and while POCO A POCO is certainly a musical term, it's not something you really find outside of the actual score - i.e. it's more of an instruction for the musicians than a description of what is happening.
Also as a wine nerd I found the clue for MERLOTS needlessly obscure...two outdated and confusing synonyms plus an awkward plural.
I have never heard CSPOT or "bones" to refer to money before - not fond of slang that only persists for the sake of crosswords.
Love the Saturday level and type of cluing in this puzzle,
These days travelers (and their fellow travellers) would do well to have much more than a mere One L that they can call upon - at the very least, they'll need someone who has completed law school and passed the bar exam.
I enjoyed FACEPALMS next to IMANIDIOT. Come to think of it, NIGHTMARE is also something that comes to mind when I do something particularly stupid or mortifying.
Much like yesterday - a strikingly attractive grid layout - we even get an internal reference to that odd central pattern. Mostly well filled and challenging.
POCO
The big corners were solid. I also needed the crosses for POCO A POCO. ELBOW ROOM, SPIT IT OUT and HOLY MOSES are great. Parsing the goofy I’s in NO I INSIST took some time. Learned EMOJI.
TESLA Girls
Highly enjoyable Saturday morning solve. Quite possibly the finest three day stretch we’ve encountered in recent NYTXW history. Matt Sewell’s Stumper today also offers a unique grid build and has some real meaty entries.
Violet Femmes
Card sharp, yes. Pool shark, yes. CARDSHARK? Well, OK, if you say so.
I can confirm POCO A POCO as legit, even though I had a hard time seeing it today.
That NW was the last to fall for me. Tough! I tried to get in through Cape instead of COWL, which didn’t help.
A properly STERN Saturday. Good stuff, Fritz!
2 dollar bills are considered good karma in Viet Nam.
Fish as a card game?
Hey All !
Another ToughThemeless. Seems the crossword folk are going back to ramping up the weekend difficulties.
Had to run crying to Goog three times today to be able to finish. Ouch. First was for LIANE. Had letIn for ADMIT, effectively closing any chance in SW. Able to finish up that corner with just that look-up.
But NW required TWO look-ups. Yeesh. AWOL and TESLAS. Was trying to fit Roentgens in there somehow. gOWn first for COWL. Cnote first for CSPOT (even considered hundo), sport for RACES. So a mess requiring untangling by good ole Goog.
Went fairly fast (the rest of puz) considering I started out with maybe six answer after first run-through (half were wrong!)
Good SatPuz. Left the ole brain sizzling, but useable. Har.
Have a great Saturday!
Don't forget to set your clocks ahead one hour! Counteract the hour of sleep-loss by going to bed and hour earlier. Easy. 😁
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Alot of write overs today made this the toughest Saturday so far this year. At least as far as I can RECALL. My most troublesome one was POCOAPOPO/POCOAPOCO. It's not often that you get REPAIRS/RECALLS as a kea/loa. I filled in all four corners and was still stuck with blanks in the LAND, NOPE and ASAP slots luckily I recognized RECALLS off the L of COWL and that final little fog lifted.
My other write overs were SPORTS/RACES, WADI/WASH, FACESLAP/FACEPALM, LETIN/ADMIT, AIDE/ASST and SEAM/TEAM. As the list demonstrates the SW was the toughest section for me.
Along with yesterday's solve this is shaping up as the best puzzling weekend so far. Maybe one of these days the SB will take ANIL.
Good write-up by OFL this am. At least he had a guess re WASH or WADI - I had no clue, lol.
I also stared at the clue for NOON for quite a while, trying to make the connection. The best I could come up with are the sounds that a clock may make at the top of the hour. If there is an alternative interpretation, please let me know.
My favorite section was up in the NE with ELBOW ROOM and RIB JOINT, both of which made intuitive sense, which can be hard to come by with clues on a Saturday. I disagree with the big guy on the clue for RIB JOINTS - we get by with “close enough for CrossWorld” all of the time, I don’t think this one is coloring outside of those boundaries.
This was a struggle for me, at least an hour, half last night and half this morning. I did finish it. But wow, really tough for me. "Medium challenging" since "Challenging" Saturdays are the ones I can't finish. Dropped "POOP" right in for #2.... I guess that wouldn't pass the breakfast test, huh??? then AIDE (or VEEP?) before ASST. Thank God for some musical background which helped me finally see POCO A POCO. 3 down was RitES and gAmES before it was RACES. 42A was iffY before CAGY. Just now finally got the joke on "NOON".... clocks striking 12 bells.... huh. Enjoyed the NIGHTMARE in the grid with ELMST, the ELBOWROOM right next to the RIBJOINT.... Lots of good stuff!!!! Thanks for a good Saturday challenge, Fritz!!!!!
Almost didn't finish. Oddly, what allowed me to finally solve this was changing IDIOT to MORON, which made it easier to see IMANIDIOT. (And LETIN to ADMIT).
Respectfully, I disagree re: POCOAPOCO. One would absolutely say the crescendo happens little by little (because it is so prolonged, yes).
If LENTO and STACCATO—terms essentially seen solely in scores—are fair game in puzzles, I’d say POCOAPOCO is just as fair. It’s certainly more inferable to any solver with knowledge of Romance languages. It’s an instruction to the musicians because it’s also a description of what is happening, much like CRESCENDO.
I loved coming across the answer. I’m also a classical pianist.
I was stuck on holy moley for the longest time. “Holy moley, Batman”
Tough, and good, Saturday. Only real issue I have is the terrible clue for DOTTED.
If 'cardsharp' only dates to 1859, what was that Caravaggio called in English for the first 300 years?
I was also wadi overconfident. And I had the same eureka moment with NIGHTMARE as Rex.
Any orchestral musician is totally familiar with POCO A POCO, likely accompanied by eye rolling when faced with playing Boléro again. The interminable repetition in the buildup can be maddening. I can see that this term would slow down others, though. You don’t hear it in everyday life, aside from Italy, of course.
Perfect Saturday puzzle! Had WAdi / WiiM before WASH / WHIM — figured a WiiM was a Wii music machine pad that you could dance on :-)
I disliked this crossword immensely and had to grind to finish it. There were far more "WTF moments than "aha" moments. I am reasonably familiar with video games and I've never heard of or played Pharaoh. ENHALO was also a stretch. IONE is not a name I've ever heard and I had ERIN for a long time. Finally, INTEMPO seems less precise than ONTEMPO. Altogether this was absolute dreck, in my humble opinion.
Doesn't "No." imply that it's abbreviated?
me too. Extremely Challenging in a not-fun way
Yeah I didn’t vibe with this at all. A lot of moments of, “it couldn’t be this, oh wait it is” *shrug* Not that satisfying snap that makes you sit back impressed, Antonio Banderas meme-style.
Some puzzles strike me as made with a thesaurus, or by someone for whom English was not their first language, so things seem just slightly off. Not wrong, just not really how people typically define or use words or expressions.
No. 2
Couldn't find a good place to start, finally wrote LETIN for "Open the gate for", which was wrong but at least led to INON and MORON and FACEPALM and after that it was slow but steady progress, slowed mightily by POOLSHARK. Oops. Thought I was going to have a DNF due to HOLYMOLEY but changing that led to DEETS and I finally remembered what "estoques" are. Think that was a deliberate mental block and still something I'd rather not think about.
Speaking of Spanish, I'll see your WADI and raise you an arroyo, which is what I wanted after reading the clue. Got the second POCO through crosses and then POCOAPOCO was obvious, very common in Spanish. Took a while to remember TONI and didn't know LIANE at all, which reminds me that old crossword favorite LIANA is MIA. Not AWOL, like ex-PFC Wintergreen, from one of my favorite books ever. No liana, but at least we have ANIL, another old friend. Welcome back.
Thought this was a proper Saturday and enjoyed it very much, FJ. A Fine Job indeed and thanks for all the fun.
Experientially, it felt medium; chronologically it registered just slightly easier. The grid itself I found aesthetically pleasing, and there has to be a much better word than "DOTTED" to capture the elegance and regularity of the knights-move array of the thirteen black squares. The entries themselves: very little junk (i.e., avoidable ugliness) to my eye, although I'll look to the official gunk-chronicler for more DEETS on that. I counted only four "terrible threes". Lovely stacks and colonnades of length nine each.
The clues themselves I'm just slightly less gaga about. Overall I think they're good, but they didn't quite rise to the heights of yesterday's. Still scratching my head over the very counterintuitive WASH as the answer to 28 Down; just never heard that usage. I did like the very succinct "D'Oh!" to clue I'M AN IDIOT (and MORON crossing that, which the aforementioned idiot hisses to himself afterwards, is a nice touch). I also liked the vivid elevator clue for ELBOW ROOM (a phrase I generally like and use). I didn't groan at the clue for RIB JOINTS as Rex did, although I ADMIT I see his point. (And suddenly I have a hankering for smoked meat.)
The mirror image of RACES is TOROS, and those produced very different feelings. I'd not heard of Finnish wife-carrying and English cheese-rolling, but it suggests happy scenes at county fairs with much laughter and gaiety (but I'm not planning on signing my wife and me up anytime soon for that). Passing to the other end: I've never heard the word "estoques" to clue TOROS, or otherwise for that matter, but I think I can bloody well guess the meaning, and it's nothing I want to think about for long. Matadors are not heroes in my world (I'm assuming my guess is correct). Someone who is heroic is whoever is the centrally placed drummer in a performance of Bolero, who drums out the same however many bars it is of the unchanging ostinato rhythm, over and over and over (169 times, Wikipedia tells me), and who cannot let the attention deviate for a single moment during that time, even while surrounded by that raucousness toward the end. I am routinely awed by such steely musical concentration (on conclusion of which, I have seen conductors go directly over and give that heroic performer a big hug as the audience applauds).
Have a good day, everyone!
Some advocate for cooking them in an oven, but it's pigs roasted on an open fire while rotating on a SPITITOUT. Like at RIBJOINTS where they roast them in TWOS, often starting ATONE in the morning (which reminds me, don't forget to set your clocks forward tonight or your schedule will be a NIGHTMARE).
When God was asked if he would ADMIT Bill Clinton to heaven, he said, "Yes, but I won't ENHALO."
I had to do a FACEPALM when I realized mid-puzzle that I could have occasionally been calling Trump a ninnyhammer instead of always using MORON.
Do most RIBJOINTS have an ELBOWROOM?
High quality puzzle. Thanks for a good tussle, Fritz Juhnke.
3rd Classical pianist here: Just checked the Durand score, and not only is there no marking for “poco a poco”, there is also no “crescendo”, and surprisingly few dynamic markings throughout. It becomes louder and fuller by the gradual addition of instruments and using the louder parts of their ranges.
While POCOAPOCO is not obscure, it feels unlikely for a xword puzzle, and leaves us to wonder if this is in common non-musical Italian usage. Close enough for xwords, I say.
I was stuck in the SW, so looked up LIANE (hi, RP) and everything else fell into place instantly from the 3 sure letters I didn’t already have. Funny how that little bit of certainty can cause the whoosh.
I also like the story that FACEPALMS, IMANIDIOT NIGHTMARE tells.
It is true that in Reform and Conservative synagogues the rabbi leads the prsayer. But thesew branches of Judaism are relatively recent (they developed in the 19th century in Germany and the USA). historically (as still today) in Orthodox synagogues the rabbi (Hebrew for "my master," and by extension "my teacher") did not lead the prayer but only taught and expounded the clasical literatures (the Hebrew Bible, i.e. the "Old Testament," and the Talmud; , and also the oceans of commentaries and cddices on these foundational texts). Orthodox Jewish prayer is a democratic affair, and often a lay person leads it, the rabbi being no more than one of the ten men requisite for congrgational prayer. On festive occasions, however, in many syangogues an appointed musical cantor (Hebrew: "chazan") leads the prayer, but in Jewish folklore (no offence meant) the "chazan" is often satirized for his, let us say, non-spirituality. Indeed some chazanim (Hebrew plural) were great opera stars and Al Jolson in the first commercial "talkie" as "The Jazz Singer" who gave up a star performasnce for the sake of his dying chazan father to lead the congregation in Kol Nidrei" on Yom Kippur, immortalized the anbiguity of the life the "chazan".
I also had WADI for a long time (a word that I know only because I read Dune many times as a teenager) and ERIN instead of IONE really slowed me down.
Sorry you didn’t like it: As RP mentioned, you don’t have to play video games to get to OSIRIS, IONE Skye is a famous actress, IN tempo is definitely the correct usage.
I found this puzzle to be like the ones I tried to solve many, many years ago.IMPOSSIBLE.No 🎈for me today.
Card sharks do not play Fish
Mike is right: The abbreviation in the clue indicates the answer will be an abbreviation.
I've been thinking puzzles were super easy lately, so I guess I had this one coming (125% of my average Saturday time).
The most complained about item was easy for me—having lived in the Southwest for 16 years, I am quite familiar with the meaning of WASH used here.
Woes:
-I started with MAKOSHARK then switched to SANDSHARK before I got CARDSHARK.
-KRONE before KRONA.
-Once I got the pun in the clue for 13 Down (although I agree with Rex that smoking isn't just allowed, it's required), I confidently wrote in BBQJOINTS.
-I needed almost all the crossers to get POCOAPOCO, although symmetry helped me (as the crossers started falling in, I saw the A with four letters on either side of it and guessed it would be the same word on either side, a la 'mano a mano').
Overall I thought is was a good puzzle.
As a long-time Arizona resident, I had no trouble with WASH vs. WADI. There are hundreds of named washes all over the state. I walk the dog along the Cañon del Oro Wash just about every day.
Had OUT WITH IT instead of SPIT IT OUT and so that southeast corner took me forever!
This puzzle gave my brain a workout, and I really liked it for that reason! Took me a while to get ONEL, though I did notice the British spelling of travelling; I just thought Americans needed lots of oneS—for tipping while traveling. But I finally got it, just as I finally accepted ELMST, once I parsed it as Elm Street and not some unknown German-sounding place. I'm not familiar with the use of STERN as hard or challenging, so that was something I learned. All in all, a crunchy and satisfying Saturday puzzle. Thanks, Fritz!
Another hand up for WADI and the dire consequences thereof in the SW. I had NIGHTMARE from ELMST but I could make no headway because I *so* wanted AMINUTS but that D blocked me. Finally AMMO got me WHIM, which gave me H not I and WASH clicked in, giving me the AMINUTS I wanted. Fun to crack this one.
Oh and as a classical singer, yeah, POCOAPOCO is right. But that would have made it nicer if we'd had A TEMPO (return to original tempo) instead of IN TEMPO, which isn't a standard score notation, but of course it wouldn't fit.
Am I the only one who didn’t know estoques?
Another fun thing about HOLY MOSES over SPIT IT OUT is that Moses famously had a lisp.
I've never heard of the name IONE so that one was impossible for me.
Luckily for me, I have yet to incorporate WAdi into my trove of crosswordese. I threw in WASH with the merest hesitation and continued on my merry way down the grid.
Medoc should have shouted "wine" to me yet I considered MaRoOnS there for a while, French colors?
I'm still trying to tie STERN to "Taxing, as a test". Is that modern-day slang? If so, it's not something I've heard.
I tried to put tWO-_ in at 7D, thinking it was a rating of an army inductee, such as 1-A. I've never read Catch-22.
POCO A POCO is a musical direction I've seen before but I don't know Bolero by Ravel and its crescendo. Crosses got me there, poco a poco.
Fritz Juhnke, thanks for a Saturday puzzle that provided a bit of sweat equity (5D and 33D)!
I got that 62A had to be a "letteral" clue but took me a sec to convince myself it was IONE, which is a pretty common crosswordism (usually clued "actor Skye" or the like), since those are usually pretty generic, not specific to a single celebrity like this one. Shows a bit of originality there as well as elsewhere.
Enjoyed a hard solve. Poco a poco is extremely niche!
My thoughts exactly. Seemed like the constructer sacrificed enjoyability for difficulty.
Interestingly, with today's NYT crescendo POCO A POCO in Boléro we have Matt's DIMINUENDO!
I went with that too, although you don’t see many card sharks playing Fish.
I wondered that myself
And A DUE to boot!
Dry stream bed seems to be a generational answer. "Wadi" is, to an extent, crosswordese. But, anyone watching weekly cowboy shows in the 1950s and 1960s would definitely recall the posse having to cross over a "wash". And, sometimes even another crossword answer, the Spanish/Mexican/Texan word, "arroyo". I love a rich language.
Very Hard. Lost my streak. NW and SE conquered me.
Thought the cluing stretched credulity today, but would rather that and struggle than blow through a Saturday like a Wednesday. Thoroughly enjoyed that struggle. Proud of myself when done. Always love the feeling halfway through of "am I going to be able to finish this?" only to persevere and succeed. 23:05
WADI/WASH nearly did me in. I stared at that little corner forever and finally had to put the puzzle aside for a bit. I haven’t had a DNF in years, but the WHIM and the TWO and the IN vs ON TEMPO and the AM I NU??? just didn’t come together. Like Rex I was fixated on WADI. I loved it when my brain finally let it go and the pieces fell into place. Despite the struggle (or maybe partly because of it) I really enjoyed this puzzle. So many fresh answers and overall fair and interesting clues! I’d give it at least four stars.
Fun puzzle, though DNF for me, I had 1A (though admittedly a little grumpy about the SHARp thing), felt good about CNOTE for 1D, and just had to give up on 2D, 3D, & 4D, and the beginning of those crosses
Great puzzle! Loved the all-over-the-map cluing voice. Sometimes obscure connections between clue and answer (CARDSHARK), sometime overly obvious (LAND). Finished without cheats but needed some ‘splaining from @Rex and friends to grok IONE and NOON (thanks, @Southside). Never heard STERN referring to a test but the crosses INSISTed.
Not sure OFL has been reading enough sci-fi. I’m no expert but my understanding of OMNIVERSE is that it encompasses all of the multiple and/or parallel uniVERSEs. (I wanted multIVERSE but couldn’t cram it into the puzzle’s spacetime continuum.)
I didn’t know WAdi but it didn’t matter because I had hOod before COWL. I pulled oASt out of my SB hat and suffered trying to come up with TWOS and WHIM. I really should make more of an effort to learn the meanings of the words I learn from SB. @pablo, Ezersky doesn’t take ANIL? I thought that’s where I learned it. NOPE, I see it’s not on my “words to remember” list - must’ve been here.
During the solve I noticed a number of double-letter words, so in @Lewis’ absence and in his honor here’s a list: RABBI, the palindromic NOON, ASST, DOTTED, DROLL, RECALLS, ELBOWROOM, NOIINSIST(!), ITLL, AMMO and DEETS. And DEETS does double duty as a rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap.
Thanks, @Fritz Juhnke - perfect Saturday workout!
"Fish" is slang for an inexperienced or bad card player, especially in poker
This was right there!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm7b-32Mpbs
Wow. This was the toughest puzzle I can remember for a long time. For some reason I worked it differently than I usually do. Today I just kept plugging along (somewhat “in horror” of my cluelessness) and after the first “across” attempt I had RABBI (low confidence, but correct), EMOJI, TONI, IONE (again, low confidence but correct) and SPITITOUT. I’ll spare you the rest of the gory details but, while I KNOW this is an excellent puzzle, I can’t say it was a solve I enjoyed a lot.
Am I the only person that doesn’t squarely equate CAGY with “noncommittal”? I usually think of it as a reluctance to disclose something. Now I’ll check the definition as I must be wrong.
No. I assure you: you aren't nuts!
Hmm. Never read that. I know in Exodus he says he stutters and stammers. But lisp is nowhere to be found.
You can LAND a fish once you've hooked it unless it SPITITOUT. Then you FACEPALM and declare IMANIDIOT!
This was the challenging Saturday I've been hankering for - also known as, "Be careful what you wish for." It took me an age to get a foothold at COWL x WASH x ACLU and then slowly piece together all but the NW. Up there, my one triumph of the day was writing in ONE L with no crosses, but then I unfortunately got money confused with sex and wrote in g-SPOT. That caused enough consternation to force a "check word" admission of defeat. Once I had the C, the rest unrolled nicely. An enjoyable struggle, will take the FACEPALM of the DNF.
It was pretty much all over when I entered “grand” for CNOTE…and from living in the Middle East had WAdi for WASH..and HOLYMOlEY….and so on…one blooper after the other. But still liked this puzzle for its energetic colloquial answers like AMINUTS and NOIINSIST. The constructor must have grinned just a bit putting ELBOWs and RIBs next to one another. Anyway, no chance to solve this one without cheating, but fun nevertheless.
You're not wrong -- the equation is not there, since a noncommittal person might not be CAGY about it -- but a CAGY person will typically be someone who refuses to outwardly commit, so I thought it was okay on that reading. It took some moments for me to gain purchase, but my solve basically started in the NE as well. I was resisting IONE at first because it's somewhat unusual, but the other name "Erin" which follows is not exactly "central", so IONE it had to be! Puzzle was very good I thought, considering it's Mr. Juhnke's first time in the NYT. The opposite of "Junky"!
Loved this puzzle! Best clue ever for RACES: "Wife-carrying in Finland and cheese-rolling in England." Ha! I hope no one gets confused and trains for a wife-rolling race.
The ELBOW in 12D is poking the RIB in 13D. Give it more ROOM!
Pair them up: PIT (50A) and SPIT IT OUT (67A)
Sir, how do you pronounce "WHIM?" (43A)
VIM (65D)
Thank you.
You're velcome.
Oh, no! It's wacky alternate clue day:
Ocean real estate? (MERLOTS)
How best to eat Cocoa Puffs? (POCOAPOCO)
________ this seat taken? (OSIRIS)
A word that sounds like it's Hawaiian . . . but isn't! (ENHALO)
Medium for me mostly because I made way too many costly erasures (see below). Plus, I also forgot to put NIGHTMARE in at 33d after I got ELM ST which let to additional erasures in the SW that I did not list because they could have been avoided.
Costly erasures - anime before EMOJIS, ethno before HELIO, HOLY MOley before MOSES (that one didn’t seem right given the clue), and, of course, WAdi before WASH which I kept for much too long.
Lots of sparkle, no junk, liked it a bunch!!
Agree with your points, Johnny, and thanks for the explanation re NOON (the clock strikes twelve) which I had not understood until reading your comment.
Ditto; seeing DEETS fixed that.
You can paraphrase Sam Gamgee in LOTR (who applies the phrase to himself) and say "He's naught but a ninnyhammer!", Slightly stronger.
Wadi Rum is one of the most stunning sites in
Jordan and there are several beautiful wadi in Oman. Very easy word if you’ve ever been to that part of the world.
Just...wow.
Same experience as Beezer; almost nothing came to mind right away and when (finally) finished, we were ten minutes over average.
But...LOVED IT; ALL OF IT!
Admit to one cheat- WASH...Webster's didn't have WADI (or I didn't notice it).
When things started to fill in correctly, and overwrites led to a slow-but-steady (POCO A POCO perhaps?) increase in progress, I marveled at the great misdirection clues and four stacks of three side-by-side 9-letter answers, all interesting and fun, in my view.
Last entry was changing WHoM and oN TEMPO.m to WHIM and IN TEMPO. Couldn't figure out how "whom" fit the clue (it took some mental gymnastics to get a lot of them), but when we didn't get the happy music, I spotted the mistake. Voila!
Only four 3-letter words (my customary pet peeve) and none of them too junky. While a few plurals, none of them served double duty (crossed as plurals).
Had HOOD before COWL (frankly, the latter works better), but saved by the increasingly important (these days) ACLU.
I'm not in the majority here, but to me this was the closest thing to five stars in the Rex Parker Ratings Era. Would love to see more Saturday challenges like this!
Check out the movie Say Anything.
It’s one of—maybe even first— movie successees for Cameron Crowe. The fenale lead is Ione Skye. ( You know her dad)
After a couple of run-throughs, I threw in the towel. Not out of frustration, but simply admitting defeat. To paraphrase Clint Eastwood, a solver’s got to know her limitations. This one was way above my pay grade.
Agree. Many clues irritatingly out of sync with their answers. An unpleasant slog.
My parents used to live near O'Neill, Nebraska, which had (apparently no longer has) a bar called the Elbow Room. The best feature was the long shuffleboard table (use corn starch for lubricant) with the stainless steel pucks.
Wadi is Crosswordese?
No sir. It’s the common term for that bit of geography/geology all over the Middle East. If you get the chance, get yourself to Wadi Rum ( maybe not right niw joweber😜)
Motheth?
Interesting that the main thing I learned today was WADI, not even in the puzzle, lol.
Ditto...
I thought "Star Power" was a Super Mario reference. Ya know, when Mario (on your screen) grabs a star and it makes him more powerful? It kinda works.
I think just last week on Dark Winds a plot point centered on a WASH, so I didn't even try to recall WADI, lucky me
Crabshack before cardshark.
Funny, most thought Friday was easy but I found it hard (32 minutes). Here, I found it quite easy and smooth at 17 minutes.
Last night I highlighted several answers where I had typeovers, but this morning I can't remember what they were. Oh, except at 46 across "Envelop with a ring" I had simply CIRCLE and loved it. When I realized it was ENHALO I groaned "No, dear God no!" And of course hands up for WADI.
Oh and for 3 down "Wife carrying and cheese rolling" I had SPORT. And Rex mentioned TWOS for "Low notes"... they were absolutely everywhere here in Canada up til the mid 1990s when they were replaced by the TOONIE. The one dollar coin, introduced in 1987, was called the "Loonie" because it had a loon on it, and the name was so popular...
I agree some of the clueing and some of the answers just seemed a bit odd to me
I had see in instead of admit, and when I got the Liane clue my aha moment was Elm St = Bad Dreams. I didn't like the singular clue/plural answer but assumed there was some word play that made it ok. Took me forever to hack my way out of that mistake.
While not disagreeing that IONE is fine for a name on a Saturday, “IONE Skye is a famous actress” is a huge stretch. I know her from one movie, almost 40 years ago, an 80s romcom breakthrough role for John Cusack, an actual famous actor.
I'm having trouble seeing how karma applies to money. Do you mean good luck?
This is almost exactly what I want from a Saturday- challenging, but not because of lots of archaic crap; lots of long answers that are actual things and phrases (though NOIINSIST sticks out like a sore thumb); and few overused clues or answers.
I thought Rex would criticize the shape of the grid, all the DOTTED squares that create a huge number of 4s across the center and no possibility of whoosh, without any long interesting answers—our largest answers are 9. Curious about where this falls in statistical grid-size-to-number-of-answers ratios.
Anyway, I was looking forward to that criticism as I slogged through this one, because it would have made me feel justified in my dislike of this one. Oh well. I see seasoned solvers on this thread appreciate the difficulty level of the clueing (as a newer solver I chime in with those who ultimately found it impossible), so I’m happy for y’all. But I missed having longer, interesting answers to keep me entertained in the struggle.
I Bari. Italian for The Cheaters.
Yeah I had Erin initially, and I thought "gee well it's not really in the middle it's more near the end". Shoulda looked harder the first time
Bullfighting. F* this puzzle.
Aha! I just got back from Tucson...was there last week,...rodeo, Gaslight Theater, weather in the 80s. Had a house near the Pantano Wash. So nice!
Odd to see a themeless puzzle with the longest answer just nine letters. I think maybe that contributed to its difficulty.
Thanks! This was new to me. Here are the lyrics (as quoted in the comments):
"Border Song"
Holy Moses I have been removed
I have seen the specter he has been here too
Distant cousin from down the line
Brand of people who ain't my kind
Holy Moses I have been removed
Holy Moses I have been deceived
Now the wind has changed direction and I'll have to leave
Won't you please excuse my frankness but it's not my cup of tea
Holy Moses I have been deceived
I'm going back to the border
Where my affairs, my affairs ain't abused
I can't take any more bad water
I've been poisoned from my head down to my shoes
Holy Moses I have been deceived
Holy Moses let us live in peace
Let us strive to find a way to make all hatred cease
There's a man over there what's his color I don't care
He's my brother let us live in peace
He's my brother let us live in peace
He's my brother let us live in peace
The speculation that Moses had a lisp, or stuttered, stems from a single line in Exodus 4:10 where he complains that he is not the right man to be sent to confront Pharaoh, saying (in one common translation): "I am slow of speech and tongue." God attempts to stiffen Moses' spine, saying "I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.”
But who can know the mind of God? There may have also been divine eye-rolling, and the thought "Just SPIT IT OUT, Moses!"
Hi @Beezer - I gave CAGY a slight side-eye too (especially since I know it as CAGeY). But then I remembered Joaquin's dictum. As defined by Joaquin: "Clues are just hints; they're not definitions and they're not synonyms. So they need not be precise and don't need to apply in all situations. They're just "clues" to assist one in figuring out the answers." So watch out for wanting answers to "squarely equate" with their clues!
A really satisfying Saturday challenge for a change! Loved the devious cluing, which I thought was mainly fair and entertaining, and the notable scarcity of pop culture references.
A few nits I'd pick: ENHALO is a dubious usage, the clue for MERLOTS was both niche and outdated, and I prefer my card players to be sharps, not sharks (although I recognize that bird has flown). But overall, this was the most enjoyable Saturday in quite a while!
Born and bred in the Mojave so “wash” was my first answer. Glad that the NYT’s bias toward everything east of here finally turned about. Wadi. Snort.
I will just calmly say that is NOT what cspot means. It's definition also ONLY appears in crosswords which means its...not a phrase. And given that a C-NOTE is literally so common its in websters I have no idea how this can pass editing muster.
Think of "fish" as a synonym for "sucker."
Started this late last night and just bailed. I was just too tired. I’d had a very tough day. Play your tiny violins for me, please. I’ve been retired for more than 15 years and have not had to commute by automobile for about 20 years before cashing out, I.e., I took transit . But, because I’m not very good at planning, I found myself in the city at about three o’clock in the afternoon needing to get back through the suburbs to my pastoral paradise. Wow, what a harrowing experience. I’m not used to wasting fuel just sitting in line and having numerous aggressive drivers cutting in. I’m a pretty courteous driver these days. If I see you have no real choice but to move in to my lane, I’ll ease off and let you in but let’s not make this some sort of aggressive contest. No fender benders please. I hate dealing with insurance companies. So, yeah, highly stressed.
And I’d promised to cook my lovely wife a nice steak dinner. Had to call her and put her on pre-prep duty but I was still responsible for the rib-eye (on the gas grill, in the rain) and the veggies (inside, in the kitchen). It all worked out. The steak was a lovely medium rare. Can you hear the repeated “fwop” of me patting myself on the back? But I was spent by the time I got to this puzzle. Got about 6 questionable answers and packed it in.
Returned in the morning to find that it was not really that much easier. I was just not on this guy’s wavelength. Too many short to mid-length answers with cruelly ambiguous clues, the worst of which were infuriating (I’m looking at you “Makeup of a plot”).
But the worst thing for me was the wine clue. @Nico 6:44 describes it as “needlessly obscure”. I kinda thought so too so I went to my Oxford Companion to Wine by Jancis Robinson and tried to make sense of it. I cannot find a reference to “Semillon rouge”. I filled it in the grid because I know many wines of the Medoc are Merlot-based, but Semillon rouge? Really. Pretty needlessly obscure. And that’s the way this puzzle unfolded for me - needlessly obscure. Thanks @Nico.
After sitting in a poker game for 15 minutes, if you do not know who the fish is, it's you.
I had the same reaction to today's puzzle as yesterday's. Initially looked at it and said, "Whoa, cool looking grid!" And like yesterday, found the solve proper end-of-week level challenging and liked it very much.
So many write-overs: ethno for HELIO at 16A, outwithit for SPITITOUT at 67A, letin for ADMIT at 58D and probably one or two more. But every time something fell, it was pure joy.
Like @Rex, much of my hold-ups involved the short fill but there was not a groaner in the bunch. And I'm very happy to learn a new meaning (for me) for the simple word WASH
NW was the last to fall. Looking at it completed, I'm not sure why it was so difficult. I had SHARK and my brain didn't make any other connection other than landSHARK of SNL fame, I put that in for a while which didn't help. CSPOT finally have me what I needed for it all to click.
I liked all the "I" references, especially IMANIDIOT crossing AMINUTS. The sequential lettering of NOIINSIST is a great crossword anomaly, I got a big kick out of that one.
Fun cluing for NOON and ONEL and IONE (I like the whole "letteral" thing)
Second puzzle in a row that required a LOT of brain work but was worth every minute. Thanks for this one Fritz!
Fun puzzle to solve instead of fill in. I had HOPESO, AWOL, guessed at KRONA, so I thought for a long time that the creature living on fish was a kind of hawk. Later, maybe a mako SHARK?
I got excited when it occurred to me that the off-roads answer might have been derails… but it all worked out in the end. Oh, I also started with wadi and moley.
WHIM is a bit random😁, and STERN for the test - no idea. GinJOINTS allowed smoking, which is evident in noir films, but the clue didn’t indicate earlier times. On first pass I confidently wrote in I can’t even instead of IMANIDIOT. Also metaVERSE. I was skeptical of ENHALO and thought for sure that answer was due a couple of tsks. Overall a very enjoyable puzzle. Thanks!
So "Erin" also appears in "electioneering" - which cost me dearly... that whole section almost ended me but loved this puzzle a ton
Hoowee. toughest Saturday in a while
Wow! With only a suspected WON for 26A "Walked off with", I looked at 12D "What's lacking in a crowded elevator" to see if I could confirm that W and boom!, ELBOW ROOM filled in. I wondered if the rest of the puzzle would be that easy. NOPE.
17A brought back fond memories. My first sailboat was small and slow. That combined with a neophyte captain made the boat's name POCO A POCO emblazoned across across the STERN very apropos. It would eventually reach its destination but only "little by little".
At several points during the solve I did some animated FACE PALMS as I was thinking AM I NUTS? Yep, I'M AN IDIOT, a MORON even.
Very nich agree. I had many of the same issues
Old Yankee fans recall (and loved) Luis Arroyo, a brilliant reliever in the early 60s. First Puerto Rican Yankee. Rest in peace, Luis.
Yeah, I was kinda wondering what a deety was.
A familiar example of a crescendo poco a poco appears in Ravel’s “Bolero.” The ostenato rhythm that literally underscores the music drives the poco a poco crescendo over quite a long time. My husband (a percussionist) adored the piece and dreaded playing snare in its performance. He said the only way not to get lost was to count the number of repetitions of the two bar motif (da-dadada-da-dadada-da-da-da-dadada-da- dadadadadadadadada-da-da). He said that often, previous percussionists had written the number of repetitions before each change in the score.
Good one, @Kristi. I had similar thoughts.
Nico
Just because I have never heard something I don’t assume it’s not a thing. Probably a bit dated, but C spot is still used by some. I don’t think it is a crossword only word. Anyway, most older people would have heard it spoken.
Medoc is a wine region.
A double coffee Saturday! Some excellent word play, a few erasures and challenging spots, and only a few clunkers. Waded through but no excitement.
My nits are:
The “grab” in screen grab” for STAR POWER was trying way too hard. “Emission from the solver screen” maybe?
“Raspberry” EMOJI awards:
1. The dreaded “EN” and the resulting non-word, ENHALO. (Raspberries EMOJI).
2. The “find a random name in another word” clue for IONE.
3. Good old ANIL making an appearance. It used to be such a regular. May e it’s been long enough that it doesn’t really deserve a raspberry. I forgive it.
4. Finally, as OFL and many others mentioned, the ridiculous OMNIVERSE. Hard no.
Several oopsies for me today too. Acre before LAND at 24A. Sadly, in my opinion, maw before PIT at 50A. Swish before SLOSH and I’m in the misplaced hubris club with wadi before WASH, and WASH was such a common word in Oklahoma. But what’s a solver to do? The pressures of the grid are real.
A few standout tough spots gave me some head-scratching time. Started with the Grim Reaper whose most recognized characteristic is the scythe but in a rebus-leas puzzle demanding only a four-letter answer, it took me quite a while for me to get his COWL on. I even thought “hood,” but no.
A year ago, MERLOTS would have given me lots more trouble, but living out here in NorCal, a mere 40 minutes from Napa, I am much more knowledgeable about my reds.
Favorite clue today was “takes off road?” for RECALLS. Pure fold that one.
And that’s all from me today. I’m behind in supervising the garden chores. Peace-out and don’t forget that we lose an hour of sleep tonight 😡. My biorhythms do not adjust. Period.
100% it's card SHARP. If they are going to use this weird variation, they should add "var." to the clue.
I had HEAD SLAPS first, but only the "s" worked out
The merlots clue is wrong. Medoc wines include merlot grapes but are predominantly cabernet sauvignon. No French wines can be called by the name of the grape. American Merlots generally must be 75% merlot which no Medoc wines are.
Teedman
I bet you HEARD Bolero at some point in your life but you just don’t know the name. It’s almost unavoidable. I think it showed up in the movie TEN with Dudley decades ago.
I know stern test. As in stern test if character. An old expression.
A stern test of character is a
Very good very hard puzzle. I was defeated by WASH WHIM TWOS - I had never heard WASH used that way. Had to look up TESLA and AWOL though I should have guessed them. Knowing Italian helped with POCOAPOCO. Never heard of RIB but got it from the crosses.
The start of meteorological spring is March 1 so spring forward it is!
Where is @Lewis? Is he AWOL? I would have loved to know if he would have been tripped up where @OFL was tripped up ...
enhalo? really?
POCO A POCO give me a break
The MERLOTS clue is actually even more obscure..."Medoc noir" is an outdated synonym for the Merlot grape. I agree that the only reasonable association most solvers will have are wines from the Medoc region!
I don't get the ACES clue (89 Down)...
Except here POCOM A POCO is Italian.
Did you mean to publish this in the Sunday blog?
Wadi got me, too! Loved the puzzle.
Enjoyed the comments as much as the puzzle, which is to say very much! Happy to see the Mum Does the Washing video viz wadi/wash. A big thumbs up on that!
I guess it must be odd that I’ve never heard the expression ‘Holy Moses’ before. ‘Holy moley’, yes.
So I'm wrong and those are actual archaic obscure names for the merolt grape.
Started off poorly with hundo for 100 bones. Never heard anyone call it a C SPOT. Cnote, yes, CSPOT, no.
The clue for SHRED is just wrong. To SHRED on a surfboard is not limited to throwing spray. That's like clueing Chops Onions for COOKS.
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