Basic drumming pattern / SUN 4-12-26 / Hip-hop artists with unintelligible lyrics / Trading card error / Squishy part of a cat's paw, cutesily / Under, poetically / A.I.-powered video hoaxes / Treaty of ___, official close to the War of 1812 / Council of ___ (Counter-Reformation body) / Socialite Sedgwick, the supposed inspiration for Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone"

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Constructor: Lance Enfinger and John Kugelman

Relative difficulty: Easy

THEME: "Initial Thoughts" — clues contain words (IN ALL CAPS) that are actually the initials of the answer:

Theme answers:
  • HELEN OF TROY (22A: HOT woman worth fighting for?)
  • GIVE OR TAKE (28A: GOT in the ballpark?)
  • BLONDE ON BLONDE (43A: BOB Dylan album?)
  • MAIL-ORDER BRIDES (64A: MOB wives?)
  • SNAKES ON A PLANE (89A: SOAP film?)
  • "KEEP IT DOWN!" (104A: KID napper's demand?)
  • TEXAS HOLD 'EM (113A: THE big game?)
Word of the Day: PARADIDDLE (73D: Basic drumming pattern) —
a quick succession of drumbeats slower than a roll and alternating left- and right-hand strokes in a typical L-R-L-L, R-L-R-R pattern (wikipedia)
• • •

There's a cute idea here, but as is, the theme doesn't really work. Some of the clues seem to work pretty well—BLONDE ON BLONDE is a Bob Dylan album, as well as a B.O.B. album; HELEN OF TROY is a "hot woman," as well as a woman with the initials H.O.T.—but others are just loose plays on words, where the clue has no relationship to the answer beyond the initials. SNAKES ON A PLANE, for instance. Definitely has the initials S.O.A.P., but there's no connection between the literal meaning of "soap film" and the movie title. So we get some clues that are both literal and initialism-based, and some that ... aren't. Then there's the fact that MAIL-ORDER BRIDES has a huge ick factor, and the clues on GIVE OR TAKE and "KEEP IT DOWN!" are really awkward on the surface level. [GOT in the ballpark?]?? I get that "GIVE OR TAKE" is a phrase expressing a rough equality, like when your guess is not exact but "in the ballpark," but the phrase "got in the ballpark" isn't really evocative of anything. The "KEEP IT DOWN!" clue is worse because, first of all, "kid napper," as two words??? And second of all, if that is your premise, that the napper is a kid, well, that makes no sense, as a "kid" would never say "KEEP IT DOWN!" That's definitely an adult phrase. When the clues work, they work, but too many of these are forced or clunky. Also, again, can't stress enough how off-putting MAIL-ORDER BRIDES is (way too "human trafficking"-adjacent). Along with DEEP FAKES (58A: A.I.-powered video hoaxes), it gives this puzzle a very unpleasant vibe. Including the recently decimated USAID in the grid did nothing to improve the vibe (82A: Org. founded to fund foreign projects). 


I did like a few non-theme things about this puzzle. "I'LL ALLOW IT" is a great answer in its own right, and the clue on it today is pretty spectacular (2D: Line of latitude?). Perfect surface meaning, perfect figurative meaning. I like that the puzzle comes out throwing NINJA STARs, and I like that the clue included their Japanese name (which I didn't know) (24A: Throwing weapon known in Japanese as a shuriken). I want to like MUMBLE RAPPERS (54D: Hip-hop artists with unintelligible lyrics), and I guess I do. I've certainly heard it, but I don't know much about it. "Mumble rap" is a term that's frequently derogatory and possibly bygone, or at least fading. It grew out of the SoundCloud rap of the mid-'10s.
Mumble rap is used mostly as a derogatory term, in reference to a perceived incoherence of the artist's lyrics. Oscar Harold of the Cardinal Times stated that "mumble rap" is misleading, arguing that the rappers such as Future rely more upon pop melodies and vocal effects, such as auto tune, than mumbling. Justin Charity, a staff writer at The Ringer, argues that the term is unnecessarily reductive and does not in fact refer to one specific type of rapping. He wrote that many of the artists often scapegoated in conversations about the subgenre do not actually mumble, which "is the red flag that the term isn't a useful subcategorization." (wikipedia)
The only "mumble" art form I know comes from film, specifically the genre "mumblecore" (NYTXW appearances: zero), which wikipedia helpfully tells me is "not to be confused with mumble rap." Mumblecore features naturalistic acting, low budgets, and an emphasis on dialogue over plot. As with mumble rap, many people grouped under the category "mumblecore" reject the concept entirely. It's almost as if "mumble" has negative connotations! Anyway, MUMBLE RAPPERS. That happened.

[This may be the only time I've laughed at a YouTube comments section: "Twenty Month Ten!" "Toning my tanner!" "When you accidentally invent one of the biggest sub-genres of Rap by being high"]

EMOTERS aren't really a thing despite crossword puzzles doing heavy PR for them (91D: Hams). I'm not even sure a single EMOTER is a thing, but I know that if an EMOTER is a thing, it definitely doesn't travel in packs. I had the same old same old same old BRIAR/BRIER problem today (46D: Prickly patch). BRIER is a "less common spelling of BRIAR" (thanks, merriam dash webster dot com! That will help me ... not at all!). Luckily I knew how to spell MADEIRA (61A: Portuguese wine). Will this be true of everybody? I do not know. MADAIRA ... looks wrong, but it seems quite possible that someone might drop an "A" in there and never see the error. Oh well. I had CHAZ before CHAS (18D: Nickname that's an alternative to Chuck), but I ZELENA Gomez looks even worse than MADAIRA, so that error wasn't hard to fix. I had TUG AT before TOUCH (79A: Affect emotionally), which is a weird, inventive mistake on my part. My answer kind of requires you to imagine "heartstrings," but that's fine, it still works. Sometimes you make mistakes and you think, "nope, I did nothing wrong. Good answer, me." Mostly you're lying to yourself, but sometimes you're right. 


Bullets:
  • 61D: Trading card error (MISCUT) — big collector of baseball cards as a kid, and I've got some other trading cards I picked up on my way through adulthood. Never considered MISCUT. That was my last word in the grid. After MISPRINT wouldn't fit ... flummoxed, even with the MIS- in there. Needed every cross.
  • 57D: Council of ___ (Counter-Reformation body) (TRENT) — whoa ... I just dropped in the Treaty of GHENT (28D: Treaty of ___, official close to the War of 1812), and now you want the Council of TRENT?! I know they don't have anything to do with each other, technically, but those words are roommates in my brain. I'm sure the rhyming has something to do with it. Also, there's something World History Quiz about both of them. They even scan the same: Treaty of GHENT / Council of TRENT / Fasting for LENT / Elbow is BENT / Paying the RENT / Not what I MEANT / da da da DA / one two three FOUR ... etc. etc. etc.
  • 19A: "The game's ___": Henry V ("AFOOT") — really thought this was Sherlock Holmes. And it is Sherlock Holmes. Famously. But apparently he "cribbed it" from Shakespeare.
  • 31A: Under, poetically ('NEATH) — I teach medieval and early modern poetry and I can tell you I've seen 'NEATH in crosswords more than I've ever seen it used "poetically." Only EMOTERS use 'NEATH. And maybe Keats, but ... he was Keats, he's allowed.

Thus ending, on the shrine he heap'd a spire
Of teeming sweets, enkindling sacred fire;
Anon he stain'd the thick and spongy sod
With wine, in honour of the shepherd-god.
Now while the earth was drinking it, and while
Bay leaves were crackling in the fragrant pile,
And gummy frankincense was sparkling bright
'NEATH smothering parsley, and a hazy light

Spread greyly eastward, thus a chorus sang... 

[from Endymion: A Poetic Romance]

  • 50A: "It's ___. Do you know where your children are?" (old P.S.A.) (TEN P.M.) — Ominous. I remember this. Vaguely. But I (mis)remember it as "ten o'clock." Presumably people watching TV at night know it's P.M., not A.M., but whatever. If it's P.M., it's P.M. "Do you know where your children are?" is a question used as a public service announcement (PSA) for parents on American television from the late 1960s through the late 1990s. Accompanied by a time announcement, this phrase is typically used as a direct introduction for the originating station's late-evening newscast, typically at either 10:00 p.m. or 11:00 p.m." (wikipedia)
  • 3D: Squishy part of a cat's paw, cutesily (TOE BEAN) — I am pro TOE BEAN. Put TOE BEANs in every grid, I won't mind. Never gonna be unhappy to see a TOE BEAN.

[Alfie as a kitten (he'll be six next month)]

That's all for today. See you next time. And best of luck to all the competitors at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament (ACPT). Just one more to go! (unless you're in the A B or C finals, in which case, there's two more).

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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84 comments:

Conrad 6:08 AM  


Too Easy for a Sunday. Solved without reading the theme clues.
* * _ _ _

Overwrites:
My 4A dunderheads were asseS before they were DOLTS
I had NiNa/o for the madre's baby at 38D (NENE)
At 46D I spelled the prickly patch as BRIaR instead of BRIER
For overly bright and showy at 85D, I wanted GAudy but it didn't fit. So I went with GAuche before GARISH
aimS before ENDS for the 119A goals

WOEs:
Actresses CHLOE Grace Moretz at 18A and ERIKA Eleniak at 117A
MUMBLE RAPPERS, the artists at 54D

Anonymous 6:14 AM  

Regarding USAID, it has been my impression that there has been a marked increase in the number of federal agencies appearing in the puzzle over the past year. My perhaps overly optimistic take is that it is the NYT taking a tiny political stance, by making people stop for a moment and bring the agencies to mind, recall what they were meant to do and consider how they have been trashed.

Anonymous 6:18 AM  

If somebody's going to mumble, they'll have to work hard to do better than this.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sbtPTHMOY-s&list=RDsbtPTHMOY-s&start_radio=1&pp=ygUTY2xhcmsgdGVycnkgbXVtYmxlc6AHAQ%3D%3D

ocoonomowoc 6:49 AM  

Rex, how many days have we gone without a "Star Wars" clue?

Lewis 6:58 AM  

Wow, look at these themers:
• The clues begin with an all-cap word.
• Those initial words are *initial* words, initialisms made up of the answer’s first letters.
• The rest of the clue defines the answer. Thus, BLONDE ON BLONDE is a “Dylan album”, GIVE OR TAKE is the meaning of “in the ballpark”, and so on.

What a wild wordplay web each themer spins!

I love wordplay and our quirky language, and this theme hit my happy button. As did the sing-song PARADIDDLE. And get this! – I noticed that the answer DAMON backward is NOMAD, went down a small rabbit hole and was reminded that the actor played a wandering spy in the “Bourne” franchise, then further found out that in 2023 he had NOMAD tattooed on his arm!

Two original clues stood out to me – The very clever [Line of latitude?] for I’LL ALLOW IT, and the highly misdirecting [Dark green] for KALE.

Lance and John, I imagine that you took great pleasure in coming up with these themers, and so did I in unpeeling them. Thank you!

Rex Parker 7:01 AM  

A pretty good stretch. I’ll have to check the records. A week? Not a record … yet (I think ~11 days is the longest non-SW stretch this year)

Son Volt 7:05 AM  

Rex pretty much nails it - cute concept but slightly off in its implementation. I don’t see any possibility of a the voice in KID napper’s demand being a kid. BLONDE ON BLONDE is the highlight for me. The word of the day is STRAT.

Rory Gallagher

Overall fill trends easy and clean enough. Some oddball trivia - LORI, ERIKA etc but for the most part some decent wordplay. Liked both the long downs MUMBLE RAPPERS and MASTER CLASSES. Chuckled at “What a Bohr”.

Stevie Ray

Hard to approach yesterday’s greatness - but this was a pleasant enough Sunday morning solve.

Robin Trower

D. Auphin 7:08 AM  

Counting the number of different ways EPEE is clued. As with ONO, will they ever run out of ways?

I didn't realize that the sport of soccer went all the way back to 1599 in London

Anonymous 7:17 AM  

I felt the recent Sunday puzzles were terrific, until today’s. The theme was just OK and the fills were lackluster.Tedious with no good payoff. No 🎈for me.

Anonymous 7:17 AM  

First time I've done a Sunday in under 20 mins and it was well under. I was more like a "big Monday" I thought. I agree, big fan of BOB and HOT's dual meaning and could forgive SOAP because the film is corny but the rest were a bit on the *DAFT* side. Honestly Ninja Star gave me the same vibe as Mail Order Bride, it's a bit 1970s, is it not? OTOH I thought "paradiddle", "toe bean" and "mumble rappers" were all great. Probably the most challenging part of this puzzle for me was remembering that in the land of crosswords, dips are salsas, not sauces.

Anonymous 7:19 AM  

Spot on again @Rex. I had to cheat to figure out briar could be spelled with an e. The wine looked fine to me either way- not a big drinker here.
That was the only difficult part for this novice crossword puzzle solver.

RooMonster 7:25 AM  

Hey All !
Good ole Samuel L Jackson line: "I'm sick of the m*****f***** SNAKES on this m*****f***** PLANE!"
Also, Ryan Reynolds character, on Samuel L Jackson's character in the movie "The Hitman's Bodyguard": "He singlehandedly ruined the word m*****f*****. Do you know how hard that is to do?"

MOB wives too good a clue not to include here. I'm sure there are some MAIL ORDER BRIDES who had a good life.

Neat Theme. Liked the way one had to twist the ole brain into getting the initialisms.I DIG.

MUMBLE RAPPERS a new one here. Liked the crossing Turkish clues (ARARAT/TATAR). Light on the dreck. Fun puz, gents.

Uniclue:
One who sticks with the same haircut?
OFTEN NEW DO PASS ONIT

Hope y'all have a great Sunday!

Six F's - I DIG that, too!
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 7:31 AM  

Loved this one! Btw Blonde On Blonde was the very first double album produced. Love Bob Dylan too!

Anonymous 7:46 AM  

Couldn't agree with Rex more on every single point he made, and I immediately felt the ick on the MOB clue once I had MAI_OR... and knew where it was going.

SouthsideJohnny 8:01 AM  

I’m glad Rex pointed out the unevenness and inconsistency in the theme, which was my thought while solving it as well. Fortunately it was a pretty easy solve, so we could discern things like the Snakes movie, which doesn’t really have any relevance to the puzzle (other than having initials that anagram to a word).

The easy surrounding answers also helped with the usual litany of B-list celebs which seem to constantly crawl out of the woodwork. This one could have benefited from a little self-restraint (i.e. don’t “force” additional theme entries if you run out of ideas). That not at all an unusual occurrence though.

kitshef 8:01 AM  

I am never going to be fond of this type of theme, but I thought this was a well-done example of one. I thought the BOB clue was a nice bonus that added to the theme, rather than having it make me think less of the other themers.

Never seen TOE BEAN outside of crosswords.

I've heard NENE used by Spanish speakers, but only as a term of affection between spouses or boyfriend/girlfriend. I guess it is the equivalent of calling your significant other "baby" or "babe" in English. Which now that I think about it, seems kind of creepy.

mmorgan 8:11 AM  

I agree they didn’t all land perfectly, but I thought the theme clues were pretty clever. I was baffled by the E in BRIER — I’ve never seen that variant. I spent a long time trying to parse ILL ALL OWIT until the little lightbulb went off. Overall, easy, but I had a not unpleasant time.

Anonymous 8:21 AM  

The dread set in in the first 30 seconds when I filled in HELENOFTROY just from missing letters and noted the pattern in the clue.

"Oh no, here we go..."

Unfortunately that turned out to be the most satisfying(?) of the theme answers.

I mostly galloped through the rest of it, guessing a couple of times (BRIAR incorrectly the first time, for example). Since the unmitigated fraud of USAID came to light this is as welcome in a puzzle as an STD, and this could have been easily avoided by making it USAIR and crossing it with any of several worthy RAMONs.

In themes like this I generally expect at least one long answers to be something completely out of my solar system, and BLONDEONBLONDE played that role today. Zero frame of reference here.

At the very end when I filled in the last square I was informed that there was an error, and instead of relief for being finished I just felt heavy dread, but thankfully I'd just made a simple typo near the top by entering a D instead of a T where AFOOT and STY cross so it was an easy fix.

Anonymous 8:24 AM  

Clueing was way too easy, been trying to break 10 min on a Sunday for years and suddenly broke 9 while in line to order breakfast. Feels dirty

Yat 8:56 AM  

I fell asleep while solving.
More Alfie, please.

Dr.A 9:17 AM  

I agree 100% on every point, except USAID. I like to be reminded of what this country did right even if it’s, let’s just say, on hiatus right now. Mail Order Brides, is so bad. Please NYT don’t ever use this again. And also the theme is cute but I agree, not unified in any way.

tht 9:24 AM  

Certainly Easy for the most part. Agree with an awful lot of Rex's review. He thought that I'LL ALLOW IT and its clue were among the highlights, AS DID I. And I DIG what he's saying about EMOTERS and NEATH. And CAN I say one more thing in agreement? That spelling BRIER made me a little prickly as well.

Two entries that I liked: PARADIDDLE and MUMBLERAPPERS. My wife has taken up tap dance in the past few years, and paradiddles are something they do, and it's really a fun word. And I somehow feel vindicated by the very existence of the word "mumblerapper". That's how it OFTEN sounds to me. I'm thinking particularly of Drake right now. (Seems to be more of guy thing, mumbling in general.)

I was prematurely proud of myself for putting in NiN_ and then waiting to see if it was going to end in O or A. That confidence bit me in the butt a bit, as I didn't even think of NENE until the crosses were in. (To me, that's a Hawaiian honker.)

Was kind of hoping the answer to 86 Across was going to be "Rex", but in the END I enjoyed the misdirection of the clue (REV).

So anyway, there's at least some good stuff in there, and sussing out the theme entries was mildly enjoyable, and there was even a little tee-hee, that I'll leave to Gary to point out. But sadly, it didn't quite manage to scratch my itch for a really good Sunday puz. Dem's da breaks, I guess.

egsforbreakfast 9:28 AM  

I assume that 35D HOTSALSAS is referring to the well-known HELEN OF TROY Salsas. I especially love her ANJOU/Habanero.

How do hams power their e-bikes? EMOTERS.

On the NYT News Quiz I get nine OFTEN OFTEN.

Future president Amy Klobuchar did time ASADA before becoming a senator.

You know you're too obsessed with the Orange Moron and his clown car when BLONDEONBLONDE makes you immediately think of Pam Bondi and Karoline Leavitt. USAID wasn't a mood heightener either.

I liked this a lot, tho it did play fast. I tried thinking of some other themers and it's not that easy to get the high quality type that most of these are. Anyway, IDIG. Thanks, Lance Enfinger and John Kugelman.

jb129 9:36 AM  

Lance & John! 'Never have I ever' finished a Sunday puzzle in under 30 minutes with no typos! Plus I enjoyed every minute of it :). My only WOES were STRAT, USAID, MISCUT. Many thanks to you both!
@Rex Your pics of Alfie (I had a dog named Alfie as a kid) almost make me want to get a kitty (but only 'just almost'). What a sweet baby. I remember when you got him.

DeeJay 9:38 AM  

I honeymooned on Madiera. Yet I still wanted Malvasia there, even though it didn't fit...

Niallhost 10:05 AM  

Too.Easy.

Ken Freeland 10:05 AM  

The late, great Kurt Vonnegut once wrote that "People Magazine is not about eople. It's about crap." Mutatis mutandis, the same goes for this particular Sunday xword. I should torture myself to tease out proper names of so many people I don't even care to know anything about? Life's too short!

Anonymous 10:08 AM  

My used to work at USAID and lost her job when it was destroyed and certainly felt its inclusion in the puzzle (I was very excited to tell her!) was a subtle shout out and tip of the hat not to mention appreciated visibility

pabloinnh 10:13 AM  

Interesting. I've heard NENE but only applied to young children and never to boyfriend or girlfriend.

Bob Mills 10:15 AM  


More problems. I was a non-person for about a week because I had the effrontery to change my email address. Now I finish a Sunday without cheating (a puzzle I didn't care for, especially BRIER), but the system doesn't confirm it.

Anonymous 10:18 AM  

Mumble rappers made me think of Mumbles by Clark Terry so I can’t be too mad at it: https://youtu.be/is-xo1YFFMo?si=PdSPbjdVzyXODmtg

Mike Duchek 10:21 AM  

Same, I failed this one because of that

Anonymous 10:24 AM  

I thought the KID clue was cute - what a kid who is napping might say.

pabloinnh 10:26 AM  

Agree with others that the themers were a little uneven and that the overall level was Monday-easy. However, ahem,

Today's puzzle wanted me to know an actress named someone Grace Moretz, a socialite named someone Sedgwick, a Baywatch actress, a Shark Tank personality, a celebrity chef, the receptionist from The Office, and a tidying method. These all filled in from crosses, but, come on.

Technical DNF as I never bothered to change BRIAR to BRIER, even though I know how to spell MADEIRA. Today's saving graces were PARADIDDLE and the return of very old friend ARARAT. Where ya been? Welcome back.

OK Sunday, LE and JK. Mostly a Low Energy solve here, Just Kept reading the clue and filling in the answer, except for many of the pop culture propers. Thanks for a medium amount of fun.

Alice Pollard 10:31 AM  

Totally agree w Rex regarding the theme, HOT and BOB jived... SOAP fell off the rails. Never heard of MUMBLE RAPPERS but I am sure I would hate it. Liked Bad lighting = ARSON; Washington or Berlin = IRVING I thought was brilliant. Nice to see SWIFT as Person of the Year, I had forgotten about that. For 118 A Breathers I had LU - - S so I put in LUngS... thought it was solid enough. when that corner was not working down-wise I saw the error and changed it to LULLS

EasyEd 10:45 AM  

Not so easy for me but struggled through. Long answers didn’t have the pizzaz or in-the-language feeling of other recent puzzles. In hindsight a fairly intricate feat of construction. Felt good tho when I finally recognized the Les Paul reference and entered the “R” in STRAT. The trading card clue reminded me of when my very young son sold a large boxful of baseball trading cards to some guy for a wad of cash. The guy thought he was taking candy from a naive kid—but the box had already been pruned of cards worth anything. Kudos to Rex for the detailed analysis, and to the folks who can do these puzzles in ten minutes!

Gary Jugert 10:46 AM  

Estás diciendo puras tonterías.

BONERS. Ugh.

People: 16
Places: 4
Products: 10
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 9
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 44 of 136 (32%)

Funny Factor: 7 🙂

Tee-Hee: TOOT ALL. NUDES. BLONDE ON BLONDE and the aforementioned BONERS. If you want to be published in the New York Times, here's the road map.

Uniclues:

1 Rumba with the dumba.
2 Weapon of choice for Grecian beauty after joining the turtles.
3 Deletes the lies robots tell about the single greatest living human.
4 Those who try to sing a poem while a kitten is standing on their face.

1 CUBA MASH WITH DOLTS (~)
2 HELEN OF TROY NINJA STAR
3 TRIMS SWIFT DEEP FAKES
4 TOE BEAN MUMBLE RAPPERS

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: MAGA cult member looking under bathroom stall doors to make sure they approve of who is in there. THRONE ROOM MOLE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

jae 10:52 AM  

Easy. Nothing really impeded the whoosh.

RIP USAID

Cute idea, liked it but @Rex makes some good points.

If anyone would liked some Sunday challenges with plenty of Naticks I would recommend giving the 1994 and 1995 puzzles from the archives a try. Be warned that solving these puzzle will adversely affect your average Sunday solving time and you may find yourself looking stuff up (see previous Naticks reference).

Anonymous 10:52 AM  

🙄

Tom T 10:53 AM  

I think the intent behind the really ineffective clue for 104A is that the "napper" is demanding that the "kid" KEEP IT DOWN. But it takes all sorts of twisting that pretzel to make any sense of it.

I entered BRIaR and didn't notice the MADaIRA misspelling until I didn't get the Happy Music. I returned to the puzzle and quickly located the oversight.

Often, standing on the last tee with golfing buddies in a tight match, someone will inevitably say, "Game's AFOOT." Funny that I haven't until now associated it with Shakespeare or Holmes.

Puzzle felt Medium and sloggish, but played Easy time-wise.

Colin 11:04 AM  

I liked this, thought the theme was reasonably well done but understand where Rex is coming from.

Appreciated especially the following:
- 39A: I had OREOS in there at first. Don't recall ORCA or ORCAS clued this way before.
- 98A: Of course, one thinks about moving about, not how switches can be in ONOFF positions.
- 45D: Another interesting clue! I'm wondering about butcher's cuts, or mowed grass...

As for the KON Mari Method, my wife and I (mainly my wife) are in the process of getting rid of "stuff". Lots of stuff that hasn't seen the light of day in eons. Unearthing some memories!

Anonymous 11:14 AM  

Alice—the word you want is jibed nit jived.

GAR 11:55 AM  

Once again, the puzzle was too easy. That said, there were several answers I had not heard of before and another several initial wrong answers that slowed me up. The answers I never heard of before include PARADIDDLE, MUMBLERAPPERS, and a couple of actress names. Another answer I don’t recall having seen before yesterday was LEVEL UP. This was in yesterday’s Stumper clued as “Hone one’s skills.” I don’t remember hearing this term in either context.

Initial wrong answers that also slowed me up were CO-OPs and ADIOS for COOKS and ADIEU (40 and 41 down); GLITZY for GARISH (85 down); AS CAN I for AS DID I (94 down) and RATE for WAGE hike (108 down). Finally, I ended with a technical DNF at the BRIER/MADEIRA crossing. I filled in BRIAR first from the B in Blonde. When I got to the across answer, I thought that Madeira had an E in it but let it go because I had never seen the BRIER variant spelling before. When I finished and didn’t get the Congratulations message, this

Anonymous 12:00 PM  

Very annoying puzzle with way too many names, propers, and trivia.

Rick B 12:00 PM  

Give or take at the ballpark may be referring to US Football where they flip a coin and the winner of the coin toss gets to choose whether they will get the ball to start or give it to opponent team.

Anonymous 12:03 PM  

Fifty years ago I shared a house and my 100+ vinyl collection with a couple college students who only wanted to listen to Dead and Dead adjacent LPs, of which I had dozens. A co-worker brought his cousin to visit, she pulled out several Rory Gallagher albums, we just celebrated our 49th anniversary! We took an Irish Tour in 2004, 30 years after his Irish Tour '74 live release, went to Cork, visited his grave. BTW, big SRV fans, seen them both, alas not Robin Trower.

tht 12:06 PM  

Alfie was indeed a stunningly pretty little kitty.

Anonymous 12:13 PM  

Morons
A$$e$
Grifters one and
All

Carola 12:26 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
The Flick Guy 12:43 PM  

As a drummer myself, I was surprised and impressed to see “paradiddle” as an answer since it’s not really a comment word. It’s a difficult pattern to master, and the most famous performance of this drum rudiment can be heard (and seen) throughout Buddy Holly’s “Peggy Sue”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrVlfGs5X64

Anonymous 12:45 PM  

The first "rock" double album. Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Cole Porter Songbook - a legendary classic - preceded Blonde on Blonde by 10 years, for example.

Anonymous 12:48 PM  

Where did he write this? do you have a citation?

Anonymous 12:49 PM  

If I didn’t want to keep my streak alive, I would have stopped halfway through. The nice thing about Monday puzzles is that their speed offsets their easiness. This felt like a Monday that just kept going.

Anonymous 12:54 PM  

Nene for mother’s child is bad Spanish. The word is either hijab (daughter) or niña (little girl). Nene is a term of affection that can be used by anyone.

Anonymous 12:55 PM  

shouldn't we not know where our kids are at either 10 ?

Carola 12:56 PM  

Carola
I thought it was a clever theme and enjoyed the range of difficulty in figuring out the answers - ranging from the easy HELEN and BLONDE to the hard-for-me ballpark figure (what baseball player had the initials GOT?) and big game (are we on safari?). I got a kick out of the napper's demand, as well as the fun to see and say MUMBLE RAPPERS and PARADIDDLE. And I love Alfie's TOE BEAN display!

Anonymous 12:57 PM  

USAid will rise again. As will sensible health policies and weather satellites. Soon, very soon.

old timer 1:30 PM  

I did not think this one was at all Easy, and finished it thinking it was a very good Sunday puzzle. What took some getting used to was the fact that the initialisms were not at all common. I'm sure some insiders did refer two the Dylan album as BOB, and the creepy movie as SOAP, but they were as initialisms unknown to me.

My big hangup was BRIER. I grew up reading Uncle Remus stories, and it's BRIaR,, darn it! No, no, not in the BRIaR Patch!

As for MOB, I remember the recent Internet era when Asian (mostly) women would travel to the US as tourists, with the intention of marrying some rich dude. who probably thought he was going to have both a bedmate and a slave to his every wish, and soon found out that as in every American house, the woman is likely to end up being his BOSS. But mail order brides were a big deal in the late 19rh Century. Thousands of Chinese men came to the USA to build the Pacific Railroad, and the few Chinese women who did were, as the old saying goes, no better than they should be. Same was true to some extent of the Japanese. So there was a brisk trade in young women who would enter into an arranged marriage, sometimes never meeting their husbands until they got off the ship, but quite often, whose future husband traveled back to China to marry in the presence of the parents of both parties, before the happy couple sailed back to the West Coast. No doubt in some cases second generation men took part in this, because they, being born in the USA, were automatic citizens under the 14th Amendment.

Anonymous 1:37 PM  

I’m here to talk about BONERS! TIL the “mistake” connotation is from baseball slang, circa 1912, and the… other connotation… is from “bone-on,” is 1893!
https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=boner

okanaganer 2:03 PM  

I really didn't care for this theme. Most everyone is calling this easy but I got fed up and clicked "Reveal complete solution". I can't go by the timer because I got distracted by something but forgot to turn it off... it says 76 minutes!

Hands up for BRIAR before BRIER. Most Canadians know the BRIER as a curling tournament. I can never remember which is which.

Several short Unknown Names: LORI ROCCO KON EDIE ERIN ERIKA. And I was briefly amused by the STENT GHENT TRENT area.

Re MAIL ORDER BRIDES... as @old timer mentions they often were legitimate non-human-slavery arrangements. My mom and dad both worked and they had 7 children (!) so they hired a full time housekeeper, an elderly Scottish lady who was more or less a mail order bride. She met her husband at the train station in Kamloops in about 1915 and took over running his ranch when he died. When she sold the ranch she went to work for our family for about 15 years. She lived to be 99!... remarkable lady.

Teedmn 2:21 PM  

Even with solving randomly and my occasional write-over, this did move very fast, 10 to 15 minutes faster than my usual Sunday solve. I do think BLONDE ON BLONDE works best and while the idea of MAIL ORDER BRIDES is gross, the clue and answer worked well. The worst, in my opinion, was TEXAS HOLD 'EM, not what I would consider "THE big game".

In Sync, then SITU. Mano a Mano before TETE a TETE. I suppose I should have known better due to the accent on the a.

Lance and John, this was an interesting theme, thanks!

Lewis 2:50 PM  

Congratulations to Erik Agard, winner of the 2026 American Crossword Puzzle Tournament!

Masked and Anonymous 3:02 PM  

Clever puztheme, with a slight dab of SOAPy snakes humor. Likable. Also, easy-ish, with the spelled-out themer clues.

Re: USAID ... Better BONERS clue = {Trump standard operating procedure}.

staff weeject picks [of only 10 choices]: AOL & OLA. cuz they represent the Anagrams Of Lao.

HOTSALSAS were evidently dances favored by Helen of Troy.
She had my fave themer clue, along with the TEXASHOLDEM one.
DEEPFAKES was a nice, long no-know, at our house. Liked ADIEU [M&A's forever Wordle word opener]. Also had fun figurin out the clues for COOKS & IMPEDE.

Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Enfinger & Kugelman dudes. Appreciate y'all spellin things out, for us.

Masked & Anonymo8Us

p.s.
Runt puzzle: The Sunday Addendum Puzzle [SAP]...
**gruntz**

M&A

Beezer 3:18 PM  

Good post @tht. I was pretty busy today, so I’ll just say “ditto.” :D

Beezer 3:20 PM  

Interesting (2)…Ive heard NENE as “Hawaiian goose.” ;)

Gary Jugert 3:24 PM  

@okanaganer 2:03 PM
I have a friend who is/was a mail order bride. She's beautiful, smart, funny, ambitious, and everything you'd expect from a woman willing to do literally anything to improve the life of her son. I can't use the same adjectives for the American she married, but somehow it's lasted.

Beezer 3:31 PM  

Good to hear from you @old timer! Interesting info!

Brian Tung 3:36 PM  

Fairly easy, finished in 42 percent of my current average (and falling), and a new Sunday record by about 10 percent.

Figuring out the theme (not hard from the puzzle title) made this rather easier than it would have been otherwise. I had HELEN OF TROY and its symmetry partner TEXAS HOLD EM (I always have it as HOLDEM, but whatever) before that, but otherwise, the initials were big-time crutches for the rest of them. Unlike Rex, I didn't find the slight misalignments on the clues to be a big downer.

Initial (!) errors: TRUMP for SWIFT (I ignored the year), SIT-INS for LIE-INS, KYRA for EDIE (I never remember which one is which), ERICA for ERIKA, AIMS for ENDS. All across clues since that's the way I tend to start, which is probably costing me some time.

Anonymous 3:46 PM  

Set a personal record for solving today’s puzzle… about 1/2 of my average time. I do make one mistake - had BRIAR/MADIARA (as Rex wrote about).

Anoa Bob 4:06 PM  

Almost quit several times during the solve when I would run into an unknown to me name or trivia that was critical to getting a much needed hint at a themer or longer entry. Each time I would MUMBLE a bad word NEATH my breath.

I stuck it out, though, partly to see if there was some unifying concept other than the seemingly arbitrary initials thingie. Middle initial only Os? Nope. Initials always three letters? Nope. Set of initials makes some seven word sentence or phrase? Nope. Some connection between the theme answers, HELEN OF TROY, GIVE OR TAKE, et alia? Apparently not.

So I went POC (plural of convenience) hunting. There's a bumper crop of that grid fill friendly, letter count boosting device. Several were of the two for one variety where a DOWN and an Across share a final S. 12D BONER hooking up with 36A LIE IN brought a LAUGH. Some longer entries needed POC help to fill their slots at MASTER CLASS, DEEP FAKE, HOT SALSA, MUMBLE RAPPER and EMOTER. Even one of the themers, MAIL ORDER BRIDE, came up short. Having to POCify a theme entry is substantial points off the puzzle's overall score in my book.

A long, long time ago I tried out for the schools ROTC marching drum and bugle corps. They had spiffier uniforms and didn't have to carry those heavy WWI Springfield rifles when marching around the city streets. I lied when I told them I played the drums (I didn't) and at the try out they asked me to demonstrate a PARADIDDLE. Much to my surprise I was able to do it so got accepted into the corps. I just now tried again with my index fingers on my PC desk top. Can I still do it? Hell yeah, like a BOSS!

Anonymous 4:14 PM  

In Oklahoma we use Osage for both plural and singular references. No “S!”

Anonymous 4:40 PM  

Got hung up on BRIER/MADEIRA. Couldn't even see it when I ran thru all my answers and ultimately had to hit "Check Puzzle", thus killing the solve. Still, one of the easiest (22 min), and dullest sunday ever.

Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 5:06 PM  

I suppose there is an alternate meaning of MASTER CLASS that says it is a dazzling display of skill. But I myself am hung up on the actual experience of them as part of classical music pedagogy. You work up your piece to play for the famous person, who turns out to be mean and vicious and dismissive/insulting; you get upset, you play terribly. Master says a few dumb things you've known for years, to accolades from everybody, then you play it again, so angry by this time that you forget to be scared and play it exactly the way you prepared it. And everybody congratulates the master for being a genius, because you improved so much in just a few minutes of little suggestions. Bah!

Oh, the puzzle. I thought I was making up MUMBLERAPPERS as it unfolded, but I was happy to see it. It's mostly mumbling as far as I can hear, except for the anglo-saxon expletives that come through pretty clearly.

Anonymous 6:23 PM  

Yup same here. Cost me a Sunday personal best

Beezer 6:27 PM  

Bob, you probably have a typo. When I get in that fix, I just do “check puzzle” and it shows the error. If you don’t care about having a “streak” it can be useful.

Gary Jugert 6:59 PM  

@Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 5:06 PM
😂 That's my experience of MASTER CLASSES as well. Yet another tool academics use to get students to quit. I do however think it's a niche use of the term. Outside of the demented world of classical music, master class is usually thought of as a dazzling display of excellence.

Gary Jugert 7:02 PM  

@tht9:24 AM
Wow. You're the first "certainly easy." Congrats!

-LY EASY Hall of Fame
absurdly, actually, boringly, certainly, childishly, definitely, despairingly, disappointingly, disconcertingly, embarrassingly, eventually, extremely, fairly, frifly (?@kitshef), insultingly, laughably, mind-numbingly, mostly, painfully, preposterously, probably, really, relatively, ridiculously, supercalifragilisticexpialidociously (!@egs of course), surprisingly, terribly, trivially, undeservedly, unfairly, and unusually.

Alice Pollard 7:11 PM  

Anonymous, and the word you want is "not", not "nit".

Anonymous 7:19 PM  

We are Mohawk
We are Blackfoot
We are Sioux
We are Osage
…. No S's please…….

Les S. More 8:12 PM  

@GFR. It doesn't only happen in music. When I was just out of high school (theatre dept.) and looking for acting jobs, I learned that certain directors had control issues, so I would feed them mistakes (an off tone, or even a flubbed line) to correct so they could feel powerful. Later, after giving up acting, I took a job at a newspaper. I was hired as an editorial artist but I occasionally got to write a piece for the features section. There was one editor who was never satisfied unless he could change something, so I would put in something that needed changing. Then, after some verbal abuse, I would rewrite it in its original form and everyone was happy. Big egos; aren't they great?

Amy 8:53 PM  

Loved MASTER CLASSES as clued. Great modern usage.

Anonymous 9:56 PM  

My memory accords with yours, Rex: It’s 10 o’clock, not 10 PM.

CDilly52 12:28 AM  

Well, we had Friday and Saturday with well constructed, engaging still on the very solvable to easy scale but among the best we’ve seen in quite a while. And then comes Sunday.

Honestly, and as many of you know, I give big fat, goofy Sunday grids an extra helping of the benefit of the doubt, and today I did. I even had some extra quiet time to give this my almost full attention as I sat with my sweet, funny, gorgeous granddaughter in the hospital and watched her get some much needed sleep as the IV meds worked to kill the pneumonia. Yep, we thought we dodged the bullet, but no, ended up back at the ER in the wee hours.

As for the puzzle, the theme refused to hold together beyond the obvious “Oh, the initials give away the beginning of the three words in the answer.” I really wanted this to work as I have enjoyed our contructors’ previous individual works and the collaborative byline excited me. So, it’s done and when Grace came briefly out of her stupor, she croaked out “Hi Grandma did you do your puzzle?” I assured her that both she and the 500+ streak were both fine just as the respiratory therapist came in to do the chest and back percussion- which she hates. I told her that her mom hated it too, but it’s just another thing that will help. I got a very weak wye roll which told me that she was better than yesterday.

What a weekend.

Anonymous 6:54 PM  

I have read that the title Blonde on Blonde is precisely an allusion to "Bob" (and "Brecht on Brecht")

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