Friday, April 24, 2026

Half of hip-hop's Run the Jewels, alongside Killer Mike / FRI 4-24-26 / Children's author Kinney / Acrobat's display / Tubes that go down? / Best-selling author who founded Paris's Théâtre Historique / Hearty soup ingredient in Caribbean cooking / Electronica instruments, informally / Grand Duke of Luxembourg until 2025

Constructor: Andrew Spooner

Relative difficulty: Easy to Easy-Medium (depending on how familiar you are with all the names...)

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: EL-P (11D: Half of hip-hop's Run the Jewels, alongside Killer Mike) —
Run the Jewels
, also known by the initials RTJ, is an American hip-hop superduo, composed of Brooklyn-based rapper and producer El-P and Atlanta-based rapper Killer Mike. They released their critically acclaimed debut album Run the Jewels as a free download in 2013 and have since released the follow-up albums Run the Jewels 2 (2014), Run the Jewels 3 (2016), and RTJ4 (2020), all of which have been released for free and received critical acclaim. (wikipedia) // Jaime Stuart Meline (born March 2, 1975), better known by the stage name El-P (shortened from his previous stage name El Producto), is an American rapper, songwriter, and record producer. He began his career as a member of the widely acclaimed Company Flow, and has been a driving force in alternative hip-hop since the 1990s. He is now most widely-known as one half of Run the Jewels. He has produced for rappers including Aesop Rock, Cage, and Mr. Lif. He was a member of The Weathermen and was the co-founder, owner, and CEO of the Definitive Jux record label. // He has released four solo studio albums, two albums with Company Flow, and four albums with Run the Jewels. (wikipedia) 
• • •

Not enough marquee power in this one. I don't really understand which of these longer answers you'd want to build a grid around. A good Friday / Saturday grid will have at least a half a dozen longer answers that sizzle and pop, that seem fresh, that give the answer real life. Today ... this was like drinking flat soda (I don't really drink soda anymore, but I remember ... actually, I did have a Dr. Brown's Cream Soda after a long day of walking around a very hot Manhattan last week and that thing tasted Perfect—not flat at all). The one answer with real juice today was THE LAST STRAW. That's an answer that will stand up and fight for your honor. Where have all the good answers gone and where are all the gods? Where's the streetwise Hercules to fight the rising odds!? THE LAST STRAW says "here I am!" The rest of these answers? Not really heroes. They don't seem inadequate, they just don't have any star quality. DO NOT DISTURB. DESERT ISLAND. OK, yes, those are solid. But BUSINESSLIKE. That is ... BUSINESSLIKE (loosen up, baby!). And after those four, most of what you got are banks of 8s, and while, again, most of these are up to the task of filling white space without making me want to throw things, almost none of them are making me go, "ooh, nice." I think both the NW and the SW corners are admirably clean, that is what I'll say. This grid has a few things I really like, like a film noir icon (BOGART) and a truly great novel (Anna KARENINA), and, I mean, how doesn't like hand-holding OTTERs? But this is a Friday NYTXW! The bar is high, and this puzzle just doesn't seem to be trying hard enough to clear it.


Lotta names today. Four in the SE alone! (five if you count JENNY, which you probably shouldn't, since that's not how it's clued, but still...). The puzzle felt a little overly enamored of names, though outside of Name Corner you really only have BOGART and ENO and DUMAS ... and EL-P! I laughed so hard at the clue for EL-P, just imagining a huge subsection of my readers going "'ELP! I don't know who this is!" What I really laughed at was the idea that adding "alongside Killer Mike" was going to clarify things for people. Please understand: I own a Run the Jewels LP (EL-P!) and *I* couldn't remember this guy's name today. When I think of all the "rap name" haters out there among the solvers ... I gotta thank this clue and answer for giving me a laugh. I don't think EL-P is unworthy of being in the crossword, but I guarantee you that for the majority of solvers, he's going to be the most obscure thing in the grid (though for me, JEFF and HENRI were more obscure (the idea that I know what any Grand Duke of Luxembourg is called, LOL)). I can't really believe EL-P made it into the grid before OZU, one of the greatest directors in cinematic history. How are all these other three-letter people getting into the grid before OZU? Hang on ... Huh. Wow. OK, turns out EL-P has been in the grid before! Five years ago! And on a Wednesday!!?!? What a day that must have been. What the hell did I say then? Ha, basically, I said everything I just said, only better:
I have to say something about EL-P today, and that is: LOL, wow. I mean ... I own two RTJ albums and *I* couldn't quite remember EL-P's name. I've been doing NYT crosswords for a while, and let me tell you, RUN THE JEWELS is better known than EL-P and the initialism RTJ is better known than EL-P and KILLER MIKE, the other half of RTJ, is way way better known than EL-P, so it is ultra-bizarre that the first thing to enter the NYTXW from the RTJ Universe is somehow EL-P. He's the far lesser known, and white, half of RTJ, yet he's the first to get into the grid. I feel like that's a metaphor for ... something. More power to him, though. I have nothing against him at all. But when I say "LOL" I mean I don't think I've seen a name that is going to be less familiar to the overall NYTXW solving base than EL-P. It's going to look like a mistake to most people. They're just gonna stare and shrug and cross their fingers.
ELP has appeared a few other times in NYTXW history, in different contexts—though both contexts are musical. ELP is the abbr. for the prog rock band Emerson, Lake & Palmer, who were apparently a big deal when I was a baby, but I can't name anything they did. Oh, wait, "Lucky Man"? Was that them? Yes! (Not Yes, the other prog rock band, Yes the affirmative exclamation!). "Lucky Man" was ELP's highest-charting song in the U.S. at No. 48. The other way ELP has been clued is via the musical My Fair Lady, as the supposed way that Eliza Doolittle would say "help." "''ELP me, 'enry 'iggins, you're my only 'ope!" (in French, it's 'ENRI 'iggins, of course).


Bullets:
  • 20A: Charges (BILLS) — all the crossword's difficulty today came from ambiguous clues on short answers ... or else from the "?" clues on the longer answers. It took me many crosses to see BILLS, and a couple crosses to get CASH (24A: "Green"), and I screwed up and wrote in HEM before FIT (21A: Concern for a seamstress), and couldn't come up with DUMAS's name despite having the "D" and knowing the name was going to be French (I think of DUMAS as a novelist, not a theater person) (23A: Best-selling author who founded Paris's Théâtre Historique). 
  • 3D: Tubes that go down? (RIGATONI) — they "go down" in that you eat them. True of most food, I'd imagine. Not my favorite clue.
  • 18A: Low volume? (TEASPOON) — because the volume of liquid in a teaspoon is "low" (compared to other standard measurement units). Kinda weak. These "?" clues are not landing the way they oughta. 
  • 31A: "The best cheese of its type in the world," per George Orwell (STILTON) — what is "its type?" Semi-soft cheese? English cheese? Blue cheese? Just say it's the best cheese, George. You're usually so good with words.
  • 16A: Field for both Martin Luther and Martin Luther King Jr. (THEOLOGY) — "Martin Luther" made me think of this amazing Tweet I saw yesterday (as well as the replies) ...

  • 1A: Once-in-a-lifetime events (BIRTHS) — got this right away (though I waited til crosses confirmed it before I wrote it in). This clue is clever precisely because it's misdirective without having to resort to a "?" It's true, you're only born once. Of course, a woman might give birth multiple times in her lifetime ... but the clue is talking about being born, not giving birth. 
  • 35D: Acrobat's display (PDF FILES) — ooh, I liked this clue too. This one got me. I definitely wanted something like AGILITY. I had the "D" (from DESERT ISLAND) but when I tried to get the crosses on either side of it—chaos. "This has to be SNEAK UP, but nothing starts 'PD-' Let me try the cross on the other side ... well that's RAF, but ... '-DF'? WTF is going on!?" D'oh!
  • 39D: Hearty soup ingredient in Caribbean cooking (OXTAIL) — also a hearty ingredient in this grid. Part of that very nice SW corner. Was able to get this fairly easily from the "X" in AXON
  • 47D: Where the Red Delicious apple originated (IOWA) — oh good, now I know who to blame. I call this mealy thing the "garbage apple," in that it tastes like garbage and I want to throw it in the garbage.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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85 comments:


  1. Medium-Challenging for me, mostly due to a wrong answer at 30D that tied me in knots. Liked it.
    * * * * _

    Overwrites:
    My 4D Terrible ones were ivAnS before they were TSARS.
    @Rex hem before FIT at 21A.
    UNIte before UNIFY for "coalesce" at 30D. I stuck with it far too long and it made SERFS (41A) and ESSAY (44A) hard to see.
    creep UP before SNEAK for the sudden approach at 32A.

    WOEs:
    I joined the "huge subsection" with Hip-hopper EL-P at 11D
    Children's author JEFF Kinney at 45A
    Grand Duke HENRI at 48A

    I resisted FAV for "number one" at 50D because I've always seen it spelled with an e at the end. I was thinking maybe lAV, referring to the "number one" you do there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi there @Conrad. Thanks for highlighting every single mistake I made - saves time. So, all of those, plus.

      I thankfully got ELP at 11D through the crosses in the single true (albeit small) whooshy area of my solve with ATHLETES, THEOLOGY, and TEASPOON. In looking for a typo post-solve, I came across ELP, and my 70+ yeAr old brain went looking for the clue thinking “WTF is Emerson Lake &Palmer doing in a puzzle with so much newer stuff?” Oh, it’s EL-P. I will forget that for sire next time. I found this a fairly worthy Friday. At least more challenging than recent Fridays for sure.

      Delete
  2. 22 minutes for me Thursday night…. so that's medium-challenging I think. The key to that middle section was finally seeing “THELASTSTRAW” emerge from some decent crosses. UNIte before UNIFY made it take me a LONG time to see SERFS and ESSAY… OASES was a gimme and, with DUMAS, helped me get into that NE corner, which was the last area to fall (but not the hardest). I think the hardest section was the SW…. had ohio before IOWA, pee before FAV (I guess that doesn’t pass the breakfast test, huh???). AXON was easy for me, so that helped me get TOFFEE which led to DOTER, DAWDLE, and OXTAILs…. The other hard part was the unholy trio in the SE of JEFF, VINNIE, and HENRI. Finally, KARENINA brought them together to make up. This was a perfect Friday—the DESERTISLAND with some OASES and a DONOTDISTURB sign up seems like where I want to be!!! I'm definitely giving this ****. And after reading @REX, I think his write up sounds like at least 3, not sure why he' only gave it 2.5. And no star wars, right???? Thanks, Andrew, that was awesome!!!! : )

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  3. Anonymous6:54 AM

    I really liked the cluing on this one. At times it slowed me down a bit, in an enjoyable way. The solve gave me a good challenge as it came together. Anyway, above average puzzle for me

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  4. Highly efficient grid layout with its lack of black squares. Started off at Stumper level and slowly mellowed once the cluing voice fell. Tend to agree with the big guy - there’s a few decent entries but just not enough. Liked DESERT ISLAND in the center and SNEAK UP.

    Poor JENNY

    Lots of trivia - mostly clean enough. DAFFODIL is cute with the bulb misdirect and we also get @pablo’s OTTER. Took me a minute to remember Barbarino. BUSINESSLIKE, PDF FILES, RESALES and others were flat and could have been edited better.

    But, darling, be home soon
    I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you DAWDLEd


    Decent puzzle - workmanlike Friday morning solve.

    Tarkus

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Joe Pop8:45 AM

      Sun Volt seems to come up with pop/rock music references that tend to be on my wavelength. Like today’s John Sebastian notation. Another good one!

      Delete
  5. Stan Marsh7:31 AM

    WTF, OP! You don’t like the puzzle?! (Rotflmao)

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  6. Anonymous7:35 AM

    Blocked myself for a bit thinking I’d seen through it and put in PEE for “Number one, informally”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Joe Pop12:48 PM

      So did I

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:04 PM

      I did as well and it messed me up

      Delete
    3. @Anon 7:35AM, Hand up for the “pee” misdirect, especially since I’d already raised an eyebrow at WTF (yeah, I know it’s been around in the NYTXW for about 5 years, but I’m old and it still seems just a tad beyond the pale) and thought, “ok, we’re getting super-colloquial today.” Joke’s on me.

      Delete
  7. Had DEATHS before BIRTHS, maybe because my kid has been watching Addams Family films recently?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, birth usually comes first. People are complaining about a rising death rate with RFK Jr in charge, but it's still one to a customer.

      Delete
  8. Oh. Man. I loved this. Wit, humor, grit, and beauty housed in an elegant grid design. Stellar.

    Let me flesh this out with an example. The puzzle has six NYT answer debuts, four of which are so lovely – DESERT ISLAND, DO NOT DISTURB, BUSINESSLIKE, and THE LAST STRAW. So, there’s beauty.

    Three are given excellent wordplay clues – [Where someone might be washed up?], [Peace sign?], and [You just can’t take it]. There’s wit and humor.

    The fourth, BUSINESSLIKE, is clued toughly, with the could-be-a-noun-or-verb [Professional]. There’s grit.

    As for skill? Each of these four answers crosses two of the others. What? Really? Wow!

    Andrew, I was over the moon over your last puzzle, a NYT debut, and called your voice promising. Your creation today fulfilled that promise, and more please. High props and much gratitude for this!

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    Replies
    1. I have to add that I adored [Accounted for] for HERE, [It has a light bulb] for DAFFODIL, and the superbly vague [Game] for UNAFRAID.

      Delete
  9. Rex, if you listened to rock radio growing up, along with Lucky Man, you might recognize Karn Eval 9 ("Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends ...") and From the Beginning.

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    Replies
    1. ChrisS2:14 PM

      Liked the puzzle liked Rex's writeup as well. In high school I was a big ELP fan, now I'm an El-P & RTJ fan (listening as I type).
      There is a song by Pavement called Stereo that has the following lyric
      "What about the voice of Geddy Lee
      How did it get so high?
      I wonder if he speaks like an ordinary guy?
      (I know him and he does!)"

      Delete
  10. I never really thought of this before, but today it stood out. Rex is looking for grid entries that are good in themselves--interesting words or phrases; as for me,, I'm much more impressed by the quality of the clues, and this one had some doozies. Just to give one example, DO NOT DISTURB clued as a peace sign was wonderful.

    I wanted BIRTHS right off, but it could have been deaTHS, so I looked at 1-D, questioned briefly whether BOBSLEDS was a real term (maybe they just say sleds?), but went with it. That was fun.

    Small question about HENRI. Isn't the convention to give English versions of foreign names? But maybe not, and maybe the clue should be a tip-off that it's French.

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    Replies
    1. I agree with this. TBF to Rex, I think the crossword blogging community as a whole has a bit of a tendency to put too much focus on entries relative to clues.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous5:02 PM

      Sliding is the Olympics category for bobsled, luge, and skeleton.

      Delete
  11. In the category of “throwing in the towel when you couldn’t think of a decent clue”, I nominate (1) “Charges”, for BILLS, and (2) a truly atrocious “Low volume?” for TEASPOON (which should win going away today in my opinion).

    I found the grid a little too segmented today for my taste. I finished the NW with relative ease for example, and then felt like I was starting a new puzzle somewhere else.

    Rex pointed out the (over) reliance on proper names, although that’s not at all surprising anymore. Not a fan of continuing the downhill slide in standards with the presence of WTF today. I suppose DTF will be coming soon as well to a grid near you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:46 AM

      How about "Clinton and Cullen" for BILLS. Too obscure?

      Delete
  12. Anonymous7:44 AM

    Still trying to wrap my head around DAFFODIL as a light bulb. I get it's a bulb flower, but not seeing a connection with light. Do they not weigh very much compared to other bulbs?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Exactly. On average, the typical daffodil bulb weighs 0.85 oz less than most other bulbs. If you buy your bulbs by the pound, the savings add up.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:59 AM

      Think color

      Delete
    3. DAVinHOP11:02 AM

      Light colored maybe? Or the bulb itself is light?? We had DAF and so DAFFODIL seemed obvious. Another clue that didn't stick the landing.

      And FAV? Isn't it Fave?? Mthinks it's short an e.

      Delete
    4. @Anon 7:44. Yes! That one bugged me, too. Trying to be clever without really knowing what you're talking about, perhaps? I called my wife over and asked her, "Is there anything particularly light about daffodil bulbs?" And she, a veteran mad gardener who communes with many other mad planters asked, "As in weight?" "Could be colour; this is a crossword clue." Her response: "Um, can't think of anything notable about their weight or colour. They're just bulbs."

      Delete
    5. I agree that this is a "trying too hard" kind of clue that misses badly. A daffodil has a bright blossom, but its bulb is not particularly "light" either in weight or color.

      Delete
  13. Hey All !
    Not easy over here. This puz put up quite the fight. 38 minutes, which lately, is a tough puz. Stops and starts all over the grid. Had to cheat a couple times to complete

    SE corner did me in. Didn't know JEFF, had giNNY for JENNY, DENIes for DENIAL, and wouldn't have gotten PDF FILES if I stared at the puz for 8 hours. Yikes.

    Properly tough FriPuz for me. The NYT stepping up their game.

    Hope y'all have a great Friday!

    Eight F's - That's what I'm talkin' 'bout
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous8:01 AM

    WTF is going on with you, NY Times? Tsk Tsk.Seriously, an enjoyable and fun puzzle to solve.🎈🎈🎊🎊

    ReplyDelete
  15. Anonymous8:19 AM

    Rex if you’re not familiar with “The Applist” you should be. He shares your sardonic tone AND your opinion on the despicable Red Delicious!

    https://applerankings.com/red-delicious-apple-review/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That was a funny review, but I saw that they had the Stayman Winesap as equally bad, which called into question the entire website - every single comment shared my opinion of it as a pinnacle of appledom!

      Delete
    2. @anonymous 8:19 am, that site doesn't even mention my favorite, Spartan!

      Delete
    3. ChrisS2:19 PM

      Agree completely non-deliciousness of the red delicious, it is however red. I love apples but will never eat a red delicious, so many better ones courtland, empire, Macintosh, honey crisp, spy,....

      Delete
    4. Anonymous9:02 PM

      Read the clue, immediately wrote in HELL

      Delete
  16. Solid Friday that had some pushback and rewarding clues, no gunk, deserves better.
    I've had some NY State small farm REDDELICIOUS apples that lived up to their name. Not sure what happened to them on their way to school cafeterias to be the worst apple.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've had tree-ripened Red Delicious apples that are, in fact, quite delicious! But it's very hard to find those. Most are picked unripe and refrigerated before they are shipped, which turns them bland and mealy.

      Delete
    2. I have a small orchard of apples and pears - about a dozen trees, if I remember correctly. But I do remember that there is one Red Delicious planted at the western end of row #1. It looks nothing like the picture perfect, glossy, apple-on-the-teacher's-desk thing we think of when we say Red Delicious. Not prolific, but tasty. My son chose to plant it there because he has fond memories of those highly polished, very photogenic apples from his childhood. Quite a difference between ours and the supermarket's.

      Delete
  17. Anonymous8:45 AM

    i get reddelicious apples at local farmer's markets (sf bay area) that are delicious. reddelicious is also the "parent" of many other varieties. apples are fascinating.
    as for the puzzle, i didn't know most of the names so it was a slog

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:56 PM

      Bingo. Red Delicious varieties grown to be eaten in season from local trees are wonderful, nothing like the tough-skinned, mushy pretenders sold under their name in grocery stores.

      Delete
  18. Glen Laker8:59 AM

    Liked it. Had __M_S at 23A, and confidently plopped down CAMUS. That took me a while to unwind

    ReplyDelete
  19. meredith9:05 AM

    I read the Orwell quote as if a parent with only only child says they are my best child

    ReplyDelete
  20. DAVinHOP9:11 AM

    Puzzle 2-1/2 stars; write-up 4-1/2 stars. Rex put the fun in his comments that the puzzle (mostly) lacked, even though it was almost exclusively about EL-P. He had me when I read in the WOTD that EL-P (never heard of him) was short for El Producto, which was (still is?) a cigar brand.

    Didn't mind the clue for RIGATONI as much as he did. Surprising if that clue has never been used for the more crossword-friendly pasta, Ziti.

    According to Facebook, it's Rev. Jordan Wells (never heard of him either) of Jordan Wells Ministries, "as seen on Fox, Dr. Phil...and (something called) Glory TV". Enough said.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I buy all of my light bulbs at BOBSLEDS. Bob is a great guy who really outshines his competitors.

    I recently saw a creepy KARENINA social media post, acting like the universe turned around her. One day visiting the Théâtre Historique in Paris, the next day jetting to Cairo to swim in DENIAL.

    Horrified realization by the last of the TSARS: SERFS up!

    Teacher: Class, I would like each of you to write an essay on how to spell "say".
    Johnny: ESSAY? Why?

    The middle-of-the-night time stamps on the Orange Moron's posts is proof that he'll often LIEAWAKE at night, exactly as he lies in the day. Which reminds me, now that we've won the Iranwar, are we tired of winning yet?

    I liked this a lot because of the cluing. As @Lewis points out, there are a goodly number of gems. Keep it up and solvers will be referring to them as Spoonerisms. Thanks, Andrew Spooner.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous9:37 AM

    11 minutes for me. this is a good example of a puzzle where the grid, viewed as a completed solve, indeed suffers from a lack of sparkly long answers... but where the SOLVING EXPERIENCE, the union of clues and answers, the moment of filling in the answers, was very enjoyable and was exactly what i am looking for.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Andy Freude12:38 PM

      Same here. Very whoosh-whoosh till I got to the SE, then a solid minute of staring at those clues for UNAFRAID and PDFFILES. Then the light bulb came on. Love that moment.

      Delete
  23. The MLK / Martin Luther clue made me remember how amused I was when I was grading a rhetorical analysis in which the student consistently referred to the author of the “I Have a Dream” speech as “Luther.”

    ReplyDelete
  24. I found this to be a good Friday workout, yet not so difficult that I didn’t enjoy it. RP mentioned the names but thankfully they were not too plentiful. Only ones that gave me much trouble were JEFF and HENRI in the SE where I also struggled with those three longer downs. Although I “knew” Anna K, it just didn’t jump out at me without anything else filled in.

    The stars of this puzzle were the clues. Most of them above average but some of my favorites I circled were: IN LAW, DAFFODIL, TSARS (where I tried IVANS), DO NOT DISTURB and saving the best for last – PDF FILES with that clever “Acrobat” misdirect. I had to sweat a little but had some fun in the process. Nice going, Andrew and thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous10:08 AM

    I had “pee” for 50D. Oops!

    ReplyDelete
  26. EL-P???
    No spark on a Friday - Robyn where are you????

    ReplyDelete
  27. Ah, the acrobatics I went through to fill in the SE with some sort of trapeze or tumbling feat, all the while trying to come up with something other than UP at the end of 32A so it meshed with ISLAND. Was it HENRi or HENRY? What 3-letter organization starts with R? So many questions that were finally answered by UNAFRAID.

    This Friday puzzle gave me much more trouble than Fridays have in weeks, which is a good thing.

    In the NW, I threw in ivAnS and thought, "I didn't think Ivan the 1st was the terrible one, hmm." And he wasn't, it was IVAN IV.

    Thanks, Andrew Spooner, for a toothy Friday puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  28. This played like a challenging Saturday for me. The SE corner was the real standout. Between the unknown author on top of the unknown royal combined with my OREAD/DRYAD write over I really had my work cut out for me. The Travolta characters name was slow coming back to me but once it came the last name came right along with it. The computer related meaning for "Acrobat" in the 35D clue is reminiscent of the other day's use of "Tahoe."

    It galls me to see DADOS in the puzzle when the SB from the same games section excludes it. Speaking of the SB solving this puzzle on my phone last night gave me a chance to clear my head and get the final word for the QB.

    Todays cluing really stood out for me. Realizing DONOTDISTURB was the answer for " Peace sign?" was one of the highlights.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous10:36 AM

    Hardest puzzle in ages for me

    ReplyDelete
  30. EasyEd10:39 AM

    DAFFODIL bulbs are light? Not exactly their defining characteristic but could be because they are not black…strengths are they naturalize easily and repel animals…Got BOGART and DUMAS quickly but ELP, HENRI, JEFF and VINNIE were mysteries. Generational thing? Lots of good clues—thought Acrobat-PDF combo was great. OXTAIL resolved the question of LIEAWAKE vs LayAWAKE. Despite being blocked by names, thought this was a challenging puzzle with little crosswordese.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Anonymous10:47 AM

    El-P is a huge figure in the history of underground/backpack hip hop. From one of the founding members of Company Flow in the early 90s, to the founder of Def Jux Records in the late 90s, to Run the Jewels more recently, he's a name I would guess most people with anything more than a passing interest in the history of hip hop, and especially NYC hip hop, should know.

    Great rapper, even better producer. Highly recommend listening to his season of What Had Happened Was for more. The guy is a legitimate legend in his field.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:12 PM

      Maybe so, but his field is not of any interest to most of us.

      Delete
  32. Medium-difficult for me and very enjoyable. After only a blank stare at the first two rows of Acrosses, I was very happy to see BOGART, which suggested BOBSLEDS and BIRTHS - enough to get me started down the left side and then counterclockwise to end with SYNTHS and CASH, with plenty of moments of Friday-worthy puzzlement along the way.
    Do-over: ivanS (hi, @Conrad). No idea: ELP. Fun to write in : DAWDLE, TOFFEE, THE LAST STRAW, DAFFODIL.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Medium with the top half easier than the bottom.

    WOEs - HENRI, SET, ELP, IOWA, and JEFF

    Costly erasures - DOnER nOugat before DOTER TOFFEE and DESERTed isle before ISLAND.

    No junk grid, a fair amount of crunch, and wee bit of sparkle, liked it.

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  34. Excellently made FriPuz themeless rodeo. Did go slightly name-crazy in the SE, I'd grant. But VINNIE & KARENINA were gimmes, tho.

    staff weeject pick [of only 8 choices]: WTF.

    fave stuff: THELASTSTRAW. DONOTDISTURB. IHOPENOT. RIGATONI & its clue. The rightmost puzgrid column of SYNTHS & PDFFILES. Lotsa consonants in that there column -- often makes the grid-fill task trickier for the constructioneer.

    Always hard for m&e to figure out the seed entries for a themeless puzgrid. Today is no exception. I notice that @RP was also questionin that.
    Of course, lookin back on @RP's own [also excellent] FriPuzgrid from 21 Jun 2013, the seed entries are more obvious: TABLECLOTH. MIRACLEGRO. SENEGALESE. SNEAKAPEEK. har
    But, I digress ...

    Congratz to @Roo, on his gettin to enjoy this 8-F Ffffffffriday ffffffffare!

    Thanx for the themeless fun, Mr. Spooner dude. Real nice job.

    Masked & Anonymo3Us

    p.s.
    runt puzzle:
    **gruntz**

    M&A

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  35. Niallhost11:34 AM

    Enjoyed this for a Friday. Challenging but flowy - never got hung up too badly. Had hem before RIP, and caMuS before DUMAS, givER before DOTER, UNIte before UNIFY (which is where I ended wondering if ESSAe and SERtS were words). Thought OTTER might be lemuR for a hot second. Was surprised (and frankly delighted) to see WTF in the grid. 17:36

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  36. Defeated by DADOS/STILTON. Never heard of either. Obviously, George Orwell was a bettter man than I, because he truly had a friend in cheeses.

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  37. Orwell was talking about English cheeses. That's the type.

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    1. I assumed he was talking about blue cheese. I love blue cheese and I admire George Orwell but, Georgie pal, you’ve got this one wrong. #1, Roquefort, particularly Societe or Papillon. #2, Gorgonzola Picante. In the number 3 slot, Saint Agur, an upstart (1980s?) French creation that is creamy and piquant and then Stilton, which is drier and a bit stodgier (very English) at #4. Your mileage may vary.

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    2. ChrisS2:28 PM

      To me, blue cheeses seemed to be the category. As stereotypical upper class Brit of that era consumed port and blue cheese after dinner

      Delete
  38. The otter clue warmed my heart because it reminded me of my cat Jasper, a ragdoll who is no longer with us but when he was, he slept between my wife and I. I sleep on my side with my arm perpendicular to my chest, palm up, and Jasper would place his paw on my palm, and sleep with it there all night. OMG that always felt so good. Miss you, big boy.

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  39. One of those hard-to-get started puzzles but whooshy once I got going, which was with SYNTHS, of all things. This led to some nice toeholds and a fairly smooth clockwise solve and seeing how my original BOGART was going to work.

    Props to self for remembering JENNY which led to DRYADS, old friend who has been MIA for a while and JEFF, a total no-know, how do you do? Nice to meet your friend HENRI as well. As for ELP , or EL-P , I hope you're riffing on long-playing records. Also, that may be the most mysterious clue for SET ever.

    I knew @Roo would be happy as it looked like this puzz had been F-bombed. And I 'm happy too, because OTTER. Holding paws is OK but the goofy stuff they do appeals to me more.

    Oh, and here we have DADOS, the singular of which is still not accepted by SB, no matter how many times I try. You puzzle guys should talk to each other.

    I liked your Friday just fine, AS. A Smattering of clues that needed deciphering and just enough crunch. Thanks for all the fun.

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  40. Anonymous12:04 PM

    Rex, loved your apple take. Mwhwah quotable!

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  41. Anonymous12:08 PM

    My big takeaway: sometime in the past five years, Rex either deliberately got rid of a Run the Jewels album, or lost it, or had it stolen (he owned "two" five years ago, but only "a[n]" album today)!

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  42. This was hard for me but they're all hard for me, so ... But one thing: "HERE" is not not not a synonym for "accounted for." When you take a roll call, someone can be present OR they can be, authorized to be not-there-but-you-know-where-they-are. That's "accounted for." If everybody is "present and/or accounted for," you're all set. If not, get the hound dogs and search party. Why in the world would you need to be both "presented" and also "accounted for"? What would the account be? "They told me to be here and here I am?" Some account. A better clue might have been "answer to a roll call" or something like that

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    Replies
    1. GPO
      FWIW
      Clues and answers are not required to be synonymous. That is why they are called clues. Crosswords are not dictionaries but puzzles, after all. HERE is a fine and tricky answer.

      Delete
  43. Anonymous1:06 PM

    Why in the world would a Protestant care what the pope says? They’ve rejected the one true faith already.
    And be assured that Leo does not give a fig what Jordan Wells thinks.

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    1. Anonymous 1:06 PM
      I do respect the Pope and know nothing of the quoted “reverend “ But said reverend sounds like one of those highly politicized Evangelicals.who have left religion behind. But you should remember VP Vance, who became a Catholic some 7 years ago also harshly criticized the Pope. Many conservative Catholics like him are highly politicized just like the Evangelicals.

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  44. I thought this was just fine for a Friday. All those 8s plus four 12s were just fine with me. But as Rex mentioned, that lower right corner was an awful slog of names, and yes I'm counting JENNY as one even though they tried to clue it as a regular word. (I wanted NINNY from the clue.) And I could even count RAF as a name, although I did actually know it from the clue which I recall as "Per ardua ad astra".

    Several typeovers: IVANS before TSARS, DONOR before DOTER, PEE before FAV ("Number one"!).

    And as @puzzlehoarder mentioned, it's annoying when the crossword uses a word that Spelling Bee says is not a word or not common enough to be accepted: DADO.

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  45. I enjoyed this fine Friday offering. Put up enough resistance to hit the sweet spot for me. I agree with others that a lot of the clues were first class but I never know who to give credit (or blame) for clues. I know that as a rule many are from editors.

    I'm an amateur woodworker and have a set of saw blades that will cut grooves of various width and depth so I knew 23D DADOS. That was key in opening up several crosses in that area.

    When I was still in the chalk and talk BUSINESS, Biopsychology was one of my favorite courses to teach so I knew the four letter 43A "Neural transmitter" would be AXON. A more accurate clue would be "Neural impulse transmitter" to distinguish it from "Neurotransmitter" which is a chemical that helps create the neural impulse. (A mnemonic for neurotransmission is "An impulse goes out on the AXON and in on the denrite". You're welcome.)

    I guess it's ironic that my DADO saw blade set I mentioned above is from the Freud Tool company. I cringe whenever I see or hear anything Freudian presented as if it's still accepted in contemporary psychiatry or psychology. It isn't. Does that make me anal? [Insert winking emoji.]

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  46. Anonymous2:18 PM

    Despite having played synths for a short moment 50 years ago in a band…ENO was never considered a “rocker.” He is and always was, a musician and sound theorist.. And uncategorizable, as our most interesting artists often are.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:18 PM

      This! (And maybe More Than This😜)

      Delete
  47. A fine Friday for me. Whole bunch of stuff I had no idea bout, a bunch of stuff I could argue about, and a handful of gimmes.

    Toughest section for me was the SE corner because I had no idea about the RAF motto or who that JEFF guy was. But I could infer HENRI because Luxembourg is pretty close to France and I had HEIR and JENNY and the unforgettable Anna KARENINA in place.

    Thank you, @jazzmanchgo, for the “friend in cheeses” quip. You beat me to it. I am a friend of cheeses. People will come to my place for lunch and I will put out a charcuterie board with various cheeses and someone will invariably ask “what is this lovely stuff?” And I will answer that I know a cheesemaker about an hour away, on the other side of the river, who studied in France and learned to make Chaourse, among other delightful cheeses. She can’t call her cheese Chaourse because of various naming laws, but it’s Chaourse. Brie on steroids. Then I bring out my cheese books - yes I have cheese books - and bore the hell out of everybody at the table .

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  48. Anonymous3:51 PM

    This puzzle was absurdly challenging and went way overboard with the names. Finished without cheats, but it was not fun.

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  49. Anonymous3:51 PM

    Ugh, that bottom right corner. Gross. Nowhere to get a foothold, and PDF file was not help!

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  50. Anonymous4:00 PM

    Wow this was hard for me but full of lovely little trick clues. I loved it when I finally finished it without having to look up names like ELP HENRI JEFF VINNIE or DRYADS. Thanks so much, Andrew!
    TIL the murderer of Osiris, and remembered DADO. OTTERs are my favorite, so playful, like this puzzle.

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  51. I enjoyed this! Clever clues that puzzled but led to aha moments, fun entries like BOBSLEDS, DRYADS, THE LAST STRAW, SYNTHS, DAFFODIL, DESERT ISLAND, an UNAFRAID OTTER and . And the SB-eschewed DADO(S)!

    Thanks, Mr. Spooner - I look forward to your next offering. Hey, does putting TEASPOON in your puzzle make you an EGOIST? I HOPE NOT!

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  52. Anonymous6:16 PM

    Hell, I've seen Run the Jewels *live* and I couldn't remember that dude's name. There's Killer Mike, and then there's the other guy.

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  53. I understand the complaints about the names. But I think there is a difference between ELP and say HENRI and JEFF EL-P is apparently a shortening of a previous nickname. As Rex likes to say, not inferable, all three letters in this case. But if you get an F on a cross, like I did, 4 letters JEFF does come in mind. HENRI. Clue hinted at foreign name. Had NR so guessed HENRI. I knew no more about Jeff and Henri, than EL-P but the first two were much easier.
    Overall, I found the puzzle medium hard, but not because of the names.
    Female :,jenny. Male: jack. These are not names( lower case j). I remembered jenny has been in the Times puzzle before.

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  54. Mata la idea.

    ELP. That's the difference between a clean, if rather long, solve for me, and hating Fridays. ELP. You know nothing is ELP. ELP isn't a thing. Even people who know ELP probably call him Jaime. But there is ELP and you Google hoping to clue it as something other than Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, which is barely a thing at this point, and seven pages of results later you find a rap dude. So you put him in the puzzle to preserve the vital entry of TEASPOON, and the Times figures DOTER will counterbalance any negativity toward ELP, and here we are. Friday. No theme just solid snappy words like ELP, and DOTER. And JEFF. And SET.

    And, for the record, TEASPOON's low volumeness is entirely predicated on the notion there are bigger spoons, and not on the notion volume is entirely relative, and a teaspoon might be an enormous volume if you're an amoeba, and frankly it's five times-ish the size of a milliliter. And the comedy of confusing us with quiet sound is maybe the reason I should stop encouraging editors to loosen up and be funny. They maybe aren't good at humor.

    Actually it's a pretty funny puzzle, so maybe just one bad joke. Washing up on a DESERT ISLAND is poetry and comedy and a little drama all rolled in to one.

    I liked this one until ELP, but sheeze I worked hard for every inch of real estate. THE LAST STRAW was a fun highlight. As was, [Ah, right right right]. And [Peace sign?] And who needs George Orwell to pick their favorite blue cheese when all blue cheese is wonderful.

    Plus, there's OTTERS.

    And I'm assuming some step-father somewhere wrote that clue for EGOIST. Those prioritizing self-care are probably just living life correctly.

    Nothing more fun than capitalism with the BUSINESS LIKE bonding of SERFS. They did bring some fun into PDF FILES so that's not nothing.

    People: 11 {plenty too many}
    Places: 1
    Products: 2
    Partials: 3
    Foreignisms: 1
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 18 of 68 (26%)

    Funny Factor: 7 😂

    Uniclues:

    1 Sudden realization about the problem with people.
    2 Swipe idiophone.
    3 Good news related to the vacancy rate in my bank account.
    4 I'm a rose by any other name.
    5 Runs oak trees through a wood chipper.
    6 The dish I'm most looking forward to them inventing.
    7 Scion of one who couldn't keep her pants on.

    1 OH, I SEE, THEOLOGY
    2 BOGART TEASPOON
    3 SPARE BILLS FIT
    4 DAFFODIL DENIAL
    5 ELEVATES DRYADS
    6 RIGATONI TOFFEE
    7 DRESS LOSS HEIR

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Campaign waged by second grader using candy hearts as a weapon against his fellow woo-ers. BE MINE VENDETTA.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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