Kinkajou cousin / THU 4-23-26 / Experience deep affirmation, in modern lingo / Media exec Sarandos / Lack of pulchritude / Follower of open or closed, sartorially / Owie kissers, perhaps

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Constructor: Zhou Zhang and Kevin Curry

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: HAND-ME-DOWN (11D: Something that's kept in the family ... or a hint to making sense of three pairs of answers in this puzzle) — in three columns, "ME" is literally passed down from the upper answer to the lower answer, so the upper answer is missing a "ME" and the lower answer has an extra "ME" (both answers still look like plausible words or phrases)

Theme answers:
  • CENT / BEEF LOMEIN ("cement" and "beef loin") (3D: *Material for a sidewalk / 28D: *Choice cut)
  • "SO WHAT?" / COME UPON ("somewhat" and "coupon") (6D: *To a degree / 37D: *Supermarket shopper's clipping)
  • HOLINESS / POMELO ("homeliness" and "polo") (9D: *Lack of pulchritude / 44D: *Sport that uses mallets)
Word of the Day: "Immaculate Reception" (42A: What the "Music City Miracle" and the "Immaculate Reception" took place in => NFL GAMES) —

The Immaculate Reception is one of the most famous plays in the history of American football. It was a touchdown which occurred in the AFC divisional playoff game of the National Football League (NFL), between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Oakland Raiders at Three Rivers Stadium in PittsburghPennsylvania, on December 23, 1972.

With his team trailing 7–6, on fourth down with 22 seconds left in the game, Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw threw a pass targeting Steelers running back John Fuqua. The ball may have bounced off the helmet of Raiders safety Jack Tatum, although many observers believe that Tatum never contacted the pass. Steelers fullback Franco Harris caught it just before it hit the ground and ran for a game-winning touchdown. The play has been a source of much controversy and speculation ever since, with many contending that the ball touched only Fuqua (and did not in any way touch Tatum) or that it hit the ground before Harris caught it, either of which would have resulted in an incomplete pass by the rules of the time. Kevin Cook's The Last Headbangers cites the play as the beginning of a bitter rivalry between the Steelers and the Raiders that fueled a historically brutal Raiders team during the NFL's most controversially physical era.

NFL Films has chosen the Immaculate Reception as the greatest play of all time, as well as the most controversial. The play was also selected as the Greatest Play in NFL History in the NFL Network's 100 series. The play proved to be a turning point for the Steelers, reversing four decades of futility with their first playoff win ever; they went on to win four Super Bowls by the end of the 1970s. (wikipedia)

• • •

This was enjoyable. It took me through many stages of revelation—the first "oh!" came when I realized there were missing "ME"s up top. "Aha, a missing 'ME' puzzle. I wonder why they're missing?" Later, I couldn't figure out why adding "ME" to BEEF LOMEIN was getting me nowhere, when suddenly I realized, "Wait ... this answer has an added 'ME'—I wonder why the 'ME's are missing in the top half of the puzzle but added below?" And then finally (truly finally—with the last letters I put into the grid), I got the rationale with the perfectly descriptive revealer, HAND-ME-DOWN. I don't think I'd noticed to that point that the "ME" shenanigans was contained to just three columns—my brain was still processing things in terms of top half / bottom half. So the revealer did its job (made sense of the wackiness in a punny way) and got me that final (of 3) ahas in a real exclamation-point kind of way. Always nice when the puzzle sticks the landing. I have only one minor complaint about the theme execution—I don't like that there's a stray, unhanded-down "ME" there at the top of the grid, in MESS (13D: State of a playroom, often). All the other Down "ME"s in the grid (except the one in the revealer) get handed down, but that "ME" is just sitting up there, tenaciously, thumbing its nose at the theme. "Haha, ya missed me, turkeys! I'm clinging to the ceiling of this grid and there's not a damn thing you can do about it!" If you change PALE to HALO, you've still got a lovely grid and bye bye extra "ME"! I am well aware that the theme is supposed to apply *only* in the case of the three relevant columns (with asterisked clues), but I like an immaculate execution, where the theme stuff stays contained entirely in the theme stuff. No strays! But, as I say, this is a minor issue. By its own stated rules, the theme works quite well.


The fill is far less interesting, but I appreciated how (relatively) clean it was. Sure, there are a bunch of overcommon short answers, but hardly any of those are what I'd call truly grating. No ugly abbrevs. today, no hoary old names from crossword grids of yore. The short stuff stays relatively innocuous, which is what I like short stuff to do. And then you get a few longer answers in there that liven things up a bit. FEEL SEEN is great (29A: Experience deep affirmation, in modern lingo), and WINDOW SILL, PRIDE MONTH, BEST MAN, "IN OR OUT?," and "IF I MUST" are all really good. So if I gotta endure an EENIE here and an ATON there and a pair of crossing crosswordese brands in the NW corner (AVEENO, AVIA), so be it. It's fine. Small price to pay for an otherwise well-crafted puzzle. 


Outside the inevitable theme confusion, the puzzle was pretty dang easy. They could've toughened this one up a bit, I wouldn't have minded. I'm looking over my grid and not seeing any places where I got particularly bogged down or even slightly delayed. All my problems came (predictably) very early, in that NW corner, where I wrote in NAIF instead of FAWN to start with (1D: Babe in the woods), and then tripped all over the missing-"ME" answers for a bit (two of them in that corner alone!). I had a little trouble remembering what a kinkajou was, so I briefly considered that its cousin might be a KOALA, and not a COATI. Now there's a crossword animal: COATI! I think of it as a South American raccoon. They're basically little fox-bear-cat-rats:


You can find them next to the OKAPI in the Crossword Zoo. Anyway, besides my brief flirtation with KOALA, I don't think I had any non-thematic missteps today. Basic basic, all around. Are there any interesting clues to talk about? Let's see ...

Bullets:
  • 4D: Media exec Sarandos (TED) — no one wants to see a "media exec" in their puzzle, come on. Choose a better TED! (this one is co-CEO of Netflix)
  • 17A: Spot for a catnap? (WINDOWSILL) — this "?" wasn't "?"-y enough. When you live with cats who nap in WINDOWSILLs every chance they get, well, this clue just doesn't have the misdirection force that it seems to want.
[OK he's not actually *in* the sill, but ... close]
  • 36A: Follower of open or closed, sartorially (TOED) — I cannot honestly say that I like the answer TOED, but I do like this clue, a lot. It's elegant. I think I just enjoy the word "sartorially." This clue is well-dressed—classy—and I appreciate it.
  • 41A: Queen's collaborator on the 1981 hit "Under Pressure" (BOWIE) — I would've said BOWIE's collaborator was Freddy Mercury, but of course it's his whole band. This music video was a staple of early MTV, which means I've watched it countless times. A great song.
  • 9D: *Lack of pulchritude (HO[me]LINESS) — Came at this from underneath and despite knowing at that point that "ME"s were both disappearing from and squeezing into the answers for asterisked clues, I disregarded thematics entirely and wrote in UGLINESS with emphatic certainty. Lack of pulchritude is UGLINESS! It fit the clue so well! Perfectly, in fact! I love that "pulchritude" means beauty, since it is one of the ugliest words I've ever seen. It sounds like something you suffer from, not something you want. "What happened to Mary? I never see her any more." "Oh, she's sick. Doctors say it's pulchritude." "Oh no!" "Yeah, she never goes outside now, it's awful."
  • 32D: Company that famously used the Beatles' "Revolution" in a 1987 TV commercial (NIKE) — at first I was like "Apple...?" but then I remembered. 1987 was the year I graduated high school / started college, and that commercial was, indeed, famous. First time a Beatles song was used in an advertisement. 

[God bless George Harrison and his doomed struggle against using Beatles songs to sell "brassieres and pork pies" LOL]

That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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18 comments:

Anonymous 6:04 AM  

A curling clue, a Weird Al clue, and a "Barbie" film clue? I damn near died and went to my own personal heaven.

Rick Sacra 6:04 AM  

22 minutes for me this morning. Took me forever to see the revealer—had ScAM for 10 Across and so cANDM…. Just couldn’t make sense of it. Worked through the puzzle, figured out the ME was being taken out of the upper answer and sent down to the lower answers…. But took me a long time to see that it was a SHAM not a SCAM. Anyhoo, loved thinking about a cat napping on my WINDOWSILL, and IFIMUST, INOROUT. Terrific theme, good puzzle, pretty challenging for me. Had no idea what a Kinkajou was, guessing that’s WOD…. Cute! **** from me, thanks, Zhou and Kevin! : ) [Sorry for the duplicate, just realized I was being anonymous without meaning to be.... ]

Conrad 6:13 AM  


Easy-Medium. Easy, once I got over the idea that the theme was going to be rebus squares containing animal sounds (see Overwrites). Didn't like it as much as @Rex did, but my enjoyment was tainted because I thought it was a rebus and I dislike rebus puzzles.
* * * _ _

Overwrites:
SO[ME W]HAT before SO WHAT at 6D.
ScAM before SHAM at 10A.
dOle out before CONK out at 38A.

WOEs:
4D media exec TED Sarandos.
ENDS as a curling term at 19A.

Lewis 7:03 AM  

FACT IS, a very nice combo is

P
I
N
T
O
S

with

P
I
M
E
N
T
O
S

Anonymous 7:04 AM  

The missing "ME"s weren't hard to uncover (SO[ME]WHAT was first). Unlike Rex, I went from NW to NE via WINDOWSILL and CICADAS, and so I got the revealer before I even knew about the answers with extra "ME"s. The only real snag was TIME'S UP with that clue. I can't decide whether it's brilliant or just too much of a stretch.

Could've done without the starred clues, knowing that the wackiness is involved in just 3 columns should be enough of a hint. The Thursdayness should've been bumped up a couple of notches.

JJK 7:06 AM  

I enjoyed this a lot and had a nice aha moment when I figured out the theme. Which I did without the revealer because I had ScAM instead of SHAM, so I had no idea what the thing was that’s kept in the family. It was my last answer and I had to ask for it 😔

Liveprof 7:14 AM  

Computer virus? WINDOWSILL

Introvert's motto: Half ALOOF is better than none

Porcine millinery product: SOWHAT

Son Volt 7:23 AM  

Fun trick that went too quickly once it fell. Loved the revealer and its location. The BEEF LO MEIN play was cute.

Burton Cummings

The grid was well filled - I didn’t love CAMIS, KENS or even the odd NFL GAMES - which I knew but thought the letter string was weird. IN OR OUT, IF I MUST, COME UPON are all solid. Had MOMS first for 40d.

Miracle Legion

Enjoyable Thursday morning solve.

And I’ll never know the same about you, your HOLINESS or your kind of love
And it makes me feel so sorry

RooMonster 7:23 AM  

Hey All !
Neat puz. Unsure if rate it as highly as Rex, but still a nice one. Nice that the missing ME and added ME answers are real things. Extra points for that.

F right at the first square, which is always nice to see. Liked Rex's very simple fix to get rid of the extraneous ME in MESS.

The easy puzs keep on coming, which is fine by me. Finished today's in 14:36, which is quick here for a ThursPuz. I can remember them taking 30 minutes or more back when I first started solving regularly (ABOUT 2009ish?)(Which in the ole brain doesn't seem that long ago, although it's coming up on 20 years. My goodness.)(Why does 1979-1999 seem like a long time, but 2000-2020 seem much shorter?)

Anyway, good one Zhou and Kevin.

Hope y'all have a great Thursday!

Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

jberg 7:24 AM  

What on earth is "mass density?" Is there some kind of upscale density that's different? Actually, RHO just means density. OTOH, ACH SO is not really German for "I see," (that would be Ich sehe, I think), though they could be used interchangeably, I guess.

I guess I woke up grumpy; and then I was expected to know media execs, skin care giants, and curling terms. There's hard, and then there's obscure. I have a hard time remembering that AVEENO is for skin while Aveda is for hair; lucky thing they are not the same length.

Oh, the theme. Yes, it was terrific! Very frustrating, but then I had the fun of figuring it out (and, yes, I had ScAM, like everybody, apparently). Really neat idea.

When I was growing up that kinkajou relative was a COATImundi. When did it lose its tail?

Lewis 7:28 AM  

This puzzle kept me guessing for a good long while, a gift that makes me feel, IMHO, IMHO(ME). Speaking of being at home, as I’m writing this, my cat Wiley is very comfortably nestled on a WINDOWSILL, making for a lovely meta-moment.

There was a crossword lingo moment too, when I was thinking NIKE for [Adidas competitor] at 2D, and then it turned up later at 32D. The term for when that happens is “malapop”, invented by Andrea Carla Michaels.

Then came a pair of reaction moments to a single answer – a happy jaw-drop at the terrific FEEL SEEN, and an amazed jaw-drop that it has never been in in a Times crossword before.

Finally came the “Life is good!” moment when the riddle of the theme cracked open.

Thus, a momentous puzzle, a staccato of lovely pings. Thank you so much for making this, Zhou and Kevin!

Yat 7:55 AM  

I really enjoyed this one. Didn’t even begin to get the theme until I was already in the southeast, staring at POMELO. It didn’t help to have SCAM up top instead of SHAM. I kept wondering if Canadians had some weird habit I didn’t know about or if a Candyman was somehow involved (not a pleasant image). The aha moment was lovely.

I also really enjoyed seeing the Under Pressure video again. I’d forgotten how great some of those early MTV videos were, before all our palates got jaded.

And George was always my favorite Beatle!

SouthsideJohnny 8:02 AM  

That HOLINESS / pulchritude combo got me but good (even though I had already seen the reveal). I have always associated pulchritude with beauty and elegance, and just couldn’t reconcile how we could get from a lack thereof to HOLINESS. I finally made the connection post-solve - it was more of a Duh / Headslap moment than an Aha / Lightbulb situation (which I’ll take, as at least I finally got it).

With discerning themes not being my strong point, I was at least able to hold my own with this one. I don’t recall anything too bizarre in the non-theme content other than the usual assortment of gunk. I did think the clue for DONUT was kind of cute - by no means Robynesque, but at least it tried. Speaking of Robyn, might this be a week where she graces us with an appearance ?

burtonkd 8:10 AM  

I think he came off really well in Get Back, unlike some other members...

Kate 8:21 AM  

Grand ISLE State Park! After seeing Loyola there recently, I continue to be surprised. Go Louisiana!

David Grenier 8:29 AM  

MORE CAT PICS IN THE BLOG PLEASE.

Anonymous 8:34 AM  

Loved this puzzle!

Anonymous 8:42 AM  

No one thought lemur for kinkaju?

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