Phrase said indignantly before a citation / FRI 4-10-26 / C-store offering / Helical tools / Chinese gambling game invented during the Northern and Southern dynasties / Like the glass in many a Dale Chihuly sculpture / Anora's husband in "Anora"

Friday, April 10, 2026

Constructor: Erica Hsiung Wojcik

Relative difficulty: Easy to Easy-Medium 


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: FANTAN (39D: Chinese gambling game invented during the Northern and Southern dynasties) —
 

Fan-Tan, or fantan (simplified Chinese番摊traditional Chinese番攤pinyinfāntānJyutpingfaan1 taan1lit. 'repeated divisions') is a gambling game long played in China. It is a game of pure chance.

The game is played by placing two handfuls of small objects on a board and guessing the remaining count when divided by four. After players have cast bets on values of 1 through 4, the dealer or croupier repeatedly removes four objects from the board until only one, two, three or four beans remain, determining the winner.

• • •


Friday! It's back! The sparkle and the whoosh, especially the whoosh. The puzzle shape here, with its interlocking 15s, sent me shooting across the grid time and again until I'd done a kind of reckless, careening circuit. Shot out in two directions coming out of the NW, but chose to follow DRINKING IT ALL IN down the west side, took a hard turn and rocketed over to the east coast with SILENT TREATMENT, before getting BRINGS UP THE REAR (from just the rear letters), and zooming back up to join up with the tail end of "AM I LOSING MY MIND?," filling in the shorter fill as I went. Each of those 15s erupted like an explosion ... light the fuse with a few crosses and then bam, the whole thing just bursts into view. Gave me the kinetic experience I really crave on a Friday. Unlike some recent puzzles, which have started with real duds at 1-Across, this one was a delight (1A: Phrase said indignantly before a citation). No idea at first what kind of "citation" I was dealing with. I imagined someone angrily talking back to a cop who was issuing a speeding ticket: "I WASN'T SPEEDING!" or "WHAT'D I DO WRONG?," something like that. So it was a surprise to find, after I worked the crosses for a bit, that I wasn't even in the ballpark, "citation"-wise. I don't know if "AND I QUOTE..." is always "indignant," but you do say it before you "cite" (as in "quote") someone else's words, usually ones whose literalness you want to emphasize in a "can you believe it?!" kind of way. "AND I QUOTE... 'TURDUCKEN!' AM I LOSING MY MIND!?" That's a whole monologue right there.


The puzzle still probably skewed a little too easy for my tastes, but the cluing got so niche and odd in a few places that I actually had to stop and work things out, so the general easiness didn't feel like insulting easiness. I don't remember a damn thing about Bridget Jones's Diary beyond the fact that RENÉe Zellweger was in it (and I never read the book), so I sure as hell don't know what this "blue soup" thing is supposed to be about. So weird to toss that clue in there. A real ... what do you call those things cops throw in the road to puncture the tires of fleeing fugitives? That's what LEEK was to me. Well, I"m not a fugitive, and LEEK didn't stop me completely, so the metaphor's not great, but LEEK definitely brought me to a very jarring halt for a bit. There were two other similar moments of grinding (if brief) halt in the puzzle. The "L" in LOYD / LAB and the "F" in FANTAN / FISH. Obviously LOYD and FANTAN are the main culprits there, but in both cases, the crosses on their first letters eluded me for a bit. I wanted FANTAN to be FANTAN without really knowing why, so I left that "F" blank and then ... it stayed blank, because whatever elaborate scenario the clue on FISH was imagining, I was not getting (39A: Remove, as from a cluttered container, with "out"). In retrospect, the clue seems fine, reasonably accurate, but mid-solve I was like "what is this what kind of container what is happening?" As you can see (from grid print-out, above), that "F" was the very last letter I wrote in. I abandoned it mid-solve and came back for it at the end. 


As for LOYD / LAB ... I don't follow the WNBA, or any other pro sports leagues besides the MLB (at least not closely), so when I was staring at -OYD, the only "last name" possibility I saw there was BOYD. Thankfully, BAB was not a viable answer at 10A: Place with flasks and alcohol, but I couldn't figure out what was, at least not immediately. I had PUB in that place at first, although I did think, "why would you bring your flask to the PUB?" I also wasn't entirely sure about that "A," since I've never (ever ever ever) heard anyone refer to a "convenience store" as a "C-store" (11D: C-store offering). What a horrible bit of shortening. Who says that? I figured something businessy (like "C suite") or computery (C++?) was going on. The "-TM" made ATM kind of undeniable, though, so I just stared at -OYD / -AB until I had my aha moment with LAB. Nothing else in the puzzle slowed me down much.


Bullets:
  • 14A: "___ Atardecer," Bad Bunny song whose name means "Another Sunset" ("OTRO") — kind of a long-winded way of saying [Another (Sp.], but maybe this is more fun. It's certainly more colorful, if a bit long-winded. AGRA (like OTRO, a crosswordese staple) got a similarly ornate clue (24A: Site with a monument that gets around 7 million ticketed visitors a year).
  • 29A: Like the glass in many a Dale Chihuly sculpture (FUSED) — no idea. Zero. I think I looked up Dale Chihuly once before for crossword purposes, but clearly I forgot him. Completely. Had --SED and thought "... LASED?" OK, yeah, here we go: Dale Chihuly was my "Word of the Day" back in Nov. '24 (when DALE was actually in the puzzle).
  • 35A: Beatles song with the lyric "I tried to telephone / They said you were not home / That's a lie" ("NO REPLY") — not on any of the Beatles albums I've listened to regularly over the years (although now that I'm listening to it, it's Very familiar). It's an early song, from the album Beatles for Sale (1964). It does not appear to have charted anywhere on the globe except the Netherlands, where it hit No. 1 (!?!?!?). "The song was not officially released as a single in the UK" (wikipedia). "NO REPLY" makes me think of a different song entirely—one that actually was released as a single in the U.S.
  • 43A: Anora's husband in "Anora" (IVAN) — never saw this clue, which is too bad, as I know (and love) this movie. This is at least the second time Anora has been used in a clue, but still no ANORA in the grid, which is bizarre, as no movie title in movie history was ever more grid-ready. ANORA is one of those answers I expect to see in the grid annnnnny moment now, along with ZOHRAN, MAMDANI, and, of course, OZU (I can dream!). 
  • 1D: Pop-punk band named after a video game company, with "The" (ATARIS) — sigh. I have heard of them, but it's hard to like this answer, since it's basically just awkwardly pluralized crosswordese. I guess they covered Don Henley's "Boys of Summer" at some point (??). I thought I knew one of their songs, but it turns out I was confusing them with the Androids:

  • 24D: Helical tools (AUGERS) — couldn't get a handle on this, and then when I did, of course I (initially) misspelled it (AUGURS)
[Helical!]

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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101 comments:

Danny 6:14 AM  

SOIN…

Eric NC 6:16 AM  

Last entry for me sLAB/LOYD

Dan A 6:16 AM  

Beautiful Friday! How many stars?

Rick Sacra 6:25 AM  

11:00 minutes flat, so easy for a Friday. Ended back in the northwest….took me forever to realize that “Once” in the clue for 2 down is eleven in Spanish, not the English “once.” Tricky. The gimmes were there in each section, so footholds were easy to find (I’m looking at you, QUO, OTRO, NEE, AGRA, NOTOK, SHAH, ARES, SYNODS, TIKI, NEOSPORIN. And the 4 long spanners were all nice/great, and fairly easy so gave this lots of whoosh! Enjoyed ACCLIMATE and BRINGUPTHEREAR and DEADLY and the ever wonderful TURDUCKEN! Took me a while to see “ANDIQUOTE”… I was imagining the cop at my car window… The O in NUMERO was my last letter. Thanks, Erica! This was a TENABLE challenge, and I never got to the point of saying “AMILOSINGMYMIND”! ..... Yes, and echoing the request for a STAR rating from @REX : ) (I'd say 3.5)

Bob Mills 6:35 AM  

It's better to be lucky than smart. Never heard of TURDUCKEN (and would rather not know how to pronounce it). That was a guess, as were ENGRAM, TANTAN/NAV, and SO-IN. When the music sounded I was amazed.

Iris 6:37 AM  

“No Reply” started up the entirety of Beatles 65 in my head. Great album, also gave us “I’m a Loser,”

Anthony in TX 6:40 AM  

I really wanted MY TAXES PAY YOUR SALARY for 1A
Anyway, 10:25 means a really easy Friday, which is fine. Hopefully we get a fun and tough Saturday puzzle tomorrow.

Andy Freude 6:49 AM  

Same here. Such a good album, when the Beatles’ lyrics were already starting to venture into Bob Dylan territory. Signs of greatness to come.

tht 7:04 AM  

TURDUCKEN = TURkey + DUCK + chicKEN. Pronounce it the way it looks (maybe with slight stress on the second syllable).

Why is it better to be lucky than smart?

Son Volt 7:17 AM  

The four intersecting spanners are the highlight here - each phrase fresh and in the language. AM I LOSING MY MIND is top notch. Handsome grid layout with minimal dreck.

Fast Times at Dropout High

Some oddball trivia here and there - Rex covers most of it. I’m thinking the LOYD x OTRO cross will be discussed here today. Cluing for NUMERO is cute.

HASTEN Down the Wind

I guess NO REPLY was playing in my house more than Rex’s. I’m not a huge Beatles fan but it’s one of my favorites of theirs. DIGRESS, AND I QUOTE, ACCLIMATE - this one is squeaky clean.

The Connells

It wasn’t a real late week ball buster but a highly enjoyable Friday morning solve.

D-I-V-O-R-C-E

Glen Laker 7:27 AM  

AMILOSINGMYMIND? 4 stars right under the grid in Rex’s write-up

Glen Laker 7:28 AM  

AMILOSINGMYMIND? 4 stars right under the grid in Rex’s write-up

kitshef 7:35 AM  

Well I'll be darned, an easy Friday. Never saw that coming. NORTON and IVAN were both unknown (from the clues given), but still a fair cross as (I think) N is the only reasonable letter there. LOYD and FANTAN were my other WoEs.

You get some weird stuff doing archived crosswords.5/6/1996 had these two clue/answer combos:
1A Garden Tools – HOES
42D Weed eliminator – HOE
This is not part of the theme or anything like that; it’s just a straight-up dupe.

RooMonster 7:35 AM  

Hey All !
Liked it. Easy in spots, tough in spots. Nice four 15's surrounding the grid. Interesting Blocker pattern.

SO IN is the only off-kilter thing in here. It's lawyerable, though. "Hey, wanna go to the water park?" "I'm SO IN!"

Started to write in DRaNK IN the moment, but ran out of space. Then left the A in there, having AM A LOSING MY MIND, which, I believe you all know the answer to that. Finally figured it out.

Did have a one-letter DNF, however, with AUGuRS/NORuPLY. Knowing some Beatles songs are oddly titled, had no reason to suspect wrongness.

Got a four S splotch in West Center, and only ends up with one POC.

Good FriPuz.
Got a @Uniclue for ya:
WNBA's Jewell PSA, "Spray directly at the base"
LOYD FIRE TIP
Ah, not the best. 😁

Have a great Friday!

Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

jberg 7:37 AM  

This one felt harder for me, mainly because I couldn't figure out 1-A until I got QUO, which made it obvious. Instead I followed BRINGS UP THE REAR down to the bottom, soon having everything SE of the diagonal of black squares filled in, but nothing on the NW side. So I was working all the downs on that side from the bottom up; and to make things worse I put in vEtoES before DENIES. At that point I had IT ALL IN at the bottom of 3-D, tried taKING, then soaKING, but DRINKING didn't come to mind. And my bar was a mInI before it was TIKI.

16-A was similar--I could tell it ended with MY MIND, but "have I lost" didn't fit.

Finally I got the status QUO, a complete gimme if I'd only looked at it earlier. In retrospect, a fine puzzle, just right for a Friday.

Lewis 7:42 AM  

I was immediately intrigued by the stark grid design, with its bold elements: the photo album corners, sash, sideways crosses (or tees), four black bars, and no distracting scattershot blocks.

For me, the puzzle had an easier half on one side of the sash, and grittier half on the other, which gave me the sweet blend of whoosh and rub.

Standing out were the four spanners which were rewarding in two ways. First, it was fun trying to guess them with as few crosses as possible, and as each answer came, it brought a marvelous “Aha!”. And second, all of them were gorgeous, and simply lit up the grid.

I fell for [Once, e.g.]; confidently wrote in ADVERB and stubbornly stuck with that until it became too strong a barricade. Aside from the spanners, I loved AND I QUOTE, DIGRESS, ACCLIMATE, TENABLE, and AUGERS. I also liked the abutting I LOVE IT and DRINKING IT ALL IN.

A rich and scrumptious outing for me, lush with lovely. Thank you, Erica!

Anonymous 7:43 AM  

Right there with you.

DAVinHOP 7:43 AM  

And (it gets worse...or better, depending on your dining tastes) it's a chicken stuffed inside a duck stuffed inside a turkey. Hence "nested" birds.

Rick Sacra 7:43 AM  

He edits his post after we ask for the stars and makes us look silly : )

tht 7:44 AM  

Easy-Medium edging into Medium for me. I didn't have quite the exhilarating whooshy experience that Rex did (what? no zooming, Rex?), but there was some whoosh. I sort of took my time with it, as I do, and I enjoyed the ride very much. A handsomely constructed grid, methinks. If memory serves, Erica Hsiung Wojcik is known for that.

Slow-ups included putting in screwS before AUGERS, and a moment of hesitation about how to spell the matryoshka birds. TURDUCKEN is what logic dictates, but then I pulled myself up short, wondering: is it really TENABLE that you would start off a food name with TURD? This musing was especially occasioned by also wondering what was going on with 2 Down (NUMERO). I think I must really not know numbers in Spanish past "diez"; I assume, by analogy with French "onze", that "once" is Spanish for eleven, which I'll look up in a minute (yep). The task of solving 2 Down was made no easier by the cross with SOIN, which was also weirdly hard to see (I'm SO IN -- got it).

ENGRAM and FANTAN: wow. Those sure needed crosses.

Bit of self-referential cutesiness happening at 44 Down.

Re the blue soup thing: I both read the book and saw the movie, and I couldn't have told you LEEK, and I have no idea why that would have been key. The main thing is that while trying to prepare an impressive dinner for her party, Bridget needed some twine to hold some food together, and all she had in her apartment was some blue twine, but it should be fine, yadda yadda yadda. It provided a nice opportunity for her prospective suitor (was his name actually Darcy?) to play the white knight and rescue the meal, and her friends were super-nice anyway about the blue soup, saying that after all blue is quite a nice color, and why shouldn't you see it more often in cookery?

Happy Friday!

Anonymous 7:47 AM  

What a FANtastic puzzle.Can we be sure that Erica isn’t Robyn Weintraub in disguise?🎈🎈🎊🎊

SouthsideJohnny 7:51 AM  

Rex praised the multiple grid spanners, which I felt were the highlight of the show today.

I was stumped by one clue (I still am), “Once, e.g.” for NUMERO. The best I could come up with is trying to make a connection to “Numero Uno”, but that doesn’t seem to work. I checked the multiple uses of NUMERO (mostly from Spanish, but didn’t see anything that worked). Hopefully, someone will enlighten me.

Beezer 8:06 AM  

I wouldn’t go so far as to say the puzzle was easy for me but it was a little below my average time AND I had a ton of fun solving.

I probably took two minutes in one spot…the unholy trio of ATARIS, NUMERO, and SOIN. Yes. I had ATARI. I decided the pop/punk band might have pluralized as ATARIi but isON had me staring at NUMERs and thinking there was some kind of NUMERic word I’d missed during my life. Then the big DOH …omg…Spanish!

Great job Erica Wojcik!

DAVinHOP 8:07 AM  

Really nice spanners. Nice to see/read Effusive Rex, and on a Friday!

Had heard of FANTAN, but never played or watched it. Interesting WOTD explanation. This game was not, as I recall, mentioned in a recent series of articles in the Boston Globe about how casinos target the Asian, particularly Chinese, population. Insidious. Sorry to digress.

Got "SO IN (for)" completely on crosses; does anyone say that?

Here's a quick anecdote describing yesterday's address by Melania Trump:

As the country was DRINKING IT ALL IN, DT wondered "AM I LOSING MY MIND?". Melania will certainly be in for the SILENT TREATMENT (likely nothing new there). The whole episode BRINGS UP THE REAR (for now) to a bizarrely eventful week. Stay tuned.

Tom 8:08 AM  

Splitting hairs, i know, but..

21A NEE follows a name as a qualifier indicating a former name; it does not occur in the middle of a name.

Though I expect there to see a split decision on whether this is "good enough for crosswords," I come down firmly on the side of "no" to these slippery slopes.

Anonymous 8:09 AM  

Love. Fun.

Anonymous 8:11 AM  

In Missouri, everyone says "C-store"

Bob Mills 8:12 AM  

for tht 7:04: In this case luck was better. I'm fairly smart, but could never have solved the puzzle without those lucky guesses. Thanks for the breakdown of TURDUCKEN, something I hope never to see on a restaurant menu.

Rug Crazy 8:14 AM  

FISH OUT?

Lynn 8:16 AM  

This was good. My solve was like @Rex but definitely with no whooshing whatsoever. I didn't have much success until I was in the SE, then worked back. Slowly but satisfyingly. (is that a word?)

puzzlehoarder 8:17 AM  

Great late week solve. I'm very familiar with that cover of "Boys of Summer " I've just never noticed the band's name. Great cover but then again it was great originally. Much less familiar with the Beatles song. I can't put a tune to it and off that __ LY ending I had no idea where the title was going.

ENGRAM was only vaguely familiar and FANTAN had to come from the crosses. Neither one has been in the SB. Speaking of which yesterday's NANOBOTS was my final word for the Thursday SB. Without the S of course. I Love those crossover coincidences.

Too bad a late week puzzle worth commenting on seems to be the exception and two of the grid spanners were debuts. Most excellent.

pabloinnh 8:53 AM  

All the spanners went right in (giant whoosh!) except BRINGSUPTHEREAR, because I started with BAR instead of PUB. Had to get most of the rest of it to see the phrase. Doh. ATARIS made sense because it's the only video game company I've heard of, IVAN through crosses, also LEEK, never remember NES, always try AGAH before SHAH, but these were all minor snags.

ARENTI never sounds right to me although I know everyone says it. I'm in favor of "Am I not?" but I won't correct you.

Today learned C-store and FANTAN, which is a great word. I could sing you NOREPLY, but nothing by The ATARIS.

Very nice Friday indeed, EHW. Exceptionally High Whoosh factor, and thanks for all the fun.

Eh Steve! 8:55 AM  

I expected some talk about the dupe in AMILOSIMMGMYMIND and NOLOSE, but I was wrong.

Anonymous 9:02 AM  

ONCE is Spanish for 11.

Anonymous 9:05 AM  

NÉE comes before a woman’s maiden name and after her married name. So between names, or in the middle.

tht 9:17 AM  

Yeah, it means to remove or to retrieve. "After an exhaustive search, he finally fished out the form he was looking for from within a thick stack of papers."

pabloinnh 9:29 AM  

Anyone know if John Madden invented this or just popularized it?

Alice Pollard 9:40 AM  

FANTAN/FISH was tough. And I do not think the FISH clue was all that great. But the puzzle, overall was excellent - I enjoyed the long answers - they seemed to come to me quickly. Thanks Erica

Stillwell 10:01 AM  

Anyone else for “DRANK THE KOOL-AID”? It fit!

egsforbreakfast 10:08 AM  

If you stuff a FISH into the chicken you've got something TURDUCKENISH. Just the thought of eating it makes ONEREEL.

When Khomeini returned to Iran, people were saying, "This AUGERS poorly for the SHAH.

With global warming, even @okanoganer lives in an ACCLIMATE.

A fella who doesn't really get what's happening these days is all Tik, NOTOK.

But I DIGRESS. I whooshed ala @Rex today. Thanks, Erica Hsiung Wojcik.

Whatsername 10:11 AM  

I rarely get whooshy but this was sparkly, a really smooth and enjoyable Friday. I loved the grid-spanning downs and crosses. More trivia than I normally like, but it was so well done as to seem minimal, or at least not bothersome. I learned ENGRAM, FANTAN, MOSH, FUSED glass, and that FIRE can mean awesome. Also couldn’t help but notice SOIN was a tad reminiscent of yesterday’s GOIPO.

“Pop punk band named after video game“ seemed like a rather inauspicious start, but thankfully, it got much better. My favorite entry - AM I LOSING MY MIND - is a question I ask myself regularly these days. As a general rule, I seldom respond. I just give myself the SILENT TREATMENT so that an actual answer is not required. It’s better that way. Actually I think I may have lost it some time ago, but I’ve begun to ACCLIMATE now so I no longer notice.

Greater Fall River Committee for Peace & Justice 10:14 AM  

Why should DESERTs be hot?

SouthsideJohnny 10:16 AM  

Thanks. Tough one, but it’s Friday.

Beezer 10:18 AM  

I was reluctant to fill in ENGRAM because I thought it was a made up term in Scientology. Well. I guess the “made up” part was the ability to detect “negative” ones is through a contraption that looks similar to the old “two tin cans with a string attached” kids telephone.

Anonymous 10:23 AM  

Regarding the 1996 puzzle: Why didn’t they just go with FOES and FOWL instead of HOES and HOWL?

Whatsername 10:27 AM  

Née does follow after the maiden name, but it also precedes the married name, therefore in the middle. The definition may say it is an added “qualifier,” but I think the clue is fine.

Beezer 10:28 AM  

Wow. I’m not that far from you and I learned the term through a past NYT puzzle. I’m not disputing it…just curious…are you “younger or older than dirt”? I’m toward the older side but usually keep my ears pricked. NYC tends to say bodega for convenience stores. Makes sense that the Midwest/Plains would shorten to C-STORE. I’ve said “mini-mart” in past.

Tom T 10:29 AM  

Slow start on this one with lots of white spaces, but ONCE I got going, there was lots of whoosh, and I finished in 21 minutes--a low time for me. The grid spanners helped, because they all fell with just a few letters. And the inclusion of AMILOSING MY MIND gave me the lovely reminder of one of the finest Broadway ballads, Stephen Sondheim's brilliant LOSING MY MIND from his brilliant Follies.
As for AND I QUOTE, like others I was stuck on a policeman and sure that the answer was going to end in QUOTa. Sigh.

Teedmn 10:32 AM  

Two of Rex's whoosh-stoppers also held me up. I know nothing about basketball players so bOYD was definitely coming to mind up there at 10A. At one point, I had puB as someplace with flasks and alcohol. uTM? pOYD? I did eventually think of LOYD and that was my last entry today, ironically since OTRO was my first entry. Spanish learning apps to my rescue.

After I finally saw FISH, I really enjoyed the image the clue evoked. I pictured a glass bowl filled with nuts, bolts, keys, marbles and trying to FISH out the agate.

The Mayo Clinic has a hall hung with Chihuly light fixtures, very cool. But did I know they were FUSED? Uh uh.

Erica Hsiung Wojcik, this is a really nice Friday puzzle, thanks!

JoePop 10:36 AM  

Second Warren Zevon notation in a week. Keep them coming!

Beezer 10:37 AM  

@Tom and Anon 9:05…I see both of your points. In Tom’s defense…I thought NEE first then reconsidered (like a “cryptic” Ema/Emmy). The NEE in essence, means “formerly” so there are technically two names. Phew. Yeah…I overthought the whole thing and maybe @Tom did too! :)

Beezer 10:45 AM  

Well good grief. It IS Spanish…as per @tht…:D

EasyEd 10:48 AM  

Odd puzzle for me this morning. The long answers were indeed whooshes and fun. Found the rest of the puzzle tough. Didn’t want to believe TURD starting out a menu or bird list or Russian doll description or whatever but finally went with it after realizing we had a Spanish clue for a cross…Interesting to learn FANTAN, a Chinese game I had not known before. Got AGRA right away, but the sheer number of visitors amazed me…

Beezer 10:50 AM  

Good one on blue soup. Did NOT remember that but yes…it was Mark Darcy, a wink to Mr. Darcy (Fitzwilliam) in Pride and Prejudice.

Anonymous 11:09 AM  

Madden heard about it in New Orleans and popularized it by eating it in the booth.

In an episode of "How I Met Your Mother," they stuffed a turkey inside another turkey and called it a turturkeykey.

jae 11:13 AM  

Easy, pretty whooshy.

I did not know LOYD, FUSED, IVAN and LEEK (as clued).

Costly erasure - vetoES before DENIES

NORTON was excellent in A Complete Unknown and got an Oscar nod (or is it nom).

My grandmother taught me how to play FANTAN when I was 8.

Not much junk and heaps of sparkle but very little resistance, liked it.

Liveprof 11:25 AM  

Loved the puzzle, but not much rattled around the old skull for me today.

SYNODS: How Sy expresses assent.

NOTOK: Is it TIK?

But DIGRESS, which is, of course, a female diger, reminded me of a bad joke that holds a place in my heart because my brother told it to me several hundred years ago. Here it is, because, why should I be the only one to suffer?

In a war between two tribes, a warrior is captured. He is offered the chance to earn his freedom by performing three tasks. If he fails, he'll be put to death. He accepts the challenge. The tribal chief explains the tasks: He shows him a large lake. The first task is to swim back and forth across the entire lake in one hour. Next, he shows him two large tents. In the first, there is a ferocious tiger with an abscessed tooth. His task is to remove the tooth. Finally, in the third tent is the beautiful Princess Fatima. The chief explains that no man has ever been able to satisfy the princess. Satisfying her would be the third task.

"Let's go," the warrior says. He jumps into the lake and swims as hard as he can for an entire hour and makes it back with only seconds to spare. He's led to the tent with the tiger. After he enters, you hear the most godawful sounds and shrieking and screaming, and you can see the sides of the tent bulging at one side and then the next. Finally, the uproar dies down. After a few tense moments, the warrior staggers out. He can barely walk and is bleeding from a thousand wounds. He slowly makes his way over to the chief and says: "Okay, now where's that lady with the bad tooth."

ericacbarnett 11:42 AM  

Re: C-store—ha! I live in Washington state, where weed is legal but cash-only, so I got the answer from inference (what else could -TM be?) and then thought "Huh. Cannabis store?" Convenience store is the last thing I would have guessed!

Anonymous 11:49 AM  

That o was really tough. The clue on the down was ultimately fair but really, really tricky. SOIN is a terrible answer and was the worst clunker in the grid.

Carola 11:51 AM  

So much to like, AND I QUOTE: AM I LOSING MY MIND over RENÉ ("I think, therefore I am") Descartes, DRINKING IT ALL IN next to I LOVE IT, plus FISH (out) and AREN'T I. The line-up of QUO, UCSF, and OKIE got me started and was enough to carry me through, with the help of those four Autobahns that whizzed across and down. Fun to solve!

Anonymous 11:57 AM  

Can someone explain TURDUCKEN? I can see DUCK, which is a bird, but the remainder TUR-EN is a mystery to me.

Masked and Anonymous 12:16 PM  

Not a big themelesspuz fan, but this one kinda grabbed m&e by the TURDUCKENs.
Did the entire side of the puz on the west side of the long diagonal border first. Mainly cuz I couldn't escape out of the NE topside early, due to that there LOYD/Bad-Bunny-song blockade.

staff weeject pick: I dunno ... I reckon I'll go with the (NYT/MET) --> NET --> NEE --> NES word ladder.

lotsa fave stuff, includin: TURDUCKEN & its clue. ANDIQUOTE. AMILOSINGMYMIND. BRINGSUPTHEREAR. NOREPLY song. SILENTTREATMENT. NYT.

Thanx for the fun, Ms. Wojcik darlin. Really smoooth work.

Masked & Anonymo5Us

p.s.
runt puzzle inspired by current events & memories of the runtz's patron saint:
**gruntz**

M&A

Anonymous 12:16 PM  

Tur(key)+duck+(chick)en
An old but wildly popular tv analyst for football brought it up every Thanksgiving. Eventually, the production team began making it each Thanksgiving.
Google John Madden turducken, you’ll see the monstrosity.

Anonymous 12:23 PM  

I often make "synonym" soup with frozen peas, leeks sautéed with onions and garlic, vegetable stock and cream, i.e. PEA LEEK SOUP

Rick Sacra 12:29 PM  

It's a chicken stuffed in a duck stuffed in a turkey. Yummy.

Beezer 12:56 PM  

@Rick Sacra…I’m “game” to try it!

Beezer 1:03 PM  

There are also some very lovely Chihuly “columns” (blue) in the federal court house in Hammond, IN. One of the ONLY perks I endured during a VERY long “case.” FUSED now makes sense, but I confess I was stuck with “blown” (glass).

saan solo 1:08 PM  

A Thanksgiving tradition in the NFL… I believe it was John Madden (RIP) who started it!!! 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️

okanaganer 1:12 PM  

@egs 10:08 am... southern interior BC, including the Okanagan, has always been one of the hottest areas in Canada. Lately even more so!

Whatsername 1:16 PM  

It’s nowhere near that common and the part of Missouri I live in.

okanaganer 1:22 PM  

Wow, those great long answers! It went very smoothly and not too long at 18 minutes for me. Unknowns: ENGRAM LOYD FANTAN. Trickiest clue: "Once" for NUMERO.

Re the clue for 29 across FUSED: seeing Chihuly's name really takes me back to the 1990s... working as a project architect in Vancouver, I was thrilled to finally see one of my buildings in the Vancouver Sun newspaper. Of course, the article was not about the house itself; it was in the society section about a charity event in the house. With a big color picture showing my client and Canada's minister of Defense admiring the Dale Chihuly sculpture in the dining room. I was happy!

Anonymous 1:49 PM  

They aren’t fused. They are blown glass. This clue was factually incorrect and it drove me crazy!

Anonymous 2:15 PM  

Great puzzle! I just don’t get all the Anora references lately :( guess that’s on me

Anoa Bob 2:27 PM  

A couple of easy crosses at 5D QUO, 6D UCSF and 7D OKIE gave me TURDUCKEN and 2D NUMERO finished the job to drop in AM I LOSING MY MIND and I was off to the races on this very fine, enjoyable puzzle. Lots to like all over the place.

At first I thought SYNAPSE for 9D '"Storage unit' of memory in the brain" (too many letters) and then I remembered (heh) ENGRAM from PSYC 101. It was a hypothetical term back when I was still teaching and unless things have changed since I retired, no actual "memory unit" has been discovered. Memory is still a bit of a mystery. The human brain hasn't quite figured itself out yet.

I agree with Rex's praise for this one but I couldn't help but notice that a couple of the marquee longs needed some letter count inflation (LCI) to do their jobs when DRINK IT ALL IN and BRING UP THE REAR came up short.

*Merle was openly disdainful of the hippies early on but later softened his stance, maybe after smoking some weed with Willie.

Les S. More 2:34 PM  

I might write a separate comment on this fine puzzle - time permitting - but first I need to comment on TURDUCKEN. I’m a competent home cook and I have a professional chef available for consultations (my middle son) and so I have to point out the major faults in the TURDUCKEN concept. You have three birds - all of which I love eating, but all of which need different cooking processes - stuffed together and slammed in the oven. Mideastern wars have more chance of success.

You need to cook the chicken - located in the middle of this Frankenstein’s monster of a dish - to approximately 160 F. To do that, you are going to overcook the turkey and mis-cook the duck. I’ve tried it once and I’ve learned my lesson. I will never do it again.

Here’s a link to a site that might help you see this in a clearer light:

https://www.seriouseats.com/the-ultimate-turducken-recipe

It might also confuse the hell out of you. It includes a loot of basic butchery techniques that most people don’t want to tackle. It’s a lot of work and sometimes it’s worth it, but not for TURDUCKEN.

Brine your turkey 2 days before roasting (with a day of rest in the fridge between steps), and roast your chicken separately. You might want to brine it, too, to make sure the breast doesn’t dry out. Cook the duck by rendering out the fat in a skillet before popping it in the oven. Slice them all up and serve arrayed nicely on a large platter. You’ll have a much better dinner. No overcooked turkey, chewy, fatty duck skin, and undercooked chicken. A lot of work, but better than TURDUCKEN.

Just saying’. As they say.

Unknown 2:38 PM  

TURDUCKEN and ENGRAM were the hardest for me to get - and the last - but otherwise pretty easy - still enjoyed this puzzle

Les S. More 2:46 PM  

Oh, Okanaganer, that's cool. The Sun did a story on my house in New Westminster once and, while not exactly Chihuly-ish, I was glad to see my imported (and super expensive) Murano glass pendants over the dining room table show up in one of the photos. The Defense Minister declined his invitation.

crh 2:51 PM  

I knew about C-stores only because my fiancee used to work for a company that had them as clients. Apparently it's a common abbreviation in business-speak.

The first time she dropped it in conversation I thought she was saying "sea stores," which was scarcely less confusing. (Isn't that where she sells sea shells?)

Anonymous 3:23 PM  

Excellent Friday fun! I solved it SE, NW, NE, SW. I had to look up NORTON although I loved that movie.
TIL ENGRAM and FANTAN.
The nested birds sound yucky to me!

Anonymous 3:31 PM  

A Spanish speaker had a prescription, was instructed "Take once daily". They OD'd

Anonymous 3:48 PM  

Once! Right after diez and before doce! But did this old timer get it? No! I put it in but had no idea how it fit the clue

Anonymous 3:52 PM  

@anonymous 9:05am: the clue is "French word in the middle of a name" It is is not "French word between two names" as you seem to suggest.

Anonymous 3:54 PM  

Many deserts like the Sahara are hot.but some are rather chilly. They are deserts because they get very little rain.

Tom 3:56 PM  

@Whatsername (10:27 am) You have it backwards. The form is FIrst-Name Last-Name NEE Maiden Name

Anonymous 4:04 PM  

It seems to be that "once" should've been italic

Les S. More 5:09 PM  

I really liked this puzzle. Don’t think I set any speed records but it seemed medium, or maybe slightly easier. I don’t run a stopwatch. I just sorta stroll through. You know, like George in the park on Sunday. (How long ago was that a theme or, at least, a theme-adjacent Seurat thing in these puzzles?)

Great grid spanners and lots of fun in between. Couldn’t ask for more.

dgd 5:12 PM  

TURDUCKEn has been in the puzzle before. I actually made a mistake the first time. Never eaten it. Didn’t know John Madden had anything to do with it. Don’t particularly Turkey.but like duck & chicken
On the easy side. At least one clue I never looked at Good puzzle. The glass maker was a professor at an art school in my city abd he is perhaps more known locally. But of course the answer deceived what he made so it took me a while to get the answer.
Happy agree with Rex today.

CDilly52 5:23 PM  

I had a dreadful time getting started because at 1A, my decades working with law enforcement told me it was a traffic “citation.” I quickly checked downs and had AND _ QUOT_ which told me the “driver” was indignantly congratulating the officer on issuing his “suggested” (read “mandatory”) number of citations for the day so I confidently entered AND a QUOTa! Alas, the TURDUCKEN (which I have tasted and don’t recommend) corrected it and sadly enlightened me as to the intended use of “citation.” I can absolutely hear a driver’s dripping sarcasm as she accepts the citation, looks at the officer and says “aaaaaand a quota! Guess you’re done for day now. Have a nice evening, officer.” Oh well.

The interlocking spanners are delightful. A few momentary head scratchers more from odd clues than I don’t knows. 20A, FEARED for worried was weakish. Maybe just more leaning old, British, headed to archaic, but certainly gettable. The “cluttered container” part of 38A hinting at FISH was really odd to my brain (yeah, yeah, yeah, I hear those “oddities for the odd” comments, but ok). When I have to FISH something out, it’s because of inaccessibility rather than clutter. An “I had to FISH my favorite necklace out of the P-trap with a crochet hook” level of inaccessibility.

Everything was gettable, which I enjoyed enormously. Blanked on Jewell LOYD, but recalled her exceptional play as a student at Notre Dame. No idea who Anora is much leas her husband IVAN. The very fair crossings helped me out.

The one and only (but very IRKing) nit was SO IN. Not because it (alas) is not of the language - at least to Gen Z, but because it dilutes a speaker’s ability accurately to communicate precisely. And yes, being raised under my grandfather’s watchful and demanding eyes and ears, I accept that my extreme dislike for SO IN may be a tad OTT as my Grace would say with a teenage eye roll for emphasis.

As OFL remarked, this was an enjoyable whooshy Friday. Nice to see Erica Hsiung Wojick back; it’s been a while.

Beezer 5:34 PM  

Are you talking about Dale Chihuly? If so…I live in “fly-over” country. I think he is bona fide “famous.”

okanaganer 6:14 PM  

@Les, if you saved a copy of that story on your house I would love to see it. To my email?

Anonymous 7:11 PM  

It's hard for a Friday to be this easy while still being this fun... but this was both very easy and very fun.

As somebody who has done graphics for many WNBA games... I still have to double-check that Jewell Loyd's first name has two Ls and her last name had one. Obviously not a problem given the spaces in the puzzle, fortunately.

Anonymous 8:25 PM  

LOYD/OTRO --Nope. FIRE/NOREPLY/NES --Nope. The rest I could get, and the rest I liked.

Anonymous 8:49 PM  

Dale Chihuly has exhibited all over the world. He had a fabulous exhbit at the NY Botanic Gardens. He is definitely famous.

Gary Jugert 9:25 PM  

¿Estoy perdiendo la cabeza?

Lovely sparkly phrases. Almost note for note with 🦖 today. Fell asleep part way through after a couple of long days and my solve time is epic. I misspelled AUGER so NO REPLY was NORUPLY and I spent a good deal of time trying to pronounce that word with a British accent.

I thought Anora was a crummy movie. I am positive that'll hurt the feelings of those who made it, but how it won any awards is beyond me. I see about three movies a year and that shouldn't have been one of them.

NO TOK? Just tik. No idea what Yas Queen or ENGRAM is, but I will go read your comments now.

😂 TURDUCKEN.

😫 SOIN.

People: 6
Places: 2
Products: 8
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 5
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 24 of 70 (34%)

Funny Factor: 2 😕

Tee-Hee: ASS.

Uniclues:

1 Woof woof woof...
2 Mike the Dominator in Mexico.
3 The space between rich people's ears.
4 Queasy queen of the Quetzal Cichlid.

1 AND I QUOTE LAB
2 NO LOSE MIGUEL
3 ELITES' DESERT
4 NOT OK FISH SHAH

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: New Year's Eve attendee crying in the parking lot. MOET REFUGEE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Pondie 9:39 PM  

Life-long Missourian here, and I've never heard it. But I live in one of the big cities.

Anonymous 10:55 PM  

I know Dale Chihuly's work well - and it's often made of "blown" glass - and that was the right number of letters. So easy - and wrong! Oh well.

Everyone in retail calls them C-stores so it's a term I hear often. Great and fun puzzle!!

CDilly52 11:13 PM  

Loved your “proper” way to serve those three fowl for a delightful and beautiful platter. My chef friend, the year the TURDUCKEN was all the rage, said he was tired of being asked about the dish. If someone insisted on his opinion, he always said, “To put the foul in these fowl, try TURDUCKEN, but if you do, all you’ll have is the TURD.”

Gary Jugert 12:58 AM  

@CDilly52 5:23 PM
"OTT!" 🤣 Grace is a rock star.

Anonymous 8:10 AM  

Arg, I was sure my problem had something to do with the wrong-looking TURDUCKEN but crosses all checked out, finally checked puzzle and had entered SiNOD for the church thing and never noticed the clue for NiT

Bobbydacron 9:59 AM  

I know i’m very late to the party but in my haste i misread Bad Bunny as Bugs Bunny. Shame on me but it did mess up the top right corner

CDilly52 1:38 PM  

@GJ, You are right about Grace, in so many ways!

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