Thursday, May 28, 2026

Blue stop sign? / THU 5-28-26 / Walking-around money for Pavarotti? / Icy passage to Antarctica's McMurdo Station / Guardians of bushido tradition / Whistling stickup man on "The Wire" / McGwire's rival in the 1990s M.L.B. / Dark and sultry, like a femme fatale's gaze

Constructor: John Kugelman

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: A major "OR" deal... — "___ OR ___" phrases are clued as if the "OR" were affixed to the end of the first word:

Theme answers:
  • TENOR TWENTY (17A: Walking-around money for Pavarotti?)
  • PASTOR PRESENT (27A: Preacher's gift?)
  • FACTOR FICTION (41A: 5 and 8 go into 42, for example?)
  • MAYOR MAY NOT (55A: Local leader is prohibited?)
Word of the Day: Jimmy CARR (43D: Comedian Jimmy) —
James Anthony Patrick Carr
(born 15 September 1972) is a British and Irish comedian. He began his stand-up career in 1997. He has regularly appeared on television as the host of Channel 4 panel shows such as The Big Fat Quiz of the Year (2004-present), 8 Out of 10 Cats (2005–2021), and 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown (2012-present). Carr is known for his rapid-fire deadpan delivery of one-liners and often controversial and edgy dark humour. [...] Carr was the first British comedian to have a Netflix stand-up special with his show Funny Business. [...] In a stand-up comedy performance released as a Christmas 2021 Netflix special titled His Dark Material, Carr joked:

When people talk about the Holocaust, they talk about the tragedy and horror of 6 million Jewish lives being lost to the Nazi war machine. But they never mention the thousands of Gypsies that were killed by the Nazis. No one ever wants to talk about that, because no one ever wants to talk about the positives.

During the show, Carr said the joke was meant to raise awareness of Romani victims of the Holocaust. The joke later received widespread attention the following February after a clip was posted and shared online. He was condemned by the Auschwitz Memorial, Hope not Hate and The Traveller Movement, who called anti-Romani prejudice the "last acceptable form of racism" in the UK. [...] In 2025, Jimmy Carr performed at the Riyadh Comedy Festival. The event was criticised by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International as an attempt to whitewash human rights abuses committed in Saudi Arabia. Comedians who played at the festival faced backlash from journalists and fellow artists for participating. Carr defended his performance at the festival, stating: "I played it. I loved it. I think we need to give up on the idea that the Middle East becomes Western Europe." (wikipedia)
• • •


Didn't think much of this theme, but appreciated that the puzzle gave me a boatload of interesting non-theme fill, so that at times I could pretend like I was solving a pretty decent mid-week themeless. Those NE and SW corners are hot, and other longer answers like TERTIARY, LOTHARIO, SLOE-EYED, and DOORMATS (as clued!) (4D: People who get walked all over) really keep things lively all over. But yeah, no, the theme ... real mild on the HAR (har). Real "Jeremy's Iron" stuff. And even if you really liked it, I think it's much more of a Wednesday than a Thursday puzzle. There's nothing particularly tricky going on. You just PARSE (!) the phrases differently, and even if it takes you some time to get the first one because you don't know yet where the wackiness is going, after that, every themer is cake. In fact, I was able to no-look that third themer, no problem. I had most of its front end worked out from crosses, and the phrase was simply obvious. I was also able to no-look "OH, NO REASON," TERTIARY, and MENAGERIE—the puzzle was so easy that by the time I would look at a longer answer, it would be sufficiently filled in, such that looking at the clue was unnecessary (I don't recommend solving this way under tournament conditions, or any conditions, really, as it can bite you in the ass, but my pattern recognition was on point today). There was precisely one answer in the clue I didn't know: Jimmy CARR. I was like, "Kimmel? Fallon? .... Choo?" But no, he's just shoes. Anyway, once again, crosses easy, so even CARR didn't do much to slow me down. It is mildly interesting that there are (at least) four different cases where an "OR"-ending word can, if you break the "OR" off, form the front end of a familiar "___ OR ___" phrase. But still, the humor here never got above a single HAR, and mostly didn't even get there. But again, I'm grateful for all the longer answers, which, even if they weren't challenging, at least brightened up the solve a bit.


This thing opened way too easy. GANDHI to GOTO to OMAR to NINA and whoosh it was all over. Well, I did have to move over to the next little section to figure out what the "walking-around money" was going to be. Not sure where or when Pavarotti is "walking around," but TWENTY seems kind of low. If he were your child, then sure, here's a twenty, knock yourself out, kid. But for a grown-up, I dunno. Twenty seemed arbitrary, given the clue. But as I say, not hard. I weirdly enjoyed mentally spelling AARGH correctly on the first try, confirming it with WING (which got a funnyish misdirective clue—8D: Bit of a lark), and then confirming that with OWLS. Double bird surprise! We're working our way through season 2 of Twin Peaks (which is like being stuck in a long dark weird but kinda boring dream), and the OWLS, the OWLS (which, I've been told, are not what they seem) are making their presence felt a little more (due to some vaguely owl-shaped petroglyph, which was found in a cave, which, when manipulated, seemed to set off some kind of earthquake ... I told you it was like a dark weird boring dream!). Anyway, AARGH / WING / OWLS amused me. I think of throwing overhand, not OVERARM. Are they the same. The wikipedia entry is for "overhand throw" exclusively. It looks like they're basically synonymous (one of the cited sources on the page uses "OVERARM" in the title). The only thing besides CARR that gave me any pause was SENSATE, which I think of as merely "having the ability to sense (or perceive)," not as "perceptive" (in the sense of "insightful"). Maybe there's a meaning of "perceptive" that's just "capable of perceiving things." Yes, a neutral meaning. It exists. I never hear "perceptive" used that way (there's always the implication of keen perception), but the neutral "capable of perceiving" definition exists. Awkward. But not so awkward that you're likely to get held up for very long.


Bullets:
  • 35A: Icy passage to Antarctica's McMurdo Station (ROSS SEA) — one of your more common seven-letter xword answers, due to all those common letters, including a rarely-seen triple-"S"! I probably should've made McMurdo Station my Word of the Day. "McMurdo Station is an American Antarctic research station on the southern tip of Ross Island. It is operated by the United States through the United States Antarctic Program (USAP), a branch of the National Science Foundation (NSF). The station is the largest community in Antarctica, capable of supporting up to 1,200 residents, though the population fluctuates seasonally" (wikipedia). 23 NYTXW appearances all-time for ROSSSEA, 16 in the Shortz Era.
  • 40A: Billionaire Musk (ELON) — I would be furious if the editors decided to change my non-racist ELON clue into this racist one. Truly one of the most execrable human beings on the planet. Essentially a mass murder. Just disgusting that he's here at all. Pardon my french, but fuck that guy.
  • 26D: Guardians of bushido tradition (SENSEIS) — stupid me, I thought "sensei" was just a generic word for "teacher." Wait ... I was right, that is basically what it means. There are definitely SENSEIS in the "bushido tradition," but the narrowness of the clue had me imagining a much narrower, more Bushido-specific answer (Bushido = samurai moral code) (saw a beautiful (and bloody!) samurai movie yesterday called Hitokiri as part of my ongoing birth-year movie challenge (see 56 movies from the year I was born (1969) before I turn 57 (Nov. 26)). Eight down, only 48 to go (roughly 2 / week ... I can do it! I believe in myself! My couch-sitting powers are unrivaled!)
  • 11D: Answer to "Why's your report card in the trash?" ("OH, NO REASON") — great answer, but this clue ... I dunno. This kid seems pretty dumb. You (presumably) suck at school and you have absolutely no idea how to hide shit from your parents? What skill set are you bringing to life, exactly, kid. 
  • 32D: Blue stop sign? (SAFE WORD) — if the surrounding answers had been harder to come up with, this one might've proved more of a problem. "Blue" here means "sexual" ("profane" "indecent" "risquΓ©"). Some sex activity (esp. BDSM) requires a SAFE WORD, which functions as an unambiguous stand-in for "stop," as the actual word "stop" may be part of the role-playing.
  • 39D: Comes on little cat feet (TIPTOES) — I have never heard this expression (apparently from a poem about fog). My cats do not tiptoe. They would be insulted if you said that. Undignified. How dare you. They are naturally ninja-quiet. Stalking skills: unparalleled. No "tiptoeing" required.

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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126 comments:


  1. Easy but cute. What @Rex said.
    * * * _ _

    Overwrites:
    I had Heh for "bit of a laugh" at 5D before HAR.
    At 7A, my fly-by-nights were batS before they were OWLS.
    My 26D bushido guardians were Samurai before they were SENSEIS.

    One WOE, comedian Jimmy CARR at 43D

    ReplyDelete
  2. Andy Freude6:20 AM

    Carl Sandburg, “Fog,” from Chicago Poems (1916):

    The fog comes
    on little cat feet.

    It sits looking
    over harbor and city
    on silent haunches
    and then moves on.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have to believe Rex was kidding about not knowing this. If nothing else, it's been in the puzzle before.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:34 AM

      What has been in the puzzle before? And what does the poem
      Have to do with Tiptoes??

      Delete
    3. I don’t think Rex didn’t know the poem, but just went on a jag that cats do not TIPTOE because they natural walk quietly. But…for a human to imitate this would be considered TIPTOEing.

      Delete
    4. Andy Freude
      I also immediately thought of this poem. I lean across it in elementary school. Easy to memorize! It actually is a good tool to teach children about poetry. I suspect it does not appear in elementary schools as much anymore.

      Delete
  3. barry6:26 AM

    ELON is of course the name of a college. Why not just go with that?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:56 AM

      There are muskRATS in the creek behind my house

      Delete
  4. David Grenier6:36 AM

    “The fog comes on little cat feet” is from a poem, I think by Sandburg. He has clearly never heard my kittens galloping across the hardwood floor sounding like a pack of elephants.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. πŸ˜„ I bet those galloping kittens are adorable. And i know what you mean. Cats can make plenty of noise, especially if they’re doing zoomies at 2 a.m.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous2:36 PM

      You're lucky they only gallop. Lulu meows like she's auditioning for the Opera. Not even throwing a a pillow in the face shuts her up!

      Delete
  5. Anonymous6:49 AM

    Thanks for shouting out the racist billionaire who i do not want to think about first thing in the morning, or ever if possible

    ReplyDelete
  6. @REX, do you mind if I ask about yesterday's blog? It seems that the updates got stopped around 2 in the afternoon, at 66 comments. I think there were more.... Are there not any comments "pending approval"? Thanks....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Same here. Kept checking, as I was missing some regulars who post later.

      Delete
    2. In the future just Email me for this kind of stuff if you really need to know. The answer is boring (medical procedure, forgot about comments, other moderators didn’t check in for some reason)

      Delete
  7. Bob Mills6:50 AM

    I'd say "easy/medium." I had MAYORMAYNOT without realizing it was part of the theme, but the absence of a revealer said, "Read it again." Then PASTORPRESENT made sense. I still had problems in the SW, because I had "moth" as the fly catcher before thinking of MITT. Enjoyable puzzle without the usual Thursday gimmickry.
    I don't like Elon Musk either, but why must a puzzle include only nice people?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He's not just a mean person, he one of the worst humans on the planet. Not an exaggeration. Truly repugnant.

      Delete
  8. EasyEd6:51 AM

    Maybe by extension a review of Carl Sandburg should have been the subject of the Word of the Day. That one allusion dominates the puzzle, at least in my view. Really easy for a Thursday, including the low-key themers.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous6:52 AM

    I was amused by Ali and Rex tiptoeing around calling Musk what he really deserves. I enjoyed this puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  10. [Outfit for the highly motivated beau?]




    SUITOR TUXEDO

    ReplyDelete
  11. Andrew Z.6:58 AM

    Steve Bannon (of all people) called Elon Musk a “Parasitic illegal alien.” Never thought I’d agree with Bannon on anything, yet here we are.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous6:58 AM

    Except for Rex’s too kind words for Musk, A fun puzzle.🎈🎈🎊🎊

    ReplyDelete
  13. 11:38 for me last night, so that's easy for a Thursday. I agree this was a fairly simple theme, less complicated than some Thursday entries. The NYT people say they are short of Thursday and Sunday puzzles.... But I enjoyed this one--all those nice long downs. I have absolutely no idea what sloe-eyed is supposed to mean... Sloe is a fruit, right, whose juice is used to make a sloe gin fizz? I'm going to have to look it up (checks internet)... Yes, it refers t the little fruits. They look like little grapes or blueberries.... Proud of myself today for spelling AARGH right the first time, unlike GANDHI, which I always misspell as GhandI.... Liked all the drinks in the puzzle, between TEXASTEA and PINACOLADAs and SLOE gin fizz. Didn't quite understand the part of speech/agreement of POISONPEN with its clue. Thanks, John, for giving us this enjoyable Thursday solve, with all the options! Kinda fun that "OPT" is in the upper R corner of a puzzle full of "this OR that" themers!!! : ) OTOH, by the time your done, you might be sitting on your ARSE, and even feeling a bit ANAL, suffering from some PTSD???? (this puzzle definitely ends darker than it begins.... )

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:00 PM

      AAH ME, held me up a while, AARGH!!!

      Delete
    2. Rick Sacra
      The clue was unusual for PTSD because of the reference to EMT’s. More often it is military related. The clue stood out for me because I have a friend who was an EMT for most of his fire department career. He was diagnosed with PTSD after retiring. Fortunately, he seems to be handling things well now. EMT’s definitely run into very harrowing situations

      Delete
  14. Feeling cautious this morning, so I had to get two theme answers before being confident that they would all involve OR; after that, the other two went right in. Pretty easy, once I realized SamuraI was wrong. I was looking for that icy passage to be a strait or channel or something more passage-like, but a few crosses gave me the ROSS SEA.

    I did hesitate over "Bum around Europe," partly because ANAL was there already, and partly because Europe? Doesn't most of it speak languages other than English? Deceptive cluing is fine, but incorrect cluing, not so much.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Re Europe: I expect they would lawyer it away with the excuse that English is widely spoken and understood throughout Europe, and that form of English is British English. Perhaps they thought "Bum around the UK" would make it too obvious. FWIW, the German cognate is "arsch".

      Delete
    2. Anonymous2:39 PM

      I misread it as "Burn around Europe", so I was really confused!

      Delete
    3. ChrisS5:55 PM

      Across the British Isles where arse is used is not across Europe.

      Delete
  15. This was, for me, like the start of a rollercoaster ride, where the car inches up the tall hill, straining and squealing, building anticipation, then comes that precious moment of zen at the top where the world stands still, followed by the bam-bam-bam rush of nonstop thrill.

    So it went for me, filling in the box around the edges and getting some crosses in the theme answers but unable to crack them, working deliciously hard, until that wait-a-minute moment where the answer started coming, then it did, and immediately after, bam-bam-bam, all the other theme answers fell, and in the blink of an eye and a wow, the puzzle was done, and there I was sitting with a goofy smile, thinking, “What just happened?”

    That’s a good puzzle.

    Not to mention an appearance by the lovely-to-see three-S ROSSSEA, some sweet answers in SENSATE, SIDLED, TERTIARY, SLOE-EYED, and POISON PEN, and a clever, original, and tight theme.

    An entertaining day-brightener you made, John. Thank you and bravo!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lewis
      I agree. Some great answers.
      I have always liked SIDLED.

      Delete
  16. Fun puzzle all around - but I agree with the big guy that the elementary theme somehow doesn’t really fit on a supposed tricky Thursday. PAST OR PRESENT is cute.

    FICTION FACTory

    Rex highlights all of the above average fill. LOTHARIO, TERTIARY, SLOE EYED - all top notch stuff. ESTADOS x SENSATE is fantastic. Limited clunky stuff - love the Feelies clip.

    Hozier

    Enjoyable Thursday morning solve that probably should have been a Tuesday.

    Hoodoo Gurus

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anonymous7:22 AM

    What am I missing? Why does OFL have a picture of Oregon here today?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:47 AM

      Don't get that either. If it was Ohio, it might make sense, given 14A's tribute to the home of a few stars.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:56 AM

      OR themed puzzle.

      Delete
    3. Its state code is OR, the key point of the theme.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous9:53 AM

      OR

      Delete
  18. Hey All !
    Is TEN OR TWENTY a common expression? The ole brain is having difficulty commonizing it. All the others are fine, but that one sounds off, not as common. Could just be me (an outstanding probability.)

    Nice puz, I do agree with Rex this was more WedsPuz than ThursPuz. Will had said a while back, that he was going to start alternating puzs, as in, not always having a tricksy Thursday, apparently it is so. Maybe we'll get a quasi-themed puz tomorrow.

    Liked it overall. Some not often seen words here, TERTIARY, SENSATE, MENAGERIE, SLOE EYED, and my fav (of this puz), LOTHARIO.

    Who had stOMPS before TROMPS?
    Time to SIDLE away. See ya.

    Hope y'all have a great Thursday!

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  19. Too easy. I think it would have been a little on the easy side for a Wednesday, but maybe a little on the hard side for a Tuesday. The theme itself, which I didn't think was conceptually bad, and in fact nicely wacky in execution, offered little to no resistance.

    Most intriguing entry: SLOE-EYED. I don't think I've seen or heard it. The difficult-to-overlook Google AI quotes "The word "sloe" refers to the small, dark, oval-shaped fruit of the blackthorn shrub. Because the fruit is small, dark, and often slightly pointed, comparing someone's eyes to a sloe means they are dark, almond-shaped, and usually long and thin." Is the general populace so familiar with the blackthorn fruit that the meaning of SLOE-EYED would be all that obvious? Of course there is "doe-eyed" which is far more familiar, and it feels like "sloe-eyed" might be riding those alluring coattails.

    Oil, they say, "they" being the guy who sings the INTRO to The Beverly Hillbillies (TEXAS TEA). Some good ol' boy vibes embedded in that phrase.

    Why do you have both ANAL and ARSE in your crossword? "OH, NO REASON."

    Does anyone else feel that, from a PART OF SPEECH point of view, the clue for POISON PEN is oddly written ("Written with venom")? That clue sure looks adjectival to me, and the entry sure looks like a noun phrase.

    SENSEIS are SENSATE. They are sensational. Speaking of bushido -- ever see those YouTube videos where a Tai Chi master wards off twenty would-be attacking dudes with merely an extended palm, and they fall all over the place due to his mystical repellent force? That man is a master of bullshido.

    There is apparently only one permissible way to spell AARGH. This I learned at the feet of Sam Ezersky and his Spelling Bee.

    Time to get a move-on. Have a good day!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agree re sloe-eyed. I had to look that one up. And I love your description of Google’s AI. While I pretty much resent AI in general, the convenience of it is very hard to forego.

      Delete
    2. I generally do think of POISON PEN as adjectival as in “they wrote a poison pen letter. Yeah, SLOEEYED is a term I was only familiar with by seeing it in books over the years but honestly probably never quite knew what it was supposed to convey and never looked it up. Yes, and agree with @whatsername with your “difficult to overlook” with respect to Google AI, and it’s convenient for things when your life doesn’t depend on it. ;)

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:10 AM

      Not sure about the "general populace" but if you can do NYT Thursdays, you almost certainly know what a SLOE is. Still, I was surprised to see SLOE in a non-berry context.

      Delete
    4. Oh, I see, the full noun phrase is "poison pen letter". Thanks!

      If there were a way to turn off Google AI from the computer screen as one would turn off a light switch in one's home (save your energy, Gemini; I'm good), then I would do it, but that's not the way it works. The most you can do is mask it from view.

      I have zoom chats with a mathematician who has been given trial access to Claude to play around with. Looking over the output script from one of their sessions the other day, it didn't take long to spot an incorrect mathematical assertion it made, so when my friend John pointed out the issue to Claude and scolded it a little, the AI agent apologized and vowed not to repeat the behavior that led to the mistake. I asked John about this, whether Claude learns its lessons, the answer is that it does -- within the session that it is operating in. But it doesn't carry that lesson over into the next session. It really is uncanny how much it behaves like a human -- it may ignore your instructions and carry on as if it has a will of its own, and thereby waste some of its and your time -- very unlike how I grew up thinking about computers. Claude is very cheerful, and insanely energetic and industrious, but you do have to keep checking up on its work, and get it to check up on its work and be "intellectually honest". This being said, these AI agents are becoming alarmingly powerful. What a fascinating and energy-consumptive world we live in now!

      Delete
    5. @Anon 11:10AM. I meant: does the person-in-the-street know what a SLOE fruit looks like, with enough specificity so that SLOE-EYED is a recognizable and and meaningful description. My own knowledge of all matters SLOE is of the superficial crossword variety.

      Delete
  20. Not really a Thursday theme, and not really Thursday difficulty, but ...
    I really liked it. Lots of good fill and a fun theme.

    SAMURAI before Senseis was fixed when ROSSSEA (weird typing that) was necessary.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bingo on your first sentence. I must have had some crosses on SENSEIS because I would’ve also thought Samurai if not.

      Delete
  21. There were a few things that I didn’t recognize, or if I had encountered them in the wild, I didn’t fully grasp the meaning so the clues were not much of a hint - including SENSATE, SENSIES, ROSS SEA, and even MENAGERIE, a word I have heard many times but never paid attention to (I thought it just meant “assortment” generically).

    I’m also not familiar with this LOTHARIO character - if I had to guess, I would go with Shakespeare or mythology; he didn’t even warrant a mention so he’s probably known by 95% of us. I do know who Jimmy CARR is though.

    Like Rex, I thought the theme was a little flat, but it did its job and didn’t gunk up a the grid at all, so I’m grateful for that, especially on a Thursday.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I never knew until now where LOTHARIO came from. It's no wonder. From Wikipedia: "Lothario is an Italian name used as shorthand for an unscrupulous seducer of women, based upon a character in The Fair Penitent, a 1703 tragedy by Nicholas Rowe." I won't pursue the rabbit hole any deeper here, but I did learn a new word from that article: "rakehell" (akin to "hellraiser"), meaning ROUE [you remember that one from the other day? I cannot now unlearn the word origin of that one].

      Delete
  22. Thought I might be in trouble right away in the NW which included a "programming statement" and someone from The Wire, but crosses took care of all that and off to the races. The idea became apparent with TENOR and was confirmed by PASTOR and the other truths were self-evident, but fun enough to figure out. Outside of OMAR, the only other WOE was Mr. CARR. Happy to not have met him before, it seems. He can go somewhere with ELON and stay there.

    OVERARM made me think of a friend who always said he used OVERARM deunderant, because he knew I liked silly. Also silly, we used to say our cat came in on little fog feet. Nonsensical but amusing.

    I can never see TERTIARY without thinking of Walter Mitty, as it's a term he uses arbitrarily when imagining himself as a surgeon, along with the machine that goes " pocketa-pocketa-queep" that he requires. Great stuff.

    Easy breezy Thursday, JK, and pleasant enough, Just Kinda wish it had had a little more crunch. Thanks for a medium amount of fun.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Love the "overarm deunderant." Am stealing it immediately.

      Delete
    2. I have never heard of Jimmy CARR either and after reading about him I echo your sentiments.

      Delete
  23. Wanderlust8:42 AM

    I wonder if the joke in the “OH NO REASON” clue is because the kid is saying, “Oh, I showed no ability to reason in my classes, so I got a bad report card.” A stretch….

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:45 AM

      I thought a bunch of these answers were a stretch, and a shrug. As in a whole lot of “this might work, but probably not, since that would be a stretch, and a bad one at that. Oh, it is *bad answer*. Shrug”

      Delete
  24. Anonymous8:50 AM

    Yup, fuck that guy.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Alexscott688:51 AM

    Never heard OVERARM. You throw overhand or underhand or sidearm or even three-quarters, but OVERARM? Would the opposite of that be underarm? Must be a regional thing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:29 AM

      The short blurb on Jimmy Carr did not do him justice at all. He is brilliant, thoughtful and irreverent in the extreme. He commonly points out idiosyncrasies and double standards that might otherwise go unnoticed. His comedic routines are easily searched and found.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:09 PM

      A creep who took journalist-murderer money.

      Delete
    3. ChrisS6:04 PM

      Seems like overarm (never heard of it either and spell check rejects it) is a cricket term and most Google hits for it are from Australia.

      Delete
  26. I was unsure if there were OWLS or batS, and when I got the ARM part of the throwing style I was sure it must be sideARM. In the US I have only heard of overhand, sidearm, and underhand.
    It all worked out eventually, but I don't think it's a great clue.
    The puzzle was fine, otherwise, but tame for a Thursday.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Yeah, well, I had TENOR tenner for the Pavarotti clue for the longest time, thinking that walking around money was a “tenner” and therefore assuming the theme answers were all homophones. Seems reasonable, no? Eventually I took out the tenner and put in the TWENTY and then the rest of the puzzle took about 4 seconds or less to finish. But until I took out the damn tenner, it was quite a struggle!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I too originally suspected the theme was going to involve homophones. Between that, being fundamentally unfamiliar with terms like "sloe-eyed" & "lothario", and failing to parse some clues (such as "Written with venom", whose solution is a phrase I've never heard), this was a toughie for me.

      Delete
  28. "Dieci ... Venti ..." I don't know if Pavarotti ever played Figaro, but my favourite version is Terfel's:

    https://youtu.be/2TjCwLnZhXk?si=6eWVFnmWXoexHqoF&t=34

    ReplyDelete
  29. Great puzzle but felt more like a Wednesday. Agree with Rex that the fill was superior, and I thought the theme quite clever. Each answer made me think about it long enough to make it interesting. But … I would’ve liked the puzzle about a thousand times better without the gag-inducing 40A. Definitely left a bad taste on breakfast. Thankfully, the day was saved by the picture of Alfie and Ida, who always put me in a better mood. Thanks for that, RP.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Per the late radio personality Larry Josephson: Discussing the Mahatma with a three-year-old is like taking GANDHI from a baby.

    Sidney Crosby is one of the greatest hockey players of all time. Three times SIDLED Pittsburgh to the Cup.

    I usually give my manicurist a few extra dollars for the fine work she does on my fingers. I guess you'd call those "fingertips." So I suppose for a pedicure I should TIPTOES.

    True story re yesterday's GOT A MATCH: When he was in college many years ago, my brother had an apartment in NYC. One evening, he darted out to the corner hardware store to pick up a bulb when one of his lamps went dark. He told the salesman to save the bag, and just stuck the bulb in his jacket pocket. In the elevator on the way back, a woman who planned to smoke a cigarette when she got off, took one out of her pack, turned to him and said: "Got a light?" With a big smile, he pulled the bulb out of his pocket.

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  31. Another day where Rex's difficulty rating makes me feel like an utter moron. I found this puzzle extremely challenging. I never had the makings of a varsity crossword-er.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My advice to you is to NOT let Rex’s difficulty rating make YOU feel like a moron. He is not only varsity A-team but experienced. And, he might have rated this puzzle as medium or hard if it were a Monday puzzle. I used to think like you, but after several years kind of got the rating system. Just be glad he no longer posts his “solve times”…those were REALLY depressing! (As compared to mine)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:51 AM

      This feels to me like a vibe puzzle. Rex mentions filling a lot of answers without looking at the clues which is more like Wheel of Fortune than crossword work (no diss on WoF). I didn’t vibe with this and could tell at the start, this constructor just isn’t on my wave length. So while I may not be a varsity player, I’ve resigned myself that crosswords are a small insular club and it’s no wonder, if the same people with similar thinking make and solve puzzles.

      Delete
  32. DAVinHOP9:50 AM

    Maybe a tepid three stars is deserved, as there were some fun long answers. But "OVER ARM" said no one ever in a throwing or sports context. And Get AN A is weak; a better clue for that (lackluster) answer might have been "Gimme ___" (start of a cheerleader's shout).

    If allowed to weigh in, I'd have suggested that Rex consider a full star downgrade for the inclusion of the disgustingly corrupt mass murderer (by purging USAID). Our neighbor's daughter is an ELON College alum and they have mixed feelings about the decal affixed to their car. Agree with the commentary that Rex was too soft on him.

    I'm predicting that @Gary will have a field day with Tee-hees.

    The picture of Rex's feline MENAGERIE was a lovely finale to the write-up.

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    Replies
    1. DAVinHOP. '"OVER ARM" said no one ever in a throwing or sports context". Ever watch a cricket match?

      Delete
    2. DAVinHOP4:27 PM

      @Les, I almost put in a qualifier to my haughty claim re OVER ARM; but I didn't. In hindsight the phrase was unlikely to have been made up.

      As a matter of fact, I have watched, I'd estimate, about ten minutes of cricket and...do...not...understand it...at all. I've even read Wikipedia and watched some You Tube videos. But given its non-US popularity that's my loss. So, taking on faith that you are correct, I humbly withdraw my objection to OVER ARM.

      In my defense, that the clue didn't mention cricket wasn't (IMO) cricket.

      Delete
  33. Bob Mills10:31 AM

    For Seth 9:46: Musk is loathsome, I agree. But recent history is replete with people who prospered despite their character failings...Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Lenin...and I'd include Netanyahu and Trump. Should puzzles ignore history?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. To be, or not to be…that is the question.

      Delete
    2. @Bob Mills 10:31 AM
      Yes, a thousand times yes. Those pieces of dirt belong in history books. We don't need them anywhere else.

      Delete
  34. Anonymous10:32 AM

    Stomps before clomps before tromps.

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    Replies
    1. Ah….the unholy trinity of “loud walking.”

      Delete
  35. Disappointed not to have some trickiness on a Thursday. But the puzzle was enjoyable. I agree with everyone on Musk and groaned when I saw that clue. One slow-up was “bats” before OWLS followed by “lyre” before VIOL.

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  36. Alice Pollard10:41 AM

    for some reason, it took me awhile to get going on this one, so it was NOT easy for me. Never heard of Jimmy CARR or NINA and OH NO REASON seemed odd. And the cat/TIPTOE thing seemed weird to me

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:21 PM

      Same, didnt really "get" OH NO REASON seemed kind of random

      Delete
  37. Well I absolutely loved the theme! This is the kind of word play that really pops for me, as straight forward as it is. That, along with some real top notch fill, made this a joy to solve.
    NW fell fairly easily for a quick start, though I know nothing about coding nor am I a Wire fan. But crosses were all very fair.
    Like @Rex and others, 7D had me scratching my head. I threw down *sidearm" with great confidence and left it there as I could not see how it could be wrong. When there was no other choice but OWLS for the O, I (reluctantly) entered OVERARM and did not like it. I say over *hand*. But there are worse things that can happen in a puzzle (like ELON) so I can live with OVERARM.
    I got a big kick out of all the themers along with the other great fill that @Rex has already mentioned.
    To add to the fun, the rated R stuff did not go unnoticed πŸ‘€. We have your SAFEWORD, your British Bum along, with the term for Fussbudgety. That's a bunch of blue!
    Thanks for this one, John. It was a good time!

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  38. Once again I got a Saturday level of solving out of a Thursday puzzle. My weekends only solving is catching up to me. Fill like OMAR and NINA do not pop up. They have to be worked out. Today I had to start with SOSA and STS and worked south from there. The theme kept slowing me down as Im not a theme person. All was clear in the end but I did have to work at it.

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  39. TrevorTheFosterDad10:52 AM

    Ah yes. A Thursday that remembers the central truth of Thursdaying: if you are not momentarily convinced the puzzle has become sentient and begun breaking its own rules, then what are we even doing here?

    And this gimmick? I laughed. I actually laughed. Out loud. A genuinely ridiculous, stupid, wonderful little idea: carving up familiar phrases so that common tiny words (OR, ON, AS, etc.) become detachable little semantic hitchhikers, drifting into neighboring answers like mildly intoxicated dinner guests who have lost track of whose apartment they’re in. It is EXACTLY the sort of gimmick that should be unbearably cute and somehow isn’t. The revealer (or pseudo-revealer, depending how doctrinaire one wishes to be about revealers) basically winks at you and says: yes, language is absurd, thank you for noticing. Once the mechanism clicks, the grid opens with the deeply pleasurable sensation of suddenly understanding a magic trick and then immediately wanting to applaud the magician for having committed so fully to nonsense. Very, very funny.

    My favorite moment, though—far and away—was “Blue stop sign?” leading to the answer that suddenly recontextualizes stop through an alternate meaning of blue. Perfect. Tiny. Elegant. One of those clues where your brain briefly stalls, blinks twice, and then gives up resisting because the joke has already landed. That is Thursday clueing at its best: not merely tricky, but amusingly tricky. You don’t resent it. You admire the tiny act of mischief. The whole puzzle had that energy, actually—mild impishness without cruelty. Even when the gimmick was obvious, it remained pleasurable because the constructor seemed genuinely delighted by the stupidity of the premise, which turns out to be contagious.

    Is it hard? No, not especially. Once the gimmick announces itself—and it does not exactly arrive wearing camouflage—the solve becomes almost suspiciously smooth for a Thursday. But I found I didn’t care. Difficulty is not virtue. Cleverness is not virtue. Delight is virtue. And today’s puzzle, gloriously, idiotically, delighted me. A very silly Thursday that knew precisely how silly it was and somehow became smarter for it. More of this, please.

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    Replies
    1. You write very thoughtful and interesting comments. I thought initially you might be the old Dash Riprock repackaged, but probably not. That isn’t anything against Dash…it was just that Dash was “hard to read.” This is not hard to read.

      Delete
    2. @Beezer. I had the same thought, that Dash Riprock had returned from rehab as TrevorTheFosterDad.

      Delete
  40. Yep, another fine puzzle that was just published on the wrong day of the week. I thought the theme answers were very clever, and there was a lot of interesting fill.

    I will say “hand up” for thinking OHNOREASON was, well, kind of lame. If I’d done that I would’ve said…IMUSTVEDONETHATONACCIDENT (note: I KNOW it’s “by accident”). Of course no grid is large enough for that fib. :/

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    Replies
    1. Some people are better at fibbing than others. But yeah, that is one "dum" kid (did you see what DJT said the other day, that "many people" don't realize that "dumb" is spelled with a "b"? curious how that guy is so bad at fibbing and at the same time has managed to fool so many).

      Delete
  41. Didn't need Elon or Jimmy Carr in my day. Why? Why? Seriously, why?

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  42. Anonymous11:07 AM

    Means of shaping entryways?

    DOOR DIE

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  43. This puzzle hit the sweet spot for me. It has just four themers of moderate length that all cohere tightly around a central idea. This allows a relatively low black square count of 35 and that leaves lots of space for some top notch fill that Rex and others have praised. This puzzle has balance.

    So often we see a grid with themer bloat. Five, six and even seven theme entries with perfunctory fill (tons of threes and fours) as glue to hold it all together. And the more themers that are crammed into the grid, the greater the likelihood that one or more will be problematic in maintaining theme concept consistency.

    I did give the side eye to the clue "Perceptive" for 32A SENSATE. Maybe it's because I taught the psych course Sensation and Perception, but I think of SENSATE as having the capacity to detect a stimulus while PERCEPTIVE means being able to correctly interpret and assign meaning to that stimulus.

    For the record, they are no plurals in the Japanese language. Whether we are talking about "one SENSEI" or "many SENSEI", for example, is determined by context. Yeah, I know it can be rationalized as having moved into English, but still.

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  44. Oh, sin motivo.

    WELL, actually ... this is a funny puzzle. An exceedingly rare clown award. Nice.

    Here's our Wednesday puzzle a day late, and worth the wait -- mostly. I enjoyed the battle with this one. The theme took me a long while before the first one landed and then they all went in. They're cute-ish.

    Last thing to drop was SLOE EYED. I still can't believe it's a thing. I'm betting it's probably got racist origins, but I am too lazy to look it up.

    Man I wanted THE FOG to come in on little cats' feet.

    At one point we had a cat and two dogs and the MENAGERIE was definitely IN there.

    ❤️ AARGH. DOOR MATS. OH, NO REASON. POISON PEN. [Blue stop sign].

    😫 SENSEIS.

    People: 10 {Sigh. And I didn't count Machiavelli.}
    Places: 3
    Products: 3
    Partials: 5
    Foreignisms: 2
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 23 of 70 (33%)

    Funny Factor: 9 🀑

    Tee-Hee: Well ... it's two-fer today. Time for a bit of a backend celebration if you observe such things: ANAL and ARSE ... yay. This constructor got the "how to beat the slush pile" memo from the editorial team. "More of this please," said nobody outside the hallowed halls of the NYTXW ever.

    Uniclues:

    1 Explain a billionaire, any billionaire.
    2 By-product of Botox in the butt.
    3 Stop!
    4 Why Columbus landed in the Bahamas first.
    5 Result of hurriedly crawling out of the window and landing in a rose bush.
    6 {Yeah, I saw it. Ugh.}
    7 Result of listening to the news about the second most embarrassing state in the union.

    1 PARSE EGOIST (~)
    2 RID ARSE PLEATS
    3 GO TO SAFEWORD
    4 NIΓ‘A PIΓ‘A COLADA
    5 LOTHARIO TROMPS
    6 OH NO REASON ANAL
    7 TEXAS TEA PTSD

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Served as kingpin in a caper to fix guitarists' fingernails. LED EMERY SPREE.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  45. I'm a fan. The puzzle was Thursday-level-enough for me, as the theme eluded me until half-way through, and it offered so many non-them pleasures, in MENAGERIE, DOORMATS, TERTIARY.... I was stymied up top by a mistaken LOverboy, the "v" of which made TWENTY impossible to see; and POISONous didn't help either. I adopted the "abandon the area" strategy and jumped down to the SE corner and backed my way in from PTSD to get me the letter string AYNOT...enough to reveal today's trick. I really liked FACTOR FICTION!

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  46. Easy. I’m sensing a pattern this week.

    No costly erasures and CARR (hi @everyone).and OHIOAN (as clued) were it for WOEs.

    The long downs were fun.

    I agree with @Rex that this would have been a pretty good Wednesday, mostly liked it except for ELON.

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  47. Anonymous11:45 AM

    Puerto Rico can’t have a national drink. It isn’t a nation. I get saying “national drink” casually, but the clue isn’t up to the puzzle’s usual accuracy.

    ReplyDelete
  48. Cool ORATORSEND puztheme, altho kinda easy-ish concept for a ThursPuz. Took m&e a few extra nanoseconds, tho, usin TENORTWENTY to unlock the theme mcguffin -- not quite as universal a phrase as the other 3 themers.

    staff weeject pick: HAR. with honrable mention to OR, of course.
    Nice weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.

    Lotsa long, neat Down entries in this rodeo, the favest bein: OHNOREASON [even tho OHN OR EASON ain't all that close to theme-worthy]. And them long Down entries were superbly framed in, usin the Jaws of Themedness, too boot.

    Thanx for the fun, Mr. Kugelman dude. Clearly ELON struck the @RP nerve jackpot, today. Not sure whether to bestow congratz on U OR the editor(s) OR a Musk-paid hacker...

    Masked & Anonymo Us

    p.s.
    Runt puzzle:
    **gruntz**

    M&A

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  49. An addendum. Rex, we take you for granted and I’m sorry. But…I hope it in some way shows our appreciation. Oh. Perhaps I’ll make a mid-year donation to convey that appreciation. ;)

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  50. Anonymous12:25 PM

    I give the puzzle 3.6 rontgens - not great, not terrible. AARGH irked me, I found it lazy.

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  51. My problem with this puzzle was knowing the Sandberg poem so well that I had a hard time turning it into TIPTOE because cats don’t walk on TIPTOE - kind and of what Rex said, but I loved seeing the reference. I probably make some reference to my Pip’s “Little cat feet” every day (unless I ask her how her “beans” are looking).

    Gran actually taught me the poem before I even started school after I adopted the big orange tabby who lived under our porch. I named him Jerrycat. We adopted each other actually.

    Until I finally got old enough to go to school, I was a very solitary kid by choice, and having a cat-friend made me very happy. Jerrycat and I understood each other. We were content just to roam around exploring all the possibilities.

    I saved food scraps, snuck them outside after I purloined an old saucer for him. Of course he wanted to come in the house. I would wait until everyone was asleep and let him in the basement door and he would sleep on my bed. All was well until the day mu mother discovered him and banned him from the premises and went nuts on my room certain that fleas had taken over. I was bereft, and Jerrycat disappeared.

    I missed him terribly. Gran explained that he was a wild animal and not used to sticking around for long and that feral cats, by nature love to take things, do all the investigating required, and then sometimes go somewhere else. We talked about how clever he was and how he could sneak up on you. Gran said it must have been time for him to move on, and recited the Sandburg poem. I remember distinctly telling Gran that I liked the poem but that Jerrycat had “really big cat feet” but was silent anyway. I’ve always been prepared vociferously to defend my best friends. Jerrycat was my very first.

    I really enjoyed this puzzle. The clever clues made me smile, and the theme was fun. I got it easily, although I doubted that once Pavaratti was a household name (for a TENOR anyway) he’d not likely be including a mere twenty as “walkin’ around money.” Each themer was legit and well clued. I especially liked MAYOR MAY NOT. My favorite themes are those that focus on language. I would have liked more challenge, but this one did its job as a Thursday offering just fine.

    Everyone here enjoys crosswords. We are all vastly different folks, and each person reacts individually to each puzzle. What’s one solvers lobster dinner is another’s cold oatmeal.

    For newer solvers or anyone feeling the least bit “less then” when taking in Rex’s star ratings, don’t be intimidated. Please understand that the stars are his stars and only his stars. I say fie upon the time clock and the stars.

    While each solver must fill in the same words to get the happy music, the solving experience itself is individual. Most of this one was easy for me to solve, had a few clues with some nice grit, but the experience at the end was of a very pleasant Thursday solve. We saw some of my favorite things: music (especially reference to Baroque, baseball (1998’s home run race was so exciting!), some really great fill (as OFL mentions, and of course I’m always going to be partial to good cat references. So, keep ‘em comin’ Mr. Kugelman!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @CDilly, love your Jerrycat story!

      Delete
    2. CDilly. Your Jerrycat story resoated with me. my kids adopted various animals. The most notable were the rabbits. We lived near a large wooded park where people would abandon pet rabbits and my kids would bring them home. I can't say I'm really fond of bunnies - they will eat any electrical cord in sight - but my kids loved them, so that was OK. Eventually they stopped bringing them home and I could stop mending cords with electrician's tape and cleanig up little hard pellets off the floor and everything was just fine.

      I'm sorry you lost Jerrycat. Sounds like my kind of feline.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous4:06 PM

      Gosh, what a lovely comment. Thank you!!

      Delete
    4. Love reading your reminiscences.

      Delete
    5. @CDilly52 1:11 PM
      Another "best of the day" read. You're wonderful. Thanks.

      Delete
  52. This would have been a perfect Tuesday or Wednesday. The theme is cute and the answers are really smooth! But for Thursday, I kinda want a bit more going on.

    The clue for WELL is pretty lame. How about: "It's a deep subject"?

    I had a bad start at 1 across: hands way up for GHANDI instead of GANDHI! After that it was pretty quick going.

    Once again, a lot of 4 letter names: OMAR NINA CARR SOSA ELON NYSE EARP. The first 3 were Unknowns to me.

    Yes, TEXAS TEA always starts the Flatt and Scruggs theme song from Beverly Hillbillies. Boy, they had some really epic TV theme songs back then!

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  53. Eniale2:01 PM

    As one who doesn't normally manage to finish Thursdays, I suppose I ought to be grateful - but I found this too easy, and it's not that I've improved so much. Thanks anyway, JK, for an enjoyable solve.

    Despite what DuckDuckGo tells me about SENSEIS, I still have a gut feeling that SenSEI would be more acceptable. (I'm trying out a different browser instead of Google because of what I hear the latter is planning to roll out in the way of AI,)

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  54. Stumptown Steve2:13 PM

    Very late to the party but thx for the shout out to OR.

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  55. In reply to @Les from yesterday (a batch of comments came in later, as was covered above, where Rex weighed in):

    Don't worry, I'm sure you are scrupulously aware of the non-smokers around you and take ample precautions not to offend. The smokers I know are similarly mindful. And yes, everything I hear about smoking accords with what you say: nicotine is both a stimulant (sharpening the mind, promoting of clarity) and a relaxant (promoting calmness and a certain meditativeness, as you said). I can easily intuit the draw [so to speak!] it would have for intellectual sorts of people, and I can easily picture myself being a smoker in an alternative universe. The pleasures that smokers speak of are widely reported.

    Here is the opening from Chapter 2 of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, which I quite like:

    Uncle Charles smoked such black twist that at last his nephew suggested to him to enjoy his morning smoke in a little outhouse at the end of the garden.

    —Very good, Simon. All serene, Simon, said the old man tranquilly. Anywhere you like. The outhouse will do me nicely: it will be more salubrious.

    —Damn me, said Mr Dedalus frankly, if I know how you can smoke such villainous awful tobacco. It's like gunpowder, by God.

    —It's very nice, Simon, replied the old man. Very cool and mollifying.

    Every morning, therefore, uncle Charles repaired to his outhouse but not before he had greased and brushed scrupulously his back hair and brushed and put on his tall hat. While he smoked the brim of his tall hat and the bowl of his pipe were just visible beyond the jambs of the outhouse door. His arbour, as he called the reeking outhouse which he shared with the cat and the garden tools, served him also as a sounding-box: and every morning he hummed contentedly one of his favourite songs: O, twine me a bower or Blue eyes and golden hair or The Groves of Blarney while the grey and blue coils of smoke rose slowly from his pipe and vanished in the pure air.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Anonymous2:47 PM

    Could somebody please explain to me 16A, and how a hoe has anything at all to do with Ken Jennings?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:12 PM

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=NJO7hcinS-U&ra=m

      Delete
    2. Anonymous5:13 PM

      I’m surprised no one else commented on this. It’s a classic Jeopardy moment, and a bit spicy for the NYT crossword!

      Delete
  57. three.

    Not a lot of time this morning (American cousin coming to visit) but I I have to say I enjoyed this puzzle and I also have to say I have a story to share about 7D, OVERARM. A number of years ago - maybe 20 - we were visiting rellies in Wigan and our cousin’s son was playing in a community league cricket match and he suggested that his 16 year old Canadian cousin, who had never played cricket in his life, might be subbed in. Coaches and officials discussed it and said OK, might be entertaining. Officials said fine, but only if he had a “cup”. A helpful parent produced one, still in the box, from the boot of his car and Graham hustled to the changing room to put it on. When he returned to the field the main official - and this is a bit weird - asked Graham to stand with his legs spread and smacked him in the crotch a few times with a bat and pronounced him fit to play.

    The opposing team’s bowler, thinking he could embarrass this colonial kid ran up and hurled a mighty OVERHAND and my son calmly knocked it out of the park. He scored 6 runs for the home side before he was retired. His teammates were ecstatic and, after the match a small group of opposing players came over to congratulate him. What a fun day. The colonies strike back.

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    Replies
    1. @Les, your cricket story reminds me of when my brother's friend was contacted by someone organizing the BC Summer Games, who was in a desperate state. The Games were starting soon, and their city (I can't remember if it was Vancouver... probably not) did not yet have a cricket team. "Can you try to round up a team? Please!!!"

      So the friend asked around all his athletic friends, but none of them had ever played cricket. Cricket is just not a big sport around here! But he thought: let's give it a go! Got the required number of volunteers, learned the rules, even practiced a bit. Tried their best!

      They won silver.

      Delete
  58. Got MAYOR MAY NOT fairly early, and then the rest of the themers were quite easy; Working upward, saw my last one, TENOR TWENTY, before I had any crossers in those lights.

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  59. Anonymous3:33 PM

    Very nice Thursday puzzle - I loved the themes, enjoyed the OR image and explanation. Clever clues. TIL ROSSSEA, and about the drink of Puerto Rico. Thanks AndrewZ for “parasitic illegal alien”
    Purrfect cat picture!

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  60. Jersey Minor3:59 PM

    No mention by Rex or any commenter (as far as I can tell) that all of the theme answers were ALLITERATIVE — which makes the puzzle better, IMO — nor any mention (as far as I can tell) that three of the theme answers are in-the-language terms expressing things that are OPPOSITES, and one is not — which makes the puzzle completely unacceptable, IMO.

    Now, will anyone notice that my name is an anagram of Jeremy Irons???

    πŸ‡―πŸ‡ͺ πŸ”ž

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    Replies
    1. I wouldn't have noticed. If prompted by being told it was an anagram, maybe I would have.

      Some people anagram as naturally as they breathe. Dick Cavett, for instance.

      Delete
  61. Anonymous6:38 PM

    great puzzle and theme for real - not as difficult as we like on a Thursday no matter the theme answers are marvelous and the pun is a good kinda groan the ones lifelong puzzlers live for. Salut John K.!

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  62. excellent puzzle today grown up pun fun loved it - also don't miss L.Al times today thurs Jared Capell puzzle the kind of Thursday we all live for - I don't subscribe they let you play anyway not sure why!

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  63. So, everybody has any idea what spaghetti code is?

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  64. Anonymous11:17 PM

    Supremely annoyed by "senseis." You can't pluralize a Japanese word with a "s." The plural of sensei is sensei.

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  65. Anonymous7:38 AM

    Seems sloppy on word tense not just once but twice. Shouldn’t ‘Written with venom’ be POISONPENNED not POISONPEN (or change the clue)? And ROTE for ‘Mindless repetition’? Shouldn’t it be ‘Mindlessly repetitive’?

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  66. Anonymous7:39 AM

    Seems sloppy on word tense not just once but twice. Shouldn’t ‘Written with venom’ be POISONPENNED not POISONPEN (or change the clue)? And ROTE for ‘Mindless repetition’? Shouldn’t it be ‘Mindlessly repetitive’?

    ReplyDelete