East Asian fiddles / SUN 5-10-26 / Reply feigning guiltlessness / Extraterrestrial British TV villain that debuted in 1963 / "Meek" in "Blessed are the meek," e.g. / Ensure that a task is finished / Arsenic's realm, in years past / Dad, in a euphemism / Baby gift bearing the alphabet, maybe / His first star turn was in the 1995 film "Devil in a Blue Dress" / Slant made with a table saw / Numbskull in Yiddish / Travel guide writer Eugene
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Constructor: Rachel Fabi and Adam Wagner
Relative difficulty: Medium
Theme answers:
- SPACE INVADER (23A: U.F.C. (i.e. [UFO] fighter)
- MEGAMALL (25A: Where many large cutlets [i.e. outlets] are seen)
- YOUTHFUL INDISCRETIONS (32A: Wild cats [i.e. oats])
- ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME (99A: Chic [i.e. Ohio!] venue that features great bands]
- AWAY TEAM (111A: They're frequently bcced [i.e. booed])
- LIFE STORY (39D: Bic [i.e. bio] filler)
- LATE NIGHT (43D: Arsenic's [i.e. Arsenio's] realm, in years past)
- REST STOPS (40D: Traveler's cases [i.e. oases])
The "BLOCK"s:
- ICE BLOCK / BLOCKERS (64A: Large summer delivery, in past times / N.F.L. linemen, at times)
- SUN BLOCK / BLOCK SET (69A: Lifeguard's tubeful / Baby gift bearing the alphabet, maybe)
- OLD BLOCK / BLOCKADE (73A: Dad, in a euphemism / Naval barrier preventing entering and leaving)
Soft, chewable jewelry such as necklaces and bracelets, intended as an oral stim toy to calm and soothe the wearer. (wiktionary)
• • •
OK so Rachel is my friend and I think this theme is quite charming but oh boy did I squeal in non-delight at ADNOUN (6D: "Meek" in "Blessed are the meek," e.g.). What in tarnation and also on god's green earth and/or the world is this word? I learned the term for what you call "meek" in the phrase "the meek shall inherit the earth" when I was in high school and I have never forgotten it and I have occasion to use it from time to time in my teaching and that term is "substantive adjective." Today is the first day in my entire life, to say nothing of my English-teaching life, that I have seen the extremely ugly and awkward and confusing term ADNOUN. It's like that word was someone's very first assignment at portmanteau school. "OK, Billy, what if you combine 'adjective' and 'noun,' what would you call that?" "Uh ... ADNOUN?" "Hmm. OK. Well ... you keep trying, Billy." I'd sooner believe ADNOUN was a noun invented entirely for the purpose of advertising, like "Wessonality" or "Retsyn" (ask your parents, kids!). ADNOUN? And that "D" was crossing SUNSHADE which ... I don't really know that term either (18A: It might hang during the summer). Something that provides shade ... from the sun? As opposed to, what, a MOONSHADE? At least I could infer the "D," so no harm done, ultimately, but oof and ack. SUNSHADE hasn't appeared in over 10 years, and before that the gap was almost 20 years! And as for ADNOUN, it will surprise no one that that word hasn't been seen in the NYTXW since before I was born—nine days before Kennedy was assassinated, to be precise. I know there are various conspiracy theories about who really killed JFK (I once made a crossword on this topic for the playbill of an off-Broadway play, true story!), but ... are we sure ADNOUN wasn't involved somehow? Lee Harvey ADNOUN? Man, that "word" ... I can barely see straight rn (as you can possibly tell).
But let's leave that aside and get to the theme, which is actually quite lovely. It's simple and cute, with an added surprise flourish in the middle (the "block" bit), and some of the cluing is quite clever. Very impressed by some of these finds, esp. "Chic" -> "Ohio"—nice twofer! The surface meaning on many of the clues works really well. I think it would've been more fun not to italicize the relevant clues and just let us stumble all over the place trying to find them and figure them out, but this way is fine too. Arsenic -> Arsenio, bcced -> booed ... these work so well. I just wish they'd had a chance to fool me, but after I got the first themer (MEGAMALL), I could see that "cutlets" had to be "outlets" and ... there went the whole gimmick. After that nothing about the theme is tricky ... that is, until you get to the "block" bits toward the center. That gave the theme a much-needed extra twist. Anyway, I basically liked it. There were some stray answers that made me roll my eyes or groan, and ... again, there's ADNOUN, pffffffffft ... but overall, I thought this puzzle was far more entertaining than most Sundays have been of late (or ever).
I'm trying to remember the game Space Invaders in order to make sense of the clue for SPACE INVADER (23A: U.F.C. [i.e. UFO] fighter). I thought the UFOs were the "invaders?" Oh ... wait ... I thought "fighter" was being used to mean "one who fights against," as in "firefighter" or "crime fighter," but I guess it just means "one who fights" (in the case of Space Invaders, the UFO is one who fights against you, the player). OK, I feel better about that one now. I feel less good about CHEWELRY, which I had a hard time finding a credible definition for that wasn't coming from someone trying to sell me CHEWELRY. Are people really gnawing on "jewelry" in public? No judgment, I promise, I just haven't seen (or heard of) such a thing. But there is a chewelryworld dot com, so if it merits an entire website—a website that promises an entire world!—then it would appear that *I* am the one from an alternate universe. "What if ... what if I'm the SPACE INVADER?! ... what if I'm the UFO, man?" At least CHEWELRY is a good portmanteau. I'd give Billy at least a B+ for that one.
Choked on L'IL OL' ME (92D: Reply feigning guiltlessness). By "choked" I don't mean "failed to solve it easily," I mean "literally choked and sputtered at the preposterousness of the letter string LILOLME." I of course know the phrase "little old me," but was not aware that you could do this particular variation, which, without its folksy letter-droppin' apostrophes, looks like something the SPACE INVADER dragged in. I also keep double-taking on SOILIED, which looks like a cutesy way of saying "dirty." "Did dolly's dress get all SOILIED because Rover buried her in the backyard? It's OK, daddy will wash it." So some of the fill got weird for me, but I appreciate that the constructors seemed to be at least trying to keep things interesting—not easy to do over the entirety of an enormous Sunday-sized canvas. Have I seen that particular spelling of SEE-THRU before? I have not. Does it make sense? Yes. Is it more interesting than, say, SEETHED? It is. So good. Fine. I'll take it.
Bullets:
- 21A: "Well, lah-di-dah!" ("OHO!") — so ... not "OOH!"? Sigh, OK. I don't think I've ever had OOH/OHO confusion before, but there's always a first time...
- 29A: Dadaism, it's said (ANTI-ART) — quite a week for the anti-arts. We had ANTICOMEDY on Friday and now ANTI-ART. Dadaism was "A
cultural movement that began in neutralZürich ,Switzerland , duringWorld War I and peaked from 1916 to 1920, which involvedvisual arts ,literature (poetry , artmanifestos ,art theory ),theatre , andgraphic design , which concentrated itsanti-war politic through a rejection of the prevailing standards inart throughanti-art cultural works." (wordnik)
![]() |
| [The Art Critic, Raoul Hausmann, ca. 1919] |
- 37A: Extraterrestrial British TV villain that debuted in 1963 (DALEK) — me, instantly, reflexively, off the "D," without reading the entire clue, let alone understanding it: "DR. WHO!" I have never watched this particular TV show, in any of its many, many incarnations, but I do recognize DALEK.
- 94A: Get ad-libby-dibby while singy-ingy-inging? (SCAT) — I appreciate the effort, clue, but that hurt my eary-wearies. You gotta be careful with cutesy. Look at the EWES clue: 120A: Baa-baa mamas. Now that's cutesy done right. Concise and precise. Presentable. Whereas "singy-ingy-inging" is not even a plausible approximation of what a drunk person would make up while attempting to SCAT. Try saying "singy-ingy-inging." It's unnatural. Even with the silliness turned to 11, my mouth doesn't want to do it.
- 108D: 2015 thriller starring Emily Blunt as an F.B.I. agent (SICARIO) — of all the '10s movies I didn't see, I think I didn't see this one the most. I know the title, but I (clearly) had no idea what the movie was about. I think I had it confused with SYRIANA (2005) (which I also, clearly, did not see)
- 7D: Slant made with a table saw (BEVEL) — younger me would've put BEVEL in no problem, but older me knows that the word BEZEL exists and can never remember exactly what it means or how it differs from BEVEL, so I left that middle letter blank and waited for help from the cross (thank you, SPACE INVADER!)
- 9D: His first star turn was in the 1995 film "Devil in a Blue Dress" (CHEADLE) — the "star" of Devil in a Blue Dress was Denzel Washington. The other "star" was Jennifer Beals (of Flashdance fame). CHEADLE isn't even on the poster. It's true, he is *amazing* in Devil, playing Easy Rawlins's loyal but unpredictably violent old friend Mouse; the performance got CHEADLE several critics circle awards for Best Supporting Actor. It's a breakout role. I just ... apparently I'm unclear about what the parameters of "star turn" are. Anyway, good movie, also a good book, worth checking out.
- 84D: Travel guide writer Eugene (FODOR) — started out spelling this guy's name like a shortened form of FEDERER, but came to my senses eventually.
- 86A: East Asian fiddles (ERHUS) — did not remember this, but once crosses started going in, I was like "oh, right, the instrument that looks like four letters chosen from the alphabet at random, I remember this ... sorta."
- 102D: Fidel ___, Philippine president in the 1990s (RAMOS) — got this easily, but only just now realized that I'd been thinking of Ferdinand MARCOS. Luckily, crosswords do not force you to explain your thinking. That ... could get embarrassing (see ... virtually everything I've ever written)
Good day to you fine people. See you next time.
P.S. texting with Rachel Fabi just now and … apparently there are no “c”s or “o”s in any of the clues today. This is an added level of constructing difficulty that seems … insane. Something only dogs can hear. Crossword-constructing dogs. Anyway, this dog didn’t hear it. I love the commitment to the bit, though.
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115 comments:
NATO Phonetic ALPHAbet…not alfa.
Easy-Medium overall. Medium until I got the gimmick and had to try getting the theme answers from crosses. Then Easy. More fun than most recent Sundays.
* * * * _
Overwrites:
Wrong streams at 8a. I had epa before FCC.
@Rex Ooh before OHO at 21A.
LET PASs before PAST for Admit at 76D.
ILLegal before ILLICIT at 91D.
My 107A hesitant reply was uHH before it was EHH.
WOEs:
The part of speech ADNOUN at 6D.
British TV villain DALEK from 1963 (37A).
ANTI-ART at 29A.
The East Asian fiddles ERHUS at 86A.
READE as a street in Lower Manhattan, yes. Or as half of a drugstore chain named after the streed. But as an English writer? No. (99D)
Former Philippine president Fidel RAMOS at 102D.
Emily Blunt flick SICARIO at 108A.
CHEWELRY? Really?!? (119A).
Nerd alert: I didn't like the 71A clue because a Web page and a SITE aren't the same thing (a SITE may have many pages)
Rex, you’re right—this was the best Sunday we’ve had in ages. But I believe you’re mistaken about “singy-ingy-inging.” Of course it’s hard to say. But it isn’t at all hard to sing, once you get in touch with your inner Ella Fitzgerald. Give it a try.
what the heck is 'ALFA'?
What’s it all about, Alfa? See comment number 1.
apparently some versions of the NATO alphabet have the "A" as ALFA instead of Alpha to help non-english speakers see how to pronounce it easier....
40D Travelers' cases [oases] RESTSTOPS is also a theme answer. I was expecting the symmetrical 41D to be another, but of course some of its letters are part of the BLOCK answers.
I liked this puzzle too! Esp. Since I didn't get my "aha" (OHO?) moment until ~3/4 thru. Puzzle lost its symmetry, tho, with non-italicized clue for 41-Down. How about "Scup alternative"? BTW - scup is a fish, also known as Porgy "popular for its excellent taste and as a fun catch for anglers." IMHO it's no less awkward than clue for 25-Across. Plus I think "scup," is an under- (never-) used answer in NYT puzzles that could have been intoduced here.
Holy moly so impressive! And fun!
Yes, pretty impressive. On several levels. Enjoyed this, although I had to complete this puzzle in two sittings.
More musings:
- The ALFA I know is the attack sub in The Hunt for Red October.
- 88A: I had PUTZ at first, and knew something was wrong for 39D to end in -ORP...
- I've never heard of ADNOUN either.
- Interesting that Letterman, Leno, and Arsenio would all be in this puzzle... All the subjects of a NYT article today on The Late Show. Coincidence???
- Several PPP crossings detracted from the puzzle a little, just a little: CHEADLE/DALEK (I knew DALEK, though); SICARIO/RAMOS; etc.
tried to do this last night but couldn't really handle the meta-ness of the theme late at night.... I think I figured out it was about the CLUES rather than the entries just as I laid down in bed. So much easier once you figure out the conceit..... like I couldn't figure out if it was a LIFESTORm or a LIFESTORe where you filled bics.... then this morning said "D'oh, it's a bio" and then the Yiddish word became clear, YUTZ of course! There were definitely a couple "What On Earth"s out of me... ERHUS???? ADNOUN??? EHH??? I did like learning CHEWELRY.... I agree with OFL that many of the clues really work great, sound great as clued, and misdirect well. Wild cats for Wild oats is just fabulous. Timer says 37 minutes, and I think challenging for me. Unfortunately I never actually looked at the clue for 65 down to see the giveaway, so hacked away at that center of the C area for a while and finally got it.... silly me. Oh well. Thanks, Rachel and Adam, for a fun and interesting puzzle with a tricky theme!!!! : ) (Oh.... and the extra layer.... NO C's or O's in all the clues!!!! Wow!!!)
It's ALFA
https://www.nato.int/en/about-us/nato-history/history-by-theme/symbols-of-nato/nato-phonetic-alphabet
Per Wikipedia, "ALFA" is the official ICAO spelling, since it is intended to be spoken and "ALPHA" in, say, Spanish is a riddle. NATO seems to have adopted the ICAO spellings (including also "JULIETT"), although it's common to see "ALPHA." Go figure.
The theme clues weren't italicized in the puzzle I printed (for which I'm always glad - I enjoy the extra challenge of discovering them on my own).
The fact that none of the clues use a C or an O is really quite impressive, especially since Rex often complains about themes leaking into non-theme clues. And that he wanted to have the theme clues unitalized, which is fair if they are the only Cs and Os!
One wonders if the editor forced the italics on the theme clues, since the constructor avoided C's and O's in the other clues. It would've been fun to play this thinking there were typos until the theme clicked.
Enjoyed this one quite a bit. Got a couple of themers by crosses without understanding what was happening at all, but then the penny dropped with arsenic/Arsenio and that made the other theme answers much easier. I didn’t understand the middle part of the theme with the “block” business until I saw the post-completion animation.
Very impressive... though I got a bit weary of the endless 3s and 4s.
Very impressive construction. The visual BLOCKS in that one clue in the center were a big help, I could definitely see myself floundering around in there without the hint.
I think Rex may have toned down his normally razor-sharp critique/dissection of this one because he’s friendly with Rachel - with full disclosure which is cool. The warts do dampen the solving experience a bit though. Things like CHEADLE crossing DALEK and that triple combo of SICARIO / RAMOS / LILOLME weren’t a lot of fun to stare at.
I paused and looked up ADNOUN while solving because it looked so bizarre. I guess Rachel gets some bonus points for “stumping the star” (and the English professor) today.
Hey All !
Mixed feelings about this one. Clever idea, I'm sure a bear to construct, but the C Blockers needing to close with Rebussed BLOCK threw me, as couldn't figure that one out. Thought the "/" clues would be read as one entry with two different meanings. I think it's neat to close the C Blockers pattern to get the symmetry, but whooshed over the ole head. I guess I'm just a YUTZ.
Never heard of DUPLO. I guess I'm too old. ERHUS another WOE. Had to Goog for OCULO (couldn't get OsteO out of the ole brain.)
Great puz in retrospect. Liked that Rex made an honest review, even though Rachel is a personal friend of his (and was his partner on the live solve blog thing he used to do.)
Tough weekend puzs. This one took 47:34. Average for me is 38:45 (NYT stats). NYTXW getting back it's groove?
Hope y'all have a great Sunday!
Eight F's - OHO!
RooMonster
DarrinV
Rick is exactly right. The YouTube channel RobWords has a good video on how the words were chosen. It's more interesting than one may think
Thank you very much for this exchange. This crossing hung me up (I didn't know DUPLO) and I sort of inferred ALFA at the end as the only thing that made sense, but now I learned something.
I just ended up solving without ever figuring out the gimmick which is often the case when you have to change the clues, not something in the grid.
But other than having PUTZ instead of YUTZ for a while that didn’t cause any real challenges.
When I first opened the puzzle I did think theme would be something involving copyright with that big C in a circle.
Yutz is NOT a Yiddish woid.
Exactly what a 'trick' puzzle should be. Confusing and difficult until you get it, then the big 'aha' once you do.
Loved the puzzle - two really good ones in a row.
I cannot for the life of me make "well, lah-di-dah" be equivalent to OHO. And LIL OL ME is used to represent harmlessness, not guiltlessness. The constructors ear for these expressions seems to be broken. And yeah, I really detested that clue for SCAT.
I miss the Zoom video Rex and Rachel used to post on the blog during Covid illustrating what goes on in their brains when they're solving (live) the crossword puzzle.
This dog, as ~RP brilliantly puts it, missed the overall gimmick, despite having grokked the "block" one. Resisted coming here for what seemed an eternity. Talk about a humiliation! Had almost everything in, and still didn't get it.
Kudos to the constructors and those that saw the light.
As for me, still trying to recover...
I didn't like the black-square gimmick.
As a recreational sailor, the NATO alphabet was a must-learn. All of the words are drawn from various Europe languages, but recognizable to most educated people in that continent. Bravo (It), Romeo (It and Eng); some are recognized almost world-wide: Hotel (French, but used everywhere), Whiskey (Scottish, but again world-wide), Golf (not called anything different anywhere), delta (universal in math), Yankee, as in go home. Some are also widely used, but whimsical: Papa, Mike, etc.
Could not get the theme until Rex explained it here.
Duplo is the oversized version of Lego.
Wow, brilliant puzzle that was fun to solve! Rex pretty much summed up all the pluses, so I won’t repeat. I confess, I was VERY happy to see what Rex said about ADNOUN, since I’d never learned it…but I finally plopped in the D figuring….well, there is ADverb, so…
Oh. I actually had a DNF because after the last block was filled I got the “close but no cigar” message. Gah. I had AWAYsEAM because I had filled in LET
ASs instead of PAST. My bad!
No c’s or o’s? 39D and 40D. 43D. 23A. 25A.
They’re missing from the regular clues but all over the italicized ones.
Great puzzle! Thank you!
Really impressive puzzle. Much better than a typical NYT Sunday
Such an imaginative theme, and great cluing overall. I got the theme when I realized Arsenic had to be Arsenio, and I also just love Wild Cats becoming Wild Oats. What a feat of construction. And now I know that adnoun=substantive adjective. Okeedokee!
P.S. Just noticed that we have SUN and also SUNSHADE as answers....
I almost quit, started to read Wordplay, but the puzzle somehow pulled me back in, and I'm glad I did. Never saw ADNOUN, but I did see the A-SIDE/SIDE SALAD dupe, and didn't like it. Theme constraints, I suppose.
Had to read Rex to realize that chic became Ohio, not chio.
I saw cutlets long before I got the theme, so I put in MEat rack instead of MEGAMALL. Also CroSs THE tees before CLOSE THE LOOP. Many other writeovers, this one took forever--but I got there. Finished with the three rebus squares.
Better clue for LILOLME-- "Citrus swallowing a laugh."
Veritable publications site Yiddish as its source.
Nice puzzle. I appreciate the genuine aha moment it gave me. I will say though that the rock and roll hall of fame is widely loathed because of how it selects artists for induction and how it treats them afterwards.
Never saw the theme (except for the 3 blocks) until I came here. I just filled in random expressions from the crosses without any idea of how they related to the clues. Thanks for the explanation, Rex.
Not so painful losing my streak to a puzzle that I was enjoying so much & came SO CLOSE! to solving (those rebuses will do it to me all the time :( But what fun coming so close :)
WOES= ADNOUN, ERHUS, SICARIO, DALEK, CHEWELRY.
Thank you Rachel & Adam for a very enjoyable Sunday.
geez guys, that was a lot more of a mental workout than I really needed on a holiday Sunday morning...
I don't think of the squares as blocks and the theme made zero sense to me until I came here for an explanation
Also crossing Fodor with D-list wasn't nice. Never heard the name and how was I supposed to know which particular list from B to Z it was?
I "o"on"o"ur
First time in a loooong time that I didn't finish a Sunday. Could not figure this one out. Looks like I'm in the minority so boo me. Probably would have loved it if I knew what was going on. Not my day.
I hear ya, JNKMD. Wikipedia lists it among its "English words of Yiddish origin" and most online dictionaries make the connection too. Several include a photo of my brother-in-law as an example.
Yutz: A fool (יאָנץ, yonts, perhaps derived from putz.)
Would have solved in personal best time before I got BLOCKED for 17 minutes!
FCC does not regulate streaming services like Netflix and Hulu. Bad clue.
I take pride in being CORNIER than the ZANIEST DLIST COMIC.
Is [Transparent, in brief] referring to SEETHRU underwear?
This morning while I was brushing my teeth, Mrs. Egs announced that we were out of caffeinated coffee and so I faced DECAF in the mirror.
One of my brushes with fame was when I METALS wife Tipper.
Toughie today until I got the C = O gimmick. Really enjoyable. Thanks, Rachel Fabi and Adam Wagner.
Completed the puzzle, filled in the rebus squares as "BLOCK" rather than "BLACK" and got the pop-up message "something is amiss." Could not find any errors, revealed puzzle, lost the streak. I'm sorry but, pardon my language, that was bullshit.
Thank goodness! I feared I was the only one who showed up here who hadn’t figured out the gimmick. Good puzzle!
Easy medium. I solved most of this from the bottom up so I caught the theme on the early side which was very helpful.
Answer I was the most grateful to dredge up from the bowels of memory - DALEK
Most amusing WOE - CHEWELRY
Fun/clever/cute theme, delightful graphics, liked it a bunch!
@Karl Grouch, I send commiserations your way. I've been there.
Say what you will about ADNOUN. It's probably the closest ADNAN Khashoggi, "the Great Gatsby of the Middle East (per Wikipedia)," will ever get to being in the puzzle.
My first two theme answers were SPACE INVADER and YOUTHFUL INDISCRETIONS, and since I had no idea what was going on, I clutched at straws, namely the "IN" in both phrases: was there a SPACE in VADER? or something YOUTHFUL in DISCRETIONS? Moving on...MEGA MALL had no "IN" - so that idea went out the window, not that it had been promising anyway. But, like @Rex, I made the connection between "cutlets" and "outlets" - and went back for "UFO" and "Wild oats." Nifty! So, yeah, the other theme phrases came quickly but were still fun to enter. Gold stars for ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME! I agree with @Rex that it was nice to have the extra brain teaser in the center, to turn the C into and O. Thank you to the constructors for the fun!
I always say "The meek shall inherit the earth...because no one else will want it"
Another great and very tricky puzzle from Adam Wagner. The only thing I didn’t like was the CHEADLE/DALEK crossing. Never heard of either of them and so had to guess at that crossing and guessed wrong. Editors should look carefully at crossings to make sure if a solver doesn’t know one person’s name there’s at least a very gettable crossing.
Didn't hit reveal yet but i have everything correct - same as you filled in "Block" for the rebus squares - and it won't give me the San Diego Strut - my two hundred fifty plus streak is in jeopardy and not because I couldn't finish the puzzle - I agree with your language - BS
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/kLxj35c_l9w Speaking of fighters, don’t forget George.
Really enjoyed the puzzle, especially since it took me much longer to get the gimmick in the clues—I had the “block” rebus long before I had made sense of why the italicized clues made no sense. I appreciate the Sunday-easiness; it’s fun to have a Sunday-size puzzle with a gimmick that a newer solver can eventually piece together. Thanks, Rachel!
Though I agree with others who have commented that some of the crosses were rough. FODOR crossing both SICARIO and D LIST on the letter was the roughest of them for me. But it certainly didn’t ruin my overall enjoyment.
Is it common knowledge among solvers who are NOT constructors that black squares are also called "blocks"? I think so, but some people might have found that mystifying. I figured the rebus gimmick out from BLOCKADE, after trying in vain to see how SUNSCREEN could possibly fit.
SUNSHADE and SUNBLOCK. Thought that was a nc-nc.
45D Leading lady's part (didn't know there was a rating system)
Exactly - editors should not allow Naticks.
Paper solve here so no italics and no idea what the hell was going on until I had nearly finished, (was all the way to the bottom) when CLOSETHELOOP finally showed up. I went back to YOUTHFULINDISCRETIONS and then the oats/cats thing made sense but I had to search out some other themers to verify them too. Thanks to my less-than-perfect vision, I was already reading "cutlets" as "outlets" and had MEGAMALL without noticing anything tricky. I finally got that I needed a rebus BLOCK in the middle to make sense of everything there, although I wanted some kind op OPTHO before remembering OCULO. So a completion that would have led to happy music, as everything was right, but far from easy.
I filled in ADNOUN through crosses and didn't think much about it so glad OFL explained that one. Poor day when you can't learn something. The only other total WTF was DALEK. Who?
On second thought there was another total WTF that made me smile, that being ERLUS with its classic crossword clue "East Asian fiddles", which took me way back to my earliest years of solving when stuff like this was common. Foreign country +noun or foreign country +geographical feature, totally mysterious. Those were the days, my friend.
Very impressive stuff, RF and AW. I Really Felt All Wrung out after this struggle, but so worth it. Thanks for all the fun.
I confidently entered "putz" on the first pass, and since I "knew" that was correct, it took me a long time to sort out the "Bic filler" at 39D. YUTZ has been in the puzzle a couple of times before, but I've never encountered in the wild, and it obviously didn't lodge in my brain.
Caught onto the c-to-o trick, solved the block section OK, but still got a DNF because of some nasty fill (D-LIST?) (CHEADLE/DALEK?) (ADNOUN?). Ugh.
Roo, as Anon above points out, it is just big Lego. It is also the gateway drug to regular Lego. Start your tot off with Duplo and in 5 or 6 years you'll be building an annex to your house to hold all the Lego.
@Edward 11:04 am: curious, my Across Lite accepted BLOCKs.
As the parent of a neurodivergent kid, CHEWELRY is definitely A Thing and has been A Thing for at least the last ten years. Ask a parent of an elementary-middle school child and I bet they have heard of it or seen it in the wild! The most common version I’ve seen is a necklace with a rubber pendant of some kind - a shark tooth, a robot, airplane, etc — that the kid can chew on as needed. When not being chewed it just looks like a necklace. This was a tricky puzzle but that was one answer I was happy to get right away!
The theme was too obscure and invilved pop culture wordplay that is pretty far over my paygrade...but the CHEADLE/DALEK natick was the coup de gras. A junk puzzle.
Wow, pretty challenging for me. I eventually got the "change C to O in the theme clues" trick, then finally got the grid completely filled in except those 3 black box squares, and sat there staring at them for a while. Finally got the BLOCK rebus, put them in, and Happy Pencil time! A bit exhausting but a really good Sunday.
Several "what the?" moments. Never heard of DALEK; I did try DRWHO at first. (9 down Don CHEADLE is one of my favorite actors, so that helped, except I never saw that film so the clue was useless.) Pretty sure I've never seen ERHUS before; sure looks like an Unknown Name to me.
Overcast skies here today! It's been quite a while since we've seen that. And absolutely zero precipitation since April 15 when we got 0.2 mm (0.008") of rain (although I must have blinked and missed it).
Not an especially humorous SunPuztheme, which I prefer ... but still kinda liked it. Caught onto the C --> O theme mcguffin pretty quick, but can't recall exactly what item did it for m&e.
Real neat that all the non-themer clues don't have C's. Not quite sure I get why they also left out the O's too, tho.
staff weeject pick: EHH. Debut mini-garbly-gook.
fave thing: BLOCKBLOCKBLOCK. Nice chicken noise, and primo unique puz shenanigan.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms. Fabi darlin & Mr. Wagner dude. Nice, different SunPuz. Good work.
Masked & Anonym007Us
p.s.
Runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
I guess I'm the outlier, but I completed it without ever understanding the theme. Even Rex's explanation makes little sense to me. Is the visual element different for those of us who do the crossword online? Anyway, I completed it, but didn't enjoy it.
Really enjoyed this one. And it’s a Sunday! What’s going on? Yeah, it was very gimmicky, but it was also very well executed, with a bit of humour and sparkle.
Along the route to the finish line I encountered an odd memory. Way back when I commuted by train to work in downtown Vancouver and when I was riding up the escalator at Granville station I would hear this weird, weird sorta musical sound from the lobby. It was a guy busking with what I now know was an ERHU. I would throw a couple of bucks into his hat, not because I liked his tunes (I didn’t), but because I thought that anyone that chose to busk with this kind of instrument could probably use the money to pay for counselling.
When I got to work, I tried to draw a picture for a co-worker and we were just shaking our heads when another colleague - a Chinese-Canadian reporter who was hanging around waiting to see if we could construct some sort of graphic for his story - named the instrument for us. That was about 30 years ago and all I could remember today that there was an “er” sound in it. But that was just enough to let me work out 86A ERHUS.
Never seen one since. Maybe the guy did seek help. (Yes, I’m being facetious. I admire the courage of buskers, many of them ardent amateurs (is that redundant?) playing on street corners and in subway halls. But solo ERHU? That goes above and beyond.)
Just have to say I knew ERHUS. Didn't do well on the rest. Totally missed the block in the middle. Still don't get it, actually, but I had a rough morning. Tomorrow morning it will probably be clear. Mother's Day morning has a bunch of people coming to church who don't normally come, but their mothers would have wanted them to. They tend to be weepy. They sang Nearer, my God to Thee like I hadn't heard on that church for some time.
Best Sunday puzzle in a very long time. Big thanks to OFL on sharing the inside story on the O and C feat. Congratulations to Rachel and Adam on the collaboration.
This was the funniest @Rex post ever! I guffawed (in a Noo Yawk accent, I may even have guf-fived!). I even snorted...especially when I thought the dog buried the little girl, Dolly. Hilarious today, Rex! A star turn, for sure!
You could build the annex with the Lego ...
Roo
Finished in 80 percent of my average time today, so right down the middle. (My times are still falling, nearly a thousand crosswords in.)
No C's or O's in any non-theme clues is definitely another level, especially for a Sunday with 140 clues in it. (I counted manually, so who knows how close that actually is.) I liked the theme quite a bit, though I'm not a fan of the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME and its arbitrary sense of taste. (I have one favorite band in and one out, so I don't really care one way or the other, personally, but I dislike the approach.)
Discovered the theme when I got LATE NIGHT from crosses and looked back at the clue ("Arsenio's realm, in years past").
Score one for me for having actually played an ERHU (though not well). I liked DALEK, though I'm embarrassed to think how long it took me to retrieve that. (I'm not an avid watcher of the program.) Nice to know that Laura DERN is still active.
I raised an eyebrow at LILOLME too, but it still brought a smile to my face for reminding me of LILIKOI. CHEWELRY sounds like a dog toy gift for Christmas.
Mistakes: I had SECRETIONS for (IND)ISCRETIONS for a while, until the crosses failed to make sense. PUTZ for YUTZ, until I couldn't make sense of what a STORP was. BLIST for DLIST. TITER oddly for ASSAY.
I don't understand this puzzle...dnf
Hand up here. Got the BLOCK rebus from the revealer but never worked out what was going on in the italicized clues other than being (quite lovely, for the most part) long answers. I was astonished when the happy music came on and immediately came here to figure out what I’d missed!
I waited until the paper came to do this in the actual magazine. We had the grandkids and my daughter over for pancakes for Mother's Day so of course I solved late. As for the solve I had almost the whole puzzle filled in cleanly without getting the theme. It was figuring out the ADNOUN/ YOUTHFUL crossing where the lightbulb went off. I then went back over the italicsized clues and it all made sense ( chic/Ohio yeesh!). Mind you ADNOUN was an unknown to me which made that crossing particularly difficult. My other unknowns were DALEK, ERHUS, RAMOS and CHEWLERY. At least that last one can be implied.
The one thing I didn't get was the central grid gimmick. When I solve on paper I just leave rebus squares blank to save time on trying to write in those tiny letters. Now that I'm closing out my 4th decade of solving maybe I should start referring to those "black squares " as blocks. That those three BLOCKs were supposed to be black squares never occurred to me.
BTW great Sunday puzzle. Kudos to the constructors. I'm just left wondering what was the misunderstood phrase that inspired it?
Break time is over. The grandkids will be back in less than an hour for dinner.
What about 97A? Just figured it out now but, had me confused.
Not even the only two!
I finished with a typo and, because it’s Sunday and there’s a lot of cells to scan in that grid, I passed and asked the software to reveal my error. I typed an N when it should have been an M half way through MEGAMALL. Good thing I’m not a streak freak.
Nits: lots of 3s and 4s and things like LI’L OL’ ME, which should be OLE me. And, of course, ADNOUN.
The gimmick was fun and the long stuff was pretty high quality all round. Even CHEWELRY didn’t bother me. My wife is a recently retired child psychologist so I’m kind of familiar with some of the ideas about ADHD and autism. As a practicing artist (though I spend more time trying to manage our little farm these days than I do painting) Dada ANTI-ART was a gimme.
Nice try on the clue for SCAT. I tried to find some videos of my fave SCATs that weren’t Ella. Blossom Dearie has done some, but she has publicly declared that it’s not really her thing. But I did find some of Anita O’Day at Newport in 1958. It’s worth looking up both for the performance and for the hilarious audience shots. Just Google Anita O’Day Newport 1958. It’s a treat
Thanks Rachel and Adam. It was fun.
Yo; ese fui yo. Así que mentí.
This one was a terrible fight from beginning to end because I was on the very last theme entry before I ever figured out the schtick. I had the blocks, I had all the other themers filled in, I had the reveal, I knew none of the italics made any sense, but that's sort of normal for me, and then finally the light bulb went on. So they got me good and now I know how much fun I could have had. It's really disappointing and really great at the same time.
A couple proper name crosses I wish weren't there. DALEK/CHEADLE. SICARIO/RAMOS/FODOR.
When it's a zillion degrees here in the summer, people stuff SUNSHADES into the inside of the car's windshield to help prevent the steering wheel from becoming a branding iron.
I have an ERHU sitting by my PIANO. Both are mostly decoration.
I've been telling you it's OHO. And who clues HIHO without a Kermit reference?
❤️ SPACE INVADER. YUTZ. TSKED. LILOLME.
😩 CHEWELRY. AD NOUN {wow, just wow}.
People: 9
Places: 1
Products: 10
Partials: 18
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 41 of 140 (29%)
Funny Factor: 2 🤨
Tee-Hee: SEE-THRU YOUTHFUL INDISCRETIONS.
Uniclues:
1 Why hostile aliens wear Forever-21.
2 What the dude who wrote: "ad-libby-dibby singy-ingy-inging" did.
1 SPACE INVADER MEGA MALL
2YUTZ SPOILED SCAT
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Judge's comment to "Tom" on handing down a sentence. PEEPER ... SO LONG.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Except for a few naticks, I enjoyed this puzzle.Not like the clunker(for me) of yesterday.🎈🎈🎊🎊
@Edward the rebus is supposed to be BLOCK, not black. rex was just saying that when the blocks are "filled in with black" meaning "colored in black", the loop closes. ["black" as a rebus would not make sense for the clues.] i solve on the website and filled each rebus with BLOCK and had no issues getting the happy music today. finished just before 6pm EST, so not sure if you had an error elsewhere or there was some kind of glitch that has since been remedied.
-stephanie.
Nice one, Roo.
really fun puzzle overall grateful for it - also did Evan's wash post Sunday wow you gotta see this beauty its incredible Evan Birnholz’s May 10 crossword, ‘Black Spots’
Eugene Fodor was my godfather. He was a classy, highly intelligent man that spoke several languages. Definitely not a D-list individual.I miss him.
🩷 U - Uncle Gene
Anonymous 9:15 AM
No c’s and o’s referred to only the non theme clues.ehich in fact have no c’s or o’s Hence Star turn instead of actor or acting in the clue for 9 down. All the italicized clues MUST HAVE a c.
Jnlzbth
You ate the first to comment on the two SUNs. I noticed it also. It doesn’t bother me because dupes never bother me, but I am surprised Rex didn’t mention that.
jberg
Your suggestion for LILOLME clue was a great cryptic. The puzzle answer bothered me a little but not like Rex!
Paul & Kathy
Maybe an age thing. But before the internet era , Fodor’s books were everywhere. Not hard for most older people.
Foie gras. Coup de grâce.
Thank you Crossword the poor AWAY TEAMS who get bcced! I had trouble getting a good whoosh on so was way down in the south half before it happened. I automatically misread Chic as ohio at 99A because I already had so many letters that ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME was obvious. Hrew up in Obio, have relatives in Cleveland and have been there several times. I also already had AWAY _EA_, and assumed TEAM, but checked the clue and “Frequently bcced” was no help. ‘Twas at that point I finally stopped to figure out the actual theme. Sometimes (and a Fabi/Wagner collab is certainly one of them), when I expect trouble, particularly on a Sunday, I just jump on in and solve as if there’s no theme to see how much I can get done without banging my head against the wall. And I was flummoxed until my brain automatically went to Cleveland and then had to sit and figure out the trick. I wish I’d caught on at the cutlet MALL, but no.
This was a masterfully curated idea and expertly engineered puzzle. It’s why today’s constructors are among my idols of the art. What a trip.
Except for the ADNOUN. Hard no. I’m with OFL on that. We were fine with the substantive adjective, weren’t we? Actually, I was fine just calling it “adjective used as a noun” which was what I learned in high school - replaced by “substantive adjective” at university. I argued vociferously that calling it a substantive adjective was too much like refusing to recognize its “nouniness” and lost because the professor disagreed, probably because I actually recall saying “nouniness.” Are any of you gobsmacked at the weird tidbits you suddenly remember when doing a crossword? Please, oh please, somebody say yes!
Other than ADNOUN, which I hope never to utter or type or key in again, this was an amazing puzzle from a construction standpoint. And certainly the cleverest, most complex Sunday theme in a long time. I still don’t really know whether I liked it, but I am impressed for sure.
Now that it's over I can recognize the skill but this theme added no enjoyment to the solve for me.
ADNOUN may be a “real” word but it’s a perfect example of dumbing down nonsense, a bizarre and unnecessary neologism used in place of a term that already exists. The example given in all online definitions of ADNOUN use the quote from the Beatitudes. But this is actually — forgive this bit of literary eggheadedness— a form is metaphoric language known as synecdoche. This is metaphorical representation used when a part of a group is used to signify the whole. A similar metaphoric tool used for the same Biblical quote is litotes when two contrasting ideas (meek people receiving an huge spiritual reward) are understated to emphasize a point. It seems that everyone forgets all this from literature classes. These days no one but linguists and hardcore English majors know about the unusual terms that describe specific forms of metaphor. I can thank my 8th grade English teacher for making these fascinating terms stick in my head for over 55 years. Yet later, in college, some of my younger profs thought I was making up the terms when I talked about them in Romantic poetry classes. Hilarious!
We loved it! Thank you Rachel Fabi!
MEEK is a predicate nominative, i.e. a noun used in the sentence pattern Subject-Linking verb-Noun. Its partner in grammatical construction is Subject-Linking verb-Adjective, known as a predicate adjective as in the sentence “Mom is beautiful.” Adnoun is an aberrant grammarians joke.
correction taken
Not as big a fan as Rex. Turned off by the top row: ADS (yuk...do we need a reminder that the social media moguls are new age ad merchants?) SWAB FCC CIG IPAD; then WHO and OHO side-by-side in the next row. Geesh!
But after finishing, it certainly was impressive, and I'll go with a ratings upgrade for both "Rachel is my friend" transparency and her role in These Puzzles Fund Abortion.
OTOH, speaking of my revulsion to ADS, her co-creator's career is "creative lead at a monetization platform for content creators". Had to read that twice to parse all the (perhaps?) AD NOUNs. And the phrase was said by no child (yet, anyway) in response to "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Hopefully he finds it rewarding personally.
Wow, what a puzzle! Completely befuddled by ADNOUN and ERHUS, but loved the BLOCK sequence. Never got the “o” for “c” switch but nevertheless figured out all the themers from the crosses. CHEWELRY was fun. Puzzle felt like one of those modernist paintings where paint was thrown at a wall…
No… Ella would not.
Clunky, kinda wretched for me - finished in great time & still had to come here for the C - O connection, and all I thought was ‘meh’
I liked it. Finally a good challenge on a Sunday.
When most people mispronounce coup de grâce I always tell them it’s not pâté.
ADnoun, as in Anno Domini?
I didn’t get the theme, so when I saw”cutlets” I thought it was a typo and was supposed to be “outlets”!
I grew up in a home w Yiddish Grandparents and yutz is definitely a Yiddish word. As is his first cousin; putz.
Love the puzzle but don't like that the theme answers aren't completely symmetrical... RESTSTOPS (cases/oases) but nothing for SIDESALAD (vegans might want theirs with catmilk dressing)
Took me until today (Wednesday) to finish this one, so yeah, I’m going with “challenging.” But finished it with no help, and had a great aha-moment this morning with my coffee when it clicked. Great puzzle!
I've seen "chewelry" sold in baby-clothes stores for the mother to wear -- gives the baby something safe to chew on.
When did bic start to mean bio? Never saw that and cant find any examples of it anywhere. So that falls right behind meek/adnoun as the biggest clunker in this puzzle
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