Frothy drink often served with boba / MON 5-25-26 / 1980s hit with the lyric "Me mind on fire, me soul on fire" / Dried poblanos used in mole sauce / California national park known for its dryness / Variety of chili that can reach a Scoville score of 1+ million / Locale for a plastic flamingo / Fruit that makes your lips pucker / Piece of armadillo armor

Monday, May 25, 2026

Constructor: Anthony Grubb

Relative difficulty: Very easy (solved Downs-only)

THEME: "HOT, HOT, HOT" (65A: 1980s hit with the lyric "Me mind on fire, me soul on fire" ... or how one might describe 17-, 30- and 48-Across) — three theme answers are things that could be described as "hot":


Theme answers:
  • LOVE SCENE (17A: Steamy segment in a movie)
  • GHOST PEPPER (30A: Variety of chili that can reach a Scoville score of 1+ million)
  • DEATH VALLEY (48A: California national park known for its dryness)
Word of the Day: "HOT, HOT, HOT" (65A) —

"Hot Hot Hot" is a song written and first recorded by Montserratian musician Arrow, featured on his 1982 studio album Hot Hot Hot. The song was a commercially successful dance floor single, with cover versions subsequently released by artists in several countries, including in 1987 by American singer Buster Poindexter.

The song was Arrow's first chart hit, peaking at No. 59 on the UK Singles Chart. A remix of the song, dubbed as the "World Carnival Mix '94" was later released in 1994 and peaked higher than the original, at number 38 on the UK Singles Chart.

The song was used as the theme song of the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. // The song was covered in 1987 by American singer David Johansen, as his lounge singer persona Buster Poindexter, and released as the first single from his album Buster Poindexter. It garnered extensive airplay through radio, MTV, and other television appearances.

A music video was produced for Johansen's version of the song, in which he appears both as Buster Poindexter and as himself. The video begins with Johansen mentioning his role as the frontman for the 1970s proto-punk band New York Dolls, showing the band's albums and tossing them aside while talking about the "really outrageous clothes" he wore and how he came to be interested in a "refined and dignified kind of a situation", which leads into the song.

In an interview on National Public Radio, Johansen called the tune "the bane of my life", owing to its pervasive popularity as a karaoke and wedding song. [...] 

The song was used in the movie Beverly Hills Chihuahua(wikipedia)
• • •

If you came here hoping to hear "HOT, HOT, HOT," sorry, I cannot oblige, as I do not want to subject my ears or brain to it any more than this puzzle already has. I did (slightly) enjoy learning about the song's history, though (see "Word of the Day," above). I had no idea there was a version that preceded Buster Poindexter's version. That's probably because that original version (by Arrow) (?) charted only in the UK (and only got as high as 59 the first time around—it got to 38 when it recharted in the mid-90s). It was apparently the theme song of the FIFA World Cup in 1986, so it must've gotten a lot of international attention, but the only version I know is the Buster Poindexter version (1987), which I (slightly) confuse with "Hot in the City Tonight," a song I remember as being by Buster Poindexter, but which is actually performed by Billy Idol. You can hear that song in that great scene in Big (1988) when Tom Hanks is riding home from a company party in a limo with Elizabeth Perkins and he stands up and pops his head out of the sun roof as they're driving down the streets of NYC. I can't find the scene, which is annoying me. In lieu of that scene, here's Hanks (playing a 13yo who now inhabits an adult's body) trying beluga caviar for the first time:


But back to the puzzle: despite the fact that I do not care for the song in question (which you can hear here in its original version, and here as the Poindexter cover), I thought the theme was perfectly adequate for a Monday. Simple, straightforward, slightly playful. All three of the themers are "hot" in different ways. There's very little else of interest in the puzzle, but despite being somewhat on the dull side, the fill is perfectly serviceable. Very little in the way of dreck. So ... there you go. Clean, basic, fine. 


And as a Downs-only solve, it was quite easy. I assume it was equally easy if you bothered with the Acrosses. As usual, I had trouble with the "word that can precede/follow" clue (6D: Lead-in to maker or breaker). When TIE wouldn't work (although there are most certainly TIE makers in the world), I was out of luck and just waited until I could infer crosses in order to get ICE. It took me a few seconds to remember that boba tea was MILK TEA (9D: Frothy drink often served with boba). I wrote in -O-A at 42D: Coke or Pepsi because I wasn't sure if it was gonna be COLA or SODA (I figured the former, but didn't wanna lock myself in without being sure). I needed a few inferred crosses (mainly the second "A" from DEATH VALLEY) to get ANCHOS (double pepper action today) (49D: Dried poblanos used in mole sauce). But the only real "whoops" of the day came when, off just the "H," I wrote in "I HEAR YOU" for 24D: "Yeah, yeah" ("WHATEVER"). Luckily, the letters from "I HEAR YOU" quickly ended up being pretty obviously bad, so I tore it out and rebuilt it as "WHATEVER" (aided considerably by the "V" from DEATH VALLEY). Otherwise, it was look at clue, write in answer, over and over and over. No resistance whatsoever. 


Bullets:
  • 17A: Steamy segment in a movie (LOVE SCENE) — It's weird that we still call these "love scenes" when what we mean is "sex scenes," which is maybe a more common term now.  I'm watching a terrible movie right now called Sliver (1993) for my Movie Club and there are several sex scenes but calling them LOVE SCENEs seems ... really wrong. It's Sharon Stone and the one Baldwin you can kinda remember but can't name. No, not Alec. And no, not Stephen. The other one. Anyway, it's one of the more putrid sex scenes I've ever seen. I hope his character dies before they have the chance to go at it again. (I stopped the movie halfway to come upstairs and write the blog, so I don't know—I'm actually hoping every man in this movie dies a horrible death, as there is not a decent or ever tolerable one among them) 
  • 38A: Volcanic spew (ASH) — in Sliver, the Baldwin in Question (OK, it's William) has a dumb crystal volcano sculpture in his apartment and at one point utters the very plausible and definitely seductive line, "I love volcanos. Someday I want to fly into one." (you can see the sculpture in the background at the very beginning of the aforementioned sex scene, which I definitely do not recommend that you watch in full). Apparently the original ending of Sliver actually featured Stone and Baldwin doing just that—flying into a volcano. But apparently they decided to go with a more pedestrian ending (I'm half-heartedly avoiding spoilers at the moment), one where Baldwin does not experience a lava-based death, which is too bad. He deserves it. Did I mention that Academy Award-winning actor Martin Landau is also in this movie? The '90s were wild. All this volcano talk has me thinking of another Tom Hanks movie: Joe Vs. The Volcano (1990). I know that movie was maligned, but it has got to be better than Sliver
  • 35D: Singer Newman with the hit "You've Got a Friend in Me" (RANDY) — this is a song from Toy Story ... hey, another Tom Hanks movie, and this one's actually in the puzzle! (well, sorta). Anyway, Tom Hanks good, this puzzle fine, Sliver unbearable. 

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

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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74 comments:

Rick Sacra 6:18 AM  

Yes, very easy, even solving downs only. 8:30 for me last night. Now, let's be honest, I by accident saw a few across clues. Solving downs only online requires serious eye discipline. I definitely want to try to remember to always do Mondays that way. Do some of you try to do Tuesdays downs-only as well? Fun how LOVESCENE is paired with DARKNESS and the GHOSTPEPPER is paired with SALIVA.... Thanks for a nice Monday puzzle, Anthony!

Lewis 6:18 AM  

My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):

1. Canal blocker? (9)
2. A boxer's might knock you out (3)(6)
3. Epithet lead-in (3)
4. Walk on water? (9)
5. Experts in body language? (3)(7)


HEADPHONE
DOG BREATH
AKA
GANGPLANK
LIP READERS

Lewis 6:19 AM  

My favorite encore clues from last week:

[Leaves together?] (4)
[Increase, as interest] (5)


PILE
PIQUE

Lewis 6:23 AM  

Manny Nosowsky, who had more puzzles published in the Times (254) than anyone else, died on Wednesday, at 94.

He matched his quantity with quality, and his output was rife with punny wordplay. Not the kind that make you roll your eyes, but rather the kind that make you want to stand and applaud.

When I make a puzzle, I often research clues for a particular answer, maybe to check if my clue has been done before, or to get ideas for a direction to take that I haven't thought of. There are only a handful of constructors whose clues I *always* look at, and Manny's one of them.

He enriched my life with his work, and I'm sure the lives of many others, and I'm so grateful to have his path cross mine.

You can read the Times story about his life and crossword work, including some of his great clues here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/24/us/manny-nosowsky-dead.html?unlocked_article_code=1.lFA.PSiq.jTV6kX4RWJjQ&smid=url-share

Dr Random 6:31 AM  

The 90s were also the age of disaster films, so speaking of ASH, remember in ‘97 when we had both Volcano and Dante’s Peak?

I happen to live in a small North Carolinian city whose minor league team is the Gastonia GHOST PEPPERs. It’s definitely a cute and appropriate name (in that it was used to create the Carolina reaper), but the fun part of the anecdote is the name competition they went through in 2022 to get there. The team tried on different names that season to see which one would stick, and various finalists included the Gastronauts, Bolognia, Galactic Dinos, Zombees, Garden Gnomes, and Yarniaks. I always wonder how the men on the team felt about their life choices when wearing some of those jerseys. Anyway, go GHOST PEPPERs!

I enjoyed the theme and the easy Monday solve.

Stan Marsh 6:56 AM  

Thanks for doing this every week, Lewis. It’s my favorite part of this blog on Mondays. Should have complemented you years ago.

Lewis 7:00 AM  

As your resident alphadoppeltotter, a role I’ve inexplicably taken in the past eight years, it is my duty to inform you that this puzzle has an unusually low number of double letters, at four, where unusual is any number less than five. This is the third time this year that this has happened.

I remain your humble servant, ever on the alert.

Bob Mills 7:04 AM  

Very easy, even for a Monday, but a fun solve nonetheless. I agree with Rex that the three different meanings of "hot" worked, with the song title as a precise revealer.

Lewis 7:06 AM  

What a nifty theme idea! So simple, yet it gave my brain the workout it loves when I tried to guess the revealer (I failed).

I thought surely a constructor would have come up with this theme before in one of the major venues – but no!

My search took me down an interesting rabbit hole. In another venue, HOT HOT HOT was a theme answer in a puzzle whose theme was to clue the theme answers as if the T’s were taken out – so HOTHOTHOT was clued [Santa’s hearty declaration].

Huh! Did you know that if you take the T’s out of STUTTGART you get SUGAR?

That got word-nerd me looking at today’s answers, seeing how many became other words when you removed the T’s – and there were a ton: PLEAT, MAT, TEACH, TEND, BATH, STUN, STEAL, SEAT, TON, DREAMT, EVENT.

I don’t know what to make of it and I’m not going to think about it anymore.

My favorite spot in the grid? The cross of two words I love, BESMIRCH and SHTICKS.

Your puzzle was fun, Anthony, and so were the side trips! Thank you!

EasyEd 7:12 AM  

Still haven’t worked up the nerve to try downs only—maybe one of these days—highlight this morning was wandering through Rex’s meandering commentary, a pleasant one-sided conversation. The puzzle was simple and fun with three themers and a three-word revealer. The hottest pepper I’ve ever had was by surprise in a salsa-type snack bowl in Yucatรกn. A chip-full nearly burned my face off and our waiter seeing my distress grabbed two bottles of beer from in front of bewildered bar patrons and ran to our table to give me some relief. I can’t even imagine what GHOSTPEPPERS would have done.

Son Volt 7:19 AM  

Fine early week theme - fill in the blanks easy. The revealer is apt and has a little punch - the big guy covers it nicely.

I See a DARKNESS

We grow GHOST PEPPERS every summer - they are beyond HOT but very tasty - years back my Bajan friend showed me how to temper them slightly. Liked the follow up with ANCHOS.

The grid is well filled - limited glue. I liked BESMIRCH x SHTICKS and WHATEVER - keep the MILK TEA. No hiccups moving through this grid.

AZTEC Camera

Pleasant Memorial Day morning solve. Thank you to all those who made the ultimate sacrifice.

I Will Go Sailing No More

jberg 7:23 AM  

Nice theme, and some fresh fill, like BESMIRCH, MOTEL (a dying form, I fear), RAP SHEET, and WHATEVEER. But I'm wondering about its accuracy -- only 25% of phone calls are SPAM? From the looks of my call log, it's more like 70%--so many loans that I am pre-approved for! But maybe I'm an outlier.

Thanks for the notice about Manny Nosowsky, Lewis. I've never noticed his byline on a puzzle, but the clue examples in his obituary are great. They made me want to try one of his puzzles, only to discover that I do not know how to search the archives! I couldn't find a search window anywhere. If someone can fill me in (you can email it if you prefer) I'd appreciate it. Thanks!

RooMonster 7:32 AM  

Hey All !
The LOVE SCENE in the original Terminator movie was about the only (I'm no seen-every-movie-guy, but ...) movie that basically required that scene, as that was how Sarah Connor got pregnant to have the leader of the Resistance John. Most every other SCENE is gratuitous. Two cents, and all that.

Liked the puz. Couple of neat words not often seen in puzs, BESMIRCH, SHTICKS. HOT HOT HOT works in the collequially sense, and also works as three HOTs for the three Themers, one each. Plus, the song. A triple triple, you can say.

Easy ®Uniclue:
Grass
LAWN MAT

Welp, hope y'all have a great Monday!

No F's - WOE
RooMonster
DarrinV

SouthsideJohnny 7:34 AM  

It seemed like Rex’s review was all over the place today - perhaps flittering around like a butterfly, which is a sign of spring that we apparently could still use up here in the northeast.

Personally, I prefer the Soca version of today’s theme song, which Rex also linked to. I believe the Baha Men performed it when I saw them play in the Caribbean years ago.

I bought some GHOST PEPPER cheese not too long ago. I like spicy food, but there was nothing I could do with that stuff. It ended up in the garbage.

Lynn 7:50 AM  

I'll have the SALAD PLATE with LEMON slices and hold the KELP. I solved in the normal way and found this to be a marvelous Monday.

egsforbreakfast 8:00 AM  

I was taking a basic intro course called New Enigmas in Astronomy (NEA), but it was so simple I kept falling asleep. So I transferred to APNEA and no more sleep, not even any YAWNS.

Mrs. Egs accused me of being a liar by denying that I was drunk when I came home last night, but I simply replied, "SHTICKS and shtones may break my bonzsh....."

We've got HOTHOTHOT starting out from the very MILD and TAME ANCHOS and ending at the STEM. A hint of DISSONANCE? That reminds me that I need to empty my dishwasher. It's one of those smart appliances that you can talk to. If you ask, "Dishwasher pal, are you an LG?" it will respond, "IMAGE."

Homeschooling motto: TEACH his own.

Very quick DO solve today, but I agree that it was a good solid Monday theme and fill. Thanks, Anthony Grubb.

Liveprof 8:13 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Lewis 8:24 AM  

Go to XwordInfo.com and under "Constructors" punch in his name. His page will come up with all his puzzles. They will be filled in, so don't look at the puzzle itself, but at the top of each puzzle will be its date.

Anonymous 8:29 AM  

I was hot for this puzzle.๐ŸŽˆ๐ŸŽˆ๐ŸŽŠ๐ŸŽŠ

Liveprof 8:33 AM  

Some people will do anything for free beer. I tip my cap to you, sir.

Liveprof 8:36 AM  

Alternate, musical clue for 21A (DARKNESS): Paul Simon's old friend, or, the outskirts to Bruce.

GHOSTPEPPER: The Sergeant, now.

The Great Sphinx: A cautionary tale on how not to put your NOSE too close to the grindstone.

ATEASE: My daughter, in high school, in a miniskirt.

"Caity! Put some pants on!"

"I'm wearing a skirt."

"You call that a skirt! You're going to get arrested!"

"Bye!"

"Arggggh"

(Just turned 40. Has five gorgeous kids now.)

Anonymous 8:46 AM  

SPA needs to be banned. Seeing it 3x a week, every week, is tedious.

kitshef 9:00 AM  

The AZTECs are not normally considered ancient. 'Ancient' generally means 500 BCE or earlier. The Aztecs started after 1300 CE. Olmec, which fits the space, is a much better answer there.

I also question the clue for HANDS. It is hard to find a definitive source, but it looks at least 65% of global watch sales are digital, and have therefore have no hands.

Hardest thing today was spelling SHTICKS, which I wanted to be schticks, and had to decide what letter to drop, and guessed the second 'c', rather than the first.

Anonymous 9:08 AM  

The clue for DEATHVALLEY is incorrect. Although most of Death Valley National Park is located in California, parts of it are located in Nevada. The NPS website (https://www.nps.gov/deva/index.htm) specifically says "CA, NV" for the location (as opposed, for example, to Yosemite NP, which is described as being in "California").

jb129 9:17 AM  

I don't know if I'll get to the puzzle until later today so I read the comments first. So sad to hear about Manny.
On a personal note, I 'cut my teeth' on Manny's puzzles which mostly appeared on Fridays. I was always PROUD when I could complete one of Manny's puzzles.
Thank you, Manny. I know you are watching over us.
And thank you, Lewis :)

Anonymous 9:39 AM  

I hope no one is out there maligning Joe vs the Volcano. One of my favorite movies. Well worth a watch

pabloinnh 9:49 AM  

Ni,ce solid Monday with some interesting fill but I sidetracked myself looking for the revealer when I was trying to make something out of GHOST, DEATH, and DARKNESS, totally neglecting the LOVESCENE. Filled in the first HOT which gave me HOTHOTHOT, and a less-than-HOT aha!. but satisfying anyway.

@Liveprof had a different musical recollection, mine was "Reach out in the DARKNESS" by Friend & Lover, which is endearingly sappy. ("I think it's so groovy now that people are finally gettin' together...etc." Hoo boy. And the only first name was RANDY Newman, one of my faves, so that was a wash.

One of the better Mondays in a while IMHO, AG. A Good start to what so far is a very rainy Memorial Day here, and thanks for all the fun.

burtonkd 10:09 AM  

Fun, fast, solid Monday.

It might be fun to run parallel Simpsons/Star Wars counters for the blog. (I'm fine with clues from both).

After the enjoyment here of KAC's Saturday puzzle, I'll point out that he did the NYer for today.

TD 10:18 AM  

I’ve been reading your blog post solving the daily puzzle for a couple of months now, and I’m pretty sure the highest rated puzzle was only 3.5 stars. Is there a way to search the blog to find the 4+ star gems so I can go back and solve them? NYT is nice enough to provide decades of archives. Thanks for any direction!

Chief of the Waponis 10:25 AM  

We are the children of children and we live as we are shown.

DAVinHOP 10:45 AM  

Funny, @SSJ, I thought Rex focused on two themes, HOT HOT HOT and the (apparently vile) movie Sliver. Not disappointed by his takes on either.

Not a lot of Marquee-level fill, length or sparkle (the revealer excepted), and super easy; but a fun enough Monday solve. In hindsight, we should have tried "downs only" but too late.

That HOT HOT HOT was once a FIFA World Cup (sorry, no trademark sign here...sue me) theme song reminds that it's only a few weeks until the start of the competition that captivates most of the world and further enriches a mostly corrupt chosen few.

I took my daughter and two of her friends to a WC match the last time it was in the US and played in Foxboro, MA. Not sure what four tickets would cost this time, but "if you have to ask..."; so I'll pass.

Carola 10:48 AM  

A smorgasbord of treats this morning, with @Rex's puzzle comments + hilarious movie review and the reminiscences about Manny Nosowsky - and the crossword itself. I didn't know the song and had to get the title from crosses, well, at least for the first two HOTs. Cute theme. I gave a grim nod to GHOST PEPPER followed by DEATH VALLEY, as I'm severely allergic to chilis.

Hugh 11:08 AM  

Very, very good Monday puzzle. Appropriately easy with a theme that while straight forward, put a kick in my step. I found a lot to like. Nice fill like BESMIRCH crossing SHTICK as @Lewis pointed out, and the every day language of WHATEVER. Smart cluing on EDIT as well.
@Rex, for whatever reason, I also sat through a bit of Sliver when it came out, needed to leave, god awful. But fun fact about Billy Baldwin, he graduated with me from (then) SUNY Binghamton, your stomping grounds! I have a feeling he knew full well the quality or lack thereof of a move like that :o)
Anthony, this was a joyful and fun start to the week, thank you!
And now on to Hugh's Monday Haiku:
EDIT a LOVESCENE
In the EVENT of weak PLOT
Lest you BESMIRCH art

pabloinnh 11:22 AM  

A woman from Thailand used to cook for us at our restaurant and had some chilis for her personal use that were too hot to even look at. Her advice if you had eaten something fiery was "eat some bread", any liquid just spreads the heat all over.

I prefer other methods for obtaining free beer, thank you.

DAVinHOP 11:24 AM  

TD, I believe that Rex has awarded 4-1/2 stars for the best, and 1-1/2 stars for the worst, puzzles; all as adjudged in the so-called (by me) Ratings Era.

Les S. More 11:31 AM  

Rick. I regularly do downs-only Tuesdays. I've never thought that Tuesday puzzles were significantly harder than Mondays, so after a few months of D-O Mondays I added Tuesday to the rotation. Allows me to kill 20 minutes instead of 6 or 7 and enjoy myself a bit more.

Liveprof 11:33 AM  

Oooh, good memory. Big hit. Oddly, I just looked it up and learned its official title is "Reach Out OF the Darkness," even though "in" is sung repeatedly. The record company wanted to give it an "optimistic" spin.

Anonymous 11:39 AM  

Fun puzzle this morning! My only beef: Why clue randy as a name when it is a fun word!?

Les S. More 11:39 AM  

Liveprof. That may be your funniest quip yet.

Anonymous 11:42 AM  

Hot Stuff!: https://laxcrossword.com/tag/its-rated-10-on-the-scoville-scale-crossword-clue/

Liveprof 11:43 AM  

I took my cousin Estelle's insistent complaining about her iodine deficiency as a cry for kelp.

Teedmn 12:01 PM  

Our local grocery chain's store brand cheese has a GHOST PEPPER cheese. We eat it all the time and it has a mild bite, like a jalapeno. I sometimes wonder if they're truthful about which pepper they use. I've had habaneros that were inedible due to heat so I'm not going to try a true GHOST PEPPER. HOT HOT HOT indeed. It's nice that ANCHOS crossed the reveal answer. Funny that MILD is at the top of the puzzle and it gets hotter as you go down.

I've heard that water doesn't wash away the hotness of peppers. Beer and milk have been suggested but I don't really know if either of those work.

Anthony Grubb, thanks for a spicy Monday puzzle.

Liveprof 12:02 PM  

High school kids around us will buy beer on a weekend night and not be able to finish it all. Afraid to bring it home, they dump the unopened cans in the street. When my wife and I encounter one (or more!) on a walk, I'm thrilled and snap it right up. Free beer! My wife thinks it's a practice I should not (literally) stoop to. So I asked my brother-in-law Lenny what he thought. He asked me what beer it was. "Almost always Miller Lite," I told him. "I'd leave it," he said.

tht 12:30 PM  

It's getting HOT in here (so take off all your clothes) -- Nelly, Hot in Herre.

Quick and easy. But there were a lot of nice hot little touches. RANDY means of course HOT and bothered. You can relax in a HOT BATH. A NOVA is a pretty damned HOT EVENT. A STAG party might get a little HOT, depending. There are some more in there, but too much more of this and I could land myself in some HOT water.

It only occurred to me the other day that APNEA is formed from A- and PNEA, where the A- signifies "without" and PNEA is related to words like pneumatic, pneumonia, etc., having to do with air, breath, spirit, and so on. That was a bit hidden from me before because the syllabification would ordinarily be rendered as AP + NEA. Sometimes these Greek roots require some effort to dig out.

That'll be all for now. Hope your day is a good one.

jae 12:33 PM  

Easy. No WOEs and no costly erasures.

No junk, steamy theme with more than a bit of sparkle, liked it.

Fun word - BESMIRCH

Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1116 was easy-medium for me with the center the toughest section. Good luck!

Anonymous 12:40 PM  

Nope— John Patrick Shanley

Les S. More 1:24 PM  

Carola. Is that really a thing? Can I start lying and telling people I'm allergic to those things instead of just saying I'd rather not destroy my taste buds. Instead of "yo, bro, you're such a wimp" I might be treated with sympathy. "Um, I have a medical condition that bars me from eating those things." "Oh man, I feel for you. Poor guy. Must be tough." No it's not.

DAVinHOP 1:25 PM  

Good one, @tht!

Etymology of APNEA is indeed Greek and translates "lacking (or wanting) breath".

Odd that the "p" isn't silent like other words with "pnein" ("to breathe") as its Greek-origin root, like those you mentioned. English is complicated.

okanaganer 1:33 PM  

I tried down clues only but finished with a kinda silly error: for 28 down "Piece of armadillo armor" I had SCALE instead of PLATE. Even though that created the unlikely crosses of SSA, ACPS, and ALEASE!... what was I thinking? Yikes.

Anonymous 1:44 PM  

Ajudged?

Les S. More 1:57 PM  

I guess I'm a member of the 35%. I don't really like digital watches. I have a half a dozen analog ones and love them all. I don't wear much jewellery -maybe a cloisonne lapel pin or tie bar, occasionally, but no rings or bracelets or such (I work with my hands and they get in the way) - so classic wristwatches are my bit of flash.

My late father-in-law once bought me an early-era digital watch (a Casio, maybe) for my birthday. I graciously thanked him (I can, on occasion, be gracious), wore the thing for the rest of the day and then put it away in a drawer, only to be pulled out for family parties and dinners.

My wife wears an Apple Watch but she sets the display to look like an analog.

Masked and Anonymous 2:29 PM  

Pretty darn smoooth solvequest, even for a MonPuz. Didn't know MILKTEA or GHOSTPEPPER, but they were made up of words I did know, sooo ... no biggie, there. ANCHOS was a 100% no-know, tho.

Cute puztheme with the HOTs.

staff weeject pick [of only 10, fairly respectable choices]: ASH. Mainly cuz I thoroughly enjoyed @RP's volcanic discussions. And sad to hear that "Joe Vs. the Volcano" was "maligned" ... it is one of M&A's fave flicks. Its DVD has a place on honor in my den stack of 30 or so. [@RP: None of em are Star Wars or Harry Potter flicks.]
Also, sad to hear about the world's loss of Manny Nosowsky. He will always be one of my personal top crossword heroes.

fave moo-cow easy-E MonPuz clue: {Missing part of the Great Sphinx of Giza} = NOSE.

other fave stuff: WHATEVER. SHTICKS. SALIVA by PEPPER. DREAMT. BESMIRCH. Anything with GHOST in it. SPA clue. EDIT clue. Primo to have ?-marker clues back on a Monday. Bring it, Shortzmeister.

Thanx for the fun, Mr. Grubb dude. Nice start to the week.
And have a good Memorial Day, y'all.

Masked & Anonymo1U [s]

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

p.p.s.s.
fave Nosowsky puz: the 10 Feb 2000 one. It "cracked me up".

M&A

Jim 2:44 PM  

Monday PR-easy, solving clues only. RIP David Johansen.

Gary Jugert 2:51 PM  

Tengo sueรฑo.

Maybe it's me, but every time I see a LOVE SCENE starting in some show I'm hoping they've got the good sense to end it sooner rather than later. Smooch, fade out, awkward breakfast the next morning. I can fill in the thankfully missing bits using my intellect -- limited as it may be. There's nothing remotely HOT HOT HOT in my mind. I wish those scenes were NOT NOT NOT. There's never any plot development and they're [not very spicy]. Just OH OH OH with me mumbling NO NO NO. There are rather more specialized media sources for those eager to see such nonsense. You can star in your own show at the [Super 8 or Red Roof Inn]. We had an independent video store near my house back in the 90s, and they didn't have an adult section, but they did have a foreign language section and every cover indicated the contents were HOT HOT HOT, but you had to read subtitles, meaning it was for intellectuals pretending salaciousness could be more than adult cinema. It can't.

It's pretty hot and dry everywhere out here, but DEATH VALLEY gets all the attention with its catchy marketing. The slogan for my town here would be Death Little-by-Little.

I'd be willing to bet most watches do not have three hands.

I did not know the ladybug thing. I like them.

You see how tea people are? MILK TEA. Bah. In coffee, we have a dozen different fancy and foreign-ish sounding names for milk and coffee. Cappuccino for the win.

People: 3
Places: 3
Products: 7
Partials: 1
Foreignisms: 0
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 14 of 78 (18%)
{GunkMart and the other shops of Gunkopolis have shuttered for Memorial Day. Truly remarkable to see a well edited puzzle.}

Funny Factor: 3 ๐Ÿ˜

Tee-Hee: Volcanic spew.

Uniclues:

1 Sleepover spot for children who don't like spicy food.
2 Me ... ask any of my girlfriends.
3 Bend space and time.
4 Location lavishing lava-like lotion.
5 The Porta-Potty at a toasty Arizonan rest stop.
6 Say, "Am I boring you?"
7 Muy caliente Mesoamerican.
8 Sea weed shower.
9 Cloistered cuckoo's crackpottedness.
10 PC lovers assessment of Apple corporation's latest device.
11 Leafy lactosian looloo.

1 KIDS' MILD MOTEL
2 LOVE SCENE LEMON
3 PLEAT DARKNESS
4 GHOST PEPPER SPA (~)
5 DEATH VALLEY STY
6 BESMIRCH YAWNS
7 HOT HOT HOT AZTEC (~)
8 KELP SALAD BATH
9 STAG SHTICKS
10 WHATEVER MAC (~)
11 MILK TEA YOYO

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Reserving holy roller in case one can't be found when the rapture comes. PRE-BOOKING BORN AGAIN CHRISTIAN.

¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯

RooMonster 3:04 PM  

Especially considering the Theme!

Roo

Anonymous 4:07 PM  

Very nice Monday - I try and solve as much as possible downs only just for fun but I’m unable to only do that! Loved seeing “feeling hot hot hot” - reminded me of that excellent Bend it like Beckham movie

dgd 5:04 PM  

Kitshef
FWIW
SHTICK however it’s spelled, comes from Yiddish via Jewish immigrants. Yiddish is written in the Hebrew alphabet though it is a cousin of German. So with spelling anything goes in transliteration. However, sh is more common than sch, as sch is really German (same pronunciation).

ChrisS 5:15 PM  

Agree about the Aztec error. Its annoying and should be so easy for Shortz to correct (30 seconds on wikipedia)

ChrisS 5:21 PM  

Capsaicin, chemical that makes peppers hot, is oil and alcohol soluble but water insoluble. So ice cream and tequila are good, beer not so much.

kitshef 5:47 PM  

@Les. The great thing about a digital watch is you can set an alarm, which very few analog watches allow. I realize that many people use their phone for both time-telling and alarms, but my watch is always with me, while my phone is not.

@dgd - good information; if I remember that, that rule should help in future.

kitshef 5:49 PM  

1116 was very hard for me. I finished without errors, but only with a lucky guess on 7D.

Anonymous 7:18 PM  

Anonymous 9:08 AM
We are talking about a CLUE in a puzzle, not a Wikipedia entry. The clue said the park is in California. The clue doesn’t say it is not in Nevada. So the clue is not incorrect. This often happens in crossroads

dgd 7:23 PM  

pabloinnh & Liveprof
I had no memory of the title of the song but as soon as the lyrics were quoted I remembered the tune. It WAS a big hit. Inescapable.

dgd 7:37 PM  

Anonymous 11:19 AM
RANDY. I agree it’s a good word BUT … I always thought of it as more commonly used in England. As in Randy Andy a sobriquet for the now disgraced former Prince Andrew. Maybe the editors thought it might be inappropriate for a Monday here the US. By the way, it is a frequent complaint in general here: Why a name instead of a word? So you are probably not alone. Randy Newman is one of my favorite songwriters so zi didn’t mind.

dgd 7:53 PM  

Les S More
They do have competitions in the US where contestants eat hotter and hotter peppers and the winner loses his taste buds. (Only semi KIDding about the taste buds). I think it is a guy thing to eat very hot peppers only because he doesn’t want to look like a wimp. Women just say no.

Masked and Anonymous 8:00 PM  

Some vindication for one of my fave flicks, as quoted from Wikipedia:

Roger Ebert gave Joe Versus the Volcano a score of 3.5 out of 4 stars, calling it "new and fresh and not shy of taking chances... [the film] achieves a kind of magnificent goofiness. Hanks and Ryan are the right actors to inhabit it, because you can never catch them going for a gag that isn't there: They inhabit the logic of this bizarre world and play by its rules."[18] He later brought the film to Ebertfest 2012 and wondered "why he gave 3.5 stars instead of 4."

M&A

dgd 8:19 PM  

Late as usual.
Hot HotHot I remember the song. But I didn’t remember the original version. I think Rex penalized the puzzle because he disliked the song since it became an ear worm. I decided to look at the original and actually liked it. Very catchy in a good way. Liked the video also. To me it was a singer doing a song from his culture vs. a guy who was running out of steam with the SHTICK he was doing and hit on this song as another gimmick. As Rex said, he started out in NYC with a punk rock group. BTW it was very popular only in NYC so it never made much money. “Poindexter” didn’t make that mistake again.
I liked the puzzle more than Rex

Anonymous 8:27 PM  

It’s criminally underrated. But as terrific as the leads are, the fillm’s magic is owing to the script, and that’s the work of the singular John Patrick Shanley.
The bio he provided to Playbill for one of hid plays—Doubt maybe— is a better bit of writing than just about anything penned
Look up and sigh that youve never written anything half as good. And you never will.

Anonymous 9:35 PM  

Yellowstone National Park ordinarily is identified as being in Wyoming, even though slivers of it are in Montana and Idaho.

Anonymous 10:52 PM  

I saw Buster Poindexter perform Hot Hot Hot at Disneyland circa 1988, and he led a joyous conga line during the song.

jberg 8:03 AM  

@Lewis, from yesterday -- thanks!

Joe Banks 10:57 AM  

No, that's correct. I was there when he said it.

melle 4:46 PM  

Egads, The Atlantic had a piece recently, an ode to Miller Lite

melle 4:47 PM  

https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/2026/05/miller-lite-beer/687249/?gift=cO_6sEn352kwMIHS1ZXqzruoajAjf36QANo-ppRQ3J0

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