Relative difficulty: Medium

THEME: None
Word of the Day: COLOR WARS (30A: Summer camp competitions for which teammates dress similarly) —
A color war is a competition played in summer camps, schools and some social organizations (such as sororities, fraternities, or small businesses). Participants are divided into teams, each of which is assigned a color. The teams compete against each other in challenges and events to earn points. Typical color war challenges include tug-of-war, dodgeball, archery, soccer and basketball. These challenges and events vary based upon the venue for the game. The games' durations can range from a day to several months. The winning team is the one with the most points at the end of the game. Typically, color wars consist of several events that are worth insignificant numbers of points, and then one large final event that is worth enough points to win or lose the entire color war. It is usually at the end of the summer.
• • •
Hello, friends! Rex is still on his trip, so it's Rafa here as your Rexplacement du jour. It's May! How did we get here? I know I'm getting older because now I'm the kind of person who talks about how quickly time is passing. But ... New Year's was basically yesterday?! I don't know what's going on. Forgive me, I saw the date and needed to have this small spiral before moving onto the puzzle.![]() |
| Here's a giraffe with its ossicones |
SO ANYWAYS, I *really* enjoyed this puzzle. It's really wide open at 64 words (themeless puzzles at the NYT can go up to 72 words). Sidenote: we refer to entries in the crosswords as "words" regardless of how many actual words the entry contains. So I'LL START is one word, FLAT is one word, etc. But, yes, 64 words, and not a single bad or gluey entry. And pretty much all the long stuff is fun multi-word entries: LATEST FAD, MOONSHOTS, STAGE NAME, GO BANANAS, NO PEEKING, etc., etc. I loved the modern PERMABAN, and even the more "boring" entries were still totally legit words that can take many cluing angles: FRAMEWORK, TENANTS, SWALLOW.
![]() |
| This is what a BOW SAW looks like, for those who don't know |
Some nice clues here, too. [Rounded up?] for DOMED was probably my favorite, and [Disappearing ink?] for TEMPORARY TATTOO was nice, too. I wish there had been a handful more clever misdirects. Oh, I also enjoyed [Residents without a title] for TENANTS. But [Call it!] for HOTLINES didn't quite land for me. Didn't feel precise enough to be a satisfying clue. The verb "call" could apply to too many things, IMO.
What else? ORA reminded me of this recent article in The Onion which was cute. I'd also never heard of COLOR WARS, but admittedly I never attended summer camp growing up. CELESTA was new to me, too ... but it has a really inferable name, and was cool to learn about. I was going to comment on difficulty but I solved this on paper (unusual for me), and I can't tell if I felt slow because I'm not used to having to hunt for the clues or because the puzzle was on the trickier side. Let me know how the difficulty played for you!
![]() |
| SAN Marzano tomatoes |
Finally: Hannah, who constructed this puzzle, also helped organize the Midis for Minnesota charity puzzle pack, supporting mutual aid for immigrant families in the state. I have solved several of the puzzles and can vouch for their quality! It also seems like you can receive a physical booklet if you donate in the next couple of days, so do check them out.
Bullets:
- FRAGS (42D: Hand grenades, informally) — I knew this because I played a lot of Call of Duty as a child (it's what I was doing instead of being at summer camp)
- RAW BAR (45A: Establishment that might have a "buck-a-shuck" promotion) — I'm not a picky eater at all, but there's something about raw oysters that I just can't do. I've tried, but it's just not for me. I wish I could enjoy them because the people who love oysters seem to really enjoy them, but alas...
- MASH-UPS (1D: Composite numbers?) — Forgot to mention this clue above, but it was a banger!
- BAMBINA (35D: Little girl, in Italian) — I cannot explain why (I do not speak Italian), but I got this answer immediately and it made me smile
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Tough for me with the bottom half a tad less tough than the top.
ReplyDeleteThe NW was the last to fall. OUT IN LA, GENA (I had GENe briefly) and HUNS were WOES and MOON SHOTS and MASHUPS took some staring.
The NE was also a nanosecond drain as ALANA, COLOR WARS, LALAKERS,(as clued) and PERMABAN were WOES and I had tails before HORNS which was a very costly erasure. NO PEEKIes before PEEKING was also costly…plus I blanked on YORK a which I did know.
The SE was the easiest section.
A very smooth grid with plenty of crunch, liked it.
Haven't seen a Friday comment for a Saturday puzzle in a while. This was ten minutes longer than yesterday's solve so a classic progression in difficulty between the two days and both above average for difficulty.
ReplyDeleteORA gave me STAGENAME so I got off to a good start in the NW.
The NE required a bit more work. The SE was the toughest section but I stuck it out and wound up finishing in the SW.
ORA was the only familiar name. ALANA, GENA, ELISA and DANNY were all unknowns. RIAN I was able to guess mostly because I was sure we'd had it recently. Oddly xwordinfo says it's a debut.
Besides from the names my other unknowns were OUTINLA, PERMABAN, COLORWARS and DONER. Yes there's an LA dupe with LALAKERS also in the puzzle.
I started this last night and didn't get very far. Really felt like I had to hack-hack-hack away at it until each corner submitted. Didn't know CELESTA or BAMBINA or FRAGS.... (had CaLiSTA first, which messed me up for a while). this was definitely Medium-Challenging for me. Loved the MOONSHOTS and the TEMPORARY TATTOOs.... I think getting YORK was the thing that opened it up for me! and BOA. Getting ATMINSIDE off just the _TM_____D_ was nice. Thank you, Hannah, for a properly challenging Saturday!!!! I always prefer to have my STAGENAME in a large font TEMPORARY TATTOO when I'm AUNATUREL.....
ReplyDeleteNo time today?
DeleteThe timer says "1:34" but I was drifting off for some of it last night. But I'm sure it took me at least 45-50 minutes of real work. I never say "Challenging" on a Saturday unless I DNFed, since I still do that now and then.
DeletePart of my slow time today was confidently and proudly putting in MedleyS at 1 down.... held onto that for a long time, confirmed by the M; finally STAGENAME came into view and I took it out. The rest of MASHUPS was about the last thing I put in.
DeleteRick Sacra
DeleteI am vastly slower than your usual time. I was surprised that my time was only a few minutes longer than yours. For me the top was easy ( stage name was almost a gimme) but then I came to a sudden halt. For me there were errors like SlAtE. and names with multiple possible letters. Lenny, Lonny Ronny oh Danny! Elena Ilana oh ALANA etc etc. Medium challenging for me. BTW I would have sworn RIAN had approved before. That one I knew.
ReplyDelete@Rafa: In the "how quickly time is passing" category, MLB has completed a fifth of the baseball season. Wasn't yesterday Opening Day?
On the Medium side of Medium-Challenging. Good amount of crunch for a Saturday.
* * * * _
Overwrites:
My 4D way to ride was teasED before it was NAGGED.
At 10A, bLAh before FLAT.
Misremembered the 25D instrument as a CELESTe instead of CELESTA.
It's been a long time since I had a rOlo, but I thought they might be minty (YORK at 34A).
jigsaw before BOW SAW for the 40D arched cutting tool.
WOEs:
WNBA HoFer ALANA Beard at 18A
Website punishment PERMABAN (20A)
Author GENA Showalter at 28A
Full House father DANNY at 43D
Actress ELISA Donovan (46A)
The 49A Turkish dish DONER
Right on, Rafa, this was a proper Saturday, full of lively, colorful words and some clever clueing. Most of the bumps were provided by unfamiliar names such as ELANA and ALISA. Or was that ALANA and ELISA?
ReplyDeleteIt’s funny - I had the initial pushback from this handsome grid at first but taking a leap of faith and putting in GENA at 28a opened up the entire solve for me. Agree with Rafa that the overall product is highly efficient - not sure I agree that there’s not a single bad entry or not.
ReplyDeleteLittle Feat
The single spanner down the middle is a little flat - although I love the center cross with COLOR WARS. The four corner stacks are generally top notch. GOLD STARS, CARESSED, MOON SHOTS are fantastic. As I mentioned above - total guess job on GENA.
The HINGES On The Door
I didn’t love PERMABAN, ATM INSIDE or STAGE-NAME. BAMBINA and ON AND ON were cute. Knew the Chili Peppers record. The NANO sure does get a lot of screen time here.
The Triffids
An enjoyable Saturday morning solve. Tyler Hinman gives us the Stumper today - I don’t recognize the name but it’s a fine puzzle - more segmented and a little trickier than this one.
DANNY and Dusty
Tough Saturday challenge. I generally look at the clues from top to bottom and didn’t enter anything until I hit CAR midway through. So I just kind of radiated out from the middle. Struggled the most in the southwest, in part because I was fixated on ARRAS for the Hamlet line. Finally giving that up and cheating by looking up the Alice in Zombieland author (JENA? LENA? DENA? Never came up with GENA) broke the logjam.
ReplyDeleteThat one answer you finally see, with maybe one or two crosses, that breaks open an entire section. But until that moment, crickets, opaqueness due to vague clues and no-knows. First, you’re chipping away at a massive stone, and suddenly you hit the magic spot, the stone cracks open, and you’re surfing a wave… until the crickets return.
ReplyDeleteOn easier days, such surfing feels good but doesn’t mean as much. On Saturday, when it happens, you feel, “Now THAT was good.” And when It happens several times, you feel, “That was a proper Saturday.”
Creating a puzzle that does this is an art. Today, for me, the box exuded this artistry.
Furthermore, every clue felt well thought out. There was wordplay and humor. And beauty, especially hard to place in an uber-low 64 word grid: MASHUPS, MOONSHOTS, NO PEEKING, SO ANYWAYS, ON AND ON, TEMPORARY TATTOO, BAMBINA, and the marvelously clued MASHUPS.
This was a proper Saturday, Hannah. I got my Saturday and my soul is happy. Thank you!
Administrative note: I shall be away one-to-two weeks – ish – as I will be undergoing some big-time surgery (spine). I believe I’ll be able to scooch in my Favorite Clues list during this period. I‘ll miss you, gang, and I wish all at least one happy surprise in the interim!
Delete@Lewis, wishing you all the best!
DeleteBest to you, Lewis. Wishing you a successful surgery and speedy recovery. Your reliably intelligent and supportive posts will be missed and will look forward to your return.
DeleteWishing you a good result and no complications, and praying for your Doctors to "put you back the way you were made".... : )
DeleteBest of luck with the surgery. I hope all goes well and wish you the best with your recovery / rehabilitation (hopefully you will be equipped with an IPad and the NYT Games app!).
DeleteGood luck and wishes your way, @Lewis. I had back surgery when I was 29, didn't want to wait til I got older. Good decision on my part.
DeleteHope all goes well.
Roo
Good luck on the surgery. We'll all be missing you.
DeleteGood luck with the surgery. My wife is looking at her third back operation in about a week, the other two were a long time ago and what used to be a week in the hospital is now -same day surgery. Imagine that.
DeleteBest wishes for a successful procedure and speedy recovery!
DeleteHope your surgery goes well!
Delete@Lewis, sorry to hear about your health issue and good luck with your surgery.
DeleteWishing you a VERY speedy recovery @Lewis. You will surely be missed!
DeleteLove and prayers Lewis - good luck!
DeleteJoining those wishing you the best and a speedy recovery, Lewis!
DeleteBest of luck with the surgery, Lewis! I always look to your positive and insightful takes on the day’s puzzle, and hope you’re back at it soon.
DeleteHope your surgery goes well. To will be misssed.
DeleteWishing you a speedy recovery and that you will be doing your ASANAS soon!
DeleteThinking of you, Lewis & wishing you well :)
DeleteYou're on the prayer list
DeleteBest wishes and looking forward to your return!
DeleteAs a fellow spine surgery survivor, I say Godspeed and hurry back!
DeleteOnly sunny Lewis could put on such a brave face for back surgery. Your positivity will undoubtedly help you heal! We’ll all be pulling for you. Take good care,
DeleteSusan in Maine
@Lewis 7:27 AM
DeleteCheers my man. I'm rooting for a speedy recovery. We need you back ASAP.
Sending good vibes your way for the upcoming operation and then a speedy recovery, Lewis!
DeleteAha! I almost asked you if something was amiss when you didn’t point out Wednesday’s palindrome or Thursday’s semordnilap (both 5 letters!). ;-)
DeleteSeriously, though, I’m so sorry you have to go through that. Best wishes for a successful surgery and a complete recovery. Hurry back!
Mimi L
@Lewis Go raibh biseach ort gan mhoill! π☘️
DeleteWishing you the best!
DeleteWe love you, buddy. You'll be fine -- these surgeons are incredible. Just stay away from spine-tingling movies for a bit. Hurry back.
DeleteGood luck with your surgery, Lewis!
DeleteGood luck with surgery Lewis, we’ll miss your insight and perspective in the meantime!
DeleteBest wishes, LEWIS!
Delete@Lewis
DeleteLewis,
I will miss your sunny reviews. I hope your surgery goes well. Good luck with your recovery.
Diane Joan
Best wishes, Lewis, for a successful surgery and a speedy recovery.
DeleteAll the best wishes, Mr. @Lewis dude. Come back all better -- with a much better back.
DeleteM&A
As usual late Wishing Lewis good luck & a speedy recovery v
DeleteOh Lewis, I am so sorry to hear your news and wish you a successful and speedy recovery. We will miss your daily positivity and insight.
Delete<3 May God watch over you and help you heal fast
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteAlas, had to Goog twice to complete. Once was for the Red Hot Chilis album, the other for Ms. Showalter. Didn't follow the NO PEEKING advise, apparently.
COLOR WARS was CanOeWARS, then CanOerace, finally the correct answer. Was thinking of spider for the wrapping up a meal clue, but obviously too long. BOA took a surprisingly long time to jump into the ole brain.
Stuck everywhere, gave the puz a proper Saturday feel. Think I may have been able to figure out the NW without the cheat, but guess we'll never know. Tough SE that I ferreted out without a cheat.
Nice puz, Hannah. Got the brain working and SWEATing this morning.
Hope y'all have a great Saturday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
That was fun! Fun to have the challenge, the wit in the clues, and the reward of so many great entries. My way in was ORA (with a smile at remembering yesterday's reference to the Onion spoof) crossing a misspelled but helpful enough AU NATURaL. The NE and SW corners caused me some mental SWEAT, while the SE corner provided a much friendlier finish. A treat of a Saturday for me.
ReplyDeleteI’ll miss you, too. You’re a major reason why I read the comments. I hope your surgery goes well.
ReplyDeleteOn the hard side. Not as hard as last Saturday's, but it was a good workout. I had some trouble in every corner: in the NE it was over RESHARE (I hardly do any social media), ALANA, HORNS (clued by a factoid that I dimly remembered after the fact), and PERMABAN. In the SE it was over RIAN, RAW BAR, BOW SAW, and BAMBINA. In the SW it was over ELISA (tried ErI(c/k)A) and DONER (as in kebab, which occurred to me belatedly). And then I got messed up in the NW by entering rAGGED before NAGGED, and by not seeing MOON SHOTS (it looked like lOng SHOTS or... maybe pOor SHOTS?) for a good long while, and by not being familiar with OUT IN LA. Oh: let me not omit the center; there it was COLOR WARS (huh?).
ReplyDeleteNice entries. (I don't know who this "we" is that says "words" as a substitute for "entries", but it's a royal we if ever there was one.) The stack in the NW is particularly lovely. The stack in the SE was less enjoyable, largely because I really dislike ANYWAYS. (I always said and always heard "anyway", and it's only in the last ten years that I seem to hear "anyways" all the time, and it just sounds wrong to me in an annoyingly slangy way -- I don't say it is wrong, but this is how it invariably hits me. It makes me GO BANANAS a little bit, every time.)
But SO ANYWAY, thank you Hannah Slovut-Einertson (cool-looking name!). It gets a GOLD STAR from me.
This was apparently my fastest Saturday time yet - I think perhaps because I got TEMPORARY TATTOOS right away and that really opened things up.
ReplyDelete@Lewis, my very best wishes for a successful procedure and a smooth recovery. We'll all be thinking of you.
ReplyDeleteA proper Saturday indeed. Many of the proper names were unknown to me, and of ambiguous spelling (RIAN, GENA, ELISA, etc.) -- but I got them all. OTOH, I finally gave up and looked up "ossicone." In retrospect, that should have been inferrable.
And for too long I had "cimbalo" instead of CELESTA. Doubly bad because a) there is no such thing (as opposed to cimbalom), and b) "heavenly" is right there in the clue, which I did not pay enough attention to. I stuck with it until I had enough crosses to see LATEST FAD, a great clue-answer pair.
There's a nice but somewhat costly way of getting into the raw oyster thing: oysters on the half shell with a small serving of caviar on each one (American Hackleback isn't ruinously expensive) and a dot or two of lime juice and eat those with a well-chilled, dry sparkling wine. Also as a transitional item: dip the raw oysters in flour, then beaten egg, then panko breadcrumbs and fry in madium-hot butter (lots of it), and squeeze a lot of lemon or lime over them and.....crunch. After that just 'raw oysters' won't seem so disgusting.
ReplyDeleteI hope everything goes well, Lewis. We will miss you here.
ReplyDeleteThe Onion could also have chosen ISSA RAE π
ReplyDeleteI usually avail myself of some assistance from the internet on Saturdays if I can’t grab a toehold here or there. Today I had to rely on my solving partner (my uncle google) for quite a few. I can’t name one RHCP album, for example, even though it seems like they released a couple dozen of them.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed some of the more straightforward entries like TEMPORARY TATTOO, GOLD STARS, and ATM INSIDE (notice that PERMABAN didn’t make the list - I’m way too ancient for that to be in my wheelhouse, even though it is pretty discernible).
Add in some fun clues like the ones for BOA and LATEST FAD this was an enjoyable outing with just enough difficulty to earn its Saturday appearance.
Enjoyed the top half of the puzzle. Took a while to get from LATE ST?AD reading to LATEST ? AD parsing.
ReplyDeleteLast word to go in was DOMED and I didn't like it. Up and top aren't interchangeable.
Vincent Lima
DeleteNot liking it is a matter of taste.
But you didn’t mention the? That is a warning that this is a tricky one. Clues are hints not definitions. And clues like this appear frequently, especially in late week puzzles There is an expression a former commenter once said which many here agree with. Close enough for crosswords. And this one certainly is.
I got MOONSHOT right away and thought, "This will be easy." Boy was it not (for me).
ReplyDeleteI know CELESTA because Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (Sz. 106) by BΓ©la BartΓ³k is featured in the soundtrack for The Shining.
David, similarly we filled in TEMPORARY TATTOOS (the word "ink" in any clue with a "?" is a tipoff) and thought we'd soon be in cruise control...not!
DeleteReally good Saturday puzzle. Loved the clues for BOA and DOMED; simple words clued creatively. Could have used more misdirection as some have stated, but hard enough as it was.
Two "LA" references, both meaning the city and not the musical note, was curiously allowed; not if Rex was editing, safe to say.
Hi Rafa. I thought you missed the best clue, which for me was “One wrapping up a meal before eating anything “ for BOA. I love when a common answer gets a great clue.
ReplyDeleteMedium for me too at about 20 minutes. Tough to finish because I had WOOl instead of WOOD for the anniversary gift. So I had LATEST_AL crossing _RAGS and, having no idea about the latter, I thought it was LATE STEAL, though I couldn’t see how that might be here today and gone tomorrow. ERAGS also didn’t look too good. Sad trombone, so I checked the crosses and saw it could be WOOD not WOOl and finished it. Nice challenge.
Easiest Saturday (for me) in a long time...maybe ever. From the very top with moonshots and temporary tattoo.
ReplyDeleteI solve on paper, in ink, and only work off of what I've already entered. I had no write-overs, and it took less than 30min. Too easy for a Saturday.
I forgot to add that I think it was an excellent puzzle!
ReplyDeleteIt was not so easy but it was a beauty of a puzzle. ππππ Be well,Lewis. We’ll miss you.
ReplyDeleteThe NW went in right away and I thought, oh no, not that kind of a Saturday, but the rest disabused me of that notion. Hung up in the NE on BLAH but the LALKERS eventually got everything straightened out. TEMPORARYTATOO was a gimme and led to lots of toeholds ATMINSIDE did similar work in the SE (great BOA clue). Had a major void in the middle mainly due to never having heard of COLORWARS, and the SW was blank space (somehow missed the CARESSED clue entirely) took a leap of faith with DONER (DONER kebab?) and GOLDSTARS, and bang, there it was.
ReplyDeleteTechnical DNF as I had GINA and never bothered to check it, although CELESTA obviously makes more sense. Same name problems as everyone else.
Very much enjoyed your Saturday offering, HSE. A Happy Solving Experience all the way around, and thanks for all the fun.
Fellow hockey fans--Well, my Bruins season is over and the better team won. Good luck to the Sabres (who spell their name with a nod to Canada, I discover) and may the playoffs last as long as possible.
@pabloinnh, Bruins fan here too, now also a Sabres fan for the duration.
DeleteAnd with @Les S. More, we have all recently commented here about national anthem renditions.
I re-watched the haunting one by Marvin Gaye (RIP); thanks for that suggestion.
I'd recommend to you finding the time (20-plus years ago) that a young girl forgot the lyrics while singing before an NBA game and was bailed out by classy Mo Cheeks. The video is tear-rendering; and the story's epilogue (the two were reunited in 2025) was an ending I didn't see coming.
@DAVin HOP-Found the original event and the epilogue and to paraphrase K. Vonnegut, if that isn't nice, I don't know what is. Thanks for the suggestion.
DeleteNo one has mentioned the dupe between OUTINLA and LALALAKERS (from LaLa Land). And then there is the reference to the current craze for using AI to cheat on exams in Los Angeles, the LATESTFAD.
ReplyDeleteHere's an example from a recent test: You have TENANTS and you lose ONEADAY for ten days. What do you have left? Answer: A condo conversion opportunity.
A gathering of grandmothers could be termed a GOBANANAS.
They serve that Turkish rotisserie dish too rare for my taste. I like my DONER DONER.
My solve was like @Lewis'. A crack and a whoosh several times. Liked it. Thanks, Hannah Slovut-Einertson.
I was hoping that someone else noticed the double LA.
DeleteTried "OohlaLA" and with LALAKERS already firmly in place I figured LALA was gonna be sumpthin but aLAs, nope!
Delete@egs and @Anonymous, maybe you skipped over a comment
DeleteGOB A NANAS -- Hah!
Delete@puzzlehoarder. I've often made comments that were original per the state-of-the-blog at the time of submission, only to have them appear as repetitive by the time they appear. This is always slightly embarrassing, but so are the rest of my comments.
DeleteLOL at GOBANANAS! I've started an @egs Word Reparse Prediction List and that was on it. Couldn't predict that though!
Delete@egsforbreakfast 9:09 AM
DeleteGOBANANAS. π€£
Hi Rafa, nice review.
ReplyDeleteI liked this a lot - not as brutal as some Saturdays - except for BOWSAW, DONER, PERMABAN (a first?), FRAGS.
Thank you, Hannah for a doable Saturday :)
Took me twice as long as Friday 27 v 14. One of those Saturdays where on the first pass I got maybe two words.
ReplyDeleteSomeone posted the Rita ORA manager clip yesterday - he's been working OT!
ReplyDeleteHere is the keyboard player for the Colorado Phil demonstrating the CELESTA:
- Nutcracker Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies perhaps the most iconic use.
- Bartok music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta is a masterwork, and inspired countless movie scores.
- One that made me very happy was the intro to Mr Rogers' Neighborhood, which I had never put together:)
I didn't know COLORWARS, so that section and the SW was tough to finish. Proper Saturday with clever clues, as many have mentioned.
I had GOBerserk crossing "oration" for address, so knew one had to be wrong - turns out both!
Has anyone heard from Bob Mills? Missing his comments
ReplyDeleteFun puzzle, thanks to the constructor. I had a DNF, didn’t know CELESTA and wrote GINA. Oh well. In retrospect, I think TEMPORARY TATTOO should’ve been clued for Graham Platner, Maine’s Democratic Senate candidate, who had a Nazi tattoo for eighteen years but covered it up after his former campaign manager released this statement: “Graham has an anti-Semitic tattoo on his chest. He’s not an idiot. He’s a military history buff. We cannot be this painfully stupid,” referring to her fellow Democrats. A week later McDonald announced that she had refused to sign a non-disclosure agreement from Platner. “The campaign offered me $15,000 to sign a NDA. I did not accept the offer. I certainly could have used the money. I quit my job to work on Platner’s campaign, believing it was something different than it is.” Also liked GO BANANAS and COLOR WARS. ta
ReplyDeleteWell, that's one way to get yourself a tough Saturday - write in the wrong letters. I managed to write down TATTOr, and later BAnBINA, both of which made the SE hard to fill in. And having the soft stone be SlAtE before I remembered, no, SHALE. You don't get any GOLD STARS when you have _Ot in place. The author Showalter might have been lENA, dENA, mENA, but turned out to be GENA.
ReplyDeleteGotta love Rita ORA - she gave me my first entry into the grid. And SAN Marzano tomatoes are the best.
So when the Red Hot Chili Peppers were OUT IN LA, were they aSLEEP?
Hannah Slovut-Einertson, nice Saturday, thanks!
This was a tasty Saturday! @Rafa, great write up, always appreciate hearing about the nuances of construction (words vs. entries, etc...)! I had a similar solving experience but I'm sure mine took much longer, but I enjoyed it all.
ReplyDeleteThe grid was a little intimidating and I had nothing but CARS and LIED on my first pass. Then COLORWARS hit which I'm very familiar with and things started to take shape.
I thought all the long acrosses and downs in the NW and SE were stunners. Some of my favorite fill in a long time.
Had several self inflicted hold ups today. In the SE, I rushed to put down *oration* for 37D, formal speech, instead of the correct (and *much* better answer) ADDRESS. I think RAWBAR finally saved me there.
Also had tagLINE instead of HOTLINE for 33D, Call it! That one stayed for far too long as I figured it made sense for the game of tag, i.e. "not it!" or "you're it!" and such. WORDS got me out of that jam with its "O". Costliest mistake was *Iwashere* instead of ILLSTART at 44A, Me first. That gunked up my SW pretty good. For me though, it doubles the fun when the right stuff finally clicks after silly missteps. So I had a ball with this one.
Thank you Hannah, this was a great start to the weekend!
Thought this a good puzzle but tough. Got off to an easy start in the NE, but after that—blotto! In the NW could not get MASHUPS and in the SE got stuck on “oration”. Knew none of the names and had never heard of COLORWARS despite years at Boy Scout camps. Oh, wait, I did finally remember Rita ORO from earlier croswords…
ReplyDelete@Belinda 9:59 : Evertyhing you wrote about Platner is true, but here’s the thing : The chance of Democrats taking the majority become a lot more difficult without Maine. They need to net 4 flipped seats. Maine and NC are probably top 2. I’m reminded of. 1991 Louisiana governors race pitted corrrupt governor Edwin Edwards vs former KKK Grand Dragon David Duke. There was a popular bumper sticker :VOTE FOR THE CROOK. IT’S IMPORTANT. The crook won. Mainers should take a cue from them. VOTE FOR THE NAZI. IT’S IMPORTANT.
ReplyDeleteNot sure if the GENA/CELESTA crossing constitutes a Natick, but I finished without the happy music and, because everything else looked correct, figured something was off with that crossing (CiLESTA didn't look right). Ran the vowels and voila. Were I solving on paper, it would have been a DNF for me. Not sure if that speaks to my ignorance or poor construction, but in reading the comments I'm not the only one who experienced the same problem. Rest of the puzzle an enjoyable Saturday slog. 22:07
ReplyDeleteI though this was gonna be easy when TEMPORARYTATTOO fell in quickly, but man that SW corner was tough.
ReplyDeleteRead the clue for 8D: Disappearing ink?, and thought, what are those temporary tattoos women from India apply, especially at weddings? Remembered henna, but that was obv too short. Hmmm, I thought, a long word for temporary tattoo. What could it be???
ReplyDeleteI liked it. Had long shots instead of moonshots so that caused some problems
ReplyDeleteNice puzzle. I had TAGLINE for Call it! and I think it’s a better answer than HOTLINE
ReplyDeleteLots of fun. Good clues, interesting entries. For some reason I particularly like the clue for TOE. I don’t particularly like the LA dupe. I very particularly hate the S added to ANYWAY. (You described my feelings to a T, @tht!)
ReplyDeleteFound a 5-letter semordnilap for @Lewis - PEELS.
Go Sabres! Mr. A is from a small town outside Buffalo and taught this Alabama native how to watch hockey. @pablo and @DAVin, thanks for the support, and for mentioning the Buffalo crowd helping out with O Canada. I was at rehearsal and missed it, but after the discussion here I found it online - very cool. The search engine then offered that other people search for “Who has the best hockey fans?” The answer was Buffalo.
RAWBAR - yum.
Happy to see the BAND get a nod as the parade sight. Those musicians spend A TON of time and effort, in all kinds of weather, to play their instruments live while marching. Much preferable to the staged, lip-synced acts (in my NSHO)!
Thanks for your efforts, Hannah - great job!
Mimi L
Longer solve than usual but lots of fun DOH! moments. Pretty tough puzzle, but much good cluing and many satisfying answers. Good stuff!
ReplyDeletePretty good & feisty SatPuz. TEMPORARYTATTOO was an interestin seed entry choice.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure ALANA, GENA, ELISA, RIAN, and DANNY are all delightful folks, but I sure don't know em.
A few other entries were word combos where I knew the individual words, but not the combo. COLORWARS, OUTINLA, BOWSAW, & PERMABAN come back to mind.
staff weeject pick [of a mere 6 choices]: SAN whatever tomato.
fave stuff included: GOLDSTARS. GOBANANAS. STAGENAME & its clue. BOA clue.
The Seashells say: 86 49-A ... even if its clue had been: {More finished??} = DONER.
Thanx for the workout, Ms. Slovut-Einertson darlin.
Masked & Anonymo3Us
p.s.
Runt puzzle deemed challengin by the test-solvin staff:
**gruntz**
M&A
Organization for folks who can't stop talking: ON AND ON Anon
ReplyDeleteWasn't FRAGS one of the ten plagues? The Seders get fuzzy for me with those four cups of wine.
Nice combos today: SWALLOW crossing WORDS, and MOONSHOTS atop AU NATUREL
Wanna see that classic Disney film about that fawn whose mom gets killed?
BAMBI? NA. (Oops. Spoiler alert!)
The Totenkopf, the specific design of Platner’s tattoo, is the exact insignia of the SS-Totenkopfverbande, the SS unit that ran concentration camps. It was also the insignia of the 3rd SS Panzer Division.
ReplyDeleteThe upshot of the discourse goes beyond his antisemitism to speak to a problem with the Left’s academic sophistication: any serious scholar will know that it is possible to manufacture analytical room for doubt in virtually anything.
Credible studies have shown that highly intelligent, well-educated people are as easily manipulated as anyone else, if not more so, by bias.
Supporters of the Democratic Party are demonstrating through candidates like Platner and Mamdani that, on balance, they are more than capable of poor judgment, and that it manifests often through sophisticated argumentation that is nevertheless detached from reality.
A politician who plasters an SS tattoo on their chest, just like one who ushers in a Third Intifada, is simply unfit for public office. That is not an indictment of the aisle’s inherent values. On the contrary, it is a valuable warning about the rot metastasizing within the party, one they would be wise to heed.
Talk about the pot calling the kettle black!
DeleteYeah happens on both sides
DeleteThis was pretty challenging for me; lots of wrong answers that I couldn't fix. Unfortunately, way way too many of them were Unknown Names. ALANA, GENA, ELISA, RIAN, DANNY... never heard of any of those idiots. Really spoiled the puzzle for me.
ReplyDeleteAside from the names, several things I haven't heard of: COLOR WARS (I had COLOR WEEK), RAW BAR, OUT IN LA. Typeovers were RE TWEET before RESHARE, JIG SAW before BOW SAW, GO BERSERK before GO BANANAS.
And what on earth is TOE for "Winning X or O"??... Google sends me to Tic-Tac-Toe... that's a new one for me.
Oh, and PERMABAN was yet another thing I've never heard. And, inexplicably, LODESTARS then POLE STARS before GOLD STARS... that one is all on me.
Deleteokanaganer. I'm with you on a few of those things. So wanted Tic or Tac and, frustrated, abandoned that section. When I returned, there was the E and TOE seemed so obvious. Tic tac d'oh!
DeleteI wanted the website penalty to be some kind of BAN. Forever, permanent, all-time … aargh! so, once again, I left that area and when I returned there was a P there so I took a flyer on PERMA and got lucky.
A fair amount of guessing today. Not the worst thing. Sometimes fun.
Okanaganer
DeleteDespite Tick tack toe being the full name of the game. It took me quite a while to get the connection!
I loved today's primarily because i finished it in 34 minutes, unusual for me for a Saturday, and then went to Rex Parker and it was rated Medium. Usually when I finish a puzzle more quickly than usual, it's an Easy. And sometimes when I slog through a puzzle and am forced to look up something to finish it, I go to the blog and it's rated Easy or Easy-Medium and it ruins my entire day. The best day is like today - my experience aligned with the relative difficulty and now I feel smart. I'm trying to put out of my head that Rex is on a trip and would likely have rated it Easy. Cuz I'm smart, right? At least for today?
ReplyDeleteRight and proper puzzle for once. Maybe a tad easier than old Saturday puzzles but well within range. Got stuck in the SW for a bit but managed to get myself out. Still finished with a DNF ad GiNAlooked fine and I didn’t know CELESTA. Only complaint was really that after yesterday’s proper noun bonanza.
ReplyDeleteThank you to all for your heartwarming kind thoughts --
ReplyDeleteBest wishes Lewis! Tried to reply to your original post, but there might be a reply limit. "I wish all at least one happy surprise in the interim!" Is that a general wish, or are you hinting at something... guess we'll have to wait and see. :)
DeleteThis could not have been more timely:
ReplyDeletehttps://theonion.com/rita-oras-agent-scores-singer-another-prime-crossword-puzzle-placement/
A workout for me, but an enjoyable one. I fell into many of the same traps as other commenters and had to claw and scrape my way out of them. But it’s a puzzle, and a word puzzle, not a technical trick, so I enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteLike @Eh Steve! And @Hugh (and, I think, others; I’m too lazy to go back and read all the comments again) Ξ had the most trouble in the SW. Nobody’s mentioned it but I got delayed by DONER, which is weird because I’ve spent time in Turkey and eaten a fair bit of street food but I kept wanting my vertically roasted meat sandwiches to be gyros, which is Greek, not Turkish. To complicate matters the little Turkish eateries where I live tend to spell their dish DONaiR, so that’s what I started looking for, and had to settle for DONER. Much of the puzzle was like that. And don’t get me started on how to spell shwarma (shawarma, anyone?). They’re all good but I tend to prefer the Greek one because I like the tzatziki.
@tht. Re: ANYWAYS. A bit of a bugbear for me, too. But at least we were spared ANYhoo.
Excellent Saturday, Hannah. And, though it has been said multiple times above, all the best to @Lewis, our pillar of positivity.
First ever finishing a Saturday for me!
ReplyDeleteMedium with a tough NW. PERMABAN was my favorite entry. RIAN Johnson is pretty much crosswordese now. Slight chuckle at the Full House reference, DANNY Tanner. Watched it as a kid. Not proud of it.
ReplyDeleteGrowing SAN Marzano tomatoes this year for the first time, along with Sungold cherry tomatoes. I bought a random variety of Romas last year, and they were awful (too watery for salsa and had a thick chewy skin). I'm pretty excited about this year.
Thanks Hannah for the puzzle and Rafa for the writeup!
He’s not a Nazi. There is no evidence for that beyond the SS Totenkopf tattoo that he proudly wore on his chest until someone called him out on having the most evil, antisemitic symbol imaginable on his chest for years and years, which he then he got it covered up, but only after he knew it was hurting his electoral chances and not out of shame, as he has attempted to explain. This is just a smear campaign by people who don’t like his politics and/or don't like Nazis.
ReplyDeleteπ
DeleteI can't believe I finished it. Maybe the toughest one for me I didn't give up on.
ReplyDeleteAnyone else think the NW was the toughest? “Rests (on)” for “hinges” was a terrible clue, plus an obscure RHCP album title? I also had “trod” for “plod” and just couldn’t get going. Added an unnecessary extra 10 minutes to my time.
ReplyDeleteNo mires.
ReplyDeleteThis was a great outing. That southeast corner was a major challenge for me.
We used to call them oyster bars and the point of them had nothing to do with oysters and everything to do with horseradish sauce. You wanted it so hot and so out of control you felt like you needed to call an ambulance as your nose caved into your skull after each slurp of a dead oyster. Misspent youth. Now I eat a carrot for excitement.
❤️ SO ANYWAYS. CELESTA.
π PLOD.
π« PERMABAN. TOE.
People: 7
Places: 1
Products: 6
Partials: 1
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 16 of 64 (25%)
Funny Factor: 5 π
Tee-Hee: AU NATUREL.
Uniclues:
1 Displays of unshapely derrieres.
2 Unwritten rule about skirts for those from civilized society.
3 Music group specializing in songs about little piggies.
4 Who you call when you're trapped with a chatty boomer.
5 Ding dong ditched.
1 FLAT MOON SHOTS (~)
2 NO PEEKING UNDER (~)
3 TOE WORDS BAND (~)
4 ON AND ON HOTLINE
5 RANG ADDRESS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Golf tournament featuring fried holes in one. ONION RINGS OPEN.
¯\_(γ)_/¯
I enjoyed figuring this puzzle out. As some said, the top seemed easy but not the rest of it!
ReplyDeleteI never heard of color wars as a child but read references to it in the Times Nice to get a clear explanation of what they are.
I thought the puzzle was very well made
There was criticism of the CELESTA GENA cross. But even they admitted that CiL looked wrong. My As someone pointed out, the clue’s “heavenly” hinted at the answer because CELESTA is related to celestial. Tough cross but I don’t think it was unfair for a Saturday.
I obviously went to different summer camps, because COLOR WARS was new for me. Holi is the only festival or big celebration of color I knew of. Sounds like fun though.
ReplyDeleteI am still in my happy Saturday bubble. This puzzle gave me everything I want on a themeless Saturday. Plenty of hunt and peck, great clues and several places where the no-knows had me thinking that cheating was my only option.
Ossicones took me back to my childhood giraffe obsession. Yep, I was that kiddo. Anyone anywhere saying something about the “horns” on a giraffe, heard the difference between horns and ossicones. There was an adorable pair at the Columbus zoo and when I was maybe 7 or 8, they had a baby. There was a name the baby contest but my suggestion “Ossie” didn’t win. And of course, in my submission I explained why my choice was “obviously” the best. But I certainly learned lots about giraffes, but more importantly, (in the long run, ANYWAYS) about libraries.
I spent way more time bothering the reference librarian at the “big library downtown not the little one we ride bikes to” wanting to know everything I could learn. One of the most valuable things I learned was that if a library knew about a book but didn’t have it there was something called Interlibrary Loan! It’s possible that in my zeal to use it, the reference librarians (yep, the ones in the big reading room where children were not the norm-or even very welcome and thinking I was annoying) limited me to one Interlibrary Loan a month. Nobody ever wondered why I got a masters in Library and Information Science before law school.
STAGE NAME was my first entry. It took me quite a while to really break in, and I didn’t get my whoosh on until the bottom half of the puzzle. COLOR WARS was new for me. Got the WARS, but thankfully, CELESTA, NANO, and TEMPORARY TATTOO, helped me out.
The help in the center exemplifies the architectural balance in today’s puzzle. I didn’t immediately recognize Ms. Slovut-Einertson’s byline, but the solve felt vaguely familiar. In my post-solve review, I looked up her author page and was happily reminded of her Saturday puzzle of January 3 this year. A similar grid, but this one has more sparkle. Ok, could just be the ossicones. Whatever, she hit all the sweet spots for me today, with my only nose wrinkle at ANYWAYS, which I think must be regional; I only use and am familiar with the singular ANYWAY.
One final thought. Open and free access to information via our public library systems is a cornerstone of equality in America. Please support your local public libraries and the courageous librarians who are now refusing censorship every day.
Graham Platner does not merely have a "Nazi tattoo."It's the worst possible Nazi tattoo.
ReplyDeleteIt's the Death's Head "Totenkopf," which was the official symbol of the SS units who ran the death camps.It is not possible to have a more wildly evil and antisemitic tattoo than this.
So of course Democrats want him to be a U.S. Senator.
Amen
DeleteAnytime I can complete a Saturday in one sitting I consider it easy. Thus, this one was easy.
ReplyDeleteI miss the days when a Saturday puzzle took me until Wednesday to solve.