"Oscar" of the French film industry / FRI 5-29-26 / Currency in The Legend of Zelda / Road maneuvers featuring lazy braking / "La Tulipe Noire" novelist, 1850 / Someone attracted to intellect over looks, say / Swing dance originating in Harlem / Adhere to the kashrut dietary rules / Smurf who is more than 500 years old / Dream interrupter / Redheaded monster on TV
Friday, May 29, 2026
Constructor: Hemant Mehta
Relative difficulty: Medium
Word of the Day: LINDY / HOP (20A: With 19-Across, swing dance originating in Harlem) —
The Lindy Hop is an American dance which was born in the African-American communities of Harlem, New York City, in 1928 and has evolved since then. It was very popular during the swing era of the late 1930s and early 1940s. Lindy is a fusion of many dances that preceded it or were popular during its development but is mainly based on jazz, tap, breakaway, and Charleston. It is frequently described as a jazz dance and is a member of the swing dance family.In its development, the Lindy Hop combined elements of both partnered and solo dancing by using the movements and improvisation of African-American dances along with the formal eight-count structure of European partner dances – most clearly illustrated in the Lindy's defining move, the swingout. In this step's open position, each dancer is generally connected hand-to-hand; in its closed position, leads and follows are connected as though in an embrace on one side and holding hands on the other. [...]
Lindy Hop is sometimes referred to as a street dance, referring to its improvisational and social nature. In 1932, twelve-year-old Norma Miller did the Lindy Hop outside the Savoy Ballroom with her friends for tips. In 1935, 15,000 people danced on Bradhurst Avenue for the second of a dance series held by the Parks Department. Between 147th and 148th street, Harlem "threw itself into the Lindy Hop with abandon" as Sugar Hill residents watched from the bluffs along Edgecombe Avenue.
• • •
Outside the middle and the NE, though, the puzzle was pretty simple, and largely delightful. Nice start with ALL TOO SOON and "SMALL WORLD!" and then the puzzle rolls right into ROLLING STOPS, which I loved as answer almost as much as I hate them in real life, especially as a pedestrian (5D: Road maneuvers featuring lazy braking). We called them "California stops" when I was growing up, but I grew up in California, so ... maybe every state thinks they invented it. Hmm, looks like only Rhode Island wants a piece of the action (wikipedia is telling me that in addition to "California stop," the rolling stop is also called the "Rhode Island roll"). I think the vast majority of people do ROLLING STOPS at lightly-trafficked stop signs. But I love coming to a complete stop. It feels almost perverse, especially when there's no one around. But I find it satisfying, especially if someone is behind me and seems, let's say, impatient. I don't hang out at the stop sign, but I damn sure come to a full and complete stop. Just for a little treat. And for the children and animals and cyclists and other drivers etc. It's a little reset. A road awareness check-in. Stop. Look. Go. Relax. Have a nice day.
LINT SCREENS is another good answer, and I love "WHAT'D I MISS?" over TERRY GROSS, as you can imagine a car passenger listening to "Fresh Air," popping out of the car to run a quick errand, then getting back into the car and asking "WHAT'D I MISS!!?" Oh, nothing, just Christian Bale admitting on air that he's doing this interview and all his Batman Begins promotional interviews not in his natural voice, but in a put-on more-or-less inflection-less American accent. Also, he thanked Terry for noticing that his body in Batman looked like it was bulky and muscly from real physical activity, not like it was sculpted at the gym. Hard bod, not gym bod. (Why do I remember the details of this one Terry Gross interview from over two decades ago so clearly??).
Bullets:
- 23A: Only player to win three Super Bowl M.V.P. awards before turning 30 (MAHOMES) — I stopped paying attention to the NFL a long time ago now, but this guy's name definitely broke through to me at some point. It's pretty crossword-friendly, as seven-letter words go. I saw this clue and my mind went to older players (Brady, Favre, Montana, Bradshaw...), but of those, only MONTANA fit, and crosses made that impossible. Once I had the answer to MAH- ... well, then it was easy. MAHOMES has played in five Super Bowls and won three (all with the Kansas City Chiefs).
- 39A: "La Tulipe Noire" novelist, 1850 (DUMAS) — because ["The Three Musketeers" novelist, 1844] and ["The Count of Monte Cristo" novelist, 1846] would've been too obvious, I guess. I'm rereading the first two books of Colson Whitehead's Harlem trilogy in anticipation of the third installment (which comes out this summer), and in those books, there's an elite association of Black leaders and businessmen called The DUMAS Club (DUMAS‘s father, Thomas-Alexandre, was born in present-day Haiti, the son of a French nobleman and an enslaved woman).
- 15D: Outstanding, in a way (OWING) — there's nothing remarkable about this answer except that it starts an -ING avalanche: OWING ROLLING RAZING ICING ing ing ing ing. It's like the grid is glitching and I need to smack it in order to get regular reception back.
- 28A: Apt anagram of NOTES (TONES) — me, confidently: "STENO!"
That's all for today. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
=============================
❤️ Support this blog ❤️:
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
- Westwords (Berkeley, CA, Jun. 14, 2026)
📘 My other blog 📘:
- Pop Sensation (vintage paperbacks)



















47 comments:
Easy-Medium. Good amount of crunch for a Friday. Liked it.
* * * * _
Overwrites:
ACHy before ACHE for the long hike feeling at 6A.
For 8D "Yowzers!" I had @Rex HOLY MOley before MOSES.
My 23A Super Bowl ring-winner was MAnning before he was MAHOMES.
pigS before haMS before ATMS for the things filled with bacon at 31D.
I thought maybe DegAS had taken time off from painting to write a novel. Nope, it was DUMAS at 39A.
For the 41A merciless fun-making I had teASeS before ROASTS.
WOEs:
I didn't know that The Legend of Zelda traded in RUPEEs (12D).
SAPIOSEXUAL at 10D.
College coach TARA VenDerveer at 48D.
Author TERRY GROSS at 56A.
I strenuously object to the clue for TROTS at 34A. For me, a TROT is full speed :)
I wrote down HOLY MOLEY immediately and of course got into trouble. Once I fixed it the fill was pretty easy. Enjoyable Friday.
Wonderful late week puzzle - the six long downs are outstanding. ROLLING STOPS, WHERE DO I SIGN and EAT KOSHER are all top notch and fill up a lot of real estate in this somewhat choppy grid.
TONES On Tail
Rex does a nice job summarizing the highlights - a few gimmes like TERRY GROSS, MAHOMES etc made this go quicker than it should have. ALL TOO SOON, SCORPIO, ROWDY - it’s loaded with good stuff and limited filler.
HOLY MOSES
Highly enjoyable Friday morning solve - one of the top late week puzzles of the year to date.
With your mercury mouth in the missionary times
I found it easier than most Fridays, but needed an alphabet run for the SAPIOSEXUAL/PAPA cross. Enjoyed the clue for DAMS, albeit "in a way" seemed superfluous.
Good morning. Yeah, this was brutal for me. My timer says 8:19:56, cuz I went to bed half way through it last night and finished this morning! But yeah... MOlEy before MOSES.... I was trying to figure out what a ZENSTAlEy was for the longest time. LINTfilters before SCREENS was dumb on my part. RETRY is not something we say as an alternative to rage-quitting. Thought it was actually going to be some synonym for quiet-quitting. 49A RUE was a WOE. WHEREDOISIGN is great, just couldn't think of it for a long time. SAPIOSEXUAL was another ????. Great puzzle, doable in the end, thank you Hemant for a terrific Friday challenge!!!
We called them "California stops" in Wisconsin, too. I think the concept was vaguely linked to the right turn on red.
I somehow remembered MAHOMES, and I got TARA from crosses, but had to look up SARA Bareilles--I really wanted ronA, I think my mind was thinking of Rona Barrett--but the currency ended with E, so it had to be RUPEE.
The SW corner was tough--took me a long time to see TOKES, and I think of DAMS as barriers to exit (for the water) rather than entry, but I guess it depends on which way you are going. My local river used to have a shad run in the spring, but they built a lot of dams in the 19th century, which were certainly barriers to entry for the fish. There is a plan to remove them, but first they have to clean up all the toxic chemicals on the bottom.
SAPIOSEXUAL is a ridiculous word, but it was fun to write in.
WTF cracked me up. Is that a first, I wonder?
Tough for a Friday. Not sure what there is not to like here - it has some very nice fill and some clever definitions, but somehow overall it left me unsatisfied. Some of that is due to a couple of subpar longs in SAPIOSEXUAL and TERRYGROSS. Part might be that I didn't like the clue for ROLLING STOPS. But that's not really enough to offset the good stuff, so it's probably a me thing.
Fourth time overall, most recently 4/24/26.
So we’re just gonna ignore OKMOM? I came here hoping for a good GREENPAINT rant or at least a mention of this terrible answer. Alas.
When I see Hemant’s name atop a puzzle, I spontaneously break into a smile. I love his creations, and let me give you one reason why -- spark.
His puzzles are alive, filled with it, that is, words we’ve never seen before in the Times grid, and their never-seen-before clues. When I say filled, I mean significantly. I did the calculation today – 58% of the white squares in the puzzle belong to debut answers. What!?!?!?!? Think about that!
Now, debut answers aren’t automatically sparky, i.e., here are some potential debuts, never having been in the Times puzzle before: ADVERTISED, BACK MUSCLE, and AUTODIALER. Snore.
But today’s debuts – do have buzz, IMO, all eleven of them, including WHAT’D I MISS, WHERE DO I SIGN, ALL TOO SOON, ROLLING STOPS, and TERRY GROSS. Such buzz is the rule in Hemant’s puzzles.
Without a doubt, Hemant, I’ll once again light up with a smile when I see your name. You are a Crosslandia gift. Thank you!
I have to put in a special mention for the elegant [Cue ... or queue] for LINE.
This clue has never appeared in any of the major crossword venues, and high props to Hemant for plucking it from the ether. Bravo, sir!
Just verifying that I’m not the only person who grew up calling them LINTFILTERS. Screen makes sense, but it was never the term my mom called it
Now this is more like it, a Friday with some pushback. Slow start, didn't remember CESAR, but knew it after I had some fill, did know CASH, did know LINDY HOP, although HOP LINDY went in a little funny. Knew SARA which led to RUPEE--only currency I know that starts RU. Took forever to parse EASYREADS and LINTSCREEN for me is either a LINT TRAP or a LINT FILTER. Had to run the alphabet to get the W in ROWDY which was then obvious. And totally agree with OFL's objection to SAPIOSEXUAL, as the one-or--the-other preference makes no sense. Since I've been married a very long time, you can ask me how I know.
Today's how-dumb-can-I-get was having D___AS and writing in DEGAS without thinking. When I went back and reread the clue , which started with "author", out came the eraser. Thanks to @Conrad for making me feel less all alone.
Very nice Friday indeed, HM. A Healthy Mix of contemporary language and interesting trivia, and thanks for all the fun.
They make you one with everything - c'mon, that's the corner hotdog stand guy
How have I never seen the name MAHOMES? I'm no football fan but have definitely heard of the big names.
STENO for me as well. Immediately slammed that one in. Shorthand notes are beautiful to behold. What a shame it’s a dying art.
FYI: Alexandre Dumas, the novelist, was born in France. The man you are describing (born in present-day Haiti to a French nobleman and an enslaved woman) is his father, Thomas-Alexandre Dumas.
Actually kashrut and kosher are the same thing. So the cluing is a bad edit as the clue and answer are the same. Do better
"WTF"...That was my response to Rex not mentioning this in his write-up. Kitshef says it's the acronym's fourth appearance, so the edgy Rubicon has long since been crossed.
I wasn’t the greatest fan of the clue for ATMS. They’re filled with bread, or they’re filled with lettuce, maybe, but I dunno, bacon? Only time I’ve heard bacon be used for money is in another phrase, Bring home the bacon. It doesn’t really stand on its own. Alas, a minor nitpick.
Harder than a Friday has been for a while. Actually: thank you!
WHERE DO I SIGN is hard not to like for its in-the-language vibrancy. I think a former me who was more of a grammar stickler might not have enjoyed WHATDIMISS, but I kind of like it now, especially for the slight poser of how to render that. WHAT'D I MISS presumably, but that contraction is pulling some weight there (short for "what did", I guess, what else could it be?), and I wonder how many other phrases with that type of contraction there are. There've gotta a few, right?
HOLY MOSES of course instantly recalls the Elton John-Bernie Taupin collaboration, and I'm a little surprised that the song (Border Song) hasn't acquired more of an anthemic status in this era of brutally cracking down on migrants and their families. Bernie Taupin has said that the lyrics didn't particularly mean anything (which might be a Taupin trademark -- I think he might have said the same thing about other songs he's written, with their strange, mysterious, and ultimately memorable lyrics). Elton John added the final lines "He's my brother, let us live in peace" (three times), and somehow that lyric gets to me. I also think "She's my mother" would have worked well, emotionally, as the final line.
I'm of two minds about SAPIOSEXUAL. One is: never heard it, sounds made up, I'll never use it myself, yeah sounds a little dumb. The other is that I enjoyed figuring it out anyway.
Had trouble over EAT KOSHER. I thought "keep KOSHER" at first, but obviously it won't fit. Then I thought "keep Halal" (not knowing for sure whether kashrut is Hebrew or Arabic or what), then "had KOSHER" before finally getting to the promised land. HOLY MOSES!
Thanks, Hemant Mehta. I could go on to point out other things I liked, but I'll sum up by saying that for me this was a welcome Friday challenge. I'll look forward to your next production.
More critical than praiseworthy in the write-up. We were surprised to see a rating above three stars. SAPIOSEXUAL...WHERE DO I SIGN? (the petition to never see that word again, ever?). Give me OVER ARM any day.
LINT filters (what we call them) before SCREENS, but technically accurate.
Loved Rex's riff on ROLLING STOPS and LOVED his reminiscence about Christian Bale's interview by TERRY GROSS (whether or not it was a real thing).
Thanks—read the bio too hastily 🙏
Did not enjoy this one. Trivia, trivia, trivia. Stupid clues and Boring answers. Otherwise, not all bad.
You weren’t the only one to (briefly) consider DEGAS 🖐️
Brilliant write up. I’m right there with STENO!
Say what you will about SAPIOSEXUALS, I think probably OFL and a few of us on this blog have done well with this particular cohort.
Forgive me if this was mentioned previously but is there a bug with the app? When I finish the puzzle and try to review it, the x button to clear the congratulations screen doesn’t work. I’ve restarted my phone but that doesn’t help. Anyone else experiencing this?
Someone should warn those folks at 30D who EAT KOSHER not to use the ATMS at 31D.
Was Serpico a SCORPIO? Almost.
A young woman from Tulsa married a gent from Pittsburgh. Their kids had an OKMOM and a PAPA.
(With apologies to Ogden Nash)
When it comes to drink
I like to think
That Jason Momoa
Enjoys his COCOA
I liked that a lot, too. I also liked the clue for NOON which made no sense until it did.
I probably skew younger than your average reader (though, upon reflection, I’m 40. WTF is right) and found this to be extremely easy for a Friday. My second fastest time, all whoosh. Not sure what that’s about.
It began as a nice doable puzzle. Then the SE did me in. Still a nice puzzle but no 🎈for me.
Nobel prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman, who was actually a pretty funny guy, once told me this corny joke: What did the Zen master say to the hot dog vendor? “Make me one with everything.”
I held on to LINTfilterS so long it’s embarrassing, and no Dr Random you are NOT the only one.
Nice one, @melle. But hold the onions on mine.
My grid looked similar to our RP’s but leaned a little further to the east. Primarily the southeast section gave me the most trouble, particularly that bottom corner and the long crosses. I flew through the rest in record time but had to chip away at that area square by square.
You need only to look at my avatar to know that I was thrilled to see my favorite QB from my favorite team. My man MAHOMES suffered an injury late last year, but he looks to be back in fine form this fall. He’s still in his prime, but the glory days go fast and will be over ALL TOO SOON.
Oh dear, I'm disappointed by the provincial response here to SAPIOSEXUAL. Considering this demographic would be the prime subject of interest to such folks, perhaps you'd reflect on the concept before dismissing on reflex.
@kitshef…I had problems with ROLLING STOPS also, but because my brain went to maneuvers that were “off-road” like “doing donuts” in spite of the clear language in the clue.
I know nothing of NFL and a clue about a player beginning with MA and confidently dropped in MANNING and went on. Took me a while to unpick that one
I hear you. Bacon did not resonate for me either. I think of the “bring home the bacon” phrase as emblematic of earning enough money to put food on the table (and etc) but not the money itself. That doesn’t mean I’m correct but it’s how I process it.
I thought all this time that Mrs. Egs was calling our friend with the homely wife a sappy old sexual guy.
Interviewer: The job you've applied for requires providing ASL translations in some exotic locales.
Interviewee: WHEREDOISIGN?
Did you all read the ROLLINGSTOne ROLLINGSTOPS exposé? Turns out that even TERRYGROSS does them. In the same issue, they interview an Oklahoma mother who has accumulated hundreds of houses in Massachusetts. The title is OKMOM and her MAHOMES.
I'm attending AMASS SASS this weekend. I expect thousands of us to be chanting "WTF".
Zen's benefits include all that great Zen food, especially ZENSTATES with sour cream and bacon.
This one ended ALLTOOSOON. Thanks for a wonderful puzzle, Hemant Mehta.
I knew about the "zen monk in a sandwich shop" joke, so I waited to see which meaning of "one with everything" was intended. Like Rex, I struggled with the part after ZEN and don't think ZEN STATES really fits the clue.
This was a puzzle I really enjoyed and was a combination of the feeling of- being pleased with the answers I knew (MAHOMES) and- being a bit embarrassed at the answers I didn’t (SAPIOSEXUAL). But, I like learning new things and I now realize that NOT knowing SAPIOSEXUAL is not in the least embarrassing.
My hand is up for immediately THINKING of DUMAS, but not putting it in because I got it in my head that any of Dumas’s books would predate 1850. I do things like that ALL the time when the actual date is thrown in and I annoy myself with my own thought processes!
Nice Friday challenge. Thanks Hemant Mehta!
Same here, Dr.
With you mentioning “overarm” again…yeah. I ended up searching it and determined that while I DID have times I threw overhand, I could never really get the hanging of throwing overarm. I other words…in the words of little boys…”I threw like a girl” doing overhand. Anyway, I decided the answer yesterday was AOK and I learned something about pitching.
Once upon a time, before I met my (now) wife, I was told that "I think we could work as a couple, since I'm a sapiosexual". I took that as more of an insult to my appearance than a compliment to my (perceived) intelligence.
@melle - NICE!
Got flummox'd by the mishmosh of names and pop culture trivia in the NE, without which I wasn't able to suss out SAPIOSEXUAL -- a term I actually kind of like, now that I've seen it. Just sorry it took such a gunk-slog to get to it.
Post a Comment