Thursday, May 21, 2026

Traditional Vietnamese garment whose name means "long shirt" / THU 5-21-26 / timiL / Fish more formally known as a batomorph / Philanthropic group with a clock face in its logo / The so-called "pineapple isle" / Large-eyed African antelope with a duplicative name / Changed my mind in editing notation / 2000 Eminem single with lines from his "biggest fan" / Something tickled on a piano

Constructor: Zhou Zhang and Mallory Montgomery

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: Change clothes — articles of clothing are clued using visually cryptic clues:

Theme answers:
  • BACKWARDS CAP (20A: timiL) (word meaning "cap" is spelled backwards)
  • CUT-OFF TEE (35A: Golfer's suppor-) (definition of "tee" gets cut off)
  • MINISKIRT (42A: Evade) (word meaning "skirt" is miniaturized)
  • STRIPED SOCKS (55A: P | u | n | c | h | e | s) ("stripes" inserted into a word meaning "socks")
Word of the Day: ÁO DÀI (16A: Traditional Vietnamese garment whose name means "long shirt") —

Áo dài (English: /ˈˈz/; Vietnamese: [ʔaːw˧˦ zaːj˨˩] (North), [ʔaːw˦˥ jaːj˨˩] (South), lit. “long tunic”) is a traditional Vietnamese outfit consisting of a long split tunic worn over silk trousers. It can serve as formalwear for both men and women.

There are inconsistencies in the term áo dài. The currently most common usage is for a Francized design by Nguyễn Cát Tường (whose shop was named "Le Mur"), which is expressly a women's close-fitting design whose shirt is two pieces of cloth sewn together and fastened with buttons. A more specific term for this design would be "áo dài Le Mur". Other writers, especially those who claim its "traditionality", use áo dài as a general category of garments for both men and women, and include older designs such as áo ngũ thân (five-piece shirt), áo tứ thân (four-piece shirt), áo tấc (loose shirt), áo đối khâm (parallel-flap robe), áo viên lĩnh (round-collar robe), áo giao lĩnh (cross-collar robe), áo trực lĩnh (straight-collar robe). (wikipedia)

• • •
[3D: "Bingo!"]

Startled by this puzzle initially because I couldn't believe how easy it was. I should not be able to move through a Thursday grid with this little resistance. It took so long today before I hit a clue that made me hesitate even a bit. In fact, I was literally this far into the grid before I hit a clue I didn't know instantly:


I was thinking of the wrong kind of "interest" and couldn't figure out why ACCRUE wouldn't fit. "IMBUE ... that's not a word for interest." So I switched to crosses, got PIQUE, and off I went again. The puzzle was 90% Monday-easy, on what should be the trickiest day of the week. Now, the theme did make you have to think a little, that's for sure, but when you can work every cross of every theme answer so so easily, you don't really have to sit there thinking—you can just quickly hack your way to a nearly complete answer and then reason it out from there. So my main take away from the puzzle, sadly, was that the editor should've tightened this thing up—a lot. It's insultingly easy for a Thursday. You have to give regular, longtime solvers something to chew on late in the week, come on.


The overall easiness of the puzzle made the one truly original and unfamiliar answer in the puzzle very jarring. Like, you're just feeding me MAA and LLAMA and ORE etc. and then you throw an ÁO DÀI at me!  Yikes. I was like "what are you doing here? you've stumbled into 'Intro To Crosswords'—you want the Advanced Class, down the hall." I was thrilled to have a bit of a struggle and learn a new term, if briefly terrified that the crosses would suddenly fail me and I'd be left with a DNF on what had been, to that point, the easiest Thursday puzzle in the history of the universe. Actually, getting the "correct" answers was particularly reassuring, as AODAI is not a letter string that inspires confidence in an English speaker who is completely ignorant about Vietnamese fashion. "Am I spelling Maggie MAE right? Dear god I hope so." The coolness of ÁO DÀI is, sadly, completely offset by the horrificness of AIS, which crosses it. AIS is never going to fly as a plural. Delete it from your wordlists now, constructors, I'm begging you. First of all, no one wants AI in their crossword. It's being shoved down our throats in every other aspect of our lives, so it would be great if you could not aid and abet the sickening ubiquity, thanks. Also, AIS ... just look at it. On its face, a truly ugly three-letter answer. Detonate it now, you won't regret it.


As for the theme ... I like that the grouping is tight (i.e. the answers to the visual-madness clues are all articles of clothing). I don't think all themes require revealers, but this one probably could've used one simply because ... why? The articles of clothing are arbitrary. They seem to make a nearly-complete outfit, but ... whose? Why not do [Jerks] for HIGH HEELS, for instance?* There's no real logic to the items in clothing, and a clever revealer might've given a greater sense of coherence to the whole endeavor. Also, I'd probably keep all other clothing answers out of my clothing puzzle (sorry, TUXEDO, I know you're a cat, but you're obtrusive. Yeah, and take DIADEM with you). The actual visual trickery in the clues is pretty clever. But I'm having trouble believing in BACKWARDS CAP. I mean, you might wear your baseball cap backwards, sure, but a BACKWARDS CAP is not an article of clothing. It's just a cap ... that you have chosen (why, dudes, why?) to wear backwards. "Yes, excuse me, miss, does this store sell BACKWARDS CAPs?" You see what I mean. The backwardness is not intrinsic. You could, however, buy a CUT-OFF TEE or a MINISKIRT or STRIPED SOCKS, though you probably made your CUT-OFF TEE at home, and if you did, is that really what you call it? I think of "cut-off" as being for jeans and "crop(ped)" as being for shortened tees. A CUT-OFF TEE is a kind of "crop-top," isn't it? Is it? Anyway, those first two themers felt slightly less on-the-money than the second two, but I have to admit that I kinda liked working all the clothing answers out, so ... despite the disheartening easiness and the mild imperfections of the theme, I had a good time.


Bullets:
  • 24A: Fish more formally known as a batomorph (RAY) — had the "R" and thought "ROE! ... wait, that's not a kind of fish, that's fish eggs. So ... R- ... R- ... Ruh-roh." And then it came to me. I grew up never thinking of RAY as a standalone word. It was always preceded by stuff like "manta" or "sting" and so RAY never leaps to mind when I see "fish." Just some dude's name.
[There was a brief time in the late '70s when this guy was a cultural phenomenon. No one remembers why. Future archaeologists and/or aliens are going to be like "what the f—?"]
  • 46A: Legal boundaries? (ELS) — a "letteral" clue (referring to a letter (or letters) in the clue itself)—the ELS ("L"s) are the first and last letters (i.e. "boundaries") of the word "Legal." To someone who does cryptic crosswords literally every day (i.e. me), this clue is transparent.
  • 8D: Philanthropic group with a clock face in its logo (ELKS) — I had no idea. I figured it just had an elk in its logo. Big building with BPOE (Benevolent and Protective Order of ELKS) written on it downtown, never noticed any logo or clock face. Let's have a look:
[Holy cow that is most definitely a clock face. "Elks: We Know What Time It Is!" "Elks: Closed from 5 to 7" "Elks: The Real Plural Is 'Elk,' We Know, We Know"]
  • 9D: The so-called "pineapple isle" (LANAI) — thought maybe KAUAI. I was on Maui once and they definitely had pineapples there, too.
  • 48D: Large-eyed African antelope with a duplicative name (DIK-DIK) — if this answer was as mysterious to you as ÁO DÀI, I understand. But as a longtime solver, my antelope lexicon is oddly vast (NYALA, ELAND, ORYX, ORIBI, etc.), and so DIK-DIK came to me quickly. Did you know that an auto rickshaw is called a TUK TUK (onomatopoetic for the sound of its two-stroke engine)? Well if not, now you know (TUK TUK = two previous NYTXW appearances) (DIK-DIK: five ... though this is the first in almost 50 years! I must've seen it in other puzzles...).
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*"heel" is another word for "jerk" in the sense of "bastard," "asshole," "rat," etc.  

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102 comments:


  1. Easy. Since it's Thursday, I tried solving without reading the theme clues. Since the answers were all common expressions, that helped.
    * * * _ _

    One overwrite. I had EXACTA(something) at 13D and it made sense at the time, but I don't remember what it was. I do remember that it was OLD at 45A that gave me EXACTAMUNDO.

    WOEs:
    The clue for 16A, AODAI, might as well have been "Five random letters."
    Model Miranda KERR at 43D.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ChrisS1:45 PM

      Including that the name means long shirt really helped me get Ao Dai because as everyone knows from basic Vietnamese Ao means long. That answer was ALL crosses. Rex you can NOT wear a standard baseball cap backwards you have to get the special version that they sell with the bacon stretchers.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:50 AM

      Ao means shirt. Dai means long.

      Delete
  2. Bob Mills6:18 AM

    For Rex: Think of "cap" as a ceiling (limit), and BACKWARDSCAP makes sense.
    I agree the puzzle was easy; I kept looking for a connection between the theme entries, or a revealer.
    Only the NE was problematic. I agree with Rex that AIS is awful.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:27 AM

      Pretty sure he knows how the wordplay works, Bob. He describes it precisely in the theme description.

      Delete
    2. ...He also precisely explains his issue with it. Bob apparently had some reading comprehension issues this morning. Happens to the best of us.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous8:56 AM

      Rex understood the wordplay. His point was that a cap is an item of clothing, but a backward cap is not an actual item of clothing; it's an item of clothing being worn a certain way...and that answer is different from the other theme answers.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous11:50 AM

      he knows this

      Delete
  3. Anonymous6:25 AM

    Agree with Rex that this was easy for a Thursday, but thoroughly enjoyed the clue-play.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I did also enjoy that the theme clues were in the same order on the puzzle as they would be on the body.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for pointing that out - I'd missed it!

      Delete
  5. EasyEd6:41 AM

    Another hand up for finding this easy for a Thursday but enjoying the punny clues and answers. EXACTAMUNDO was fun to find right at the beginning, brought back memories of the Fonz and friends who loved to mimic him.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Until today, I thought a DIADEM was some sort of jewelled rod. I knew the word only from the hymn "All hail the power of Jesus' name," which didn't give me a lot of information. But there it was, six letters starting with D, and what else could it be? So good for that, but yes, it is clothing, like TUXEDO and AO DAI, so ideally shouldn't be here--but I'll give it a pass since I didn't know what it was.

    I know they've got "benevolent" right there in their name, but I don't think of ELKS as "philanthropical." More fraternal.

    I see Rex's point, but I didn't mind BACKWARDS CAP. STRIPED SOCKS, though, seem more like green paint -- they're just socks. Probably needed for the theme, but just not as cool as the other theme answers.

    I had EXACTiMentO at first, but that was enough to get on with.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know DIADEM from the hymn too and if you remember the lyric it is "Bring forth the royal DIADEM and crown Him Lord of all". There's a clue right there.

      Delete
    2. Good point, Pablo -- I think I was mixing up that lyric with "Extol the stem of Jesse's rod."

      Delete
  7. Camel before llama. Camels spit too, don't they?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Only in private, I hope..

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:56 AM

      And Cobra

      Delete
    3. @JoePop. Llamas are camelids. We have a few on our small farm and I have never seen one spit on a person. I have seen spit exchanged when two llamas are talking American politics, though.

      Delete
  8. Yes, easy, but also fun. I liked this one and actually didn’t fly through it quite like Rex describes, there were a few slow-downs. I had camel before LLAMA, and my fox SneaKed and then StalKed before he finally SKULKed.

    My daughter-in-law is Vietnamese and I’ve seen the AODAI many times, worn by her and members of her family for formal occasions, but I’d never heard the name of it. So I was happy to learn that.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Well, the zany outfit itself was fun.

    So was trying to guess the theme answers from their visual and wordplay clue-riddles.

    Then there was the richness of uncovering words that strike me as beautiful, such as PIQUE, DIKDIK, EXACTAMUNDO and WREAKS.

    Oh, and the fauna-rich collection in the grid warmed my animal-loving heart – LLAMA, MINK, ELKS, DIKDIK, RAY, PURRS, MAA, FERAL, TUXEDO, plus that SKULKing fox and the hidden snake in Portugal’s capital.

    The whole vibe in the box was marvelously upbeat, and that on top of everything else I've mentioned made this puzzle so much more than simply filling in the squares. This was a splendid, splendid experience. Thank you, Zhou and Mallory!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Excellent call, Lewis. I also loved the animal-heavy fill today.

      Delete
  10. It was EXACTIMUNtO for me at first. Only other overwrite was camel before LLAMA.

    A DIADEM features prominently in the seventh Harry Potter book.

    Agree with Rex that TUXEDO grated as clothing but not theme clothing. AODAI grated doubly - non-theme clothing plus a WoE.

    AIS has a long, respectable crossword history as 'three-toed sloths'. Why change things now?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:22 AM

      DNF’d at EXACToMUNDO/DIoDEM. Time to read HP VII.

      Delete
    2. Kitshef and Anon: hand up for misspelling both!

      Delete
  11. 16:38 for me, so medium. Of course I did it last night with the TV on.... I liked the way the clues had absolutely nothing to with the answers... until they did. Was fun trying to guess the themers before putting any crosses in. I couldn't find any pics online of someone in exactly that outfit.... until I consulted one of the many AIs out there to create it for me! It was impressive. But I can see why Rex might not have wanted to put one of those in his post. Gone are they days when you could detect an AI video because the hands had 6 fingers..... Thanks, Zhoe and Mallory! Fun Puzzle! : )

    ReplyDelete
  12. This was fun - blatantly straightforward as the big guy says but pleasant nonetheless. STRIPED SOCKS is the highlight.

    Golden SMOG

    Cleanly filled - Rex summarizes the odd ones - AO DAI needed all the crosses. Liked EXACTAMUNDO and BATTLE SCARS. The grid layout is attractive but results in those shorts dead center.

    Let the Mystery Be

    Over too quickly - no question it was Tuesday/Wednesday level stuff but I found it to be an enjoyable Thursday morning solve.

    Colter Wall

    ReplyDelete
  13. Hey All !
    A Clue Theme puz today. Wondering if it rendered as such in all platforms. If not, gonna get the complaints. Unsure how you'd get the Theme is clues are not manipulated. Well, I guess just "Evade" wouldn't be MINI. The other clues should be in as written.

    Anyway, thought this a good puz. Agree easy, thanks for taking it easy on the ole brain.

    Neat to find a Q just hanging around in the SW. Kind of a surprise. Love the F-ness of the puz.

    Lots of doubles today, or so it seemed, wondering if it'll make the @Lewis count. Well, let me count right now [Dramatic music plays] ... I got 14. More in the Downs than the Acrosses. Seemed higher.

    Hope y'all have a great Thursday!

    Five F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  14. I definitely had my fingers crossed when I settled on AODAI - especially with that grotesque AIS taking up residence in that same section. I was less uncomfortable with DIKDIK due to the “duplicative” in the clue, which sort of confirmed what the crosses had proffered me.

    This is a good example of a theme that would be “my type” if I were more into themes. It’s self-contained, which is a big plus in my opinion. I don’t care for those spaghetti themes that wind their way in multiple directions and infiltrate the entire grid. It was also reasonably tricky (tricky is probably not the best choice of words - it wasn’t self-evident, but it was discernible without being overly convoluted).

    Another interesting aspect of this puzzle (for me) is that it contains a clue for OREO that wasn’t an outright gimmie. I need and an enjoy an OREO here and there along with things like ORE and TSK to give my solve some momentum - unlike Rex, I’m not going to be able to drop in the DIKDIK’s of CrossWorld right off the top of my head. I need a few softballs now and then.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Ya hear that, Gary? Insultingly easy. (When read in vacuo, it sounds like "Behold my solving prowess" [tosses head proudly].) Actually, I think that one is already on your list.

    That wasn't quite my own lived experience, because I tripped myself up in ways obviously not touched upon by Rex. It started off easy. But then there was StaLK before SKULK. EXACTAMente (sp.?) before EXACTAMUNDO. Before SWISH, wooSH (although its tenure was brief). Wasn't sure how to parse 20 across, whether it was going to be BACKWARD something or BACKWARDS something, and worked with the former for too long. (BACKWARDS CAP still looks weird to me.) Thought the Muse (Hi Loren, wherever you are) might have begun with a vowel before CLIO finally kicked in. AODAI, sure, whatever you say. CUT-OFF TEE I found tricky to assemble, for whatever reason. Anyway, there are ways of screwing yourself up to turn what is understandably for many an easy experience into something edging toward Medium, and this type of thing happens frequently with me.

    "Ms." as a contracted form didn't quite fit FRAU, even if that it the only possible answer. (It's not an abbreviation, exactly, but closer to a back-formation deriving from Mrs., which is an abbreviation. I went with "contracted form".)

    "AIS is never going to fly as a plural." Golly, hate to break it to you, but that one is here to say. I mean, I hear you, the whole development is deplorable in ways that people can scarcely imagine. But, try to remember (that time in September) when AIS was the plural form for a pale-throated sloth. You remember, don't you, Rex? Of course you do. And look: how cute is that creature!

    Thanks, Z-squared and M-squared. It was alright with me; I didn't feel insulted.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous7:50 AM

    I questioned "bad" in 1D when I saw it in the clue for 44A but in the end it was unquestionable.

    ReplyDelete
  17. A very easy solve with the exception of that NE corner. I realized I've been putting LANAI into SB lists for so long that I forgot it's also the name of an Hawaiian island. Crossing that with the completely unknown AODAI caused some hesitation. Then there's the ridiculous AIS. I just crossed my fingers and entered AODAI. The congrats was a relief.

    I expected AODAI to be two separate words otherwise it would have turned up in the SB by now or at least be in the Scrabble Dictionary.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:44 AM

      It is two separate words. Ao means tunic. Dai means long.

      Delete
  18. She's got the LOOP


    "Ud. se LLAMA IRIS?" * asked the por-un- DIA DEMocrat lady.

    "NO MAAM, mi nombre es EL TON. I used to be on tv, half STAN Laurel, half Adrian MONK, remember? People called me El Rey, RAY LISBOA, for the FERAL SOCKS I delivered on my opponents' SKULKS.
    But then, after an OB SESSh with my PSI, IVORY much changed CAP, went by the name of ETHEL and got the FRAU's LOOPS:
    STRIpPED OFF the TEE's ARMs, a MINK FIR coat on the shoulders,
    a MINI SKIRT barely covering the FEMUR."
    "You're a DIKDIK wearing such KILOaths" said the lady. "reFLAX OBIT, ORE ELS you'll have an A.M.T or somethin, you might even AIDAI, ITS that BAD!"
    "BAA.." I CUT her OFF, " don't worry, I' m getting YELP as we sPIQUE".

    " It's because I really KERR" she said.

    "AhhMEN!!" I replied and went MAE way.



    *T/N: " Your name IS SUE?" in Spanish

    ReplyDelete
  19. Good write up from Rex and I laughed at his “absurdly easy” (for a Thursday) as going on Gary’s list, but my guess is it’s already there. And yes, something’s a bit off when my timer and the app indicated I finished the puzzle 8 minutes faster than my average, but hey, I may have dozed off or left the timer running during a past Thursday solve.

    Post solve, the “wacky” combination of clothing reminded me of something I’ve seen, maybe a character…Punky Brewster or SOMETHING like that. My search revealed various animé characters as well as female Where’s Waldo costumes, but nothing 100% on point.

    I will say that NOMAAM kind of threw me being clued as Southern denial. I don’t live in the South and have heard it all my life. I remember my chagrin when shopping the transition from “May I help you miss” to “May I help you ma’am.” At any rate, the whole thing made me wonder if people anywhere these days say “No madam.”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In the UK, maybe? From someone of an older generation? OTOH I never heard "ma'am" when I lived in England for six months, even though the contraction originated there (late 1600s).

      I was taught to say "yes sir, yes ma'am, no sir, no, ma'am" in my Southern childhood upbringing, and will still trot them out on occasion, not necessarily ironically. But you're right, it's not limited to the South by any means.

      Delete
    2. I agree that was a weird clue. Nothing about "no ma'am" strikes me as southern.

      Delete
  20. Anonymous8:26 AM

    I put in Lanai and then took it out because "What's 'AODAI'?" but then every cross confirmed. Solved in less than half my NYT app average time, so agreed on easiness.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Anonymous8:28 AM

    I liked that the clothing was in order, top to bottom:
    Cap
    Tee
    Skirt
    Socks

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:20 AM

      Good catch! thanks for pointing it out.

      Delete
  22. An old memory of a hymn from my youth helped me get DIADEM. I don't know how many times we sang this when I was a kid attending a Methodist** church, but I never wondered what DIADEM meant. (makes sense now)

    All hail the power of Jesus' name!Let angels prostrate fall;Bring forth the royal DIADEM, And crown Him Lord of all.

    **Now a devout atheist

    ReplyDelete
  23. Anonymous8:44 AM

    Every time I see Raymond J. Johnson Jr. I laugh out loud!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Anonymous8:50 AM

    Confused that miniskirt clue (evade) was also bold text 🤷‍♀️

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:58 AM

      In mine, the letters were exactly the same size as all others, just higher up in the box, as though they had tried superscript but it didn't change the font size. MINISKIRT became obvious from crosses, not from the clue. 🤷‍♀️

      Delete
  25. I know a guy who often BATTLESCARS and he's got the BATTLESCARS to show for it.

    To those who put CAMEL before LLAMA, I put COBRA!

    GI: What was that batomorph that the star of the USO show had on stage?
    Sgt: That was a RAY of Hope.

    We need to take a long look in the mirror before deciding to let these AIS into our classrooms. And when we do, the IRIS surrounding our pupils will be Siri at the center of our slipup.

    This was, as @Rex bemoans, awfully easy. But I found it to be realamundo fun. Thanks, Zhou Zhang and Mallory Montgomery.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous9:28 AM

    Loved this ! So much fun !!

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous9:33 AM

    To print out "newspaper version" only makes it very hard on those of us of a certain age. Just sayin'.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anonymous9:35 AM

    Add me to the list of people finding the NE not easy. An enjoyable rebus.🎈🎈🎊🎊

    ReplyDelete
  29. Had a lot of fun with this one. @Rick Sacra summed up my experience perfectly: "I liked the way the clues had absolutely nothing to do with the answers... until they did." The joy of the moment when it all comes together is what I look for in a solve and it happened over and over again today. It was PURE good times trying to figure out each themer. I actually did not pay attention to the fact that they were all articles of clothing, that was a cool aha moment when I came here.
    I'm a long time solver and I did not find this quite as easy as @Rex and others. The AODAIs, DIKDIKs, TATAMIs and STANs were totally foreign to me, and they all put the brakes on the whoosh. But learned a lot of cool, new stuff, so all good.
    Added to the fun was EXACTAMUNDO, the cluing for PIQUE that misdirected me fair and square, and the every day language of GOOIER.
    The puzzle conjured up a nice memory for me as well. My parents were both avid crossworders and the Sunday puzzle was an integral part of their Sunday routine. One of those mornings, I must have been nine or ten (so mid 1970s), I happened to look over my Dad's shoulder and saw something interesting with the clues. One example was: 9:00AM Surgeons, and the "9:00AM" was written in huge font. I asked what was up, and my father explained that the answer was BIGTIMEOPERATORS. Not clothing, but a similar theme. I think that was the moment that I realized crosswords could be fun. It would only be years later that I got serious about it but that, I think, was when the seed was planted.
    Thank you Zhou and Mallory, this was a party that had me thinking and smiling! It also brought me back to a time when I first caught a glimpse of how crazy and wonderful this little part of the world of ours can be!


    ReplyDelete
  30. I was expecting an "I've seen this type of puzzle before" review so was pleasantly surprised, as I was going to say "me too, and so what?" Today's massive oversight was not noticing that the themers were all articles of clothing. Going too fast to notice. Yeah, that's the ticket.

    I wonder how "exactamente", which is an actual Spanish word, morphed into EXACTAMUNDO. Was that all Fonzie? Spanish was also handy for LISBOA.

    A classic crossword clue with the foreign country + something today leading to AODAI which is pure crosswordese. A nod to us veteran solvers. Had OFL;s problem with the "interest" part of PIQUE. Duh. No idea on KERR as clued. Not Steve? Not Deborah? I would prefer PSI to have to do with tire pressure, but that's just me. And thanks for the shout out to my Very Old TUXEDO cat, who just keeps on truckin'.

    Nice Thursdecito, ZZ and MM if way too easy. I Zigged and Zagged enough to Mostly Maintain my interest. Thanks for a fair amount of fun.

    ReplyDelete
  31. DAVinHOP9:46 AM

    Pretty much in agreement with Rex on all points today. The theme and solve were mixed bags; so three stars are appropriate.

    The AI (ugly, in all respects) cross with AO DAI was the last entry. Unfortunate construction in the NE corner, IMO. But it was about the only real resistance, for a Thursday puzzle.

    A few minor speed bumps; all easily traversed. Camel, sneak, exactamente (isn't that French?), Cleo (Pinocchio's goldfish, not the muse). Maybe a Thursday puzzle didn't need "duplicative" in the clue for 48D; how do you forget DIK-DIK? (@Gary, take it from here.)

    The puzzle sees @Roo's five F's and raises seven K's!

    "SWISH" may not have been coined by, but to a long-time Celtics fan evokes the memory of, radio announcer (and unabashed homer) Johnny Most. He's been gone many years, but no fan of the era will ever un-hear, in his inimitable, raspy, chain-smoker voice, calls like "Havlicek...stops and pops...SWISH!"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good comments! Loved your reference to Pinocchio’s goldfish. :)

      Delete
    2. Yeah, Johnny Most--"fiddles and faddles, dribbles and drabbles...They don't call it!!!" . Anyway, Warner Wolf in NY was also famous for his SWISH call. One night he had his usual cohorts on set and led with And he shoots, and ....(all his friends on set yell SWISH! and Wolf says, nope, bank shot.

      Delete
  32. I'm here to tell you, ac(c)rue absolutely fits at 64A if you forget how to spell it! *face palm* luckily saa looked very sketchy and SPA was undeniable once I saw the clue. LANAI/AODAI felt naticky to me, but perhaps the Pineapple Isle is a hole in my Hawaii knowledge. Oh fun! It's mostly owned by some rich dude. Now I resent knowing anything about it.

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  33. Anonymous10:00 AM

    Rex, are you f*cking high??? There is no coolness of AO DAI. It's horrible. Absolutely horrible. If it's on any wordlists, it should be deleted.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think it's a cool-looking word. What's so horrible about it? How would it be any more horrible than, say, "aioli"? What's wrong with learning a new word?

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    2. tht. I, too, think it's a cool looking word. What's horrible about it is that I will forget it by the time today's hockey game begins. When the clue next appears I will think, "Um, it's a bunch of vowels with one consonant". Then I will just wait for crosses.

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  34. Niallhost10:04 AM

    Ended with a mistake. Took me forever to find that I had put in OmIT/mADE instead of OBIT/BADE because I assumed MADE was correct for "Ordered" and OmIT seemed like a likely answer and so never checked the clue.

    I kept thinking my mistake was in the NW with AODAI because I had never seen the word, and it didn't look like a real word, and didn't know that LANAI was anything other than an outdoor sitting area. But after some deep diving I figured it out. Doubled my time just looking for the mistake. 15:16

    Otherwise super easy Thursday.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:06 PM

      My exact same DNF!

      Delete
  35. Anonymous10:14 AM

    For Mike: 8:18 I read it again, Mike. Rex only discusses "cap" in the context of clothing. There's no mention of a ceiling or any maximum. I'm capable of brain cramps, especially before breakfast with black coffee, but I don't get it here.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:36 AM

      just read the theme description ffs

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    2. Is that you, @Bob Mills? Anyway, here it is: "BACKWARDS CAP (20A: timiL) (word meaning "cap" is spelled backwards)" -- Rex doesn't say explicitly in his parenthetical that the word meaning "cap" that is spelled backwards is "Limit", but isn't that completely inferrable from the rest of the quote? I think we can safely assume that he understood it.

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  36. Loved the Fonz reference. In fact, needed it.

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  37. Easiest, fastest and most ENJOYABLE Thursday in a long time (or maybe I was just relieved it wasn't a rebus). Except for AODAI of course. Didn't know KERR but otherwise a nice Thursday. Thank you, ladies :)
    (I googled the 'old' love of my life - how disappointing to see him in a BACKWARDS CAP :(

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  38. Easy.

    No costly erasures (typos are not costly, just annoying) and AODAI was of course a WOE.

    ELK as clued was also a WOE.

    Cute theme with a couple of fine long downs, liked it.

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  39. WREAKS stinks.

    What Mickey wears when he's cross-dressing: MINISKIRT.

    I come hat in hand to ask what the proofreading notation for "let it stand" is, Dad. It's STET, son.

    How to greet the great Spanish surrealist: Hello DALI.

    Apt description for Trump, Vance: DIKDIK.

    So, Mickey and Minnie are getting divorced and the judge calls Mickey over and says, "I'm sorry, Mickey, but I don't see any evidence that Minnie is mentally unbalanced."

    Mickey says: "Your honor, I'm not claiming she's mentally unbalanced. I said she's f*cking Goofy."

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  40. Anonymous11:13 AM

    LANAI is called the Pineapple Isle because a man named Dole, president of the Hawaiian Pineapple Company, bought virtually the entire island and turned it into one huge pineapple plantation, the world's largest.

    Dole closed down the plantation in 1992.

    Larry Ellison (Oracle) now owns about 98% of the island.

    The island's been stuck permanently in a Gilded Age colonial trap.

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  41. Anonymous11:47 AM

    Ay-yi-yi-yi-yi! Or AI AI AI AI AI. That's five three-toed sloths. Who needs ChatXYX or Clod in a NYTXW?

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  42. Alice Pollard11:52 AM

    Great puzzle! Easy? Not easy? who cares. Loved it

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:50 PM

      Right on, Alice. I need not split the atom to enjoy a puzzle.

      Delete
  43. Anonymous11:54 AM

    Plural--Artificial Intelligences
    Plural possessive--Artificial Intelligences's

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  44. I know, I know!

    Stressful days here, so I won't have time for my usual ridiculous ramblings, much to my Chihuahuas' disappointment, until later, but I'm dropping this in for your reference, and oddly had to add @egs's "awfully easy" from this morning.

    -LY EASY Hall of Fame
    absurdly, actually, awfully, boringly, certainly, childishly, definitely, despairingly, disappointingly, disconcertingly, embarrassingly, eventually, extremely, fairly, frifly (?@kitshef), insultingly, laughably, mind-numbingly, mostly, overly, painfully, preposterously, probably, really, relatively, ridiculously, supercalifragilisticexpialidociously (!@egs of course), surprisingly, terribly, trivially, undeservedly, unfairly, and unusually EASY.

    And yes 🦖 it is perfectly fine to be insultingly easy with long-time solvers as they'll find something to weep about no matter what. It's why we come here. But more importantly, lots of them blew their CRED on Valentines day when they opened up a puzzle with a giant red heart on it and even still expected it to be Saturday tough. That was MY Valentines gift. Weep, o mine eyes for the puzzle I dreamt of and for our innocence and privilege lost in the wind.

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    Replies
    1. As my Grace would say, Totally, Gary!!!

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  45. Fun but Monday easy.

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  46. Anonymous1:04 PM

    ANSEL Adams was first and foremost a photographer, not an environmentalist. Just saying.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:28 PM

      You may know him primarily from his photography, but he was also a long-time member of the Sierra Club, for whom he did much of his early photographic work. His environmental advocacy was intertwined with his photography throughout his career.

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    2. ChrisS2:11 PM

      From Wikipedia: Adams was a life-long advocate for environmental conservation, and his photographic practice was deeply entwined with this advocacy. At age 14, he was given his first camera during his first visit to Yosemite National Park. He developed his early photographic work as a member of the Sierra Club. He was later contracted with the United States Department of the Interior to make photographs of national parks. For his work and his persistent advocacy, which helped expand the National Park system, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.

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  47. Anonymous1:15 PM

    I thought maybe Rex would use the AIs to generate a picture of someone dressed in these items.

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  48. Eniale1:19 PM

    Surprised no-one apart from me objected to scientific FEMUR rather than "thighs" to match non-scientific hips and knees. Quick, anyone, what's the Latin for Knee?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Actually, I think patella is the kneecap….

      Delete
  49. Not a terribly exciting Thursday, I'm afraid. As Rex said, quite easy but with the unexpected land mines of AODAI and DIKDIK, both of which I got entirely from crosses. Oh, and a totally unknown model for the clue at 43 down KERR. Plus AIS and IQS in opposite corners.

    There was a big theme fail for me at 42 across, as the clue was in totally ordinary text; not raised or smaller or anything. That's the problem with this tricky cutesy stuff, is making it work in all the apps.

    I did enjoy EXACTAMUNDO though!

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  50. Puzzles within a puzzle puztheme. Was indeed kinda easy-ish, but certainly had some entertainment value.
    Had more solvequest trouble with BACKWARDSCAP, than any other themer. Made my scaps hurt. Never did notice the wearability of the themers, until I came here for the debriefin.

    staff weeject pick: MAA. Sorta an ode to M And A appearance, right, Roo & pabloinnh? Just sayin.
    And, by pop demand -- honorable mention to AIS, of course.
    Nice weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.

    some fave stuff: EXACTAMUNDO. TUXEDO. GOOIER. ITSBAD. Learnin about DIKDIKs [which do indeed, have two large I's].

    There were some ?-marker clues, but alas they weren't tryin real hard to be feisty. I reckon {Legal boundaries?} = ELS was my fave one.
    Kinda sums up the legal boundaries for the White House DIKDIKS [yo & har, @Liveprof].

    no-know debut: AODAI.

    Thanx for the fun, Ms. Zhang & Montgomery darlins. Primo collab work.

    Masked & Anonymo6Us

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

    p.p.s.s.
    Awful sad to say, tonite is the final show for Steven Colbert Late Nites. Will miss him and will probably occasionally miss not watchin anything to do with CBS or Paramount anymore.

    M&A

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    Replies
    1. MAA (MAndA) is sure close enough for me, can't speak for Roo.

      Amen on the end of the Colbert Era. Feel like we lost a member of the family.

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    2. There's been other MAAs in the puzs throughout this year that I haven't been tracking. Perhaps you can go through this years puzs and find out how many? You'll probably be near the top!

      Roo

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  51. AIS to me brings forth thoughts of Aquatic Invasive Species. Not sure that's a cheerier clue than AI . . .

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  52. Hello CLIO, my old friend, you've come to help my solve again. How are the rest of your ENNEAD group of Muses?

    I have a friend who is from CLIO, Iowa, population 67. Good Saturday level CLIO clue, no?

    One of the MINI spaces in my Tokyo apartment had a TATAMI mat floor covering. It had just the right amount of cushioning for sitting crossed-legged on during the day and for sleeping on my rolled-out futon at night.

    In some televised sports they will suddenly turn up a microphone's gain/sensitivity for specific events. This happens in hoops when the shot nears the rim to amplify the SWISH "Sound of a perfect basketball shot".

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  53. That "You can call me RAY" clip was quite the blast from the past. What WAS going on with that guy? I'd forgotten all about him.

    AI'S - I would feel intrigued about the possibilities AI could bring if I could be convinced that the billionaires that seem to run the world would only allow it to be used for humanity's benefit. Ha ha hahaha. (A bit of hysterical laughter is good for a person, right?) The grocery store I visit has an unmanned robot going up and down the aisles cleaning the floors and I find it creepy - not in an uncanny valley way, they look nothing like a human. It's just...wrong.

    I thought this theme was fun but yes, absurdly easy for a Thursday. Thanks, Zhou Zhang and Mallory Montgomery!

    ReplyDelete
  54. Oops ... that shoulda said StePHEN Colbert, in my previous rant.
    Apologies to all Colberts.
    M&A House of Corrections

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  55. Anonymous3:28 PM

    Really enjoyed this excellent Thursday- not easy for me but a fun puzzle. TIL AODAI, DIKDIK and the TUXEDO cat! Loved PIQUE. Also thanks Rex for pointing out they were all clothes! From top to bottom no less!
    And thank you Anon 11:11am for the information on LANAI and its Gilded Age Colonial Trap.

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  56. Anonymous3:29 PM

    the theme clues are pretty remarkable with their double meanings that both fit the answers to a T - it was odd how easy it was solved it doing the theme answers first by trying to figure out what the theme clues meant - that was no so easy - agreed AI's is ghastly

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  57. Oh and I meant to mention... Rex said "It's just a cap ... that you have chosen (why, dudes, why?) to wear backwards". There are some occasions where it is quite reasonable to do it. Personally, I mainly wear one to keep the sun out of my eyes, but if I have to climb some stairs (which I do a lot, as my house is very close to several steep hillsides) I turn it backwards so I can see where I'm going. But I agree, to wear it that way all the time is really goofy.

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  58. ChE Dave3:53 PM

    I believe the “you can call me Ray” shtick was first on Carson. One of things that was funny the first time you heard it. It ended with “but you don’t have to call me Mr. Johnson”. There would be a brief interview and the host would say “thank you Mr. Johnson” and he would start the spiel all over and they would cut to commercial. And he was gone as fast as he appeared!

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  59. Despite the Monday-level fill, I liked those one - a lot. The theme idea is clever and well executed, (STRIPED SOCKS made me laugh) and best of all, I learned AODAI. It will show up again. I just hope I’ll remember it. I will likely recall something like “oh yeah, Rex included a photo of a gorgeous turquoise gown with buttons nut what the heck is the word?!” Laugh all you want, t’all will get old - if you’re lucky, and your brain will betray you.

    TUXEDO cats are gorgeous and they tend to have fancy attitudes to match. Mot on a bad way; they’re kist proud, sure of themselves and love being admired.

    I needed some fun today. This fit the mandate very well.

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  60. Apologies to one and all for yesterday. Somehow, i was almost done posting and lost my text. Thought it was gone and started over (we have been having epic internet issues). Started over snd it looks like two bad posts in one. Ugh!

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    Replies
    1. No apologies needed. I and others have done it too. I did learn that the composer of a post will have the option of deleting their comment by clicking on the red "Delete" to the right of the red "Reply".

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  61. Anonymous8:48 AM

    I was so pleasantly surprised to see AO DAI as one of the answers. As a Vietnamese woman, who owns about 5 of them, I felt so seen. Even if it is for trivia’s sake.

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