Video game franchise featuring 100+ species of dinosaurs / THU 5-7-26 / Counterparts to calls, in stock lingo / One's appearance after a difficult journey, say / One providing timely delivery? / Plant used to make a Mexican beverage called "pulque" / Arctic seabird nicknamed "aerial pirate"
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Constructor: John Guzzetta and Jeff Chen
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: -LESS — clues are familiar phrases that are missing a letter string that forms a word; answers are cryptic descriptions of those clues. So, e.g. 17A: is CARELESS MISTAKE because its clue, [BAD ___ER MOVE], is a "mistake" (BAD CAREER MOVE) minus the "care" part:
Theme answers:
- "CARE"-LESS MISTAKE (17A: BAD __ER MOVE) ("bad career move" w/o "care")
- "WIN"-LESS SEASON (27A: ___TER) ("winter" w/o "win")
- "AGE"-LESS BEAUTY (44A: P___ANT QUEEN) ("pageant queen" w/o "age")
- "END"-LESS STRUGGLE (56A: ___EAVOR) ("endeavor" w/o "end")
Ark: Survival Evolved (stylized as ARK) is a 2017 action-adventure survival video game developed by Studio Wildcard. In the game, players must survive being stranded on one of several maps filled with roaming dinosaurs, fictional fantasy monsters, and other prehistoric animals, natural hazards, and potentially hostile human players.
The game is played from either a third-person or first-person perspective and its open world is navigated by foot or by riding a prehistoric animal. Players can use firearms and improvised weapons to defend against hostile humans and creatures, with the ability to build bases as a defence on the ground and on some creatures. The game has both single-player and multiplayer options. Multiplayer allows the option to form tribes of players in a server. The max number of tribe mates varies from each server. In this mode, all tamed dinosaurs and building structures are usually shared between the members. There is a PvE mode where players cannot fight each other unless a specific war event agreed upon by both parties is triggered. [...]
Ark: Survival Evolved received generally mixed reviews, with criticism for its level of difficulty, repetitive gameplay design, and "bloated" level of content. The initial Nintendo Switch version was panned for its graphics and performance issues. Several expansions to the game have been released as downloadable content. (wikipedia)
Once again, I start a 2026 NYTXW puzzle and I immediately hit things like KIR and EVEL and wonder what kind of crosswordese time warp I've fallen into. ARLO ALIG SAHIB ECO ELLIE ESTA ESTES etc. etc. etc. I don't expect short fill to be exciting, and I do expect a clunker or two, but lately there seems like there's been a distinct carelessness with the short fill, as if constructors are just taking the first options their constructing software is giving them without bothering to see if maybe, with a little polish, the grid could look ... better. Or at least feel somewhat less creaky. So even before I hit the theme today, I was disappointed in this one. The theme itself is clever—one of those two-way cryptic dealies that's hard to explain, where the answer is more like the clue and vice versa. The clue tells you how to read the answer ... but once you figure out the gimmick, and you know you're (always) dealing with -LESS phrases up front, you can (probably) get to the answer from the clue alone. I never did. Took a while to discover what the gimmick was—needed most of the crosses in CARELESS MISTAKE, in part because I couldn't make anything out of [BAD ___ER MOVE] ("Badger move?" "Badfinger move?")—and after WINLESS SEASON told me they were all going to be -LESS phrases, I got the remaining two themers just from crosses and then inferring that there was a -LESS word at the beginning. Got BEAUTY and inferred AGELESS. Got STRUGGLE (actually just -GGLE) and inferred ENDLESS STRUGGLE. So the gimmick was kinda hard to pick up, but once you do, the puzzle becomes very easy to close out.
Bullets:
- 13A: Plant used to make a Mexican beverage called "pulque" (AGAVE) — "plant" and "Mexican beverage" are all you need here, AGAVE being the basis for other, more familiar Mexican beverages (tequila, mezcal). AGAVE shows up a lot in xwords—it's got that perfect five-letter VCVCV pattern that works so well in grids (OBAMA, ILANA, EDEMA, AROMA, etc.). Probably should've made "pulque" my word of the day, but the stupid video game got in the way. Pulque "is an alcoholic beverage made from the fermented sap of the maguey (agave) plant. It is traditional in central Mexico, where it has been produced for millennia. It has the color of milk, a rather viscous consistency and a sour yeast-like taste." (wikipedia)
- 46D: ___ Triangle (coastal section of Pennsylvania) (ERIE) — whoa, do ships disappear from there? Did Leonard Nimoy do an episode of In Search of... about the ERIE Triangle, the way I know he did about the Bermuda Triangle? Sadly, the answer is much more mundane. The "triangle" is literally just a triangle-shaped piece of land that connects PA to Lake ERIE, giving the state a freshwater port it wouldn't otherwise have.
- 40D: Counterparts to calls, in stock lingo (PUTS) — oh boy ... stock lingo ... everyone's favorite. Why clue a normal word normally when you can make it ... stock lingo ... ?
- 9A: One who measures meter by the feet? (POET) — on the last day of classes, some of my British Literature students gave me a book they'd made filled with all the craziest things I'd (apparently!) said in class over the course of the semester. It was very sweet, if mildly humiliating. There's a lot in there about feet.
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| [I have no recollection of any of this, your honor] |
- 39D: Arctic seabird nicknamed "aerial pirate" (SKUA) — first of all that's a terrible nickname. When you already have a cool name like SKUA! why would anyone bother with the syllabically excessive and boringly descriptive "aerial pirate"? Second of all, I want to point out that although SKUA is technically crosswordese (a bird I wouldn't have known existed were it not for crosswords), it is the official policy of this blog that all birds are given passes and will not be counted toward any puzzle's crosswordese load. Yes, that includes EMU, as well as extinct birds like MOA and DODO. All birds welcome, any time, in any amount. Yes, even TITS, of course TITS, why not? Haven't seen a TUI since '04, why not bring that one back? So many birds out there waiting for a crossword home. Constructors of the world, expand your ornithological range!
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| [TUI!!] |
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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110 comments:
Solved as a themeless - primarily because the fill was early week level and I made one pass through the grid and was done.
Weezer
Is anyone building tricky Thursday puzzles anymore? Rebus - anyone?
Weep For JAMIE
I typically like the offerings from both of these constructors - but this was a Monday on a Thursday and was a huge letdown.
Waylon
Easy-Medium. Since it's Thursday and the theme clues were likely to be redirections, I solved without reading them. That turned out to be useful. When I read them post-solve, I smiled. As often happens, I was on Jeff Chen's wavelength. Liked it (unusual for me on a Thursday).
* * * * _
Overwrites:
My 6A coffee container was the crossword stalwart urn at first, then cUp before MUG.
Misspelled Gary SINESE at 15D. Twice.
I was thinking STAGE coach (in both senses) as the timely delivery guy in 29D.
I had trouble with 39A because I misread the clue as "Garish amount." I was looking for something like SPRee before my eyes cleared and I saw it was a SPRIG.
iron Triangle before ERIE for the Pennsylvania section at 46D.
I misremembered the 60A tea as TAZa, not TAZO.
WOEs:
The arctic seabird SKUA at 39D.
ARK, as clued at 48A. Didn't know it was a video game, let alone a franchise.
I couldn’t abide Lionel Ritchie back in his heyday. Now I agree with Rex. Not a bad song. Not bad at all. I must be getting soft and sentimental in my declining years.
Easy once I changed "cups" to MUGS and "irks" to NAGS. Enjoyed the theme, which I picked up on with ENDLESSSTRUGGLE/endeavor.
Thanks to the friends who welcomed me back yesterday. I'll be getting pneumonia shots from now on.
Nice easy-for-a-Thursday puzzle, Jeff and John! Thanks! 11:04 for me. I enjoyed the theme, and MUSCLECARS. Like @Conrad, SKUA was a WOE. Have a wonderful day, everyone! : )
My Doc tells me every year “of all the shots pushed at you by the drug stores, do NOT miss flu and pneumonia”. Glad you’re back with us.
Raskin mostly became prominent for his role in the second impeachment of Trump. He had also led investigations into 2016 election interference allegations.
Yet another themed puzzle where you can easily solve it without ever getting or understanding the theme. I’m thankful for this site in no small part because of the countless puzzles I’ve solved and said, “Huh? Wha? Oh well. I finished it. Not sure what all these weird clues are supposed to mean.” Seems like it’s not that great of a theme if it’s totally unnecessary to solve the puzzle.
I can’t believe you don’t know who Jamie Raskin is — ex-chair & ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, & one of the very smartest, bravest, most principled people in Washington. Not only that, but a hero who has continued to serve while grieving the suicide of his son and through cancer treatment (wearing a bandana given him by Steve Van Zandt).
One of the more prominent Congressmen over the last decade.
Hand up for the urn/cUp/MUG dance.
ECOlabel????!? Certainly new to me. Quite enjoyed this one. A neat theme that didn't put too much stress on the fill.
There were two great things about this puzzle: Jeanette Rankin in the clues, and the moment in which I thought "... but Pennsylvania isn't on the coast, is it?" Plus, post-solve, noticing that Rankin is only one letter off from another great MC, JAMIE Raskin. I strongly recommend the latter's book, "Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth, and the Trials of American Democracy," memoir of time in which he suffered the suicide of his son Tommy and then led the second impeachment of Donald Trump. It's powerful.
I enjoyed working out the theme answers; ENDLESS STRUGGLE was the hardest for me. No idea about SINISE or ELLIE, and I don't really thing of a SLED as something to carry, rather than something to sit or lie on, but OK. The theme made it all worthwhile.
Hey All !
Good puz. Would've been more at home on Wednesday, but I don't make the rules. 😁
Neat idea, having the missing letters (word) as the answers to the meaning of the full thing if they were included (if that explanation made any sense!)
As Rex pointed out, three sets of Cheater Squares, but sometimes ya gotta do what ya gotta do to get fill to work.
SPRIG sound like an insult. "He's such a SPRIG! Why do you put up with it?" Weird clue for LAY LOW. Strike down? Maybe Hide out, or something.
Hope y'all have a great Thursday!
No F's - It's an ENDLESS STRUGGLE. (But six K's)
RooMonster
DarrinV
agree
It's not fair to criticize all the crosswordese and cite a lack of polish and then criticize the clues for 'Erie' and 'Puts' which seem to add a bit of polish to the puzzle
I solved it in well below my Thursday average (10:27) without even trying to get the theme. I find puzzles where you can do that kind of disappointing. Why bother?
Please! We need to see the entire content of your students' compilation of Sharpisms! Do not fail us!
He's a wonderful prodemocracy leader who suffered a major loss the day before the tha siege of the Capital building. Everyone should know him.
Odd puzzle experience today. We got all four theme answers from crosses and inference only. Had to study the clues and answers post-solve to figure out the gimmick. Not bad, but agree with Rex completely.
Another victim of the urn-cup-MUG trilogy.
Enjoyed Rex's Bird essay (though didn't recall SKUA from puzzles past). Especially loved the excerpts from "Blibbity Blobbity Bloo"... Hopefully the perpetrators received at least four stars.
If the word SILKEN ever (again?) appears in a puzzle, I'd like to see the clue be "Like Lionel Ritchie's voice".
And to anyone (including Rex) who has never heard of Jamie Raskin, just wait until next January when, as a committee chair in the new democratic majority, he leads investigations into the corruption, war criminality, and other Constitutional ignorance of the last two years.
As a Marylander I was delighted to see him first thing in this puzzle! We love Jamie!
Sure hope you’re right about that last part..
Very easy for a Thursday, I think. Never really noticed the theme until late in the game.
The book from Rex’s students looks charming. Something to keep in the archives forever.
I appreciate that Rex gives bird names a pass, and I loved learning about the tui. Check out its Wikipedia entry. The little white tufts on its throat maybe make it easier to soak up the honey it eats. All that Manuka honey in New Zealand!
And I agree about the skua nickname. How ridiculous!
Thursdays can be anything. This was just awful.
Bob, I wasn’t on the blog yesterday…good to have you back!
Yes, @Rex should look at this as the counter-punch to Palin’s appearance in the puzzle a few days ago. A Congressperson worth knowing about for sure.
And he has been plagued with serious health issues. Thanks for the book recommendation!
Who can watch anything to do with politics these days? I refuse to memorize any of their names. They are all useless
Off to a flying start with JAMIE. I agree with the many positive comments, he's one of the really, really good guys. JAMIE led to JACKS, saw that LESS in the long across meant something missing, and whooshed on through. I think some of the themers work better than others--a BAD CAREER MOVE could be a CARELESSMISTAKE, e. g., but is a PAGEANTQUEEN really an AGELESS BEAUTY? Oh well, close enough for crosswords.
Did the CUP/MUG thing and had SORRYSTATE before SORRYSIGHT, ARK is a total WTF and made the acquaintance of ELLIE today, but most of the rest of it was read-the-clue-fill-in-the-answer which is kind of fun but not terribly rewarding, especially on a Thursday.
Nice concept and execution, JG and JC--Jolly Good Joint Crossword, and thanks for a fair amount of fun.
@OFL--I think your students' gift is pretty great, and wish I had received something similar during or after my many years of teaching. Shows they were paying attention. Good for you.
Pennsylvania is on the Atlantic coast…
Didn't know skua, but backed into it. Took a while to "get" the theme
Mrs. Egs: Why have you arrived home from work drunk?
Egs: AGAVE at the office.
Ike: How're your ma and PATINA?
@Roo. Are you gonna give @Les S More a point for each time LES occurs today?
A very clever theme that somehow wasn't a joy to solve. But I still always applaud clever themes, so thank you, John Guzzetta and Jeff Chen.
Whenever Rex’s explanation of a theme contains “answers are cryptic descriptions of those clues”, it’s a pretty safe bet that I had a long day.
In fact, I actually finished this puzzle, stared at it for a while, and never did determine the gimmick. That’s not surprising, considering the day of the week it is. It does mean that I spent another day parsing together cross after cross in the hope that three plausible grid-spanning phrases would materialize.
Not really my idea of fun, but on a positive note, just a few short years ago I would have gotten stuck and given up when the grid was probably still circa 90% empty. Unfortunately, the word “cryptic” in any theme explanation continues to be my CrossWorld Kryptonite.
I always seem to like a puzzle that Jeff Chen is part of the construction, and @Rex seems to reliably not particularly like the puzzle. Today was no exception. Also, I wasn’t really “het up” about the particular list of crosswordese mentioned.
I enjoyed the puzzle, grokked the theme, but I will say that other than filling in some LESS’s due to a cross L or S, I didn’t bother myself during the solve to figure out the root word answer and did it through crosses. I’m ok with post-solve marveling, but I guess some are not.
Good to see Jamie Raskin get some Crossworld fame.
No, Pennsylvania does not have a coast. It has a river bank and a (tiny bit of) lake shore, no coast.
Less of these types of puzzles, please. No🎈for me.
No, Pennsylvania does not have a coast. It has a river bank and a tiny bit of lake shore. No coast.
@Anon 8:59AM: Explain that one. I don't think PA has any coastline on the Atlantic. You've got New Jersey and Delaware and Maryland intervening and cutting off access to any Atlantic shoreline.
@anon - PA does not touch the Atlantic Ocean (it is a technically a landlocked state - that giant lake notwithstanding). Philadelphia has is a major port on the Delaware River, which flows into Delaware Bay, and that opens into the Atlantic. I would characterize PA as a “Middle Atlantic state” instead.
I second that motion !
It was painful to put that S at the end of ELK. The only ELKS I recognize are the Benevolent and Protective Order. So I reminded myself that members of the Elks lodge, as humans, are therefore indeed animals, and they may at times have trumpeters at lodge meetings. This is made the S more palatable.
Welcome back. Had pneumonia once, never want it again. Good luck.
Count me a Jamie RASKIN lover. We were penpals briefly after an organization I was secretary of voted to send him condolences when his son committed suicide. Proud little moment in my life.
I suppose somebody in this group of proud pedants needs to mention that if you have an ELK and then anloher ELK and more, what you have are several ELK. You do not add an 's'.
Yes, for urn, cUp, MUG . I didn't know SKUA and, like an idiot, I, at first, had cURDS instead of KURDS. I liked the mention of osso buco - if you are ever in NYC goto BECCO on W46th and order the osso buco, to die for. SINISE was a tricky name to spell for me. We listen to Alice's Restaurant every Thanksgiving.
SNORK-EL: Superman's idiot brother back on Krypton
Raskin's nightwear: JAMIE's jammies.
How to convert palms into those biblical verse thingies: USES
RP: Loved your student's collection of "Sharp comments." A labor of love, for sure. It reminded me of the best student evaluation comment I received in 38 years of teaching: "Prof. L thinks he is so smart and funny, but actually he is a fat jerk." I submitted it to the tenure committee and it worked!
Thanks for the book recommendation. Not sure how I missed that one, but I just put it on hold at the library.
Easy or Easy-Medium for a Thursday. I liked the theme okay although it too was easy to deal with once the code was cracked. To me it didn't reek of crosswordese, although it's not hard to imagine that it will get a high percentage on the Gunk-O-Meter (at a glance, it looks like a lot of Persons in there).
Always nice to see an interesting new word, in this case SKUA. I was not triggered by the stock lingo (PUTS), and thought that was a nice nontrivial way to clue it. MARROW BONE and SORRY SIGHT are both good.
I'll join the crowd that is commenting on the prominence of JAMIE Raskin, as one of the smartest and most effective Democrats who are pushing back against the skulduggery of the Republican toadies. I have to remind myself that I am probably a lot more minded toward politics than most people (even while reminding myself that I know nowhere near enough); therefore I won't go TSK TSK at Rex, but I do think he is well worth knowing as one of the better and better-known Congresspersons. He is a lawyer and formidable Constitutional scholar. Do keep an eye on him.
Re the ERIE triangle: on the small map that Rex thoughtfully inserted, I see something called Presque Isle. Almost an isle/island? Well, come to think of it, that's right! It's a peninsula, but one that is more island-y than most because it is connected to the mainland only by a tenuously thin band of land. It's about as close to being an island as it can get without actually being an island. Another little nugget of information available to me only on account of the magical gateway of Crossworld.
Happy Thursday, and happy end-of-semester to all the academics out there.
I think this would’ve been easy to solve as a themeless because the crosses were all enough to get there. However I did actually catch the trick at pAGEant queen, and that - along with the LESS endings of each one - made the themers immensely more obvious. Frankly, with J. Chen’s name on the byline, I was surprised that the clues overall weren’t more devious. I’m not implying that’s a good thing or a bad thing, just not what I would’ve expected.
I'm with Rex re: birds. Right now, the yellow-rumped warblers are passing through - they've been here for two weeks which is about a week longer than usual. I'd wonder what the hold-up was except I wish they'd stay for the whole summer SEASON, they're so adorable. The dark-eyed juncos left already and the white-throated sparrows were only here for a week. Birds, so cool.
I found the theme clue/answer pairs first inscrutable and after, when I had a chance to puzzle them out, quite clever.
Urn before MUG, SORRY State before SIGHT, and no idea what kind of bone was in osso buco, just knew osso means bone.
Thanks, John Guzzetta and Jeff Chen!
Liked this a lot.
I like Jamie Raskin too (in government not just the first
name --nice opening). I solved as a themeless & before I knew it, it was solved (except for a moment with SKUA). Nice to see"Lovely Rita Meter Maid." Then I looked at the solve and saw how good it was by two seasoned pros. Thank you, both :)
Stunned to learn that Rex did not know Jamie Raskin, a true gem of a public servant. He is a constitutional scholar, the real deal (and a real lawyer, Pam Bondi!), and was a major force in (for example) the Select Committee investigating January 6. He visited the staff of The Nation during the an impeachment (first, second?) of Trump and I gave him the sad news from the day's New York Times that violations of the Constitution's Emoluments Clause was not going to be one of the charges. Has Rex heard of Jamie's father, the late Marcus?
Another easy romp. Saw the clue for 17A and thought it must be CAREER, then “oh, it’s CARELESS.” Used the theme to help with the others - the assistance wasn’t needed but it was fun to come up with the answers without a bunch of crosses.
So disappointing that there’s nothing EERIE about the ERIE triangle.
I did have to correct urn, which I splatzed in without checking, and also SINeSE and SORRYState, but none of that caused much of a fuss.
While I did note some of the crosswordese OFL mentioned, I thought it was offset by the large number of LESS common entries like SNORKEL and PATINA and MARROW BONE.
Some of the cluing was oddly straightforward for a Thursday, but I liked the clue for ETS. Mr. A loves to play Euchre so I appreciated that clue, too, and the “win an earthquake” quote clue for WAR is timely.
Go JAMIE Raskin! Hope he can stay SANE during the seemingly ENDLESSSTRUGGLE.
Love the Sharp Comments collection - maybe we could get treated to a few examples every day!
Mimi L
Yes, no one but crossword solvers are able to learn about Presque Isle.
LOL. Ok Dave…
Thank you for posting this, Iris. Jamie Raskin is living proof they are all NOT “useless.”
He’s smart as a whip, articulate, and a bit edgy. My kind of Democrat.
Every geographer on Earth characterizes Pa as a Mid-Atlantic state,
Also, Philadelphia is a major port, no need to draw the distinction of having. All major port cities have things beside the port itself.
First time I’ve ever heard pirate described as boring. I think aerial pirate is fantastic—pirates do most of their work on the water skuas in the air. That makes it not just a useful nickname, but subversive in a wry, knowing way.
I’ve said this before here, but skuas are also called jaegers— German for hunter.
They’re fantastic birds— and not strictky arctic fwiw.
I wasn't able to make sense of CARELESS MISTAKE until I got WINLESS SEASON and saw how the theme was working. I enjoyed guessing the remaining two. I agree with others that it was an easy Thursday, but the twist in the clue-answer relationship kept it interesting.
@Iris, - Hear, hear! A hero for sure.
Easy. I looked at the theme clues a decided to see if I could ignore them and still solve the puzzle…turns out I could, quite easily.
ARK and AGAVE (as clued) were it for WOEs and urn before MUG was my only costly erasure.
This was a pretty smooth themeless with a couple of fine long downs for me…and I did like the theme once I figured it out.
So many coffee containers: MUG, jUG, cUp, pot, urn
;
Anyone else baffled how ‘strike down’ is a clue for ‘lay low’?
Regarding Rex's unconditional love for all birds, I have to note the M&A exception for the PEWIT.
Pneumonia apparently laid our friend Bob low but we’re happy to lean he’s feeling better.
I knew he wasn’t lying low to avoid Rex’s rants.
Ha ha my high school english students presented me with a book of weird things i said during the year. Fun! I think teachers perform odd and funny comments to keep student attention, and to entertain ourselves. . . .
YES... for Becco! One of the best restaurants on Restaurant Row NYC. Great puzzle, btw
Krypton blew up before Superman arrived on Earth.
You’re missing an e, and the charms of a very cool bird.
My feelings exactly.
An early, strong, articulate fighter for equal marriage, a clear voice for the Constitution, he is a hero for this New Yorker!
Professor of Constitutional Law, Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee (and presumptive chair when Dems regain the majority), constantly being interviewed. Kinda hard to miss, TBH, and well worth paying attention to.
From your lips to God's ear...
Nice AHA moment. Wheel-of-Fortuned WINLESS SEASON. Season... ___TER... winter! Fun theme, thanks John & Jeff.
Never seen TUI in a puzzle, SKUA yes. ANI (blackbird), SMEW ("panda duck"), '90s crosswordese.
Incomprehensive list of SB birds: AVOCET BLACKCAP BOBOLINK BULBUL CATBIRD COVEY FANTAIL GANNET HOOPOE JUNCO LINNET MARTIN NUTHATCH PEWEE PINTAIL PIPIT TITMICE TOMTIT TOWHEE WOODCOCK
Enjoyed the Sharpisms. I'm a Tarantino fan, so no judgment here... :P
"Aerial pirate" is an apt nickname for the SKUA. It's what's called a kleptoparasite. It literally steals food from other birds, often in flight. I've seen another kleptoparasite, the Magnificent Frigate Bird, in action. It was amazing. (And a frigate was a small, maneuverable sailing ship sometimes used by pirates.)
I've been known to make a CARELESS MISTAKE and think that a group of ELKS was a bunch of deers.
I enjoy watching PBS "Antiques Roadshow", although I don't own a single one, and I've learned that PATINA is very important in establishing the age and legitimacy of an item. The moderators on the show are experts in distinguishing genuine PATINA from faked antiquing.
I've always thought it was BONE MARROW instead of MARROW BONE. Is there a difference between the two?
Not so ridiculous, actually. I just watched a video of a skua hounding a gull until the gull gave up its lunch in order to escape.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fi1m9d54E84
I was displeased to see an Unknown Name at 1 across -- and a US politician to boot! But from all of your positive comments about him I shall withdraw my objection.
Hands up for disliking the clue for ARK... I guess if you're a video game fan you're lucky. For me, no need to clue it as a product name. And name wise... there were a lot of 4 letter names, fortunately all Knowns: ARLO EVEL CATE OVID ERIE TAZO. Then two more Unknowns at the end, ELLI and ESTES.
Oh yeah the theme... thought it was fine; not terribly exciting for a Thursday but interesting. And no circles required!
Agree it was painful. unlike you, I could not forgive it.
Actually saw a Mercedes in Florida (!) recently with a Jamie Raskin bumper sticker! Very well-known and admirable congressman.
This is one of those puzzles I finished without understanding the theme. Always seems weird when that happens. I think I kinda sorta get it now.
Rex, Jamie Raskin is definitely worth knowing — you’d be a fan.
But SKUA???
Anon 12:15. When M&A was having fun with the word, it was spelled PEWIT in the grid. I remember because I couldn't figure out how to pronounce it. So I looked it up. Both peewit and pewit are acceptable, though the former is more common. It's sort of like teepee and tepee.
No idea what an ecolabel is or could be and don't plan on googling it
Raskin is one of the reasons that we're thinking of moving to MD, a big one
Unless you're sledding down once and abandoning your sled you do need to carry it
I resisted that S for as long as possible elk is the plural and singular for the animal aka wapiti. But you're right that many BPOEs could be called elks and they could bugle.
There is a Presque Isle in Michigan that is also a peninsula. Further research reveals this a French word presqu'ill which means almost an island
Live just next to the ERIE TRIANGLE in the NY county shown in the map - Chautauqua County. Despite crossing that PA strip of land innumerable times have never, ever, ever heard it called the ERIE TRIANGLE
Live just next to the ERIE TRIANGLE in the NY county shown in the map - Chautauqua County. Despite crossing that PA strip of land innumerable times have never, ever, ever heard it called the ERIE TRIANGLE
I liked this puzzle, even though I had some trouble getting the LES S thing. Imagine that. But it eventually clicked and was kind of fun.
I was going to ask about JAMIE Raskin but apparently that’s unnecessary. He seems to have a fan club. That’s good. He seems to be the kind of politician that you need more of in your government. (Sorry. It’s hard to *not* comment on your government, these days. I really wish you all well and may you elect more JAMIEs.)
Other than that, my biggest nit was WTF is an ECO label?
Speakin' 'bout boids, I dare an intrepid constructor to attempt "puteketeke" (crested grebe from New Zealand) as either a clue or an answer!!! Viewers of John Oliver will thank you. Migration is fun to watch, common mergansers, loons, snow geese visit the creek and fields nearby, swifts and swallows take up residence in the barn, robins abound. Just saw an Eastern King bird, thankfully they pass through because they deserve the Latin appellation "tyranus tyranus" nasty, feisty little devils.
Tengo que irme.
Enjoyable and engaging. Felt more challenging than my time indicated. Getting the first theme answer to appear out of crosses helped me with the other three.
It's OHO, not AHA.
We missed an opportunity for those sleds to be more than carried or pulled. They can also be ridden, and they make wonderful main characters in Hollywood blockbusters. Still can't believe people who are smart about this stuff think that is the best movie.
❤️ SORRY SIGHT.
😫 SKUA {this is pure constructor desperation}
People: 10 {stop it}
Places: 4
Products: 4
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 5
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 27 of 74 (36%)
Funny Factor: 2 😕
Tee-Hee: SPEW.
Uniclues:
1 Good place to sleep while sucking on a tube.
2 Religious ceremonies for the Fonz while on a noted 40-day rainy voyage.
3 Response from dare devil upon hearing that sleeping in my La-Z-Boy is my preferred activity.
1 SNORKEL INN
2 ARK "A" MASSES
3 EVEL TSKTSK
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Resentfulness toward the nihilist in the neighborhood. AMORAL ENMITIES.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I enjoyed this puzzle, which I solved as themeless - thanks Rex for explaining the theme! JAMIE Raskin is brilliant and funny, and keeps his cool. We need more like him!
I have been attacked by SKUAs - they are aggressive pirates indeed
@PH, love your list of Spelling Bee birds! However, two of them I don't remember ever seeing: BULBUL and HOOPOE. Were they actually "in the word list"?
Anoa Bob - the MARROW is the good stuff inside the hole in the BONE. In Italian - l’osso is BONE and buco or buca is hole so the dish literally translates to “bone with a hole”
Anoa - yes. Marrow bones are cross-cut veal shanks (the bone-in meat from the lower leg).The name "osso buco" literally translates to "bone with a hole" in Italian, which refers to the central marrow-filled hole in the cross-cut shank. Bone marrow is the material inside it.
Please. The memories are too painful.
@Son Volt- thanks for the shoutout to one of my favorite PP&M (Peter Yarrow) songs ever! I just listened to Album 1700 while driving through the gorgeous spring landscape to Napa yesterday. Had that album on specifically for that song. Seems like I weep for so much these days.
@Conrad, It’s a hand up for no idea about ARK! Thankfully, I chose TSK TSK over Tut Tut and knew the ERIE Triangle so with all the species of dinosaurs I figure the answer had to be ARK. And then I perseverated off and on for the remainder of the say about the unmanageable size (for poor old Noah) had he needed to get that many dinos on his little boat less than 2 football fields in length (if my recall of a cubit is in the ballpark).
BONE MARROW is the MARROW inside the BONE, MARROW BONE is he BONE the holds the MARROW.
Had to chuckle a bit about OFL’s comment about “Endless Love.” @Rex, you gave me a nostalgic case of the very happy warm fuzzies. Growing from “how corny” to “yeah, that’s really how it feels” in response to that song reminds me of my own “corny love story” (my daughter’s description when she was young) with my husband and I love that song too.
When Lionel and Diana recorded it in the early ‘80s, my husband and I had been together ten years and - corny as it sounds - every year was better than the one before. All 46 of them passed so very quickly.
I’m very happy for you, @Rex and for everyone who has experienced endless love. As my husband in his closing quip toasting our daughter and son-in-law at their wedding said, “True love is the best feeling there is. Don’t mess it up.” The love that song expresses exists. It takes a lot of work and it’s worth the effort.
This puzzle was fun. A more cerebral theme than in most recent Thursday puzzles. Because I had decent wavelength connection to our constructors today (very unusual for me in a Jeff Chen offering), the solve went fairly smoothly. The initial two theme answers fell in nicely with a combination of accessible across and downs, and it felt theme-less, which is how my insufficiently caffeinated brain (my cardiologist is getting pushy about my coffee intake) was processing it until I finally woke up at pAGEant queen. Not because I suddenly got it, I just metaphorically slapped myself and my speech bubble would have showed a few bad words ending with “Wake up and at least snell the coffee. Figure this out!” I enjoyed the Aha! moment followed by well-deserved Duh!!! To be honest, I was still a little bit in my “Endless Love” moment thinking about my husband. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it. So thank you Jeff Chen (you’re still a favorite even though you can - and usually do totally flummox me for a good long while) and thank you too, John Guzzetta (another favorite). This was a fresh idea, cleverly executed and an easy but enjoyable solve.
Thank you as well, Professor Sharp. I’m always up for some great memories.
Jamie Raskin is well known as a thorn in someone's (ahem) side.
Nobody says marrow bone.
A lot to like about this one. Like others, I needed to struggle from urn to cup to MUG. But when I did, MUSCLECARS (nice word) fell and I had what I needed for one of my themer spanners, CARELESSMISTAKE. Grokked the theme pretty quickly form there.
This was one of those puzzles when, after a satisfying solve, I couldn't wait to come here to see how @Rex was going to put the explanation of the theme into words. For the life of me, I would not be able to do it and he, as always, came through. I think there is a real art to that. @Roo also did a good job of that today - thanks!
So while the theme somehow came to me fairly early, I thought it was intricate and deep enough to be a nice Thursday challenge. For me, it more than made up for some of the short fill - even the pluralization of ELK with an S. Even I winced a bit at that but I give it a pass because there was so much joy to have here.
We have two spanning themers and the rest are all very good words that are normal language and look pretty in the grid. What's not to like?
Hit a bit of a snag as I incorrectly read the clue for 32D as BrOTHERS, BrOTHERS, BrOTHERS. Couldn't think of a three letter word for a group of brothers so looked real close and finally realized...BOTHERS.
I'm a little familiar with Pulque - as an undergraduate student at @Rex's current employer (then called SUNY Binghamton) I took a much sought after History of Mexico course with a cool prof. He talked a LOT about Pulque, apparently it can cause an LSD type experience - who knew??
Like others, I thought it was nice to see JAMIE Raskin at 1A. Very refreshing after the early week entries that we had a couple of days ago.
Much to enjoy here, John and Jeff, thank you for making this!
One of my favorites CDilly - and I loved your elegant endless love discussion.
Maybe too late to comment , but I think stage actor is fine. Rex didn’t like it
There is no requirement in crosswords that a clue’s answer be general, like ACTOR or not cover a whole category. This happens all the time. Likewise, moviE would have been fine here too.
I liked the puzzle better than Rex. It was on the easy side though.
Anonymous 8:57 AM
I agree that the news can be intolerable at times. And names can be hard to keep track of (seeRex) But politicians are most definitely NOT all the same. That is what the wannabe dictator Trump wants you to think when he viciously attacks all who even slightly opposes him. to make people believe everyone else is like him.
Correction: BULBUL has never been accepted, but the others have been. HOOPOE was accepted in the recent April 25 when previously it wasn't. I'm guessing Ezersky has been getting flak from the birding community. :)
https://www.sbsolver.com/s/hoopoe
https://nytbee.com/ is what I use after getting to Genius. I don't have the patience to get Queen Bee, but I'll try if I'm a few words away.
Thanks @okanaganer
Liveprof 4:32.
I’ve been a faithful part of this blog for more than a decade.
That sir, is the best post Ive ever read. By a million miles. Thank you.
@PH, you won't believe this... I've still got April 25 open in a tab with one answer missing! I would never ever have gotten that. Thanks, I'll put HOOPOE on my "remember these" list.
That book is the sweetest thing!!!
What the heck did I just solve? The themers are inscrutable and there were far too many clues that were baffling. SKUA, really? LAWLOW for Strike Down? Kemper?
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