Mind-reading scan, in a way / THU 6-18-26 / Bona fide numbskull / Employee after working hours, on "Severance" / Chemical agent used to make frosted glass / Follower of "4" on a love note / Adrenaline surge providers / Big name in archery equipment / Chemical agent used to make frosted glass
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Constructor: Scott Hogan
Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
It's possible that I got a turbo boost there at the beginning because I just happened to remember that line from Keats's "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" about the SEDGE (5D: "The ___ is wither'd from the lake": Keats). The poem opens like this:
- BROADWAY OPENING (17A: Bro?) ("Bro" is the "opening" part of the word BROADWAY)
- VISITOR CENTER (35A: Sit?) ("Sit" is the "center" part of the word VISITOR)
- FAIRYTALE ENDING (54A: Ale?) ("Ale" is the "ending" part of the word FAIRYTALE)
Functional magnetic resonance imaging or functional MRI (fMRI) measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow. This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activation are coupled: When an area of the brain is in use, blood flow to that region increases. (wikipedia)
• • •
A very easy puzzle where you never really had to figure out the theme if you didn't want to because the crosses were easy enough that it didn't matter. I'm not sure I ever saw the clue for the last two themers. In a puzzle like this, with completely inscrutable theme clues. I just hack at the short stuff and wait for something to happen. Today, the short stuff, and most of the longer (non-theme) stuff came very easily, like it was Tuesday, and so despite having no idea what was going on with the theme for a long while, I was able to move through the grid really easily. Here's a snapshot of my initial travels:
![]() |
| [poetryfoundation.org] |
SEDGE is a weird enough word that, as you can see, the poetryfoundation website has helpfully highlighted it (if you click on it, you get a definition; in this case: "Grasslike or rushlike plant that grows in wet areas"). I used the SEDGE as a catapult ... although looking at it now, it didn't give me that much. I think OUTIE probably did more to propel me into the puzzle (14A: Employee after working hours, on "Severance"). At any rate, starting was easy, and once I got going, as you can see, I just drifted right across the grid, top to bottom, no problem. I was probably half done or more before I finally inferred the OPENING part of BROADWAY OPENING, and then ... that was pretty much it. I do cryptic crosswords every day, so this kind of self-referential way of referring to letter strings (today, "bro" "sit" "ale") is really familiar to me. What we get today is basically a clue/answer reversal—the clue is the indicated letter string ("Bro," etc.), and the answer acts as the cryptic clue for that letter string. It's a cute idea, but would not be very theme-worthy were it not for the progression that the puzzle sets up: OPENING, CENTER, ENDING. That gimmick gives the theme some much-needed coherence. The execution of the theme is neat and elegant. Not dazzling, but ... tidy. Would've been nicer if the puzzle had had teeth, if it had made getting those themers more of a battle by making the fill more challenging. But maybe this was the kind of thing where people really Really needed to be given ample opportunity to get those themers from crosses. Maybe the theme remained indecipherable to some people even after they'd completed it. Seems possible. If you had to come here to understand the theme, that doesn't make you a CLASS-A MORON, a term which I don't believe exists in the first place (surely if you really felt you needed to insult someone like this, you'd say GRADE-A, not CLASS-A). Apparently 30 Rock popularized the CLASS-A version, since it's all I'm seeing when I google it (there's an episode where the Post calls Jack a CLASS-A MORON). I never really watched 30 Rock, but I did watch the Simpsons, a lot, which (maybe) explains my ears' preference for GRADE A:
Bullets:
- 36D: Chill way to take things (IN STRIDE) — big frowny face next to this one. Without "take (it)," this looks ridiculous.
- 3D: Absolut alternatives (STOLIS) — look, I'll give you one plural brand name like this per puzzle, but I will not give you two. Sorry, PEPSIS (9D: Colas in the "cola wars").
- 19D: Chemical agent used to make frosted glass (ETCHANT) — what are we doing here? ETCHANT should make you strongly reconsider tearing the grid down and starting over. Longer answers should not be wasted on obscurities. The "frosted glass" part of the glue had me briefly considering ETCH ART, but that didn't sound very "chemical agent"-y.
- 27A: Word rhymed with "flash" in "A Visit From St. Nicholas" (SASH) — one of the first poems I ever knew by heart, or close to it. I certainly don't know it by heart now, but I remember that my mom read it to me many times when I was very young. It's almost certainly the first place I ever heard "SASH" used in this way (in reference to windows). The lines in question are: "Away to the window I flew like a flash, / Tore open the shutters and threw up the SASH." The poem also famously contains the complete list of non-Rudolph reindeer:
More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name:"Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now Prancer and Vixen!On, Comet! on, Cupid! on, Donder and Blitzen!
- 38A: Alfred ___, co-creator of the original I.Q. test (BINET) — ah, the eugenicists' favorite test. Did you know that "moron" used to refer to those with an I.Q. score between 51 and 70 (one step up from "imbecile"!). I'm not sure if a CLASS A MORON is a higher or lower scoring moron. Might be one of those golf-type situations where lower is better (i.e. more moronic). If I never saw another I.Q. or MENSA clue again, I would not mind at all.
- 58A: Follower of "4" on a love note ("EVER") — the "4" (for "For") had me thinking the latter part would also be funnily "spelled," so I was like "4 EVAH?"
That's all for today. See you next time.
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96 comments:
Easy, solved without reading the theme clues. This often helps on a Thursday because the theme clues only serve to distract. Cute theme.
* * * _ _
Overwrites:
I thought vOiT might make 7D archery equipment, but it was HOYT.
Confused my Canadian currency. lOONIE before TOONIE at 45D.
WOEs:
The Keats quote at 5D, but SEDGE came easily from crosses.
Fuyumi ONO at 8D. Nice to see an ONO who isn't Yoko for a change.
Is ETCHANT a word (19D)? I guess it is. M-W.com lists its definition as "ETCH sense 2" but the examples agree with the puzzle's clue.
Never having seen Beautiful Boy, I needed every cross for METH as clued at 43A.
The F part of FMRI (52A)
In our family, whenever someone would read out loud, "Away to the window I flew like a flash, / Tore open the shutters and threw up the SASH," someone else would say, "Why did he eat the SASH?"
Cute idea - 3 letter clues morphed into long themers. I agree with Rex that the crosses were clean enough to play this as a themeless but after the initial Bro? spanner I was intrigued.
Kraffwerk
Liked the long down pairs - VINEGARY - IN STRIDE and COINCIDE - MANEUVER. I loved seeing SEDGE in the grid. I think we had the exact EYEORE clue recently?
. METH
Didn’t love CLASS A MORON - Rex summarizes that one pretty well. ETCHANT was a new one for me - needed most of the crosses there. My wife loves Severance - unwatchable for me.
Walk me out in the morning DEW my honey
Not an overly tough challenge but an enjoyable Thursday morning solve.
All I wanted was a PEPSI just one PEPSI
Not a lot to say here, but for some reason I enjoyed having IN STRIDE and WING IT in the same grid. Made me smile on this welcomed free day during a travel course in Europe. Looking forward to taking the day IN STRIDE with no responsibility for the 20 college kids as I WING IT in Belfast.
Despite the (I thought) lame theme, I enjoyed a lot of of this one.
Misspelling in grid: l'Académie Française decrees "4 EVah"
The only name I know in archery equipment is Henry V.
Give me Roadrunner and Bugs Bunny allusions all day.
Never heard of an fMRI, now I know more.
Let's be grateful it wasn't EONs ago in a galaxy far, far away.
vIcTorY lion? You either know it or you don't and that crossed with a 19th (?) century physiognomist, boo. Following the NOBLE gases, I'd rather hoped there was yet another great idea by Alfred NobEl.
Unless there's something I didn't get, the theme was lame. What does a bro have to do with theater; after three hours since the last rest stop, I'd rather do jumping jacks than sit. Maybe you have ale at the VISITOR CENTER, you sit at the BROADWAY OPENING, and at some point in the FAIRYTALE ENDING there's a bro?
I'd have liked the Mad Hatter's mouse friend weeping about the ENDING of a very sad tail.
Greek myth story time, yay: forget the Earth moving - that white Brahman took EUROPA all the way to outer space.
12:50, so medium for me. Had no idea about the SEDGE, so had to rely on other help to get me going. Once you figure out the theme it opens up lots of opportunities to whoosh! I kinda feel like this puzzle needed a DISCLAIMER, you know, the way the clues are duped in the answers, but it wasn't too tough to MANEUVER around the grid. Thanks, Scott, for a CLASS-A grid.
Caught on to the trick when the crosses gave me FAIRYTALEENDING, after which BROADWAYOPENING was easy to get. I still needed some trial-and-error in the NW, and was handicapped by misspelling BINET as "Benet" at first.
All told, a pleasant Thursday except for ETCHANT (I agree with Rex there).
I don't know what the hell NITTANY is, so that cross with the eugenicist was a guess. I was leaning towards NIXTANY at first because of the groundhog place, but BINEX seemed unlikely, so guessed right
Well now, that was a pleasure.
We have a theme rich with riddles and wordplay, one that’s fun and satisfying to figure out, involving phrases known to everyone.
We have the symmetrical and rhyming IN STRIDE and COINCIDE, not to mention the ARNIE / TOONIE / EENIE / OUTIE quartet, and NITT touching WITT.
While never reaching GRUNT level, there was enough CHOP in the water to fully involve my work-loving brain. An “Ahhh!” rather than a “Phew!”.
There was even an LOL moment for me, when I was thinking BYES for [They might be seeded], leaving FUB for the parka material, and there I was for several ticks wondering what the heck FUB was.
Nothing GARISH in the box today. I felt nestled and cozy throughout and after your puzzle, Scott. Congratulations on your first solo Times puzzle (after six collabs), and I love what you did. Thank you!
I know the Penn State mascot, but I misread the clue as Penn STATION, so I left it blank for the longest time.
Huh. not easy at all. one of the harder Thursdays in a while
Hey All !
Nice. OPENING on top, CENTER in middle, ENDING on bottom. Concise, sensible.
Had dASH in for SASH, thinking Santa was dASHing away. Can't verbatim the poem. Also, a Mandela effect in the Reindeer names, as many (raises hand) think it's Donner, not Donder.
Didn't know MORONs had CLASSes. Would tha CLASS A be smarter or dumber than the CLASS B or C? See also: half-assed. Would doing a good job be full-assed, or no-assed? Inquiring minds want to know.
Welp, hope y'all have a great Thursday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Another one that feels very much like a trivia exam. You don’t even make your way out of the NW and you get a moon from Jupiter, a vodka brand, a Spanish quiz, a Keats quote and a quiz about a character from Severance, which sounds like a tv show. Yuk.
It doesn’t get much better as you go eastward. I think the archery equipment is particularly “in your face” piling on. How many of us actually refer to him as ARNIE ? It is what it is I guess, but my enthusiasm for the NYT is definitely waning, I used to consider it the gold standard, oh - how the mighty have fallen.
Even with NESTS in place NOBLES and SEDGE would not come to me, so wandered about the grid until FAIRYTALEENDINGS gave me the theme. HOYT was an unknown and FMRI would have been except for FLEW. Maybe not an originalidea but thought this was fun to parse. Seemed to be a very low quotient of standard crosswordese, tho I guess ETCHANT is a bit of a stretch and EYEORE is a character I know only from NYT puzzles.
TBH, I continue to read this blog just to see if there will ever be a puzzle Mr Lewis does not like!
When I'm faced with the VISITORCENTER choice I always CENTER.
FedEx Clerk: What delivery method would you like for your package?
Customer: Oh, TWODAY is fine.
FedEx Clerk: Today is really expensive. Are you sure overnight wouldn't work?
Customer: Why would TWODAY be more expensive than overnight?
FedEx Clerk: Because today comes before the day after today.
Customer: Well I won't put off til tomorrow what I can do TWODAY.
Mrs. Egs likes to work with yarn and needles to make animals but so far she hasn't been able to NITTANY lions.
Another marginally crossword-worthy HOYT would have been Axthelm, author of one of the greatest refrains in country music :
Work your fingers to the bone whadda ya get?
Bony fingers
This was a cute theme, but it certainly FLEW by. Thanks, Scott Hogan.
Huh. Solved as themeless, ling themers filled themselves in. Easy enough I didn't even see some of the clues @Rex mentioned. Had to come here to grok the theme. Not as expected for Thursday!
We’re all just accepting RARED in an NYT crossword and moving on? Must just be me then.
BINET crossing NITTANY was a Natick for me (because of the "T") until I ran the alphabet to get the happy music. I'm sure I'm not alone there.
Inferred ONO which got me HOYT, otherwise would have been stuck there.
age before EON.
But generally super easy. I never understood the theme until I read the write-up. I don't prefer puzzles where you can solve without having to figure out the theme let alone fly through them. 10:48
Not my cup of tea. Pluralising sodas and the plethora of PPP put me off.
In declaring an end to the penny, has our government committed COINCIDE?
A fight broke out in Brooklyn between the DISCLAIMERS and the datclaimers. Nobody got HOYT.
ETCHANT: Phone home! Phone home! Phone home! . . .
The Alphabet Society was all abuzz at the discovery of a RARED.
That archery clue made me quiver at first. But I got it using the crosses, so I'm taking a bow.
Orthopedist: And why are we here today?
Patient: ARNIE is broken.
The hills around State College PA are called the Nittany Mountains. My son is a Penn State grad. State College is a wonderful college town.
There were actually THREE plural beverage brand names, if you count DEWS, which didn't need to be clued this way.
All time fast Thursday solve for me at 4:31!
Ha…I thought MEL H brought the Beautiful Boy down, but that was just me being L (OONIE)!
“Why did he eat the sash?” made me laugh out loud.
As I start this Thursday puzzle, I’m wondering whether it will be another one of those computer generated architectural wonders that I find less word interesting. The structure of puzzles is getting so complicated, now I’m sure assisted by AI, that I suspect in the future crosswords will only be Solved by computers as the computer owners look on in awe.
Pretty much everything Rex said, right down to knowing the Keats line and having no idea about Severance. As for the theme-- well, sure, you could solve it as a themeless, but where's the fun in that? Figuring the theme out, though... The first one I got was FAIRY TALE ENDING, which has ALE sitting there right in the center. So I went back to the other themers and saw that SIT wouldn't work in the center of the line, but could go in up front to make VISITOR CENTER. I got it but I didn't understand it -- but then I went up to BROADWAY OPENING, and it couldn't be missed--a very nice little solving challenge.
ETCHANT, on the other hand. I can barely imagine some chemist saying NOBLES, but etchers usually say "acid." I guess you can have a non-acid etchant, though, and if you did you'd have to call it something.
Four-letter horse color starting with R is ROAN, but what on earth does "muted" mean in this clue?
I had fun with this one but did not find it anywhere near as easy as others. This put up proper Thursday fight for me which is much appreciated.
I thought the theme was great, caught on with FAIRYTALEENDING and it was fun to get my mind working on the others.
Like yesterday, so much I did not know...AT ALL. But today, it all piqued my interest. I Naticked in several places: OUTIE/SEDGE, NITTANY/BINET (should have known the latter as I was a psych major!), METH/TOONIE, and ETCHANT/STINE. That was a *lot* of real estate to get through but it was worth the effort as I got such a kick out of the theme.
Funny how the brain works when straightforward stuff just refuses to get through. For me today it was CHOP and PHASE. For CHOP, I just couldn't think beyond Hack as in "life hack" and got nowhere for a long time. For PHASE, it was *stage* for terrible twos that I couldn't get unstuck and was trying to figure out what word ending with T could possibly rhyme with "flash"! I couldn't tell you what finally clicked to fix all that up. Those two were among my last entries.
I enjoyed the abutting pair of longish downs, VINEGARY/INSTRIDE and COINCIDE/MANEUVER, all good words that sit pretty in the grid (they more than make up for ETCHANT.)
Thank you for this Scott, nice theme with some Thursday crunch!
I feel like this should've gotten a WAY lower score....
More accustomed to see MRI alone as an answer; they added the F just for @ROO.
Same here, Anonymous 7:39. Often I finish a puzzle that had things I liked and things I didn’t like, then I come here, where Rex reminds me of all the things I didn’t like. Next I read the comments, generally negative, sometimes piling on myself. And then Lewis reminds me of the things I did like. He even points out beauties I missed. Thanks to him, I remember why I look forward to doing this every day. Even a bad puzzle—and today’s was not bad, not bad at all—exercises the old noggin in ways I appreciate.
Agree with all, @SSJ. I believe "ARNIE" more commonly refers to the golfer (and his legion of followers, "Arnie's army") whereas the former governor and movie star was "Ah-nold" which mimicked his accent.
Twelve (count 'em) plurals. And I'd see Rex's two brand names and raise two (DEWS and EPIPENS).
ETCHANT got an audible groan from us. As did filling in METH. Ugh, ugh.
Guess when someone says (e.g., in reference to an injured athlete) "they will have an MRI", it is technically an fMRI. But perhaps the first letter is omitted to not make it sound like it's vulgar slang. "F MRI; I'll play through it"
My biggest issue is that literally yesterday we had a clue “Start of a counting out rhyme”, answer: EENY (which I thought at the time was misspelled). And then today we have “Start of a selection process”, answer: EENIE (the correct spelling). Having this contradiction over two consecutive days felt like an egregious error to me.
EENIE today, when we just had EENY yesterday? For the same exact clue? Terrible.
I found the puzzle to be much harder than most folks. I completed it thinking what a tough but fun puzzle to solve. Ah, well.🎈🎈🎊🎊
PEPSIS, STOLIS and DEWS. Oh my! Like RP, I don’t mind allowing an occasional plural of convenience but three? Although it would’ve been very easy to ignore the theme completely and still finish the grid, I did see the trick at VISITOR. Like yesterday, getting the first themer immediately gave you the others. Also like yesterday, plenty of names and trivia. Certainly a decent puzzle which was entertaining to solve but didn’t seem much like a Thursday.
Cringed at STOLIS, then again at PEPSIS, and by the time I got to DEWS (and WINES!) I was genuinely rooting for RYES to be clued as the beverage, but alas. Even without the hard liquor, this was quite a thirsty puzzle.
Reading A Visit From St. Nicholas was an annual family tradition on Christmas Even in my childhood. At some point my brother and I heard "threw up the sash" as "vomited the sash," and thereafter when whoever was reading got to that line, we would mime barfing. I don't think I've gotten through that story without giggling in that spot since. Ah, youth.
Yer basic, sneaky 70-worder ThursPuz. Only 3 puzthemers, but oodles of cool longball stuff. sooo ... OK by m&e.
The no-know level was quite reasonable, with only a foursome, visitin our house: FMRI. HOYT. ONO. ETCHANT.
staff weeject pick: ONO - non-Yoko no-know version.
honrable mention to the BRO, SIT, & ALE extracts, of course.
some fave stuff: COINCIDE [@Liveprof: har]. EUROPA. MANEUVER. INSTRIDE. WINGIT. The GARISH CLASSAMORON. URDU/GURUS.
Thanx for the fun, Mr. Hogan dude. Nice job.
Masked & Anonymo6Us
p.s.
Runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Rared?
NW was not much help OUTIE was a WTF, so I skipped around, ending at the bottom where FAIRYTALEENDING gave the game away. Nice. Didn't speed through the rest--HOYT? FMRI? ETCHANT? Also I think I'm used to seeing MANEUVRE with an O in the middle somewhere.
Very happy that neither egs or Liveprof defined COINCIDE as what you do when it rains, so I won't do that either.
One alternative to the Christmas poem that I've heard is "Tore open the window and threw out the trash". Grade school fun.
I had a good time with this one, SH. Slightly Hard in places which made it more interesting, and thanks for all the fun.
Always thought an outie referred to a belly button. Regardless, I found this puzzle clever and quite enjoyable. Thank you Scott.
Never heard of HOYT Axton?
Way way too many plurals. Otherwise a nice solve.
As often happens with Thursday puzzles I got a Saturday's worth of solving. Once I had the theme from filling in the southern tier it helped with the fill that initially stumped me. At the end I had to correct my TIO/TIA write over to get BROADWAY. I really misread the clue on that one.
Does anyone really call the governanator ARNIE? I just say aw-nult.
ETCHANT has never appeared in the SB and I'm not complaining.
RARED is cringe inducing.
Fuyami? Where have you gone, Yoko ONO? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.
4EVER and RP's evah reminded me of Tina Fey's show Girls 5EVAH, because 4ever's too short.
I remember being really surprised that moron and imbecile were "medical classifications", and not just random playground insults.
I actually like clues like ETCHANT that I would never use, probably never heard, but can suss out. ETCH is self-evident and ANT is a common chemical reaction suffix.
Same for me. Maybe just not my wavelength but a lot of the trivia was lost on me.
70 words and 30 black squares... this is a themed puzzle but it's constructed as a themeless with 3 seed entries, which IMO is a recipe for disaster in terms of fill quality. If not that, it's going to have uninteresting long answers, thus making the themeless solving experience pretty dull. FAIRY TALE ENDING and CLASS A MORON are the only long entries that have some zing in the grid.
CLASS A MORON was actually tricky to solve. I wanted GARISH and ANIMAS, but I took them both out at one point because I also wanted CLASS to be either part of CLASSIC, or the first of two words in that answer, and nothing starting AM- was coming to mind.
The theme is disappointing, especially for a Thursday. The April Fools puzzle did the same shtick a lot better.
If you don’t know HOYT AXTON, look him up.
More clue-worthy than the archery company.
What is a TOONIE? I started with lOONIE but MElH made no sense so it had to be METH. Then I thought maybe the $2 dollars was the pun but then it should have been a TwONIE. That doesn't really work either. I don't get it.
Re PEPSIS / STOLIS: Stoli was a very key part of the referenced Cola Wars. https://www.history.com/articles/pepsi-navy-soviet-submarines
HOYT Aston d'oh!
I had a problem with NITTANY/BINET cross, found CLASS A MORON offensive & really just glad that it wasn't a Thursday rebus, but can't say that I enjoyed it.
I share @Southside Johnny's sentiment (sorry to quote you
@Southside Johnny) - "My enthusiasm for the NYT is definitely waning, "I used to consider it the gold standard, oh - how the mighty have fallen.".
For me - Streaks? Who cares anymore? It's become an effort just to enjoy the solve of late.
Axton, Axton, Axton.
Starting out, I didn't trust NESTS and couldn't come up with CHOP, but found my way in at ACME and ROAN x ARNIE and COINCIDE. That meant that working down the left side, I soon had -PENING, -CENTER, and -EENDING. Like @Rex, I've done enough cryptics to catch on to the theme...it was now a matter of getting some crosses on the left side of the grid to see what BRO was beginning, what had SIT in the middle, and what ended with ALE. Enjoyed it, especially seeing BROADWAY appear.
Lewis is a gem. He sometimes makes me feel guilty when I don't like a puzzle or appreciate it as much as it did :(
The chemical used to frost glass is either hydrogen fluoride or hydrofluoric acid
I often agree with you
@SS Johnny but never as much as your comment "It is what it is I guess, but my enthusiasm for the NYT is definitely waning, I used to consider it the gold standard, oh - how the mighty have fallen."
Sad to know I'm in good company :(
I got the idea of the theme at 17A Bro/broadway opening. But it less tricky than I expect for a Thursday puzzle.
52A FMRI was new to me and I've heard and talked about MRIs a lot lately since I had stroke(probably) and seizures (definitely) and the hospital could not give me an MRI because I have a metal clip in my brain closing off an aneurism that broke about thirty years ago.
I don't see any smiley faces on my puzzle (I print them off) so there must not have been anything tht especially tickled me, but over all I enjoyed the puzzle.
@DAVinHOP 9:01 AM: MRI is not short for fMRI; they both involve MRI, but fMRI is a dynamic scan of the brain, while MRI provides a static image of any body part (if an athlete's knee is being examined for injury, they would definitely have an MRI, not an fMRI).
@Brian 10:09 AM: My favorite Hoyt Axton lyric is "Work your fingers to the bone, whaddayou get? Boney fingers, boney fingers."
@"RARED": I've heard multiple people use 'raring up' or 'rared up' to refer to a cat getting up on its hind legs (apparently a variation on 'rearing up') so I always assumed it was an 'accepted' slang word (i.e., in 'real' dictionaries, albeit as slang), but a quick search shows it's only in a few online-only slang dictionaries.
I feel that if you read articles about research in education, psychology, or health, written for the layperson, you come across references to functional MRIs all the time, often accompanied by pictures of the brain with the relevant parts lit up. I'm not very science-y and I see them all the time?
Played myself today. Saw BRO was the first three letters of 17A so confidently dropped SIT and ALE into the beginnings of 35A and 54A. D’oh.
I loved CLASS A MORON when I got it, because I just rewatched that 30 Rock episode the other day. Put a big dumb grin on my face.
I liked the theme. Like a reverse-letteral clue. Yeah, you need a lot of crosses to get them but I don’t think of it as a themeless because you cannot easily get the answer from the clue. You NEED to understand the theme. Unlike earlier-week puzzles where you can get the answer from the clue and the revealer shows some cute way the themers tie together as a bonus.
On Dasher and Dancer and Cupid and...Vomit???!!!
Yup, my three sisters and I always giggled at that. I still do. some 70 years later.
Ages (eons?) ago, Playboy ranked college parties noting at the end that Penn State and Ohio State were not ranked, reason: they were not "college" parties, they were PROFESSIONAL parties to which I can attest!
Time flies even when you're NOT having fun
Medium for me but I don’t do cryptics. I jumped around the grid a bit and caught the theme with FAIRYTALE, which helped me finish.
I did not know ETCHANT, METH and ONO (as clued), HOYT, FMRI, and SEDGE.
Costly erasure - lOONIE before TOONIE
Cringe - STOLIS
Kinda ho-hum, didn’t hate it.
LOL at Dis, dat, nobody got HOYT.
Thanks for the bony fingers reminder, Egs!
Definitely felt weird about the Beautiful Boy clue. It’s the movie that Rob Reiner made with/about his son Nick loosely based on Nick’s drug problems. Heartbreaking at the time, more so now with Nick charged in the murder of his parents. Very dark for a crossword clue
I always thought one could be a grade-A moron or a world-class moron.
I never watch the Simpsons although when I've run into it, I find it funny and clever. I watched the clip Rex provided. I was sure (spoiler alert) that after everyone ran to the front of the room to get their "treat" that Lisa would explain exactly what tripe was.
I did not know the psychological concepts of ANIMA and ANIMus so 31A needed the crosses. The cross with NITTANY made me nervous.
This was a very nice theme, not very Thursday-ish, but nice all the same. Thanks, Scott Hogan!
Doggone old nag done got spooked and RARED up. Or something like that. I don't really do dumb-ass cowboy that well.
The Canadian one dollar coin has a loon on it and is widely called a Loonie. So the two-dollar coin got called a Toonie as a portmanteau of Two and Loonie.
@noni 10:49 am, they introduced the $1 coin in 1987 and it had a picture of a loon, so people called it a Loonie. Then a few years later when the $2 coin came out, they called it a Toonie.
Yes!
This was much too tame for a Thursday; it would be a perfect Tuesday. Ugly clusters of names again today, especially HOYT ONO PEPSIS jammed together. The only Unknown Names for me were HOYT, ONO, and NITTANY.
I loved to see TOONIE. But ETCHANT is just ridiculous!
Fun fact: MANEUVER is from the French for "handiwork". In modern French "main ouvre" is literally "hand work".
Pablo. I, too, am used to manoeuvre, but that's because I live north of 49. That "oe" combination is actually supposed to be a ligature, but I don't know how to do that here. After I had spelled it wrong in an assigned essay in grade 10 English, my teacher took me aside to explain its origins. I'm more than a little fuzzy on Latin but I'll try to remember what he told me: Latin "mano" or maybe "manus" (hand) combined with "opera" or maybe "operare" (to work). So, something like "manoperare", which, a few centuries later, the French changed to something you can't easily type in Blogger; manoeuvre. Etymology is so much fun.
In one of those funny coincidences Beautiful Boy appeared in both the crossword and the CineNerdle Reversal puzzle. Like Rex, I had never heard of it before.
Hear, hear!
Guilty
Personal best for me too. Not *that* fast though. Yikes.
@Son Volt 6:14 am... I was a huge Kraftwerk fan, and I know some German, but I never realized it was "Europa" in the original (it's "Europe" in the English version). Thanks for posting that!
A group of friends and I spent a week skiing in Whistler/Blackcomb and we quickly learned about loonies and toonies. After seeing a rather strange design on a toonie, we flagged down a server and asked her what it was. "A toonie", she said. "We know that," we said but what is this? She looked at it for a while but had no idea. This was in 2000 so we were looking at a commemorative 1999 coin celebrating Nunavut - the image was a Nunavut drummer but to me it looked like someone in a space suit.
Further along these lines (NYTXW, "how the mighty have fallen"), it's likely true (and if so, ironically) that, from a financial standpoint, NYT Games (of which the classic XW and all its spawn are subsidiaries) has never been stronger.
Probably can say that about a lot of products and industries. Profitability does not necessarily correlate with quality.
I think if it weren't for this blog and its camaraderie, we may have considered bidding adieu to the XW.
Wow. Didn't even get out of the upper portion without NEST, NOBLE, STOLI, EPIPEN & PEPSI all needing some convenient help to fill their slots. And then 31A "Feminine sides" for ANIMAS? How many feminine sides are there, exactly?
Is my vision getting weaker or has the comment font changed? Looks like an electronic version of an ink saver mode on a printer.
Like some others, only know 37D EEYORE from xwords. Does he/she/it get EYESORE from doing too much 44D EYEING?
We do get the full version of IOU (304 appearances in the NYTXW over the years, 158 of them in the Modern Era, per xwordinfo.com) at 49A I OWE YOU.
Must check to see if an FMRI will detect an ASMR.
I STILL don't know what the heck is going on 🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃
Definitely not easy for me because the names were tricky. I had CrOP and rOYT and MElH and gave up on the T in BINET crossing NITTANY. So thank you JoePop for the NITTANY Mountains and Anon 11:54am for explaining the darkness of the Beautiful Boy clue. And I’ve learned about Severance that it is a show, from Southside Johnny!
CLASSAMORON seems quite timely these days !
La próxima ronda corre por mi cuenta.
Held up in the same spots as 🦖 today. Didn't hate it, didn't love it. More cringified than I like, but at least it was fast. I wrote in LOONIE for TOONIE like a LOONEY and ended up with MELH being the Beautiful Boy's problem and honestly I think MELH is a bigger problem than people know about these days.
Rude they called me VINE-GARY and said I was like I pickle.
❤️ Obnoxiously blingy. Bona fide numbskull. WING IT. Dim WITTED.
😫 OUTIE. SEDGE. FMRI. HOYT. ETCH ART. DEE. ETCHANT.
People: 6
Places: 3
Products: 9
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 24 of 70 (34%)
Funny Factor: 3 😐
Uniclues:
1 Added estrogen.
2 Why you got nothing done over the weekend.
3 Where they keep the Corgis in London.
4 Why you're walking funny.
5 Make jokes without worrying about fact checking. {Prepare for the ensuing sound of Arf-ing.}
6 Chihuahua Street in Dullsville.
7 When Fuyumi says, "No, I'm definitely not related to her."
1 ANIMAS AIDED
2 TWO-DAY METH-INS (~)
3 NOBLE'S FUR BIN (~)
4 STOLIS IN STRIDE
5 WING-IT WITTED
6 CLASS-A MORON AVE.
7 ONO DISCLAIMERS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Question with a guaranteed "yes" answer. BACCHUS ... WANNA GO?.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Liked it, but shouldn’t the clue for 6-down be “47”?
Easy, almost half the time of yesterday's Hard puzzle. 3 themers seemed a bit light, but enjoyable overall.
Favorite entry was CLASSAMORON. Thanks Rex for reminding me why I thought the phrase should have been "grade A MORON". '90s (The) Simpsons, peak television.
No idea about HOYT archery equipment. I heard archery membership doubled after The Hunger Games in the US. It's been a part of Korean culture for ages which explains their dominance in international archery competitions/Olympics.
Today was a good day. Thanks Scott!
You forgot the tenth reindeer. There's the eight mentioned, plus Rudolph ... and Olive, the other reindeer. (used to laugh and call him names)
I’m not crazy!
@ DAVinHOP9:01 AM: no, fMRIs are only used for brain scans. For Injuries they are plain MRIs.
Aaahhhhhh. . . This one made me feel more like myself! A theme type I “clocked” (as my granddaughter would say) immediately, and lots of easier than usual Thursday fill to help with the names. At least it made me feel much less like a CLASS-A MORON than yesterday! Oooff - yesterday made what’s left of my brain hurt. Thankfully, today left me at least knowing that the condition wasn’t permanent.
I didn’t know the F part of FMRI, but at my age, I’m certainly aware of how especially the last couple decades FLEW much faster than I’ve liked, and thus, the stumble resolveth.
I also seem to have a skip in my brain’s hard disc or cloud or whatever has stored “R. L. Stine wrote all the ‘Goosebumps books’” resides. It’s been in several puzzles lately and I’ve had to run the alphabet or start thinking about the covers of the books to remember. But as soon as I go into the metaphorical stacks and call up one of the “MOST WANTED” covers I know well, I can see the goofy photo thereon and the book’s subtitle “Planet of the Lawn Gnomes by R L STINE and I’m home free. Thinking about all the Goosebumps gang made me remember one of my favorite experiences reading to kids.
I was enjoying family dinner with dear friends who were also neighbors. My little friend Parker (PJ to friends and family) melted my heart early. He was obsessed with trucks as a toddler. The first time I read to him, he gave me one of the kindest and most genuine compliments I’ve ever received.
The adult conversation at the dinner table that evening had not included him very often. He was getting fidgety. When we were almost finished, PJ looked at me and said “scuse me but do you know how to read to kids?” I said I love reading to kids and he jumped out of his chair, ran out of the room and returned with a (for him) huge book. His mom smiled and said “Watch out what you wish for.”
The book was about trucks - of course. It was just my cup of tea; it had pop-up pages as well as opportunities for funny voices and sound effects. When we were done, Parker looked at me wide-eyed and said “That was great! Whose Gramma are you?”
PJ heads off to college on a baseball/academic scholarship this fall. I couldn’t get back for his graduation but sent a gift and a card with copies of some of the shots of me reading to him over the years. In his note acknowledging the gift, he thanked me for reading to him, saying “I will think of you when I hopefully read as enthusiastically as you did to my own kids some day.”
Kids need to be read to, and to read! My tragically neglected granddaughter could neither read nor write when she started first grade. When she came to us at almost 8, she was still so far behind. Today, as a teenage girl of 13, she now tests at a junior or senior in high school or better in all subjects with progress each year. My kids offered her love, consistency and a safe environment, but as the saying goes, the greatest of these is love.
@Hack mechanic 11:05AM: yes it’s an example of a very specific clue for a very general answer. Slowed me down trying to figure out how to work HF in there in some way. For those who don’t know about this (probably most people here) it’s a good clue, inferrable.
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