Friday, June 19, 2026

Sudden reversal of fortune, in literature / FRI 6-19-26 / Twin city? / Companion of Ash and Misty in Pokémon anime / Willie ___, first Black player in the N.H.L. / Cut of beef used in Santa Maria-style barbecue / Chinese revolutionary Sun ___ / Cold one enjoyed during a hot wash / Guitarist who played the first-ever rock concert at the Sistine Chapel / Terrorizer of Amity Island, in a 1975 blockbuster film / Mushroom named for its resemblance to a body part

Constructor: Jack Hatchett

Relative difficulty: Challenging

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: PERIPETEIA (10D: Sudden reversal of fortune, in literature) —
Peripeteia (/ˌpɛrəpɪˈt.ə/, peripety, alternative Latin form: Peripetīa, ultimately from Greek: περιπέτεια) is a reversal of circumstances, or turning point, within a work of literature. // Aristotle, in his Poetics, defines peripeteia as "a change by which the action veers round to its opposite, subject always to our rule of probability or necessity." According to Aristotle, peripeteia, along with discovery, is the most effective when it comes to drama, particularly in a tragedy. He wrote that "The finest form of Discovery is one attended by Peripeteia, like that which goes with the Discovery in Oedipus...". (wikipedia)
• • •

Yeesh, what day is it? I thought it was Friday [checks date on computer screen] Ah, I see it is Friday. Huh. Well, this one was harder than most recent Saturdays for me, so I don't know what the heck was going on. Maybe just a wavelength thing. And yet ... I don't know. So many things in this puzzle seem legitimately tough, or toughly clued. We can start with PERIPETEIA, a word that I, a teacher of "literature," have never used in my decades-long career. A word I never hear. A word that really, really, really could've used "Aristotle" somewhere in its clue (the term comes explicitly from Aristotle's Poetics and relates specifically to Aristotle's ideas about tragedy). If you'd just said "per Aristotle," then at least I might've known we were looking for a Greek word. But I was looking for a much more ordinary word, certainly one I might have come across many times in my life, whether it relates to my own teaching or not. But no. This feels like a wordlist word. Something your software suggests, and that works and so you go with it. Unless I have gone completely through the looking glass, it's not an everyday word, or even an every other day word for most people. PERIPETEIA created all kinds of problems, because it made it harder to see that damned mushroom, whose name I've heard of but totally forgot, and harder to get THE, which I had as "AHA!" (?) (32A: Off-grid connection?). I knew the French director was RENÉ Clair, but -HE seemed impossible for the clue. It wasn't til very late in the game, when THE seemed undeniable, that I understood its clue. "Off THE grid." THE is the "connection" between "off" and "grid." Sigh. Good one. You got me. You got me, PERIPETEIA, you got me, WOOD EAR, you got me THE. THE! Upended by a definite article. Not my finest hour.


But that wasn't my only trouble spot. I dropped THAW and "I'M UP" and IRE in right away in the NW and still couldn't see TRITIP (I kept wanting some kind of STRIP) (1A: Cut of beef used in Santa Maria-style barbecue), and W-P- looked impossible (despite WEPT being very very possible), and as for parsing HOME-RUN TROT, forget it, not with that clue (13A: Field trip?). Eventually had the TROT part and still was like "how many TROTs are there? There's TURKEY TROT, and ... ???" The worst thing up there, though, in terms of difficulty, was ROME. I was done with the puzzle and still had no idea how ROME was a [Twin city?]. I actually googled [Rome twin] and the results gave me my one real "D'oh!" moment of the day: ROME was (legendarily) founded by twins, specifically Romulus and Remus. At least I assume that's what that clue is after. If it's not, well then I'm still in the dark. 


The difficulty continued down below, with SHOWER BEER, a thing I've never heard of and could not parse, even after I had SHOWER B- (47A: Cold one enjoyed during a hot wash). Then there was the laughable clue on BROCK (45A: Companion of Ash and Misty in Pokémon anime). This could've been any five letters of the alphabet. The idea that my knowledge of the Pokéverse has to go this deep is absurd. Human beings have the name BROCK. Lou BROCK was a Hall-of-Fame baseball player, for instance (6x All Star, 8x stolen bases leader, 3,000+ career hits). But no, we get some random Pokémon character. OK. That SE corner also had the very toughly clued BANK SHOT (35D: What might go off the rails?) (the "rails" are the edges of a pool table). Then there was the end. The very end. The last square. O'REE, LOL, no hope. I know that that name has been in the puzzle before, and I've said "no hope" before, but what can I say, here we are again.* I was staring down ORE- and had already left that last vowel in Sun YAT-S-N blank because I wasn't 100% sure (60A: Chinese revolutionary Sun ___). And so after all that struggle, I found myself hurtling toward Natick—a gaping vowel hole at the intersection of two proper nouns of limited fame. Now before you squawk about Sun YAT-SEN being legitimately famous, I know, I agree, I kinda sorta remember his name from some bygone World History class. He's a major historical figure. But that second vowel, yeesh. Dicey. I said his name in my head and it really felt like "SEN," and O'REE rang a faint bell, so I went with it (51D: Willie ___, first Black player in the N.H.L.). And was rewarded with the "Congratulations" message. A hard-earned victory. A Saturday victory. Or else I'm just off my game and everything in this puzzle is normal Friday fare, which is absolutely possible. Sometimes you just hit a wavelength snag and down you go ...


I enjoyed the challenge more than anything today, despite the fact that it was completely unexpected and maybe excessive for a Friday. HOME RUN TROT over AMUSE-BOUCHE is a nice combo, and FISH 'N' CHIPS crossing PUB FARE worked nicely as well. I like baseball, I like eating, this is good. This almost makes up for the Pokémon. I was lucky that the names today were familiar (well, besides O'REE and BROCK, that is). Not just THOMAS PAINE, but the pop culture names as well: JOHN WOO is famous for his '90s Hong Kong "gun ballet" movies (Gun fu—put that in your puzzle and smoke it!) (8D: Director of "Face/Off" and "Mission: Impossible II"). THE EDGE is the lead guitarist for U2 (37D: Guitarist who played the first-ever rock concert at the Sistine Chapel). Condolences to everyone wondering who this Mr. THEEDGE was (The THEEDGE! Sounds Seussian!). THE EDGE is featured in the recent ENO documentary, which I watched just two days ago. That is, he was in the version I saw—"The film uses a computer program to select footage and edit the film so that a different version is shown each time it is screened" (wikipedia). ENO co-produced U2's The Unforgettable Fire, and there's footage of all of them writing / recording "Pride (In The Name of Love)," which is pretty remarkable. I guess the big news here for crossword lovers is ... there's an ENO documentary. One iteration is currently playing on The Criterion Channel. Here's your chance to learn all about that guy who's been dancing around your crossword puzzles all these years. He's a fascinating figure. 


Bullets:
  • 54A: "That sounds brave ... but very stupid!" ("DON'T BE A HERO") — really resent the "but very stupid!" part of this clue. It's one thing for a venture to be too risky, and quite another for it to be downright "stupid." Was this clue written after a SHOWER BEER? It sounds like it.
  • 57A: One concerned with transparency in the workplace? (GLASS BLOWER) — this wasn't hard, but it felt ... only minimally accurate. So much blown glass is not, in fact, transparent.
  • 36A: Skater who lit the Olympic cauldron in 1998 (ITO) — Midori ITO, Japanese figure skater who lit the Olympic cauldron at the 1998 winter games in Nagano, Japan. I saw "skater," had the terminal "O," and wrote in ... ONO. I corrected this mistake quickly, but it was still a stupid mistake. First of all, his name is Apolo OHNO (like the exclamation!). Second, OHNO did not win his first Olympic medals until 2002. 
  • 33A: Former attorney general Bill (BARR) — between this guy and the idea of a military parade going through an ARCH (such as the one the current president is hoping to build, in honor of himself, I presume), I think this puzzle could've made better cluing choices. Less repulsive cluing choices.
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*I was wrong: I've never seen O'REE in the NYTXW before. Today is the first time O'REE has appeared in sixty years! Weird. I know I've seen his name in at least one puzzle before ... just not the NYTXW, I guess.  

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116 comments:

  1. [Note: wrote this before OFL posted, so yes, I now know we said some of the same things. I think that's a good sign for me : ) ]. 19:08, so medium for me. But man, got through the top half and all I had was NOIR, HEM, and THE….. but got down to the bottom, and BETS, REBS, ALA and then some kind of BEER and the GLASSBLOWER got me going….. then it was just hack, hack, hack. Should have gotten DROPSAHINT right away, thought of it but somehow miscounted the letters and thought it wouldn’t fit. Saw square #8 and thought it would be a Natick, name crossing name, but once you get _OHN, it kinda has to be a J there. Loved all the long answers, especially AMUSEBOUCHE right on top of FISHNCHIPS, and GLASSBLOWER and DROPSAHINT. Learned PERIPATEIA today. Scratched my head for a good 5 minutes about why Rome was a Twin city…. Almost looked that up, but then remembered Romulus and Remus…. Mystery solved! Thanks for a great puzzle, Jack!

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  2. Anonymous6:16 AM

    I’ve heard of PERIPATETIC but not Peripateia.

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    1. Anonymous7:48 AM

      same

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    2. Anonymous10:06 AM

      ive heard of amnesic but not amnesia, i think?

      Delete
  3. Sweet late week puzzle solved on the train out to Shinnecock. Agree with the big guy that it brought the heat - he covers most of the tough stuff. I needed full crosses and a leap of faith for PERIPETEIA and AMUSE BOUCHE.

    Slobberbone

    I recently saw a food network episode where they were in Napa and grilling TRI TIP - thankfully that went right in. Loved HOME RUN TROT, OH CMON NOW and DON’T BE A HERO. Usually not a fan of complete proper names in a grid but I’ll give THOMAS PAINE a pass - the quote was worth it.

    Sublime with ROME

    I can attest to the greatness of SHOWER BEERs - the only issue is I don’t like to drink alone.

    Fats

    Highly enjoyable Friday morning solve.

    AJA

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    Replies
    1. Nice take on the shower beer!:)

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  4. Medium. Proper Friday difficulty. One of the odd days when I had less trouble than OFL. Enjoyed it.
    * * * * _

    Overwrites:
    I had 13A starting H_M_R... and thought the "Field trip" might involve HuMoR(something). But no, it was HOME RUN TROT.
    Started to type in diagnoses at 4D, but was surprised when it didn't fit (TESTS FOR).
    My 49A word with ball or board was base before it was SNOW, my favorite mistake of the day.
    At 34A my short cut was a riB (thinking short ribs) before it was a BOB.
    I had LAB filled in before I read the 53A clue, "Spot for a flask," but if I had read the clue first I'd have confidently put in HIP.
    For brave but stupid at 54A I had DON'T BE A fool before I realized it was HERO.

    WOEs:
    I needed every cross for AJA Wilson at 7A, but I got WNBA at 27D from that so I'm not totally women's basketball illiterate.
    Didn't remember director JOHN WOO (8D) at all. Had to get him mostly from crosses.
    What language is PERIPETEIA (10D)? Certainly not one that I'm familiar with. Oh. It's Greek. Thanks, @Rex!
    Didn't know RENE Clair at 28D, but guessed at RENE as the most likely four-letter French name.
    Only vaguely knew THE EDGE at 37D. Needed almost every cross.
    Pokémon BROCK at 45A.
    Is SHOWER BEER (47A) a thing? It became obvious pretty quickly but ... really?
    Hockey player Willie OREE (sorry, O'REE) at 51D.

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    1. Hands up for hip before LAB. I put it in..... had to remove it later. base would be a totally legit answer instead of SNOW there. nice one. I also had fool before HERO. Agree with the **** rating.

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    2. I had a similar solve! Rare that I find a puzzle easier than Rex, given that we are almost exactly the same age and are both from the Northeast, so have a lot of the same cultural references in common. It took me a while to get some traction with this one, but once I did it was enjoyable. I had PUB FOOD instead of PUB FARE for a bit, but that was the only cross-out. Most of the names I had to get from crosses, but that's what I get for having very little sports knowledge!

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    3. Also felt very confident of hip. Have owned many hip flasks. Went for lept before wept as well despite spelling issue.

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    4. Anonymous10:11 AM

      Same for me on both

      Delete
  5. This puzzle was fine, easy even for a Friday — and I’m solving jet-lagged as all get out, having just arrived yesterday in Berlin from NYC.

    And yet, I had to run the alphabet on the OREE/YATSEN cross. A classic NATICK.

    Diligent crossword construction would not allow such a cross to occur.

    And diligent crossword editorship would not allow such a cross to occur.

    I’m not angry. Just disappointed.

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    1. Clearly Naticks are in the eye of the beholder. For me, YAT-SEN was a gimme and quite possibly neither the constructor nor the editors thought it would be problematic.

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    2. Anonymous8:41 AM

      The fact that you personally knew one of the names is never, ever the point with Naticks. I knew YAT-SEN but still recognize that that cross is Terrible because it happens on a vowel, with a much more obscure proper noun.

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    3. Anonymous9:02 AM

      Came here to post the same complaint. OREE / YATSEN crossing is an awful crossing / natick?

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    4. Forgive me, but to call YAT-SEN obscure is the height of provincialism

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    5. Anonymous9:23 AM

      “Height of provincialism” do you even hear yourself? Who talks like that? Embarrassing.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous10:15 AM

      Greetings fellow anonymous posters!

      To Anonymous 3: This blog is nothing if not the *epicenter* of elitism on the Internet. Embrace it. LOVE IT.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous12:59 PM

      Michael, it's clear that the first Anonymous is calling O' Ree obscure, not Yat-sen.

      Delete
    8. Anonymous1:30 PM

      I was in middle school when Nixon went to China, and our history teacher (very good one) took the opportunity to give us a week of Chinese history . Still remember discussion of Sun Yat Sen, the Japanese invasions, Chiang Kai Shek, and Mao . Remember an unusual moment of stunned silence (13 yr olds are noisy) when the teacher told us how many Chinese starved to death in the '60s . I can't imagine understanding world events now without knowing at least the basics of 19th and 20th century China., just like knowing US history

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  6. Bob Mills6:33 AM

    Glad Rex found it challenging. Felt like a Saturday to me. Needed cheats to get TRITIP and JOHNWOO, and lucky guesswork came up with AMUSEBOUCHE. I suppose "certain canine" for TUSK refers to an elephant's tooth; this was typical of the evasive cluing throughout.

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  7. OREE crossing YATSEN is some major league natick material. Other than that I didn’t have the wavelength issue as OFL.

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    Replies
    1. Lisa B7:33 AM

      @elstudhombre 6:40 am I was just in Taiwan at the Sun Yat Sen Memorial in Taipei, Taiwan so it was easy for me. That's what is so cool about Xwords. Sometimes life experience gives you an answer. They worship that guy in Taiwan. My son lives there now for 4 years.

      Delete
  8. One of the pleasures of reading this blog is a day like today when I can have it professionally confirmed that the puzzle was in fact quite hard. Glad to have THE explained—that one I couldn’t understand even after it was filled in (I did make sense of ROME on my own, but still think it’s a bit too much of a stretch). Glad all you long-time solvers out there got your weekend workout!

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    1. Anonymous10:27 AM

      Same! I felt so validated this morning lol

      Delete
  9. Anonymous7:01 AM

    Brock - the Pokémon one - he was another trainer like Ash and Misty. He adventured with them. Not an actual Pokémon.

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    1. Anonymous8:11 AM

      Yes, sadly for me as a millennial, I knew that one right away from the TV show as a kid. I suspect there are a bunch of us in this boat.

      Delete
  10. What do I want on Friday, in a nutshell? Sparkling answers, sparkling clues, tough-but-fair challenge. And here it is, a clinic on what a Friday should be.

    And on a debut!

    Colorful answers, such as AMUSE BOUCHE, DON’T BE A HERO, HOME RUN TROT, COME ON NOW. Names-to-know answers, such as AJA Wilson and JOHN WOO. All are NYT answer debuts, BTW, 11 in the box today, and all worthy. Talk about spark!

    So many knock-me-out-good clues. Some deliciously misleading, such as [Common export] for PDF. Some deliciously vague, such as [Certain canine] for TUSK. And some delicious playful, such as [What might go off the rails] for BANK SHOT.

    Tricky cluing and no-knows -- a riddle-fest for my brain. Sometimes such puzzles are wearying, filled with tough clues that yield “Oh, I see.” But the best, like today's, have many tough clues that yield, “Hah! Good one!” The kind my brain lives for.

    Just a revelation, Jack Hatchett, a name I’m remembering. Please come around with more, and soon. Thank you for a sterling outing today!

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  11. Hey All !
    SHOWER BEER, eh? You can't wait to drink a beer until after you've showered? Sounds like an issue to me. Where would you put it as to not get water and/or soap in it?

    Had OREE as OREO, because, why not? WORN was WORe, so my Chinese revolutionary was Sun YATSoe. That so? Yatsoe.

    Also a Y for the I cross of THOMAS PAINE/PERIPETEIAwhatever. So a three-letter, five word FWE. Not bad for a tough FriPuz.

    Lots of different cluing stuff happening today. Had to twerk the ole brain a bit to get to into the rhythm of the clues. Nice to see the full OH COME ON NOW. Reminds me of the court scene in Liar Liar, when Jim Carey's character yells that out when the recorded sex tape plays. (He leaves off the NOW, though.)

    A good, crunchy, brain exercising FriPuz. Felt good to finish, even with the errors.

    Hope y'all have a great Friday!

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    2. O'Ree as Oreo for the first black hockey player is as racist a comment as they come. Please reconsider bringing such remarks out of your own consciousness to revolt others.

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    3. Anonymous8:57 AM

      Absurd comment. The OREO mistake is reasonable. Obviously nothing racial intended. But you knew that. 👎🏼

      Delete
    4. Anonymous10:17 AM

      @melle, give it a rest.

      Delete
    5. @melle How...how are Oreos inherently racist?

      "Something something something black...something something something white...something something something racism"

      This whole "you're racist, you just don't know it yet, let me inform you why" movement is just absurd.

      Delete
  12. Anonymous7:29 AM

    It seems more and more like the crossword includes completely made-up phrases and words. I have never heard of a SHOWER BEER in my life. Fish and chips are spelled with the full word AND not 'N'. It isn't a trade name. WTF?

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    1. That 'N hit me as well. I'm used to seeing it in America (as in IN 'N OUT from the other day), not so much in Britain. And this is the first time I'm hearing about these "SHOWER BEERs".

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    2. Anonymous1:30 PM

      I’m an elder millennial, and “shower beer” is actually one of the first clues in the puzzle that I got. Found this a very challenging solve overall, though — knew almost none of the proper names, including the Pokémon trainer!

      Delete
  13. Lisa B7:30 AM

    OH COME ON NOW! I feel better that Rex got stuck on crossing of THE and the PERIPETEIA or however you spell it.
    I was running the alphabet and finally broke my rule and looked it up, now I hate myself for not trying the T!!!
    Oh and bad memories of my alcoholic brother bringing 3 beers into the shower with him- that was years ago and I just found out today that's it actually a thing? People do this and call it that?
    Boo he died from drinking at Age 62. Just saying don't drink in the shower people!
    If you do and get caught " Better Call Saul"

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    Replies
    1. Lisa, I'm so sorry. Crosswords often evoke pleasant, nostalgic memories; how awful for it to call up such a sad one.

      Delete
  14. Damfino7:33 AM

    Wonderfully devilish Friday puzzle, and a debut to boot! Struggled like mad and collapsed over the finish line. Especially liked what I assume was intentional mislead on 49-A and 53-A, where ROOM and HIP were my first answers (for quite some time). Only nit for me is that the clue for GLASSBLOWER doesn't really work, so it clanks instead. That's the kind of answer that looks neat and original when you make a puzzle but not when you try to write a nice clue for it. I would have gone with "Occupation where swallowing is dangerous"

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  15. I was about to give up on this one with issues in SE and NW. But SE came when I changed room to snow. And then finally I remembered Amuse bouche and it came together. 25 minutes.

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  16. This is the kind of puzzle satisfying to long-time solvers who through experience learned the tricks and ways of thinking that make such grids gettable and satisfying.

    We have lots of new solvers who were brought in through easier puzzles, including easier end-of-week puzzles, and who haven’t yet developed the chops needed to experience the joys of solving puzzles such as these.

    How to bring these new solvers along, editors? Keep the end-of-week puzzles just as challenging as today’s. The only way to develop the skills needed is through practice.

    Give these new solvers great satisfaction earlier in the week through easier puzzles that whet their appetite for more, giving hints on what challenges/pleasures lie ahead, but keep these end-of-week puzzles tough.

    I hope that is the direction you’re taking with puzzles like today’s, tough weekend puzzles that were once the rule. You may lose a few solvers, but those who stick it out will stay with you forever.

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  17. Anonymous7:48 AM

    I loved the clever clue for ROME! For me, much fairer than some of the popular culture names.

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  18. Anonymous8:01 AM

    A while since I’ve ranted on this, but…

    I absolutely do not believe it’s “cheating” to look up obscure references in clues. No doubt the constructors relied on some kind of database to create most of these in the first place. Some of today’s were almost laughable in their likely unfamiliarity for most solvers.

    I seriously doubt that many regular x-worders are motivated by a desire to flex their trivia muscles (although I admit it can feel good to dredge up a distant memory when such exists in one’s mind—YAT SEN in this grid, for example). But looking up answers that can easily be googled IMO is just a normal way to get better positioned to deal with the clues that invoke clever wordplay—like today’s for THE and BANK SHOT—for which some crosses are usually a necessary foothold.

    webwinger

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    1. Anonymous8:14 AM

      You should solve however you want, but if it’s cheating under tournament conditions, then it’s cheating. If you wanna cheat, no one is going to care. Or know! Go ahead. But I would not recommend it to people trying to get better. Patience makes a better solver.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:32 AM

      Wow. That is one wicked case of justification for cheating.

      Delete
  19. Anonymous8:05 AM

    Good puzzle. Challenging like a Friday should be. Fish & Chips is NOT pub food though. Never seen F&C in a British pub. You eat fish & chips at a 'chippy' not at a boozer.

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    Replies
    1. That is simply not my experience at all. They serve a wide variety of dishes at the British pubs I've been to.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:15 AM

      Fish and chips are offered at most pubs I've patronized in the UK and Ireland. You're simply mistaken.

      Delete
  20. Donald Barclay8:09 AM

    I have a graduate degree in English from the leading research university in Alameda County, CA. I have never heard or read the word peripateia in my life. Rex's confession makes me feel less like an imposter.

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  21. Anonymous8:13 AM

    Beyond challenging. Impossible. No 🎈for me.

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  22. Tough one. Hard to find points of entry. Was grateful for fishnchips. Only Pokémon name I’ve ever known is Pikachu.

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  23. Anonymous8:20 AM

    To those who are baffled by the SHOWER BEER, don't knock it till you've tried it. Not during your morning shower, but after a hard days work in the sun. Very refreshing

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:29 AM

      I guess this is what the world is coming to. Unfortunate and glad I’d never heard the term before. As if people need even more excuses to drink…

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:03 PM

      My wife drinks shower coffee in the morning.

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    3. Well, there is that advice to install a bar in your shower…

      Delete
  24. EasyEd8:22 AM

    Am glad Rex respected this puzzle. I think @Damfino summarized it best: “devilish”. On my first pass I had only three fill-ins: IMUP, IRE, and YATSEN. After looking up BROCK, filled in the South, but had to Google again for TRITIP to get moving in the North. Both complain that this was tough trivia contest, but in the end was OK with having to look up a couple of outliers like OREE to eventually get to the fun longer answers.

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  25. hip -> Lip -> LAp -> LAB -> lol

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  26. DAVinHOP8:30 AM

    Challenging Friday, all right. And Rex nailed it with "sometimes you just hit a wavelength snag".

    A lot of our snags were easy for him and vice versa. As a Bruins fan I knew Willie O'Ree, and thought he'd be featured as the WOTD. Anyone wanting a "feel good" story should google his name.

    Knew Sun Yat-Sen, though not personally, and apparently saw HOME RUN TROT (great "?" clue) before Rex.

    But my wife gets a star on her forehead for getting ROME. When I read her that Rex "actually googled [Rome twin]" she was ecstatic ("I got one he didn't know!!). My HS Latin didn't help me; when she said the answer, I asked "huh?". Another great "?" clue.

    Maybe too many "WTF?"s to warrant a higher rating? TRITIP, PERIPETEIA, SHOWER BEER (inferable at least, though I'm not taking a Bud Light into the bath with me anytime soon... or in the case of that product, ever), and BROCK (as clued). All Yikes! But a rewarding Friday challenge.

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  27. Anonymous8:31 AM

    I kept thinking: it can’t be SHOWER BEER, it can’t be SHOWER BEER….

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  28. Anonymous8:32 AM

    Obscure trivia and Hebrew do not make for a good time.

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  29. Anonymous8:38 AM

    If you haven’t had a shower beer, have one this summer. Best enjoyed after a day at the beach when you need to just rinse off. Bonus points for an outdoor shower.

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    1. Anonymous10:14 AM

      they are also enjoyed when sitting two rows lower than a group of english world cup fans immediately after another harry kane goal.

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    2. @Anon 10:14 am, that's a beer shower, not a SHOWER BEER. But good one!

      Delete
  30. I like to start with 1-A and go down the across answers until I get one. Today, I was drawing blanks until 17-A, where the delightful AMUSE-BOUCHE fit, I took a chance, and it worked out. That happened with several other answers--BANK SHOT, GLASSBLOWER (after ALAzier proved too short), and eventually HOME RUN TROT. (At an earlier point I confused Sally Field with Sally Ride, and wanted something like "earth orbit.") I stared and stared at "Twin city?" and seriously wondered if it could be SP MN, when ROME popped into my head. The whole experience was tough but enjoyable. I want to defend GLASSBLOWER's clue, on two bases. First, it's a clue, not a definition; and second said artist is "concerned with" transparency, along with color, shape, thickness, and many other things.

    That said, I had to look up THE EDGE and PERIPATEIA. I had PERIPAT_IA and still had no idea. I was happy to learn it, though--back in my middle ages I started to find all those Greek words for rhetorical and literary devices fascinating, and now I know another one.

    Having THE in the grid twice was so weird I'm willing to forgive it.

    I was a Maoist in my youth, so Sun YAT-SEN was a gimme. BROCK, less so. I thought I would have to look it up, but got it from the crosses. And I never saw O'REE.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:43 AM

      A Maoist?!!!! Really? Why on Earth?

      Delete
  31. Some of the longer stuff wasn’t bad, although the cluing seemed intentionally deceptive rather than “witty”. I didn’t bother banging my head against the wall and just looked up the “I need to add esoteric propers to get to the targeted level of difficulty” stuff like YATSEN, Pokémon, and the author referenced in the clue in such small font that I didn’t even bother reading it.

    So I basically just turned this into a Wednesday-level solve which made it somewhat palatable (sort of like the mushy peas which frequently accompany FISH and CHIPS when you are in the mood for some actual PUB FARE).

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  32. Anonymous8:56 AM

    Nine "?" clues got mildly annoying...

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  33. Anonymous9:03 AM

    Amazed by the prophet who haven’t heard of shower beer. While I haven’t done it, I’ve seen it referred to dozens of times.

    Really happy I knew about Willie O’Ree. One of the few times Boston sports have been ahead of the curve from a racial discrimination perspective.

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  34. Anonymous9:03 AM

    Hated the puzzle but think Rex should have made Willie O’Ree - not PERIwhatever - the featured word.

    Grandson of slaves who made it to Canada via the Underground Railroad, O’Ree made it in Boston, of all racially-accepting places, joining the Bruins in the late ‘50s.

    Hall of Gamer still alive at 90. Here’s to Willie’s debuts in the NHL 70 years ago and NYTXW today…

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Walk Away Renee11:55 AM

      Happy Juneteenth, Mr. O’Ree!

      Delete
    2. DAVinHOP12:01 PM

      To both @Anon 9/03s:

      I get your message about Boston's racial history, sports division. But it's certainly had some moments of leadership. in addition to Willie O'Ree as noted, there's the Celtics who had the first all-Black starting five (won the championship, BTW) and Black head coach (an assistant-less player-coach!, also a championship-winner).

      But then there's the Red Sox and their racist owner who passed on signing (among others) Willie Mays, and became the last MLB team to have a Black player. No championships during that ownership era.

      So depending on your conclusion, you can find a suitable narrative from Boston's racial history, non-sports as well.

      Delete
  35. I guess I'm in a contemplative mood after our new puppy got me up at 3:50 am. Bill BARR and ARCH got me thinking about distasteful things in the crossword. Nothing really bothers me about virtually anything that gets into a NYTXW. But sometimes I find myself down deep rabbit holes. So, with apologies to both Rodger's and Hammerstein:

    My Least Favorite Things

    ICE agents kicking down doors of my neighbors
    Oligarchs stealing the fruits of my labors
    People in MAGA hats worshipping kings
    These are a few of my least favorite things

    Not having health care to cure our diseases
    Low IQ grifter who does what he pleases
    Cheesy fake fighting in White House lawn rings
    These are a few of my least favorite things

    When a war's launched
    Between golf swings
    When the Court's gone mad
    I simply remember my least favorite things
    And then I sure feel real bad

    I found this much easier than @Rex did, but still a solid Friday-appropriate puzzle. Really a nice debut, Jack. I'm looking forward to future Hatchett jobs.

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    Replies
    1. Wow. Made my morning. Thx!

      Delete
    2. Bravo and bravissimo.

      Delete
    3. This is fantastic!!!

      Delete
    4. Anonymous12:04 PM

      Least Favorite Things is now one of my MOST FAVORITE THINGS!!!

      Delete
    5. Anonymous12:08 PM

      Had to sing it to my wife.

      Delete
    6. DAVinHOP1:46 PM

      Fantastic, Egs.

      Only downside is sad but...true.

      Delete
  36. Willie O'Ree "had a cup of coffee" (as hockey fans say) with the Bruins in 1961. The next Black NHL player was not until the 1970s. The NHL: is a remarkably backward institution; racist taunts are still a semi-regular feature of games.

    But it is still the Beautiful Game.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:26 AM

      Nope. That’s football / soccer. Famously ⚽️

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:41 AM

      And cup of coffee comes from baseballl.
      So, twice wrong.

      Delete
  37. Anonymous9:30 AM

    Always somewhat satisfying to finish with an "easy medium" time and see Rex rate a puzzle challenging. Then again I didn't even need the BR- to fill in BROCK, and missed the various other stumbles that consumed OFL. Felt like a pretty normal Friday to me, although it's definitely more difficult than many have been lately, I think pretty in line with historical norms.

    Less whoosh for sure, I'll grant that.

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  38. After a long hot bike ride, nothing beats a beer on the train home, or that shower to rinse off the crusted salt sweat. I may need to consider combining these thrills now. Thanks SHOWERBEER - I'll see if I can throw in a FISHNCHIPS to refuel while I'm at it.

    Incidental to RPs comments, the Corning Museum of Glass in his neck of the woods is one of my favorite museums featuring all the beautiful and technical uses. Great gift shop also!!

    I ran the vowels at ORE_ x YATS_N, and didn't get the happy music. Turned out I had another vowel problem at THOMASPAyNE:(

    I liked this puzzle a lot: while harder than most Fridays here, never stuck completely and some fun or tough clues that turned out to be fair.

    I had a song with peripatetic rattling around and just had to change the end. Thanks google for reminding me it was a G&S I had played, Patience:

    Grosvenor:
    Peripatetic lover,
    he lived to learn,
    By no endeavour
    Can magnet ever
    Attract a Silver Churn!

    Maidens:
    While this magnetic,
    Peripatetic
    Lover, he lived to learn,
    By no endeavour
    Can magnet ever
    Attract a Silver Churn!

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:03 AM

      I’ll second the praise for the Corning Museum. It’s world class.

      Delete
  39. Rachel9:48 AM

    Boy was this a hard one! I got the "glass" part of "glassblower" and really wanted it to be glass cleaner or something conveying making glass clean. The answer for that clue really should have been "window washer" or something.

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  40. Happy to see that some other Bruins fans knew Willie OREE, but for a while there I was so proud that I was the only one. Oh well. My last letter in today was the T of THE and that Greek thing, which when I saw the OffTHEgrid connection led to a face palm that probably rivalled OFL's. THEEDGE has been in the news as one of the performers at the opening of the Obama Library, so I had a good guess at that one. Wanted TRITIP right away but it was leading nowhere so that became one of the last things to fill in.

    A SHOWERBEER does not sound like a great idea to me, especially if you're drinking a draft. A good plate of FISHNCHIPS is one of the best things you can eat, so I liked seeing that. BROCK is Lou, the end. And JOHNWOO, I know you--but only from crosswords.

    I liked your Friday a lot, JH. Tough but fair, some wonderfully tricky clues, and learned some stuff. Congrats on the debut, and Just Hope you make lots more like this. Thanks for all the fun.

    PS0@Les S More from yesterday-Good stuff on the O in maneuver. I was associating it with French--"main"++"oeuvre" and taking it back to Latin is interesting. In Spanish the word for this kind of work is "obra" as in "obra de arte" and the maneuver equivalent is "maniobra". As you say, etymology is cool.


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  41. Anonymous10:02 AM

    BROCK was the first thing in a long while where my husband knew it without supporting letters (as did I) so maybe it's a Gen X nerd thing?

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  42. Anonymous10:13 AM

    Was definitely *pleasantly* surprised by the level of difficulty today…felt like a proper Friday of yore. Unusually my gripes are almost exactly the opposite of OFL’s. If a SHOWER BEER is a thing then it’s (rather disappointing) news to me and I never thought I’d see the day when OFL prioritized his dismay at the inclusion of a well-worn Greek term or a well-known philosopher over his disgust with unnecessary Pokémon cluing.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Google AI has this to say about SHOWER BEER: "Pro-Tips & Accessories - If you are tired of balancing your can on the soap dish, you can grab a suction-cup wall mount like the Original Shower Beer Holder on Amazon to keep your drink secure and at arm's reach."

    SHOWER BEER sounds like hair-of-the-dog to me, not the shower equivalent of a "bath wine".

    This played quite hard for me due to the unknown-to-me names. I actually left two square in the SW blank and just noticed it now (solving on paper). And then the SE with its O'REE crossing YAT SEN. Wrong there also.

    For a moment, with _HE____in place at 37D, I wondered if sHEila E played in the Sistine Chapel. But she's a percussionist, oops.

    Jack Hatchett, you got me good, thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  44. Alice Pollard10:29 AM

    This was a hard puzzle. I was not familiar with AMUSE BOUCHE, got that from the crosses. BROCK was tough I am not a Pokemon person outside of Pikachu. AJA I didnt know (can't they clue it as a Steely Dan album? lol) Even 1A TRITIP was tough, I had - - - TIP and took awhile to get it . JOHN WOO I almost got my son Sean out of bed to ask him about that one... lol. And ROME was clued as Twin City ?? ugh

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:13 PM

      In Rome last year, asked my wife about the "twin city" and she came up with Vatican City, a city within a city, then grokked the boys as more apt.

      Delete
    2. Anon 12:13. Odd. I've always thought of the Vatican not as a city but as a country within a city but, after checking Wikipedia, I see it can be both. They use the terms "country" and "city-state".

      Delete
  45. I'm sorry but I didn't like this puzzle at all. PERIPETEIA, ACROPHOBIC, BROCK, WOOD EAR?
    Where's my Friday puzzle?
    I did like AMUSE BOUCHE.
    Robyn W. is at the NYer this past Wednesday for those needing a Weintraub fix.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:44 PM

      Yes! Robyn pops up frequently there on Wednesdays, which is the NewYorker's day for intro level puzzles. They're known for having their toughest puzzle on Mondays- usually somewhere between a Wednesday and Friday level for this group

      Delete
  46. har. Welcome to no-know city, masked xword rodeo fans. At our house, we definitely agree with @RP's "Challenging" difficulty assessment.

    staff weeject pick: WOO. The puz not only had JOHN WOO, but then crossed it with WOO DEAR. Clearly the constructioneer is a powerful-big WOO fan.
    honrable mention to THE, on account of its sneaky clue, splatzed into that there Sea of Peripeteia.

    some fave stuff: DROPSAHINT & its clue. OHCOMEONNOW. DONTBEAHERO.
    ... and the primo clues for: ROME. GLASSBLOWER. BANKSHOT.

    Thanx for the feisty FriPuz hatchet(t) job, Mr. Hatchett dude. M&A did some much-above-average research, to solve the whole abuse-bouche. And congratz on yer Fri-Sky debut.
    And congratz to OREE, on his NYTPuz debut appearance.

    Masked & Anonymo3Us

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

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  47. Anonymous11:14 AM

    "What day is it?" you ask.
    It's Juneteenth.
    What a tribute to this important holiday! Not.
    Instead, a tribute to the unknown.

    ReplyDelete
  48. A very challenging Friday. I did not get a clean finish thanks to the PAINE/PERIPETEIA crossing. I went with a Y. A quick switch to an I got me the congrats but the damage was done. People drink while showering? Depressing.

    ReplyDelete
  49. Anonymous11:19 AM

    Tough (~110% of Friday average time), but I liked it overall. I felt like I spent twice as long on the bottom half as I did on the top.

    Most of the trouble spots people are raising were no problem for me today (TRI TIP, THE, ROME, and YAT-SEN [the guy led the Chinese revolution and was the first president of China!] all went in right away [as did TAPSHOE, although I didn't see complaints about that]). Had BASE (ball, board) before SNOW, and HIP (flask location) before LAB. The 'king' reference in the quote made me think exclusively of non-USA people, so THOMAS PAINE took a long time to come to me (and then gave me a huge D'OH moment when his name went in). 48D/59A went fine for me (I think both are common enough that most people should be fine, and haven't seen any complaints), but it did occur to me that crossing two words in the same foreign language is potential Natick territory.

    Anon 8:20 am nailed it: a shower beer is for when you're hot, sweaty, and dirty from working outside in the sun. I've had a few when called for [I agree it should not be a morning-shower thing, nor should three beers be involved]. To answer someone's question, I'm not sure what you'd do in a stall-type shower, but in an 'in-tub' shower, the front-right corner is the spot to put the bottle between swigs. No problems with soap/water/shampoo getting in it there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Also an after the beer-league hockey game thing. But cans, not bottles. And only 1, or maybe 2. You gotta drive home from the rink. Safety first.

      Delete
  50. I thought this one was a treat...with OH COME ON NOW + DON'T BE A HERO and then WHAT A SHAME (after they apparently went ahead anyway). And the pairs of ACROPHOBIA + PERIPETEIA and AMUSE BOUCHE +. SHOWER BEER. I thought someone might comment on the cross of JOHN WOO and WOODEAR: "Hon, who's that director again?" "WOO, DEAR." What a great debut!

    Do-overs: HOME RUN TRip, despite the clue; PUBFood, NOd. Help from college class on history of drama + still functioning long-term memory: PERIPETEIA.

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  51. Anonymous11:24 AM

    Got tri-tip right off the bat and amuse bouche right after that. Had a whole lot of trouble with 10 down even with most of the letters in place. Also put don’t be a fool instead of don’t be a hero, which messed things up down below for a bit

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  52. Medium-tough for me mostly because of PERIPETEIA. I also didn’t know AJA and BROCK…and SHOWER BEER was inferable but not familiar.

    I did know OREE.

    Costly erasure - Ann before AJA.

    Plenty of sparkle with some crunch, liked it.

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  53. Anonymous11:31 AM

    I hate it when knowledge works against you in a crossword clue. Thomas Paine was not a "political *philosopher*." "Pamphleteer," yes.

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  54. Damn, am I the only one who knew what PERIPETEIA was? After getting PER from the crosses, I clocked it instantly. Maybe that’s what I get from taking Greek literature classes in college!

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  55. Anonymous12:05 PM

    If you look up PERIPETEIA on this blog, two puzzles show up. One is today's, and the other is the "Infernal" Bob Klahn puzzle: https://rexwordpuzzle.blogspot.com/2007/12/saturday-dec-29-2007-bob-klahn.html

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  56. Anonymous12:16 PM

    When my son was in college, he and his roommate had a mini fridge in the bathroom stocked with beer. You could tell there were many shower beers, based on the number of steamed-off labels plastered on the shower wall. I don't know if they got their depisit back when they moved out.

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  57. Currently in grad school for playwriting, have read the Poetics more than once now…pretty sure I’ve never seen the word Peripeteia. I think my translation always terms it simply as “reversal”. Life long Pokemon fan here though, and my partner loves nothing more than the simple pleasure of a shower beer, so those were gimmies for me.

    ReplyDelete
  58. MetroGnome12:58 PM

    AMUSE BOUCHE? Really??!!

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  59. I'm not sure I would call a military parade going through an arch politically repulsive... It feels like a pretty typical occurance. My first thought was the annual Bastille Day parade through the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

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  60. Anonymous1:14 PM

    Disrespecting my man Brock, literally gym leader #1.

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  61. Wow, challenging yes. Some really great answers: HOME RUN TROT, AMUSE BOUCHE, WHAT A SHAME, DONT BE A HERO.

    But so many things I have not heard of: TRI TIP, AJA, PERIPATEIA, SHOWER BEER, WOOD EAR, BROCK, OREE. And OREE crossing YAT SEN gave me an error, even though I have been to the Sun Yat Sen gardens in Vancouver... I thought YAT SIN sounded right.

    BNAI crossing ELI, both clued by their Hebrew meaning... ouch!

    I actually worked with a GLASS BLOWER in my final year of physics major. I was building a helium neon laser. He was about 3 feet tall and had to climb on a stool to do his work.

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  62. As a lifelong voracious reader, I'll blame (and kick) myself for not knowing PERIPETEIA. Some of the other terms/names/foreign words, though (OREE [Sorry, not a hockey follower], TRITIP, BROCK, AMUISE BOUCHE [!]) utterly flummox'd me.

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  63. Still not giving the NYT any $, but this puzzle was constructed by an elite Ultimate player. If someone would be so kind as to email me a pdf of it, I'd be appreciative.

    Otherwise - Greetings and Salutations and I hope all is well in Rye, NY. I understand Rye has a marina.

    ReplyDelete