Acronymic weapon / FRI 7-10-26 / Suffix with caffe- / Relative of a bandeau / Wu Zetian of the Zhou dynasty, for one / Speculative musings / Smug know-it-all type / Branzino, by another name / Pescatarian steak option

Friday, July 10, 2026

Constructor: Willa Angel Chen Miller

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium

THEME: none 

Word of the Day: Wu Zetian (8D: Wu Zetian of the Zhou dynasty, for one = EMPRESS) —

Empress Wu (17 February 624 – 16 December 705), commonly known as Wu Zetian, personal name Wu Zhao, was the only undisputed female sovereign in the history of China. She had previously held power as the empress consort of Emperor Gaozong of the Tang dynasty from 660 to 683 and as empress dowager during the reigns of her sons, Emperors Zhongzong and Ruizong, between 683 and 690. She was the sole ruler of the self-styled Zhou dynasty from 690 to 705.

In her early life, Wu served as a concubine of Emperor Taizong. After his death, she married his successor, Emperor Gaozong, becoming empress in 655. Wu exercised substantial political influence even before her elevation and gradually came to dominate court affairs. After Gaozong suffered a debilitating stroke in 660, she effectively administered the empire on his behalf until his death in 683. Breaking with precedent, Wu then consolidated power and prevented her sons from ruling. In 690, she proclaimed the Zhou dynasty in place of the Tang and crowned herself emperor. [...] 

In her later years, her governance became increasingly autocratic and extravagant. She was removed from power in the Shenlong Coup, which abolished the Zhou dynasty and restored the Tang, and died a few months later. (wikipedia)
• • •

This seemed fine. This square racetrack format (interlocking gridspanners around the edges of the puzzle) is not uncommon in lateweek themeless puzzles, and it usually provides for some interesting answers, as well as a fair amount of whoooosh—and today was no different. Not sure the marquee answers were as killer as I'd've liked. I liked SPILLED THE BEANS, but "I CAN ONLY IMAGINE..." was the only one that really made me sit up and take notice. Actually FAN INTERFERENCE is pretty good too. So I guess that bottom stack of 15s was the one real highlight for me ... which is interesting, because it was also the one real lowlight. Certainly a lowlight in my own personal solving performance, but also a kind of ugly patch where fill and cluing were concerned. I'm talking about the entire lower middle section, everything due south of the "+" mark at the center of the grid. I had both long answers driven straight through that section and so expected to make short work of it, but ... oof, no. Total spinout. The first issue was that I wrote in TANK TOP instead of TUBE TOP for 51A: Relative of a bandeau, but even after I tested TUBE TOP, I was getting nowhere because of all the Downs. No way the one-word clue [On] was getting me to ENABLED. As for a 2005 viral video about Hobbits, are you ****ing serious? (42D: "___ Taking the Hobbits to Isengard" (viral video from 2005)). A 21-year-old "viral video"?? What was I doing in 2005? New marriage, new home, new dog, little kid. Viral videos were not on my radar. Nor was most popular culture, frankly. Anyway, I looked at the "---YR-" pattern at the end of this answer today and thought "what the hell kind of Elvish-language bullsh*t am I dealing with here?" To have the answer end up as a mere contraction, man, that was the disappointment of the day. You made me think about LOTR and "viral videos" ... just to get to THEY'RE? Buzzkill. Then there was the -IFS ending on 39D: Speculative musings (WHAT-IFS). I was assuming the answer was one word (one non-hyphenated word). Like MOTIFS, only ... longer. 


But wait, there's more (of me struggling in the south): HAHAS??? People actually call laughs "yuks" but they absolutely do not call them HAHAS, my god (45A: Yuks). Never would've considered HAHAS without that initial "H" and ... that was Not forthcoming because that clue on HUNT was impenetrable (45D: Proceed with a game plan). I call foul on that clue—it really, really needs a "?" (which I'm surprised the puzzle didn't use, given how liberally it was doling them out today). I guess when you HUNT you "plan" to get "game," but come on. If you're going to do tortured wordplay like "game plan," throw me a "?" at least. I wanted PUNT at one point, figuring the game plan involved football (where, unlike hunting, you may actually have a "game plan"). I don't know how long I got held up down there—maybe not that long, by the clock. But by comparison to every other section of the puzzle, I was absolutely mired down there.


Not much else to say about this one. I rolled my eyes at the idea of "-INE" as a "suffix" for "Caffe-" (6A: Suffix with caffe-). I'm gonna start pronouncing it "kah-fay-EEN!" in "honor" of this dumbass clue. Speaking of suffixes, and the -ass suffix in particular, the NYTXW's ASS Era continues today with WISEASS (39A: Smug know-it-all type). I'm neutral on the whole ASS thing. On the one hand, who cares, people say these words, they're not really profane, so ... shrug. On the other, there is such a thing as oversaturation. ASS-containing answers no longer have novelty on their side. They've been done. They're not that exciting. More of a shrug. So I guess I shrug either way—because I don't think it's a big deal and because I don't think it's that impressive. ASS away, as far as I care. I just wish this puzzle had found a way to bring WISEASS and SEA BASS closer together. Who wouldn't love a WISEASS SEA BASS? That's a winning puzzle mascot right there.


Bullets:
  • 1A: Acronymic weapon (TASER) — I forgot TASER was an acronym. I generally hate all things TASER (incl. the verb TASE) and wish the puzzle would stay away from that particular instrument of brutality, but those letters are so common, so useful, I understand why TASER and TASE and TASED keep coming back.
  • 4D: Things that come with waffles? (ERS) — when you waffle, you are indecisive, and you might utter a sound of hesitation, such as "er..." If you make several such utterances, then there you are: ERS. That wasn't so bad, was it?
  • 9D: Ginormous quantity (SCAD) — I will continue to maintain that there is no such thing as a singular SCAD. Only scads. See also "kudo" (sorry for not getting angry about that one yesterday like, as so many of you seem to have wanted)
  • 5D: Short Instagram video (REEL) — one reason I didn't get TASER more quickly is that I had CLIP here, which made my "Acronymic weapon" end in "C." "REELs" is the proprietary name for Instagram's short-form in-app video production format.
  • 36A: Creator of the Detroit Industry Murals (RIVERA) — say what you will about Geraldo, he's very talented.
[I know it's Diego]
  • 16D: Subjects of certain reviews at Untappd.com (ALES) — easy for me. I don't drink beer, but some of my beer-drinker friends will post their Untappd reviews to social media. It's an app for discovering beers and logging your own ... personal beer journey? I think? 
  • 51A: Relative of a bandeau (TUBE TOP) — a bandeau is essentially a strip of cloth that wraps around the breasts, like a strapless bikini top, but if Google Image Search is at all accurate, it looks like "bandeau" is being used to describe a garment that covers much more of the midriff than a bikini top would—strapless and tight-fitting, but more regular streetwear than beachwear.
  • 12D: Relatives of sloths (ANTEATERS) — huh. Did not know they were related, but it's true. Together they make up the order Pilosa.
  • 22D: Branzino, by another name (SEA BASS) — I thought Branzino was some kind of beef. Isn't there some special expensive beef dish that sounds like "Branzino"? Maybe I saw "branzino" on a menu and just assumed it was beef. Anyway, when this came up fish, I was mildly surprised. 
  • 29D: Not be square with (OWE) — yes, I too wrote in LIE here at first.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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12 comments:

Rick Sacra 6:18 AM  

70 worder, 6 grid spanners (all really nice), and a unique and interesting grid with lots of whoosh whoosh—perfect for a Friday! 17 minutes, but I spent the last 3 looking for a typo (I had typed BEAbERS by mistake). So really about 14:30 if I hadn’t had the typo. I guess that’s easy-medium for Friday. I always find the association of DEISM with the founding fathers interesting—yes, it’s certainly true, Franklin and Jefferson were solidly in that camp. But Washington, even though he used some flowery distant sounding language for God (like “Providence”) certainly felt God was involved in his life… he had too many bullets pass through his clothes (and not harm him). Adams too, I think, viewed God more personally. Interesting puzzle, Willa, thanks, 4* from me! We’ve got the BEAVERS and the ANTEATER separated by the LINEOFREASONING…. Which has a FENCE attached to it. EELS crossing SEABASS too. Lots of animals. 😊 great puzzle!!!

Andy Freude 6:20 AM  

My solving experience was similar to Rex’s today. I flew through the grid, thinking, “This is a mind-bogglingly easy puzzle,” until I hit that bottom central portion. That took forever to get straightened out, ending on the singularly unsatisfying THEY’RE. My verdict: easy-challenging.

Lewis 6:44 AM  

@rex -- "... say what you will about Geraldo, he's very talented." Hah!

SouthsideJohnny 6:55 AM  

All of the grid spanners were common, in the language phrases, which allowed for some momentum and flow between sections. I tackled everything NW of the diagonal first, took a minute to transition to the SE section and fortunately was able to get into a decent rhythm there as well.

It also occurred to me while I was solving that the clues for HUNT and THEYRE were suboptimal (is suboptimal a polite way of saying “stupid”?; if not feel free to swap in “stupid” and call me impolite). Anyway, I agree with Rex on those.

But all in all, to me the reasonable grid-spanners resulted in a very pleasant Friday morning solve.

Conrad 6:59 AM  


Easy-Medium. About what I've come to expect from a Friday themeless.
* * * _ _

Overwrites:
At 1A, lASER before TASER. I wasn't aware that the latter was acronymic; I thought it was just lASER with a T instead of an L.
gEe before EEK for "Jeepers!" at 20A.
I saw neckware and a four-letter plural and slammed in leiS before BOAS (24A).

One WOE, The viral video THEY'RE Taking the Hobbits... at 42D.

Melle 7:02 AM  

More TASERS and streakers!

Rick 7:05 AM  

a tale of two sections - top was easy, bottom quite hard (as Rex noted)

Sutsy 7:06 AM  

Great puzzle today. I thought it was one of the best Fridays in recent memory.

Son Volt 7:12 AM  

Beautiful grid - 6 intersecting spanners - what’s not to like? I tend to fall in line with the big guy however - this was fine for the most part but did lack the splash and sophistication of last Friday’s standout. I liked all the spanners.

I’m going to catch that horse if I can

Overall fill was fine - Rex summarizes nicely as always. ANTEATERS, WHAT IFS, SMEARED - all top notch. Didn’t love RENTAL CARS and the DAS - DES - RES etc shorts were clumsy. Not much pushback in this grid - smooth sailing in just a little more than one pass.

TONY’s Theme

Enjoyable Friday morning solve. Summer Friday for me - time to go catch a wave.

REEL Around the Fountain

Bob Mills 7:12 AM  

I agree with Rex that HUNT is unfairy clued. "Game plan" has never been applied to game animals. That's crosswordese in the extreme.

Needed one cheat in that bottom area, to get TUBETOP (I sensed bandeau was a garment, but I also had "tank top." Had "fan indifference" instead of FANINTERFERENCE, which took a while to undo. Finally, can someone explain how we arrive at ENABLED from "on"?

Glen Laker 7:19 AM  

Laughed out loud when Rex informed me that 42D was just the word “They’re”. I know nothing about LOTR, and after getting 42D strictly by crosses, I assumed that “Theyre” was a creature in the LOTR universe, and the video referenced in the clue was “Theyre, Taking the Hobbits to Isengard”

Lewis 7:22 AM  

Many lovely moments in the outing today. Such as:
• Reading a clue, having a short or long moment of confusion, then the sudden sweet joy/relief of cracking it. This happened with the “waffles”, “hot shot”, and “game” misdirects.
• My two favorite answers, and they cross – WHAT IFS and I CAN ONLY IMAGINE.
• A smile at the apt abutting of EEK and BOAS. I think I heard the EEK.

Five box-spanners combined with a low number of black squares (27), and yet a practically junk-free answer set, revealing a high level of constructing skill. That, combined with the lovely wordplay scattered throughout, made this puzzle a showcase of the art and science of creating crosswords.

Sufficient rub, plenty of fun – a most splendid outing. Thank you, Willa!

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