Gemstone with biological roots / WED 7-1-26 / Taiwanese president ___ Ing-wen / Rightmost compartment in a till
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Constructor: Jeffrey Martinovic
Relative difficulty: Medium (7:49 on a grid that's 16 squares across)
THEME: The Multiverse — Various references to the science fiction concept
Theme answers:
Hello everyone! I am here for a Malaika MWednesday, and I solved this while watching Mexico beat Ecuador. Have you guys been watching the games? Last week I watched the Mexico game at a Mexican bar. Today I watched the France game at a French bar. Tomorrow I will watch the Senegalese game at a Senegalese bar. I love New York City so much and I love the World Cup soooo much.
- [Theoretical world coexisting with ours ... as depicted in this puzzle] for PARALLEL UNIVERSE
- [Theoretical timeline where things play out a little differently ... as featured in this puzzle] for ALTERNATE REALITY
- Circled letters across the middle spell out WORMHOLE, and that entry connects two closed-off corners that are mirror images of each other
- E.g., TUBER at 1-Across is mirrored with REBUT at 10-Across
- ENOLA at 15-Across is mirrored with ALONE at 17-Across
- etc.
A West End revival based upon the 2019 production at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre began previews at the London Palladium in 2025. Jamie Lloyd directed, with Rachel Zegler, in her West End debut, as Eva.The production stages the number "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" on the exterior balcony of the Palladium (Argyll Street) and is broadcast to the theatre audience using cameras outside and a large screen inside the theatre; the large crowds on the street watching this balcony scene can be contextualized as part of Eva Peron's "spectacle and political theatre".
The musical is set to begin performances at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in 2027, with Zegler confirmed to reprise her role of Eva Perón.
• • •
| AND I LOVE MBAPPÉ SOOOOOOOOOOO MUCH |
I loved this puzzle, too! There was so much going on, yet it felt delightful, balanced, and impressive, rather than overstuffed or tortured. Oftentimes, creative themes like this seem to me like they'd be fit for a Sunday-sized grid, but it worked perfectly fine in this slightly oversized puzzle.
As I've said in the past, a marker for a good theme is if the theme entries would be sparkly even in a themeless puzzle. Both of the spanners are excellent, as well as being debuts (meaning that no NYT crossword has ever used those entries). I imagine it is easier to debut a sixteen-letter entry, given that ~85% of puzzles can't contain it. I liked how the entries ran "parallel" to each other, and how they served sort of as alternates to each other. I wondered if it would have been fun to give them identical clues, but that would have evoked more of a sense of deja vu. The point of parallel universes and alternate realities (as shown in the corners) is that things are not identical.
Let's talk about the corners: I did not even clock until three-quarters through that the corners are not connected to the rest of the grid! That's a big no-no in puzzles, but (like with all other Puzzle No-Nos) is welcome to be utilized in service of a relevant theme. There is a danger that a solver could get stuck in one of the corners, but the brilliant thing is that you sort of have two sets of clues to help you solve each entry! I paused on how to spell NEIL ("Neal"?) and checked my work not by looking at the down entry but by looking at the mirror entry, LIEN. I am so curious as to how the constructor put together those corners. I am extremely, almost embarrassingly reliant on constructing software while making puzzles and it seems like these would have had to be put together without it.
I'm curious what you guys thought of this one! While I love when people use the grid in a creative way, I also have a high bar for it, and this puzzle totally cleared it for me.
Bullets:
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Bullets:
- [___ Holmes, 2020s role for Millie Bobby Brown] for ENOLA — As a constructor, this Netflix series felt like a gift allowing a modern alternative to the standard [___ Gay]. Of the twenty-two times that this entry has appeared in the NYT since the movies came out, eighteen of them have referenced Sherlock's sister
- [1880s-'90s veep ___ P. Morton] for LEVI — On the heels of that.... we've got a politician from well over a century ago! I was so hesitant to fill this in because I couldn't imagine why they'd pick this dude over Strauss on a Wednesday puzzle.
- [Bed for fish?] for SUSHI RICE — Cute clue, and now I am massively craving a negitoro hand roll
- [Posh clothing material] for SATIN — My fave fashion expert Cora Harrington talks a lot about how satin is not the same as silk. Satin can be made of polyester, in which case it is likely cheap and not particularly posh!
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82 comments:
Agree 100%, fun theme and vety breezy
A skosh tougher than medium for me, mostly because I knew for sure the bridge position had to be east or west so I took out AGATE, resisted TREAT and couldn’t see SUSHI. Many nanoseconds were lost.
I did catch the “WORM HOLE” theme early because I also knew for sure that TESLA was the answer for 1d and 14d.
I did not know TSAI and LEVI.
Impressive/clever theme idea with no junk and two excellent 16s, liked it a bunch or exactly what @Malaika said.
When I saw the closed-off sections in the NW and NE, I thought, "Oh, no! This isn't Thursday!" But it was obviously necessary for the trick..
A complicated puzzle, but well thought out and constructed. One nit...the circled letters added nothing of value.
Loved this creative puzzle! I knew there had to be something going on with closed off sections of the grid. And that bottom section is just pure gold. What luck that those two revealers are the same length!
Fantastic puzzle! When I finished the puzzle, I looked for words that were connected by WORMHOLE. None. I didn't see that entire corners were connected. Wow!
You were far too nice - a 16 x 15 grid of dreck. The strive for the theme just wasn’t worth it.
Malaika - to continue from your bar visit yesterday - C'était nul.
WHITE LIE
I saw the alternate universe after a bit, but don’t see the parallel universe.
I felt kind of sad for the fish when I realized it wasn't a comfy bed for sleeping (other than metaphorically). But overall I agree with @Malaika--a refreshingly different theme. I also didn't notice that the corners weren't connected, and the NE was the last area I filled in, but once I saw what was happening I didn't even look at the clues to fill in that corner--I just looked at the NW. I thought the theme was brilliant and overall the puzzle was nicely done.
This puzzle went where no puzzle has gone before!
Easy-Medium. Actually quite Challenging until I forced myself to accept the "PARALLEL UNIVERSE" aspect of the downs in the NW and NE.
* * * _ _
Overwrites (outside of the NE, where there were too many to list):
Right off the bat, my 1A potato designation was idaho before it was a TUBER.
My 20A camper covers were TentS before they were TARPS.
At 31D, my actor submitted a DEMO tape before a REEL.
I had ALeRtS before ALARMS for the clear warnings at 50D. It was a 50/50 chance (appropriately).
Thc before TNT for the chemical at 73A. Not a chemist. Oviously.
WOEs:
Taiwanese president TSAI ing-wen at 44D.
Former VP LEVI P. Morton at 46A.
Hey All !
Interesting idea. So I take it that the PARALLEL UNIVERSEs are the Downs in the Closed Corners being the same words, but not in the same spots, being reversed. And the ALTERNATE REALITYs being the Acrosses as mirrored images of themselves. An argument can be made that the Theme would work either way, whether you assign the Downs to the PARALLEL or the ALTERNATIVE, I suppose.
Was looking for some animation upon completion. Maybe a swirling wind thingie, or something, going through the WORMHOLE. No such luck. *
Fill good, what with having two 16's in close proximity to each other. Some Long Downs included, and nicely interspersed.
Enjoyable, different, science -fictiony WedsPuz. Pretty neat. (Liked how the WORMHOLE went to NEIL deGrasse Tyson.)
* If you're looking for a swirling wind thingie, check out my book! Time travel novel, not necessarily PARALLEL UNIVERSEs or ALTERNATE REALITYs, but a good story! Changing Times by Darrin Vail. Get it wherever you get your books online!
Hope y'all have a great Wednesday!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Hi, Malaika! I started in the NW (as always), saw that that corner didn’t connect to the rest of the grid, and knew something was up. Started over in the top center with STAG, worked my way to the bottom and the two revealers, then filled in the NE without looking at a clue. Kinda gimmicky, but a nice change I suppose. Sort of a too-easy Thursday, so I guess Wednesday it is. About my average time, even with a glitchy iPad this morning.
Enjoyed discovering the mirror corners.... and the WORMHOLE. I always enjoy a 16 wide grid and those 2 bottom spanners were definitely a good reason to do it! Hadn't really thought about PEARLS in association with the word "biological" but once I got it, was like D'oh! That west middle section was the last for me, FAVORITES, ORES and SOFAS. And of course LEVI P. Morton didn't help me out much.... Thank you, Jeffrey, for a creative grid, perfectly executed!
Tsai Ing Wen is the (former) president of Taiwan - should it have been clued as such?
Have to confess up front that I’m a big sci-fi fan, so loved this one. In addition to being fun it was quite a feat of construction, at least the top half. If the lower half had been completed in a similar vein this would have been one for the ages. But I’m good with creative and different!
I didn’t pick up on the mirror image component, so the segmented grid caused a lot of stop and go traffic for me. Some of the clues felt a little flat to me as well (CON ARTISTS are scammers, for example - I don’t buy “tricksters” there - c’mon Will, do your job).
At the end of the day, it’s an interesting concept and the grid is well constructed, so hopefully there will be a group of intermediate to advanced solvers who really appreciate it.
I noticed that Malaika characterized the theme as referring to the “science fiction” concept, which is certainly a fair description, as it is fertile ground for sci fi enthusiasts everywhere. I am by no means an expert on the topic, but my lay person’s understanding is that although we don’t “know for sure” that wormholes and the like do exist, they are consistent with what we know about the universe thus far, and are certainly plausible within the context of current astrophysical theory.
Beautifully conceived and executed. This was masterfully done and exemplifies how a puzzle can be fun and gratifying to solve. Several recent constructors would do well to take note and emulate this approach.
When a doe is "in the mood," all the world's a STAG.
Santa, urging his elves to finish the landscaping: HOE HOE HOE
The thief who broke into the surgeon's home and made off with his ceramic collectible performed a VASE-ectomy.
The Yanks expect one or two of their starters to be among the ALARMS facing the NL in the All-Star game in two weeks.
My wife: Do you want to go to that Japanese play tonight? It got great reviews and all of our friends are going.
Me: NOH.
Mrs. SPRAT could eat no LIEN.
For aficionados of sports couples: Overheard in the Garciaparra household:
Nomar: Darling, I'm making a short stop at the Boston deli. Do you want a sandwich?
MIA: Ham.
Brilliant puzzle!
The wormhole connects the one closed-off section to the other
Delightful, well-made puzzle. Mirror corners so fun to discover. Whoosh whoosh.
The circled letters connect the corners to the puzzle and each other. As I read @Malaika’s comment I thought, ‘…but they’re connected by the WORMHOLE!’
Very quick 70% of average Wednesday for me, so I'd rate it easy. No hold-ups anywhere. The disconnected corner stood out almost immediately. That's a no-no, I thought, but cannot be an unintentional mistake. Finally got to the right top corner and after "rebut" it was all over quickly.. The lack of a struggle was more than made up for by the clever theme and the way the "wormhole" connects the two corners at the same letter. A delightful canard.
The app keeps crashing on me. Anyone else?
Me too. Very bizarre.
Really cool puzzle! Probably my favorite of the year, which I never thought I’d say about a Wednesday. I’m embarrassed to say I noticed all the repeated down clues before seeing the mirror-image trick with the acrosses, which was infinitely more interesting.
I briefly thought we were going to have a Rex-head-exploding Elon Musk theme today, when the NW corner started off with TELSA and BORED, and then I had EL-N in place at 4D.
I enjoyed the wanton rule-breaking today. 16-wide grid, sections not connected to the rest of the grid by crosses, repeat entries.
How were you able to speed-solve while watching a game? Wow. All the more impressive that it was a 16 squares across!
@8:08, YES, my app keeps crashing too . Probably 6-8 times over the course of solving, which has turned an enjoyable routine into a very irritating one!
This started yesterday presumably as the result of an app update. I hope the Times gets it fixed soon.
Yes!
I wish @Lewis were here to comment on the rare-in-crosswords 44 square semordnilap.
What did Don, the famous ukulele player (almost as famous as @GaryJugert), say when asked, "What's your last name and what is the name of Oprah's magazine?". IMHO and THATSO.
When Vanna says there isn't a certain letter, I always wonder does WHITELIE?
I tried a DEMOREEL from Cabela's on my fly rod, but it doesn't SEAT right and GETSLOOSE.
This puzzle was outta this world. While it was preposterously (hi again, @Gary) easy to solve, it was the most imaginative theme in a long time, executed incredibly well. It's definitely my POY to date. Thanks, Jeffrey Martinovic.
And thank you Malaika for your usual cheerful, sparkly write-up. See you later today down at the Bosnia-Herzogovinian bar.
I filled in the long spaces. I had too many erasures. DNF The puzzle outsmarted me.No 🎈for me.
Trickster is absolutely a valid clue for CONARTIST.
Love your enthusiastic accounting! Cool puzzle. One thing (i'm sure others have said this above): it's not just science fiction. These conscepts are serious discussions in theoretical physics. . ..
Filled in the NW and ready to move on, then Hey! I said. This is sitting here all alone. Did some top center SHUSHIRICE held things up there, not a SUSHI fan, but down the west coast I flew (LEVI?). The long spanners were evident after a few letters, thanks to practicing on Acrostics,
Oops... anyway, back up the east coast, saw the other isolated corner and had it half filled in before I saw that trick. Momentary pause at TSAI but that filled itself in nicely.
Very clever indeed, JM, and Just Might be my favorite Wednesday in some time. Thanks for all the fun.
For those on iPhones, I just went into the App Store and did an update - seems to have resolved the issue. Not sure why it didn’t update automatically.
WOW! I loved this one. I'm not the biggest sci fi fan but this worked so well in so many ways that I can't help but think that this may be my favorite puzzle in a long time.
I've been solving for about 30 years and I'm still not sharp enough to notice things like corners being closed off until the solve is complete. But with all the mirror image stuff going on and the downs duplicating with totally different clues and meanings, to the WORMHOLE connecting both 'universes" and kinda ending with NEIL deGrasse Tyson and starting with his (maybe) evil twin LIEN...again WOW! You really don't need to be a science fiction fan to get a huge kick out of this and be very, very impressed.
Like Malaika, I love it when themers would be great fill on their own merit with no theme behind them, and these two spanners really fit the bill today.
Thanks for this Jeffrey! You really knocked it out of the park today!
Yes, fellow bridge player! Minutes lost for me. Bridge positions are North, South, East, West (maybe declarer and dummy as well). After putting in TREAT, confidently put in WEST, verified by GETSLOOSE. Then, stuck until STAG and URGE eventually forced the change.
Super puzzle!! Great job in Ne and NW using same letters and words!!!
Alternate runtpuz universes! Out of this world different. Like.
And nice wriggly WORMHOLE connectivity, too boot.
NEIL deGrasse Tyson should be proud to participate, even tho he is [theoretically] a claim on property in a parallel universe.
staff weeject picks: RAT & RAT. With alternate parallel honrable mention to AND & DNA.
Caught on to the reality of them NW/NE similarities pretty early. Filled in the NE runtpuz area in absolute-record time. Will phone up the Guinness folks, later.
fave stuff included: WORMHOLE's schlockiness. GETSLOOSE. SALIVATE & clue. CONARTIST. SUSHIRICE's clue [just ate out at a sushi place yesterday for lunch -- had primo Bento box fare. Place had a huge menu, but interestinly, only two desserts listed. Fried ice cream, anyone? har].
Thanx for the fun, Mr. Martinovic dude. See yah on the other side!
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s.
Happy Canada Day, northern neighbors!
Runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
The WORMHOLE connected the two UNIVERSES/REALITIES as stated. Not relevant to the solve, but a star on the constructor's forehead.
Sorry, but a "universe" is not a "world." A world exists WITHIN a universe. I'm sure the esteemed Dr. DeGrasse Tyson would agree.
As revealers go . . . This is brilliant! Could not ask for more on a Wed. In fact, it’s in my HOF for Weds.
A little bit cranky, by the way, about "trickster"/CON ARTIST. I see the connection, but when I think of TRICKSTER I think of the shape-shifting deity in so many indigenous religious practices -- everyone from the Yoruban Eshu/Eleggua through the Irish leprechaun -- who symbolizes the crafty "little guy" outwitting the big, strong, oppenent with ingenuity and guile (Bre'er Rabbit comes to mind, for instance, as does the legendary Signfying Monkey). S/he is a major figure in folklore, especially in the folk histories of oppressed peoples (there's a raft of studies on Trickster lore in African-American culture, to cite just one example of many). I think "con artist" has a different, and more unsavory, modern-day connotation. But this may be only a nit.
Is no one going to say anything about “NERTS”? Meanwhile SKOR is one of my favourite candy bars
The above was mine, not sure why it came up as Anon???
Thanks to all. I wasn't current on wormholes as connectors. I conceived of places (live) worms might crawl into. Time to get up to date with Silicon Valley.
Very clever! Thoroughly enjoyed! Thank you!
Ethan. You don't really *watch* soccer games so much as abide them.
I take umbrage calling TESLA an "automotive giant" when its "size" is not based on manufacturing output or total material assets, but on an inflated stock price based on a cult of personality.
RE: ENOLA clues, there is a town in PA across the Susquehanna River from Harrisburg, site of what is considered to be the largest rail yard at least east of the Mississippi named, wait for it, ENOLA. A natick in the wings?
I had to update last night, too. Works fine now.
Yes, pretty much once a minute during my solve (on an iPad). Very annoying.
brilliant puzzle and hilarious - salivate! I was bravo J.M & Will Shortz
No, it’s not a nit. Con men do trick people but they’re not tricksers when doing it. The’re grifters.
Parallel is that the left and right upper sections have all the same vertical words, while the alternate reality is the horizontals all form different words backwards.
Not a real sci-fi guy so I didn’t enjoy this one as much as some of you. Yes, I saw the repeated downs in the top corners resulting in mirrored acrosses. Yes, I saw the circled WORMHOLE shortly thereafter. Yes, I got the ALTERNATE and PARALLEL stuff without too much trouble. And then I finished it and said OK, that’s done and moved on to watch some less than uplifting news.
I kind of appreciate the creativity angle but, over all, not for me.
Happy Canada Day!
Love this puzzle. It’s so f*****g smart and was so much fun to do. Unique in my experience. Is this JM’s first NYT appearance and where else could I find his puzzles?
It did once for us, too.
Also, the clues for some of the filled-in answers remained black versus turning gray on completion. Odd.
OMG, yes, kitshef, double TESLAs (which had us questioning which one HAD to be wrong).
Rex's head explosions often make for entertaining creative writing.
Just wanted to say we got the exact same solve time.
Happy Canada day!!
Certainly a Thursday level of trickiness, but Tuesdayish easy. Quite an ambitious theme, where the down answers in those corners are PARALLEL but the across answers are ALTERNATE. And the concept of the multiverse is real science, but also rich ground for science fiction.
A couple of Unknown Names: TSAI and ENOLA. And lots of short Knowns.
Weather wise, the year is now half over and here in Penticton we have gotten 57.0 mm of precipitation (2.2"), where the normal for the first 6 months is 177.7 mm (7.0"). Not great!
but @Rick Sacra, what was your time?!
This puzzle is exceptionally clever!
I also thought this was a clever, complex puzzle that must have been very challenging to construct. One nit. In an ALTERNATE REALITY 45A MOOR might mean "Anchor, as a boat", as clued, but in this REALITY anchor and moor are distinctly different ways to secure a boat. Entire books have been written on anchoring ---I have one--- but mooring could be explained in a single paragraph.
I don’t know about Silicon Valley, but I think the WORMHOLE here could refer to an astronomical structure. And thanks Malaika for clarifying that!
@Anon 1:04 pm, you can see a list of Jeffrey's 14 NYT puzzles at this page on xwordinfo.com.
This puzzle was amazing. It deserves some kind of prize.
Good thing that Star Wars doesn’t have WORM HOLEs or PARALLEL UNIVERSEs, or we’d have to be debating whether or not we need to reset the clock! Enjoyed it.
Anon 12:38. Re grifters. I think you must be thinking of your "royal family".
No, what you abide are comments denigrating such a beautiful and captivating competition. Inwardly, we feel compassion…
This was a fantastic puzzle and thanks for the great write up Malaika! Very clever, not that I understand that underlying physics concepts at all. I did it all and ended up at the NE, almost gave up, then noticed the mirroring. Such fun!!
Yes. Yesterday and today…crashes every minute or so. Update/restart did not help for me. So annoying!
Jae and Anonymous
Another bridge player here.
Same mistake. A lot more than wasted nanoseconds ( hi M & A) on that one area. As Z used to say, a case of knowing too much! And SEAT is an anagram of east!
Southside Johnny The editors did their job.
I agree with Anonymous on con artist and trickster. A con artist is a type of trickster. Common feature of crossword answers They aren’t definitions but answers to clues in a puzzle.
Con artist is a subset of trickster.
Mostly positive reactions. But some were very much negative! .I liked it. Got the mirror image thing right away. Never noticed that the NW & NE were cut off. Typical of me. Didn’t bother to look at the circles. So let Malaika explain them. Added to the puzzle I thought.
Easyish except I agreed with other bridge players that the top center was a mess because we “knew too much “. It had to be east or west, until, after much effort, it wasn’t!
Fun puzzle that didn't try too hard yet still did something clever.
I will go to my grave thinking people exclaim NERDS! not NERTS!
No Cy;’
I read a lot of sci-fi and fantasy - I haven't run into a lot of alternate reality books. One such was "Hominids" by Robert Sawyer where in the alternate reality Neanderthals are the dominant species. Somehow, scientists in our reality are able to reach the other one and they bring a denizen from there back to our existence. That individual is appalled that murder and war are allowed, that humans kill humans. He concludes that it's our belief in heaven that allows us to accept it. If we think everyone has an after life, then how bad is it if we cut this life short? Neanderthals have taken some pretty extreme measures to make sure that doesn't happen in their society.
I really enjoyed that book and the philosophical ponderings it invoked but I never read the sequels to that book. Guess I should look them up!
Thank you, Malaika, for pointing out the NW and NE are closed off from the other parts of the puzzle, something I didn't notice but that makes sense in making the theme work.
Jeffrey Martinovic, thanks for an interesting new theme idea!
I plunked down TSAI right away...then thought "wait, am I confusing the woman who served two terms as President with the Queen of C-Pop?" No, they're both Tsais (the latter being Jolin Tsai, who came out with her fifteenth album last year, after an uncharacteristic gap of six and a half years from the prior one).
I came here just for the angry comments about this and was shocked (SHOCKED) to see none! Is this a normal slang word that I somehow missed over several decades of life??
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