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Channel: Rex Parker Does the NYT Crossword Puzzle
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First chairman of EEOC familiarly / SAT 8-25-18 / Lamb by another name / Yoko Ono artistically in 1960s / Theme of Cirque de Soleil's O appropriately / renowned pirate captain during golden age piracy / Coiner of words chortle frabjous

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Constructor: Sam Ezersky

Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (for me—I solved upon waking, Always a bad idea on Saturday) (I had friends find this one very easy; seems likely there's a wide divergence of experience on this one) (9:13)


THEME: none

Word of the Day: NED LOW (9D: Renowned pirate captain during the Golden Age of Piracy) —
Edward "Ned" Low (also spelled Lowe or Loe; 1690–1724) was a notorious English pirate during the latter days of the Golden Age of Piracy, in the early 18th century. Low was born into poverty in WestminsterLondon, and was a thief from an early age. He moved to BostonMassachusetts, as a young man. His wife died in childbirth in late 1719. Two years later, he became a pirate, operating off the coasts of New England and the Azores, and in the Caribbean. (wikipedia) (wiki-cluing, boo!; my emph)
• • •

Mostly enjoyed this one, though I don't particularly enjoy solving the hardest puzzle of the week first thing in the morning. This was in many ways a typical Saturday-morning solve—slow and stumbling. I'm always slower in the morning, and as the week goes on, the difference becomes more noticeable. It's not as if I was slow throughout, though. When things are pretty gettable / roughly in my wheelhouse, I can move, in the mornings, just about as fast as I can at night. It's just getting unstuck that is the real challenge. My brain can get me out of a rut much, much more quickly when I solve at night. Whereas here ... well, here, I stumbled all around the NW, putting in wrong Downs at every turn, and then, finally, I actually looked at the Acrosses, and 15A: Pop group with the 1993 #2 hit "All That She Wants (ACE OF BASS) just looked at me, shaking its head, going "what took you so long?" Yes, embarrassingly, I finally managed to get started in this one because of the kindness of 90s Europop. Sigh.


After that opening disaster, I actually moved fairly well through this one, but then again came to a total halt in the SE, which was totally empty except for the ends of CARROLL and MY FAIR LADY. Some of my struggle was the puzzle's fault (SANDPILE????? There is sand in the sandbox—no one would use SANDPILE in conjunction with a playground; absurd, I say!). But mostly it was my brain's fault. I couldn't get past how wrong FDR-R looked, so I assumed I had an error. Looking at it now, it's hard to believe I couldn't see FDR comma JR. there, but I couldn't. Was never gonna get IVIE or METS or DAH, so ... yipes. I feel like I got very lucky, in the end. I wanted the casino to be THE TAJ, esp. because "J" in the first position of a long Across felt *right*. But when that yielded nothing, I thought, "what are the other 3-letter casinos? (note: I ****ing hate casinos and their denizens and the whole "culture" of whatever that is, so ... Not exactly my strong suit) ... RIO? Is THE RIO something? That means 65A: "Abso-freakin'-lutely!" would start with an O and ... Oh ... OH! OH HELL YES!" One of those rare times where exclaiming the answer literally expresses your feelings. So I managed to finish solely because I was able to remember a second three-letter Vegas casino. You take whatever scrap of an advantage you can get and you Never apologize for it, remember that!


Other struggles: AIDE for PAGE (1D: One running for the Senate?). STAR for ICON (2D: Supercelebrity). MENS for KIDS (13D: Department store section). URL for USB (46D: Modern connection inits.). JAN for WIN (59D: The "1" in 1-9). Did *not* fall into the SHAH-for-AMIN trap; if you take anything away from the blog today, let it be that AMIN and SHAH are both exiles of 1979 so Do Not Be So Sure. Always use crosses as guide. You're welcome. Only ickiness to me, today, was NANKI- (ick to name part, double ick to the whole Orientalist enterprise that is "The Mikado") (64A: ___-Poo, son of the Mikado), and WOMYN (not used by any "feminists" I know in any serious way in forever; also, according to a trans woman friend of mine, sometimes used as a "transphobic dog whistle," indicating spaces where only cis women, i.e. women with wombs, are welcome—exclusion of MEN, implied by the E-to-Y letter change, gets taken to prejudicial extremes) (59A: Group in feminist writing).

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

1836 siege setting / SUN 8-26-18 / Standard info on stationery nowadays / Bourbon Street's locale informally / James ___, Belgian painter in the movement Les XX / Italian car informally / Dweller along Bering Sea / Locale for Charlie Chan / City in Iraq's Sunni Triangle

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Constructor: Olivia Mitra Framke

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (9:50)


THEME:"To The Point"— a puzzle about THE US OPEN Tennis Championship (59A: Annual sporting event that is this puzzle's theme)

Theme answers:
  • ADVANTAGE (23A: Follower of deuce) (it's always AD IN. or AD OUT, never just ADVANTAGE, so ...)
  • LONG RALLY (25A: Lot of back and forth?)
  • HARDCOURT (27A: Alternative to grass)
  • BACKHAND SHOT (43D: One way to answer a server?)
  • GAME SET MATCH (46D: Winning words)
  • ARTHUR ASHE (94A: Stadium name new Citi Field)
  • GRANDSTAND (96A: Spectators' area)
  • QUEENS, NEW YORK (109A: Location of 59-Across)
Word of the Day: EMERSON College (33D: College in Boston) —
Emerson College is a private college in downtown BostonMassachusetts. Founded in 1880 by Charles Wesley Emerson as a "school of oratory," the college offers more than three dozen degree programs in the area of Arts and Communication and is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. Located in Boston's Washington Street Theatre District on the edge of the Boston Common, the school also maintains buildings in Los Angeles and the town of Well, The Netherlands. (wikipedia)
• • •

Mixed (doubles?) feelings about this one. On the one hand, it's just a bunch of US Open / tennis answers. Nothing particularly ... special about the content. On the other hand, I mostly really liked the fill, which is saying something, given that there are a lot of throwaway 3-letter answers (never very sexy). EXEMPLAR SHOEHORN DERBYWINNER CALLMELATER, all good. And there are intersecting themers, which is always a tough thing to pull off. And hey, there's sort of a picture there, with the four squares that spell out BALL and then the racquet, which I didn't even see until I was finished, but ... [squints at puzzle] ... yeah, that's definitely a racquet. Or "racket." Frankly, neither spelling feels right, but I think that's all the spellings there are so. Take your choice. I had a horrible time getting started (which appears to be recurring theme in my solving life of late), but eventually I took off—after the whole opening NW / N debacle (about which, more below), the only places that slowed me down at all were the far east (ENJOY instead of EAT UP hurt (53D: Relish), and I couldn't get STONY no matter what I did (54D: Rugged, as a landscape)) and the SW (long Downs were rough ... but I very luckily guessed All the short Acrosses correctly on the first try). Started at DITZY (sorry, I mean WOOZY) and ended at SHUSH.

[98A: James ___, Belgian painter in the movement Les XX]

It's so bizarre that I threw down DITZY at 1A: Lightheaded and then confirmed the "Y" *and the "Z"*, which made me pretty damn certain DITZY was right. So when confronted with 3D: Low soccer score with "T" in the first position, I blithely and semi-confidently wrote in TWOONE. I mean ... it's *pretty* low. But things not surprisingly fell apart from there. I got back on the horse in reasonable time, only to fall right back off in the north, where I had either nothing or SORRY for 6D: "Alas ..." (SADLYand then MARS for 7D: One of a well-known septet (ENVY) (how many planets are there again...?) and then woo hoo a gimme with LEN Cariou but then two big whiffs with ESC (instead of ALT) (10D: Computer key) and DRAB (instead of BLAH) (11D: Utterly uninspiring). This left the north a complete wreck. I kind of tripped my way down the west coast, and ended up finding my way into the racket center, which was very easy, and then whoosh, I flew out of there in all directions, the whole bottom of the grid was a blur. I had to go back eventually and pick up the north (the NE I managed to figure out w/ little trouble). Then it was back for my last stand in the SE, where the main problem was parsing THRIVE ON (81D: Do well with). I just couldn't figure out the context for the clue, so I kept wanting ARRIVE ON (which is a phrase, but one that alas, SADLY, has nothing to do with the clue). And that's it. I had more fun than I normally have on Sunday, that much I can say with confidence.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Early Indus Valley inhabitant / MON 8-27-18 / Leveling wedge

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Constructor: Susan Gelfand

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (2:58)


THEME: two first names of people in same profession make complete name of someone else in the same profession... —

Theme answers:
  • KIRK DOUGLAS (21A: Actor Cameron + actor Fairbanks = actor ___)
  • STEVE MARTIN (31A: Comedian Carell + comedian Short = comedian ___)
  • JAMES TAYLOR (40A: Singer Brown + singer Swift = singer ___)
  • BILL RUSSELL (50A: Basketball player Walton + basketball player Westbrook = basket ball player ___)
Word of the Day: MONOSKI (9D: Relative of a snowboard) —
monoski is a single wide ski used for skiing on snow. The same bootsbindings, and poles are used as in alpine skiing. Unlike in snowboarding, both feet face forward, rather than sideways to the direction of travel. Similar equipment includes the skwal and the teleboard, with feet in tandem formation (one ahead of the other). (wikipedia)
• • •

Quick write-up tonight. It's a mildly weird concept we've got here. Not a lot holding it together, but which I mean ... the professions represented are totally arbitrary. Also, taking the first name from another person's first name does not strike me as that interesting. You're really just looking for someone whose last name can be a first name. Is this hard? I'm not gonna try, but it seems like you shouldn't have too much trouble coming up with names that fit the bill for, say, authors, or, I don't know actresses (speaking of, this puzzle is Kind of a sausagefest—I guess Taylor Swift is in there as one of the clue names, but all the themers are dudes, and all the other clue names are dudes). Author Miller + author Baldwin = author HENRY JAMES. That took zero time. The theme just feels a little lackluster, is all. Also, the idea that Kirk Cameron (of "Growing Pains" and literally no other fame) is in this puzzle with all these legitimately famous, even legendary people ... doesn't feel right. Fill-wise, it's fine. Mostly clean. I don't get why anyone puts ARYAN in their puzzle when they don't have to (it's a Monday, the grid is not demanding, no need to put in a word that evokes Nazism—don't believe me, just google). Not keen on the idea of "ogling" a HUNK either. I get that you're trying to do a little table-turning here, but [Object of an ogler] is always a gross clue. Why introduce "ogling" into the equation at all? We get LEER and OGLE plenty enough as it is.


I floundered a lot on this one but still ended up under 3, which tells me it must've been pretty easy. As usual, I screwed up right away, in the NW, but putting in LOUT for LUNK (2D: Blockhead) and then REP (!?) for RTE (4D: Traveling salesperson's assignment: Abbr.). So much typing and untyping and retyping. Ugh. Once out of there, things got much easier. Botched the HUNK clue, and first wrote in POKES (?) for PRIES (29D: Gets nosy), but no problems otherwise until the very end, when I tried to get cute and guess the first name based only on RUSSELL. I guessed KURT. Wah WAH. This meant that I considered BITTEN (???) for 44D: Swindled (BILKED) and just generally lost precious seconds on the clock. Oh well. In the end, a pretty average experience on all fronts.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Indian flatbread / TUE 8-28-18 / Vittles / Be in a dither / Hockey feints

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Happy Tuesday, everyone! It's Clare again for the last Tuesday of the month as August comes to a close (summer, too, unfortunately). I'm currently in DC suffering in hot and humid weather while trying to get the hang of law school. It's just my second week, and there's already tons of reading for each class. I've yet to be cold called in class, but I know that moment is coming.

Constructor:Brian Thomas 

Relative difficulty:Moderately difficult for a Tuesday
THEME: BACKCHANNEL(60A: Covert means of communication ... or what's hiding in the circled letters?) — Circled letters in the puzzle that when read backward are television channels

Theme answers:

  • WAXONWAXOFF (17A: Teaching catchphrase popularized by "The Karate Kid")
  • ZIPLOCBAG (21A: Resealable container for chips or cheese)
  • GLENNCLOSE (32A: Portrayer of Cruella de Vil in 1996's "101 Dalmatians")
  • USBCHARGER (44A: Connection point for a smartphone cable)
  • JOBHUNTER (52A: One using Monster.com)
Word of the day: ANUBIS(47D: Wolf-headed Egyptian god)

Anubis is the Greek name of a god associated with mummification and the afterlife in ancient Egyptian religion, usually depicted as a canine or a man with a canine head. Archeologists have identified Anubis's sacred animal as an Egyptian canid, the African golden wolf. (Wikipedia)

• • •
As a theme, the idea of a BACKCHANNEL is clever. But the theme didn't help me to solve any of the puzzle besides giving me the "b" in JOBHUNTER, so I didn't notice the theme until I got to the snappy revealer. A few of those answers felt meh: JOBHUNTER, ZIPLOCBAG, and USBCHARGER aren't very exciting. (I had no idea people used that term, anyway. USB port, USB cable, sure, but a charger?)

None of the fill was too taxing but also didn't feel that exciting. A few answers stood out to me as particularly uninteresting. 38A: Customize, as a video game as MOD seems off and a bit obscure. From a preliminary Wikipedia search, MOD seems to be short for modification, which would make MOD a noun and not a verb, like the clue leads you to believe. 11A: Misbehaving as BAD feels off, too. A parent might say, "My child is misbehaving" but probably wouldn't say, "My child is bad." The parent would say, "My child is being bad." As for 9D: Hilarious, briefly, I can once again assure you all that no one says/writes ROFL anymore. 39A: She reads the signs: SEERESS seems like a forced way to get a lot of e's and s's in there. (The only thing I can think of when I see "seer" is Professor Trelawney in Harry Potter).

Bullets:

  • As a Despicable Me fan, I was happy to see GRU make an appearance at 41A: Animated movie villain with Minions. But the clue isn't quite right. GRU is sometimes villainous but he always ends up saving the day.
  • Mental block: I can never seem to remember whether ORC is spelled with a "c" or a "k."
  • Two of the clues/answers got me to crack a smile: 40D: Makes the cut as SAWS and 3D: Prepares to go on the runway as TAXI (for the sole reason that I couldn't think at first of anything other than a model preparing to go down a runway).
  • 47A: Wolf-headed Egyptian god: ANUBIS and 26A: Jean who wrote "Wide Sargasso Sea": RHYS on a Tuesday felt obscure.
  • When I saw 20A: Spot for a yacht, I immediately thought MARINA, but that obviously isn't four letters long. I was then pleasantly surprised to find that clue again for 27A, this time with enough spaces to fit MARINA.

With that, I leave you! I'm off to reread cases for class for the fourth time like the professors tell us to. That first cold call may be coming tomorrow.

Signed, Clare Carroll, a GW 1L

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Voldemort, to Harry Potter / WED 8-29-18 / Rough spots for teens? / Grp. co-founded by Helen Keller

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Constructor: Alex Bajcz

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium


THEME: City work— Each theme answer is a city name preceded by a "profession" which is an anagram of the city name

Theme answers:
  • DIAGNOSES SAN DIEGO(18a: Work as a metropolitan health official?)
  • COUNTS TUSCON(29a: Works as a metropolitan census taker?)
  • HASTEN ATHENS(44a: Work as a metropolitan traffic engineer?)
  • SALVAGES LAS VEGAS(55a: Works as a metropolitan reclaimant?)
Word of the Day: KENKEN (27d: Numbers game)
KenKen is a trademarked name for a style of arithmetic and logic puzzle invented in 2004 by Japanese math teacher Tetsuya MiyamotoAs in Sudoku, the goal of each puzzle is to fill a grid with digits so that no digit appears more than once in any row or any column (a Latin square). KenKen grids are divided into heavily outlined groups of cells –– often called “cages” –– and the numbers in the cells of each cage must produce a certain “target” number when combined using a specified mathematical operation.


• • •

Hi y'all! It's Matthew, your friendly neighborhood radio producer/baseball fan/whale enthusiast in for Rex on this fine Wednesday. To all of you in the comments who thought I was ~too tough~ on last Monday's puzzle: Don't fret! With very few exceptions, today's puzzle was a joy! But as the winds of the anonymous Internet go, you probably hated it. Oh well.


Anywho: let's puzzle! Got off to a disgruntled start with UNSEAL (1a: Open, as an envelope) — you can reseal an envelope, and you can unseal other things ... but "unseal" an envelope? I'm skeptical. HOWEVER the rest of this puzzle was so darn exciting that before long it didn't matter one bit. I had my share of stumbles here and there along with several double-takes — TANK for REEF (24a: Home for a clown fish) (sorry @Nemo), BEGINS for ONSETS (34a: Starts), and JUMP for LEAP (41a: Jeté, e.g.)— but used my trusty crosses to right those wrongs without incurring any serious damage and came in comfortably under my average Wednesday time. Cracking the theme was really fun working from the bottom up. I cobbled together both SALVAGES LAS VEGAS and HASTEN ATHENS before picking up on the anagram component, at which point the other two themers fell nicely into place amidst a grid chock-full of delightful fill. 

I definitely want to give EAGERNESS, USED CAR LOT and ARCHENEMY their due (4d: Zeal / 31d: Place for junkers / 34d: Voldemort, to Harry Potter)  — but the real prize of this puzzle, in my eye, is the staircase of 6- to 8-letter money words cruising right through the middle, with only NOAA (38a: Operator of weather.gov) feeling more like a tourniquet than a snazzy belt.


Yes, I had a great time on this puzzle. Yes, I think it feels like the ~perfect~ Wednesday difficulty. But I've already proclaimed my baseball obsession on this blog and would be remiss if we didn't talk about that pesky clue for ON BASE (30d: In scoring position, in a way). This wouldn't be a big deal except that "scoring position" is a technical tern in baseball to refer only to runners on either second or third. Most runners who end up ON BASE start at first, which, while closer to scoring than the batter's box, is not in "scoring position." 

End mini rant. Hats off to a great hump day.

Bullets:
(The Chicago Cubs have not lost a baseball game since my CrossWorld debut.)
  • SCRAPE (26d: Pickle) — Synonymous, sure, but "in a pickle" is so much more fun to say.
  • BARISTA (42d: Fitting occupation for a "Joe") — My go-to barista in my hometown is named Magic, and he is cooler than I could ever hope to be.
  • ROYAL (49a: Word before flush or pain) — An exemplary Wednesday clue, in my opinion. Makes you think and perhaps second guess yourself (flush?) but doesn't bust your grid. 
  • OBOE (59a: Item with a bore and a bell) — Link your favorite oboist in the comments below. (Seems safe to assume that the worlds of oboe enthusiasts and crossworders aren't mutually exclusive. Let's find out!) 
Signed, Matthew Stock, CrossWorld utility infielder in for Rex

[Follow Matthew Stock on Twitter]
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Philosophy of Simplicity / THU 8-30-18 / Home of the oldest university in the Western Hemisphere (founded in 1551) / Ancient mother goddess

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Constructor:Grant Thackray

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME: ADBLOCK (64A: Popular browser extension... or a literal description of four black squares in this puzzle) —  Puzzle where four BLOCKs (black squares) represent the letters AD

Theme answers:
  • MANSPRE[AD] (5D: Annoyance from a subway seatmate)
  • SAL[AD] (11A: Light lunch choice)
  • BUTTLO[AD] (16D: Whole lot, slangily)
  • [AD]DRESS (17D: Speak to)
  • UNDE[AD] (37A: Like zombies)
  • [AD]OPTARO[AD] (38A: Program for reducing litter on highways)
  • [AD]LIBS (40A: Lines screenwriters didn't write)
  • [AD]ULTING (45D: Doing grown-up things, in modern lingo)
  • [AD]ORKABLE (47D: Endearingly awkward)
  • HOTHE[AD] (48D: Easily angered sort)
  • [AD]AMS (70A: Number 2 or 6)  [as in, the 2nd or 6th president]

Word of the Day:Thomas KYD (Playwright Thomas who predated Shakespeare) —
Thomas Kyd (baptised 6 November 1558; buried 15 August 1594) was an English playwright, the author of The Spanish Tragedy, and one of the most important figures in the development of Elizabethan drama.
Although well known in his own time, Kyd fell into obscurity until 1773 when Thomas Hawkins, an early editor of The Spanish Tragedy, discovered that Kyd was named as its author by Thomas Heywood in his Apologie for Actors (1612). A hundred years later, scholars in Germany and England began to shed light on his life and work, including the controversial finding that he may have been the author of a Hamlet play pre-dating Shakespeare's, which is now known as the Ur-Hamlet.
• • •
I've seen a lot of crosswordese in my time, but this is my first encounter with Thomas KYD. I suspect it won't be my last. (Also, "Ur-Hamlet"!)

Anyways, hi! I'm Rachel, a new faculty member at a medical school in central New York who somehow managed to twitter my way into covering for Rex while he is, as far as I can tell, eating his weight in Minnesotan baked goods. In case it isn't obvious from the fact that my entire tweet was an emoji, I am a (fully ADULTING) millennial, and therefore (mostly) loved this puzzle.


For the most part this played pretty smoothly for me. I landed on UNDE[AD] almost immediately, and then skipped to the theme clue and worked out the ADBLOCK. Knowing to look out for missing ADs made the rest of the puzzle fall into place pretty seamlessly. I did have a slight speed bumps in the SE, where it took a few painful seconds to wrap my head around what an [AD]AMS was in relation to 70A: Number 2 or 6.


Aside from my new friend Thomas KYD, most of the grid felt fresh and exciting, with MANSPREAD and ADULTING both making their NYT debut. Both of those terms have theirdetractors, but neither is as bad as ADORKABLE, which should really be sent to a farm upstate. We've also seen it once before, in 2014. Also making its NYT debut is BUTTLOAD, which I'm sure some will find objectionable, but it made me laugh. I appreciate the almost aggressive youthfulness of this puzzle; in addition to the modern young-people-speak, we have SEENSAY, which I understand is a very retro toy, and MEGAMAN, a slightly-less-retro video game.



The fill struggled in some placed under the weight of the 11(!) theme answers (I'm looking at you, ORLAUST RAS IDA ENE BMOC INS). But as with my browser extension, I'm willing to overlook a lot of issues not to have to have to see any ADs. The double-AD BLOCK on ADOPTAROAD is an impressive feat of construction that more than makes up for the occasionally-spotty fill.


Bullets:
  • POPUP (23A: Temporary, as a store) — I wonder if this was originally clued in reference to the theme as a pop-up ad?
  • SKIPIT (26A: "Let's go to the next one")—In light of the youthfulness of this puzzle, I'm also curious whether this was originally clued as the 80's-90's toy that you... skipped?

  • ATONESPEAK (31D: Performing Flawlessly) — Booo. In addition to this being a dumb phrase, my brain parsed it as ATONE SPEAK, like some sort of command to verbally make up for something.
  • NERDSROPE (7D: Crunchy candy with a gummy string center) — Objectively one of the worst candies don't @ me 
Overall, I thought this puzzle was clever and fresh, and I'm glad Rex took a chance on a person he didn't know anything about beyond a single emoji. Thanks for letting me review at you!

Signed, Rachel Fabi, Queen-for-a-Day of CrossWorld

[Follow Rachel on Twitter where she mostly tweets about public health, ethics, and immigration]

1994 Denis Leary comedy / FRI 8-31-18 / White Buildings was his first collection of poetry / Country singer who uses her first two initials / Portrayer of Hulk in 2003 / Florid drapery fabrics / Downtown Julie Brown's former employer / Subject of Marie Curie's isolation

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Constructor: Peter Wentz

Relative difficulty: Medium (5:36)


THEME: none

Word of the Day: "THE REF" (55A: 1994 Denis Leary comedy) —
The Ref (Hostile Hostages in some countries) is a 1994 American black comedy film directed by Ted Demme, starring Denis LearyJudy Davis and Kevin Spacey. (wikipedia) 
(a ridiculously underrated movie; one of my favorite movies of the '90s; Christine Baranski can do no wrong; stupid Kevin Spacey had to go and ruin everything)
• • •

Hi there. I'm back from Minnesota, back from moving my daughter into Middlebrook Hall at the University of Minnesota, back from enjoying Minneapolis and the Minnesota State Fair, and back in town for the foreseeable future, finally (this was our fifth trip of the summer). Hadn't solved a puzzle in four days, then sat down to do the latest Liz Gorski Crossword Nation puzzle as a kind of warm-up, and then started in on this one. Felt all kinds of out-of-practice, and got stuck plenty, but still managed to come up with a slightly better-than-average time, so either this is a Medium difficulty puzzle or it was very very easy and I was just rusty. Take your pick. Had the most trouble, by far, with SHOCKS (I only just this second that the "installation" of the clue (1A: Garage installation) refers to the act performed on them by the mechanic (i.e. she *installs* the SHOCKS), not the physical arrangement of them in space inside of the garage (i.e. it's a garage, not a museum) ... OK, yeah, I'm a little rusty) ... and then STAY-AT-HOME DAD, which was shockingly hard for me to parse (12A: He works with kids). I had something like 10 letters in place and still couldn't make sense of it, because the letters I was missing were crucial. I had STA-ATHO-E-AD and my brain couldn't make a name, couldn't make anything out of it. Also, I had HYPED instead of AMPED for a bit at 7D: Jazzed, so that threw an errant "Y" in there. As you can see, the letter I needed was the "Y" from OYEZ, but ... ugh, OYEZ is awful fill *and* it has a "?" clue (3D: Court order?). Cardinal rule: don't give your terrible fill tricksy / hard "?" clues. It's the worst. It's so unsatisfying. It's barfsome. Solver enjoyment!!!!!! Just clue you stupid bad fill straight and move on. The rest of the puzzle is so good, why would you do this??? Anyway, OYEZ. Because bailiffs always say ... that ... I might've had RISE in there at one point, I don't know. Anyway, I did not say "o, yay" to OYEZ.


I was the first person to put TA-NEHISI COATES in a puzzle (3 years ago!), and, with apologies to everyone, I will never not mention this when I see his full name in a puzzle (51A: MacArthur Fellowship-winning author of "Between the World and Me"). It was a Buzzfeed crossword, back when that was a thing, and so only like 200 people saw it, but What Ever. First! My grid even had roughly the same shape as this one (largely because TA-NEHISI COATES is a 14 and they are notoriously difficult to manage, grid-wise—this little stagger maneuver, with stairstep black corners in the NW and SE, is one way to deal). Here was mine:


Look at that. Same. Place. In the grid! Ooh, and they both have END in them! Eeeeerie ... Anyway, coincidences can be kooky.


I thought you "desalinated" water—is DESALT the same thing (are there "DESALTing plants"?). DESALT just felt odd to me. As for OBOE d'amore, Ha, if I ever knew that was a thing, I sure forgot it today. "Slightly larger than the oboe, it has a less assertive and a more tranquil and serene tone, and is considered the alto of the oboe family," says wikipedia. Ok then. Had OUTDID before OUTRAN (19D: Surpassed), and needed every cross to parseFIVE-O (39D: Fuzz). That's slang for "police," btw, in case you didn't know, which you probably did, but you never know. First answer was EWE, last answer was FBI, which has a beautiful symmetry to it. 



Glad to be back. See you tomorrow. And, oh yeah, so ... it's *possible* that my wife and I might be kinda sorta thinking about moving to Minneapolis, so ... just puttin' that out there. At least one of us will need a job, probably. OK, bye!


Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. Thanks to Matthew and Rachel for covering for me Wednesday and Thursday, respectively, and thanks as always to Clare for doing her last-Tuesday-of-the-month write-up. Nice to know the blog's in capable hands when I'm away.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Mean Miss of Wizard of Oz / SAT 9-1-18 / Overhyped event in slang / Smallest country in mainland africa / Frazzled commuter's comment / Bisector of Fertile Crescent / road runners' race classification / Toon with middle initial

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Constructor: Randolph Ross

Relative difficulty: Medium-ish (8:18)


THEME: none

Word of the Day: William P. BARR (30D: Attorney general before Reno) —
William Pelham Barr (born May 23, 1950) is an American attorney who served as the 77th Attorney General of the United States. As a member of the Republican Party, Barr served as Attorney General from 1991 to 1993 during the administration of President George H. W. Bush.
• • •

Puzzle has no sense of fun, and what sense it tried to have (NOTHING BURGER) is a phrase I find stupid and repulsive—like, my least favorite slang of this decade. It's dumb political talk. Stupid. Inane. Generally used by people trying to downplay something genuinely terrible. Just say "overhyped event," it's so much nicer. TEMPEST IN A TEAPOT has a certain quaint ring to it. NOTHING BURGER just sounds like something someone barfed up. Slop. I cannot overstate how much I hate the phrase on an aesthetic level. It's ugly, and when you use it, you're ugly. Moving on. APERY!? Ugh. ME DO? Up there with the stupid BURGER for most off-putting answer. The good stuff here is just "good" in the sense of solid, sturdy, and some of that gets mucked up with bad cluing. What is it with the NYT and its name-droppy intellectualism fetish? Mensa this mensa that ... and then this CONAN O'BRIEN clue (31A: Longtime talk show host with a degree from Harvard). Ooooh lala, Hah-vahd. It's such a weak, narrow way to clue someone who is so talented and accomplished. Lots of complete assholes have Ivy League degrees. Who cares? Moving on again: What is a capital-R Road Runner? How on earth would I know that their "race classification" is TEN MILE? Garbage fill, garbage clue. BARR was Attorney General for about 8 minutes when I was in my early 20s. Not exactly puzzle-worthy. I want to say same about STIMSON, but I'm willing to bet that's not true and just chalk up my ignorance to my second-rate education and third-rate mind. ME DO not know Secretaries of (lowercase "w"?) war.


The phrases here are so stilted. HEAVENS, CAN IT BE that the puzzle HATH NE'ER considered that it NEED NOT project such an OLDSTER vibe? It MISDOES its APERY, forsooth. WILE E!? The [Toon with a middle initial] is WILE E. COYOTE. I think you meant [Toon name part that contains an initial]. The toon is the full name of the toon, not the first name and middle initial. UNOS is a bad plural. OLES is a bad plural. Hard to think of a clue / answer that I liked both in clue and answer. Maybe CONTORTIONIST (15D: One who gets bent out of shape). Is SCOTS a "language"? I thought it was more a dialect. Hmm. This is from wikipedia:
A 2010 Scottish Government study of "public attitudes towards the Scots language" found that 64% of respondents (around 1,000 individuals being a representative sample of Scotland's adult population) "don't really think of Scots as a language" but it also found that "the most frequent speakers are least likely to agree that it is not a language (58%) and those never speaking Scots most likely to do so (72%)"
So there's that. I had the most trouble in the NW, where STIMSON was unknown and 6D: Any minute was ANON for a bit and "IT'S A ZOO" just didn't compute. Anyone in a crowded area might say that. "Frazzled commuter" had me thinking the comment was going to be something about a STOP. "OUR STOP?!" I dunno. Whole corner was rough for me. Rest of the puzzle was more tractable. Looking back, it's clear that NOTHING BURGER complete drained any pleasure I might've had right out of this solving experience. MEDO didn't help.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Protein shell of virus / SUN 9-2-18 / Showdown in classic video games / Obie-winning playwright Will / Stefanik who is youngest woman ever elected to Congress / Brother of Dori Nori in Hobbit / Territory name until 1889

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Constructor: Tom McCoy

Relative difficulty: Medium (10:50)


THEME:"Going Head to Head"— famous antagonists are written out "head to head" (i.e. with first name backward, so its first letter touches first letter of the second name):

Theme answers:
  • SUESEHTMINOTAUR (22A: Showdown in Greek mythology)
  • OIRAMBOWSER (28A: Showdown in classic video games)
  • NOTLIMAHBURR (39A: Showdown in American history)
  • EKULDARTHVADER (61A: Showdown in cinema)
  • YPOONSREDBARON (69A: Showdown in the funnies)
  • DIVADGOLIATH (92A: Showdown in the Bible)
  • NAMTABJOKER (107A: Showdown in comic books)
  • ETOXIUQWINDMILL (115A: Showdown in literature)
Word of the Day: CAPSID (95A: Protein shell of a virus) —
noun
  1. capsid is the protein shell of a virus [you don't say!!!]. It consists of several oligomeric structural subunits made of protein called protomers. The observable 3-dimensional morphological subunits, which may or may not correspond to individual proteins, are called capsomeres. The capsid encloses the genetic material of the virus. (emph mine) (wikipedia)
• • •

All this is—Literally All This Is—is famous antagonists pairs presented in the grid with their heads (i.e. first letters) touching, i.e. first name backward, second name forward. There's no gimmick, no trick. Just ... half-backward pairs. This isn't a thing. The pairs aren't even iconic much of the time. David & Goliath, well obviously, but Mario and Bowser???? What? I honestly don't even know what Bowser is. I know that Bowser is neither Hamilton- nor Burr-famous. Darth Vader is Luke's father (spoiler alert!), so ... that's not exactly a great example. Batman has many, many villains that he battles, though I guess Joker is probably the greatest of them all, so maybe that example is OK. I don't know. I think the basic premise just seems very, very weak to me, in that, again, it's just some kind of foes with one name turned the wrong way. [Extreme shrug]!!! Seems kinda UNIDEAL (just like the word UNIDEAL, coincidentally).


This one felt very fussy to me, throughout. Like someone was trying to toughen it up by simply making it more annoying. I finished with a typo/error at 38D: Defeat (WORST), mostly because omg who uses the word that way and How In The World does WORST mean the same as BEST!??!? That is insane. I must've seen R-D in the cross (43A: Hot ___) and instead of filling in the obvious ROD, wrote in the answer that would've been obvious if the blank had *preceded* the "Hot" (RED). And then I just didn't check the down in the end. Ugh, WORST. "I WORSTed you!" ... said Don Quixote to the Windmill, maybe? Why is it just LUKE but the full DARTH VADER. His name is LUKE SKYWALKER, man, come on. Be consistent. The fill on this one is not great, largely because there is a KILOTON of very short fill (not a lot of longer answers) and so you just get bombarded by NSA and SCHS and AAA (those are all abutting and crossing one another) and ORI and the dreaded AHME etc. ATTA OCTA ALII OSTEO make it stop. CAPSID, yikes! I was really worried that that answer was gonna kill me, as I had no idea about it or (for a while) KILOTON. There are some nice longer Downs, particularly NO-CALL LIST, "NOW WHERE WAS I...?" and "AMEN TO THAT!" But overall it felt like I was dealing with a subpar / unambitious theme, and like I was spending most of my time swatting at gnat-like short fill. I did not enjoy it NOWISE.
    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

    Hawaii's Mauna ___ / MON 9-3-18 / Roman god of love / Notice when getting fired / Song of praise / Eagles' nests

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    It's the first Annabel Monday that I'm writing as a SENIOR in college! What is even up with that.

    Constructor: Trent H. Evans

    Relative difficulty: Hard



    THEME: Couch to 5K — Theme answers are two word phrases that start with an activity, arranged from most to least active. Or, like, sitting but then getting up and running. I dunno.

    Theme answers:
    • SITTING DUCK (17A: Defenseless target)
    • STANDING ORDER (26A: Directive that's in force until canceled)
    • WALKING PAPERS (44A: Notice when getting fired)
    • RUNNING JOKE (57A: Repeated comical reference)

    Word of the Day: OSS (63A: Pre-CIA spy org) —
    The Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was a wartime intelligence agency of the United States during World War II, and a predecessor of the modern Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The OSS was formed as an agency of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS)[3]to coordinate espionage activities behind enemy lines for all branches of the United States Armed Forces. Other OSS functions included the use of propaganda, subversion, and post-war planning. On December 14, 2016, the organization was collectively honored with a Congressional Gold Medal.[4]
    (Wikipedia)
    • • •
    This is the first first-Monday one in a while that I'd call a certified toughie! I seriously got stuck in the dumbest places--the top right corner, the bottom left corner--for so long. It felt like there was NO END in sight. ...But then, I used to feel that way about college and I'm starting my senior year now. YIPES.  At least this year I get to live in a single room! Don't worry, I won't be using it to host wild parties, mostly just to take long naps by myself without worrying that my roommate will feel like she needs to be extra quiet, or to have some nice private crying sessions. You know, the fun parts of college, right?

    Wait, yeah, the puzzle. Other than being hard it was okay! I dunno what was up with the theme; if your theme doesn't have a catchy title or really make sense is it even worth it? Also, why RUNNING JOKE and not RUNNING GAG? Space, I guess. I have to admit I got pretty excited when I saw 16A because I thought the answer would be WW2, I just think it's the coolest when puzzles use numbers. Oh well. On the bright side, you've noticed I've been complaining forever (à la Rex) about boring fill, and the fill in this puzzle was way more fun! I actually had trouble deciding between different candidates for the Word of the Day instead of trying to figure out which word some people might not know, lol.

    Bullets:
    • GEESE (50A: Birds that honk) — There are about a billion geese at Wellesley! Last spring a bunch of them raised their goslings on campus, and it was the sweetest thing ever. There's really nothing like walking across the quad half-dead running on two hours of sleep and seeing little bitty baby goslings swimming with their parents. Swans, on the other hand? Absolutely terrifying.
    • AWKWARD AGE (11D: Middle school years, notably) — I think we should all share an awkward middle school story! I'll go first. One time when I was in middle school I was on a school canoeing trip and a spider the size of my hand fell into the canoe and I freaked out so much that I jumped out and maybe in the process the canoe flipped over. That wasn't the first time I jumped out of the canoe on that trip, nor would it be the last. The moral of the story is don't take a bunch of thirteen-year-olds canoeing, at least not with giant spiders.
    • GROAN (29D: A pun can induce one) — Hey, when does a joke become a "dad joke"? When it's "apparent!" Get it? Here's another one: Why do sharks eat clowns? Because they taste funny! Yeah, yeah, I'll be here all day. 
    • POLE (53A: Tree : Christmas :: Pole : Festivus— Ah yes, a Festivus for the rest of us. 
    Signed, Annabel Thompson, tired college student.

    [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

    [Follow Annabel Thompson on Twitter]

    Word spoken before after James / TUE 9-4-18 / Pair of skivvies / Sporty Pontiacs of old

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    Constructor: Bruce Haight

    Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (3:12)


    THEME: THE EIGHTIES (58A: When Pac-Man and Rubik's Cube were popular ... or a phonetic hint for 17-, 23-, 37- and 48-Across) — two-word answers, first word starts with "A," second word starts with "T":

    Theme answers:
    • ALL TOGETHER (17A: In unison)
    • ATOMIC THEORY (23A: The idea that matter is composed of small, distinct components)
    • AIRPORT TERMINAL (37A: Common taxi destination)
    • ANCHOR TENANT (48A: Big department store in a mall, e.g.)
    Word of the Day: ANCHOR TENANT (48A) —
    In retail, an "anchor store" (sometimes called an "anchor tenant", "draw tenant", or "key tenant") is a considerably larger tenant in a shopping mall, often a department store or retail chain. With their broad appeal, they are intended to attract a significant cross-section of the shopping public to the center. (store store store store store) (wikipedia)
    • • •

    What a bizarre set of answers. You could do A.T. answers all day long, and *these* are the ones you settle on??? ARMORED TRUCK, APPLE TREE, ANN TAYLOR, ANIMAL TRAINER ... etc etc etc. I'm particularly floored by the off-brand ANCHOR TENANT, which is ... I mean, the wikipedia entry is for ANCHOR STORE because that is what people call them. Our local mall is dissolving, largely because ANCHOR STOREs are moving out. Why are you dipping into the "sometimes called" jar for answeres when the world is literally teeming with other, more interesting, more in-the-language A.T. answers. Not coincidentally, the only trouble I had with this puzzle happened *entirely* along the length of TENANT. AND HOW made it worse. Super-annoying that I got thwarted by language out of a Norman Rockwell painting. AND HOW is exacerbated by "keister" and "skivvies" and other things Andy Taylor might say. All that aw-shucks nostalgia-talk is cloying enough as it is without its being involved in the whole TENANT-area train wreck. I have no problem with the theme concept here (though it feels awfully familiar ...), but choose better answers. Real answers.


    There is nothing else memorable or remarkable about this puzzle except that the themers were an odd, arbitrary set, and the theme derailed at TENANT. The only marks I have made on the grid that are not in the TENANT region are:
    • The last two letters in I'M OFF (I had I'M OUT) (as in "I'm out (of here)") (1A: "Gotta go!")
    • The second word in PIANO TUNER (question-mark clue meant I needed a couple crosses to figure that one out) (11D: One involved with a grand opening?)
    • The last letter in AMAS (got my first / second / third persons all turned around in my head and forgot which way second person was supposed to go—I might've tested a "T" there) (27D: You love: Lat.)
    • The second letter in MITE (I had MOTE) (54D: Smidgen).
    The end. I thought I was at least headed toward a smooth, non-disastrous solving experience with this one, but then TENANT happened (AND HOW!) and that dream ended. I should add that I could've gotten back on track a little more quickly if a. I had known what kind of [Racket] I was dealing with at 51D: Racket (NOISE), and b. I had figured out what the hell the context was for 53A: Word spoken before and after "James" (BOND). Clue makes it sound like anyone might "speak" it. Also, BOND here is not a "word," it's a name. You aren't encouraging James to get closer to his child. He is naming himself. UGH.

    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

    Concerning both moon and sun's motions / WED 9-5-18 / Arabian land near Strait of Hormuz / Obsession of el rey Midas / Operating system in Linus family

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    Constructor: Amanda Chung, Karl Ni and Erik Agard

    Relative difficulty: Easy (4:18, which would be more an Easy-Medium time, but the puzzle is oversized, so ... Easy)


    THEME: TEAM-BUILDING (38A: Goal for six answers in this puzzle?)— NFL teams are clued in two parts, like an equation, [X + Y], where X and Y are both real words (or names):

    Theme answers:
    • TITANS (9A: "Whatever You Like" rapper + Gets some color at the beach) (the rapper is T.I.)
    • BRONCOS (24A: Frat dude + Cpls. and sgts.)
    • DOLPHINS (26A: Actor Lundgren + Elected officials)
    • PATRIOTS (50A: Butter square + Hilarious people)
    • BENGALS (52A: London's Big ___ + Ladies)
    • GIANTS (66A: U.S. soldier + Little scurriers)
    Word of the Day: UBUNTU (48D: Operating system in the Linux family) —
    noun
    1. a quality that includes the essential human virtues; compassion and humanity. (google) [and....] 
      Ubuntu (/ʊˈbʊnt/; stylized as ubuntu) is a free and open source operating systemand Linux distribution based on Debian. Ubuntu is offered in three official editions: Ubuntu Desktop for personal computers, Ubuntu Server for servers and the cloud, and Ubuntu Core for Internet of things devices and robots. New releases of Ubuntu occur every six months, while long-term support (LTS) releases occur every two years. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    The core gimmick here seems pretty solid to me. I just thought the revealer was a dud. It's a kind of weak, corporate-esque term to begin with, and then the whole equation-like cluing didn't really suggest "building" to me, and finally they are all NFL teams but there is absolutely nothing NFL-y about the revealer. Coulda been any teams from any sport (side note: slightly) weird that there is significant baseball *and* hockey content in this puzzle as well). The long Downs are really something, and the grid as a whole is very nice, but ... I just wasn't feeling the revealer or the "+" cluing. Seems like it would've been more fun / interesting to clue themers with "?" clues; like, just clue BRO NCOS, just clue G.I. ANTS. I don't know what your revealer would be in that case, but certainly solving the themers would've been more entertaining.


    I was surprised at how quickly I finished this one given that it contains two answers I've never heard of, and they're *crossing*. UBUNTU is super-duper new to me. Like ... just a bunch of letters. And LUNISOLAR is new to me as well, though there I could use some rudimentary knowledge of Latin roots to piece it together. What word would that even modify? Weird. I also nearly tanked BATHOS because I had PATHOS at first (58A: Sentimentality). I think of BATHOS as anti-climax. Is that wrong? [Checks] Nope, it is not:
    noun(especially in a work of literature) an effect of anticlimax created by an unintentional lapse in mood from the sublime to the trivial or ridiculous. (google)
    Huh. Odd. I'm sure [Sentimentality] is in some dictionary, somewhere, but it's not what I would call a Great clue. No other problems except writing in EXTRA INNING instead of TENTH INNING (11D: Bonus in baseball). Oh, and I forgot that JACOB was a "Twilight" thing just as I have largely forgotten "Twilight" was a thing. Weird how that very popular book / movie series just ... disappeared from cultural relevance. Harry Potter, on the other hand, promises never to fade from memory, which is fine with me. Interesting NFL-related clue on KNEEL (37A: Take a stand by not standing), especially considering Nike *just* made Colin Kaepernick the face of their new marketing campaign. Is a DSL MODEM still a thing? Whatever, it looks pretty cool in the grid.
      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Dweller along Don / THU 9-6-18 / Link popular online comedy duo / Blood of gods in Greek myth / Superhero's defining quality / Literally hopeful person / Mosque of shrine in Jerusalem

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      Constructor: Jeff Chen

      Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (6:48)
            
                       I    C     E    B     E    R    G

      THEME: TIP OF THE ICEBERG (62A: Hidden trouble indicator ... or what you'll need to finish this crossword?) — "tips" of some Downs at the top of the grid (which extend beyond the top of the grid) spell out ICEBERG

      Theme answers:
      • (I)SLAM (2D: It's symbolized by a star and crescent)
      • (C)OVER CHARGES (4D: Entry fees)
      • (E)MERGES (5D: Comes out)
      • (B)ARES (7D: Exposes)
      • (E)ASTERN (9D: Like Confucianism and Taoism)
      • (R)ENUNCIATION (10D: Formal rejection)
      • (G)UN IT (12D: Put the pedal to the metal)
      Word of the Day: LAPIN (51D: Rabbit fur) —
      lapin. 1 : rabbit; specifically : a castrated male rabbit. 2 : rabbit fur usually sheared and dyed. (m-w)
      • • •

      This doesn't work. On a grammatical level, it is completely broken. I see what the constructor's trying to do, especially with having ICEBERG literally above the grid, the way the TIP OF THE ICEBERG would be above the surface of the ocean, but that's the problem: "What you'll need to finish this crossword" is the tip ... of a bunch of answers. You do not, in fact, need the TIP OF THE ICEBERG. In fact, worse, you actually need THE WHOLE DAMN ICEBERG. So, double fail: first, the tips you need are not "of the iceberg," and second, you've got an entire iceberg on top of your grid, not just the tip. Why go forward with a theme that doesn't stick the landing. We are in the era of "good enough." Someone should be telling constructors when their tricky gimmicks don't actually work. Or (in the case of the A.T.s puzzle ... which apparently literally had 8 "T"s in it !?!?!?!) when their gimmicks are just bad ideas. I think we're supposed to see it as an accomplishment that the "wrong" answers (the tipless Downs) are all actual words in their own right. Maybe you're supposed to be left wondering how all those answers are supposed to work for their respective clues, I don't know.


      Picked up the gimmick without too much trouble. There was just so much going wrong at the top of the grid that I knew something was up, and eventually I figured out that 9D: Like Confucianism or Taoism had to be (E)ASTERN, which instantly made me reevaluate the handful of Downs I'd already had trouble with up there. Still didn't know that the "tips" of the answers spelled anything because I Was Solving Online, ugh, so I struggled some to get the NE corner, and I was honestly looking for more answers to be poking out of the grid, possibly along the bottom. Those never came. Never heard of RHETT, possibly because I couldn't name even an unpopular "online comedy duo" (18A: ___ and Link (popular online comedy duo)). I also weirdly struggled with ABILITY—despite the fact that I'm currently teaching a course on early superhero comics. I put in AGILITY. ABILITY is such a banal word, but I guess it's vaguely accurate. Superheroes have "abilities." I think of them as powers, but whatever. NO IDEA that the bomb-riding guy was Major KONG despite having seen "Strangelove" multiple times. Weird. Still don't get how SALSA refers to *two* kinds of dips? Like ... it *is* a dip, and you can ... ohhhhh ... dancing, I bet. OK. I liked the ASPS clue (33D: The snakes in the movie line "Snakes. Why'd it have to be snakes?") because I just read this comic today, which, honestly, they should still make:


      If only Steve Ditko (1927-2018) could still draw it.

      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Eponymous Austrian physicist who studied waves / FRI 9-7-18 / Fictional figure whose name means whole dweller / Brad's gal in Rocky Horror picture show / cheap beer option for short / Part of central american grove / Psychologist who coined word synchronicity / Comfy safari digs / London burial place of John Donne Horatio Nelson

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      Constructor: Josh Knapp

      Relative difficulty: Challenging (for me—slowest time in four+ months) (8:15)


      THEME: none

      Word of the Day: WET CELL (37D: Battery type) —
      noun
      1. a primary electric cell in which the electrolyte is a liquid. 
      1. [electrolyte = 
        noun
        1. a liquid or gel that contains ions and can be decomposed by electrolysis, e.g., that present in a battery.
          • PHYSIOLOGY
            the ionized or ionizable constituents of a living cell, blood, or other organic matter.] (google)
      • • •

      JANET
      Just one of those grids that had nothing to do with me. No pleasure for me anywhere, no cluing that entertained or seemed clever. I think the grid is just fine, but the solving experience just wasn't pleasant. A lot of trivia, and a lot of short stuff, and then longer answers that were solid but just sorta ... sat there. Also the idea that a TOW is a [Fate worse than a ticket] is pretty stupid. I mean, yes, you'd rather get a ticket than have your car be towed, but I think of a TOW as a vital thing, a helpful thing, a thing you *need* when your car breaks down, so the cutesyish clue was just annoying. And nothing clever ever really landed. Even an original answer like GO-ROUND had this fussy clue and was thus really hard to come up with (7D: One of a series of attempts). Also, GO-ROUNDs can be actual events, not just "attempts" at events. M-W has it as "one of a series of recurring actions or events"; what is "attempts" even doing in this clue? Weird. Some kind of TREE ... was a not-fun answer to try to come up with. I don't know. There's nothing special in this grid, nothing snazzy or new or ... it's just blah to me. Again, it's not a weak grid, it's just an old and boring-seeming grid. To me. Again, I'm in super "IMO" mode because I believe decent people can disagree on this one. I mean, if you're the kind of person who knows and enjoys the term TENT BED (???) (35D: Comfry safari digs), maybe you were on cloud nine.


      All my trouble came in the highly sequestered NW and SE corners. I have marked my printed puzzle in green ink, and almost all the ink currently resides in those regions. I guessed DISC straight away (1A: LP, e.g.) but couldn't confirm any of the letters. Got RES and ELLE and still had no idea about any of the Downs, and was pretty sure one of the first three answers I got must be wrong. Just couldn't come up with IN A HOLE (had the IN and then, nada). A colon might denote EYES. I mean, yes, but I was never going to get that. A villain could have a SCAR, but so could anyone who had been cut (I had LEER here) (5D: Mark of a villain, maybe). My first known actual right answers were, weirdly, ACETIC / OTT. Tried to back into the long Acrosses, but TREE was zero help, and then -L-CK at the end of 14A: Getting paid, say (ON THE CLOCK) had me thinking about the money, thus ... IN THE BLACK. Now, for the whole stretch of puzzle from NW to SE, the only issues I had were with VOLE (I somehow wrote in MOLE) (18A: Field mouse) and VENT (I understandably wrote in RANT) (49A: Go on a tweetstorm, say). Then came the SE, where I couldn't get HOBBIT (39D: Fictional figure whose name means "hole dweller") because "figure" implies a specific figure, not a type. If the word had been, say, "creature," I think HOBBIT would've come faster. PBR was brutal because how would I know it's "cheap," I've never bought one (also, for those of you who are like 'wtf is that?', it's Pabst Blue Ribbon). What is "broomball"? Unnecessarily hyperspecific clue for something as basic as RINK (45D: Venue for broomball). TENT BED, again, ridiculous. WET CELL, I didn't really know what that was, despite having heard of dry cell / WET CELL re: batteries before. It sounds gross. O'REILLY was never (John) Stewart's "sparring partner" in any regular sense of the word, i.e they didn't share a show; he was a recurring guest, but tons of guests "recurred" over the years. Ugh. Be accurate, puzzle (36D: Stewart's onetime TV sparring partner). Cluing matter, this cluing was (to me) bad. The only reliable day of the week fails to deliver. Sad.

      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Porgy novelist Heyward / SAT 9-8-18 / Useful list when troubleshooting computer / Balkan land on Olympic scoreboards / Half of 1980s sitcom duo / Member of Hoboken Four

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      Constructor: Andrew J. Ries

      Relative difficulty: Easy (6:50, at which point I had a single blank square I didn't know, which made me just quit ... but then I came back and got it after running the alphabet ... still Easy overall)


      THEME: none

      Word of the Day: TANGRAM (21D: Seven-piece puzzle) —
      The tangram (Chinese七巧板pinyinqīqiǎobǎn; literally: "seven boards of skill") is a dissection puzzle consisting of seven flat shapes, called tans, which are put together to form shapes. The objective of the puzzle is to form a specific shape (given only an outline or silhouette) using all seven pieces, which may not overlap. It is reputed to have been invented in China during the Song Dynasty, and then carried over to Europe by trading ships in the early 19th century. It became very popular in Europe for a time then, and then again during World War I. It is one of the most popular dissection puzzles in the world. A Chinese psychologist has termed the tangram "the earliest psychological test in the world", albeit one made for entertainment rather than for analysis. (wikipedia)
      • • •

      Hey, look: I found the Friday puzzle! Where were you yesterday, buddy? I missed you!

      A pattern develops

      Despite an epic faceplant right out of the gate, I torched this one pretty good. There were only a few roadblocks, and those were created entirely by terms / names I just didn't know, most notably DUBOSE, TANGRAM, and TAXI SQUAD (it's weird how much I hate football now, given how much I loved it as a kid (see: CTE, white supremacist owners, etc.); if I never saw another American football clue again, I'd be perfectly happy). TANGRAM in particular messed me up, because at the very end of the solve, I managed to get it down to -ANGRAM, but that last square had a cutesy "?"-clue cross and I just couldn't process it (21A: Scratch on the table?). And I thought "well PIP and PANGRAM would work fine ... but PIP can't be right ... Why Wasn't This PIP And PANGRAM!?" So I ragequit with one square to go, having finished the rest of it in under 7. But then I ragereturned and ran the alphabet and figured out the "T" (from TIP). So "scratch" in the clue is being used as olde-timey slang for "money." Weirdly, I knew the slang meaning of "scratch," and it was the very first meaning I thought of, but, in a bizarre series of associations that could've happened only in my brain, I was thinking of "money on the table" as a gambling thing, and *that* was driven *largely* by the fact that PIP is the term for any of the spots on dice. Once PIP got in my head, it pretty much dictated the whole arena in which my brain was willing to operate, apparently. In my world, PANGRAM is a much much much much more common term, but I recognize that in normal world (say, an ordinarily google search), TANGRAM is the far more common thing. I just didn't know it. Que sera.


      So, the initial faceplant: TONY (4D: Stage award) to ALLY (20A: Half of a 1980s sitcom duo) to RETAIL (1D: Sell)!!! Nailed it! (Fun fact, ALLY was doubly wrong, as the sitcom duo is actually "Kate and ALLIE"). The fact that I got out of that mess as fast as I did is my real accomplishment today. For my speedy recovery, I would like to thank ... god help me ... the worst Beach Boys song of all time, "Kokomo." Like all terrible and traumatic things, it haunts you. I just have to *see* the worst ARUBA and my brain goes "Jamaica! Ooh I'm gonna take ya!" And then it dies a little. Anyway, ARUBA OBIE KATE MARKET. I mean, I literally did a little donut in the NW corner of the puzzle. Once around wrong, and then again around right.


      Bullets:
      • 39D: "Porgy" novelist ___ Heyward (DUBOSE)— OK, I know W.E.B. DUBOIS, and I know the opera "Porgy and Bess," but this novel and this novelist, no. He was a white author who wrote predominantly about African-American culture of the south.
      • 33D: III, in Ithaca (IOTAS)— yes, those are several IOTAS all in a row, there. The misdirect is obviously that you're supposed to see the Roman numeral THREE, which is also five letters.
      • 19D: Celine Dion, by birth (QUEBECER) — man that is a silly-looking word. I love it. Probably my favorite thing in the grid.
      • 58A: Lab dept. (R AND D) (i.e. R&D, i.e. Research & Development) — ooh, an ampersandwich. Don't see those much any more.
      • 7D: Ones sharing some shots (SNAPCHAT FRIENDS)— not quite as, uh, snappy as FACEBOOK FRIENDS. Feels like a weak analogue. But I acknowledge that it's a real thing. I guess I should be grateful the clue didn't try to do a crossreference with nearby PIX (8D: Movies, informally)
      • 43A: Name for a big wheel (FERRIS)— this is cute cluing. A "big wheel" can be a VIP, so maybe that's the misdirect here. I also briefly considered cheese, before getting a cross or two and figuring out the right context.

      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Attire for Bond villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld / SUN 9-9-18 / Bullet 1950s fashion fad / Big name in water filters / Man just after kneeling / Chocolatier since 1845 / Manta ray by another name / Crucible for McCarthyism / Boxer upset in biopic Cinderella man / Dashboard warnings informally

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      Constructor: Hal Moore

      Relative difficulty: Medium (10:30)


      THEME:"Mixed Feelings"— a Schrödinger puzzle where two different words inhabit the same square, one (LOVE) for the Across and another (HATE) for the Down. Revealer in the center of the puzzle is: LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIPS (63A: They involve mixed feelings ... or a hint to four squares in this completed puzzle)

      Theme answers:
      • SLOVENIA (26A: Neighbor of Hungary) / WHAT ELSE IS NEW? (23D: "Why am I not surprised?)
      • BATTING GLOVES (37A: Pair of diamonds?) / CALIPHATE (12D: Islamic state)
      • ROLLOVER IRA (83A: Option for moving an investment) / WORDS TO THAT EFFECT (45D: Basically what was said)
      • FOUR-LEAF CLOVER (102A: Symbol of luck) / CHATEAU (98D: Fancy French home)
      Word of the Day: MAO SUIT (3D: Attire for the Bond villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld)
      The Yat-Sen Suit, also called the Mao suit, Chinese tunic suit or Zhongshan suit, is a style of Chinese menswear associated in China with Sun Yat-sen (better known to mainland Chinese as "Sun Zhongshan"), although it is more commonly associated in the West with Mao Zedong
      Sun Yat-sen introduced the style shortly after the founding of the Republic of China as a form of national dress with distinct political symbolism. Following the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, Mao and other leaders continued to wear the garment as a symbol of proletarian unity and as an Eastern counterpart to the business suit. It became less popular after the Opening Up of China under Deng Xiaoping but is still commonly worn by Chinese leaders during important state ceremonies and functions.
      In the 1960s and 1970s the Mao suit became fashionable among Western European, Australian, and New Zealander socialists and intellectuals. It was sometimes worn over a turtleneck. (wikipedia)
      • • •

      Hey! This theme was interesting, and the grid was clean, so hurrah. There are lessons to be learned here. First, the theme is tight; the revealer is apt, and the execution of the theme is nicely done—sqauares are spread out but not (predictably) symmetrical, and the squares are surprising, and found inside interesting answers. Further, by having just four squares, i.e. by not trying to cram more theme squares in, the grid is allowed to b r e a t h e, and so the non-theme fill is largely smooth and lovely, as opposed to pinched and awful. HUNTER-GATHERER! THE FAR SIDE! CONDO FEE! IDIOT LIGHTS! And the shorter stuff stays, at a minimum, inoffensive. Sundays often skew toward tedium, with high volume of themers trying to make up for low concpetual value. Give me this puzzle over X puzzle with 10 dumb add- / subtract- / change-a-letter "joke" answers.


      I moved through this one pretty quickly but the theme did not reveal itself for a long time. I had moved, in interlocking fashion, from the NW all the way to the SE before I figured out what was going on with the theme (picked it up at ROLLOVER IRA / WORDS TO THAT EFFECT). Unsurprisingly, all the sticky spots in this puzzle were located in and around the theme squares. I especially had trouble in the NW, which is where I started *and* ended. Thought a [No-goodnik] was a CAD. Don't know the Bond villain well or even the movie he's from (weird to omit that?) (it's "Goldfinger"), and MAO SUIT isn't the most familiar term to me, so even if the clue had been clearer, I might've struggled there. And then SNOW UNDER ... something feels slightly off or finagled or jury-rigged there, esp. as clued (22A: Overwhelm). It googles OK ... somehow I'm just having trouble hearing anyone's actually saying it. Sounds like a drunk person trying to say "it's no wonder..." And then you've got the LOVE/HATE square there, so yeah, the NW gave me minor fits. But only minor. My time was pretty dang normal.


      Bullets:
      • 114A: Certain break point (AD OUT) — wow this one threw me. My brain was translating the clue as "breakING point," so tennis was not on my mind. (Although it's on my mind now—that Serena / Osaka final, damn and dear lord!). Oh, and CIO (104D: Certain tech exec) ... what is that? Chief ... Information Officer? Ah, yes. OK. CEO and CFO I know, other Os I'm iffier on.
      • 81D: Bribes (PAYOFFS)— because of the ambiguity of the clue (verb or noun!?) I had PAYS OFF at first.
      • 88D: Suffix with large numbers (-AIRE) — ok this is not good. I found a not-good thing. To its credit, the clue doesn't try to get cute. Just keeps it simple and literal so you can Move On (nothing to see here!)
      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Human rights advocate Jagger / MON 9-10-18 / Shaggy grazer / Mosque toppers / Device to remove water from ship

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      Constructor: Jacob Stulberg

      Relative difficulty: Challenging (by far my slowest Monday time since I've been recording them) (4:09)


      THEME: CHEESE / SPREAD (28A: With 45-Across, savory topping found in tubs ... and the circled squares?) — four-letter cheeses are S P R E A D out inside theme answers:

      Theme answers:
      • FREE TRADE (17A: Zero-tariff policy) (FETA)
      • DEAD CALM (31A: Complete lack of wind, as at sea) (EDAM)
      • BURL IVES (43A: "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" actor) (BRIE)
      • BILGE PUMP (58A: Device to remove water from a ship) (BLEU)
      Word of the Day: SOBE (35A: Iced tea brand in a bottle) —
      SoBe (stylized as SoBe) is an American brand of teas, fruit-juice blends and enhanced water beverages owned by PepsiCo. The name SoBe is an abbreviation of South Beach, named after the upscale area located in Miami Beach, Florida. In the past, the SoBe name has also been licensed for gum and chocolate products. SoBe switched from glass bottles to plastic bottles for all of its beverages in 2010. (wikipedia)

      • • •

      You wouldn't describe this as "Hard" but I don't know, man, it played like a tough Tuesday / easy-medium Wednesday for me. Something about the way the revealer is laid out AND cross-referenced, and then some of the proper nouns, and some of the potential traps you might fall into, made this not a normal Monday, difficulty-wise. Again, it's a minute of my day. A minute off of average. But a minute on Monday is F O R E V E R. I just finished a Manhattan, and I definitely get a little sloppy and slow when I've been drinking, but even so, I thought I was gonna come in somewhere in the mid-3s. But over 4??? I don't have a recorded *Tuesday* time that's over 4. I don't think the puzzle is difficult overall. Or maybe it is, but my particular downfall was a couple of mistakes, one understandable (and lethal) the other just a dumb misreading of the clue on my part. In the first case, I answered 5D: "Start working!" as GET TO IT! Oh, man, did that hurt. The wrong part went right through the first half of the revealer, so ... ouch. Also, I totally convinced myself that maybe TOSSES could work for 21A: Orders (around) (BOSSES) and PODS could work for 24A: Beginning blossoms (BUDS). The clue on COMFY was awkward-sounding to begin with (33A: Feeling good to wear, say), but throw in a wrong letter, and things ... well, they got ugly. And the second error was due to a too-quick reading of the clue at 37A: "Where there's ___, there's hope" (LIFE). I wrote in WILL, because clearly my brain thought "Where there's a WILL there's a way" was what was happening there. Where is this dumb unattributed quote from. Dum spiro, spero, I know—is that what this is? Footnote, please!


      BIANCA Jagger is a "Human rights advocate"??? I didn't know she was ... I just haven't seen her name at all, in a million years, so that clue meant nothing to me. Honestly, I'm not sure I saw the clue. I think I filled her in entirely from crosses. I was lucky to know BURL IVES, though I'm not sure how easy that is for non-TCM fan solvers. I struggled through BILGE PUMP. I have a vague idea what it is, but it's a pretty technical term. It's weird to call AARP a [Grp. making after-work plans?] because ideally you've made "plans" before you are even eligible to *join* AARP. I mean, what is my IRA if not a "plan"? Or maybe the "plans" are just ordinary junk one might do. Non-financial. It's just that the phrasing of the clue implies that the planning is happening Before You've Stopped Work, in which case... probably not in AARP yet. See, when you get cute, I get picky. It's a tit for tat situation. I don't know what I thought of the theme. As someone who once made a cheese-themed puzzle himself, I guess I'm favorably inclined toward this one. I don't know.  But CHEESE SPREAD ... I don't eat that (I couldn't even name a type or brand), so it's not on my radar, and "savory topping found in tubs" didn't help one iota. But honestly, I barely noticed the theme and (as you can see) had bigger problems to deal with.

      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

      Onetime radio host Boortz / TUE 9-11-18 / Rapper/actor Gibson / Epithet for British beauty with fair skin / 1996 best-selling guide for grammarphobes / Slack-jawed feeling

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      Constructor: Timothy Polin

      Relative difficulty: Easy (3:02)


      THEME: FLOWERY LANGUAGE (35A: High-flown speech or writing ... or a description of 17-, 22-, 51- and 57-Across) — common phrases where last word is a type of flower:

      Theme answers:
      • SHRINKING VIOLET (17A: Shy sort)
      • ENGLISH ROSE (22A: Epithet for a British beauty with fair skin)
      • GILD THE LILY (51A: Try to improve what is already beautiful)
      • AS FRESH AS A DAISY (57A: Full of energy and enthusiasm)
      Word of the Day: TYRESE Gibson (3D: Rapper/actor Gibson) —
      Tyrese Gibson (born December 30, 1978), also known mononymously as Tyrese, is an American singer, songwriter, rapper, actor, model, VJ, screenwriter, film producer, author and television producer. He played Joseph "Jody" Summers in Baby Boy, Angel Mercer in Four BrothersRoman Pearce in the Fast and the Furious series and Robert Epps in the Transformers film series. After releasing several albums, he transitioned into films, with lead roles in several major Hollywood releases. (wikipedia)
      • • •

      Zoom zoom. A full minute and change faster than yesterday's solving time. Not sure how Monday and Tuesday got so badly flipped, but the difference was dramatic. I occasionally solve Tuesdays faster than Mondays, but never by this much. And when I first looked at and started the puzzle, I was sure it was going to be tough. That NW corner is so open-looking, and usually big open corners spell trouble, or at least some real elbow grease, and my first moves into the grid felt pretty dicey. "MOSHES?," I wondered, as I wrote it in, tentatively. But then ERS, OK, that felt right, and HOED, sure, fine, both not great entries, but both work. And then AMID and the rest of the short Downs and things really fell into place. Really easy to move into / out of the NW and SE corners, despite their being relative cut-off. Got STELLAR and ANNAL (in the NW) and TARGETS and LEADS (in the SE) really easily—those are hallway words or bridge words or whatever metaphor you want to use for words that connect one part of the grid with another. Hallway words? Corridor words? And then most of the fill (outside the themers and the four longer Acrosses) was short, and short typically means easy. Despite all the short stuff, the solving experience was not unpleasant. The themers were interesting, though ENGLISH ROSE is not a term I know at all—IRISH ROSE, I've heard, but not ENGLISH ROSE... not that I can remember, anyway. Looks like the flowers are all used metaphorically here, which is a nice way to express the revealer.


      GAWP, though, man... I really have a hard time accepting that as a word (56D: Stare slack-jawed). If I stare slack-jawed—which I'm sure I do; my dad is infamous for this, and (except for politics) I am more and more like him every day—then I GAPE or I GAWK. I am quite sure I've never GAWPed in my life. Doesn't Whitman talk about a "barbaric YAWP"? Am I making that up? Aha! No I am not. See, I've never actually read Whitman. But I sure as hell saw "Dead Poets Society" when I was in college, which, you know, is almost the same thing:


      Sorry, where was I? Oh yeah, GAWP is slop. Pass it on.
        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

        [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

        Old Chevy model renamed Sonic / WED 9-12-18 / Literally small ovens / Literally thousand leaf / Attribute for my girl after five foot two in 1920s tune / Historic political visitor to Pearl Harbor on 12/27/16 / Like about 17% of land in Holland

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        Constructor: Jeffrey Wechsler

        Relative difficulty: Challenging (5:23) (3rd slowest recorded Wednesday since April)


        THEME: FRENCH CHEF (63A: Julia Child's PBS show, with "The" ... or one associated with the answers to the starred clues) — French food that "literally" means something unfood-sounding when translated into English

        Theme answers:
        • PETIT FOURS (18A: *Literally, "small ovens")
        • HORS D'OEUVRES (30A: *Literally, "outside the works")
        • BOUILLABAISSE (39A: *Literally, "boil and lower")
        • MILLE FEUILLE (46A: *Literally, "thousand-leaf")
        Word of the Day: PETIT FOURS (18A) —
        petit four (plural: petits fours, also known as mignardises) is a small bite-sized confectionery or savoury appetizer. The name is  Frenchpetit four (French pronunciation: ​[pə.ti.fur]), meaning "small oven". (wikipedia)
        • • •

        This will be fairly quick: Nope. First, this is just some French food, and then the rather boring FRENCH CHEF as a revealer. Second, despite the whole "Literally..." thing linking all the theme clues together, there is really nothing of substance holding the theme clues together. You can see this just by looking at the revealer, which, again, contains nothing that would relate it to the whole "Literally..." cluing gambit. A Thud-revealer if I ever saw one. Lastly, BOUILLABAISSE is Not Like The Others. The others are *Literally* literally what they say they are, whereas BOUILLABAISSE does not not not "literally" mean "boil and lower." It contains those roots, but that is very (Very) different from what is being claimed here (i.e. literalness), and it makes that clue stand out badly from the others, where the clue translations are, in fact literal. Literally literal. To recap: nope.

        [j'aurais toujours faim de toi]

        This felt harder than usual, partly because of tricky French spelling, and partly because the parallel longer Downs in the NW and SE made those corners potentially weird. I could not have opened worse, in the NW. Just a disaster. Got ENDO and then eventually guessed ASHE (though that is a bad clue ... I think it's trying to say that ASHE- is a "lead-in to 'ville'" in North Carolina (also), but that is not, grammatically, what is happening in the clue (unless "North Carolina" is being used adjectivally to modify "lead-in," which would be bonkers). Anyhoo, I had Lao-TSO (ouch x 2) and then dropped in AKIN TO at 1A: Just like. Brutal. But not as brutal as what I was about to do next, namely compound the one long error with Another Long Error: faced with H---O---- at 3D: Want really bad, I decided to try out HAS TO HAVE. It's a bad answer because 3rd person present singular verb doesn't work with the clue, but that didn't keep it from feeling right for a few seconds. So I had a mess up there. I had to leave the corner and then back into it with HORS D'OEUVRES before I could even begin to extricate myself. Other big trouble spot was down south, where I couldn't get either LATHS or LOW-CUT to fall, and so the SW was something I had to jump into with no help from crosses. I also couldn't spell FEUILLE because I thought it had to be plural. Gah. Oh, and RECLAIMED was hard for me to see. I guess Holland RECLAIMED the land ... from the sea? Or from Prussia, one or the other.

        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

        [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

        Fermented milk drink / THU 9-13-18 / Pre-snap signal / Tatooine has two of them / Three barleycorns as defined by Edward II / Start of some hybrid music styles

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        Constructor: Alex Eaton-Salners

        Relative difficulty: Medium (5:56)


        THEME: IN BOX / OUT BOX (69A: Where work piles up ... with a hint to this puzzle's theme / 72A: Where finished work goes ... with a hint to this puzzle's theme) — rebus puzzle with an IN box and OUT box in each of the four long Acrosses:

        Theme answers:
        • CARP(IN)G AB(OUT) (18A: Finding fault with)
        • THE FOUNTA(IN) OF Y(OUT)H (30A: Goal for Ponce de León)
        • FROTH(IN)G AT THE M(OUT)H (47A: Incensed)
        • RA(IN)BOW TR(OUT) (60A: Colorful food fish)
        Word of the Day: CHARLY (10D: Oscar-winning Cliff Robertson title role) —
        Charly (marketed and stylized as CHAЯLY) is a 1968 American drama film, directed and produced by Ralph Nelson, and written by Stirling Silliphant. It was based on Flowers for Algernon, a science fiction short story (1958) and subsequent novel (1966) by Daniel Keyes.
        The film stars Cliff Robertson as Charly Gordon, an intellectually disabled adult who is selected by two doctors to undergo a surgical procedure that triples his IQ as it did for Algernon, a laboratory mouse who also underwent the same procedure; additional roles are co-played by Claire BloomLilia SkalaLeon Janney, and Dick Van Patten. Robertson was reprising his previous portrayal of the same role in a 1961 television adaptation, "The Two Worlds of Charlie Gordon", an episode of the anthology series The United States Steel Hour. (wikipedia)
        • • •

        I really like this theme, particularly the way the revealer answers resemble (in their stackedness) the thing they describe. I also like how tightly the theme is expressed: one IN, one OUT, with the former always preceding the latter, in each of the four themers. IN, OUT, IN, OUT, IN ... sounds a little dirty when I say it that way, but you get the picture. Consistency! But a hidden consistency that you have to suss out (i.e. where's the IN!? where's the OUT?). One big problem with the theme was FROTHING. The phrase is "foaming at the mouth." I lost valuable time wondering what the hell was going on with this non-foaming answer. I see that people (allegedly) also use this FROTHING expression, but (per google) less than half as often as they use the real, better expression. I don't know why "food" is in the clue for RAINBOW TROUT (60A: Colorful food fish). It adds nothing to the answer's gettability. It's just this weird extra bit of information—yeah, people eat it. Nobody cares, puzzle. [Colorful fish] would've worked just fine.


        I found this one pretty easy as rebus puzzles go. Started very quickly in the NW (not surprising, given that everything up there is a short answer) and then got predictably bogged down in the NE all around the area of the first themer. I thought CARPING AT was a perfectly good answer for 18A: Finding fault with, so the rebusness of it all eluded me longer than it might have if I'd drawn a blank for that clue. I think I actually wrote in FATISH (?!) at one point for 12D: Somewhat stocky (STOUTISH). I finally figured out something weird was going on with the Ponce de León clue, which I *knew* had to be THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH ... but the letters I had appeared to be in the wrong place. But I had OF and then the terminal H, and so I put OUT in there and then I realized 9D: "Dancing With the Stars" co-host Andrews had to be ER*IN* and after that, things got Very easy. I spelled AHH"AAH" and there was the whole foaming/frothing confusion, but otherwise, I sped through this thing to the end. Nice to have it all end, thematically, at that strange revealer set-up in the SE. This (and only this) is why God invented random Roman numerals—to make worthwhile tricky corners work.


        Pretty motley group of pop culture names today. Mostly older, occasionally marginal, all male. I barely know who Cliff Robertson is and I sure as hell don't know the movie "CHARLY"—he won an Oscar for that? It happened before I was born so I probably shouldn't be so surprised at not knowing that. And cluing Mark HARMON as just [Actor Mark] is hilarious. I feel like his level of fame require some extra info, like "of 'NCIS' fame" or whatever. I've never seen "NCIS" (which is somehow Still On The Air and has been since 2003!!!!). All I know about HARMON is he's married to Pam Dawber (of "Mork & Mindy" fame) and once pulled a guy from a burning car. Dick ENBERG and Jay LENO are also in this puzzle. It's a really weird men's club meeting today, is what I'm saying.

        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

        [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
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