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Metrosexual satchel / FRI 6-5-15 / Up or down 12 semitones in musical notation / Popular series of 1990s compilation albums / King in Elgar title / Eternally nameless thing / Louisville-based restaurant chain

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Constructor: James Mulhern

Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging



THEME: none

Word of the Day: OTTAVA (48D: Up or down 12 semitones in musical notation) —
 at an octave higher or lower than written —used as a direction in music. (merriam-webster.com)
• • •

This has some nice moments—there's a liveliness to OH GOD NO and FAKE PUNT and SNARKY—but there's also a certain forced hipness. I lived through the '90s and paid attention to music/pop culture and JOCK JAMS rings only the faintest of bells. MONSTER BALLADS and NOW THAT'S WHAT I CALL MUSIC! were all I could think of. I can't see JOCK JAMS bringing a lot of joy to or having much currency with NYT solvers, but I'm not mad at it. Double-J-ness alone makes it respectable. MURSE, however, is absurd in the extreme. It's a non-word. No one but no one uses that word, would claim to own one, etc. Maybe some TV episode or pop culture joke somewhere made the term briefly, unfortunately viable, but please. No. Terrible. MURSE is better as a portmanteau of "male nurse," and it's not good there, either, as male nurses are just nurses.

[even sites that sell "MURSEs" don't actually sell them]

JACKASS has a "look at me pushing the envelope!" feel that I found slightly off-putting. I use the term all the time (in private), so I'm not (at all) offended by the word, but (and perhaps this will be surprising to you), I'm not a big fan of crassness / coarseness in my puzzles. It's sort of how I feel about public use of profanity. Like, go to town if you're at home, or if just you and your friends can hear, but rein it in if you're in line at the grocery store. Blah blah something about public discourse something about I'm becoming an old man. Whatever. I know JACKASS isn't profanity, but I still wasn't as thrilled as I think I was supposed to be.


Basically you have a super-common Friday grid design today—black X (roughly) through the center with 3-wide L-corners all around (that is, 3 longer Acrosses crossing 3 longer Downs in every corner), and the results are mixed. I'd say the fill is mostly good, rarely terrible, but too often mediocre. Entire NE is entirely forgettable. With exception of JACKASS (which is at least unusual), SW isn't much better—lots of AREAARREARSIERRAERR, which is to say it's mostly the same three letters over and over and over. It's an entirely acceptable puzzle, but I wish there were more stand-out answers, and I wish the fill were somewhat smoother. REJIGGER is not and will never be a thing. Also, TEENTSY does not and will never contain that second "T." It hurts just to look at. POO, also, never acceptable.


Look how terribly I started out. I got so frustrated that I just plowed ahead, bull-in-china-shop style, refusing to stop until I'd traversed the entire grid from NW to SE. As you can see, horrific start suddenly gives way to impressive grid-spanning streak:


First four answers in the grid were wrong. Yeesh. I still don't really get how [Give a turn] makes sense for JOLT, but I'm sure that some idiom somewhere can be stretched to make that meaning work, somehow. After ARABS, though, I cut right through this thing. Doesn't mean it got Easy all of a sudden—just means it got doable. At this point, I actually wasn't at all sure about JOE or PILLS. Got screwed up by writing in NO NO NO for OH GOD NO, which made ELDEST impossible to see, which made me doubt both JOE and PILLS. Again, the elephant in the grid is REJIGGER, which is still not a thing. But once I got the NE settled, I came down and realized that all my first instincts (shown above) had been right. I made a few more mistakes along the way—GULE (?) for ORLE (53A: Edge on a shield), DIRE for DARK (55D: Forbidding), WAIT A SEC for JUST A SEC (38A: "Hold on")—but except for the WTF-ery of OTTAVA (48D: Up or down 12 semitones, in musical notation), nothing else held me up much. Puzzle took some work, but no more than you might expect on a Friday.
    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

    The Indie 500 Crossword Tournament, May 30, 2015 (The Rex Parker Write-Up)

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    The Indie 500 Crossword Tournament

    Saturday, May 30, 2015—Washington, D.C.


    We drove down to suburban D.C. to stay with PuzzleGirl, which we have done several times before, but usually only to visit before leaving the country via Dulles. The drive was typical summer road trip stuff—heat, construction, Harrisburg, traffic, Gettysburg, traffic, accident, traffic, urban traffic madness, creepily bucolic area around C.I.A. headquarters … and done. 6+ hours. Ridiculous. But we were in no rush, and we made it in time for 7:30 dinner reservations, so my pre-tournament excitement was undiminished. First great surprise was that constructing phenom and all-around good guy Doug Peterson was staying with PuzzleGirl too. The second great surprise was that Doug had brought me vintage sleaze paperbacks for my (sizable) collection. This actually wasn't much of a surprise, as it's become something of a ritual—I meet Doug at a tournament, he hands over roughly 4-to-6 smutty old books in a ratty plastic bag, all of us end up crying-laughing. Here's a typical specimen:


    So we all had Italian food nearby and constructor Barry Silk came along (he's the guy who makes seemingly every LAT Saturday puzzle). I had chianti and split a pizza with my wife. You really don't need to know any of this.

    [Former ACPT D-division champion Vega Subramaniam and her tournament-rookie father, Mani]

    Up early the next morning to drive into Georgetown. The tournament took place on the GWU campus in the Cloyd Heck Marvin Center For Something Or Other—I don't remember the last part because Cloyd Heck is such a mesmerizing name sequence, you hardly feel anything else around it is worth remembering. Cloyd! It's like Clyde and Lloyd got together and said "Heck, let's have a baby!" A truly building-worthy name. The stairwells of the building had huge posters of famous GWU alumni affixed to the underside of the stairs, creating a truly vertiginous stair-climbing experience. But again, I digress. The tournament space was lovely; you entered down a large, wide staircase into a large well-lit area with a stage on one side. We got there early so we could see all the contestants arrive. My wife decided to assume the role of official tournament photographer: "it's amazing what you can get people to do if you act like you're in charge and have a camera around your neck." I got to meet a lot of first-time tournament-goers and see a lot of old friends. The air was festive. It should be noted, however, that the organizers—Erik Agard, Peter Broda, Neville Fogarty, Andy Kravis, and Evan Birnholz—were All Business. There were very few hiccups all day long, and this was clearly due to the fact that the organizers were well and truly *working* from start to finish. Really impressive how well they cooperated and improvised and generally made the trains run roughly on time.

    [Peter Broda and Erik Agard—working]

    I can't talk about the puzzles in detail. I can say that all contestants solved five puzzles: three before lunch and two after. Then the top three contestants in each division—Outside Track (beginner) and Inside Track (advanced)—solved Puzzle 6 on stage while the rest of us looked on in awe / sympathy (both Outside and Inside Track solved the same grid, but did so using very, very different clues—the Inside Track clues were Brutal). But to rewind a bit—Erik Agard's puzzle was first. It had parts that were (appropriately) in color, so that was new. It also was not not not nearly as easy as most people seemed to expect a Puzzle 1 to be. I struggled, and I ended up doing better on that puzzle (relative to the field) than on any other puzzle that day. It was my favorite puzzle of the day, though I should say now that there was not a bad, or even a Just OK, puzzle in the bunch. The whole set was amazing and if you don't believe me, or if you do, you should go get them and see for yourself. I tried to congratulate Erik on his great puzzle after I'd finished it, but he was nowhere to be found—I think he was in the scorer's lair, which was this mystery area behind a black curtain that none of us were allowed to—or dared to—enter.

    [Tournament organizer / constructor Neville Fogarty and crossword bon vivant Tony Orbach]

    Peter Broda's puzzle was next (Puzzle 2), and this is the puzzle that caused a bunch of errors among the top solvers. There were slashed squares, and you had to write a letter in each half of the square, and—as was made perfectly clear to us from the outset—which half of the square you put which letter in *mattered*. But not everyone was as attentive as they needed to be to those instructions, so there was some carnage. I was terribly slow on that puzzle, but since I got out of it clean, my slowness didn't really matter that much. Puzzle 3 was by Finn Vigeland, and it had won the right to be in the tournament, having been selected as part of a contest from a pool of puzzles submitted by comparatively novice constructors. It was a very deserving puzzle. Again, parts of the grid were in color. The grid had objects on it—little, emoji-like renderings of a familiar object. All over the place. You had to figure out why. Really entertaining.

    [Contestants Brayden Burroughs, Lena Webb, Adam Jackson]

    We ate lunch at a Baja Fresh because we were lazy and there were a lot of us and actually it was pretty damned good. Tournament was running a little behind at that point, but not so's you'd notice. People seemed to be having too much of a good time to care. After lunch there was a puzzle by Andy Kravis. The whisper campaign—instigated by Andy, I'm pretty sure—had it that this puzzle, Puzzle 4, was going to literally figuratively decapitate people. It would be the equivalent of Puzzle 5 at the ACPT—the terrifying, world-slaughtering monster. This ended up being complete B.S.—so much so, that I got paranoid that I was solving it *too* easily; I figured I must be missing something. Threw my game off pretty badly. So remember if you ever attend one of these things in the future: mind games are apparently part of the deal. Don't believe the hype—just Follow Instructions and solve the puzzle. Puzzle 5 … what was it? Oh, Neville's puzzle. A fine, tricky-at-first-but-ultimately-doable puzzle. Turns out the puzzle had an interesting back story, which involved its having to be completely rewritten (they took test-solver feedback very seriously). The original idea sounded amazing, but also, possibly, solver-maddening. None of that really matters, though, as the resulting product was excellent. And just like that we were done. And *very* shortly thereafter (before Puzzle 5's time had officially completely elapsed), I found out that I had had a perfect tournament—clean, no errors. In the end, I finished 9th (out of 100 contestants—an impressive total for an inaugural independent tourney). I will never, ever finish higher than 9th at any tournament. Thus, I am The 9th Greatest Crossword Solver in the Universe In Perpetuity Forever and Ever Amen. I didn't get any hardware, but that single-digit finish (and my favorite number to boot!) was good enough for me.

    [Trip Payne senses a disturbance in The Force—runs to tell Al Sanders about it]

    Both of the finals were pretty thrilling. On the Outside Track, Andrew Miller (a tournament rookie who had destroyed the competition all day long) finished way before the other two contestants, but (dum dum DUM) he made the mistake (familiar to anyone who has seen "Wordplay") of leaving squares blank, even after having stepped back and checked the grid. Note to future on-stage solvers—apparently it can be hard to see the parts of the grid that are below waist level when you are stepping back to check your grid at the end. Anyway, his mistake paved the way for Joshua Himmelsbach (another rookie) to take the top prize. Christine Quinones ended up finishing well before time elapsed, so she got the … silver, or whatever they were calling 2nd place.

    [Contestant Joshua Himmelsbach, looking, fittingly, victorious]

    Then it was time for the big guns—all A-level competitors at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament (ACPT), all people who had solved on stage and won before, in other venues. Joon Pahk had a Lollapuzzoola championship under his belt, Amy Reynaldo won the ACPT B division back during the year documented in "Wordplay" (you can see her curtsey if you watch real carefully), and Eric Maddy had won many regional tournaments around the country, most notably (and recently) Crosswords LA. Joon was the favorite (he's one of the very fastest solvers in the country) and he didn't disappoint, finishing comfortably ahead of the others, with no errors. Here he is looking gleeful while the others still toil away:



    Amy made steady, methodical progress and came in a comfortable second. Eric didn't manage to finish in the allotted time, so he took third. That someone of his solving caliber couldn't finish in time should give you some idea how hard the cluing was. With the Outside Track clues, the puzzle was tough—but with the Inside Track clues, it was well nigh impossible. Mere mortals could not hope to solve this thing at all. So congrats to all of them, and to anyone who dares to solve a tough puzzle on stage with 100+ people watching you. I would probably break down and cry and/or put my fist through the grid.

    Then there were awards to hand out. Here's the list of winners:

    1st Inside Track: joon pahk
    2nd Inside Track: Amy Reynaldo
    3rd Inside Track: Eric Maddy
    [Amy, Eric, joon]

    1st Outside Track: Joshua Himmelsbach
    2nd Outside Track: Christine Quinones
    3rd Outside Track: Andrew Miller
    [Andrew, Christine, Josh]

    The PuzzleGirl Rookie of the Year Award: Andrew Miller
    [Andrew's wearing the medal; Neville, for some reason, is celebrating]

    Bobsy Jane's Pretty Penmanship Award: Laura Zipin (runner-up was Bret Martin)


    the joon pahk award for worst handwriting: Christopher King
    [He has a puzzle site: chriswords.com]

    FireballCrosswords.com Indie Spirit Award: Amy Reynaldo


    The Yogi Berra Best Wrong Answer Award: Megan Beresford

    Special Dairy-Related Tradition Drawing Winner: Joe Cabrera (winner of this drawing got to hit any constructor of his/her choosing with a pie)
    [Pie Victim: Puzzle 2 constructor Peter Broda]

    After the tournament, a most unusual / terrible post-tournament dining experience for me and a few of my friends. Then back to PuzzleGirl's house to rest up for next day's trip to Camden Yards to see the Orioles lose to the Tampa Bay (don't call them "Devil") Rays, with actual Oriole fan and UVA junior-to-be and independent crossword constructor Sam Ezersky. But I'll just stop there. I can't recommend this tournament highly enough. In terms of the combination of professionalism and pure fun, only Lollapuzzoola can really compare (and you should definitely go to that—NYC, Saturday, August 8). I really hope Indie 500 happens again next year. It deserves to be an annual event. Thanks to all the organizers, and everyone who came up to me at the tournament and said (mostly) nice things. Yay, dorks!

    Awaiting next year,
    REX

    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]
    [Get the 2015 Indie 500 Crossword Tournament puzzles here (under "Register")]
    [Register for Lollapuzzoola 8 (on 8/8!) here]
    [All photos ©2015 Penelope Harper]

    Bygone sticker / SAT 6-6-15 / Pol affiliation of British PM William Gladstone / Heavy durable china / Former big four record company / Longtime sponsor of Socceroos national soccer team

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    Constructor: Jason Flinn

    Relative difficulty: Easy-Challenging



    THEME: MIRROR, MIRROR … — that's the phrase that appears in the diagonally arranged circled squares. It's a phrase that was said by the EVIL QUEEN, who was asking who was the fairest of them all (answer, of course: SNOW WHITE). Now the trick here is that the MIRROR parts of the grid have an actual mirror function, in that the answers that run into those circled squares (whether coming from Across or Down) bounce off the figurative "mirror" at a 90-degree angle. So Down answers veer right, Across answers bounce down. The angle of incidence = the angle of reflection. Physics finally pays off.

    Theme answers:

    • EVIL QUEEN (5A: She queried a magic object named twice in this puzzle's circled squares)
    • SNOW WHITE (64A: Answer provided by the magic object named twice in the circled squares)


    Word of the Day: ROTI (56D: Pita-like bread)
    noun
    INDIAN
    1. bread, especially a flat round bread cooked on a griddle. (google)
    • • •

    I think this puzzle is great. I'm not sure, but I think so. I asked others to tell me whether I'm right, and I'm mostly waiting to hear back, but for now: great. It's just one of those "wow" concepts—the fill is no great shakes, but it doesn't have to be because the concept is so solid. The NE and SW corners threatened to be Much harder than the mirror-related parts … but then the thematic material (SNOW WHITE, EVIL QUEEN) in those corners was easy, so those corners became fairly tame. My only complaint is that this should've been a Thursday. Would've been Challenging for a Thursday, but conceptually, it's exactly where it belongs. I want my Hard Themeless Saturday! But if you're gonna swap out my themeless with a themed puzzle on a Saturday, yeah, make it this good and I won't be able to squawk that much.


    I imagine lots of solvers will have a parallel experience to mine. Initial flailing, followed by realization that something very loopy is going on ("OK so STEERAGE… but what kind of email header is three letters starting with "E"? … and … uh, OMENS and I'M OUT… oh, come *on*, I know that's NOIRE!! …"). Once I realized that there was a serious trick involved, I went looking for the clue that would help me figure it out. Eyes lit on the clue for SNOW WHITE, which had "magic object named twice" in it, and the MIRROR, MIRROR thing came to me instantly. As soon as I'd filled all the circled squares, the concept came to me as well. After that, the only tough thing was making sure I was putting the letters in the right squares. Everything along the MIRROR, MIRROR axis was very easy. As I said, the NE / SW corners were initially harder, but in the end, not terribly.

    Bulllets:


    • 1A: Some safety stats: Abbr. (INTS)— safety is a position in American football. INTS are interceptions.
    • 20A: Cuttlefish feature (TENTACLE)— I learned about these amazing creatures from Jaron Lanier's fantastic book, You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto. This is also where I learned the word "neoteny."
    • 26A: 1992 Prince song or its peak position in Billboard (SEVEN) — I forgot this song until I said the title aloud (?) and then it came back; or at least the chorus did. It's technically called "7." His songs aren't on youtube, so … here are a couple of other "seven" songs:




    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

    Dennis who fronted 1960s-70s Classics IV / SUN 6-7-15 / 2005 South African drama / Bonheur who painted Horse Fair / He died at Xanadu / 1971 top 20 hit with no English lyrics

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    Constructor: Samuel A. Donaldson

    Relative difficulty: Easy



    THEME:"The Call Of The Race" — clues are an imagined call of a race, where fill-in-the-blank clues are both appropriate to horse racing and wacky plays on words related to the names of the imagined horse in the clues:

    Theme answers:
    • 22A: "And they're off! Ace Detective has the ___!") (EARLY LEAD) — get it, because detectives get leads? Yeah, you get it. I'm not annotating the rest of these, on the assumption that you Get It.
    • 28A: "Looks like Setting Sun is ___!" ("FADING FAST")
    • 35A: "It's Pariah ___"! ("ON THE OUTSIDE")
    • 56A: "Chiropractor heads into the ___!" ("BACK STRETCH")
    • 64A: "Here's where Mississippi Delta often ___!" ("GAINS GROUND")
    • 75A: "Now Carrier Pigeon takes the ___!" ("TURN FOR HOME")
    • 95A: "But wait! Amex Card ___!" ("MAKES A CHARGE")
    • 101A: "Almost there, and E Pluribus Unum will be ___!" ("IN THE MONEY") — fittingly, this answer does not seem very on-the-money.
    • 114A: "But the winner is … Inseam ___!" (BY A LENGTH) — why "Inseam???"Because it is *a* unit of length? I think I'd rewrite my entire puzzle just so I could get a more wordplay-ish expression here at the end, like (BY A NOSE) (114A: "But the winner is … Cyrano ___!"). What a weird, anticlimactic ending.

    Word of the Day:"TSOTSI" (38D: 2005 South African drama that won a Best Foreign Film Oscar) —
    Tsotsi is a 2005 film directed by Gavin Hood and produced by Peter Fudakowski. It is a adaptation of the novel Tsotsi, by Athol Fugard and a South African/UK co-production . The soundtrack features Kwaito music performed by popular South African artist Zola as well as a score by Mark Kilian and Paul Hepker featuring the voice of South African protest singer/poet Vusi Mahlasela.
    Set in an Alexandra slum, in JohannesburgSouth Africa, the film tells the story of Tsotsi, a young street thug who steals a car only to discover a baby in the back seat.
    The film won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film in 2006. (wikipedia)
    • • •

    Yeah, no. Too easy, too corny, too much about stupid horse racing. Serena Williams won her twentieth (20th!!!) Grand Slam singles title this weekend, but all Americans can talk about is a horse with a misspelled name who ran fast three times. Booooo. But even if I didn't think this baloney once-a-year, pretend-we-care-about-horse-racing charade weren't a complete national embarrassment, I still wouldn't have liked this puzzle. It's cute in the way hallmark cards are cute. So, not actually cute. You can see the "humor" coming down Broadway. It's certainly competently made on a technical level, but solving it was just 9-ish minutes of me going "Yes, I see what you did there" every time I got to a theme answer. I have nothing  more to say about this puzzle. I miss yesterday's puzzle. MIRROR, MIRROR, take me away! Dammit, that's Calgon.

    ["… now with ALOE Vera."]

    TO HOE or not TO HOE, that is the question (the answer is "not").

    Bullets:
    • 1A: Shopping lines? (UPC)— I immediately wrote in CPU, so it's a pretty awesome coincidence that one of the adjacent answers is DYSLEXICS (19D: Ones having a rough spell?)
    • 41D: Suit in a Spanish card deck (OROS— golds? I'd've sooner believed OSOS. Weird. 
    • 49D: Bonheur who painted "The Horse Fair" (ROSA)— I don't know who that is, but that's not the problem. ROSA crossing ROSE (49A: Part of a Derby garland)that is the problem.
    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

    PS here's my write-up of last weekend's INDIE 500 CROSSWORD TOURNAMENT

    Country crooner Robbins / MON 6-8-15 / Noted watering hole in Beverly Hills / Coconut-flaked Girl Scout cookies / Old pulp reading

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    Constructor: Peter A. Collins

    Relative difficulty: Medium (normal Monday)



    THEME: Hey, MAN — "MAN" can follow eight different theme answers to make movie titles:

    • CINDERELLA (17A: *Glass slipper wearer in a fairy tale)
    • I LOVE YOU (25A: *Valentine's Day message)
    • REPO (16A: *Seizure in a driveway, maybe)
    • DEAD (32A: *Out of juice, as a battery)
    • IRON (46A: *Fe, in chemistry)
    • RAIN (66A: *Drought ender)
    • MARATHON (53A: *26-mile race)
    • DEMOLITION (64A: *Job done with a wrecking ball)

    Word of the Day: POLO LOUNGE (8D: Noted watering hole in Beverly Hills) —
    The Polo Lounge is located inside the Beverly Hills Hotel at 9641 Sunset BoulevardBeverly Hills, California. […] The lounge has been described as "done up in peachy pink (as you might expect), with deep carpets and dark green booths, each booth featuring a plug-in phone. Legend has it that Mia Farrow (and maybe even Marlene Dietrich) was banned from the Polo Lounge for wearing pants." 
    Hernando Courtright, who ran The Beverly Hills Hotel in the '30s and '40s, had a friend named Charles Wrightsman, who led a national champion polo team. Wrightsman felt it unseemly to keep the team trophy, a silver bowl, in his own home. Courtright, on hearing his friend's dilemma, offered to display the bowl in the hotel's bar, which was being redecorated at the time. The name for the bar and its lounge sprang from that favor.
    The Polo Lounge was seen as the premier power dining spot in all of Los Angeles. There are three dining areas complete with the signature pink and green motif. The photograph behind the bar depicts Will Rogers and Darryl F. Zanuck, two lounge regulars, playing polo. The menu "still offers a classic Neil McCarthy salad, named after the polo-playing millionaire." (wikipedia)
    • • •

    Hey there. I enjoyed this. Far more entertaining than your average Monday, what with all those long Downs bouncing around and adding entertainment value to a puzzle that already has nine (albeit mostly short) theme answers. I thought the puzzle was playing harder-than-average, but since I came in one second under the 3-minute wire, it's hard to argue the puzzle was anything but Monday-easy—which adds to its impressiveness, in my eyes. Hard to get six long (8+-letter) Downs into an already theme-dense grid and still get it to come out Monday-easy. It's true that there's some meh stuff here, but there was too much hip and swinging stuff for me to pay it no nevermind. (Is that the expression? I grew up in central California, so most of my sense of homespun idiom comes from '70s television and probably can't be trusted.


    I had some missteps along the way, despite the fast solve. I had POLO and wrote in GROUND. That answer was wrong in at least two ways. I also got very specific and had TWO EGGS where I needed just RAW EGGS (43A: Cake batter ingredients). That clue is weird, as recipes assume you know the eggs should be raw and so generally just ask for eggs. Probably TWO EGGS. So I stand by my wrong answer. I saw Judd APATOW in a little bookstore in O'Hare back in April. And that is my Judd APATOW story. Just looked up "I LOVE YOU, [MAN]" and despite the fact that it stars both Paul Rudd and Jason Segel (who have been in multiple other APATOW productions), APATOW appears not to have been involved with this movie at all. I would see a movie called "AXIOM MAN," but probably not "CRAP MAN."
      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      P.S. I finally got around to doing a write-up of last weekend's INDIE 500 CROSSWORD PUZZLE TOURNAMENT. I proofread it and everything! Check it out.

      [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

      88 98 of autodom / TUE 6-9-15 / Marsupial that looks like small bear / Much-discussed program of 1960s-70s / Eponymous chair designer

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      Constructor: Roy Leban

      Relative difficulty: Tuesdayish



      THEME: Triple Crown winners — theme answers are just years in brackets. Answers are the horses that won the Triple Crown that year. [Note on puzzle reads: "The five Across answers with only years for clues are the five most recent members of a particular category."]

      Theme answers:
      • CITATION [1948]
      • SEATTLE SLEW [1977]
      • AMERICAN PHAROAH [2015]
      • SECRETARIAT [1973]
      • AFFIRMED [1978]
      Word of the Day: DIRE (55A: Descriptive of some undesirable consequences) —
      adjective
      1. (of a situation or event) extremely serious or urgent. 
        "dire consequences"
      • • •

      This is a non-theme. About as vanilla as a "tribute" puzzle can get. This is the kind of thing where you observe that the last four Triple Crown winners' names can be arranged symmetrically, and then you observe that AMERICAN PHAROAH is a 15, and so you quickly build a grid (with essentially found, prefab theme answers, this is not hard), and … wait with your fingers crossed for the results of the Belmont? The symmetricality is indeed fortuitous, but the puzzle itself is totally unimaginative, and poorly filled to boot. For a puzzle that had to be made ahead of time, you'd think it would be much more clever, or at least more polished. This is basically a game of "hey, remember that horse?" posing as some kind of "Mission: Impossible"-style, "how'd-they-turn-that-around-so-quickly!?" ultra-current piece of constructor/editorial wizardry. Independent outfits manage to be at least this topical and nimble, while also being clever and polished and entertaining, on a very regular basis. Not sure why the NYT "tributes" always seems like just sad lists—symmetrical arrangements of stuff in a grid because stuff fits symmetrically in a grid.


      Bullets:
      • 19D: "Isn't she cute?!" ("AWW") — I had "AAW." Exciting, I know. 
      • 30D: Onetime Mideast grp. (UAR)— crossing USSR! How … something. HISTorical, maybe.
      • 1A: Marsupial that looks like a small bear (WOMBAT)— easily my favorite thing in the grid. I hereby offer to the constructing world the potential theme answer "Mortal WOMBAT." I don't know the theme exactly … puns on video games … or Australian fauna … or a K/W swap dealie … be creative!
      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

      Some Eurasian deer / WED 6-10-15 / Regatta foe of Radley / Shampoo introduced by Procter & Gamble in 1947 / Coastal inlet / Faddish 1960s jacket style / Bipedal Aussies informally

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      Constructor: Tracy Gray

      Relative difficulty: Medium (maybe harder depending on how much the gimmick threw you)



      THEME: head over heels — common phrases related to turning, where the thing that turns literally turns (in the circled letters in the grid). Thus:

      Theme answers:
      • MEGOROUND (17A: Ride on which to try for a brass ring)
      • Y R
      •  R
      • SPINNINGWHE (29A: Textile machinery of old)
      •         S E
      •          L
      • ASTHEWTURNS 
      •     D O
      •     LR (48A: Once-popular TV serial set in Oakdale, Ill.)
      • ROLLINGST
      •       S O
      •        EN (64A: "Gimme Shelter" band)

      Word of the Day: MAISIE Williams (37A: Williams of "Game of Thrones") —
      Maisie Williams (born 15 April 1997) is an English actress and dancer. She is best known for her role as Arya Stark in the HBO television series Game of Thrones, which earned her the 2012 Portal Awards for Best Supporting Actress – Television and Best Young Actor, and the BBC Radio 1 Teen Award for Best British Actor in 2013. She has also received nominations for the Scream Award for Best Ensemble (2011), and the Young Artist Award for Best Performance in a TV Series – Supporting Young Actress(2013) for her performance. (wikipedia)
      • • •

      We've had a gimmick very much like this one recently—a Thursday puzzle from back in February:


      The February puzzle was quite a bit trickier, in that theme answers had to loop up and then come back down and rejoin with their base answers again. Also, the loops in the February puzzle were actual loops, by which I mean they were symmetrical, and thus plausible approximations of circles or ellipses. Today's circled square arrangements get pretty wonky, and the spun word doesn't have to meet back up with the base phrase, creating a feeling of discontinuity (except in the two theme answers where the spinning happens at the very end). Still, today's concept was cute, and the theme execution, while not elegant, was reasonably consistent. The fill was a jarring mix of cool and terrible. IRENEE!? (60A: The "I" in E. I. du Pont). Yipes. That made me look back fondly at NOEAR, which is saying something. But beyond those, only AFTS and (to a lesser extent) OSTEAL were really jarring. Longer Downs were always at least interesting, and while ROT OUT seems slightly made up, it's vivid, and it gives the grid some character.


      Bullets:
      • 8D: Revitalizing snooze (POWER NAP) — I accidentally fell asleep at 8pm only to awaken at 10pm, disoriented and untoothbrushed. So I got up and did the puzzle and now here I am. Toothbrushing, presumably, to follow. I think once the sleeping goes past an hour, it ceases to be a "nap." It certainly ceases to confer "power." 
      • 43A: Precisely (TOATEE) — always looks dumb in the grid. Like a diminutive form of its other incarnation, TOAT.
      • 39D: Like some rye (SEEDLESS)— Had SEEDL- and without even looking at the clue wrote in SEEDLING. Reading clues—always a good idea.
      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

      [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

      Cartoonist Bushmiller who created Nancy / THU 6-11-15 / Classic 1944 Otto Preminger film noir / Model of Blues Brothers Bluesmobile

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      Constructor: Lewis E. Rothlein

      Relative difficulty: Easy



      THEME: HIDDEN GEM (34D: Well-kept secret … or a hint to the answer to each starred clue) — the letter string "GEM" is "HIDDEN" inside five theme answers

      Theme answers:
      • "INDULGE ME" (1D: *"If I may…")
      • LARGE MOUTH (18A: *Kind of bass)
      • DODGE MONACO (24A: *Model of the Blues Brothers' Bluesmobile)
      • GRUDGE MATCH (43A: *Opportunity for revenge)
      • IMAGE MAKER (52A: *Publicist, e.g.)
      Word of the Day: GARDEN City, Long Island (26A) —
      Garden City is a village in the town of Hempstead in central Nassau CountyNew York, in the United States. It was founded by multi-millionaire Alexander Turney Stewart in 1869, and is located on Long Island, to the east of New York City, 18.5 miles (29.8 km) from midtown Manhattan, and just south of the town of North Hempstead. A very small section of the village is in North Hempstead.
      As of the 2010 census, the population of the incorporated village was 22,371.
      The Garden City name is applied to several other unincorporated, nearby jurisdictions. In the region, hamlets such as Garden City SouthGarden City Park and East Garden City are adjacent to the incorporated village of Garden City, but are not themselves part of it. Roosevelt Field, the shopping center built on the former airfield from which Charles Lindbergh took off on his landmark 1927 transatlantic flight, is located in East Garden City.
      Part of Hofstra University's campus is located in Garden City. (wikipedia)
      • • •

      I liked this one OK, but man it was over fast. There was a while there where I was cutting through this thing like it was Monday—from the NE right down through the middle to the SW I got every answer I looked at immediately. Not nearly Thursdayish enough, cluing-wise. The theme type is also standard—not the kind of thing I'm used to seeing on Thursday (typically the twisty / tricky day). I've seen this done a million ways. I did one once called "Inside Dope" where THC was "hidden" inside the themers. I have nothing against this theme type. Just feels more T/W to me. There was absolutely nothing unusual today. The envelopes all remained unpushed. And yet I enjoyed the five minutes I spent doing it. I think this is because a few of the themers are simply entertaining in their own right. "INDULGE ME…" is original, colloquial, nice. I don't think I've ever heard of a DODGE MONACO, but I enjoyed remembering "The Blues Brothers" (one of the first R-rated movies my parents took me to see, along with "Bustin' Loose" and "The World According to Garp"). GRUDGE MATCH is the big winner of the day—a fantastic answer I can't remember seeing before. Most of the fill was just average, with a few unfortunate moments, but the long stuff is good, and when the long stuff is good, the mediocre short stuff can't do much to ruin the party.


      There were very few points of resistance. I had to think about 1A: "___ pass" for a bit. After getting LPS at 4D: Audiophile's collection, I went with "WE'LL pass." As in, "You guys wanna go contra-dancing with us?""Uh, no. WE'LL pass." But that wasn't it. NEAP made that clear. Once I changed WE'LL to IT'LL, whole NW was done fast. I didn't rocket out of there because GARDEN City is meaningless to anyone outside NYC (i.e. me), and even with GARD- I wasn't sure. Also, I had BIOS at first for 21D: They may have kings as subjects (ODES). But CEDE was a gimme (5A: Turn over), and I got all the crossing Downs and then just Took Off. Once I changed EMOJI (!?) to ECARD (ick) at 6D: Gift with a GIF, maybe, I didn't miss a single answer until way down at 39D: Take (ANGLE), which proved so inscrutable to me that I just ended up solving around it. I get it now, but that is one ambiguous clue for ANGLE. I also had some issues with the equally ambiguous clue 43D: Beef (GRIPE). Confuse there was exacerbated by feeling 58A: Union busters? might be AXES and 55A: One getting the message? might be MAGE (can a MAGE be a seer or a medium?). After that slight delay, I rocketed across the bottom of the grid right down to the SE corner, where GEM actually didn't come quickly. Had to work it from crosses. But that was it. Too easy and straightforward, but pleasant enough.
        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

        [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

        Japanese PM executed in 1948 / FRI 6-12-15 / Sylvia ballet composer 1876 / Ski resort that prohibits snowboarding / 2001 sports flop for short / Jay British singer with 2009 #1 hit down / Infant rocketed to earth from Krypton / Studio with horse logo / Literally elbow / emulate esne

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        Constructor: David Steinberg

        Relative difficulty: Medium



        THEME: no

        Word of the Day: Stan GETZ (56D: "The Sound" of music) —
        Stanley Getz (February 2, 1927 – June 6, 1991) was an American jazz saxophonist. Playing primarily the tenor saxophone, Getz was known as "The Sound" because of his warm, lyrical tone, his prime influence being the wispy, mellow timbre of his idol, Lester Young. Coming to prominence in the late 1940s with Woody Herman's big band, Getz is described by critic Scott Yanow as "one of the all-time great tenor saxophonists". Getz went on to perform in bebopcool jazz and third stream, but is perhaps best known for popularizing bossa nova, as in the worldwide hit single "The Girl from Ipanema" (1964). (wikipedia)
        • • •

        My brain was foggy from a hard ten hours sleep, but I usually crush David Steinberg Friday puzzles, so I ended up feeling like I struggled, but with a pretty normal Friday time. Lots of start and stop. Speed and stop. Usually get stopped on names I just don't know, or that won't come to me, and that was certainly true today. Spent I don't know how long imagining that 5D: Japanese P.M executed in 1948 (TOJO) was actually a clue about a former Sony exec (which is a clue you do see from time to time in crosswords, another four-letter Japanese name … I think my brain turned "P.M." into CEO and then just ignored the "executed" and "1948" parts … oh, and I still can't remember that Sony exec's name). And I've literally never heard of Jay SEAN until just now. Big SEAN, yes. Jay SEAN, no. So turning that particular corner was rough.


        This puzzle started with IOTA (wrong) at 1A: Minute bit, which was quickly fixed by crosswording's favorite fisherman, the EELER, and then I went through the NW without much trouble. NE proved much tougher, as I got ANEW up into there, but then couldn't get much to work, Across-wise or Down-wise, on first pass. KAL-EL, NEXT, and AGOG—that's what I had. I thought the Hulk might be in a RAGE, but too few letters. I figured the [Land bordering western China] was a -STAN, but I wasn't sure which one. And of course TOJO, who would've helped a lot, was still a Sony exec in my mind, so I abandoned that area for the center, which then got me IRENE DUNNE, which sorted the NE out pretty nicely. Very tough clues on I'M READY (10D: "Let's roll!") and SPY (11D: Invasive plant) up there. Love the SPY clue, actually.


        From there I could not get into the SE. I couldn't see DESKS in a library and I had no idea YALIEs sang like sheep, so … I got a few little answers. Crosswordese retrieval skills were on point as I brought down ISERE off the "I" and then SILAS (never seen or read "Da Vinci Code," never will). Then ALTA. But the answer that finally got the Downs down there to fall was … a comics sound effect. ZOT! Hurray!  ZOT! to SLEAZEBALL For The Win!



        After that, an easy SW, and done.

        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

        P.S. LA VIDA LOCA as a partial? (29D: Subject of a 1999 Ricky Martin hit). No. Come on.

        P.P.S. best wrong answer of the day: 18A: A cameo may be seen in it (GOOGOLPLEX). I seem to have confused "cineplex" with a very large number.

        P.P.P.S. Happy Birthday, Jamie B. Fowler, wherever you are!

        [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

        Congo feeder / SAT 6-13-15 / Mostly women Olympic sport familiarly / Foursome in Mahler's Symphony of Thousand / Ultra-environmental policy / Putting phone down for sec in textspeak / 1973 self-titled album / Bent for collecting curios / Singer who was coach on four seasons of Voice / Miniaturizing device in Fantastic Voyage / New York City theater where Cinemascope debuted

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        Constructor: Brad Wilber and Doug Peterson

        Relative difficulty: Medium


        THEME: none

        Word of the Day: VIRTU (48D: Bent for collecting curios) —
        n.
        1. knowledge or love of or taste for fine objects of art.
        2. Objects of art, especially fine antique objets d'art, considered as a group. (thefreedictionary.com)
        • • •

        Well, it's Brad and Doug, so of course it's very good, but I made a few more faces and shrugged a few more shoulders at this grid than I typically do at a Brug Wilberson creation. I'm used to tough, bordering on esoteric, cluing with this these guys, but usually I know, or at least am familiar with, all of the answers once they're filled in. But today … I've followed football in one way or another since I was 8 years old and I somehow managed never ever to hear of the concept TAXI SQUAD (17A: Group of practice-only N.F.L. players). So while I was able to put the SQUAD part together pretty easily, the TAXI part got a little dicey. Specifically, I didn't know the "T"; I guessed the "T"; I also don't know what a Riemann ZETA function in, but ZETA is a Greek letter, so I went with that. That Greek-letter fact was literally the only reason I chose "T." I could just as easily, perhaps more easily, chosen "M." So that freaked me out a little. I also didn't know a person could *be* a CORDON BLEU. I thought it was just a school or a way of preparing chicken. So that Julia Child clue knocked me around too.


        Then there were the twin WTF answers down below: SYNCHRO (41D: Mostly-women Olympics sport, familiarly) and VIRTU (48D: Bent for collecting curios). The former … I have never heard, so when the clue says "familiarly," I have to take that to mean "if you actually participate in synchronized swimming or are a family member of someone who does or possibly a synchronized swimming commentator, in which case you probably participated in the sport at some point, so don't really need to be listed separately." I cannot imagine someone asking, "You gonna watch the SYNCHRO, dude?" And VIRTU… I thought that word had something to do with manliness, but that's just the (stupid useless) Latin root. Does collecting "curios" make you manly? Has anyone used that word in that sense in a century later than the 19th? The esoterica hurt a little today. As did the REGIFT / RERUNS crossing. Otherwise, the grid was both smooth and zesty, like a fine guacamole.


        Here's how I got into the grid. You can see the MAXISQUAD error already in place, but I counterbalanced that muff by popping both FINERY and HYATT off just one letter each:


        Between early MAXISQUAD troubles and late SYNCHROVIRTU troubles, I mostly made steady, Saturday-like progress, with few real hangups. I did, however, have to fight through a pretty funny cross-referencing mishap. I got to 31A: Alert at 52-Down and decided to go down and see what 52-Down was all about—52D: 1970s-'80s sitcom locale. So with O---R in place at 31A, I felt oddly comfortable throwing down ORDER / MEL'S for those two answers. I see in retrospect that ORDER is not really a good example of an "Alert," but it felt close enough for horseshoes. If Mel shouts "ORDER!" (maybe…) he's alerting Dingy or Flo or Alice that the ORDER is ready. Or so I sort of reasoned. But I saw quickly that the crosses on ORDER just wouldn't work, so I went with the next 70s-80s sitcom 4-letter workplace I could think of: WKRP. The alert there, of course, is ON AIR.


        That'll do. See you tomorrow.
          Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

          [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

          P.S. YODA does not speak like Claudius in "Hamlet." I see where the clue's going, what with holding the verb til the end and all, but that clue is painfully forced.

          Cheap smoke in slang / SUN 6-14-15 / Creator of Stupefyin Jones / Rank above bey / Sally sweet bun / Dick popularized zone blitz / Slaughterhouse scraps / Tenor in flying dutchman

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          Constructor: Randolph Ross

          Relative difficulty: Medium



          THEME:"The In Crowd" — two-word phrases, second word begins w/ prefix "IN-"; clued as if "IN" were, in fact, a separate word. Wackiness, theoretically, at least, ensues.

          Theme answers:
          • FIGHT IN JUSTICE (23A: Dispute between Loretta Lynch and her co-workers?)
          • GENERAL IN FORMATION (37A: Army V.I.P. at a military parade?)
          • BRAIN IN JURY (48A: Smartest one to consider a case?)
          • COURT IN JUNCTION (64A: Municipal building located where major roads intersect?) (makes no sense—it would be *at* a junction, not *in* one…)
          • SISTER IN LAW (83A: Nun for the defense?)
          • PRIVATE IN VESTMENTS (90A: G.I. dressed like a priest?)
          • CRIMINAL IN TENT (110A: Felon at a campground?)
          Word of the Day: PUT (5D: Wall Street order) —
          put op·tion
          noun
          STOCK MARKET
          noun: put option; plural noun: put options
          1. an option to sell assets at an agreed price on or before a particular date. (google)
          • • •

          I can't write a lot about this one, as I have very little nice to say. There is a theoretically humorous angle to this theme, but it's too basic, too transparent, and the end, too dull and repetitive to be a good basis for a Sunday puzzle, especially in the 21st century. The concept and the fill both felt ancient. There are terms and expressions here that aren't just unfamiliar to me—they're borderline nonsensical. Clue on PUT made zero sense to me, but I'll take PUT on the chin and say "my bad."PIG IT, however, I will not accept. That is possibly the dumbest thing I've seen in a grid, and I've seen … some stuff. In an attempt, I guess, to have a lower word count on these Sunday puzzles, we end up with big white spaces that are clearly too much for some constructors to handle well. But even the little sections … I mean, why is anyone suffering a MOL/ORDO crossing in such a tiny section of a grid in the year 2015? That's a MOLORDOrous crossing. But I can tell you right now the cross that's going to groin-kick more people than any other: EL ROPO / LUNN (68D: Cheap smoke, in slang / 76A: Sally ___ (sweet bun)). This is a bad cross; this is a cross that will thwart more solvers than any other single cross in this puzzle; this is a fact; this problem is utterly foreseeable, and (likely) utterly fixable with a little elbow grease. I know EL ROPO *only* from solving crosswords for a long time (the cigar-type clue is a pretty hackneyed / low form of clue) and I Don't Know What A Sally LUNN Sweet Bun Is At All. Was that big … sometime before 1969? I have no problem with old-skewing clues, but when that's all there is, and when the theme is moribund and the grid just Isn't Clean … well, it makes me want to play HOB with something. Now where did I put my hob?


          Seriously, the hell? Play HOB with? HOB. [Frodo, familiarly?]. Also, AT NOON? IN A CAN? Random adverbial phrases... Ugh. It hurts.

          To the puzzle's credit, it saved the best for last, themer-wise. If only they all could've been felons at campgrounds...
            Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

            [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

            German prelate who was first person to be canonized AD 993 / MON 6-15-15 / Relative of wood engraving / Google's image organizer / Kingston Trio hit that inspired CharlieCard for Boston commuters / Where Magna Carta was sealed / tropical grassland

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            Constructor: Mike Buckley

            Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (**for a Monday**) (time: 3:09)



            THEME: MAGNA CARTA (19A: Document issued on June 15, 1215) — theme answers are trivia relating to this document

            Theme answers:
            • RUNNYMEDE (20D: Where the 19-Across was sealed)
            • DUE PROCESS (57A: Heart of the U.S. legal system, with roots in the 19-Across)
            • KING JOHN (38D: He sealed the 19-Across)
            • INNOCENT (10D: Pope who issued an annulment of the 19-Across)
            Word of the Day: ULRIC (23A: German prelate who was the first person to be canonized, A.D. 993) —
            Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (c. 890 – 4 July 973), sometimes spelled Uodalric or Odalrici, was Bishop of Augsburg and a leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. [I like how ULRIC is not an option for spelling his name here … interesting] (wikipedia)
            • • •

            Not a Monday puzzle, difficulty-wise, and some of the fill was farcical—AS A TEAM? IN A SUIT? (picking up where IN A CAN and SIP TEA left off yesterday, I see). Still, I'll give this puzzle points for a. getting the exact publication date right (for once), and b. nailing RUNNYMEDE through two other themers. That's nifty. But there's a cost to pay, and that cost is ULRIC, WTF? That is about as un-Monday a piece of fill as you're likely to find. Outright obscure. But given the way the grid was constructed the "U" and the "C" were fixed, and good luck getting a decent five-letter word that starts "U" and ends "C"; I mean, what with the economy the way it is and everything … Big corners and occasionally not-famous fill (I'd put both RUNNYMEDE and ULRIC in that category) make the puzzle slow-going, but we can mostly ignore the difficulty expectations when anniversary puzzles are in play. The theme here isn't anything more than symmetrically arranged trivia, so it's dull, conceptually, and the fill is odd here and there, but mostly NYT-normal. OK. Shrug.



            Bullets:
            • 6D: Cheeky (SAUCY) — I has SA--Y. Wrote in SASSY. That was fun.
            • 37A: Pig sound (OINK) — just givin' a little shout out to "PIGgin' IT!," my new favorite expression. I take it back, 8-Down in yesterday's Sunday puzzle; you are a totally for-real thing. I can't stop using you. You are Instant Klassic fill. So OINK OINK.
            • 25A: Movie critic, often / 30D: Broadcaster (RATER / AIRER) — two terrible tastes that taste worse in close proximity to one another. Constructor totally pigged it, right there.
            • 50D: Google's image organizer (PICASA) — this still exists? Why does it feel so 2008? 
            Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

            [Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

            Cousin of a mallard / TUE 6-16-15 / Blues musician Allison / Brooklyn hoopster / Social reformer Jacob / Paintball cry / Hindu meditative rituals / Multilevel military readiness system / Cousin of catalan / Prankster's weapon

            $
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            Constructor: Peter A. Collins

            Relative difficulty: Challenging (**for a Tuesday**) (time: a bit over 4)


            THEME: toppers— different foods are clued as "offerings" from different venues, and then the answers directly on top of said foods (so … literally topping them) are clued as those foods'"toppers":

            Theme answers:
            • 18A: Fast-food offering (BURGER) / 15A: 18-Across topper (CHEESE)
            • 19A: Soda shop offering (ICE CREAM) / 16A: 19-Across topper (HOT FUDGE)
            • 60A: Trattoria offering (RIGATONI) / 58A: 60-Across topper (MARINARA)
            • 61A: Ballpark offering (HOTDOG) / 59A: 61-Across topper (ONIONS)
            Word of the Day: SCAUP (8A: Cousin of a mallard) —
            The New Zealand scaup (Aythya novaeseelandiae) commonly known as a black teal, is a diving duck species of the genus Aythya. It is endemic to New Zealand. In Maori commonly known as papango, also matapouri, titiporangi, raipo. [there are "greater" and "lesser" SCAUP too. I just picked the NZ one because if I have an opportunity to go kiwi, I'm going kiwi] (wikipedia)
            • • •

            I quite liked this theme. Simple, neatly executed. It played hard for a Tuesday, but not ridiculously hard, and not hard for the wrong reasons. The not-terribly-specific, cross-referenced theme clues, as well as a few less-than-common answers, simply created speed bumps (or humps, which I'd never heard of until I saw a "SPEED HUMP" sign outside PuzzleGirl's front window in suburban D.C.—our hypothesis is that speed humps are broader and less jarring). The fill here isn't great; there's some fine stuff here and there, but the average is a little on the weak side—grid's a little too crowded with a POSSE of less-than-great answers, from the harmless and banal (ASNER, ERNIE, RIIS, CERA, PSA, ADA) to the somewhat more crosswordesey (SSN, SSE, ALEE, MRES, NOMSG, ONKP, INLA, URALS, ANO, CBSTV) to the aggressively partial (ATAIL) to the oddly arcane (LOGIA) to the how-the-hell-have-I-never-seen-this-duck-before!? (SCAUP—last known NYT sighting: 1998). It's also hard to imagine using REGALER in a sentence, straightfacedly. But the charm of the theme was enough today. Even the horrific image of a SCAUP CHEESE BURGER couldn't ruin the fun for me.

            [FRINGE]
            [SURREY]

            Bullets:
            • 8D: 7-0 baseball victory, e.g. (SHUT OUT)— came at this from below and initially went with BLOW OUT. The clue seems designed to elicit that error. This is yet another reason the puzzle played harder-than-normal for me today.
            • 41D: Cousin of catalán (español) — lack of capitalization threw me, but languages aren't capitalized in Spanish (it seems), so, fine.
            • 2D: Doggie (POOCH)— was sure this was gonna be some kind of non-canine slang. Might've read it initially as "dogie." Whatever happened, I needed multiple crosses to see POOCH.
            Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

            P.S. 39A: What a surfer catches (WAVE) / 49D: It might accompany a wave in Waikiki (ALOHA) — every one of you can fix this dupe in approximately zero seconds. Editing!

            [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

            Holly tree / WED 6-17-15 / Modern prefix with aggression / Bygone component in luminous paint / 1921 play that introduced word robot / Hot Japanese bowlful

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            Constructor: Molly Young and David J. Kahn

            Relative difficulty: Easy



            THEME: famous people who refused honors

            Theme answers:
            • GEORGE C. SCOTT (3D: Actor who refused a 26-Down in 1971)
            • DAVID BOWIE (5D: Rock star who refused a 37-Down in 2003)
            • JEAN-PAUL SARTRE (15D: Playwright who refused an 8-/57-Down in 1964)
            Word of the Day: ILEX (7D: Holly tree) —
            noun
            1. 1
              another term for holm oak.
            2. 2
              a tree or shrub of a genus that includes holly and its relatives. (google)
            • • •

            [GEORGE C. SCOTT]

            Kind of interesting concept, and I always love remembering DAVID BOWIE, but the nature of the theme made this play *way* too easy / obvious, and the fill was really substandard. Dull, tired, yesteryear. Here is my solving experience in a little grid-photo essay. Let's just say that things did not get off to an auspicious start. I can often tell how painful / glorious a solve is going to be by the first handful of answers I get. Could such an early indicator be wrong? Of course. But it rarely ever is. One bad corner usually heralds many bad corners. Here's my first first few answers in the grid:


            "R.U.R." used to be much more common. It's one of those answers that modern constructing techniques (and modern standards) have been able to drive to near (and deserved) extinction. But clearly it's not dead. It's a real play and I wouldn't care much about it if, again, it weren't the canary in the coal mine. After the initial ugliness, though, things just got weirdly, disturbingly easy. Finished up that NW corner, and then immediately plunked down not only GEORGE C. SCOTT, but ACADEMY AWARD, in its entirety, clear on the other side of the grid. What the hell else kind of honor is GEORGE C. SCOTT going to refuse. His silver medal in EPEE at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal? (great clue on EPEE, though—50D: Poker game?). So now I'm a few seconds into this thing and already…


            Soon I get DAVID BOWIE and while I don't immediately get KNIGHTHOOD, I'm honestly not thinking that hard about it, as the grid is easy to fill and I'm sure I'll pick up the other half of that themer on crosses eventually (which I do). The delay in getting the second half of the BOWIE answer gives me time to really "enjoy" the grid. When my travels take me to the dreaded abbr. isl. of ICEL. I am compelled to stop, sigh, and take a picture.


            As you can see here, JEAN-PAUL SARTRE isn't exactly hiding, and since the second part of his answer (the NOBEL / PRIZE, that is) will give me entree to not only the NE but the SW, the whole puzzle starts to seem like a dull exercise of fill-in-the-blank, paint by numbers, connect-the-dots, or choose your own 1st-grader diversionary activity metaphor. First part of themers just Handed you the second part, for the most part, leading to a dangerous spike in ho-hummitude. Even MEL / OTT was getting on the give-away-answers-in-other-parts-of-the-grid act.


              So now the only thing left was to discover unfortunate stuff like the intersection of SOUR ON and RAT ON.



              The whole thing ended IN A TIE, which was about as exciting as that answer sounds. The end. Lesson: a good concept is one thing, but without clever, interesting, or even serviceable execution, it's not worth much.

              Congrats to the Golden State Warriors on their NBA Championship. Even though I was born in S.F., I was rooting for Cleveland to make a go of it, because they were Such underdogs, and, you know … Cleveland. It's Cleveland. It needs a sports hug. I look forward to rooting for the Cubs in the fall (though Chicago doesn't need a sports hug at all—congrats also to the Blackhawks on their 3rd Stanley Cup of this decade).
                Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                Old Toyota sports car / THU 6-18-15 / Salinger dedicatee / Uncle on Fresh Prince of Bel-Air / Third-largest city of Roman Empire / German electrical pioneer / Mentaiko at sushi bar / Carrier to Seoul

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                Constructor: Jason Flinn

                Relative difficulty: Medium



                THEME: -onym— familiar phrases have "-ONYM" added to their ends and then are reclued accordingly.

                Theme answers:
                • 17A: The Olympics or Andes Mints (MOUNTAIN TOPONYMS) ["mountain top" + -onym]
                • 23A: White and lighted (BLACK ANTONYMS) ["black ant" + -onyms]
                • 39A: Deadly or human (MORTAL SYNONYM) ["mortal sin" + -onym] — this one is the only one that involves a spelling change to the base phrase ("sin" to "SYN"); not a problem—they all still work perfectly, sound-wise.
                • 51A: Wall Street and Madison Avenue (NEW YORK METONYMS) ("New York Met" + -onyms)
                Word of the Day: ALEK Wek (18D: Model ___ Wek) —
                Alek Wek (born 16 April 1977) is a South Sudanese British model and designer who began her fashion career at the age of 18 in 1995. As the first black model whose looks did not conform to Caucasian aesthetics, she has been hailed for her influence on the perception of beauty in the fashion industry. She is from the Dinka ethnic group in South Sudan, but fled to Britain in 1991 to escape the civil war in Sudan. She currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. (wikipedia)
                • • •

                I thought this was pretty nifty. The fill wasn't always great and the general frame of reference was just … not mine. Not my wheelhouse. BUT the theme was clever, and I solved it in what I imagine is an ideal way—that is, I got the basic idea, and thought "well OK, I guess" but then got to the last theme answer and realized I hadn't gotten he full idea at all. It was all just literal to me until I hit NEW YORK METONYM and thought "ha ha, that's funny, sounds like 'things named after the New York Mets…'" and that's when my brain went "D'oh!" and saw that all the themers were like that—ordinary phrases before you add "-onym(s)" to the end. NEAT little twist. Fill actually isn't terrible—just grimy in the short stuff, mostly in the corners (STLO OHM LTYR in the NE, ESME ODEUM NOTTE in the SE, AWHO… just being AWHO). But solid longer Downs largely drown out that noise. I found this all decidedly acceptable.


                Had remarkable trouble getting going in the NW. Bygone Toyota was not coming to me at all, and SAMI was not at all obvious from 1D: Arctic residents, and even when I got -MI I wrote in SUMI (?), and I had IN ON before UP ON at 2D: Acquainted with, and I had no shot at ANTIOCH (5D: Third-largest city of the Roman Empire) until I came at it from the other end, so lots of sputtering up there to start. But once I got going, progress was pretty regular, and there were no major sticking points. Didn't get the HENS clue at first (7D: Roosters … or not roosters?), but do now (first "Roosters" = "Ones who roost"). Had NICE instead of NEAT (41D: "Ooooh!"), ODIUM instead of ODEUM (54A: Theater) (very different words), and RECUTS instead ofREDYES (40D: Changes the locks again?). All in all, untroublesome and non-STICKY (22D: Awkward).
                  Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                  [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                  French shipyard city / FRI 6-19-15 / Cosmetician Adrien / Seasons lithographer / Fictional Sicilian town of literature / Former Toyota model for 36 years / Jazz saxophonist Buddy / Chantilly's department / Nixon Brezhnev signed it 1972

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                  Constructor: Martin Ashwood-Smith

                  Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium



                  THEME: none

                  Word of the Day: BREST (51D: French shipyard city) —
                  Brest (French pronunciation: ​[bʁɛst]Breton[bʀest]) is a city in the Finistèredépartement in Brittany in northwestern France. Located in a sheltered position not far from the western tip of the Breton peninsula, and the western extremity of metropolitan France, Brest is an important harbour and the second French military port after Toulon. The city is located on the western edge of continental Europe. With 142,722 inhabitants in a 2007 census, Brest is at the centre of Western Brittany's largest metropolitan area (with a population of 300,300 in total), ranking third behind only Nantes and Rennes in the whole of historic Brittany, and the 22nd most populous city in France; moreover, Brest provides services to the one million inhabitants of Western Brittany. Although Brest is by far the largest city in Finistère, the préfecture (regional capital) of the department is the much smaller Quimper. (wikipedia)
                  • • •

                  A summer cold has made its way through our entire house. I am its ultimate victim. Because I would not stop for the cold, it kindly stopped for me. I'm awkwardly alluding to Dickinson, so you know something's wrong. Anyway, summer colds suck (Yeah, I know it's not "summer" yet, but give it a minute). So I did this puzzle after waking from a three-hour nap—gotta love those naps you have *right* before bedtime; exquisite timing. Still, I walked right through this thing, even with foggy post-nap summer cold head, so it must've been easy. What are my thoughts? Well, there's weirdly a lot of crosswordese, and not only where you'd expect it (i.e. crossing that quad stack). OISE ADANO ARPEL REPOS ERTE KNAR. All quite familiar, none hard to get. Just felt throwbacky, and not in a great way. But the marquee event up top is the double-author stack, which is pretty sweet. I also love the repackaging of vintage crosswordese ARLENE Dahl as full-named ARLENEDAHL. Somehow that uncrosswordeses (™) her name.  Eventually it came time to do the stack at the bottom and it wasn't hard. Also, that's an excellent stack. The crosses, predictably, hurt a little, but there aren't any howlers. So, mixed feelings.

                  [from "SATCHMO Serenades"]

                  Things got off to a fast start—CHOCOHOLIC off a single letter (and I'm not sure I even needed that)—the clue was transparent to me) (4D: One who might steal a kiss).


                  From here I pounded into the center of the grid pretty easily, but had weird bit of trouble trying to get JOHN STEINBECK, even after I had JOHN STE- … I think JON (no "H") Stewart was running interference in my head. But I dropped OPALESCENT like it was hot.


                  ANGELINA was a total gimme (8D: Brad's partner in 2005's "Mr. & Mrs. Smith"), so JOHN STEINBECK and then the rest of the top of the grid fell into place pretty easily. I emerged from the top via ARLENE DAHL and then set to work on the quadstack.


                  I got the back ends of the quad first, but they didn't do much for me, so I went after other Downs, and found RAMIS AREI and COWGIRL just waiting for me. Made the stack very easy to see and take down.


                  About five seconds after this, I was done. I ended in the iffiest part of the grid (i.e. the no-"UE"MONOLOG MISADAPTed INAPEN), which often happens, actually—you end up at the place that you've been consciously or unconsciously avoiding, often for good reason. And so to bed. Or, rather, to Jon Stewart, which is apparently remarkable tonight—or so Twitter tells me. It's been a pretty terrible day, nationally, historically … I STILL DON'T GET IT seems apt, somehow.

                  Take care,
                    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                    Feminist author Millett / SAT 6-20-15 / Chicago-born choreographer / Service begun in 1947 for short / Country created by Treaty of Sevres 1920 / Social media debut of 2010

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                    Constructor: Kyle T. Dolan

                    Relative difficulty: Easy


                    THEME: none

                    Word of the Day: Brienne of TARTH (10A: Brienne of ___, "Game of Thrones" protagonist) —
                    Brienne of Tarth is a fictional character in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fireseries of fantasy novels. She is a prominent point of view character in the fourth novel, A Feast for Crows, and a main character in the television adaptation. (wikipedia)
                    • • •

                    Need to wrap this up quickly, as I'm kind of at Peak Summer Cold right now, and also it's "Summer of Noir" on TCM so Friday nights are Always Something Good On nights, all summer. Nice to have illness dovetail with film noir marathon (and that is literally the only "nice" thing about this summer cold). I didn't love this one. Its marquee answers seemed not marquee enough—straining to be hip and relevant, but landing somehow just off the "Wow" mark. WIN AT LIFE is a phrase, I guess, but it left me cold, as did the '90s-era-Bud-ad "WASSUP!" and whatever SPANDRELS are (got that answer entirely from crosses).

                    [phase 1—tried "WHAT UP?" initially]

                    Really started to sour on this puzzle when I hit the truly hackneyed, seen-only-in-crosswords ICEAXE.


                    I've seen that answer a million times, and I doubt I've ever complained about it, and it's an actual thing, but it's … well, with SOG already in the books, it seemed to herald mediocrity. AMINO ACID, too, felt limp. Not bad. Just so-so. Didn't help that I immediately followed ICE AXE up with ENDO. ENDO is slang for pot. Just FYI, in case that ever shows up in a clue, which, in the NYT, it probably won't, but such a clue would almost make ENDO interesting. EMONEY will never be interesting unless someday there is a rapper called E MONEY. Or unless you clue that answer [How "Two Tickets to Paradise" singer signs his checks"]. The NE didn't liven things up much.


                    TARTH wants you to think it's fresh, contemporary fill, but it's not. It would be fine if it were necessary to hold something good together, but as a gratuitous "hey I watch GOT" reference, in a corner where we have to suffer through EASEIN and HENNAED, no, TARTH isn't good. Rest of the puzzle was too easy to be terribly remarkable.

                    [I have a crossword friend who *hates* seeing any reference to David Ortiz, aka BIG PAPI, in puzzles, so all such clues/answers make me laugh imagine his ire]

                    I almost like HAVE A BEER, in that I like having beer, but the clue (60A: Kick back while watching the ball game, say) struck me as odd. First, you HAVE A BEER as a possible addition to kicking back. You'd kick back *and* HAVE A BEER. You can certainly kick back without one, and I have been in plenty of baseball-watching, beer-drinking situations where I was not at all kicked back (if it's a tense game, I'm often standing and "talking" to the screen, decidedly unkicked back, possibly frightening my dogs and causing them to leave the room). Also, if that's your clue, then apparently any clue will do, e.g. [Relax after work], [Celebrate the end of the work week], [React to thirst], etc. It's weird that I find myself disappointed by beer, but here we are. Maybe STEAK RUB was supposed to be an exciting answer? It's acceptable, for sure, but like most of the rest of the grid's "highlights," it just didn't do much for me. Not a bad puzzle overall, but I'll forget about it as soon as I post this.

                    Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                    [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                    English monarch called magnificent / SUN 6-21-15 / Relative of halberd / Peace to Pushkin / Shark girl in west side story / North-flowing English river / Former Houston athlete / Opposites of fantasts / Bath-loving TV character / 100 Iranian dinars

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                    Constructor: Timothy Polin

                    Relative difficulty: Medium


                    THEME:"Climbing the Corporate Ladder"— theme answers are familiar phrases that start on one level and then climb up and finish on another level. The "climbing" part, read downwards, is the name of a corporation, and is clued by the product that corporation makes [in brackets]:

                    Theme answers:
                    • TRUEFALSETESTS (34A: Exams that students get F's on?) — TESLA makes [Automobiles]
                    • POSTAGESTAMP (31A: What may be forever?) — SEGA makes [Video games]
                    • THREEKINGSDAY (62A: Annual celebration on January 6) — NIKE makes [Sportswear]
                    • INTHATRESPECT (75A: When viewed one way) — SERTA makes [Mattresses]
                    • HOWWASITOKNOW (82A: Response deflecting blame) — OTIS makes [Elevators]
                    • SETSINMOTION (116A: Initiates) — OMNI … makes? are? … [Hotels]
                    • LOGICALFALLACY (118A: Part of an unsound argument) — AFLAC … deals in … [Insurance]
                    Word of the Day: SUGARLOAF (2D: Rio de Janeiro peak) —
                    Sugarloaf Mountain (PortuguesePão de Açúcar) is a peak situated in Rio de JaneiroBrazil, at the mouth of Guanabara Bay on a peninsula that sticks out into the Atlantic Ocean. Rising 396 meters (1,299 ft) above the harbor, its name is said to refer to its resemblance to the traditional shape of concentrated refined loaf sugar. It is known worldwide for its cableway and panoramic views of the city. (wikipedia)
                    • • •

                    This one started out Grim. ISIS (1A: Sunni jihadist grp.) crossed with SEALERS (4D: Some arctic hunters)!? Yeesh. way to lead with the carnage. But things lightened up considerably after that. My first thought upon discovering the theme was "we just had a Sunday puzzle with this theme, didn't we?" I'm pretty sure I've seen the basic conceit (here it is in reverse). But the rationale here strikes me as a very good one—the "climbing" isn't gratuitous, but fits right in with and neatly visually exemplifies the title phrase, "Climbing the Corporate Ladder." Take familiar phrase, turn it into wordplay. That's a pretty common crossword-maker gambit, and I thought it worked well here. It took me a while to understand the bracketed Down parts of the theme answers. My gut reaction was "How is [Mattreses] SERTA, singular? Shouldn't it be SERTAS?" But then I saw that those clues weren't ordinary—they indicated the product dealt in by whatever business was being spelled out by the riser part of the theme answer. And since the fill didn't bug me much at all, I have to declare this one a reasonable success.



                    Today I remembered AGFA, which almost never happens. Do they still make film? Even when they did, I was never familiar with AGFA, and learned it (and repeatedly forgot it) through crosswords. But today, victory. I've been seeing a lot of good press for "Masters of Sex" recently, so 9D: Study for a Masters? (SEXOLOGY) didn't fool me at all. I had a bunch of initially wrong answers—not uncommon on a Sunday. My [Bank deposit] was SILT before it was SNOW. Had a double screw-up at 108A: Whole essence crossing 103D: Some madrigal singers. Instead of the correct BE ALL / ALTI, I had BEING / ANIS … they're blackbirds … it's a crossword thing. What can I say, it felt right, for like three seconds. My best error, though, came when I had -OL-WATER for 35A: Liquid harmful to vampires and I went with … [drum roll] … COLD WATER. So basically I would be the guy in the movie who throws cold water on the vampire, resulting only in a cold, wet vampire. Then I'd get bitten or just destroyed. Speaking of vampires, there's a Christopher Lee marathon on TCM on Monday, so look for that.
                      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                      [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                      Internet photo company named after insect / MON 6-22-15 / Former name for Congo / Peanuts boy with blanket

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                      Constructor: Joel Fagliano

                      Relative difficulty: Mondayish


                      THEME:@rexparker— imaginary Twitter handles (that is, actual words reimagined as Twitter handles)

                      Theme answers:
                      • @TEMPTING (17A: Good Twitter handle for a seductress?)
                      • @TESTING (21A: … for a teacher?)
                      • @TUNES (37A: … for a musician?)
                      • @TIRED (39A: … for a sleepyhead?)
                      • @TRIBUTE (53A: … for a eulogist?)
                      • @TRACTION (59A: … for a tire company?) 

                      Word of the Day: SHUTTERFLY (27D: Internet photo company named after an insect) —
                      Shutterfly is an Internet-based image publishing service based in Redwood City, California. Shutterfly's flagship product is its photo book line. The company was founded in 1999 and is currently led by Jeffrey Housenbold, who joined the company in 2005.[2]The company went public in 2006. The customer base is heavily skewed toward women, who accounted for 80% of customers as reported in 2013.
                      Shutterfly's revenue derives from "turning digital snapshots into tangible things". (wikipedia)
                      • • •

                      Smart, funny, modern, clean. Hurray. Mondays rarely have this kind of life, and rarely have grids that are both this theme-dense *and* this interesting. All those themers and he got STATE FAIRS and TAXIDERMY and SHUTTERFLY and CATACLYSM in there too. Pretty sweet. I wish beginning constructors would study this grid as an example of what an easy puzzle should be. Note especially the dearth of terrible short fill. And in a grid loaded w/ 3- and 4-letter words, that is some kind of accomplishment. I think I'd send back the partials GRATA and CRUE, and maybe AAA and NENE and SANTO, if I could, but if that's the worst stuff you're throwing out there, and you've got six good themers and six (6!) good 9+-letter answers in the Downs, that's something. People are happy to put up with The Usual Stuff in the short fill as long as the theme + longer fill entertains. That is today's lesson.


                      Plays fast and loose with the ends / tenses of the "handles" to make them work: present participles here, third-person present verb there, past tense verb there, noun there. And I might've gone with something other than "tire company" for @TRACTION, since @TIRED is already in the grid. But the lack of part-of-speech consistency in the handles is a non-issue—it certainly doesn't detract from the sense of the clues or the fun of figuring them out. And the "tire" thing is just a little thing. A note. A suggestion. Puzzle is still a winner. Winning Mondays are hard to make, and this one is clearly a cut above NYT-normal (i.e. about where I'd like the self-described "best puzzle in the world" to be every week).


                      Check out these kids, tearing up the crossword on the subway:


                      This photo made me terribly happy. If you see anyone solving "in the wild" feel free to snap a pic and send it to me. Love it. (photo courtesy of reader Shandra Dykman)

                      Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                      [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]

                      Deep blue dye / TUE 6-23-15 / Spanish liqueur / Wisconsin v landmark 1972 Supreme Court case on religious freedom / Stark Game of Thrones protagonist

                      $
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                      Constructor: Jules P. Markey

                      Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium



                      THEME:"ROAD to BALI"— word ladder going from ROAD to BALI. Also, four theme answer related to the movie:

                      Word Ladder: ROAD (1A) TOAD TOLD BOLD BALD BALI (60A)

                      Theme answers:
                      • BROMANTIC COMEDY (16A: Modern-day genre for the 1952 film whose title is suggested by a word ladder starting at 1-Across)
                      • HOPE AND CROSBY (24A: The film's headliners)
                      • DOROTHY LAMOUR (40A: The film's co-star)
                      • SONG AND DANCE MEN (52A: Occupations of 24-Across in the film)
                      Word of the Day: Wisconsin v. YODER (29D: Wisconsin v. ___ (landmark 1972 Supreme Court case on religious freedom)) —
                      Wisconsin v. Yoder406 U.S. 205 (1972), is the case in which the United States Supreme Court found that Amish children could not be placed under compulsory education past 8th grade. The parents' fundamental right to freedom of religionoutweighed the state's interest in educating its children. The case is often cited as a basis for parents' right to educate their children outside of traditional private or public schools. (wikipedia)
                      • • •

                      Er … no. This is loaded with problems. I don't care if you love the movie—that's not the point (I'm going to bet that most solvers have barely heard of and likely never seen the movie … I mean, not you, of course—you're quite the movie buff. But most.). The point is 1. word ladder, yuck. The worst of ladders. A hackneyed puzzle conceit if there ever was one. 2. BROMANTIC COMEDY is not a thing. Sorry, but no. Check out its wikipedia page—front-loaded w/ warning flags. I see that a few publications have used the term, but it's simply not common enough to qualify as a "modern-day genre" (which is already a deeply awkward way to refer to the genre of a *1952* film—how can a film be in a genre that didn't exist? Confusing.). Google "bromantic comedy" => 108K hits (also, for the record, autocorrect made it "romantic" just now). Now google "bromance," an *actual* "modern-day genre," and you get 9 million hits. There's the difference: fake portmanteau v. real portmanteau. So …. yuck to the whole awkward mess of that answer and its clue. 3. theme answers are just trivia, who cares? 4. OMG the fill is superbad. Not the good kind of "superbad." The bad kind. OPES! ALINED! ANIS APER A ON! A tent full of TAMERS! How many TAMERS!? MMCCC TAMERS! Can I get MMCCC AMENS? Thank you.


                      Further, ill-conceived grid construction leaves you with YODER, which is an Absurdity on a Tuesday. But the way the grid's built, you're locked into that Y---R sequence, and making an actual, viable, reasonably early-week answer out of Y---R is nigh on impossible. In fact, the whole thing is clearly too theme dense (what w/ the word ladder and all) for the constructor to smoothly handle. So it's a hot, rough mess. This thing just tries to do too much, and gets too cute, with a not-important old film, and so I didn't care. Killed it (just north of 3 minutes), but didn't care.
                        Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

                        [Follow Rex Parker on Facebook and Twitter]
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