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Brother Antonio Girolamo in music history / THU 5-26-16 / Foe of Ottomans / Nursery bagful / 1777 battle site / When shortened topic in sexology / 1836 battle site / white one said to symbolize I'm sorry

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Constructor:Andrew Zhou

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME: transformative compressions— two-word phrases are clued as if they were "[first letter of first word]-second word" words, "[w]hen shortened." Thus, for example, [When shortened, June 1944 offensive] might clue the answer DORIS DAY (because "when shortened,""DORIS" becomes "D"...). And so:

Theme answers:
  • VITAL SIGNS (4D: When shortened, winning symbols)
  • QUICK TIPS (18A: When shortened, ear swabs)
  • FOXHOLE (24D: When shortened, violin feature)
  • ONION RING (11D: When shortened, rocket seal)
  • GUEST SPOT (34D: When shortened, topic in sexology)
  • TAPAS BARS (58A: When shortened, ski lifts)
  • BLINDSIDES (one-word verb? two-word plural noun?) (31D: When shortened, lesser-played songs) 
Word of the Day:PAAVO Järvi(50D: Conductor Järvi) —
Paavo Järvi (Estonian: [ˈpɑːvo ˈjærvi]; born 30 December 1962) is an Estonianconductor.
Järvi was born in Tallinn, Estonia, to conductor Neeme Järvi and Liilia Järvi. His siblings, Kristjan Järvi and Maarika Järvi, are also musicians. After leaving Estonia, the family settled in Rumson, New Jersey. He studied at the Curtis Institute of Music with Max Rudolf and Otto-Werner Mueller, and at the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute with Leonard Bernstein. // From 1994 to 1997, Järvi was principal conductor of the Malmö Symphony Orchestra. From 1995 to 1998, he shared the title of principal conductor of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra with Sir Andrew Davis. Järvi was music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra from 2001 to 2011. The orchestra made a number of recordings for the Telarc label during Järvi's tenure. In May 2011, he was named the orchestra's Music Director Laureate. Since 2004, he has been the artistic director of the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen and an Artistic Advisor to the Estonian National Symphony Orchestra. In 2006, Järvi became the principal conductor of the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra, and served in the post until 2014. In 2010, he became music director of the Orchestre de Paris. He is scheduled to conclude his tenure with the Orchestre de Paris at the conclusion of his current contract, at the end of the summer of 2016. In June 2012, the NHK Symphony Orchestra named Järvi its next chief conductor, beginning in the 2015–2016 season, with an initial contract of three years. Järvi recently starred in the documentary Maestro, directed by David Donnelly, which followed Järvi and an array of brilliant musicians as they performed across the globe. (wikipedia)
• • •
Wow, this was not an easy theme to describe succinctly. It's kind of bizarre, in that there's no connection at all, meaning-wise, between the answer in the grid and the "shortened" answer that's actually being clued. There's just this clever bit of wordplay going on, over and over (and in intersecting answers—nice). I found it oddly delightful. Wacky in a way I somehow appreciated. I can even forgive the Absurd Scrabble-f*cking in the SW corner—why is that "J" there? TAJ really really limits cluing possibilities, leaving you only with proper noun / fill-in-the-blank cluing options (here, the banal 58D: ___ Boston (luxury hotel), yawn). TAN or TAB or TAG or TAP beats TAJ any day. Any. Day. It is *bizarre* that there is no "Y" in this grid, because the only way I can understand that corner "J" is if the constructor was actually going for a pangram (i.e. a puzzle with every letter in the alphabet represented at least once). But there's no "Y". There's no Y!!! It's so weird. I feel like there must've been one that got edited out. Wait, where was I? Oh, right. I actually enjoyed this theme, and most of this grid.


TAPAS BARS was both my favorite answer and the hardest (for me) to get. This is partly because of TAJ (?) [shakes fist], partly because I don't think of a BOT as a "harvester," partly because that [Remover of dirt...] clue was doing nothing for me, partly because I wasn't *entirely* sure of the spelling on PAAVO. But I just hacked at it wildly and finally things fell into place. Two other trouble spots were a. in the north where ETAS and SALE were not at all apparent to me. The latter really looked like it would be OPEN, and the former was just inscrutable; and b. in the east, where the BILGE / ASTER / LILT / DEBRIS mash-up was mildly befuddling. Clue on DEBRIS was particularly vexing (30A: Refuse). Other than that, I had TOYS for 10A: Nursery bagful (LOAM) at first, but not many other hiccups. Finished in somewhat under my average Thursday time.


I think QUICK TIPS is the weakest themer here, in that I don't really know what those are. Or, I do, probably, but that answer just doesn't stand alone as well or seem as snappy as the others. I mean, yes QUICK TIPS are a thing the way GREEN PAINT is a thing, but ... HELPFUL TIPS googles twice as well, and no one in their right mind thinks *that's* a great phrase (HELPFUL HINTS, however, would be good ... but I (really) digress). I'm not faulting the answer so much as noting its wobbliness vis-a-vis the other answers. It's good enough—not much else you can do to pick up the Q-TIP reference. Weird, inventive, interesting. FINE!

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Italian for sleeves / FRI 5-27-16 / Longtime All My Children role / First novel of Great Plains trilogy / Hybrid woman-bird monster / Magna carta drafters / Title trio in 1986 comedy

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Constructor:Damon Gulczynski

Relative difficulty:Medium (leaning somewhat toward easy)


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:TAXON(18A: Phylum, order or genus) —
In biology, a taxon (plural taxa; back-formation from taxonomy) is a group of one or more populations of an organism or organisms seen by taxonomists to form a unit. Although neither is required, a taxon is usually known by a particular name and given a particular ranking, especially if and when it is accepted or becomes established. It is not uncommon, however, for taxonomists to remain at odds over what belongs to a taxon and the criteria used for inclusion. If a taxon is given a formal scientific name, its use is then governed by one of the nomenclature codes specifying which scientific name is correct for a particular grouping. (wikipedia)
• • •
Taxon. Tax off. Taxon, tax off ... the taxer. TAX TAX.

[You're welcome]

I'm trying to think of things to say about this puzzle, but I'm fantastically distracted by my Twitter feed, which is half live-tweets of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, and half animated discussion about the strengths and weaknesses of "High Society" (1956). It's all too enthralling. Allegedly, there's an important NBA playoff game on right now as well, but I haven't heard a peep about it. This puzzle was enjoyable, mostly. West fell fast, east ... didn't. After a couple early miscues (AGE for SWM, ENYA for ERTE) I went sweeping down the west side of the grid pretty easily, then moved into the middle and kinda got stuck for a bit (finished in 6:09, so not *that* stuck, but stuckish). First there was the ON ICE / IN ICE problem (IN makes me wince), then the NE, where ... let's see. I threw AVAIL in and then crossed it at the "V" with ... OVATE. But when the "T" cross was some kind of green (er, that is, 13D: Kind of blue that's close to green), I somehow ... I ... well, I changed OVATE to OVOID and went with NILE. NILE blue. Is that a thing? It felt thingish. It was wrong. MIENS and DENS helped out and things settled down. Really really really thrown off by the word "attraction" in 34A: Attraction temporarily shut down and partly moved to Siberia during W.W. II, so much so that even with LENIN in place I still thought I was dealing with some kind of carnival ride. The LENIN SWING or something.... but it was just his TOMB.

[This video is unrelated to anything in the puzzle. It was on 89.3 The Current (Minneapolis!) as I was writing this, so I just stuck it in here, why not?]

Yucked out at the awkward EMBANK, where -MBAN- did zero for me (PET rock ... cute) (29A: Kind of classic rock?). Thus stuck, I switched to the SE to see what I could do—and bam, off the "O" got "O, PIONEERS," and RIC OCASEK would've been a gimme even without the initial "R" in place. Filled the grid back up to horrible EMBANK, ending with that "E."

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Miss Hungary of 1936 familiarly / SAT 5-28-16 / 1960s sitcom matriarch / Sights at Supercharger / Sound effect in comic BC / French frozen desserts / 1999 parody featuring starship Protector / Title brat of kid-lit

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Constructor:Frederick J. Healy

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:ATTELET(20A: Decorative skewer for serving hors d'oeuvres) —
n.1.(Cooking) a type of skewerwith an ornamentalhandlewhich is usedforholdingfoodsforpresentation at thetable,butnotwhilecooking. (thefreedictionary)
• • •

Constructing software (armed with a sizeable wordlist) can help constructors do really nice things, like running stacked 11s through stacked 11s (as in the center part of this grid). It can also convince you that putting stuff like SUL and THEICE and ATTELET in your puzzle is a good idea. Google didn't even believe me when I told it [define attelet]
I think the good far outweighs the bad today, though. Your marquee answers here are all wonderful, the corners are OK, and the bad parts (ATTELET notwithstanding) are hardly flagrant. So, YIPPEE, I guess.


I tore this thing up thanks to some very helpful letters in very helpful positions. Let's start with the letter "Z"—two of them, actually. First answer into the grid was ZSA ZSA (1D: Miss Hungary of 1936, familiarly). Why did I know that? Dunno. Just did. And I didn't "know" it. It just felt right. And right away—two "Z"s. Two high-value letters. I knew ZOT was right, and after trying A LIFE for 27A: "Get ___!" (A GRIP), I put in PATHS and thus got a grip on the NW corner. Done, and fast. PETE (or, to be precise, PE_E...) was there before I ever saw the clue at 14D: He said "You kind of live and die by the serve"(eloquent!), so no problem there. The most important answer for me in the top half, though, was SELIG (25A: Manfred succeeded him as baseball commissioner). Not only was it a gimme, but it gave me a terminal "G" at 7D: "Morning Mood" composer. I wrote in GRIEG reflexively, and that gave me all the first letters of the Acrosses in the NE. One letter in one easy answer opened an entire section of the puzzle right up.

[So ... "Peer Gynt" composer, really, then ...]

"GALAXY QUEST" (31A: 1999 parody featuring the starship Protector) was a flat-out, no-crosses-needed gimme, and... look at that: an "X" *and* a "Q"! The whole puzzle just flowered out from there. I did have awful trouble, however, with DELUXE MODEL (17D: Provider of more bells and whistles). Got the DELUXE part OK, but the second part ... less easy. Eventually, with DELUXE MO-EL in place, I went with [drum roll] DELUXE MOTEL! Then I went with EATST at 43A: "___ thou no poison mix'd ...?": "Romeo and Juliet" (HADST). Threw that awesome wrong answer out pretty quick, but only at the very end, after starting to run the alphabet at -OPED / -ATST, did I see it was actually HOPED / HADST. The "D" there was my last letter.

Bullets:
  • IN STIR (18A: Doing time)— I have a vast reservoir of olde-timey expressions no one uses any more, like ... lots of synonyms for "money" and "jail." Speaking of olde-timey expressions: NATTY (38A: Spruced up). Got it off the "N." 
  • HAN SOLO (35D: [Spoiler alert!] He dies in "The Force Awakens")— cute clue, but Monday-easy.
  • AS TO (48D: Repeated words in a multiple-count verdict)— can't say I like ASTO as fill, but I admire this highly original clue.
  • STRIPE (12D: IBM logo feature)— that is the weirdest, randomest STRIPE clue ever. I can see the logo in my mind's eye, vaguely, but of all the STRIPE-y things in the universe ... blah. Pretty blah. 

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Physicist Nathan who postulated wormholes / SUN 5-29-16 / 1880s-90s veep P Morton / Enlightened buddhist / Drive street where Harry Potter grew up / Dweller along Mandeb Strait / TV inits since 1975 / Never in Nikolaus

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Constructor:Kevin G. Der

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium (closer to Medium)


THEME:"Best Picture Adaptations"— Best Picture titles that have had one letter changed, resulting All The Wacky:

Theme answers:
  • BEER HUNTER (21A: Best Picture adaptation about ... a search for the perfect brew, with "The"?)
  • SILENCE OF THE IAMBS (24A: ... inaudible metrical poetry, with "The"?)
  • THE VAST EMPEROR (37A: ... a fat Eastern monarch?)
  • DUNCES WITH WOLVES (50A: ... fools accompanying a pack of wild animals?)
  • GONG WITH THE WIND (67A: ... a reed and percussion duet?)
  • FRENCH CONFECTION (84A: ... an éclair or crème brûlée, with "The"?)
  • A BEAUTIFUL MINK (99A: ... gorgeous fur?)
  • GERMS OF ENDEARMENT (my favorite) (113A: ... cooties from hugs and kisses?)
  • MY HAIR LADY (also good) (122A: ... a salon woman I go to?)
Word of the Day:OEO(65D: War on Poverty agcy.) —
The Office of Economic Opportunity was the agency responsible for administering most of the War on Poverty programs created as part of United StatesPresidentLyndon B. Johnson's Great Society legislative agenda. (wikipedia)
• • •

Kevin Der is a great constructor, which is why I keep looking at this grid and wondering what I missed. I wrote out all the letter changes to see if there was some kind of sequence or hidden message in either the original or the new/wacky letters, but I just got gibberish. I don't fully understand why the letters that were changed ... were changed. Why not THE LUST EMPEROR? Or SILENCE OF THE LAMPS (or LIMBS) (or JAMBS)? A BEAUTIFUL RIND? TERNS OF ENDEARMENT?  If the only criterion is a single letter change, it seems like you should've been able to get better humor mileage out of these "adaptations." That said, I thought the answers were pretty cute, and I enjoyed remembering movie titles and figuring out which word would be changed how, so there was definitely some entertainment value here. And again, I would not be shocked to learn that there was some Deep Der Stuff going on in this puzzle that I just can't see.


If you knew your crosswordese, then you had a leg up today. AIT crossing ARHAT! (29A: River islet / 12D: Enlightened Buddhist). Two words I only ever seen in crosswords (OK maybe I've seen AIT in the wild, but not much). You were also ahead of the game if you knew a Slew of short proper nouns. You were also ahead of me, as I knew virtually none of those shorties. The fact that they were densely clustered around RAVE REVIEW, an answer I didn't understand until the very last letter I put in the grid, made the NW by far the toughest section to solve. Let's meet the mystery players:
  • LIV! (23A: Disney Channel's "___ and Maddie")— you can just stop at "Disney Channel"
  • LEVI! (27D: 1880s-'90s veep ___ P. Morton)— uh ... no.
  • PEGG! (57D: Simon of the "Mission: Impossible" films)— OK now that I realize we're talking about the modern films and not the original series (my bad!) I can actually picture this guy. But while solving, I figured he was just some olde-timey actor I'd never heard of.
All that, and the fact that [****] was a baffling clue for RAVE REVIEW (which I assumed would be some kind of plural...), conspired to hold me back up there. But I just left it for last and luckily, once I circled back around, the dominoes fell, however slowly. As far as the cast of mystery players, I also didn't know who ROSEN (44D: Physicist Nathan who postulated wormholes) or EVIE (92A: Daughter in E.M. Forster's "Howard's End") was.


Other trouble spots involved my comical inability to anagram "snake" (I don't think of snakes as SNEAKy, as I nearly step on them all the time in the woods), my layman's understanding of [What stars do] (GLIMMER, I wrongly assumed), and my utter non-understanding of what "sponsorship packages" even means (TIERED? If you say so!). Still, because the film titles were so familiar and the changes to said titles so minuscule, I made pretty good time. Not lightning fast, but better than average.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. Hey, Rich and J.T.—I know you send each other emails with the subject line "FRP," and I know what the "F" stands for. So ... thanks for acknowledging my fearlessness. XO 

P.P.S. Lollapuzzoola, one of my two favorite crossword tournaments, is accepting crossword submissions for its tourney this August. Here's a message from tourney organizer Brian Cimmet: ""Lollapuzzoola, the greatest crossword tournament ever held on a Saturday in August, is accepting submissions! Our 9th annual tournament is happening on Saturday, August 13 in New York City — and it could feature YOU! Do you have a puzzle that is brilliant, clever, inventive, mildly wacky, curiously strong, and can measure up to the unrehearsed nonsense of Lollapuzzoola? Send it our way! We'll take a look at themes, concepts, completed grids, etc. (but don't feel pressured to finish cluing or filling). Submissions will be accepted until June 1, 2016. Please send your work to brian@bemoresmarter.com"http://www.bemoresmarter.com/

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Longtime NBC newsman Roger / MON 5-30-16 / Showtime's serial killer protagonist familiarly / Lover of Tristan in legend

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Constructor:David Woolf

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:TOSSED SALAD (62A: Common first course ... or what's literally contained in 17-, 23-, 32-, 44- and 49-Across)— circled squares in the theme answers contain are scrambled versions of the word "SALAD"

Theme answers:
  • PIÑA COLADAS (17A: Tropical drinks often served with umbrellas)
  • SALSA DANCING (23A: Spicy ballroom activity?) 
  • DEAD LAST (32A: Finishing eighth out of eight, say)
  • ROAD SALT (44A: Application to highways before a winter storm)
  • DOUGLAS ADAMS (49A: "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" author) 
Word of the Day:"RED"(61A: 2012 #1 album for Taylor Swift) —
Red is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. It was released on October 22, 2012, by Big Machine Records, as the follow-up to her third studio album, Speak Now. The album title was inspired by the "semi-toxic relationships" that Swift experienced during the process of conceiving this album, which Swift described the emotions she felt as "red emotions" due to their intense and tumultuous nature. Red touches on Swift's signature themes of love and heartbreak, however, from a more mature perspective while exploring other themes such as fame and the pressure of being in the limelight. The album features collaborations with producers and guest artists such as Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol and Ed Sheeran and is noted for Swift's experimentation with new musical genres. Swift completed The Red Tour in support of the album on June 12, 2014, which became the highest-grossing tour of all time by a country artist, grossing over $150 million. (wikipedia)
• • •

Mixed feelings. The theme is so hackneyed that I'm stunned it hasn't been done before. Cursory look through the cruciverb database doesn't turn up anything, though, so ... it's simultaneously original and old-as-dirt. But who cares? I didn't even see the theme. How could I? The puzzle was (until the very very very end) so easy I didn't have time to think about what was going on in those circled squares, or much of anything beyond the nice long Downs. And the fill was smooth enough, and grimace-free enough, that it didn't call attention to itself in either a bad or good way. It just flew by. Short fill is dull in parts, but not ugly. I don't like that the tossed "salad"s are not all broken across two words; PIÑA COLADAS is a yucky outlier in this regard. Should've been chucked. Boo. But overall, the puzzle was fine. I like how timely the puzzle is—at least for me, personally. As I write this, I am at the end of a Very LAZY SUNDAY (29D: Relaxing time after church, say), with a G&T in my rearview mirror and homemade mint chip ice cream (with mint from the garden) waiting for me when I'm through here. Hiked in the woods with dogs much earlier in the day, but the rest of the time I spent organizing my comic collection (which I'd let get disgustingly disorganized over a period of many years) and listening to music. If it were a tad less, uh, sweaty, today would've been perfect.


I thought I was gonna come close to my Monday NYT record solving time (which ... I actually don't remember, though I think it's 2:36. I've been faster on other easy puzzles, but not the NYT). And I would've gotten it, too, if it weren't for those meddling kids, by which I mean a Taylor Swift album name I totally blanked on and a "Longtime newsman" whose name I am never going to remember no matter how many times I see it in puzzles. Roger O'NEIL? Sure, why not? Not in my time, but great—his name crossing "RED" meant a hiccup of untold seconds, resulting in a final time of 2:45, which is still fast, but ... it's infinity far from from 2:36, in my experience. I see 2:40s a lot. I see 2:30s virtually never. I have dumb fat clumsy fingers, too, which ... don't do me any favors.

That's all. Stay authentic, colloquially! See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Folkie Phil / TUE 5-31-16 / Sheepskin boot name / Offensive football lineup / Gourd-shaped rattles / Frodo's best friend / Red Balloon painter Paul

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Constructor:Sarah Keller

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:EIEIO (69A: Children's song refrain found at the starts of 17-, 26-, 35-, 50- and 57-Across)

Theme answers:
  • E STREET BAND (17A: Bruce Springsteen's group)
  • I FORMATION (26A: Offensive football lineup)
  • E PLURIBUS UNUM (35A: Phrase on the back of a buck)
  • I LOVE PARIS (50A: Cole Porter classic from "Can-Can")
  • O HENRY TWIST (57A: Surprise ending, as in "The Gift of the Magi")
Word of the Day:A.O. SCOTT(32A: Longtime New York Times film critic)
Anthony Oliver Scott (born July 10, 1966) is an American journalist and film critic. Along with Manohla Dargis, he serves as chief film critic for The New York Times. (wikipedia)
• • •

This is a sturdy, solid, old-fashioned puzzle. Again, as with yesterday's TOSSED SALAD (another old-fashioned concoction), I'm stunned this exact theme hasn't been done before. The reveal is somewhat nice. Not quite an aha moment, but definitely an 'oh, huh, neat' one. But the themers themselves aren't inherently interesting, and ... well, EIEIO is EIEIO, which is to say, one of those things you'd rather not see again in any crossword ever if you didn't have to. Here it's repurposed as a revealer, so that elevates its worth, some, maybe. There's really nothing wrong with this puzzle. Theme-wise, it was just a bit of a shrug for me.

[this is killing me]

Oh, no, wait. Sorry. One thing wrong. O HENRY TWIST? I believe that to be an entirely made-up phrase. OK, not entirely, but mostly. Everyone knows that O Henry stories are associated with a twist at the end—his name is practically synonymous with literary irony. So "twist,""irony,""ironic twist," these are all things I buy as phrases relating to O. Henry. But O. HENRY TWIST I do not buy. The very fact that you had to put an O. Henry story in the clue tells me that it is not a real thing. If it can stand alone as a [Surprise ending], then you don't need the story title, but you do, because it can't. It googles poorly and many of the hits you get add the word "ending" or are otherwise inexact. I see one google books result that says "many critics refer to the sudden, unexpected turn of events at the very end of a story as “the O. Henry twist." There's no footnote on this assertion, however, so I call baloney. It's just not a stand-alone phrase. Not. Veto. I would support OH HENRY TWIST as some kind of modernized version of the candy bar. Like Reese's Sticks. Only Oh Henry. And ... in some kind of twist ... shape.


Bullets:
  • 22D: Globe shape: Abbr. (SPH.)— one of the few clunkers in this grid, which is really very nice overall. Gets a little rough in the SE, and there's an ILSA here and a LBO there, but lots of solid, vivid, interesting answers throughout kept the short stuff from hurting too much.
  • 44A: Gourd-shaped rattles (MARACAS)— had the -AS and wrote in ... CASABAS!
  • 31D: Reporter's contact (SOURCE)— the most elusive answer in the grid for me, for reasons unknown. I had SOUR- and ... no idea.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. my friend Mike Dockins asks "MISERS / SAM??? That gives you SAM and SAME in the same corner. Why not MISERY / YAM"? I have to agree. Why *not* MISERY / YAM. . . MISERY / YAM 2016!

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Dickinson with modeling agency / WED 6-1-16 / Elephant boy boy / One-named singer from Iceland / Coffehouse combo often / Em polly in literature / NCAA's Aggies informally

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Constructor:Wren Schultz

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:diacritical marks— four of them in the grid, both as answers, and as the marks themselves, which can be found (if you solve on paper and care to write them in) at the intersection of four sets of words throughout the grid:

Theme answers:
  • CEDILLA (7D: Mark in the intersection of 58-Across and 43-Down) (GARÇON and CURAÇAO)
  • TILDE (22D: Mark in the intersection of 56-Across and 38-Down) (SI, SEÑOR and AÑO)
  • CIRCUMFLEX (45A: Mark in the intersection of 19-Across and 11-Down) (ÎLE and MAÎTRE D')
  • UMLAUT (Mark in the intersection of 17-Across and 1-Down)(ÖYSTER and BJÖRK)
Word of the Day:ASGARD(37A: Odin's realm) —
In Norse religion, Asgard (Old Norse: ''Ásgarðr''; "Enclosure of the Æsir") is one of the Nine Worlds and home to the Æsir tribe of gods. It is surrounded by an incomplete wall attributed to a Hrimthurs riding the stallionSvaðilfari, according to Gylfaginning. Odin and his wife, Frigg, are the rulers of Asgard. // One of Asgard's well known locations is Valhöll (Valhalla), in which Odin rules. (wikipedia)
• • •

This is at least interesting. It takes a common crossword observation / complaint (esp. where the TILDE is concerned)—that crossing a letter with a diacritical mark over it with one that lacks such a mark is like crossing two different letters—and makes it the subject of the puzzle, with four crosses that actually get the diacritical mark thing right. OK. Interesting concept. There is some weirdness here–hilarious, to my mind—in that the examples for UMLAUT are neither of them actual words or place names. They are names belonging to musical acts. BJÖRK's, at least, is a given name. BLUE ÖYSTER CULT, however ... yikes. That's not just an umlaut—that's a "metal umlaut"! It's used "gratuitously or decoratively" in band names (mostly metal bands, hence the name). The most famous instance, to my mind, is the double metal umlaut in Mötley Crüe. I thought BJÖRK's umlaut was also decorative, but it's her actual given first name, apparently (Also, according to one very reliable source, "Thë ümläüt wäs ïnvëntëd by Ïcëländïc sïngër Björk ïn 197Ö."). Anyway, the UMLAUT portion of this puzzle is bewildering and funny. Which, I think, is actually a plus. Here's an interesting article on the difference between the UMLAUT and the dieresis (same symbol, different function). There really aren't many (any) English words with true UMLAUTs. Apparently, with German loan words in English, most of the time the diacritical marks are "suppressed." I'm just reading wikipedia here, so don't quote me.


The grid is choked with crosswordese, which is its main problem. As if AÑO and ÎLE weren't enough, there are old friends like RLS and AESOPS and ENE SLO SABU STR ILO REN. This incarnation of REN (49A: "Footloose" hero ___ McCormack) actually slowed me up more than almost anything in the puzzle besides another even worse piece of fill: CMIX (I miscalculated my random Roman centuries and started off with M...). As for the names of the diacritical marks not lining up symmetrically in the grid ... I just don't care. Concept is worth the "violation" of grid etiquette. Junky fill is a far bigger problem, and even that didn't ruin the solving experience completely.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Turkish moolah / THU 6-2-16 / Hercules spinoff informally / First name in gospel / Brother's place informally / Neighbor of Majorca / Mental flub

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Constructor:Susan Gelfand

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME: JACK IN / THE BOX (8D: With 48-Down, children's toy ... or a hint to this puzzle's theme)— four JACKs in boxes

Theme answers:
  • JACK ASS / JACK FROST
  • JACK POTS / JACK CHEESE
  • FLAP JACK / LUMBER JACK
  • CAR JACK / PHONE JACK 
Word of the Day:BRAINO(58A: Mental flub) —
THINKO (n.) jargon
/thing'koh/(Or"braino",byanalogywith"typo") Amomentary,correctableglitchinmentalprocessing,especiallyoneinvolvingrecallofinformationlearnedbyrote;abubbleinthestreamofconsciousness.
Seealsobrain fart. Comparemouso.
[Jargon File ]
(1996-04-20)
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © Denis Howe 2010
• • •

Started with RICE, then changed it to STEW and got FRAT and OBI-WAN quickly thereafter. Then I looked at 1D: Nose nipper. I had -F-O-- ... and I knew what I was dealing with. [JACK] FROST went in, [JACK] ASS went across, and off I went. As I continued solving, I thought "This can't really be a JACK IN / THE BOX puzzle, can it? That's a really obvious rebus concept, and I'm virtually certain I've seen it before. Maybe this will have some different twist..." But then it didn't. It just had four JACK boxes, and a patently unnecessary revealer (which is to say, if you got one box, the revealer was obvious). Then I did some sleuthing and discovered that the NYT ran This Exact Theme roughly 4.5 years ago. Conceptually identical. So, since the NYT is just nakedly recycling themes, allow me to nakedly recycle write-ups. Actually, it wasn't my write-up. I was off somewhere, and 5-time ACPT champion Tyler Hinman was filling in for me. Anyway, you can read it here. I'm done here today. There is nothing wrong with this puzzle. It's just a rerun.


Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS there is one thing wrong and that is BRAINO, holy crap. But I'll let you fight over that one. Good night.

PPS here's that Dec. 1, 2011 grid ...

 [cruciverb.com]

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Eponymous bacteriologist Julius / FRI 6-3-16 / 2000s retro Chrysler / Under lilacs writer 1878 / Eastern border of Manhattan's Tompkins Square Park / Nickname for Francisco

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Constructor:Josh Knapp

Relative difficulty:Easy (Very)


THEME: none 

Word of the Day:T-BEAM(14D: Building bar with one flange) —
A T-beam (or tee beam), used in construction, is a load-bearingstructure of reinforced concrete, wood or metal, with a t-shaped cross section. The top of the t-shaped cross section serves as a flange or compression member in resisting compressivestresses. The web (vertical section) of the beam below the compression flange serves to resist shear stress and to provide greater separation for the coupled forces of bending. (wikipedia)
• • •

Tall thin puzzle (16x14), which feels like a cheating kind of way to handle 14s, but I guess it's OK. It's certainly quite clean for a fairly low word-count puzzle, but once again, Friday ends up being a ridiculous breeze. I meandered through this, not at all on High Speed setting, and still finished in 4:19. That's a Wednesday time. Fridays should be minimally 50% harder for me. But look at the NW. 1-Across? Gimme (1A: Singer with the 1977 hit "Lido Shuffle"). 13-Across? Gimme (13A: House of Tybalt and Juliet). From there, you're lined up to take down all the Downs up there. I had real, serious trouble with AVENUE B (?) crossing T-BEAM (???). "B" was a total guess, even though I was 99% sure it was right. I mostly had to convince my self that a. a T-BEAM is a thing (never seen it, in crosswords or elsewhere) and b. other T_EAM possibilities were not possible. I also had to crawl out of the nakedly intentional YOLK trap at 22A: The so-called "sunny side" (YANG). If all you've got is the "Y"—and maybe even if you've got nothing—YOLK is clearly the better answer to this clue. YANG shmang.


Had a couple other missteps: COHORT for COEVAL (31D: Agemate) ("ONE LOVE" fixed that—Marley was playing in the cafe where I was working today ... I want to say that helped, but it probably didn't help at all) (39A: 1977 reggae classic). And then LIAR! for LIES! (50A: "I deny all that!"). But that's it. Everything else went in easy. The NE and SW corners were particularly unchallenging. I spent maybe a minute (maybe) on both of them combined. Once you lock in SHERLOCK HOLMES and COLONEL SANDERS, building up (in the NE) and down (in the SW) is a Snap. Good clean fun, for the most part, but Fridays should put up at least a little resistance, and lately, that hasn't been happening.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Conditional construct in computer programming / SAT 6-4-16 / Opera genre for Tosca Pagliacci / Hooked projection on bird feather / 1980s electronic innovation from Detroit / Lily Tomlin character headset

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Constructor:Byron Walden and Brad Wilber

Relative difficulty:Medium


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:VERISMO(23A: Opera genre for "Tosca" and "Pagliacci") —
Like Gran Turismo... it's like a video game thing ... it just tells it like it is. It's the rawest of all opera genres. (Lena, trying to say out loud what she thinks VERISMO means). If you google it, it's all Starbucks coffee stuff. Braydon: "Ugh, it's Starbucks Keurig."
 OK, the actual opera definition: "In opera, verismo (meaning "realism", from Italian vero, meaning "true") was a post-Romantic operatic tradition associated with Italian composers such as Pietro Mascagni, Ruggero Leoncavallo, Umberto Giordano and Giacomo Puccini." (wikipedia)
• • •

Byron Walden and Brad Wilber! Double B-Dubs!

Hi from D.C., where I solved this puzzle in a hotel room with my wife and my friends Lena and Brayden. I have no idea how hard it was. My time was really slow, but I was having a conversation while solving, and reading various clues out loud, so the time tells me nothing. It felt normal. Toughish. Pretty old school. When I saw ADIT, I was like "Oh, hello, old friend." From TOP CAT to Dan ISSEL to MOGAMBO to CESAR ROMERO to ERNESTINE to RAMON Novarro, this definitely skewed olden. Very much so. There were some nice moments, but most of it just lacked  the quality and pizzazz I expect from these constructors. ELSEIF? Clue for WATER-LOVING is so literal that it's laughable ... I don't even know where you'd use that term. MISS IDAHO is one of the green paint-iest answers I've ever seen. MISS [any state]? That's legal? Ditto OHIO-BORN. [Any state]-BORN??? Yuck. Also, "People" has an ART EDITOR? There are too many questionable things. And if not questionable, arcane (see BARBICEL).




I live in a New York city on the Pennsylvania border and I couldn't tell you where the hell OLEAN is (36A: New York city near the Pennsylvania border). Lena says SRO stands for "sold right out"; sounds good. I still don't believe ECOCIDE is a thing, no matter how cutely you clue it. Half of us think it's too made up to have that tricky of a clue. Half of us don't. Question: Does "hoops" sufficiently clue you into the fact that N.I.T. is an abbrev.? Is it supposed to? (37A: ___ Season Tip-Off (annual hoops event)). Also, how does [Common Allen wrench?] work? I get that it's Woody Allen, and that ANGST is a "wrenching" feeling ... is that it?

OK, it's morning now and I have to go to the Indie 500 Tournament in a few minutes. Take care.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

PS we like [Tender towards one's exes?] a lot as a clue for ALIMONIES.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Newspaper VIP Baquet / SUN 6-5-16 / Fictional braggart / Default avatar for new Twitter user / Silmarillion creature / Flirtatious wife in Of Mice Men / Finnigan friend of Harry Potter / Charm City baseball player

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Constructor:Tom McCoy

Relative difficulty:Medium


THEME:Word Search— clues all start "Where you can find...?" (see, you're "searching" for a "word"), and then every answer is both a familiar term / phrase *and* directions telling you where you might find the other word (in different familiar terms / phrases). Hence:

Theme answers:
  • 23A: Where you can find ... "jacket" or "yourself"? (FOLLOWING SUIT) (because "suit jacket" and "suit yourself")
  • 31A: ... "go" or "so"? (BEFORE LONG)
  • 37A: ... "anybody" or "cooking"? (CLOSE TO HOME)
  • 65A: ... "got" or "tell"? (BETWEEN YOU AND ME)
  • 93A: ... "two"or "face"? (AHEAD OF TIME)
  • 95A: ... "building" or"hours"? (POST OFFICE)
  • 113A: ... "that's" or "special"? (NEXT TO NOTHING) 
Word of the Day:ASA Gray(84D: Botanist Gray) —
Asa Gray (November 18, 1810 – January 30, 1888) is considered the most important American botanist of the 19th century. His Darwiniana was also considered an important explanation of how religion and science were not necessarily mutually exclusive. (wikipedia)
• • •
JUST NOW ASTRIDE ... WHOOPEE! Racy.

A good deal thornier than recent Sunday offerings, which is to say, about what an average Sunday puzzle should be, difficulty-wise. I solved this at the tail end of a tournament day, so my puzzle brain was a little fried, so the themers kept requiring many many crosses for me to get them, but the grid is clean and crosses fair, and the themers all work perfectly. Even though it feels like a *type* of puzzle I've seen somewhere before, the execution is so tight and clever that it felt, original, fresh, nice. It *did* do that thing I don't like where it called attention to terrible short stuff by doing cutesy clue stuff with them (see clues on E'EN and NE'ER—[Contraction missing a V]— ... there's also an ERE, if you dare). But that has virtually no impact on the overall solving experience.


It's pretty funny that this puzzle is titled "Word Search" because if you follow mentions of the word "crossword" on Twitter (as I do), you know that So Many people out there refer to things that are not "crosswords" as "crosswords," most commonly "criss-cross" puzzles (you may have seen these in some stupid assignment your child's third- or seventh- or twelfth- or college freshman teacher thought was "fun") and most annoyingly "word searches." All the time. Total public confusion about what the hell a "crossword puzzle" even is. The "criss-cross" confusion I kind of get. I mean, these *are* "words" that are "crossing" ...



But that's not a crossword. So calling this "Word Search" had me all worried I'd have to actually search for words in this puzzle like some kind of dope, but no. No. Thank you, Tom, for not making me circle stuff in my finished grid.


["Can't read my, can't read my..."]
[SRO = Standing Rhino, Ogling]

I'm still IN D.C. because of yesterday's Indie 500, and we're going to have to leave very soon because our entire route home is thunderstorm alley, and it's going to get quite terrible later in the day. I'll report on the tournament in a future post (Tuesday). For now, I can tell you that I won ... this:


So, you know, that's something. I also drank the crosswordesiest wine of all time—a Chateau STE Michelle Riesling called ... well, look for yourself:


It was, not surprisingly, Delicious.

See you later.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Ankle bones / MON 6-6-2016 / Six-time N.B.A. champion Steve / "N.Y. State of Mind" rapper / N.Y.C. airport code

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It's Annabel Monday and I have some important news to report: I AM NOW SLIGHTLY LESS TIRED!!!! Because it's summer and I finally got a vacation...for two weeks before I started my summer class. Sigh. Oh well.

Constructor: Mary Lou Guizzo

Relative difficulty: Hard enough that I thought I clicked on the wrong puzzle by accident!!



THEME: REDUNDANT — Each and every theme answer was a redundant and superfluous multiple-word phrase. ;-)

Theme answers:
  • FIRST BEGAN (11D: Started)
  • END RESULT (17A: Outcome) 
  • HEAD HONCHO (29D: Top dog)
  • TWELVE NOON (36A: Midday)
  • REVERT BACK (43A: Return to a former state)
  • REDUNDANT (61A: Like 17-, 36- and 43-Across as well as 11- and 29-Down)

Word of the Day: TWYLA (28D: Choreographer Tharpe) —
Twyla Tharp (/ˈtwlə θɑːrp/; born July 1, 1941) is an American dancerchoreographer, and author who lives and works inNew York City. In 1966, she formed her own company Twyla Tharp Dance. Her work often utilizes classical musicjazz, and contemporary pop music.
From 1971 to 1988, Twyla Tharp Dance toured extensively around the world, performing original works. In 1973, Tharp choreographed Deuce Coupe to the music of The Beach Boys for the Joffrey BalletDeuce Coupe is considered to be the first crossover ballet. Later she choreographed Push Comes to Shove (1976), which featured Mikhail Baryshnikov and is now thought to be the best example of the crossover ballet.
In 1988, Twyla Tharp Dance merged with American Ballet Theatre, since which time ABT has held the world premieres of 16 of Tharp's works.
(Wikipedia)  
• • •
Oh my gosh why was this puzzle so hard? I hardly got any Across clues on my first try, and some of the clues were worded pretty strangely. Wouldn't you think "how kids are grouped in school" would be GRADE instead of BY AGE? And the only ankle bones I've ever heard of are the fibula and tibia -how is FARSI right? Ah well. At least that meant we got some really choice words, like TORERO,  and LUCRE - and STY, which pretty much describes my room at all times.

Funny thing about the theme: Before I really looked at the theme clues, I thought it was going to have something to do with the word "on," because of ONTO, TWELVE NOON, LIGHTS ON, and HAS ON. But as it was, the redundancies thing was pretty cool - and it gets points from me for using Down answers as clues, I love puzzles that do that! I prefer oxymorons to redundancies, though. Jumbo shrimp, anyone?

Bullets:
  • SOX (69A: Chi-Town team) — As a sort-of Massachussite, I am VERY offended. The White Sox are not nearly as cool as the Red Sox. I bet Mary Lou Guizzo is a darn Yankees fan! - or she just didn't want to have to spell out "Sawx."
  • THE NERVE (4D: "What gall!")  — The nerve of that guy and his driving eyeballs!
  • ALTOS (56A: Voices above tenors) — I swear, I have read the word "alto" or some variant of it in every. Single. Puzzle. Do puzzle constructors just hate sopranos and tenors and basses or something? 
  • ATALANTA (41D: Maiden who raced Hippomenes, in myth)— So, like...one time my high school theater put on this super-artsy interpretation of Jason and the Argonauts, and I was Atalanta. And, well, I guess this video speaks for itself.
Let's see...that about wraps up this week, nothing else to say here. JUST KIDDING!!! I made an awesome friend the other week! Her name is Emma Howey, and she's a really cool recent Wellesley grad, and I want to give a shoutout to her for being super cool, as well as to her awesome parents Leslie and Jim for being fans of Rex and of Annabel Mondays. Apparently they call every first Monday of the month "Annabel Monday", so like, it's totally a thing now. Not that I'm a celebrity or anything.
Hi Emma!!! Hi Leslie!!! Hi Jim!!! 

Signed, Annabel Thompson, tired college student

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Small flycatchers / TUE 6-7-16 / Oxide in rubies sapphires / shapes of bacilli bacteria / yale affectionately / classic song that starts mid pleasurse palaces though we may roam

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Constructor:Peter A. Collins

Relative difficulty:Challenging (*for a Tuesday*) (still well under 5 min. so don't freak out)


THEME:NEEDLEPOINT (24A: Popular setting for 17- / 18- / 19-Across)— an attempt to depict a "HOME / SWEET / HOME" (17A: With 18- and 19-Across, classic song that starts "Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam") needlepoint, with a giant SLATE ROOF covering a wee THREE / STORY / HOUSE (47A: With 53- and 56-Across, certain abode).

Word of the Day:PHOEBES(40A: Small flycatchers) —
The genus Sayornis is a small group of medium-sized insect-eating birds, known as phoebes, in the tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae; they are native to North and South America. // They prefer semi-open or open areas. These birds wait on a perch and then catch insects. Their nest is an open cup sometimes placed on man-made structures.
They often slowly lower and raise their tails while perched.
The full list of species is:
[wikipedia]
• • •

It's not at all for me, but I can admire, at least somewhat, the ambition—the attempt to do something boldly visual and unconventional. But mostly I just thought "whoa, this is tough for a Tuesday," and, where the theme was concerned ... [shrug]. I googled [home sweet home needlepoint] and none of the results had slate roofs and none (absolutely none) of the houses were three-story. So on a pictorial level, the theme seems to have been forced, just a bit—that is, we get a SLATE ROOF (arbitrary) and a THREE-STORY HOUSE (arbitrary) because those make nice symmetrical little designs in the grid, *not* because they are exactly what one would expect to find on a "HOME SWEET HOME"NEEDLEPOINT (not "cross stitch"?). Further, "HOME / SWEET / HOME" is a "classic song"? If by "classic" you mean "once famous by now nearly totally bygone and erst and onetime," OK. I have no idea what this song is. I have a feeling that it contains the lyric "be it ever so humble, there's no place like home." I figured that was part of some shlocky poem, not a song. I've never heard it sung. If you google [home sweet home song] you get ... well, I think you know what you get:


If the double metal-umlauted Mötley Crüe had been in that clue, I'd be singing a slightly different tune right now. But "classic song" does nothing for me.


Also doing nothing for me: OLD ELI (??) (36A: Yale, affectionately). WFL (?!?!?!?!) (44A: 1974-75 pigskin org.). WtF(L)? What is the "W" for? "Women's"? Nope: World Football League. You're kidding, right? A short-lived nothing of a league from the mid-'70s that I'm only just hearing about just this second despite being an obsessive sports fan as a kid from roughly 1977 on? That's quote poor. Ditto plural ASHTONS and actually-a-plural-name-but-you're-trying-to-disguise-it-as-a-plural-bird PHOEBES. Also, REORG. Also, MEECE. Yuck. Love love love the long Downs, and kind of like FREE PR, even though the expression is actually FREE PRESS. Difficulty today came from most of the above, but also wicked clues on AISLE (35D: Dairy ___) (!?) and CEDILLA (38A: Façade feature). Further, I couldn't remember the exact name of DAMON's buddy, even though I'm pretty sure I played one or the other of those two guys in a school play in elementary school. I think I had PYTHEUS or some such.


And now a brief word about this past weekend's Indie 500 crossword tournament in D.C. It was great fun, as the smaller indie tournaments (like this one and Lollapuzzoola) always are, though both of those are getting increasingly not-so-smaller. Indie 500 had considerably more participants than last year and nearly maxed out the venue (a nice ballroom on the campus of GWU). There was a prom theme, with "couples" responsible for all the puzzles (plus a little prom photo station with balloons where you could take prom pictures). There was also pie. There is always pie at this tourney. Good pie. And, for the winners in various cateogries, tiaras (objects that are both prom- and crossword-appropriate). Roger Barkan won the whole thing (Roger is not to be confused with Howard Barkin, who won ACPT earlier this year). He had a cheering section, which was novel / amazing.


But the big news, of course, is that I won ... the Joon Pahk Award for Worst Handwriting. I now have Worst Handwriting Awards from two different tournaments ... and *still* don't have as many as Joon does (yet another thing he is "better" at than me). But *he* doesn't have a tiara. And I do. So there. Anyway, you can see a gajillion photos from the tournament here (at this Facebook album my wife created). Lots of first-timers there, all of whom seemed to be enjoying themselves. You should consider attending Lollapuzzoola 9 this August, if you are thinking about dipping your toes in the crossword tournament waters. It's a great, warm, fun, friendly place to start.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

She in Lisbon / WED 6-8-16 / Former Israeli PM Barak / Proselytizer's handout / Metallurgist's sample

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Constructor:Sean Dobbin

Relative difficulty:Easy-Medium


THEME:wacky celebrity "-ing" pun phrases 

Theme answers:
  • HOLDEN TANK (17A: Military vehicle for actor William?)
  • BACON POWDER (24A: Makeup for actor Kevin?)
  • DANSON SHOES (36A: Footwear for actor Ted?)
  • WALKEN STICK (47A: Cudgel for actor Christopher?)
  • LANDON GEAR (57A: Equipment for actor Michael?)
Word of the Day:OMSK(37D: Trans-Siberian Railway city) —
Omsk stretches along the banks of the north-flowing Irtysh at its confluence with the smaller Om River. The city has an elevation of 87 meters (285 ft) above mean sea level at its highest point. // Omsk is an important railroad hub, and is the junction point for the northern and southern branches of the Trans-Siberian Railway. The city also serves as a major hub for the regional highway network. River-port facilities handle both passengers and freight, giving the city access to navigating the extensive waterways of the Irtysh and Ob River. The waterways connect Omsk with the coal and mineral-mining towns further up the river in Kazakhstan, as well as with the oil, natural gas and lumber operations of northern Siberia. Omsk is served by the Tsentralny Airport, which offers access to domestic and international (primarily, German and Kazakh) destinations, making the city an important aviation hub for Siberia and the Russian Far East. (wikipedia)
• • •
BERN crossing CRATERS? Interesting. It's at least mildly ironic to get a "Feel the BERN" reference today, considering what a historic night Clinton had last night. So the slogan makes it into the crossword at the very moment that the slogan becomes (or begins to become) historically erst (BERN crossing CRATERS....). Speaking of erst yore bygonedness—the clue on KODAK (48D: Big employer in Rochester, N.Y.). Constructors / editors / anyone who will listen—you might want to update your cluing database. Maybe you heard what happened to, uh, film over the past two decades or so. Long story short, KODAK is no longer even in the Top Ten of Rochester-area employers. Longtime solvers of erstwhile puzzles will still associate that company with that city, but as a firm believer that puzzles should dwell in the present, I want clues to be current. 2016 puzzles, 2016 data, please. I don't have much to say about this theme. It has an ersty feel to it as well—corny wordplay, of a kind I am certain I've seen before. Puns are cute, but not LOL-worthy. Some of the short fill is unfortunate. Most of the fill overall is acceptable, but no better than that. I'm a big fan of UMPTEEN, but not much else.

["... last year, on that stupid 'Dame EDNA' special.."]

Took a while to put together HOLDEN TANK, but after that, things whipped right along. I wrote DUB in at 29A: Burj Khalifa's home: Abbr. which was simultaneously smart and dumb (it *is* in Dubai, but DUB ... is not an abbr. ... for that ... place). Had trouble getting LL BEAN from 44D: Competitor of The North Face since I think of LL BEAN as a store and a catalogue and The North Face as just a brand. So NW and SE gave me a little trouble, but the rest was very simple. Here are some late-night puzzle thoughts from some of my Twitter followers:




And here's Indie 500 Crossword Tournament Best Handwriting winner Brian Cimmet not-so-quietly judging me for my Worst Handwriting medal. I would show you our handwritings side by side (as tourney organizers did when they posted them on the wall at the back of the ballroom), but I don't want to spoil the puzzles for people who are solving at home...


Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Agave drink / THU 6-9-16 / Shrubby wasteland / 1920s screen star Naldi / Large but not often vocal voting bloc / Publications for by aficionados / Modern Japanese martial art

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Constructor:Damon Gulczynski

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:SILENT— circles spell "SILENT," with each letter in SILENT being itself a silent letter (in the Across answer). SILENT can precede two other words in puzzle: MAJORITY (49A:With the circled letters, large but not often vocal voting bloc) and PARTNERS (21A: With the circled letters, investors not involved in the management of their businesses)

Word of the Day:TORTONI(43A: Trattoria dessert) —
noun
noun: tortoni; plural noun: tortonis
  1. an Italian ice cream made with eggs and cream, typically served in a small cup and topped with chopped almonds or crumbled macaroons. (google)
• • •

Two things eroded my enjoyment of this puzzle. The first was the fact that I did this week's American Values Club Crossword earlier in the day (a Jeff Chen production: "No Seconds for Me, Thanks") and it was so good that I was left stunned that the NYT couldn't / wouldn't / hasn't produced a Thursday-type puzzle that good in so so so long. Weird that Jeff practically works for the NYT (writes a very-much-authorized blog about their puzzles) but didn't give his best work to them. But Jeff's puzzle aside, the AVXC just destroys the NYT on a regular basis. Week in. Week out. That shouldn't be. The "best puzzle in the world" shouldn't be getting consistently schooled by an indie outlet. But here we are. None of this, of course, is the fault of this puzzle, which is actually solid and clever. But the AVXC this week really is something else. The *other* thing that made me not love this puzzle so much is the very concept of the SILENT MAJORITY, which I associate with scary white bigotry (check out the signs at the Trump rallies, for instance). It's creepy. At first, I thought that was the only SILENT thing in the puzzle, so my enthusiasm just crashed. Then I saw there were also PARTNERS, *and* that the letters in "SILENT" were themselves silent (in the Acrosses), and I liked the puzzle much better.


Despise the cutesy syntax in the clue for AISLES (17A: Pair of big jets?). Big jets have a pair of these ... is what the clue means. Torturous. But most other clues and answers were acceptable, if far too easy. Only trouble spots (besides AISLES) were the Italian dessert crossing (GELATI is kind of a yuck plural, but I knew it—TORTONI, I didn't know, and have never seen ever); LIE IDLE, which I had as the much more common SIT IDLE (28A: Go unused); and ... I think that's it. I needed a cross or two to get the NON- in NONBASIC."Alkaline" I know. NONBASIC isn't as familiar to me. But all else in the puzzle was a cinch, and the theme made the puzzle even cinchier. I walked into MAJORITY and then just filled in all the remaining SILENT circles from there. With SILENT in place, PARTNERS = cake.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. if you want to see a variation of today's theme done really brilliantly (by Erik Agard and Amy Reynaldo), check out this Fireball crossword from last year. (h/t B.E.Q.)

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Website with virtual animals / FRI 6-10-16 / Vernacular much debated in 1990s / Literally land of sun / Tamid synagogue lamp / Classic R&B hit about returning lover / Green Hornet trumpeter

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Constructor:David Steinberg

Relative difficulty:Medium (E-M for me, but ... proper nounstroubles might getcha)


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:BARBUDA(38D: Island north of Antigua) —
Barbuda is an island in the Eastern Caribbean, and forms part of the state of Antigua and Barbuda. It has a population of about 1,638 (at the 2011 Census), most of whom live in the town of Codrington. (wikipedia)


• • •
Lively, contemporary themeless from Mr. Steinberg. He's pretty good at these. Tougher than most Fridays of late, but still on the historically easy side for me. I can see how the puzzle might play much harder for some, though. EMPEROR PALPATINE (16A: Film villain who says "Your feeble skills are no match for the power of the dark side") is not Vader-famous, despite being an important figure in the "Star Wars" universe, and NEOPETS, well, god help you there. I was pretty chuffed when I "got" that one right out of the box ... then less chuffed when it turned out I didn't "get" it at all. See, I have a daughter who was the right age to enjoy "website(s) with virtual animals" (the fact that said sites still exist is news to me). And my daughter, like many children, did a lot of art as a child (painting and what not). And like a lot of parents, we hang said art in our house–daughter has her own special gallery that we also refer to as "the downstairs bathroom." So if you ever go in there, you will see her amazing visual-art tribute to her virtual animal obsession of yore (seven letters!):

["WEBKINZ Rock!!"]

WEBKINZ seemed like suuuuuch a David Steinberg thing to put at 1-Across, what with its Scrabbly letters and high youth content. But no. Thankfully, I could tell right away that no [Prominent feature of a sloth] was going to fit the "N--" pattern. "Uh, NUT? Hmm, I did not know that. Also ... that's pretty ... colloquial." So out went WEBKINZ and I had to get NEOPETS mostly from crossess. SRO was my first answer (sold right out!) but after that it was LACY and ATAT, and I started hacking at the NW from there. Once I got a grip, I was flying pretty good there for a while.

But bottom half was a little tougher, largely because I could not parse "I HEAR YOU KNOCKING" and I honestly had no familiarity with BARBUDA—a kind of Frankensteinian hybrid of "Bermuda" and "Barbados" and "barbituates" that proved very EELY for me. OCTO also killed me. I had OCHO, then thought "Oh, no, quattuor is Italian," and so wrote in ... OTTO. I know "seven" is SETTE, so ... OTTO? Ugh. That tiny error had massive repercussions, the largest of which was my racking my brain to remember a song called "I HEAR YOU KNOW KING." Maybe it was a song from the Civil Rights era? About the late Reverend? But no, OWTO surely wasn't 2x quattuor. I worked this all out without too much grief. It was nice to have at least a little resistance from a Friday puzzle, finally. Grid was very nice; there was some hot junk like NER and ATAT, but otherwise it was very very polished and balanced and thoughtfully clued.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. wife just walked in to tell me that off the "E" in WEBKINZ (see! she made same mistake) she wrote in EDITION for 2D: Issue (EMANATE). Turns out that "E" is correct (from NEOPETS), and that if you know NEOPETS (or WEBKINZ!) and write it in first, then EDITION is a hell of a trap.

P.P.S. just noticed this is 16 wide. This is the second 16-wide themeless I've seen recently. Apparently constructors are being encouraged to open their unused bag of 16s and let the answers fly. Fine by me.

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Soviet co-op / SAT 6-11-16 / French siege site of 1597 / Children's song about avain anatomy / Post-stunt provocation / Aye's opposite poetically / Ill-fated old-style / Poison also called white arsenic / Third-ever best actor oscar winner

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0
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Constructor:Andrew Kingsley

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:none 

Word of the Day:somebody named ARLISS(42D: Third-ever Best Actor Oscar winner) —
George Arliss (10 April 1868 – 5 February 1946) was an English actor, author, playwright and filmmaker who found success in the United States. He was the first British actor to win an Academy Award, as well as being the earliest-born actor to win one. // Disraeli is a 1929 American historical film directed by Alfred E. Green, released by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., and adapted by Julien Josephson and De Leon Anthony from the 1911 play Disraeli by Louis N. Parker. // The title card states, Mr. George Arliss in "Disraeli". His performance as British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli won him the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. The story revolves around the British plan to buy the Suez Canal and the efforts of two spies to stop it. As with the original 1911 Broadway play and its 1917 revival, and the 1921 silent film, Arliss' wife Florence appeared opposite him in the role of Disraeli's wife, Mary Anne (Lady Beaconsfield). (wikipedia)
• • •

Yawp yarp yaope. This one had many hurty aspects. Sadly, these outshouted the nicer stuff that one can find here and there throughout the grid (e.g. "TOP THAT!", "I CAN EXPLAIN," MALL SANTA). Normally, strong longer stuff can make you forget the weaker short stuff, but there was just too much foreignisticness and bygoneitude (esp. in the proper name category), in addition to the prefixy abbrevibe of the 3- 4-letter stuff, for me to feel much joy. Problems started right away, when 1A: Ones hanging around a deli? was transparent to me because I swear I just saw it. Like ... just. SALAMIS was the first and only answer I thought of. And it fit, and the crosses worked. C'mon! "?" clues have a hardcore obligation to be Original. I sincerely thought I'd opened an old puzzle at first by mistake. But no. Then, things failed to get better. No idea what RATSBANE is (13A: Poison also called white arsenic), ALOUETTE is boring (16A: Children's song about avian anatomy), INTL is INTL, ABES were never a thing (it's like a longstanding crossword hoax, this ABES = $5 bills concept) ... then I turned the corner into the truly ACCURST part of the grid (fittingly crammed with the likes of PARI- and RARA and my good old friend ERST. Oof.) SELFIE STICK was a definite tick up in liveliness, and I like DEMIJOHN OK too. But AMIENS and J'AI were a pont trop loin after ALOUETTE. And then ONEL PTAS ... the whole thing just NE'ER got off the ground.


SO DOPE is the Green Paint of "modern lingo" (56A: Way cool, in modern lingo). DOPE, I buy. The SO part, not so much. SORAD, I also would not buy. See also SOBOSS, SONEATO, even SOCOOL. JOE COOL, however, would get a pass. I hate the word SEPAL because reasons. It reminds me of that other word I hate because I never see it except in crosswords ... SEP- something. Something Indian. Like an Indian soldier? Am I making this up? [googles] I'm not! SEPOY! Unh! Selfie High Five! Anyway, screw 5-letter SEP- words, man. Ancient, non-baseball-sitcom ARLISS (so, non-"ARLI$$") next to "Annette [Annette who!?! Funicello??] Sings ANKA" (!?) really made my knees buckle with ERST sadness. But the worst was having the last letter into the grid be the "T" in something called an ARTEL? (45D: Soviet co-op). I know you'd like me to accept that that is a thing, but that will NE'ER happen. Unless it's a motel just for arhats. Then I'm in.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Mid-Long Island community / SUN 6-12-16 / Hunger Games star in tabloids / Noted sexologist in her infancy / Controversial TV personality's magical sidekick / Resolve dispute in modern way / Frequent James Franco collaborator / Rock whose name sounds good? / 1961 Michelangelo Antonioni drama

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Constructor:Finn Vigeland

Relative difficulty:Easy


THEME:"Attending Physicians"— "DR." added to familiar phrases to create wacky phrases with "?" clues... (there's also an unnecessary revealer: THE DOCTOR IS IN (113A: Sign on Lucy's "Peanuts" booth ... or a hint to this puzzle's theme)

Theme answers:
  • DR. PEPPER SPRAY (23A: Result of shaking a soda too hard before opening?)
  • BABY DR. RUTH (34A: Noted sexologist, in her infancy?)
  • DR. WHO'S YOUR DADDY (48A: "The paternity results are in ... it's the protagonist of a long-running BBC sci-fi show!"?
  • DR. J. CREW (64A: 1970s-'80s Sixers star and friends?)
  • THE WIZARD OF DR. OZ (85A: Controversial TV personality's magical sidekick?) (I love that he's clued as "controversial," though even that is euphemistic)
  • DO DR. NO HARM  (98A: Hurt a Bond villain?) (I thought the phrase was "*First* do no harm...")
 ["I went to the PSYCHIC and the PSYCHIC said...."]

Word of the Day:SYOSSET(119A: Mid-Long Island community) —
Syosset/sˈɒst/ is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Nassau County, New York, United States, in the northeastern section of the Town of Oyster Bay, near the North Shore of Long Island. The population was 18,829 at the 2010 census. It is served by the Syosset railroad station, the Syosset Post Office, the Syosset Central School District, the Syosset Public Library, the Syosset Fire Department, and the Jericho Water District. // Syosset is located approximately 32 miles (51 km) east of Midtown Manhattan. Service is accessible to New York City by the LIRR and the Long Island Expressway by car. (wikipedia)
• • •

Hey, it's my friend Finn. I just saw him at the Indie 500 crossword tournament last week. He looks like this (or at least he did last week):


I didn't really dig this theme—not because simply adding "DR." to familiar phrases is too simple (simple can be wondrously effective), but because only one of the themers made me smile (specifically, "DR. WHO'S YOUR DADDY!") (which was also the first themer I got). After that, nothing really landed for me, and considering the rather limited number of famous DR.s, uncovering those themers was astonishingly easy. The grid as a whole, however, I quite enjoyed. It was very Finny in both its professionalism and its boyish cuteness. Thought the FRAT BROS HUGging IT OUT was kind cute (though I had the more common "FRAT BOYS" there at first), and both SUPER BOWL MVP and "OH BOO HOO!" were lovely. Same with "MAY I SEE?" (no, you may not). ISN'T HOME isn't good, but there's not much in the way of junk here, I must say. I wish the themers had been funnier, and I wish the puzzle had been 50% harder. But I can't say I didn't have a pretty good time.

 [Here I am reading a short story to my dogs. The story is "Slatland" by Rebecca Lee. They seemed to enjoy it. I know I did.]

Bullets:
  • 66D: "The Hunger Games" star, in tabloids (J-LAW)— for Jennifer Lawrence. Just saw this answer (for the first time, I think) this past week in one of Caleb Madison's Buzzfeed crosswords. 
  • 56D: Frequent James Franco collaborator (SETH ROGEN)— pretty easy, though I did make sure to leave that final vowel blank until the cross confirmed it (never sure if it's "A" or "E"). 
  • 48D: "You sure got me pegged!" ("DO I!")— I had "MOI?" and I swear it felt right. But then I was like "Who ... is MR. WHO?"
  • 63D: With 65-Down, technological escalations (ARMS / RACES)— the "technological" part really threw me. I was thinking of tech companies engaged in some kind of tech ... battle. With competing products and what not. But I guess nuclear bombs and other weapons are "technological" too.
  • 119A: Mid-Long Island community (SYOSSET)— a random conglomeration of letters, as far as I was concerned. This is where I finished the puzzle, and I just shrugged as I entered all of the letters from crosses. I kept expecting a recognizable place name to come into view. That did not happen.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Iconic U.S. cabinetmaker of early 1800s / MON 6-12-16 / Spinal cord cell needed for muscle contraction / Four Corners-area tribesman

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0
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Constructor:Lynn Lempel

Relative difficulty:Medium-Challenging (i.e. above-average difficulty For A Monday)


THEME: FOOL AROUND (64A: Engage in some horseplay ... or a hint to the words spelled out in the circles) — circles on either end of the themers (so, "around" the edges of the answers) spell out words that are (allegedly) synonymous with "fool"

Theme answers:
  • DOUBLE PARK (17A: Leave one's vehicle in a traffic lane, say)
  • DUNCAN PHYFE (24A: Iconic U.S. cabinetmaker of the early 1800s)
  • CHEST BUMP (37A: Physical expression of victory)
  • MOTOR NEURON (55A: Spinal cord cell needed for muscle contraction)
Word of the Day:DUNCAN PHYFE
Duncan Phyfe (1768-16 August 1854) was one of nineteenth-century America's leading cabinetmakers. // Although he did not create any new furniture style, he interpreted fashionable European trends in a manner so distinguished and particular that he became a major spokesman for Neoclassicism in the United States, influencing a whole generation of American cabinetmakers. (wikipedia)
• • •

I have a few things to say about this puzzle, but honestly there's just one thing anyone's going to remember, and that's DUNCAN"what the"PHYFE. I needed every. Single. Cross to get that name. This is literally the first I'm seeing it / hearing of it. The idea that that is a Monday name is hysterical. I kept waiting for that last name to become a recognizable brand or ... recognizable anything, really. But no. "Iconic"? Well, to be fair, I couldn't name *any* cabinetmakers, iconic or not. But I'm going out on a limb here and saying that That answer, far far far beyond all the others, will be the big "?" of the day for most solvers. I don't mind him in a crossword; I mind him at least a little in a *Monday* crossword. Maybe there is some reason older solvers will know it? Maybe cabinetmaking is like horse-racing in that people used to care about it? I don't know. All I know is there is only one "iconic" Duncan and that's Duncan Hines.


Without some interesting kind of twist, this whole "around"-type concept (an old one) doesn't  do much for me. I don't really recognize the circled words as synonyms, and DORK in particular feels like a real outlier.


I see that the first two things listed in this definition are "dull, slow-witted," but the only context in which I ever heard it growing up was as the next meaning in the list: "socially inept." Perhaps this was because social ineptness was my own particular problem, so that was the context in which I heard it. Certainly that's how I believe my sister intended it when she used it to describe me. I know the reverse is true. However you slice it, it seems far from FOOL.


What made this somewhat harder than usual, besides the cabinet dude, was SNIFF AT (wanted SNEER) and the generic NATIONS as an answer for the specific-sounding 43D: Slovakia and Slovenia. Those SW and NE corners in general were odd—grid overall is super duper choppy, but those corners are big and open, and as such are somewhat tougher than normal (for a Monday) to fill. I still broke 3 minutes, but just barely.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Grasslike perennial / TUE 6-14-16 / Krupp ironworks city / Greek philosopher of paradox fame / Forage beans / Dangerous virus strain named for its original outbreak location

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Constructor:Tracy Gray

Relative difficulty:Medium


THEME:EASY DOES IT (58A: "Not too hard now" ... or a homophonic hint to 17-, 23-, 35- and 48-Across) — themers are two-word phrases, first word "E," second word "Z"

Theme answers:
  • EBOLA ZAIRE (17A: Dangerous virus strain named for its original outbreak location)
  • EMILIANO ZAPATA (23A: Mexican revolutionary)
  • ED ZWICK (35A: "Legends of the Fall" director, informally)
  • ERONGENOUS ZONES (48A: Sensual areas)
Word of the Day:ED(WARD) ZWICK 
Edward M. Zwick (born October 8, 1952) is an American filmmaker and Academy Award winning film producer. // His films include Glory (1989), Legends of the Fall (1994), The Siege (1998), The Last Samurai (2003), Blood Diamond (2006), and Defiance (2008). Along with Marshall Herskovitz, Zwick runs a film production company called The Bedford Falls Company (inspired by the name of the town featured in Frank Capra's It's A Wonderful Life). This company has produced such notable films as Traffic and Shakespeare in Love and the TV shows thirtysomething, Relativity, Once and Again, and My So-Called Life. // He was one of the recipients of the Academy Award for Best Picture for Shakespeare in Love; he was also nominated in the same category for Traffic. // Despite sharing a surname and being in the same profession, Edward is unrelated to fellow director Joel Zwick. (wikipedia)
• • •
Normally I like big, wide-open corners, but these are almost comical. Giant themeless-sized corners in an otherwise choppy, short-word-laden grid. Odd. Weirdly, they might be my favorite thing about the puzzle. The NE one holds up better than the SW one (ANA NANS ERES PSST make that corner mildly creaky). 74 words is pretty low for a Tuesday. Why not give some of those white squares to the middle of the grid and take a little pressure off the corners? I can answer my own question, actually—the themers likely presented a severe challenge, given the Z-abundance and the general theme density. I mean, how else do you explain the absurdity that is ED ZWICK. EDWARD would've sat nicely in the middle of the grid too, and the whole jury-rigged "informally" contrivance could've been ditched. *But* that would've created perhaps an untenable level of theme density. So, compromise compromise compromise. The puzzle is at the very least interesting looking, and those corners were an exciting challenge to get through in normal Tuesday time (I managed to come in just under normal, actually). I really wanted to rate this puzzle "Easy" or "Easy-Medium" (for I hope obvious reasons), but with those corners and those proper nouns, this is likely to play Medium, possibly even Medium-Tough. Again, 4 a 2s day.


If I could design a picture to go with this write-up, it would be a passel of ELSAS eating their NANS. Those plurals are painful, but I think that together they could make magic. EBOLA, I know. EBOLA ZAIRE, hoo boy, not so much. I needed Every Cross for the ZAIRE part. I did not there were strains (or, rather, I did not know there were strains with names that I was supposed to know). The more I look at the NE corner, the more I love it. I think AT-BAT is ridiculously clued. "Slugger" has zero zero zero to do with the "datum" (ugh, that word) that is the AT-BAT. A "slugger" connotes a batter who hits for power. But an AT-BAT has absolutely nothing to do with slugging. You can stand there and never move the bat off your shoulder and get an AT-BAT. This clue drains "slugger" of all meaning. It also subjects me to "datum," which I just don't like on aesthetic grounds. Also, why is "Baseball" in that clue at all? If you'd had [Slugger's stat], who's going to go "Do they mean hockey?"

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. for one brief, dizzying moment I sincerely thought 7D: Many a "Guardian of the Galaxy" character could be ALLEN. "Were there lots of guys named ALLEN in that movie?" I asked myself for approx. 8 nanoseconds.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
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