REX Ancient Brit for whom a language was named / TUE 6-17-26 / Bluffer's giveaway / Very muscular, in slang / Like an im
Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2026 2:01 pm
Constructor: Brad Lively
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: The OLD MAN AND THE SEA (36A: Hemingway tale about an elderly fisherman, with "The" ... or a phonetic hint to four sets of circled letters in this puzzle?) — theme answers contain a letter string meaning "father" (i.e. "old man") and also the letter "C" ("sea"):
Theme answers:
As for the theme, it's ridiculous (complimentary). I can't say I love it, but I can say that it's weird—weird enough to be interesting. Themes involving nonconsecutive circles are always dicey and usually result in a "who cares?"-type situation, but this one is whimsical in a semi-entertaining way. Plus it's timely, with Father's Day just a few days away. I guess we can be grateful that this ran midweek instead of Father's Day itself, as it's hard to imagine this theme holding up over the length and breadth of a Sunday-sized grid. But for a Tuesday, I thought it worked fine. Two of the circled-letter configurations actually give us "The Sea and the Old Man," but for me, the reversals were part of the puzzle's charm. There is something slightly grating (to my brain) about the revealer being a famous title but leaving out a word in that title (in this case, the "The" at the front of The Old Man and the Sea). Like, if you tried to put LONGEST YARD or RIGHT STUFF in a puzzle, I would be mad. Not big mad. Little mad. There's something about titles, esp. titles being used as theme revealers, that should be respected. But you gotta lop that "The" off to get the revealer to fit, so ... OK. Fine. I guess it's worth it. But only just.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/ZcuMsZais ... DwbwhnQUC3
Bullets:
https://www.youtube.com/embed/PNbBDrceC ... hSUMXkQkwh
[55D: Word sung over 100 times in "___ Are You" by the ___]
That's all for today. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
THEME: The OLD MAN AND THE SEA (36A: Hemingway tale about an elderly fisherman, with "The" ... or a phonetic hint to four sets of circled letters in this puzzle?) — theme answers contain a letter string meaning "father" (i.e. "old man") and also the letter "C" ("sea"):Theme answers:
- PAPAL CROSS (17A: Pontiff's emblem with three horizontal bars)
- COMPADRE (29A: Amigo)
- CRAWDADS (42A: Crustaceans sometimes called "mudbugs")
- POP THE CORK (57A: Open some bubbly with a bang)
As for the theme, it's ridiculous (complimentary). I can't say I love it, but I can say that it's weird—weird enough to be interesting. Themes involving nonconsecutive circles are always dicey and usually result in a "who cares?"-type situation, but this one is whimsical in a semi-entertaining way. Plus it's timely, with Father's Day just a few days away. I guess we can be grateful that this ran midweek instead of Father's Day itself, as it's hard to imagine this theme holding up over the length and breadth of a Sunday-sized grid. But for a Tuesday, I thought it worked fine. Two of the circled-letter configurations actually give us "The Sea and the Old Man," but for me, the reversals were part of the puzzle's charm. There is something slightly grating (to my brain) about the revealer being a famous title but leaving out a word in that title (in this case, the "The" at the front of The Old Man and the Sea). Like, if you tried to put LONGEST YARD or RIGHT STUFF in a puzzle, I would be mad. Not big mad. Little mad. There's something about titles, esp. titles being used as theme revealers, that should be respected. But you gotta lop that "The" off to get the revealer to fit, so ... OK. Fine. I guess it's worth it. But only just.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/ZcuMsZais ... DwbwhnQUC3
Bullets:
- 11D: Really booked it (HAULED ASS) — The ASS Era continues unabated in the NYTXW. ASS-containing answers are up 55% since 2020 (I made that stat up, but it feels true). DEAD ASS (2 appearances) debuted in 2022. HARDASS (four appearances) debuted in 2019. HAUL ASS (2 appearances) debuted in 2018. HAULED ASS (now two appearances) debuted just last year. O brave new world / That has such asses in't!
- 44D: Animal symbol of the University of Minnesota (GOPHER) — you see Yale-related answers in the puzzle so damn much that it's nice when other schools get some airtime for a change. It's especially nice when the school in question is in one of your favorite cities and your own daughter went to said school.
- 35A: It scratches the itch (NAIL) — as in fingernail. Or toenail, if you're being creative. Or a carpentry nail, if you want to make people start worrying about you.
- 5D: Very muscular, in slang (JACKED) — I wanted SWOLE, so much that I was almost prepared to create the answer SWOLED.
- 59A: "Logan" actor Jackman (HUGH) — You know who's JACKED in Logan? That's right.
- 8D: Place for the highest-scoring golfer (LAST) — oh right, because a high score is bad in golf. Briefly thought there was some damned golf slang I'd never heard of, like LAFT or LASH or something.
- 4D: Exam for a future J.D. (LSAT) — this puzzle is really into exams. There's the LSAT and the GRE, then the AP JAPANESE exam (can't get that college credit unless you take the exam). On top of all that, we get 54D: Crushed, as a test (ACED). We get it, you went to school, take it easy.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/PNbBDrceC ... hSUMXkQkwh
[55D: Word sung over 100 times in "___ Are You" by the ___]
- 10A: Obsessive captain of fiction (AHAB) — our fourth (!) AHAB since May 31, and June is only half over! We went five months without an AHAB and now we get four of them in just 17 days. Bizarre. There have been far more AHABs of late than there have been Star Wars references. It's actually been an eternity since the last explicit Star Wars reference. I ended up counting a clue that made an oblique reference to The Mandalorian ([This is the way: Abbr.]) as a Star Wars clue, but I was being *very* expansive in my definition there. If we ignore that clue, which many people didn't know was Star Wars-related at all, then it's been something like three weeks, I think. I stopped keeping track and don't want to go back and search right now. Anyway, I would like to thank management for toning it down, Star Wars-wise. Now if you could get AHAB under control, that would be great.

That's all for today. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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