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Puzzles for June, 2023
with Constructor comments

Thu 6/1/2023
REAPGRADBRAS
HALOSHADELEGO
OUTO4HANDSUTES
H8ENSERRANO
IPACLANLIBIDO
FORMALOPECNAN
SPOOFSTACOS
OUSTI2NTHURT
PETITS4SSEAS
ORALBATHOME
AVAIKEASOIREE
NOLOSEDRIPGRR
GOTTHATAT1D
EDITCREDI2RTHY
ROMEAURASOBOE
SOARBEARPAWS

DAVID: My dad, Paul, thought of this Reducing Fractions crossword idea years ago. In Dad's proposed implementation, the theme answers were three-square rebus arrangements such as FOUR LINE EIGHT. Dad wasn't a constructor yet, but he loved the twistiness of this idea, so he urged me to use it. I quickly realized that the three-square rebuses were impossible to construct around, so I moved on.

This idea stuck in Dad's head, though: Every so often, he'd ask, "When are you constructing the Reducing Fractions puzzle?" and I'd reply, "I told you: It's impossible!" Enter my mom, Karen. In 2021, she started constructing regularly, and Dad jumped at the opportunity to revive this idea. Mom tried hard but hit the same roadblocks. One day, I realized we could do a bidirectional, two-square rebus, but because the fractions had to be in order, the number of theme sets would be very limited.

Last year, Dad was diagnosed with atypical Parkinson's, and he's now in hospice. Crosswords are no longer in his life in the same way they once were, but when Mom and I told him Reducing Fractions was running in The Times, he was very happy. This one's for you, Dad!

Fri 6/2/2023
PLODSREPSIFS
TIMETRAVELSNIP
SPACEOPERAETNA
DONKEYRIMCHAR
PANELSTALK
ACHILLESPISTON
GUIDEATLASCFO
UPTOATBAYDAFT
ABSBLOATGOSEE
FEISTYSTARTERS
RANTSDEERE
ERGOSACDERIVE
SELLPIANOTUNER
CREEARMOREDCAR
ASSNYPDDEALS

This puzzle started life with ALCOHOL-FREE BEER down the middle, but that rightly got poured away and was replaced by EVEREST BASE CAMP, which has slightly friendlier letters. The juxtaposition of TIME TRAVEL and SPACE OPERA is quite nice, and I'm already planning a Donnie Darko / Source Code doubleheader.

My British-leaning clues usually get edited out, but a couple snuck through this time through sheer weight of numbers. I started writing an explanation for why the British army isn't "Royal", but it quickly turned into the world's dullest essay, so I suggest you Google it if you're interested. It's something to do with the Corps Warrant. Plod for policeman is a bit easier — that comes from Enid Blyton's "Noddy" books, in which Police Constable Plod keeps the villains of Toyland in check.

Sat 6/3/2023
LANDSCAPESAJAK
EXCALIBURABUSE
DEOXIDIZEGASSY
METZCACTUS
NADERLOAKIM
AEROLIMPSNEW
SOMETHINGTOHIDE
ANYTHINGYOUWANT
NOTHINGPERSONAL
AIRSTARSRIMY
RAGEMOSADIE
EFILEDBLED
LINEABLOWAFUSE
BLEATTELEPORTS
AMENSSMARTENUP

I'd like to retroactively title this puzzle "Everything Everywhere All at Once", which was too big to fit in a 15x15 grid.

The "stairstep" progression of Nothing -> Anything -> Something -> Everything caught my attention as a fun way to seed a themeless, as it created a bunch of really workable substrings in the Downs. I worked through a couple iterations of this puzzle, trying a quad stack (fat chance!) and two double stacks, ultimately settling on a triple stack with the disappointing omission of a delicious everything bagel.

(Side note: Seattle! Get your bagel act together. How hard can it be?)

A BIT of RIMY fill here and there, but I'm happy with the grid given the constraints of the center spanners. Getting 8-Down to run through it all felt appropriate for what I hope was a fun stumper of a Saturday!

POW Sun 6/4/2023 Flying Colors
DUNBARSLOGANS
ARMOIRECOLONIES
ONANDOFFREDSTATES
WHOYOUITISSOSALE
OARLOSABSUSATLAS
ORANGEJUICESTEROIDS
TAKEIOCTOOCHERNEO
ANDCESSNATOE
DARKROOMYELLOWLAB
SOSGARRPRIDEFLAG
FITOWNMAILGNCERE
ONESOCALAFOOLURL
GREENTAPECASSETTE
ANOSLOTHSERA
ALFSMITEIOTAINDIA
PEACOATSBLUEJACKETS
IDCARDSPRENASPAT
ATTNATEASEIAMALI
VIOLETRAYBRADBURY
SETPIECEATHEIST
DESEXEDYESSES

As Will mentioned, this puzzle is very special to me as it's being published almost exactly ten years after I first came out. My 17-year-old self had no idea what was in store for the coming decade, but a Sunday NYT crossword celebrating pride didn't even feel like a possibility.

It can take a village to make a crossword puzzle. I owe Rebecca Goldstein immensely for suggesting the 21x20 layout with the corner staircases after I'd complained about struggling to lay out 14 (!) theme entries. Adam Wagner and Michael Lieberman were great sounding boards for theme ideation. I'm lucky to have this many crossword besties to rely on.

This puzzle has the dubious honor of having the shortest longest entry of any Sunday in my recent memory, with two 11s and then no entries longer than 9. I always hope to incorporate longer bonuses, but frankly, it's miraculous this grid worked at all. The short theme entries had to be in a set order, with pairs in the same row, and rows vertically spaced as evenly as possible ... and also forced black square placements. Anywhere I tried to include PRIDE / FLAG immediately became ultraconstrained … It really was a labor of love and patience.

This one is for all my trans, gay, queer, bi, ace, lesbian, etc. baddies out there. I love you so much <3

Mon 6/5/2023
DUSTSLAMAMID
ONTOALOHALODE
GRAPEFRUITSPOON
MOPLASTOON
ALLFORWRENRPM
LEAPDIETORO
JESUITSCHOOL
ADMIREROKEEFFE
QUITSTALLING
ULNANODSASS
ALTAUTOPUPPET
LAMPPARICE
KEEPITBETWEENUS
ALASORGANPART
LIFENAGSALES

It probably goes against Construction 101 to place the middle themers so close to each other. I had several working versions of the puzzle with those themers one row higher and one row lower, which seems to be the safer position, but the middle was getting muddled with fun words like ATONAL and UNIVAC.

My original revealer clue was a bit vague, but I put bubbles around IT and US as a trade-off to make the theme more apparent. The Editing Team found a nice solution to clue the revealer more straightforwardly and avoid the bubbles, which you rarely see on Mondays.

Hope it was a fun solve for you!

Tue 6/6/2023
DAPTATASLSD
OGREAMAROAPE
REEDSPACERPOL
ASTIPILSTNUTS
SOARDEEPS
SNOOPSSMART
LORNESTATSNAP
AVERACECAREVA
PANSTATSENROL
TRAMSSPOONS
SPEEDRAOS
STUNTSLIPITSA
LOPRECAPSDEER
EPAORAMAERGO
DSLSATATPAD
Wed 6/7/2023
PAPAITEMPLEA
AMENKALELANDS
CIAOBELLAASCOT
BREAKINGSTORY
CARATSTEMREX
LEAKEDFOOTAGE
URIRANATE
BONOBOSETVOILA
PINIPAROB
STREAMINGLIVE
ADEDORMEASEL
CURRENTEVENTS
DEBUGPRACTICAL
CLINGOSLONANA
SAGSPEENONYX

Thrilled to be back with our third NYT puzzle! We tried hard to make a surfing-themed puzzle work, but decided to pivot to other water puns, and were surprised to find a full set relating to a potential news story. The grid and fill came together nicely after we tried putting a black square in the center of the puzzle. It took a little time to figure out the best clueing angle — but this puzzle by Brian Thomas has always been a favorite, and we took some inspiration from that.

And here is a bit of bonus theme we couldn't fit: "This news report brought to you by ___ " THEATLANTIC. Hope you enjoyed!

Thu 6/8/2023
UNIGARBOATALL
SONITOOKPALEO
ETSSOLOSSILTS
SACREDLYDECIDE
UPHOLDASIHEIR
PROCESSPRAISES
OOHCELTS
BLETCHLEYPARK
MOUSEVEE
DISTILLNOMINEE
OWIEOZSHELENA
GASMANMASSAGES
SNAPSTITUSAYE
INLETSTOREDEL
TASHAAHMEDEDS

Crosswords and code-breaking have a long history. The British government famously conducted a crossword contest to secretly screen for Bletchley Park recruits (they picked the top six solvers). U.S. intelligence similarly recruited William Lutwiniak — who would go on to become one of the most prolific crossword constructors of all time — based on his standing as one of the best cryptogram solvers in the country. He served as a cryptanalyst during World War II and for decades thereafter at the NSA.

Other constructors also worked in code-breaking and intelligence. Jay Spry, a constructor in the 1960s and 70s, translated Japanese codes during the war. Roberta Morse, who constructed the first rebus puzzle in the Times, served as a translator for the OSS in World War II. Among more recent constructors, Ed Salners had a career as a U.S. Navy Cryptologic Officer, and constructor Verna Suit worked at the NSA, where Lutwiniak, by then semi-retired, gave her advice on constructing. Verna's name anagrams to NSA VIRTUE, but she assured me that was just a coincidence.

With the encouragement of Jim Horne and David Steinberg, I've been researching scores of historic constructors by using genealogy techniques to locate photos and draft short bios. We've now got photos of nearly all 71 constructors in Jim's Most Prolific Authors page on XWord Info. Besides those constructors, I've also enjoyed researching other notables, like Charles Erlenkotter, the constructor of the first Times crossword; Mable Daggett, the first female Times constructor; and Jeremiah Farrell, constructor of the famed Clinton-Dole puzzle.

In addition to the legends, it's been enriching to research the everyday constructors from the past. Invariably, you learn something truly interesting. Archie Kreiling and Willard Jordan, for example, were constructors in the Farrar era who were inmates at the same prison. Martha DeWitt, a constructor from the 1960s to 90s, was a nurse who attended to servicemen injured in the attack on Pearl Harbor. The aforementioned Jay Spry was a cigar-chomping fixture in the Baltimore Sun newsroom whom David Simon included as a character in the HBO series "The Wire." And on and on.

If this sort of research interests you and you'd like to team up or compare notes, shoot me an email at flipkoski@comcast.net.

POW Fri 6/9/2023
AISLESCARHDTV
GREENPEACEAREA
RACEHORSESRYAN
ANTALITTUBERS
ANKATENORS
MUSICALCHAIRS
ERODECOASTHAM
GLUEPOUTYZENO
ASPPUMPSDEETS
TELLMEABOUTIT
LOYOLAFOGS
TENETSBIOSAHI
RAULOVERSTATED
ANTEFIESTABOWL
PSSTFASTRUNNY
Sat 6/10/2023
SLEIGHALARMS
HOTSEATBUREAU
ACHILLESCRAMIN
MAIAOLESEMITS
ETCHGETTONAE
DESHESTARTEDIT
CINCINNATUS
CARBONDATES
MAKEUPGAMES
POWERLIFTERTBH
AMCBURENLIRA
SCALEMEATIRON
SAWYERESIGNING
EVERLYENTENTE
REDEYEGINGER

Hi all! Here are a few words about how this puzzle was constructed.

For this kind of grid, you start by using software (i.e., brute force) to fill the center region only. But with ten connected slots, it's a real test of wordlist quality. You need a wordlist that's both very large and very precise (ideally > 95% usable, otherwise the chance that ten random entries are *all* usable vanishes quickly).

I spent a month improving my wordlist for 11-letter entries specifically, after which an exhaustive search still took several months. This resulted in four usable centers and two final puzzles — this one and a puzzle published in AVCX last month.

TELESCOPIUM is maybe the main weakness of the center stack. I have a vague memory that I considered removing this from my list in my pass through the 11-letter entries but decided to keep it because it's essentially gettable (even if not really interesting). It's funny how that works!

CAWCAWED is a case of finding something that works, with the pattern CAW????? being shockingly constrained. I'm thankful for the editors' clue on this one, which took something contrived and made it very cute!

Thank you for solving, and for reading!

Sun 6/11/2023 Words, Words, Words: A Themeless
TOBACCOHASPLANS
COAUTHORBACKRONYM
SHORTHAULSASHAOBAMA
BARTSTARRREDHOTPOKER
OVOWENTTOETOTOEITT
CONCORDCICADASPANSY
AROOMCALLLOGCAM
GETSOMEAIRTAROTS
SKINNIERDIMSOLDASIS
COMOKANTMICHELMULL
OOHSILEACTURNAAREA
OPECBILBAODUALSINK
BARESALLUNMBIOWASTE
SENTRYALGALBLOOM
TISDIDOKAYNATTY
TAMERSORRIERFATTIRE
ACUDAIKONRADISHDEG
JUSTKIDDINGJUNKETING
INTROCLASSSEMISWEET
KIDACTORSCABSTAND
STOPHATEINSHORT

As Will notes in the Magazine blurb, this grid contains the lowest answer count (118) in Times Sunday history. (For reference, most of these 21x21 crosswords contain around 140 answers, with little variance, given their constraints and our specifications.)

All I'll say is this: I'm very excited to see the puzzle that one-ups this one. And eventually, the one beyond that. And all the other puzzles — themed and themeless — that continue to move a genre forward, try something totally new, or anything in between.

When I joined the ranks of the "Crossworld" as a high schooler in 2012, I worried I'd be late to the game, so to speak. The greats were already there, and it was a privilege to join this select community at all. It's still a privilege, of course … but over the past decade, I've gotten to witness so much outreach, collaboration, and more and more fresh faces enter the fold.

I've gone from being one of a small handful of "indie" crossword constructors to one of many editors for mainstream puzzle publications, who also get to enjoy the dozens of envelope-pushing, individually run puzzle projects and websites in their free time.

Our Crossworld is in a wonderful place, y'all.

Thanks to all the constructors whose work inspired me once upon a time. And thanks to all the constructors and solvers who continue to welcome others into this rewarding pastime.

Mon 6/12/2023
AMPUPCOCOPCS
CRONESEPIAOOH
HITSTHEROOFTOE
RESOLESSCALE
SHOEGLASSOTIS
PIANOBLUETOOTH
AHSNAYMEOW
MOTHERTONGUE
AIMEAOLORA
BUBBLEGUMSOFAS
ETALDONNAFILE
HORASTOILING
APTWORDOFMOUTH
VIEADIOSATRIA
EARPEPSMEETS

I was at my wit's end with theme ideas going absolutely nowhere, procrastinating by online shopping, when I was prompted with a "How did you hear about our product?" survey. One of the options, WORD OF MOUTH, caught my eye. As a poet, I often play with the vocabulary of the MOUTH as a motif in my writing, so it feels apt to have that reflected in my debut puzzle.

It was a great honor to be a part of the Diverse Crossword Constructor Fellowship! I definitely plan to continue constructing puzzles, and I have another one coming out with the LA Times on July 5th. I'm excited for everyone to play the puzzles from the other talented constructors in my cohort as well.

Thanks to the friends who brutally play-tested many a grid for me. Thanks to all the editors who provided such insightful help and fun banter. Special thank you to my mentor Christina Iverson, who provided vital encouragement, support and direction over the course of the fellowship and beyond.

Tue 6/13/2023
MISTCSPANBETS
ANEWAPOLOADAM
TAXIDRIVERSULU
CHINESEKICKS
HOEVOLCANICASH
ELSTONITEMTUE
SETATTIMREPS
READYTOGO
SOSORUBEXAMS
ATMSITUMAYNOT
WHISKEYSOURTVA
PETTYOCTOBER
ALTOKEEPHONEST
SLEWBASSOMAIL
TONESTAYSERTE

JULIANA: For me, this puzzle is a testament to the power of collaboration. I had the idea to make a puzzle in which the solver looks for common items one would need to leave the house. (Personally, I spend a lot of time doing just that!) However, I was really struggling with what to include and subsequently building a working theme set from those items. Talking with Wendy really helped me to find new ways to look at the possibilities, and she found fitting theme entries that completed the set. In this case, two heads were definitely better than one, and we had a great time working together to boot.

WENDY: I loved Juliana's idea for the puzzle and was thrilled that she invited me to collaborate with her on it. My favorite part of the puzzle is that two themers hint at going out on the town (WHISKEY SOUR and TAXI DRIVER). It was great working with Juliana, a brilliant constructor, and an amazing punster. Her clue, "How do you say that in Spanish?" still makes me smile. We hope you enjoy this one (and maybe even give it a second look before heading out the door).

Wed 6/14/2023
LEERSPLITFREE
IDLEHOOCHLACK
CELLONTHEFENCE
KNEELEDALLEGED
NILTMI
MUSTSEESATODDS
INAASSETSPREE
SMUTSTAIDSEMI
HATERALLINAOK
ANEMICYESANDNO
PASONE
TANGENTPROBONO
BLEARYEYEDUPON
ADAMOVATELURK
RARENEWERASAP

Shortly after I started constructing, I found myself constantly coming up with clues for words I'd encounter throughout the day. I'd see a MIME and think, "He's ‘not one to talk.'" Or I'd be driving on a CUL DE SAC when a voice would pop in my head to say, "You know, this is ‘not a through street.'" Then one day it hit me that the clues inside my head always seemed to begin with the word "not," which is when I found myself wondering if I could construct a puzzle in which all of the Across clues began with the word "not."

It wasn't easy, at least not for the beginning constructor that I was. I spent a couple hundred hours filling a least a dozen iterations of this puzzle until I came up with a version that I thought might be elegant enough for the New York Times…then the Times came back with a few notes that required me to start all over again. But all that work NOT only earned me my NYT debut, (I am pinching myself) I can confidently say it made me a better constructor.

Anyway, I'm still sad that I couldn't get CUL DE SAC to work (I really tried), but I hope my puzzle gives everyone at least a few smiles. And yes, I owe XWord Info a big thank you for a few of my "nots." (The clue search option was clutch.)

POW Thu 6/15/2023
IOUSIPADSCALF
ONCEFACETALIA
NILEESTERSPEC
STANZASPUSHOUT
TARLETEM
PSYOPHANWEEDS
ATMSICDERMAL
BACKTOSQUAREONE
LLANOSUSBTED
OLSENDEECHESS
EELERTAO
MACPROSCONTENT
ISLAVICARALOE
STUDERUPTIMON
SOBSDEBTSROBS

First solo! I was still so new for my debut collab in 2021 that my co-constructor had to do most of the heavy lifting — I've developed a bunch as a constructor since then. I've also gone into video game law & joined a competitive Only Connect fan league since then, it's been a wild few years.

A couple of puzzles have used this central themer to signal answers circling back on themselves, but the phrase "square one" feels so literal in crosswords that I kept wondering if I could make it work with a different take. My ground rules:

  • Both across and down themers, each keeping direction like they emerge from a portal.
  • 1A/1D should feel like complete entries, not suffixes, so the puzzle doesn't start with something gluey.
  • 1A/1D have to finish lots of words without feeling repetitive or cheap, so there weren't too many viable options that started with the same letter.
  • The themers shouldn't just take a suffix to make a different version of the same word, there should always be a twist.

I really like the variety of themer changes. A couple do have semantic links — VICARs stand in VICARIOUSly for higher-level clergy — but hopefully, none felt predictable. Interestingly, the submission suggested not flagging themers, but the asterisks are mildly less evil if you're into that.

Just a little look at my theme process. Come say hi @hero_complex on Twitter and suggest other fun themer pairs!

Fri 6/16/2023
ADSPACESABAN
TACOBARSANODE
STONEWALLODORS
EELYTIASSKIT
ADDPLOTZESFEE
FRIAMAANG
DOOMSCROLLING
CANCELCULTURE
WHITERUSSIANS
HELSISNIA
ANYSCHMEARSUP
TIMSKIEVPILE
FLAIREGOBOOSTS
OLIVESKIDMARK
RELAXENDPLAY
Sat 6/17/2023
BARBELLDAMNS
ARALSEAHOYEON
KERATINROBERTA
USEMEACURACOP
SERFONSTRIKE
AUTOCOMPLETE
STANRAYOFLIGHT
TAMTADPOLEOOO
OHPUHLEASEOGRE
BULLSESSIONS
ABIENTOTHELD
DUDDIVERLHASA
LEAVEMEISEENOW
INHEREMANACLE
BOOTSSTATEID
Sun 6/18/2023 My Two Cents
WEPTMRMETMANTAISLE
EGADCATCHAVAILCHAD
DOUBLETAKEGAMETHEORY
BLAINEOPPOSESABRAS
MOANERLIOTTAJOT
BONKONARUNANDACTI
ASKSERVINGSUGGESTION
STASHAGOGANSELMRTS
CEOTESLALIUCOT
AFRAIDSOTERSEAUTO
BLANKETRECOMMENDATION
IONSMERCITOETOTOE
TAIABAWICCAEEL
OTTCORBINOVUMILLGO
DISSENTINGOPINIONARP
DECODIKDIDIONCNET
OWNNEOCONSPACES
AMUSEDTWANGSSTOLEN
COREBELIEFSAGEADVICE
ILSALORNEAGINGETAL
DEERLOESSWASTEDORK
Mon 6/19/2023
PEALOSSWAB
OVERICEPORE
PIRANHAOVEN
SLICEOFBREAD
AYNART
TILSARIFED
AMIEBEEHIVE
RASPBERRYJAM
EXTORTDINO
NASCAR
OHHIABASED
PEANUTBUTTER
TYLENOLERGO
SSESPECISP
SENAUK
SLICEOFBREAD
HAZETRILOGY
AVONCENSURE
MADEHESTAD

I knew from the beginning that this theme would break the no-repeated-entry rule, but this construction unlocked itself when I decided that it was also okay to abandon the 15x15 grid and let the puzzle be the shape that it just naturally wanted to be. In fact, I'd spent a long time trying to make this or some other sandwich puzzle instead, in a 15x. The Reuben was particularly seductive, with its 15-letter SLICE OF RYE BREAD and the fact that its other ingredients are symmetric-length, too, but its ingredients never looked quite right when they went into a grid, and, eventually, this very classic sandwich (and the very non-classic 12x19 grid) was the winner.

It's probably surprising how much you (well, I) end up doubting things that you're pretty sure you know but can't quite figure out how to fact-check: that you don't have to use grape jelly to make a good PB&J; that the peanut butter definitely goes below the jelly/jam, not above; etc. But, happily, in the end, this puzzle ended up being the exact version of the sandwich that I remember from childhood. And I'd rather have one of these than a Reuben, anyway.

I'm thrilled to have finally cracked a Monday — I've always struggled to come up with themes that are both interesting and approachable. Finally, I have something to counterbalance my hefty pile of Monday-level rejections!

Tue 6/20/2023
ODEPAWNSABBY
FOMOACHOOSLOE
THUMBNAILSTOGA
NUDISTKIWIS
HARIBOTERIYET
ORABRELESTO
MISPLACEISSUED
MAPLEOSOMARCO
ELBOWSTATERTOT
ETREOKOKOLE
PARAARPYAPPED
SCRAPATESTS
HEYSCLOTHESPIN
ALPOBLUTOTIDE
WAIFSYRUPGOT

I really like early-week puzzles that have vertical themes because I feel like it adds some variety into a day of the week that can sometimes feel a little monotonous. So when I thought of the phrase BLOW YOUR TOP as a reveal I knew there was something fun I could do with that.

Originally, I submitted this puzzle with one of the themers being GLASS NOODLES, but we revised it so that all of the things you blow are "countable" (as in, you blow *A* bubble, you blow *A* kiss, but you don't blow *A* glass). Ultimately I'm much happier with the final product as a result of the changes.

POW Wed 6/21/2023
TRAPSHIPOSLO
UHURAPINEREAD
RENALAPPLEGATE
SEAGODPETNAMES
AUTOMATONONO
NADASLINGS
PDFSALECASKET
HEATACHOOMENU
ECLAIRSNUBYEN
WALLSTTTOP
SKALIVEDATES
ICHEATEDDEJAVU
FOODCHAINGAMED
SORTACNEAMENS
OTTOWHATSASS

I'm not exactly sure when I came up with this theme idea, but the term FOOD CHAIN pops up a lot in my life: both because I'm an ecologist and because I do food justice-related organizing in my community.

I had no special strategy for creating the FOOD CHAIN in this puzzle. I would just start with a food and see how far I could take it. This probably wasn't the most efficient method, but it was made easier by referring to alphabetized lists of foods (which can be found on a surprisingly high number of websites).

I'm pretty happy with the final set of theme answers. I'm glad all the foods are fairly well hidden. My only complaint is that DATES is plural while all the other foods are singular. I originally had LIVE STOCK, but the editors felt STOCK wasn't a substantive enough food. Luckily, I found LIVE DATES as a replacement, which I think is a more fun answer anyway.

My payment for this puzzle is being donated to The Okra Project.

Thu 6/22/2023
IMHONBCSCAT
GREENBAITARCH
ROSASHANAHLAMA
INAREACORNISEN
NYTTSKSUAVE
USDAMALI
SAKSINTIMEMDS
THEBABYISASLEEP
SATUSESONETSY
BOHRUCSD
GUAVATIMHIM
FRESERBSNATURE
RENUBRITISUMOR
OBISOARSINANE
MACHMIATENS

MICHAEL: I like doing things. Sure, it's fun to sit and solve crosswords all day, but writing one? That's a challenge. So is learning to play the Gamelan. I suppose you could sit and listen to the Gamelan, but to actually sit behind one of those instruments and try to play it? I mean, come on! If you're in Bali, what else are you going to do? Sit on a beach all day? Meh! FYI, I'm not Hindu, but when you visit a Hindu Temple in Bali you need to dress appropriately. Playing the Gamelan is hard. So is writing a good crossword puzzle. So is producing a movie. So is acting in a play. Skydiving was easy — you just fall out of the airplane, pull the cord at the appropriate time, then tumble to the ground. Playing drums is pretty easy, too, compared to everyone else in the band, that is. My wife says I can't do everything. To which I say, "Why not?"

Fri 6/23/2023
PRIORAGHAST
MONOPOLYMONEY
PALATECLEANSER
SEGOANKANEWME
TOIOSMONDDELS
EPCOTINERTRYE
PLASTICREAD
SELLERKOIPONDS
PRORATEDESERT
ALESNEEREDWIE
SEAMIMPELASET
MALESPITVCRS
ASIDESTIMELOOP
RESINSUNCTUOUS
ARMADAPASSMTA

I first encountered the New York Times crossword puzzle one Saturday in high school. I scanned the clues and guessed a few answers before putting it away. Years later, my partner, Emily, and her mother — both avid crossword solvers — explained the rules to me, and it was then that I began solving the NYT puzzle regularly. During the pandemic, I started constructing my own crosswords, initially just for friends and family. I loved the challenge of it, and I'm so proud to now have a crossword published in the NYT!

I seeded this puzzle with PALATE CLEANSER, which I thought was a refreshing entry. It took me a while to get the upper left to work out, but once I decided on MAGICAL REALISM as the other long entry, PEOPLE PLEASER and MONOPOLY MONEY fell into place pretty quickly. I hope you enjoy this Friday puzzle!

Sat 6/24/2023
WOZBBQPORKBUN
ALESYOUAREHERE
VINEPRIDEFLAGS
YOGAPANTSLORE
ABUSEDBEE
DROSSAJAXFLU
JUDASCYANWRIT
EVERYBODYGOHOME
TENDERRSBASES
ETSSAKEBATTY
CHUAPEMAN
TALEIMONADIET
BOREINMINDAXLE
BREAKDANCEYOBA
COATHANGERNAM

SPENCER: This puzzle came together relatively fast. I met Quiara a while back on the Crosscord Discord server, and this is our first collaborative effort together. I think it turned out pretty well! Rather than email different grid designs back and forth, we constructed the puzzle in a single sitting via a discord call. This live collaboration method allowed us to work around some of the pitfalls that collab puzzles can often fall into — those being that the grid is overly segmented to allow different constructors to work on different sections or that one constructor fills the majority of the grid while another constructor gets small outer sections that are already constrained.

In the end, I really love how the grid turned out. I know scrabbly grids (ones that use lots of high-point scrabble letters like J Q X Z) aren't everyone's cup of tea since they tend to bog down the fill, but I love them, especially when the rare letter is at the nexus of two punchy words like the Q is in our grid. The grid ended up being a pangram — the first one of 2023, in fact!

QUIARA: How exciting to be back in the NYTXW, and on my favorite day, no less. I feel most at home when making a hard themeless loaded with exotic letters, so thankfully, Spencer was picking up what I was putting down on this collaboration. We made this grid a little under a year ago — I think it was fast-tracked to run in June on account of how much they liked the PRIDE FLAGS clue — and as such, I have a pretty clear memory of our process on making this one.

We came upon this grid shape pretty quickly, but it took us a little longer to get a fun pair of stacks. Eventually, we cut out a lot of possibilities by planting an ING at the bottom of the vertical spanner here, which gave us lots of options — once we saw we could get BBQ PORK BUNS and QUIT DAYDREAMING to cross, though, it was off to the races.

Some miscellanea here:

- Since that spanner crossing that top stack has 20 of the 26 letters in it, we decided to aim for the pangram here. AJAX at 25-Across is the kind of entry that usually reads as fishing for a pangram, but in this case I really do think that gave us the best fill, and they were completely unnecessary to hit the pangram with JUDAS-crossing-JETE and FROST/NIXON elsewhere in the grid.

- WOZ is apparently a debut entry here, which I didn't expect to be the case, him being co-founder of the most valuable company in the world and all that. How often do you see a 3-letter word debut in the NYT these days? (Incidentally, shout-out to my pal Nick Wozniak, game developer of Shovel Knight fame, who is the reason I even put WOZ on my wordlist in the first place.)

- Speaking of WOZ, he was originally clued as [Jobs initiative backer, familiarly?] - a tricky clue that had its difficulty ironed out in editing, presumably because they prefer proper names to be clued more straightforwardly. Similarly, KHLOE was clued as [Rob's biggest little sis, in tabloid land], with the unstated assumption that we are all aware of the Kardashian-Jenner clan, whether we want to be or not.

- There were a bunch of other changes here, none of which are particularly tragic. Cluing YOGA PANTS as [They're not just for posers anymore!], for instance. Or cluing OBAMA as the [Central figure in 2014's "Tansuitgate"]. Or cluing BREAKDANCE in reference to the late great Adolfo "Shabba Doo" Quinones, star of the Breakin' movies. (And contemporary of Toni Basil - yes, that Toni Basil - with whom he invented the pop-and-lock. Also, this is a trivia chestnut at this point, but did you know Toni Basil choreographed David Byrne's dancing in the video for "Once in a Lifetime" ?)

- One extremely specific reference of mine that did make the final cut? Cluing Malik YOBA in reference to his (rather minor) role on "God Friended Me," a very sweet show that I genuinely like despite its stupid title, and not just because its cast is an armada of dreamboats. (Seriously, why is Brandon Micheal Hall so good looking? It's unfair.)

- See if you can guess our original clue for FROST/NIXON! Hint 1: it was *hilarious.* (Hint 2: It rhymed with "picnic.")

Sun 6/25/2023 Opposites Attracting
SPEEDOHOSTFORREAL
HOWDEDOISLEISAIDNO
INOUTINGSHORTLONGING
NYKAUTOSAPRILTHEE
DIMOUTSOAKIEST
STEALPROCONNINGSNIP
THALIADORFFOAMING
RESENDSLEANHOTPACKS
ICYGOOFELOPERIRE
NAHLABANIMALANTMAN
GPASPRINGFALLINGEAU
SERAPHSIRENSONGAMC
DNASPLATSSILONIL
BRIANMAYBILETENMILE
PUNTSONMARADEANNA
SEGOODDEVENINGTIGER
MINGERADECAPOD
TTYLLEONASHILOPSA
WHOLEPARTINGONOFFING
SEMANASISTOSWEETIE
JABBERSCHIPSWEATS

This puzzle has an interesting property: I've "stolen" one of the theme answers from another puzzle with an entirely different theme! Tom McCoy adds "AL" to common phrases, so "Spring Fling" becomes "Spring F(al)ling". People who remember these sorts of things: let me know if this has happened before!

In all honesty, I haven't been spending much time making puzzles recently; instead, I'm focusing my efforts on species preservation. The great Spanish oso (Latin: Ursus utilis) has been on the brink of extinction for many years and I'm working with a crack team of cruciverbal conservationists to reintroduce as many as we can to the wild before it's too late. Speaking of, I haven't seen any ernes around recently ... sure is weird.

Mon 6/26/2023
NAPEBLINDSHOP
OLAYROSIECEDE
VEGETABLEFARMER
ARESOSECDEIST
TROPEYESMEN
NITSKINGLY
TEAMCAPTAINWOE
ACNEIAMMAMA
NOGBANJOPLAYER
GNOMESSEEK
RACKETAGENT
SHARKLAOUNION
PICKYPICKYPICKY
OVALUSERSCHEN
TETEPETALEENY

We're excited to share a byline in The New York Times for the first (but hopefully not the last!) time. The two of us have collaborated on several other puzzles, which have appeared in The LA Times, Crosswords Club, and Universal Crosswords.

Another project we've worked on together is the Grids for Kids charity puzzle pack, for which we both volunteered as editors. We vetted themes (which are all related to parenting!) and helped edit a suite of puzzles for kids and adults. With a small donation to a kid-centered charity of your choice, you can download the puzzle pack, which consists of 17 themed puzzles, 2 cryptics, and 6 puzzles for kids. We're both parents of young children, Taylor with a 2- and 4-year-old, and Christina with a 3= and 5-year-old, so we were particularly inspired by this project.

Finally, a quick plug for Taylor's side project, Lemonade Disco, a platform for new constructors to showcase their talent in a supportive space. A new suite of puzzles is available every two months, edited by Taylor, Shannon Rapp, and Steve Mossberg.

Tue 6/27/2023
IMAFANJABBOIL
DOCILEILLANNA
SALOMEGLAMROCK
TUNAISUZUCHE
ANALREFOCUS
IRAALICEFLAP
MISSCLEOUSOS
SOPHIDLERRIGS
ROANBABADOOK
POOLMYMANNBA
MOMTOBEENDS
OPIHOSTSTUMS
MUSTACHESHIITE
OLESCELPENCIL
AIDAESLANGERS

The original concept for this puzzle had MOVEMBER as the revealer; I'd already participated in the past and was reminded of it when I came across the name while putting another puzzle together. The handlebar in the center was a perfect fit, and once that lil' cutie was in place, I knew I'd have to make the rest of the puzzle work, come hell or high water. The NE was the worst to fill and was the only part that remained unscathed through revision, mainly because there was very little that could be done to fix the iffiest parts (at least, by someone of my talent level).

About me: to do our part to ensure the entropy of the universe continues to expand, our family will be welcoming our third (and final) child by this time next month. If anyone wishes to shoot the breeze on parenthood, dynasty baseball, actuarial science, or, naturally, crossword construction, feel free to drop me a line (amgxwrd@gmail.com).

Submission stats:

  • Submitted: 4/24/2022
  • Revision requested: 7/15/2022
  • Revision submitted: 7/22/2022
  • Official acceptance: 8/8/2022
  • Publish date: 6/27/2023
  • Unchanged clues: 23
  • Clues with minor edits: 25
  • Completely changed clues: 30
Wed 6/28/2023
ALPINISMAFTRA
PEARTREETHROAT
AIRSHOWSAIOLIS
TATBOASTGENE
RAYONUARTSA
SPITATSIMON
MADLYINSIDEMAN
OLGAGRASSWINY
GOESBROKEPANTS
TRANECERISE
SHEOBIGAWKS
WICKSCIONKOR
AMOEBACOALMINE
BONNETEUROAREA
SMOTESTYLETIP

MATT: It is so exciting to see this puzzle run on my birthday — thank you to the Times for this awesome and memorable present!

Victor wrote me after the publication of my last Times puzzle expressing his interest in learning more about crossword construction. While I struggle to devise theme ideas and prefer the later stages of filling grids and writing clues, Victor had no shortage of theme proposals and was eager to develop them further. After some exchanges in which Victor brought up phrases involving animals like "Pigs in a Blanket" or "Elephant in the Room," it occurred to us that we could represent those "___ in the ___" expressions using literal Across and Down crossings. That realization also meant we could eliminate the inconsistencies or redundancies of articles and pronouns from one phrase to another.

Since my last puzzle, I started graduate school in architecture and am currently living in Cambridge, MA, where I understand the puzzle community is strong. It's tough to balance puzzle constructing with the school schedule, but I hope to find more time for it and to branch out further in the world of puzzle people!

VICTOR: This puzzle is dedicated to the memory of my father, Gilbert Sloan, who died peacefully on May 24 at the age of 94. While he didn't get to see the puzzle in print, I did tell him it had been accepted, and he was one of our test solvers. Whenever we would visit, I would photocopy the puzzle (yes, I still solve on paper) and we would work on it side by side. We would also listen to the Sunday Puzzle on NPR (with Will Shortz) and we would race to solve it and call the other person.

I got the theme idea from a book about English language curiosities and realized there were a number of animal idioms in the form (animal) in the ____. I reached out to Matt, who graciously agreed to work with me to bring this to fruition. I learned so much in our collaboration.

My portion of the payment for this puzzle will be donated to the Newark Museum of Art's Explorers Program, which is the successor to the Junior Museum program that gave my father his first exposure to science in the 1930s.

About me: I am a rheumatologist currently working for the Peace Corps (I was a Volunteer in Cameroon from 1981-83). This October, my wife Sandra Gong and I will celebrate our 35th anniversary. We are the proud parents of 2 amazing daughters, ages 24 and 19.

Thu 6/29/2023
STABSBLTBTU
HORNETRAISERS
REFUGEEANGELES
BAITSLRCOALER
GRAVELATENCY
LLANOSABOT
FASCIAWOOBAKE
EXCHANGINGRINGS
MEREDOTRANDOS
ADAMSSHEEN
PITCHINGHOST
COPCARTAGACLU
AVIATESBEARHUG
BILLETSLAPPER
ODEDENERROR

This is one of those puzzles where the editors were able to see it from the solvers' perspective in a way that I hadn't considered. I'll explain. My initial idea was to clue the compound answer phrases (HORSE.TRAINERS, TRAVEL.AGENCY, HITCHING.POST, and BALLET.SLIPPER). For example, 47-Across [Give a hand] would be (P)ITCHIN, and 49-Across [With 47-Across, Frontier parking spot?] would be (P)ITCHIN+G(H)OST, seemingly a very wrong answer. [Forming a union, perhaps…] would have hinted at "EXCHANGING RINGS": (P)ITCHIN+G(H)OST would equal (H)ITCHIN+G(P)OST, after the "ringed" (P) and (H) get swapped in the solver's mind. And "forming a union" would also hint at combining/reparsing the two halves to yield HITCHING POST.

Confused yet? Ya, that's what the editors thought you might say! They noted that the "correct" answer for the compound phrases would not be what's entered on the grid, which can be frustrating for solvers. But they argued that seeing the compound answers emerge during the solve –especially with the revealer in the middle of the grid instead of at the more traditional bottom right — would be plenty fun and surprising. I appreciated the time they put into discussing the tiniest details of the puzzle's mechanics. Hope you all enjoy it!

Fri 6/30/2023
AUTOSAVEDITCH
CHICKLITBITEME
TORTILLARECTOR
SHEHELLTOTHENO
MAYABUSY
ATBATIDAHONAP
PARTANOADSALE
THATISSUCHAMOOD
LOWESTBAAOMNI
YENLASTSCRIES
WAITHIRE
IMEANREALLYLAM
DIVIDELOOPHOLE
LEAVESPASTABAR
INNERONEONONE

This grid has a lot of attitude, which seems appropriate because so do I. My primary job is as a circus coach and performer. I always try to be kind to my students, but I do like messing with them sometimes. "You call THAT a straight leg?" "Come on, all I'm asking you to do is hang by your heels. You think that's too hard? I MEAN, REALLY!"

Fridays are my favorite solving day of the week. I absolutely love themeless puzzles. It's probably taboo for a constructor to say this, but I have never liked themes. Swapping out letters? Circling special words? No. Stop messing with my puzzle. My hatred of themes is unfortunate because it turns out themeless puzzles are really freaking hard to make. Every one I successfully create feels like a small miracle. Thank you to Dana Edwards for test solving this one, and thanks always and forever to Will Nediger for his generous mentorship when I was starting out with making puzzles.

I still have no idea what I am doing when it comes to crosswords, but I am more than happy to pay forward the incredible guidance that others have given me. Hit me up on Instagram if you have questions about constructing or would like some help, and I'll do my best to assist!

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