Six fantastic marquee entries, that's REALLY SOMETHING! I paused when I finally uncovered that one, wondering if it felt arbitrary or I liked it. Didn't take long to decide that I loved it.
With only four more long entries in the entire puzzle, you have to take full advantage of them, and Brooke and Ada did a reasonable job with that. I enjoyed both FIBONACCI and STEEL DRUM, especially with that curious "instrument played by a pannist" clue. That's a great way to generate an a-ha moment, turning a "how the #$@!? should I know what a pannist is?" feeling into a delightful head-slap. DIVING INTO, though ... add-preposition phrases are tough to make stand out.
I finished with an error, putting in CHIMA as the rapper with NIME as the daughter of Styx. I guessed CHIMA ... as in chime? Because she's a singer? Get it?
Fine, I didn't either.
I would have had a much more positive first impression of CHIKA if the NIKE clue had been eased up, allowing me to achieve a victorious solve. I'm big into Greek myths, my kids having listened to D'Aulaires book on audio roughly eight thousand times in the car, but NIKE's lineage escaped me, and NIME sounded familiar. It's a shame, because "Can't Explain It" is catchy!
INNU treated me much better. I didn't know the word — neither did XWI's resident Canuck, Jim Horne — but with unambiguous crossings, each one given a softball clue, I had a much friendlier first contact experience.
Entertaining to get a throwback LINsanity clue. He had his five minutes, played overseas, and is now trying to make another NBA run with the Warriors' G-League affiliate.
A peppering of great clues, with [Puts on the line, say] a standout — clever repurposing of a common phrase. I could have used more of these, though, since there wasn't as much juice in the grid's long entries as there typically is with themelesses featuring 14-16 long entries.
Beautiful set of six marquees. Next time, I'd love to see what Brooke can do with long marquees laid out with her trademark diagonal symmetry. Editors tend to adhere to their old ways, and I'd love to see them experiment more, allowing all sorts of different themeless layouts for variety's sake.