- 20A "timiL" = BACKWARDSCAP
- 35A "Golfer's suppor-" = CUTOFFTEE
- 42A "Evade" = MINISKIRT
- 55A "P | u | n | c | h | e | s" = STRIPEDSOCKS
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Thursday, May 21 2026, Zhou Zhang and Mallory Montgomery
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Wednesday, May 20 2026, Kathleen Duncan
I gotta say right up front, I loved today's puzzle. Really fun and just the right amount of crunch for a Wednesday. The well-disguised theme turned out to be quite SPECIAL! To wit - the first three long Across clues all looked ordinary and had straightforward answers, but they all had something in common:
- 16A : "Nontraditional time for voting someone into office" (OFFYEARELECTION)
- 26A : "What a waiter might offer to start you off" (SOUPOFTHEDAY)
- 44A : "Bit of movie magic" (VISUALEFFECT)
Monday, May 18, 2026
Tuesday, May 19 2026, Brad Wiegmann
Just for fun, I printed today's puzzle out and solved it the old-fashioned way. So much slower this way! And no catchy little jingle at the end. But ultimately quite satisfying - I should do it more often.
Working down the grid, it quickly became apparent what was going on. The four longest Across entries each have two letter groups highlighted with heavy borders, and the first one, "Standard musical progression", revealed itself as PENTA[TONIC]SC[ALE] (brackets mine). Next was "High court judge?" (my favourite clue today!) as [CHAI][RUM]PIRE. And so on. Clearly there are drinks embedded in these answers! By the time I reached the revealer "Requirement at some comedy clubs", the answer was a write-in : TWODRINKMINIMUM. Hah! I suppose this makes sense, to make the crowd more receptive, though it might have the same effect on belligerence. And surely you wouldn't see much CHAI at a comedy club? What do I know. Haven't seen a comedy show in decades.
It's a mixed bag in the rest of the grid. There are five all-consonant answers (CCCP, KGS, MTN, TBS and TCBY), which seems a bit much. Interesting wrinkle in 39D "Term of friendship for a French woman" - MONAMIE looks weird, with the masculine possessive in front of a clearly feminine word, but that's what you do when the word begins with a vowel. (Try saying "MA AMIE"!) I'd never heard of the term "gut course" to describe an EASY A. I think we used to call them "bird courses", back in the day.
Back atcha tomorrow!
-philbo
Sunday, May 17, 2026
Monday, May 18 2026, Rena Cohen
Up here in this part of Canada, Monday is a holiday - "Victoria Day" - a shoutout to our English roots, also known as "May 2-4 Weekend" - a shoutout to our irresponsible youthful days. You get your Memorial Day, we have this day. But enough stalling - on to today's puzzle!
Monday puzzles, by design, don't generally put up too much of a fight, and this one was no exception, though I did stumble out of the starting gate at 1A ("Like a game that has gone into a penalty shootout") with INOT instead of TIED. That sorted out, I made my way down a fairly straightforward grid and only afterward looked back to see what the theme was. The "revealer" at 63A - "Advice for the overambitious" - is STARTSMALL and sure enough, the four theme answers all "start small", or with synonyms thereof. What makes it neater is that none of them are words as such; for example, 50A "Gardener's tool" is WEEDWHACKER, which indeed begins with WEE but not the word "WEE". If you see what I mean. (An old physics prof used to say that. Sometimes I did see. Sometimes I didn't.)
Elsewhere ... 41D "Distorts, as data" caused a hiccup - I entered SPINS, not SKEWS. I liked the fun facts sprinkled throughout; e.g. 54D reminds us that a KOALA is not a "bear"; 22D points out that there is an actual English town named EPSOM, whence the salts.
I have a CAT, and can attest to the accuracy of 71A "Stereotypically antisocial pets".
Ciao for now!
-philbo
Saturday, May 16, 2026
Sunday, May 17 2026, Derrick Niederman
Greetings Earthlings! Philbo here, back on the blog after a hiatus that seems to have lasted forever. Bear with me, willya, while I find my stride...What a great puzzle to start back with! Among the Across clues we have 11 that are italicized - short and punchy little QMCs, familiar phrases, all of them. But at first glance they don't match the grid. Or do they? Look at 65A: "Yellow submarine?". A Beatles reference? Not at all - it's another seemingly unrelated phrase CHICKENSANDWICH. But look! It does make sense - the clue DOES describe the answer, just in a whole different way. (Hence the "Double Meanings" theme.)
This is so brilliant! Mr. Niederman's managed to do this almost a dozen times. They're not puns...it's just really clever wordplay, and it really tickled my funny bone. I won't enumerate them here - you'll discover them for yourself and I hope you experience the same delicious "aha" moments that I did!
There were other nice touches too. I liked the double "Intl. group formed in 1945/1949" (19A and 106D), and "Iconic role for Harrison Ford" (6D and 10D). HAN and INDIANA - first names - nice touch! A couple of misleading food references were amusing : 74D "Packed like sardines, say" (INOIL) and 81D "Experienced a bit of turnover?" (ATE).
I was going to take issue with 18A "____ polaris" (AURORA), thinking "surely that's not right" - but no, "aurora polaris" is a general term referring to both aurorae, "borealis" to the North and "australis" to the South. File that under "old dogs, new tricks"!
On that note, I'll sign off till tomorrow. It's great to be back!
-philbo
Saturday, May 16, 2026, Byron Walden
One should be on his or her toes (their toes? what's the better modern construction here?) upon encountering Mr. Walden's byline. And indeed today was a challenging Saturday, which I FWOE'd (finished with one error).
It's filled with tricksy clues - see, for example 24D: Trigger hair (MANE), playing on hair trigger, and the fact that Trigger is a classic horse name, with the hidden capital. And also please see 22A: Matches with forensics (DEBATECONTESTS) where the presumed verb at the start of the clue is actually a plural noun. Here, "forensics" is the art of public speaking, namely speaking in order to convince a group of people who will judge based on the evidence. It has latterly come to apply to forensic science, where evidence is treated scientifically in order to convince in a court of law.
In follow up to yesterday's exclamation point clue (and Horace, I agree in retrospect with your analysis of that clue), today we have 39A: Don't start with me! (SECONDSTRINGER). So much better! The "me" here is the answer, and it is literally true. Love it.
| Cynthia ERIVO |
I loved 38D: They're concerned with feeding kits (VIXENS), where kits is the name for juvenile foxes, and the answer the name for their mothers. But who's ever heard of the word ZARFS? It comes from Arabic. But it's nice to know what to call the sleeves around your coffee cup.
My error came at the intersection of WATTLED and INTWOACTS. I had INTrOACTS, a real stretch, but I imagined these individuals getting their break on Broadway by opening for the more popular headliner. The actual answer merits the question mark. rATTLED seemed as likely as anything else, I guess.
Well, that's my week done and dusted. I turn you over to the capable hands of Philbo, starting tomorrow!
- Colum
Friday, May 15, 2026
Friday, May 15, 2026, Maddy Ziegler
50D: Food item whose name comes from the Greek for "turn" (GYRO) was another good trivia clue. I put it in without even thinking of the etymology, but in retrospect it should be obvious.



