Terrific puzzle today. So much going on. Let’s settle in with some brunch and take a look. Oooh — it’s a brunch theme, but if we had to put a name to it (the NYT does not name its non-Sunday puzzles), we might go with Brunch With The Girls. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
First, it’s larger than usual size: 15 x 16 instead of 15 x 15. It’s needed because the revealer (key answer) runs down all 16 squares at 7D. The clue is “Event that might feature unlimited mimosas,” and the answer is BOTTOMLESS BRUNCH.
Then, there are six separate theme down answers all related to brunch, e.g., “Raise a glass” is PROPOSE A TOAST. So there’s your TOAST for brunch. But, get this — the last T in TOAST is missing. What you have to fill in is PROPOSE A TOAS. Why? Because that makes it “bottomless!” So, similarly, “No goodnik” is BAD EGG, but you fill in BAD EG. The other four bottomless answers are: COUGH SYRU(P) (Remedy for a cold); SAVE ONE’S BACO(N) (Help avoid disaster); RAGAMUFFI(N) (Little scamp); and REHAS(H) (Go over again).
That’s enough to make it a terrific puzzle, but Rex noticed something else that I missed. There are many names in the clues and answers – and every single one is a woman. Puzzles are typically male-centric, reflecting the tilt of society. So this constructor, Sophia Maymudes, is trying to even things up a bit. Brava!
The women answers are: NAOMI (Novik, author); Diana RIGG; REY (Star Wars heroine); SARA (of Tegan and Sara, pop duo); ELENA Kagan; SOFIA Coppola; ASTRID (Gemma’s role in “Crazy Rich Asians”); and KAY Thompson (author).
KAY Thompson was a singer and actress and author of the Eloise series of children’s books. She was Liza Minelli’s godmother. After two marriages that ended in divorce, she had a secret love affair with singer Andy Williams (who was half her age) that lasted 14 years, until he ran off and married Claudine Longet. Remember her?

The only named males in the puzzle are Flotsam and Jetsam from The Little Mermaid, and they are eels.
Men, as a concept, aren’t entirely excluded. Way at the bottom, the answer at 69A is GENTS.
Tegan and Sara, noted above, are twin sisters from Calgary. Both are gay and married and very active in LGBTQ+ politics. In 2013, they took part in creating an ice cream sandwich that supported same sex marriage. It featured “double chocolate” cookies and salted caramel ice cream and was named “Til Death Do Us Part.”
You got a problem with any of that?

Hard not to like this tune.
RAGAMUFFIN appeared in the puzzle, as I noted above. You don’t see that term very often, if ever. Commenter Barbara S. reminded us it appears in this old S & G tune, “Cloudy.”
And it’s hitchhike a hundred miles
I’m a RAGAMUFFIN child
Pointed finger-painted smile
I left my shadow waiting down the road for me a while.
You may be hearing the name Shedeur more often as we get closer to the NFL draft. It’s the name of a quarterback (last name Sanders) out of UColorado expected to be drafted early — maybe by the NY Giants. It’s a beautiful Hebrew name meaning light or flame of God. His dad is (and his coach at Colorado was) Deion Sanders, whose nickname involves light too — Neon Deion. He, of course, was a brilliant Hall of Fame defensive back and not too shabby a pro baseball player. You see him in Aflac ads now all the time along with Nick Saban. If he’s wearing sandals, look down – you’ll see he only has eight toes. (He lost two from blood clots.)
Good-looking young man, Shedeur Sanders. We wish him well.

W. C. Fields was born on this date in Darby, PA, back in 1880. His entry into showbiz was as a brilliant juggler. He joined the carnival at age 14 and then moved to comedy and films. A big drinker, he often joked about it, saying e.g., “once, during Prohibition, I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water.” And, “Everyone must believe in something. I believe I’ll have another drink.” And, “If I had to live life over, I’d live over a saloon.”
One of my brilliant trip-planning moves decades ago was to place Linda, the kids, and me in a dumpy space behind/above a gas station/convenience store somewhere in the middle of Utah near some National Park we were visiting. How it earned more than one star is a mystery. But it didn’t seem infested by anything, it was pretty spacious, and it had weird hiding spaces the kids loved. There were stairs from it directly down to the little shop that had maps, junk, and candy. Sam thought that was fantastic and couldn’t conceive of a better life. For two nights he felt like we had our own private candy store. He was sad when it was time to move on.

See you tomorrow, Chatterheads!! Thanks for popping in.

























































