Saturday, June 6, 2026

LAT tk (Stella) rate it
Newsday tk (Kyle) rate it
NYT 6:05 (Amy) [3.88 avg; 4 ratings] rate it
Universal tk (Adam S) rate it
USA Today tk (ZEB) rate it
WSJ tk (Kyle) rate it


Daniel Bodily’s New York Times crossword—Amy’s recap

NY Times crossword solution, 6/6/26 – no. 0606

Easier for me than the Friday puzzle was. Go figure!

This 60-worder has wide-open corners with roughly 6×8 white spaces. A grid like that will generally contain some clunky fill to get everything to hold together.

Fave fill: SCHMEARS, UHAUL VAN, stepmom MOMALA Kamala Harris, PRESTIGE, KING-SIZE, PIE FIGHT, WAYFARER.

Entries that feel a little off to me include BURN SAGE, ATE CAKE, NETTER, DEARIE ME, SNEES, GETS TAN, TSETSE. AMENDMENT I is another way to refer to the First Amendment, but does anyone call it “amendment one” rather than “the First Amendment”?

New to me: 4D. [Hindu clerk], MUNSHI. Curious to know if this is everyday vocab in India. Wonder how many constructors have this in their word list!

Three more things:

  • 2D. [Mexican fried pastry often covered in cinnamon sugar], CHURRO. Technically, churros originated in Spain and Portugal and they got colonized to places the Spaniards and Portuguese invaded.
  • 28D. [School memento], CLASS PIN. I don’t remember that from high school and college in the 1980s. eBay has a bunch of vintage class pins. When’s the last time you saw a school touting class pins?
  • 29D. [Doc’s license plate in “Back to the Future”], OUTATIME. Eww. First, if you’re going to use that phrase, it’s “outta.” Second, the movie trilogy takes place in California, which has long had an 7-character limit for plates. They’re considering going up to 8 now, but the movie people should’ve devised a plausible vanity plate for Doc.

A feat to fill a grid that looks like this, but the fill compromises that a challenging grid generally entails make the result less fun for me as a solver. 3.5 stars from me.

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2 Responses to Saturday, June 6, 2026

  1. Seth Cohen says:

    NW of the NYT stopped me dead. Got the rest of the puzzle but just stared at that section forever. Couldn’t see SUBPAR or ROSINED, didn’t know BURN SAGE (I was expecting a word in another language) or ELSTON. Eventually looked up synonyms of “deficient” and put in SUBPAR, but still stuck. Looked up ELSTON, then got ROSINED. And I still couldn’t see BURN SAGE (MUNSHI was just 6 random letters as far as I was concerned). I was thinking BURSSAGE or some such random word I’d never know. Tried random letters until the puzzle told me I was done.

    • Jamie says:

      Puzzle: NYT; Rating: 4 stars

      Exactly the same here. Flew through the SW, got the SE and NE with only a little difficulty, and then the NW was a mess. I had to look up the Stravinsky quote to get it all to fall into place.

      I still liked it but I guess that’s the downside of grids like this. It’s like solving four separate smaller grids.

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