This made me LOL! That's exactly where I got tripped up! Tricksy little...
"Backdrops" February 2,2023
- LizD
- Posts: 89
- Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2020 8:37 pm
- Location: North Carolina
I don't have an inner child... I have an inner old lady. 
Meta solver by night, proud independent bookstore owner by day!

Meta solver by night, proud independent bookstore owner by day!
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- Posts: 3159
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2021 7:26 pm
- Location: at the intersection of grits and breakfast tacos
With DASH and OVERANDOUT, I was sure that Morse code was going to figure into it somehow. Somehow I convinced myself that FLIP meant to rotate the grid 90 degrees one way or the other, and then I could use O = dot and I = dash.
Tilting my head to the right (and the grid to the left) gave me nonsense and 3 too many letters (but maybe the makings of STAGE with a little anagramming):
And tilting my head to the left also gave me nonsense:
I spent the weekend doing lots of work around the house and never came back to it.
Tilting my head to the right (and the grid to the left) gave me nonsense and 3 too many letters (but maybe the makings of STAGE with a little anagramming):
Code: Select all
S ooo
T -
D -oo
G --o
T -
A o-
A o-
D -oo
E o
E o
R o-o
E o
Code: Select all
E o
R o-o
E o
E o
U oo-
N -o
N -o
T -
W o--
U oo-
T -
S ooo
I don't have anything clever to say, but if I did, it would go here.
Eli
Eli
- DrTom
- Posts: 4910
- Joined: Sat Apr 20, 2019 6:46 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, FL
Oh Oh, did you notice a DeLorean anywhere near the house? I ask because your computer went back in time and solved "Turn on the Radio"! That darn Doc Brown, he will show up and try to solve the meta. Well at least you didn't see any Supreme Court justices in your puzzle,hoover wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 10:51 am With DASH and OVERANDOUT, I was sure that Morse code was going to figure into it somehow. Somehow I convinced myself that FLIP meant to rotate the grid 90 degrees one way or the other, and then I could use O = dot and I = dash.
Tilting my head to the right (and the grid to the left) gave me nonsense and 3 too many letters (but maybe the makings of STAGE with a little anagramming):
And tilting my head to the left also gave me nonsense:Code: Select all
S ooo T - D -oo G --o T - A o- A o- D -oo E o E o R o-o E o
I spent the weekend doing lots of work around the house and never came back to it.Code: Select all
E o R o-o E o E o U oo- N -o N -o T - W o-- U oo- T - S ooo

NUDGES!I am always willing to give nudges IF ASKED; metas should be about fun, not frustration. PM me what you have done so far, because often you are closer than you think, and I will try to help you move along.
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- Location: at the intersection of grits and breakfast tacos
Hmm... Someone in my neighborhood drives a DeLorean. I'll let you know if I see a crazy wild-haired guy in a lab coat.DrTom wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 12:08 pmOh Oh, did you notice a DeLorean anywhere near the house? I ask because your computer went back in time and solved "Turn on the Radio"! That darn Doc Brown, he will show up and try to solve the meta. Well at least you didn't see any Supreme Court justices in your puzzle,hoover wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 10:51 am With DASH and OVERANDOUT, I was sure that Morse code was going to figure into it somehow. Somehow I convinced myself that FLIP meant to rotate the grid 90 degrees one way or the other, and then I could use O = dot and I = dash.
(snippety snip)
I spent the weekend doing lots of work around the house and never came back to it.![]()
I don't have anything clever to say, but if I did, it would go here.
Eli
Eli
- JAQT
- Posts: 142
- Joined: Mon Aug 10, 2020 4:55 pm
- Location: California
With inspiration from others here who have shared their rabbit holes, here's mine:
Interesting, 52A's hint of Transmission Ending. Maybe this is a double-meaning from Mike: He lets us think it's a radio transmission, but maybe he actually means the transmission for a car. What's that sequence again? Oh yeah, PRNDL
Now we come to the 60A hint of Reverse. Well that clinches it! Of course he's referring to the gears in a transmission! And between 52A and 60A, he's also telling us to look at it in reverse: LDNRP
The "L" stands for "Low" and by golly, there are four answers in the grid with "LO" right in them. In rough left-to-right reading order they are RELO, SLO, LOTTO and MELON
Let's line them up and see if that helps:
XXRELO
XXXSLO
XXXXLOTTO
XXMELON
The title of the grid, which is "Backdrop", tells me I should drop something, right? And hey! If I drop the "LO" from "MELON" I get the word MEN! That's got to mean something.
What if I drop the "LO" from all four? (Are you still with me?) Result: RE S TTO MEN -->> REST TO MEN !! Surely that's some theatrical saying that refers to "Death of a Salesman" or Willy Loman or some other thing I never heard of!
But of course, diligent inquiries into Google turned up nothing. So sad.
Congrats to all who solved!
Best,
JAQT
Interesting, 52A's hint of Transmission Ending. Maybe this is a double-meaning from Mike: He lets us think it's a radio transmission, but maybe he actually means the transmission for a car. What's that sequence again? Oh yeah, PRNDL
Now we come to the 60A hint of Reverse. Well that clinches it! Of course he's referring to the gears in a transmission! And between 52A and 60A, he's also telling us to look at it in reverse: LDNRP
The "L" stands for "Low" and by golly, there are four answers in the grid with "LO" right in them. In rough left-to-right reading order they are RELO, SLO, LOTTO and MELON
Let's line them up and see if that helps:
XXRELO
XXXSLO
XXXXLOTTO
XXMELON
The title of the grid, which is "Backdrop", tells me I should drop something, right? And hey! If I drop the "LO" from "MELON" I get the word MEN! That's got to mean something.
What if I drop the "LO" from all four? (Are you still with me?) Result: RE S TTO MEN -->> REST TO MEN !! Surely that's some theatrical saying that refers to "Death of a Salesman" or Willy Loman or some other thing I never heard of!
But of course, diligent inquiries into Google turned up nothing. So sad.

Congrats to all who solved!
Best,
JAQT
Last edited by JAQT on Mon Feb 06, 2023 4:58 pm, edited 2 times in total.
JustAQuickThought
- JAQT
- Posts: 142
- Joined: Mon Aug 10, 2020 4:55 pm
- Location: California
Incidentally, when was the Wordle thread deleted? And I'm guessing it was deleted because of space/storage issues?
I can't search the forum for any information on Wordle because the search function on the board treats the word as too common for use in a search.
I can't search the forum for any information on Wordle because the search function on the board treats the word as too common for use in a search.
JustAQuickThought
- boharr
- Moderator
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- Location: Westchester, NY
viewtopic.php?p=119855#p119855JAQT wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 4:56 pm Incidentally, when was the Wordle thread deleted? And I'm guessing it was deleted because of space/storage issues?
I can't search the forum for any information on Wordle because the search function on the board treats the word as too common for use in a search.
- JAQT
- Posts: 142
- Joined: Mon Aug 10, 2020 4:55 pm
- Location: California
Ah, thank you! My mistake, I thought it (both Wordle and Wordle2) had been deleted.boharr wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 4:59 pmviewtopic.php?p=119855#p119855JAQT wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 4:56 pm Incidentally, when was the Wordle thread deleted? And I'm guessing it was deleted because of space/storage issues?
<snip>
JustAQuickThought
- Streroto
- Posts: 951
- Joined: Thu Jul 04, 2019 4:24 pm
- Location: Newtown Square, PA
So my meta story is I actually solved the meta while on he ground waiting to take off from…RENO!!!!!!
Stay well all
Stay well all
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- Posts: 1739
- Joined: Sat Dec 28, 2019 10:09 am
Here's my admittedly sloppy spreadsheet of the last ~6 months of data:Dplass wrote: Sun Feb 05, 2023 9:11 amIt's not just the percent correct, it's the number of submissions. I have a spreadsheet that comes up with a "normalized" percentage. When I remember I'll publish it.Bob cruise director wrote: Sat Feb 04, 2023 12:40 pm@LizD My wife's theory is that Mike has "upped his game" so there are no gimme weeks.LizD wrote: Sat Feb 04, 2023 12:19 pm Been staring until my eyes cross with nothing to show for it. Is it just me or have the last few puzzles been a bit more difficult than usual? Don't think I've had this long of a streak stuck with Isaac before...
Last couple of months percentages from WSJ
1/27 MG 72%
1/20 MS 87%
1/13 MG 70%
1/6 MS 72%
12/30 MG 80%
12/23 MS 70%
12/16 MG 85%
The "normalized" column is the % correct compared to the entire "population" (about 3k people.)
- The XWord Rabbit
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Wed Aug 03, 2022 12:00 pm
There were some interesting “rabbitisms” this week, a couple of people went down the back trail trying to append BACK to other words and tease out a word. This was detailed most vividly by the “punisher” himself, DrTom, who tried to HOOF his way to an answer. Logical, elegant and wrong; in the end they all ended up with hoof-in-mouth disease and got backed into a corner.
Another few went with trying to use the decidedly cryptic “loose” clues. They made an effort to find words that went with both over and out like MOVE, DROP, PUTS (hmm the Rabbit maybe needs a PG rating?). Again very logical but also wrong, these people had one put over on them and struck out.
Hoover took an interesting approach, effectively firing up the “Wayback Machine” so that he and Mr. Peabody could go back in time a week or so. His approach was very technical, obviously founded in a viable mechanism, and also (like the two predecessors) incorrect.
JAQT had a tortured path, perhaps because he took the LO road? He did end up with 9 letters with his transmission, I mean transition, from LO and he was certainly using his melon, but it doesn’t quite come up to the merit bade in rabbit trailing of the next meta maniac.
The winner for a nomination HAS to be DBMiller. The explanation of his tortured trail was at least a two carrot read. I laughed, I cried, I marveled at his Goldbergian (for those who are too young https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rube_Goldberg_machine) pathway to the white whale he assigned early on. How I wish he had been able to find his K along his “Family Circus” (for those who are too young https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/1 ... 0-c85.webp) route. What is so remarkable is that he actually had the mechanism but used it for much different reasons and words. Had he come up with a theater related word I would have hopped on over to MG and hareassed him to accept an alternate answer.
So, in XWord’s absence this week I am going to nominate DBMiller for the Rabbit Award.
- HeadinHome
- Posts: 1459
- Joined: Sun Apr 26, 2020 9:06 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
Me too!! (Except the SLIM/MILKS part)ZooAnimalsOnWheels wrote: Mon Feb 06, 2023 1:10 am With FLIP, OVER, and BACK being possible hints, my eye was at first drawn to HINGE, running right down the middle of the grid. I thought this was an indication that we were supposed to fold the grid back over on itself along the vertical axis to reveal something. I think that is what made me notice SKIM from MILKS, where the L was sitting right along the perceived axis. That was my AHA to the actual mechanism.
The other Wendy. 

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The contest answer is REHEARSAL. Nine Across clues contain a word that’s that clue’s answer reversed minus one letter (GRAB/bag; AMORE/Roma; BIRCH/crib; MEAD/Dam; YARD/Dry; RENO/One; BASRA/Arab; EMMA/ Mme.; MILKS/skim). The dropped letters, in order, spell the contest answer.
Who knew there were so many nine-letter theater terms? We had a nice turnout this week, 1122, with 2/3 correct (below our usual level around 3/4). An unusually big showing for BREAK A LEG (111) plus BACKSTAGE (38), CYCLORAMA (18), SET DESIGN (4), MONOLOGUE (3), AUDITIONS (2) and many others.
Congrats to this week's winner: Louis DeBiasio of Oxford, Ohio!
Who knew there were so many nine-letter theater terms? We had a nice turnout this week, 1122, with 2/3 correct (below our usual level around 3/4). An unusually big showing for BREAK A LEG (111) plus BACKSTAGE (38), CYCLORAMA (18), SET DESIGN (4), MONOLOGUE (3), AUDITIONS (2) and many others.
Congrats to this week's winner: Louis DeBiasio of Oxford, Ohio!
- Al Sisti
- Posts: 2166
- Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2019 1:28 pm
- Location: Whitesboro NY
Oh man, so close... I only missed by an entire first name, last name, city and state!MikeMillerwsj wrote: Tue Feb 07, 2023 10:39 am
Congrats to this week's winner: Louis DeBiasio of Oxford, Ohio!
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I missed by first name, city, and state, but the last name is right, it's just in the wrong place!Al Sisti wrote: Tue Feb 07, 2023 2:16 pmOh man, so close... I only missed by an entire first name, last name, city and state!MikeMillerwsj wrote: Tue Feb 07, 2023 10:39 am
Congrats to this week's winner: Louis DeBiasio of Oxford, Ohio!
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I get by with a little help from my friends... thanks again zoom room! I am on shore. 
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