Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Tuesday, August 20, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for August 20, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is harder; I got it in five. Beware, there are spoilers below for August 20, Wordle #1,158! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

They’re almost all common letters—four are from our mnemonic today. The fifth is less common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

This makes you late.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There are no repeated letters today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There are two vowels and one “sometimes” vowel.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with D. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with Y. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is DELAY.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, followed by BLAND to eliminate common consonants. From here, possible answers included PEDAL, MEDAL, and DELAY—I guessed MEDAL, which left DELAY as the solution.

Wordle 1,158 5/6

⬛🟨⬛⬛🟨
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟨🟨⬛🟨
⬛🟩🟨🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was medium difficult. The hint was “a unit of measure at the Olympics” and the answer contained four common letters and one pretty common letter.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was METER.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

Organic Maps Is the Best Offline Maps App for Hiking

I’ve been an avid hiker of the Pacific Northwest for around a decade. I’m also very bad at navigation. Making matters worse, Google and Apple Maps are both basically useless if you’re on a hike: They don’t have data for most trails, and their offline functionality is generally limited to driving instructions, which isn’t useful if you’re hiking far from any cell phone towers.

Luckily, there’s a great alternative in Organic Maps, which I’ve used on hikes for years now. This free and open source application is available for iOS and Android, and I’m yet to walk on a trail it didn’t have data for. Even better, it works offline, and is very easy on your battery life. I’ve used it for multiple days during a backpacking trip and didn’t even need to recharge. (Airplane mode helps with this a lot.) Organic Maps also has an excellent privacy policy: There’s no tracking and no ads—period.

The mapping data comes from Open Street Maps, an open source project that allows anyone to contribute mapping data. While a platform like this runs the risk of lacking data, people have evidently been contributing trails. I’ve actively used Organic Maps in Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and even Croatia during a vacation last year. If I’m out on a trail, I can see exactly where I am in the context of the rest of the trail system, ask for turn-by-turn directions, and quickly find out how many miles I am from my car.

Even better, Organic Maps works perfectly without any kind of internet connection. Google and Apple Maps both offer a reduced version of their application when you’re offline: You can do the basics, but features like search and turn-by-turn directions only work in a limited way, if at all.

Using Organic Maps for hiking

Getting started is simple. First, download the application. You can start using it right away if you plan on having an active internet connection, but the real fun happens if you download the region you’re going to take a hike in. Tap the three-line button in the bottom-right corner, then choose Download Maps. You can download as many regions as you want. I tend to keep all of Oregon and Washington on my phone, which takes up around 600 MB.

Once you download the maps you need, it doesn’t really matter whether you have an internet connection or not: The application works perfectly either way. The search functionality, your saved locations, even turn-by-turn directions all function as needed—ideal for when you’re out on the trail.

A coupe more screenshots. One shows off the elevation contour lines, another shows off the turn-by-turn directions during a hike.

Credit: Justin Pot

And there are a few hiker-specific features. You can turn on elevation contour lines, which is something Google and Apple Maps don’t offer. You will see the elevation change outlined when you ask for directions, which includes total up and down elevation with a chart that summarizes the gains and losses. This is great if you want to know how much more uphill hiking you need to endure (which becomes important to me quite often). All this, combined with a much better data set for hiking, make it clearly superior for hikes.

Organic Maps isn’t just for hiking. You can use the app for walking and driving directions, and it will work well enough. That said, it is missing real time traffic and transit data, however, so I usually stick to Apple Maps when I’m in a city. Still, I love having reliable maps when I’m miles from the closest cell tower, and the trail maps are second to none.

Now, Apple is adding hiking features to Apple Maps with iOS 18 this fall, so that could change things for hikers on iPhone. Until we see how Apple’s official Maps update performs, however, I’m sticking with Organic Maps.

How to Do Hip Thrusts Without Bruising Your Hips

Hip thrusts are not only a great exercise for your glutes (aka butt), they’re also a great confidence-builder—most of us can learn to hip thrust a lot of weight once we get the hang of the exercise. This success brings a small problem, though: How do you lift all that weight on your hips without getting bruised? I’ll explain.

Hip thrusts go best with padding of some sort. You can buy pads that wrap around the bar, cushions that sit in your lap, or you can even improvise with stuff you find around the gym. (My favorite solution is one that’s not sold as a bar pad, but we’ll get to that.) 

But first, fix your positioning

Before we talk about padding, we have to talk positioning. When you set up for hip thrusts, you’ll want the bar in the crease of your hip. That puts it above your pubic bone (the one right at the center of your crotch), but below your iliac crests (those two bones you can feel at the front of each hip, above the crease). 

This is the ideal spot because it avoids each of those bony areas. If you think of having the bar “on your lap,” you might end up with it riding over your pubic bone. And hopefully you aren’t rolling it all the way up toward your belly, but if you are, you might hit those iliac crests. So adjust accordingly. 

If you’re having trouble getting the bar into that hip crease area, take a look at your overall setup. If your back is on a bench, and you’re starting with your butt on the floor, you’ll probably have an easier time with positioning if you swap the bench for something shorter—like a 12” soft plyo box, a pair of crash pads, or an elevated aerobic step

Probably already in your gym: a cylindrical barbell pad

I’m starting with this type of padding because your gym probably already has one, and if not, there are a ton of options if you’d like to buy your own. This is the same type of pad that I’ve told you not to use for squats (it just interferes with your ability to position the barbell correctly), but it’s great for hip thrusts. 

You’ll want something with a fairly dense foam padding. I’ve even heard of pool noodles successfully being used for this purpose; there’s a pool noodle stan crowd that say they’re better than purpose-built barbell pads, although I’m not convinced.

Make sure you get one that you can secure around the bar, otherwise it will roll around and pop off. Something like this that comes with straps is a good pick; so is this style that has a velcro flap. 

Upgrade option #1: a square-sided barbell pad

Instead of those cylindrical pads, you may want to look for a square-sided pad. This one is basically a square version of the one above, which means that it won’t roll out of place. Some gymgoers find these to be more comfortable. 

Upgrade option #2: a flat cushion

What’s even better, though, is a large, flat, dense cushion. This one can strap onto the bar, making it a hybrid of a flat cushion and a bar pad like the above. But you can also get one that is just a plain old cushion by itself. (Pro tip: Use these under your knees for ab rollouts, nordic curls, or other kneeling exercises.) 

What to use in a pinch

If you’re doing hip thrusts at the gym, didn’t bring your own padding, and can’t find a suitable barbell pad, look around. One of the best options is a thick yoga mat, folded in half or into thirds. Look for these in the stretching area, or anywhere people do exercises on the floor. 

The best kept secret in hip thrust padding: a sandbag

Finally, we come to my favorite. You probably won’t want to lug a heavy sandbag around in your gym bag, but if your gym has a tightly-packed, ideally rectangular-ish sandbag (like this one), it is a privilege and a luxury to use it for hip thrusts. 

The tight packing distributes the weight of the bar over a larger area, making it hurt a lot less. And you’re already lifting a heavy weight, so it’s not a problem for, say, 25 of those pounds to be in your lap rather than on the end of the bar. (Load the bar with this in mind; a 135 pound barbell with a 25 pound sandbag is a 160 pound lift.) And if you’ve got your own home gym, definitely go the sandbag route. You can do a ton of other fun exercises with a sandbag.

How to Download Videos From X

You can’t scroll through X without coming across an interesting video or two. Although the official X app doesn’t let you download videos, there are some ways to do it, whether you’re on Android, iOS, Mac, or PC.

Why can’t I download Twitter videos anymore?

X has been going through many changes over the years. As many people found out around December of 2023, the usual tools and websites that used to work no longer do (unless they’ve been updated). One of those changes seems to be a new format for MP4 videos, if Reddit is to be believed.

Are you allowed to download Twitter videos?

X won’t give you the option to download videos directly from their app or website, which is likely due to copyright issues. However, there is nothing stopping you from using tools outside of X to download any videos you like.

How to download Twitter videos on your iPhone

You can use Shortcuts on your iPhone to download any video you want from Twitter without needing to download any third-party apps. To start, open X and copy the link for the video you want to download. You can find this in the “Share” button or, if you’re in a browser, the share icon like the screenshot below.

Select the share button and copy the link.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

Then, go to Safari (not Chrome). Paste and go to the Twitter link. Click the options or “…” and you will see the “Save to Files” option. Select it.

Select "Save to File" on Safari.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

Once you save it to your files, you are given the option to name it. Finally, make sure to select “Save” at the top right corner.

Name it and select "Save."

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

When it’s done, you’ll find the downloaded video in the Files app on your iPhone.

How to download Twitter videos on Android

There is no Safari on Android, so you will need a third-party app. First, go to X and select the share option.

Select "Share" on Twitter.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

Then select “Copy link.”

Select "Copy link."

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

The Play Store has a useful app called TwiTake. Open the app, and it will automatically give you the option to download the video. Just click “Download” and the video will be on your phone. If you can’t find it, it’ll be in Settings> Storage> Videos.

Select "Download" on TwiTake.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

How to save Twitter videos on your PC or Mac

When you see a fun video on your computer, turn to Twitter Video Downloader. First, copy the link to any tweet that contains videos.

Copy the link from Twitter.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

Then, paste it on the Twitter Video Downloader site, and select the download resolution you want for your video. Click that download button.

Select the download option you want.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

A new tab should open with the video you selected. Right-click this video or select the three dots, and you’ll see an option to save it to your computer.

Select "Download video."

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

The video will be on your downloads by default or wherever you send your downloaded videos on your computer.

Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Monday, August 19, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for August 19, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is medium difficult; I got it in four. Beware, there are spoilers below for August 19, Wordle #1,157! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

They’re almost all common letters—four are from our mnemonic today. The fifth is also pretty common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

A unit of measure at the Olympics.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There is one repeated letter today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There is one vowel, used twice.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with M. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with R. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is METER.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, followed by BENDY, which includes letters found in possible answers. From here, METER was the best solution.

Wordle 1,157 4/6

🟨⬛⬛⬛🟨
🟨⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟩⬛⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was medium difficult. The hint was “tall and thin” and the answer contained two common letters, one pretty common letter, and two less common letters.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was LANKY.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Sunday, August 18, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for August 18, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is medium difficult; I got it in five. Beware, there are spoilers below for August 18, Wordle #1,156! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

There are only two common letters from our mnemonic today. One is pretty common, and two are less common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

Tall and thin.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There are no repeated letters today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There is one vowel and one “sometimes” vowel.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with L. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with Y. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is LANKY.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, followed by BLAND. I then guessed MANLY as a possible solution with more common letters, which left LANKY as the only answer.

Wordle 1,156 5/6

⬛🟩⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟨🟨🟨⬛
⬛🟩🟩🟨🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was medium difficult. The hint was “May bring thunder, lightning, and/or rain” and the answer contained four common letters and one pretty common letter.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was STORM.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Saturday, August 17, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for August 17, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is medium difficult; I got it in four. Beware, there are spoilers below for August 17, Wordle #1,155! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

They’re almost all common letters from our mnemonic today. Only one isn’t, and it’s also pretty common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

May bring thunder, lightning, and/or rain.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There are no repeated letters today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There is one vowel.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with S. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with M. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is STORM.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, which confirmed four of five letters. I guessed NYMPH to eliminate consonants that appeared in possible answers, which left only STORM as the solution.

Wordle 1,155 4/6

🟨⬛⬛🟨⬛
🟨🟨⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was medium difficult. The hint was “as a verb, to prepare for or support” and the answer contained three common letters and two pretty common letters.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was BRACE.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

How to Quit Using a Barbell Pad for Squats (and Why You Should)

At most gyms, there’s a cylindrical pad on the floor somewhere near the squat rack. (If it’s not there, check the Smith machine.) When I first started squatting, I needed that pad on the bar—or thought I did. How else would I protect my bony neck?

But the truth is, you don’t need that pad. And if you’re planning to lift more and more over the years (which you will, you beast, you), you’ll have to ditch it.

What is a bar pad, anyway?

The pad I’m talking about looks like the one below. I’m sharing this with you for educational purposes, not because I think you should go buy one for squats. (It’s not a bad idea at all to use one for hip thrusts, though, if you’re looking for something for that exercise.) The bar pad wraps around the center of the barbell, and usually has a velcro flap or a pair of straps to hold it on the bar.

Should you use a bar pad when doing squats?

Look, you can use a bar pad if you want. I’m not your mom. But I’d argue that you shouldn’t, or at least that if you use one your first day in the gym, you work on weaning yourself off of it as soon as you can.

The purpose of a bar cushion, in theory anyway, is to keep the barbell from pressing into the back of your neck. But if the bar is pressing in like that, you probably have the bar too far up your neck, and you’re not squeezing your shoulder blades together to make the “meat shelf” that holds the bar in place and protects your neck bones.

Why you’re better off without the pad

The one upside of the pad is that, on your first day squatting, it probably helped you get more comfortable. Great! But there are downsides, and you’ll notice them more as the weight gets heavier:

  • A cushion around the bar makes the bar unstable. When you have hundreds of pounds on your back, you don’t want any squish. (This goes for your feet, too; get proper shoes.)

  • It also holds the weight an inch off your back, which some folks find is enough to shift your center of gravity, and thus alter your form.

  • If you intend to compete, there are no barbell pads on the platform. Train like you compete.

The only time a pad does make sense is if you’re using light weight and the bar feels totally under control, and the pad helps you feel more confident about squatting at all. If you just squatted for the first time, maybe the pad helped you get used to the exercise. Great. Now let’s take off the training wheels.

Find the right place for the bar

The bar should not be resting on the bone at the base of your neck. It also should not be on your shoulder bones. If it’s hurting either of these areas, all you need is a little adjustment.

For high bar squats, the bar will rest on your trapezius muscles. These are the muscles on either side of the base of your neck. Place your hands as narrowly as you can on the bar (somewhere just outside shoulder width), and squeeze your shoulder blades together. That will make your traps into a sort of meat cushion for the bar, and it won’t be resting on any of your bones.

For low bar squats, the bar will rest below shoulder level, so it shouldn’t be pressing on any of those bones. (If you don’t know what low bar is, you’re probably not doing it.) Alan Thrall has a video showing good low bar positioning here.

Once you get the positioning right, you’ll probably find you don’t miss the pad at all. Save that pad for hip thrusts, where it makes a lot more sense.

Can you use a pad for front squats?

Nope, I wouldn’t recommend it here either. When you do front squats, you need the bar to sit on your shoulders, but in front of your neck. There isn’t much room there! A bar pad is going to take up space and make it impossible to get the bar in a good position. If you find front squats uncomfortable, read this guide and make sure your positioning is correct.

There’s one more thing to consider, though. Sometimes people will do front squats with a safety squat bar, which comes with a built-in pad. It’s not just a barbell with a pad, though; the ends of the bar are shaped at an angle, which changes the balance and positioning entirely. Some people do prefer doing front squats with this bar. But don’t confuse a safety squat bar with a straight bar pad.

20 of the Most Thrilling Crime Dramas Streaming on Netflix

We love crime, honestly, as long as it isn’t happening to us. Whether it’s a chilling drama based on real-life events, a clever mystery, or a tale of a heist gone wrong, watching criminals fail and the cops triumph, or vice versa, can be intensely satisfying. So grab some popcorn and your favorite handcuffs while you enjoy some of the best and twistiest crime drams streaming on Netflix.

Molly’s Game (2017)

Aaron Sorkin writes and directs—which is sometimes even a good thing—this true crime bio-drama based on the memoir of “Poker Princess” Molly Bloom. A one-time Olympic-class skier, Bloom ran one of the highest-stakes poker games in the world for ten years before running afoul of the Italian mafia, Russian mob, and then the FBI. It’s a wild rollercoaster ride of a story, with an impressive cast lead by Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner, and Michael Cera.


The Clovehitch Killer (2018)

A small and quiet Kentucky is haunted by memories of a string of murders from a decade prior, committed by an unknown murderer known only as the Clovehitch Killer. 16-year-old Tyler Burnside (Charlie Plummer) thinks he’s got a pretty normal family and an upstanding dad, at least until some bizarre pictures turn up in dad’s truck that leads Tyler to believe that the missing killer might be very close to home. The movie is all the more chilling for being based on the story of the real-life BTK killer.


The Killer (2023)

Michael Fassbender plays the title’s hitman, a ruthless but fastidious hired killer suffering from the fallout of the first significant mistake of his career—accidentally shooting the wrong person. (Whoops!) His carefully managed life quickly begins crumbling and he finds himself very much on the other side of things: he’s now the one people are trying to kill. Very unlike his previous Netflix original, Mank, this is about as close as director David Fincher gets to a pure action thrill ride.


The Irishman (2019)

In 2019, Martin Scorsese took his latest crime drama to Netflix, earning 10 Academy Award nominations in the process. The premise here, involving real-life truck driver-turned-hitman Frank Sheeran (Robert DeNiro), hits some of the same beats as Scorsese’s earlier mob dramas, but this one feels more contemplative than those other movies, with the criminals feeling very much like stand-ins for an American society that’s become increasingly sociopathic in its willingness to tolerate crime and corruption.


The Pale Blue Eye (2022)

If you like your mysteries broody and also historical, you’ll enjoy this one, even if it plays fast and loose with history. Christian Bale plays a retired and deeply troubled detective teaming up with a young West Point cadet you might have heard of: his name’s Edgar Allen Poe, and he’s played here by Harry Melling, who’s great. A student on campus has turned up dead, and it’s unclear whether the occult imagery and symbolism surrounding the case are indications that dark forces are at play—or if they’re meant to throw our mismatched investigators off the trail. Impressively twisty.


Baby Driver (2017)

Setting aside, for a moment, the problematic leads (looking at you, Ansel Elgort and Kevin Spacey), Edgar Wright’s car-centric 2017 heist film is undeniably thrilling. Elgort plays the titular “Baby,” an expert getaway driver who can do anything behind the wheel provided his earbuds are supplying him with the right tunes. Aside from its fun and engaging plot, which follows Baby as he attempts to get out of the driving game and settle down with the woman he loves (Lily James), the film features a standout six-minute opening car chase featuring frankly unreal stunt driving—except it was all shot with real cars in real locations.


Luther: The Fallen Sun (2023)

Continuing, and possibly concluding, the British crime series starring Idris Elba, Fallen Sun benefits from a knowledge of what came before for the character, but doesn’t require it. Now disgraced and imprisoned, former Detective Chief Inspector John Luther finds himself taunted by a serial killer (Andy Serkis) who, he’s pretty sure, can only be stopped if Luther busts out of jail and hunts him down. Convenient, really, in that we don’t have to watch our guy sit around a jail cell for two hours. Elba’s been doing the morally gray detective thing better than anyone, maybe ever, as we’re reminded in Fallen Sun.


El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie (2019)

Picking up the story of Breaking Bad‘s Jesse Pinkman with new-western style, this one’s not really a standalone, so you’ll want to hold off if you haven’t watched the series that preceded it. Picking up in the immediate aftermath of the series’ conclusion, Jesse (a rather brilliant Aaron Paul) is on the run from the authorities. The movie follows him as he tries to make it to safety in Alaska in defiance of the cops, as well as some new enemies made along the way. Essential viewing if you’re a Breaking Bad fan.


The Good Nurse (2022)

Very much not related to the Good Doctor TV series (definitely don’t get the two mixed up), The Good Nurse stars Jessica Chastain as the real-life Amy Loughren, a woman in need of a heart transplant who desperately needs to keep her hospital job for the insurance. No matter: she makes friends with another nurse on the night shift, Charlie Cullen (Eddie Redmayne) and it seems like everything will be OK. Until a patient’s death leads to a coverup, and she’s forced to question whether or not her coworker is the stand-up guy he appears to be (hint: he’s really, really not).


Rust Creek (2018)

College senior Sawyer Scott (Hermione Corfield) doesn’t want to tell anyone that she’s headed off to DC for a job interview, fearing embarrassment if she doesn’t get it. Still, she probably should’ve let someone know where she’d be. Lost in the Appalachians, she stumbles upon a couple of brothers burying a body—and the brothers don’t intend to let her get very far. The survival drama is full of creepy backwoods atmosphere.


The Guilty (2021)

Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) directs a screenplay from True Detective‘s Nic Pizzolatto, a remake of a 2018 Danish film (which is a bit better, if we’re being honest, but that’s to be expected). Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Joe Baylor, an LAPD officer who’d been bumped down to 911 dispatcher for initially unspecified errors in judgment. He gets a call from a panicked woman that leads him to make some dramatic decisions, not all of them good. An exercise in pure suspense, the contained movie very much rests on Gyllenhaal’s shoulders, though a few famous names show up via voiceover.


City Hunter (2024)

A crime drama doesn’t have to be grim and gritty. This manga adaptation is a candy-colored, high-action, and kinda goofy take starring Ryohei Suzuki as lead detective Ryo Saeba and Misato Morita as the daughter of his murdered partner, with whom he teams up to avenge that death and to find a missing teenage runaway with deadly superpowers.


The Little Things (2021)

Set way way long ago (in the 1990s), Little Things stars Denzel Washington and Rami Malek as detectives investigating a string of murders in Los Angeles. As they start to suspect a weird loner (Jared Leto), the pair find that the case has ties to Washington’s character’s past. It’s a familiar piece of genre fare in many ways, but the moody atmosphere and performances from the three leads elevate the material significantly.


Mea Culpa (2024)

Tyler Perry’s very steamy legal thriller stars Kelly Rowland as Mea (get it?) a defense attorney who takes the case of an artist (Trevante Rhodes) accused of killing his girlfriend. Her husband Kal’s been cheating on her, and her brother-in-law is the prosecutor, and there seems to be some sort of larger political scheme at play. It’s all a bit of silly, sexy fun in an erotic thriller vein.


A Simple Favor (2018)

The darkly comedic tone makes this one bit lighter, on the surface, but ultimately it’s all the more twisted for it. Things kick off when mommy blogger Stephanie (Anna Kendrick) makes friends with, and unwisely confides in, Emily (Blake Lively), a PR director and mother of her son’s schoolmate. Then Emily disappears, Stephanie (with tremendously poor judgement) sleeps with Emily’s husband (Henry Golding), and the lurid secrets that Stephanie spilled start to come to light under shocking circumstances. It’s all lot of fun with a plethora of genuinely wild twists.


I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore (2017)

When nursing assistant Ruth (Melanie Lynskey) comes home to find that she’s been burglarized, she sets out with her neighbor Tony (Elijah Wood) to get her stuff back, and get revenge. Sounds like the setup for a badass action movie, except that the two of them are about as competent as you or I might be in turning the tables on criminals. As a vigilante farce, it nearly reaches Coen brothers levels of absurdity, but it’s not all goofiness, alternately challenging and confirming our worst instincts about our fellow humans.


Missing (2023)

Screenlife, as a sub-genre, is a bit like found footage, except that all the action is shown from the point of view of a computer or mobile device. Which is kinda how we experience the world now anyway, so it doesn’t feel all that artificial. In this rather exceptional example of the form, Storm Reid plays June Allen, the daughter of single mother Grace (Nia Long). June is thrilled that her overprotective mom is heading off on vacation with her new boyfriend—until she doesn’t come back. June sets out to investigate Grace’s disappearance from afar, getting some help from gig worker Javier (Joaquim de Almeida). The suspense ratchets higher and higher with every click into darker corners of the internet.


Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile (2019)

The title here pretty much says it all: Zac Efron stars as serial killer Ted Bundy, following him from his law student days in Seattle of the late 1960s to (spoiler?) his 1989 execution. Efron is great, as is Lily Collins as Liz Kendall, the girlfriend who maintained Bundy’s innocence until that became impossible. The movie is directed by true crime documentarian Joe Berlinger, who directed the docuseries Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes, also from 2019 and also on Netflix. In case you just can’t get enough Ted Bundy.


Hit Man (2024)

Glen Powell (who cowrote the film alongside director Richard Linklater) stars as Gary Johnson, a withdrawn New Orleans professor who’s roped into a side gig at which he’s surprisingly good: He impersonates hired assassins for the police. People looking to hire a killer come to Gary, believing that he’s a hit man, only to find that they’ve been entrapped. Things get complicated when he’s approached by Madison (Adria Arjona) to bump off her abusive husband, and he’s not so sure that they guy doesn’t need killin’.


Lost Girls (2020)

Based on the real-life Gilgo Beach serial killings, Lost Girls stars Amy Ryan as Mari Gilbert, who pressured Long Island police to dig deeper following what was initially seen as the accidental death of her daughter. The case remains unsolved, as we’re informed at the movie’s outset, but the focus here is on Gilbert herself, and on the reluctance on the part of the police to dig deeper, even when bodies begin to accumulate, on behalf of women who were sex workers. It’s an impressive dramatic feature debut for documentary filmmaker Liz Garbus.

Anyone With a Google Account Can Try Google’s Latest AI Image Generator Right Now

Google’s latest AI image generation model, Imagen 3, is now publicly available in the United States, and all you need to try it out is a free Google account. As spotted by VentureBeat, the company quietly opened up its model this week, publishing its research in a paper on Tuesday. It comes two months after the company first announced the new model at Google I/O back in May.

In a post on Hugging Face, a machine learning platform, Google researchers said, “We introduce Imagen 3, a latent diffusion model that generates high quality images from text prompts. We describe our quality and responsibility evaluations. Imagen 3 is preferred over other state-of-the-art (SOTA) models at the time of evaluation. In addition, we discuss issues around safety and representation, as well as methods we used to minimize the potential harm of our models.”

From some initial amateurish tests on my end, the model seems pretty solid. When asking for photorealistic images, the results are relatively high quality, with some decent stabs at realism that could fool people on first glance. (I was particularly impressed with the quality of images when I prompted the model to create a 35mm film look.) Imagen 3 also highlights particular parts of the prompt that affected the output, so you can adjust those if you don’t like the way the image came out.

prompt for a 35mm look for a soccer game

Credit: Jake Peterson/Google

However, Imagen 3’s offerings still display the telltale signs of AI-generated images. In some photos, hands have too many fingers, faces are distorted, and text doesn’t make sense. (Although the model was able to reproduce the “Coca-Cola” and “Canon” logos with trademark-infringing accuracy.)

ai image of a coke bottle

Credit: Jake Peterson/Google

Google isn’t the only tech company to release a new image model this week. X recently pushed a new beta for Grok, the company’s AI chatbot, and with it, an image generator built with seemingly very few restrictions. Users (specifically, Lifehacker’s Michelle Ehrhardt) have used Grok to generate everything from Taylor Swift in a MAGA hat to Pikachu holding an AK-47.

Imagen 3, on the other hand, displays obvious guardrails. When I attempt to prompt Google’s image generator with anything controversial, it stops itself and politely directs me to Imagen 3’s FAQ to understand why my prompt wasn’t appropriate. It also refuses to generate copyrighted content, but can be tricked into producing it with the right prompts. As noted above, I was able to generate logos, and was even able to get it to spit out trademarked characters like Mario and Pikachu, even if I couldn’t get them to engage in a gunfight.

AI generated Pikachu

Credit: Jake Peterson/Google

How to try Imagen 3

Google’s new AI image generator is free to try for any U.S. user with a Google Account. To do so, head to ImageFX in Google’s AI Test Kitchen. Sign in with your Google Account, then get prompting.