Whom one might not marry no matter what! / MON 9-19-22 / Implementable with expertise and expert ease / Italian vino region / About one-third of Hispaniola area-wise / Cool get together with cones and scoops

Monday, September 19, 2022

Constructor: Leslie Young and Andrea Carla Michaels

Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (***for a Monday***)


THEME: DOWN TO A SCIENCE (14D: Implementable with expertise and expert ease ... or how the starred clues' answers can be taken?) — all theme answers are "Downs" and they end in a "science" (i.e. a word that can precede "science"):

Theme answers:
  • ANNUAL PHYSICAL (4D: *Routine medical checkup)
  • ICE CREAM SOCIAL (13D: *"Cool" get-together with cones and scoops)
  • LAST MAN ON EARTH (7D: *Whom one might not marry no matter what!)
Word of the Day: DÍA de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) (19A) —
The Day of the Dead (SpanishDía de Muertos or Día de los Muertos) is a holiday traditionally celebrated on November 1 and 2, though other days, such as October 31 or November 6, may be included depending on the locality. It largely originated in Mexico, where it is mostly observed, but also in other places, especially by people of Mexican heritage elsewhere. Although associated with the Western Christian Allhallowtide observances of All Hallow's EveAll Saints' Day and All Souls' Dayit has a much less solemn tone and is portrayed as a holiday of joyful celebration rather than mourning. The multi-day holiday involves family and friends gathering to pay respects and to remember friends and family members who have died. These celebrations can take a humorous tone, as celebrants remember funny events and anecdotes about the departed. (wikipedia)
• • •

OK so this was delightful. It's just ... right on the Money for a Monday (I literally just typed "right on the Monday," so on the money for a Monday is this puzzle!). Here's what I ask of a Monday: 1. a simple cute theme that just Works. Original, bouncy answers are a plus, but honestly, the theme just has to be clever and not strained. Elegant simplicity is the key! And 2. smooth fill. Nothing fancy. Just let me travel this road pothole-free. And today checked both those boxes, strongly. Big red checkmark, two times. Let's take the theme. First of all, it's all Downs, so ... fun. Weird. Mildly disorienting. I'm into it. Do your weird little thing, Monday! Second, the themers are all 14s, what!? 14s are odd cumbersome things and so end up being the most grossly neglected and underrated of all the 3-to-15-letter answers. And yet today—four of 'em! So that's two ways we're in unusual territory, and we haven't even gotten to the actual content of the theme yet! As for that ... well, I worked the puzzle west to east, left to right, like a Normal, and despite not quite understanding what the revealer clue was even saying, I figured out what the answer was and damned if it is not a. a real phrase that b. works perfectly for its themers. All answers are in fact Down, and do in fact lead "to a (type of) science." Ding ding. Success. As for the fill, not a peep out of me as I was solving. All the short fill is totally acceptable, and we even get some fairly saucy longer stuff in CASH BONUS (16A: Profit-sharing reward, perhaps) and (esp.) CON ARTIST (57A: Flimflammer). The puzzle may say ERRATIC MESS-UPS, but I did not see anything erratic or messed up about this. It hums. This should be the average Monday. This is the bar. Good work, everyone.

["Good heavens, Miss Sakamoto*, you're beautiful!"]
[*Literally until just this second and for ~40 years thought this was "Miss Sacramento"]

The only issue I had with the puzzle was literally comprehending the clues on two of the themers, namely the aforementioned clue on the revealer, DOWN TO A SCIENCE (14D: Implementable with expertise and expert ease ...) and then also the clue on LAST MAN ON EARTH (7D: *Whom one might not marry no matter what!). On a Monday, I'm not sitting down and spending my time with a clue like it's a good book—I'm scanning and moving, scanning and moving. And these two just made my brain go "Nope! just figure it out from crosses!" And I did. And only later did I realize the perfection of the LAST MAN ON EARTH clue. I'm a little less fond of the revealer clue, as it's cutesy in a semi-cloying way, but whatever, man, as I said, this puzzle is otherwise pretty flawless, so it's all good. What else is there to say? It was easy, as a Monday usually is. I would like to praise the constructors for taking the time to polish The Hell out of this grid. You have no idea what it takes just to make an all-over clean and wince-free grid. It's work. It isn't showy work, but it's work nonetheless. Please respect the work. Thank you. See you tomorrow. 

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

71 comments:

jae 12:19 AM  

Easy. Yes, delightful and very smooth. As a SOCIAL scientist, I liked this a bunch.

@bocamp - Croce’s Freestyle #744 was more than a tad easier than last week’s Croce, or around 2X last Saturday’s NYT. Knowing the answer to the Spice Girls clue helped. Good Luck!

okanaganer 12:43 AM  

To make Monday more challenging, I always solve by looking at only the down clues. There are always a few downs that I just can't get, but since the long acrosses are almost always themers I have a good shot at getting them (sans clue), which helps a lot.

But not tonight! The themers are downs, so good luck guessing any of the acrosses. And there were only 2 sorta long ones -- CASH BONUS and CON ARTIST -- but somehow I got them both even with a few missing letters. It was a struggle, but I finished the puzzle and... no happy pencil. Checked and re-checked; all down answers make perfect sense. So I gave up and clicked Check All, to find: BEST MAN ON EARTH is not correct!, but jeez it sounded fine to me. And ABA and IRES were perfectly reasonable answers (sans clue). Oh, well, I still really enjoy doing Mondays this way. I don't keep track of streaks or anything like that.

Oh yeah, nice theme; they had to go "down" cuz of the revealer. Could've used one more themer, say OFFICE COMPUTER or something.

[Spelling Bee: Sun 0, my last word was a 7er which has been my last word at least 5 times, I swear. Good run with QB 9 of last 10 days, Fri Sep 9 to Sun Sept 18: 0, 0, 0, 0, -2, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0.]

egsforbreakfast 12:48 AM  

Can’t wait for the Gary Jungert uniclue for 60A EVIL BATH SCENT. I know where I’d head with that, but I’ll wait to see what the Denver Dynamo comes up with.

Mini tennis theme at 51D & 52D with ACES and LOVE.

With all of the sedition rockin’ the joint these days, the Alien and Sedition Acts might remind us that not all aliens are ETS.

Not sure why Rex called this easy. Just look at 51A Girl in Wonderland. I needed all the crosses before I could determine whether it was Maeve, Linda, Maria, Megan or ALICE. Actually, I agree with OFL that it was a sweet little Monday. Thanks, ACME and Leslie Young.

Anonymous 1:10 AM  

Enjoyable, nice-flowing easy fill (some very common but good for Monday), and the themers were fresh. Liked it!

Birchbark 1:33 AM  

EONS away from home, and tomorrow Eugene. Greetings from crossword-favorite Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

Yesterday in two cars, eleven hours from the Minnesota-Wisconsin border to Miles City, Montana (where I improvised off-menu, and they accommodated: buffalo burger with blue cheese and apricot jam, with a side of truffle fries). Today, nine hours. Tomorrow (Monday, that is), seven and done.

SEE other-world landscapes/movie scenery, badlands, canyons, high plains grasslands, buttes, paisley cliffs, rollercoaster highways and mountain passes: Western North Dakota, Eastern Montana, all of the long I-90 West driving across Montana then angling northwest, and the last few hours this afternoon of Rocky Mountain wows and life-preserving focus at the wheel. I was talking about Mahler's Eighth for a while, just processing the changes. Now in the Idaho panhandle far enough down the western slope, in a business park hotel just north of a long and very scenic lake.

Tuesday morning we move my daughter into her studio apartment in Eugene, Oregon, relax, part company until Thanksgiving, and then up to Portland for the night. Wednesday morning return the one-way-rented Nissan Altima at the airport and take a one-way flight home: DOWN TO A SCIENCE.

Yes, a good puzzle, beginning with ATLAS.

chefwen 2:14 AM  

Not your typical slam dunk Monday, there was some thought involved, which was welcomed. Solved it while watching my Packers redeem themselves after last week’s embarrassing loss to the Vikings, so I was a wee bit distracted, but managed to finish in good form without any MESS UPS.

Thank you Andrea and Leslie.

Joe Dipinto 2:18 AM  

A thoroughly delightful puzzle. They rarely make 'em like this anymore.

His mind is up his sleeve
And his talk is make believe

Andrea Carla Michaels 2:33 AM  

The new Mrs Young, whose original idea this was, is off on her honeymoon, but I’m sure would love your remarks…and as soon as I fully regain consciousness, I’ll say “wow, thank you!” ;)

Loren Muse Smith 2:41 AM  

Acme! Always a pleasure to see your name! You definitely have Monday constructions DOWN TO A SCIENCE. Both of you – nice work. Lovely execution and lively bonuses, to wit: that tennis corner with ACES/LOVE/SET, plus the HARE/MESSUPS and APPLE/PHONE, crosses. Hah

It’s fun when you have the themers all in place but just a few of the reveal crosses. And then you tease out the reveal without looking at the clue. Big smile this morning. Cool to do a mental inventory of stuff I have down to a science. I guess my big one is just entering my classroom every morning. Lamps on, coffee started, music playlist on Bluetooth speaker, led off with The Devil Went Down to Georgia really loud ‘cause Mr. Burch (custodian who lets me in) loves that one. . . bam, bam, bam. Then I get to open the week’s coverage schedule and see whose class I’m losing my planning to. Instant buzz kill. We’re hemorrhaging staff, and obviously we’re not alone. It’s staggering how little we pay our teachers considering how much we ask of them. Us. Me. I hate the whiny little child I’ve become.

Speaking of whiny, I have to say again that I once was tasked with reading some lit crit by TONI Morrison. There was this one paragraph that was so abstruse and incomprehensible that I had someone far smarter and more erudite give it a go. He sat with it for several minutes. Read it. Reread it. And then simply said, I have no idea. She must have been high when she wrote this.

Distractedly went with “cob” before TOM. Chuckleheadery. ( l looked into “chucklehead” – seems a “chuck” used to mean a “block” of wood, so a chuck(le)head is a blockhead. The chuckle part is completely unrelated to laughing. Don’t hold me to this. Etymology is not my thang.

I liked the rhyming clue for pests: brats and gnats. I would add “rats” to the list.

I also liked LIAR crossing ANNUAL PHYSICAL. Hey, commentariat doctors - do y’all have a formula to do a quick mental recalculation of a patient’s reported amount of exercise and drinking? So you can understand the actual ugly reality? Asking for a friend.

“Forever and a day, say” – my fifth block.

“Tech support seeker, typically” – uh, that would be a Luddite, and that would be me.

“Where outdoor Christmas lights may be hung” – well, in a Hallmark movie, pretty much on every single tree, fence, banister, shrub, column, door frame, and hapless dog in the wrong place at the wrong time. The decorating sequences choreographed to Deck the Halls, with all the laughing and good cheer, where they’re knocking it out in under an hour, having invited the near-stranger who hates Christmas to help – Are. You. Kidding. Me? The resulting display would probably take a team of 30 experts a couple of weeks to finish. But still I watch and wish fervently to live inside a Hallmark movie. I want off my Géricault raft, thankyouverymuch.

Alrighty then. Happy Monday, everyone.

okanaganer 3:03 AM  

@Loren said "Tech support seeker, typically – uh, that would be a Luddite". Please don't ask why I already knew this, but Huddie Leadbetter from yesterday anagrams to HE BERATED LUDDITE. Bye now.

Conrad 5:17 AM  


Did anyone else have slip UPS before MESS UPS? Nobody? Nobody at all? Just me? Ah well!

Congrats, ACME and Mrs. Young on a terrific puzzle, and double congrats to Mrs. Young on her nuptials!

Anonymous 5:54 AM  

VI

Anonymous 6:28 AM  

Three seconds above Monday PB. Smooth, easy, clever, clean. Nice one!

Anonymous 6:48 AM  

The Platonic ideal of Monday puzzles, IMHO. Clever, smooth, and easy in a way I welcomed after Wordle kicked my butt this morning.
@Birchbark: Driving westward across eastern Montana, seeing the Rockies rise into magnificent view — you’re right, it’s a lot like Mahler’s Eighth.

Lewis 6:52 AM  

My five favorite clues from last week
(in order of appearance):

1. Bakery product that can't be purchased (5)
2. Defend borders? (4)
3. Exemplar of stick-to-itiveness (5)(4)
4. The land down under? (8)
5. Question in a lot of cars? (5)(3)(I)(4)


AROMA
DEES
SUPER GLUE
ATLANTIS
WHERE DID I PARK

Phillyrad1999 7:02 AM  

Always love it when the puzzle matches the day. Brava! Thank you Leslie and Carla.Wrestled with the revealers bit but the crosses brought it home and loved the whole idea of it.

SouthsideJohnny 7:17 AM  

Agree with OFL - just what you want on a Monday and very well done. OVID on top of HAITI were the only speed bumps for me. I hadn’t ever heard the island referred to as “ Hispaniola” so I learned something as well. Kudos to the constructors.

Gary Jugert 7:31 AM  

Yesterday, when 🦖 rated the puzzle "Easy (very, very)," I assumed we'd hear a cacophony of comments along the lines of "yeah, way too easy because society is filled with boobs and dolts," but refreshingly, and predictably mainly our glittering Anonym-oti went for the bait, while most said, "yeah, it was easy, and kinda fun." Rating a puzzle as "easy, very, very" when you measure your solving experience in decades seems like maybe you aren't the best one to be making the call. Imagine ESPN interviewing Tiger after one of his many first dates at a putt-putt course. "It was easy, very, very." Or LeBron after playing in a pick-up game at his old high school. "It was easy, very, very." Or, Serena after a ping-pong match with her next door neighbor. "It was easy, very, very."

I wish I could remember which one of you says on a regular basis, "Hey, clues are not synonyms." You're desperately needed again. Clues are clues and are way more fun when they're a bit off. I appreciate people picking nits for the fun of picking nits, but if you got the correct answer even though the clue is off, then you played a puzzle and won. See, it's called fun.

I am so in love with the idea many looked up "wowee" yesterday to see if it was in the dictionary. The sense of indignation over onomatopoeia's stubborn resistance to be standardized. From my friend at Wiki: "In American English, the spelling 'meow' was first used in 1842. Before that, the word could be spelled 'miaow,' 'miau,' or 'meaw.'" Let us hope the WOW-synod meets soon to straighten this ee-ry mess.

My name is OVID and you
know I wrote an OPUS
It's a DOPE ole EPIC with a
lotta hocus pocus
I woulda wrote about an evil
APPLE in a j'ardin'
but a pack of filthy LIARS say
it's an EVIL OMEN
So I rang up my pal ATLAS
(you remember that CON ARTIST?)
according to ALICE he was the
strongest and the smartest
He comes off as a LONER
an ERRATIC MESS UP, sure,
and he wears a SCENT of SPAM
just so beefy and, and, and ... purr
Luckily we MESHED and
exchanged some baudy SEXTS
then we met under the heavens
in his ANNEX with the weather VANES
"Let's fly a KITE out in the rain
where you will learn about my BIAS
I'd love to help you pull the wool
like every author spreading bull,
but my sweet dear you see it's awful
cuz I've got my hands full."

Uniclues:

1 Every single puzzle and every single commenter every single day according to our glittering Anonym-oti.
2 Rudy Giuliani's house.
3 Eau de Diabolical Rubber Duck.
4 That which brings bunny buddies together.
5 Spot a fashionista from a bygone era.

1 EPIC MESS UPS (~)
2 CON ARTIST ANNEX
3 EVIL BATH SCENT
4 THEIR HARE LOVE
5 SEE TIES USER

Gary Jugert 7:40 AM  

@egsforbreakfast 12:48 AM
OK, I showed you mine, now show me yours. 😉

Gary Jugert 7:44 AM  

@Birchbark 1:33 AM
Love this travelogue. Thank you.

bocamp 7:50 AM  

Thx, Leslie & ACME for a nice, smooth Mon. puz; it was ACES! :)

Easy-med.

Definitely had this one DOWN TO A SCIENCE. Nothing ERRATIC or 'unpredictable' here.

An ODE to 'Beloved': a TONI Morrison 'magnum' OPUS.

Liked the clues for LIAR & EDIT.

LOVEd the 'hike' along the SCENTed PATH this morning. 🌹

My 🙏's go out to HAITI.

Thx @jae; on it! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

Son Volt 7:52 AM  

The theme is one of elegant simplicity - the overall fill is clean and slick. As the big guy says - it’s not splashy but otherwise an ideal Monday.

The grid is neat - allowing the vertical themers, some longish across entries and limited 3s. We even get a cool X cross early week.

Crossword darling Arlo’s daughter doing In LIEU of Flowers

Highly enjoyable Monday solve.

GAC 7:53 AM  

Word of the Day: DÍA de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) (19A) In my puzzle I found this at 19D.

B. Gordy 7:56 AM  

James Taylor?

Taylor did a lovely version of "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By YOU)," but it was a cover.

Marvin Gaye recorded the original in 1964. Te song was also the title track of his album released in 1965.

Lewis 8:10 AM  

I deliberately filled in as little as I could of the reveal so I could guess what it was after putting in the three theme answers. I figured that DOWN was part of it, being that the theme answers were downs, but was completely stymied. What an early-week gift, to have the brain so actively engaged, to have its work ethic satisfied.

And there was spark. ICE CREAM SOCIAL, LAST MAN ON EARTH, not to mention rare Monday wordplay clues (for LIAR, EDIT, and HAIR)!

And bonuses. A backward MAPS to go with ATLAS. An APPLE on the side and a SET down. The corners-touching HAIR CARE. The rhyming quartet of HAIR / CARE / THEIR / HARE.

And all very well put together. A top tier Monday, IMO. Thank you so much, Leslie and Acme!

OffTheGrid 8:16 AM  

14th row. EVIL BATH SCENT. Made me think of those westerns where a cowboy is in a copper tub after three months of herding cattle. (the mind wanders where the mind wanders).


HERE'S KRAMER'S OPINION

Nancy 8:38 AM  

If only all Mondays could be like this! Smooth and delightful -- and over much too soon, sort of like ICE CREAM, if not like an ANNUAL PHYSICAL.

The most delightful answer of all? LAST MAN ON EARTH, as clued. How many times have we gals thought (and maybe even said out loud) "I wouldn't marry you if you were the LAST MAN ON EARTH"?

Very colorful and a lot of fun. Most likely constructed with two tongues firmly in two cheeks.

pabloinnh 8:46 AM  

The LASTMANONEARTH may have taken some time for OFL, but it was automatic for me, as at some point in my younger days I used to hear "I wouldn't marry you if you were...". Not addressed to me personally, and the start of numerous jokes, and I wish I could remember one.

I delayed the last long down trying to uncover a theme and then took a while to just fill in the answer, as I was working from the bottom up and ECNEI was not leading me to much, so a nice aha! there.

ANNUALPHYSICAL was a gimme, and I am happy to have passed the age when a prostate exam is no longer de rigeur.

Great Monday. I'm not sure if it belongs in the "Cute Mondecito" category or the "Awesome Mondazo" ranking, but I'll go with the latter. Loved Your Amazing Crossword Mashup, LY and ACM, and thanks for all the fun.

Nancy 8:47 AM  

Reading of @Birchbark's l-o-o-o-o-ng drive through some of America's most glorious scenery over the last three days, I was torn between envy of the awesome beauty he was experiencing and one of the most powerful "Mommy, Mommy, are we there yet?" sensations (vicarious, of course) that I think I have ever had.

Airymom 8:57 AM  

Yes, James Taylor sang the song, but so did Marvin Gaye, Junior Walker and the All Stars, and many others. Credit where credit is due---Holland-Dozier-Holland wrote "How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You." One of the best songwriting teams in history.

Anonymous 9:04 AM  

A very nice Monday. Smooth and flows well, but with a theme that required a few of the "little grey cells," as Hercule Poirot would say. Bravo to our constructors!

Tom T 9:16 AM  

The good news--I made the puzzle today: TOM (9A, Male turkey)

The bad news--I blanked on the clue for 9A: Male turkey.

Had to get TONI Morrison before my senile brain remembered my own name.

Talk about a male turkey!

Delightful puzzle, tickled this Tom's feathers!

Anonymous 9:24 AM  

'How Sweet It Is' was written by Holland-Dozier-Holland' and first performed by Marvin Gaye. Not OK in 2022 to be crediting white people with things appropriated from African-Americans! Terrible clue.

JD 9:39 AM  

Ahh @Birchbark, You brought the poetry, the scenery and the music today. Thank you, as always.

Fun little puzzle hiding the Last Man On Earth. Erratic Tom, you Dope, you Liar, you Con Artist with your Mess Ups, use your IRAs, your Cash Bonus, pay your Debt. Think of what's At Stake.

RooMonster 9:44 AM  

Hey All !
Nice fill, considering a lot of Across go through two or three Themers. Neat theme. Great MonPuz from our long lost (well, not that long) ACME. And a Congrats to Leslie on her nuptials.

Open corners, as Rex mentioned, awesome handling of the four 14's. Especially the two middle ones only one column apart.

Go Las Vegas ACES! WNBA Champs! First place all year. Gonna be good for many years to come. The Golden Knights are good, the crazy Raiders need to step up! 😁 Now the city is considering MLB and NBA. Good stuff.

No F's (c'mon ladies, that's just MEAN. 😜)
RooMonster
DarrinV

TTrimble 9:47 AM  

Agreed; this went down smooth and easy. For me, one of the rare times I've experienced this whoosh-whooshing Rex is always talking about. I'm more an
"examine crosses before whooshing" kind of guy, which is to say: I don't whoosh. But today I let 'er rip. Gotta admit, it was fun.

I did stumble once or twice: I never remember when to put in ASTI or ASTe. And I put in DIo before DIA, dur. And I almost messed up on MESSUPS, thinking it was going to be mis- something.

CON ARTIST reminds me of a post from yesterday, to the effect that if the NYT allows O'ROURKE and PSAKI, then it also ought to allow Trump as an answer. Sure, there's a point somewhere in there. I guess. Actually, my guess is that it comes down to economics. The NYTXW is their biggest CASH cow, if memory serves. It's not in their economic interest to turn off a whole bunch (what's the word? SCAD?) of subscribers with mention of TFG.

Tom P 9:55 AM  

Totally agree with Rex on this one. It was an easy, breezy and yet stimulating way to start the week.

Beezer 10:10 AM  

I totally agree with OFL and the non-silent majority that THIS was an AWESOME Monday puzzle! The downside (of course) is that the fun was over much to soon, but them’s the breaks for a very well-done Monday puzzle!

@LMS…I’d like to think “great minds think alike” but my mind isn’t that great BUT I also thought cob before TOM. From what I hear about swans (mean!) I think I’d rather stumble upon a TOM in a dark alley rather than a cob, though.

@Gary Jugert, now you are forcing me to look at yesterday’s comments to look for both synonym nit-picking and (SPOLER!!! beware…) WOWEE dictionary runs! Your answer to the synonym saying…hmmm…could be attributed at @Joaqin OR @Zed. As for the latter…last I checked blog yesterday two people made comments (I was one) that said I “think of it” spelled with an “i “ BUT I am very open to alternate spellings…especially of “nonsense” words. Well, “nonsense” may not be exactly right but I don’t know how to spell (maybe autocorrect does) onomatopoeia (yay, it does!)

@Nancy, you cracked me up with your inner side- thoughts on @Okanaganer’s travels! I mean, you can take in just SO much splendiferous scenery in one day…right? When are we gonna stop at a restaurant? I’m hungry!

And @okanaganer (with apologies to @Gary J) yes. I GET it now with your reference to a certain Nunavut language yesterday. It would be KIND of like saying a Slovak, Serb, or Pole speaks “slavic.”

Thank you ACME and Leslie for your wonderful puzzle!

Diego 10:16 AM  

pabloinnh @8:46 — TMI (but, agree, about that part of the physical)

Carola 10:17 AM  

What a delight! With the double treat of LAST MAN ON EARTH and ICE CREAM SOCIAL going in with the first letter or two, the puzzle won me over right away with its wit and, well, ICE CREAM (church benefit pie and ice cream socials being one of the glories of a Wisconsin summer). Like @Lewis, I had to wait for the reveal: DOWN TO A ??? had me hanging in suspense, as I fought interference from "done to a turn." I was also stuck on ANNUAL...what? So getting SCIENCE and PHYSICAL at the same moment was a second double treat. A top-notch Monday.

sixtyni yogini 10:27 AM  

Best Monday ever!

Remember thinking that the 🧩 constructor probably was a woman after LASTMANONEARTH answer and clue. 😂

Even a few tricky/clever clues.So yay!

🥰🦖🦖🦖🦖🦖🥰

egsforbreakfast 10:43 AM  

@Gary Jugert. My “EVIL BATH SCENT” would be: Result of flatulence bubbles surfacing.

Whatsername 10:46 AM  

Well I don’t often say wow on a Monday but wow! These two ladies could teach a class on Crossword construction and how to make one that’s easy enough for a beginner but still fun for an experienced solver. I have never tried but I’m sure it’s not an easy feat to accomplish. Thank you Andrea and Leslie and best wishes to the newly hitched Mr. and Mrs. Young!

I’m the female equivalent of that guy who doesn’t want to get married, the LAST woman ON EARTH. But I’ll be the first one in line for ICE CREAM, especially if it’s homemade as IT is at the Zion Methodist Church SOCIAL in Indian Grove, Missouri - population 50 on a busy day. The ladies serve the cakes made from scratch and the men haul the big heavy freezers of ice cream up from the church basement and scoop it onto your paper plate. Then you go find a bale of straw to sit on and visit with whoever else happens to be there, whether you know them or not. They had quite a record going for over 100 consecutive years until Covid sadly broke the string.

Optimist 10:57 AM  

I was sure this was going to be Jeff Chen's Puzzle of the Week. Since it's not, we must be in for a great week, yes?

Anonymous 11:02 AM  

OK, WHO are you, and what have you done with Rex???

Anonymous 11:37 AM  

@acme, thanks for stoping by! Now don’t be a stranger! Kudus to both of you for a great puzzle.

@birchbark, we did a very similar drive, Boston to Bend (and back) in August. I agree, truly great scenery.

@jberg

Joe Dipinto 11:45 AM  

@Anon 9:24 – Right, and how dare Otis Redding "appropriate" Try A Little Tenderness when it was written by British songwriters decades earlier and recorded by Bing Crosby among others. No doubt HDH were happy to get the royalty checks for James Taylor's cover of How Sweet.

It is a clunky a clue, though. "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)" is actually the title of the song – but IS and TO are separated by a left parenthesis. Presumably that's why the clue took pains to specify "song lyric"– otherwise it would have to look like "How Sweet It __ ( __ Be..."

mmorgan 11:58 AM  

I was enjoying this as a super easy and smooth Monday, and especially for how lovely and yummy it felt to solve, and I found myself imagining what it might be like for a newbie — or how I might have felt doing it 40 or more years ago, giving me a sense that, yes, I can do this! — and then I saw it was an ACME puzzle. Ahh, that makes sense. Thanks to you and your colleague for a superbly perfect Monday puzzle, Andrea!

Beezer 12:13 PM  

@egs 🤣🤣That is exactly what I THOUGHT you might say for EVILBATHSCENT!

Masked and Anonymous 1:28 PM  

HAR, HARE, HAIR! [irregular M&A-ese conjugation]

Nice SCIENCE-themers. I reckon LAPTOPCOMPUTER would also work, in this 14-long themer universe.

4 ?-marker clues in a MonPuz. Bring it, ACME & Co.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Girl in Wonderland} = ALICE. Figured we weren't required to know the Queen of Hearts's given name. honrable mentions to them mighty neighborly HAIR & HARE clues.

staff weeject pick: PRE. As in: PRE-SCIENCE.
Other faves: CONARTIST. ERRATIC. ATSTAKE. HAIR & HARE.

Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms. ACME & Ms. Young darlins. Nice job. Shoot, even @RP liked it.

Masked & Anonymo3Us


**gruntz**

Gary Jugert 1:32 PM  

@egsforbreakfast 10:43 AM
Ew... (but yeah, that was my first thought too). 🙃 I figured Rudy Giuliani should be the grossest joke today. So sad what happened to that dude's brain. Maybe his evil bath scent was toxic. I hope somebody is helping him.

pabloinnh 1:47 PM  

@jae, @bocamp- Fought my way through The 744, but I'm glad it was a rainy morning with not much else to do. 3 or 4X as long as a Sat. NYT, and at least 2X as hard as the last Saturday Stumper, but not impossible. Whew.

East Coaster 1:48 PM  

I once crashed and burned with a woman I was trying to date who told me that if she and I were the LAST two people ON EARTH, there was no doubt that she and I would be the last two people on earth.

CDilly52 1:50 PM  

Well what a Monday delight! Not only that, but I agree almost 100% with @Rex today. That’s one of those rare as hen’s teeth occurrences for sure. Not that I often get cranky and snarky when I disagree with OFL, but sometimes I do feel as if we didn’t work the same puzzle.

Today we are served up a delightful, creative and very clever offering as delightfully cool as an ICE CREAM SOCIAL. And its revealer is every bit as cool and unique. In fact the reveal is one of the places I disagree slightly with @Rex. That and the LAST MAN ON EARTH 14-er.

LAST MAN . . . first. I slid that one in immediately. Perhaps it’s an age/gender thing? Whatever it is, that’s a common phrase from my youth - mostly my undergraduate youth. As kids do, my women friends and I would often discussed our current amours. I admit I had some fairly shallow pals who fit the stereotypical mold of the girl who goes to college and is fairly vocal about hoping to get not a BA or a BS, but her “Mrs.” and in those cozy and often excessively snarky sessions almost every time, someone would be accuse if dating a someone who seemed completely ill suited to the young woman in question. In response, and in an attempt to defend a questionable choice, she would say something like, “Well, he can be fun for now but I wouldn’t marry him if he were the LAST MAN ON EARTH..” so there you have it folks, living proof that women do the very same dating post mortems as the men do, and we can be just as mean. But my past less than generous behavior did give me a quick answer today.

Now, the reveal. The “deepest” cleverness in today’s puzzle. At first, I also gave the reveal the side-eye. It’s a very easy Monday puzzle, and my knee-jerk was “trying way too hard!” And then I fave it the grey matter time it deserved as I reviewed the finished grid revisiting all the clever clues for common answers that made this polished offering shine like the jewel that it is. As I looked especially at ICE CREAM SOCIAL wondering if the “science” was supposed to be the delicate food science of ice cream, at first I thought “ok, but it’s a stretch.

And at that point (I’m pretty sure 15 minutes had not yet elapsed from my start), my coffee kicked in or something, and I actually went into “c’mon, C really think about this like you do the later week puzzles! Give it the respect it deserves!” Self shaming is something I revert to on occasion. Not pretty. But in this case, I reread the theme answers and the reveal with more of a Thursday mindset and . . . Aha! DOWN (to science)! I get it! PHYSICAL, SOCIAL and EARTH sciences all downs!

Sometimes I am not quick on the uptake, but when I got it, the cleverness if this entire puzzle made me want to cheer. As @Rex said, this one ticks all the Monday boxes in clever, clean and innovative (loved the themers being downs) ways. Vest Monday puzzle in a very, very long time. Knee them coming Leslie and Andrea!

CDilly52 1:52 PM  

@Gary J, you make me laugh! Thanks!

Anonymous 2:36 PM  

Finally got to ace a Monday after a drought of self reliance on the easiest of week. Enjoyed my start knocking off answers left and right. A few sips of tea before going into second gear and solving more. Then voila. Done. Thanks. Might take on tomorrow

Joe Dipinto 2:52 PM  

@Birchbark – next time you go on a trip can I come? I don't take up much space, I can shrink myself down to avatar size.

@East Coaster 1:48 – That? is a great line, I must admit. (Sorry about the crash-and-burn but you were probably better off)

mathgent 3:10 PM  

I guess that just doing a crossword doesn't do anything for me anymore. I finished today's quickly then checked out the asterisks. Ah, yes, down to three sciences. Nice. That was it for me. Happy that so many here had more fun with it.



CDilly52 3:19 PM  

PS to my terrible typing today! I have a raging flare of iritis and reading is tough, thumb typing - forget it! Sorry for all the dang typos.

dgd 4:56 PM  

Good point!

Anonymous 5:08 PM  

Kudos to Leslie and Andrea. I am a Monday/Tuesday maybe Wednesday solver. I enjoy taking my time while I watch the waves lap the beach or while sipping a ‘tini on the deck so speed is not my goal. I loved this puzzle and it’s theme. Keep them coming.

jae 8:36 PM  

@pabloinnh - Congrats on solving a Croce, they are not for the faint of heart.

pabloinnh 9:26 PM  

@jae-To quote a clue that was about as straightforward as anything in #744, amen.

Birchbark 10:43 PM  

@Joe DiPinto (2:52) -- Absolutely yes -- if only to learn how avatar-size translates into three dimensional space. I think the music would be pretty good too.

Thanks to all for your nice responses, which I read this evening out on our hotel-room balcony in downtown Eugene. The destination well worth the long trip. Winding along the great Columbia River surprised us for hours.

kitshef 9:01 PM  

I quite enjoyed this, though I had no idea what the theme was until well after the solve. Though Rex would hate it, so please that he liked it, too.

thefogman 9:36 AM  

An almost perfect Monday puzzle. The only thing that bugged me a bit is how PHYSICAL and SOCIAL both end in AL but EARTH does not. But that’s so minor it’s hardly even worth mentioning. And these are three of the main branches of SCIENCE so that cannot be negotiated or altered. So Brava! to Young and Michaels for an EPIC Monday offering.

JJPH 12:28 PM  

Amen. James himself would acknowledge this.

Burma Shave 12:29 PM  

LOVE SPAM

TOM IS an ERRATIC LONER,
a MANON ALICE's PATH,
and his MESSUP ISTO PHONE her
with SEXTS SCENT from the BATH.

--- TONI PENNE

Diana, LIW 12:52 PM  

An ACME Monday - who could ask for more? (from a puzzle...)

Hope your Monday is going as well as this did for me. See y'all tomorrow.

Lady Di

rondo 3:32 PM  

Wow! OFL just gushing with praise, when ACME is a constructor. This is an EVENT! Or is it an OMEN? No MESSUPS here on a fine puz.
And a wordle birdie to boot.

spacecraft 7:05 PM  

This is a real beginner's puzzle, a sort of PRE-Monday offering--if there was a day between Sunday and...well, you get the idea. All of the clues are "moo-cow" easy, as @M&A would say. As such, it does the job. I miss the cerebral workout, but I can hardly condemn it for that.

Theme & execution are on point, so for what it is we have to issue a birdie.

I missed a short putt for a Wordle birdie, guessing wrong on _AULT. My fault entirely.

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