Monday, March 13, 2023

Nonalcoholic mixed drink / MON 3-13-23 / Creatures that helped make Cinderella's dress / Country that's home to the Inca Trail

Constructor: Sam Koperwas and Jeff Chen

Relative difficulty: Medium (as a Downs-only solve)


THEME: MOCKTAIL (62A: Nonalcoholic mixed drink ... or a hint to this synonyms found at the ends of 16-, 24-, 37- and 51-Across) — last words (or "tails") of theme answers are synonyms for "mock":

"Mock" "tail"  answers:
  • PRIME RIB (16A: Quality beef cut)
  • MOVE THE NEEDLE (24A: Have a noticeable impact, so to speak)
  • WHIZ KID (37A: Young phenom)
  • TAKEN FOR A RIDE (51A: Bamboozled)
Word of the Day: KEIRA Knightley (53D: Actress Knightley) —
Keira Christina Righton
 OBE (/ˈkɪərə ˈntli/;  née Knightley, born 26 March 1985) is an English actress. Known for her work in both independent films and blockbusters, particularly period dramas, she has received several accolades, including nominations for two Academy Awards, three British Academy Film Awards, and a Laurence Olivier Award. In 2018, she was appointed an OBE at Buckingham Palace for services to drama and charity. [...] For her portrayal of Elizabeth Bennet in the period romance Pride & Prejudice (2005), Knightley was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She starred in a number of more period pieces, playing a complex love interest in Atonement (2007), tastemaker Georgiana Cavendish in The Duchess (2008), and the titular socialite in Anna Karenina (2012). She forayed into contemporary dramas, appearing as an aspiring musician in Begin Again (2013) and a medical student in Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014). Knightley returned to historical films playing Joan Clarke in The Imitation Game (2014), earning her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, and starred as the eponymous writer in Colette (2018). (wikipedia)
• • •

Did you know TAGALONGS and THIN MINTS are both Girl Scout cookies and both 9 letters and both start with "T"! True story! (Briefly tragic story, for me, but only briefly). It was funny putting the revealer together—well, what turned out to be the revealer (I wasn't so sure if that's what it was when I was trying to piece it together). I solved Downs-only, and really wanted that word to be MOCKTAIL based on what I had in place: the "M" the "T" the "I" and "L" ... and probably the "K" but you never can tell with KEA/LOA—the eponymous kealoa*. So I wrote in MOCKTAIL but because I'd guessed IAMS at 57A (the clue for which I was not allowed to look at), I ended up with abutting "A"s in 33D: Longest keys on keyboards, which obviously had to be wrong, but instead of taking out the "A" in IAMS I took out most *all* of MOCKTAIL. Sigh. I kept thinking about a piano keyboard, and thought "well ... all the white keys are the same length so ... what do you call those?" And there's only *one* space bar on a computer keyboard, so the clue just wasn't registering correctly with me. Annnnnyway, once it was all sorted out and the puzzle was over, I looked at MOCKTAIL, then looked at the longer Across answers, saw the whole "mock" "tail" thing going on, and thought "huh, OK, yeah, that works." Those words *do* mean "mock" and they *do* come at the "tail" end of their respective answers, so you can't say that the theme isn't as advertised. It does the thing it says it does. Hard to be mad at a puzzle like that.

The grid feels very black square-heavy and (consequently) super-choppy through the NW and SE. There are double cheater squares (?!) (above the "B" in RIB and below the "M" in MOCK). "Cheater squares" are black squares that don't add to the word count—they just make the grid easier to fill. Those double cheaters make the grid look weird and kind of amateurish. This is what happens when you arrange your themers a certain way, namely this way, namely with the "B" in PRIMERIB and the "H" in MOVETHENEEDLE in the same column, such that they pretty much have to be part of the same answer. You kinda gotta put black squares over that "B" 'cause good luck finding anything that will fit a -B-H or a --B-H pattern. Honestly, simply making MOVETHENEEDLE and TAKENFORARIDE switch places wouldn't have helped much, since you'd've been in the same position, just with "F" instead of "H"—no -B-F or --B-F answers either (unless you want to go with DAB OF, which hopefully you do not). Nah, you gotta really rethink the grid structure *or* just do what they did here and go with the double cheaters. No one but me is gonna care, so why not? Make it easy on yourself. 


Not being able to get SPACEBARS was definitely the biggest hang-up I had on the Downs-only front, though I couldn't get SCENTED either (impossible to know what the first letter was since MUS- at 42A could've ended in so many things). But the most surprising hang-up in retrospect was NORI (26D: "Me neither"), which I had as NOPE, and then NOT I. This meant I kept doubting OZS, which seemed the only plausible answer for 31D: Parts of lbs., but I just couldn't square it with the crosses, since I kept getting either OEP or OET depending on which (wrong) answer I went with. Finally NORI occurred to me. Really would've appreciated a sushi clue there, for differentiation and clarity purposes. But whatever, I got there, eventually. Had TAKES FOR A RIDE before TAKEN etc. but had enough foresight to see that it might be a different verb tense. And that was that. The fill feels a little subpar today, but the theme works fine, and that's all I really ask of these early-week puzzles—a theme that works and fill somewhere north of garbage. Mission accomplished. Gotta run. See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

**kealoa = a pair of words (normally short, common answers) that can be clued identically and that share at least one letter in common (in the same position). These are answers you can't just fill in quickly because two or more answers are viable, Even With One or More Letters In Place. From the classic [Mauna ___] KEA/LOA conundrum. See also, e.g. [Heaps] ATON/ALOT, ["Git!"] "SHOO"/"SCAT," etc.

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

68 comments:

  1. Easy-medium. ON A roll before TEAR. Reasonably smooth grid, but I needed the delightful revealer to get the theme. Fun Monday, liked it.

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  2. Nice to see the original KEA/LOA back in action, and crossing another one in M/C OCKTAIL. The latter one is obvious unless you’re doing downs only, in which case it might take a nanosecond longer.

    PRIMERIB and STEAK made me so hungry that I really put the flower on the award (PETAL to the medal) to finish in time for dinner.

    I told my boy that I’d have to give a slight side eye to ITSON and DIDIT in the same puzzle. There, I DIDITSON. Now excuse me, but I gotta take a PEE, so I’m gonna WHIZKID. ITSON and ONSITE are another suspicious pair. But they appear on NYTimes.com, so ITSONSITE. Also, it’s indisputable that all ADREPs read ADAGE.

    RSVP being right on top of PEE makes me wonder if some of my invitations have meant “Respond if You Urinate.” Makes you feel bad about saying no.

    I’m not usually gung ho about MOCKTAILS, but I liked these. Nice job, Sam Koperwas and Jeff Chen.

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  3. Like Rex solving Mondays by down clues only, I usually get help from the theme. That is, I can guess what the theme is just by looking at the long across answers. But that didn't happen here; I completed the puzzle and had absolutely no idea. Is WHIZ KID part of the theme? So I read the clue for MOCKTAIL and... still didn't get it. Well, eventually...

    Sloppy: with one unfilled square, looking at S-IRTS crossing YA- I put in SHIRTS, but no happy pencil. Oops! Read the clue for gof's sake: Mini SKIRTS!

    Speaking of KeaLoas, "One of the three bears": -A-A!

    [Spelling Bee: Sun -1, missing a 6er. Will have a try again in the morning but right now no idea!]

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  4. Tagalongs in ink on paper. Ugh!

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  5. I’m ashamed to admit how long t took me to understand the trick. I was distractedly thinking some kind of synonym for the word TAIL while I was fumbling with my sister’s %$#@ TV trying to figure out how to get CNN live. I think their only live TV dealie is YouTube TV - not too user-friendly for an old person. Anyhoo, I finally focused my steel trap of a brain and saw the trick. Perfect reveal.

    Considering that people are spending good money these days getting fanny implants – mystifying – it’s hard not to see the alternative meaning for MOCKTAIL. Save some money and just eat a crap ton of Girl Scout Cookies.

    They set up shop outside Walmart here in Denver, NC, and I go through all kinds of social gymnastics to avoid them. Act like I’m on my phone, time my approach to the door so I can be part of a crowd, park at a different entrance. . . I always round up for whatever charity the cashier asks about, always put change in the Salvation Army bucket, but there’s something about paying so much money for so little, and the little that you’re buying is utterly pedestrian. . . I just do not like Girl Scout cookies, and I do not like being around moms and daughters who’re peddling them. Now if they were selling Pepperidge Farm Bordeaux, the little black dress of cookies...

    “Agent” before AD REP. And I always see the word ADAGE as AD AGE – when ads are so omnipresent that they’re virtually inescapable. Hi, @egsforbreakfast.

    My version had only a hyphen for 67A's clue, so that was confusing.

    Mom and I have this routine where I search movies on Netflix, read aloud the synopsis, and then if it passes that test, I go to Rotten Tomatoes to see what they have to say. Honestly, I don’t know why I bother because we stumbled upon The Ice Road with Liam Neeson that scored a 43% Tomatometer and 31% audience score, and I swear it’s one of the greatest movies ever made.

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  6. Anonymous4:32 AM

    MOCKTAILS! Great entry on its own, and especially great re-interpretation of the word as today's revealer. Two Mondays in a row with a satisfying "aha" moment after seeing the theme.

    The GIRLSCOUTLEADER from yesterday's puzzle brought us THINMINTS as a nice bonus entry. Just like Loren Muse Smith @3:59, I had just the hyphen for the SPADES clue, I had to check XWordInfo to see what the clue actually was. No way they would run a "-" based theme on a Monday, right? But the ADREP clue didn't seem very Mondayish to me.

    This happens to be Jeff Chen's 10th published Monday puzzle, which means he now has at least 10 full weeks of published crosswords!

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  7. A plethora of kealoas today! Besides the aforementioned mAmA/PAPA, KEA/loA and M/cOCKTAIL, there's also UTE/oTo.

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  8. I don’t know how THIN MINTS can compete with the undisputed King of Girl Scout cookies, which are Samoas (down south) or Caramel DeLites (in the north) - the Girl Scouts used two different manufacturers to make basically the same cookies but they call them by different names. I believe at one time they were attempting to remedy that - I don’t know if that is still the case - is there a troop leader or a den mother in the house ?

    Some crazy fill today - AAH, YAK, BAH, OER, OZS, OTS, along with the infantile PEE giving the infantile ASS a much needed day off.

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  9. Thx, Sam & Jeff; just right for a Mon! :)

    Med.

    Other than trOMPS before CLOMPS and mANage before PANOUT, no other write-overs.

    Learned Suzanne VEGA.

    Fun RIDE! :)
    ___

    Looking forward to @jae's Croce pick of the week! :)
    ___
    @kitshef

    Thx, again, for the xwordinfo heads-up for the acrostic! Agree that it was relatively easy; fun, nevertheless. :)
    ___
    Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

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  10. More easy than medium here, but I knew THIN MINTS and got SPACE BAR without Rex's struggles.

    Did you know THIN MINTS are vegan?

    Best cookies in order:
    Tagalongs (also known as Peanut Butter Patties)
    Do-si-dos (a.k.a. Peanut Butter Sandwiches)
    Samoas (a.k.a. Caramel deLites)

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  11. MOCK is a word with numerous definitions and it took me a minute after finishing the puzzle to assess whether I thought the ends of the themers really did mean MOCK. I’ve come to the conclusion that RIB and KID are much gentler than MOCK, which Merriam-Webster (for one) associates with the words contempt, ridicule and deride. NEEDLE and RIDE seem to me much closer to the cruelty of MOCK. However, there’s an argument that all four words are close enough for a Monday crossword, and I can buy into that point of view.

    I solved this downs-only – well, as far as I was able to take it. I got stuck in the SW corner and finally had to look at 2 across clues in order to finish. My problems were AD REP (and there was misdirection in that “pro pitcher” clue) and SCENTED (which should have been straightforward, hi @Rex). I’d figured out TAKEN FOR A RIDE, but MUSS, COOS and the 4 acrosses below TAKEN eluded me. MUSS might have been MUSe, MUSh, MUSk, or MUSt – you see the problem. Likewise, the COOS candidates were bOOS, gOOS, lOOS, mOOS, rOOS, wOOS and zOOS – which ones to try? One thing I’ve discovered in solving downs-only is that I’ve really got to guard against getting wedded to across answers I’ve guessed at. At one point I’d mistakenly inferred CRIsIs for CRITIC and would not let it go. But clinging to that wrong word is one of the things that prevented me from seeing SCENTED. Well, live and learn. Or rather, solve and learn. Only two writeovers – PAy Off for PAN OUT (is that yet another kealoa?) and ON A roll for ON A TEAR.


    UNICLUES:

    1. Noise made by your own personal alien.
    2. Only sound a certain bird is able to make when its bill is holding more than its belly can.
    3. What’s running the Primal Garden after God oversees a high-tech upgrade.
    4. Advice to Ms. Knightley on what snack to eat to preserve her slim figure.
    5. One of the many reasons not to try and use your laptop while having a mudbath.

    1. PET ET’S CLOMPS
    2. PELICAN COOS (~)
    3. EDEN’S NINE IBMS
    4. THIN MINTS, KEIRA
    5. MIRED SPACEBARS


    [SB: Fri -1, Sat -1, Sun 0. @okanaganer, bet I know what 6er you’re looking for. But congrats on getting that tricky 9er.]

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  12. Cute little theme - overall fill seemed off. Liked WHIZ KID adjacent to PEE and MOVE THE NEEDLE is nice.

    All the short stuff in the center drags this down - COOS x OTS x OZS x OER etc is rough. Liked CLOMPS crossing SLAKE.

    SPIRITS and MOCKTAIL don’t belong together. Isn’t NORI = seaweed?

    Enjoyable Monday theme - solve was a little disjoint.

    Marlene on the Wall

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  13. I tried to guess the reveal, having left it blank after uncovering the theme answers. I figured it had to do with a connection between the first words or the last words, but that’s as far as I got. How could I have missed the MOCK connection after pondering over RIB / NEEDLE / KID / RIDE? But I did. And my head remains unbig.

    Early in the solve, when I saw RIB meeting EYE very close to STEAK, I thought that might have something to do with the theme, even though it seemed too complex for a Monday puzzle. It was, but what a lovely serendipity of answers! In the one-degree-of-separation department, there’s NINE → pins → NEEDLEs.

    Sweet never-done-before theme, combined with the lovely SLAKE, and SPACE BARS, which awakened long-dormant delightful Star Wars images in my inner film reel. What’s not to love? Thank you, Jeff and Sam!

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  14. For me, it was a Monday-easy fill with a Wednesday-tough theme.

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  15. Note to self: stop reading OFL on Mon. or Tues. unless I'm solving downs only, which I'm not.

    Thought this was a very nice Monday indeed, as I didn't see the revealer coming and it was in the proper place, so all good. STOPMPS before CLOMPS (great word) and I misspelled KEIRA but otherwise no problems.

    @LMS-We'solved the tv remote problem as our latest is voice-activated. Now I wish I could do that with my car radio.

    @itshef-With all due respect, the best cookies ever are/were my mother's chocolate jumbles, which are round with a hole in the middle and covered in vanilla frosting. That's it, that's the list.

    Just right Monday, SK and JC. Sorta Kinda Just Coulda been the best in a long time, and thanks for all the fun.

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  16. Anonymous8:42 AM

    Amy: refreshingly fresh Monday. Liked it a lot.

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  17. Perfect Monday. Theme worked like themes should. Fill was fun. KEIRA, VEGA, PELICAN, and some others offered walks down Memory Lane. @LMS think I've seen all the Liam Nesson movies but Ice Road so will add that. Enjoyed having spirits and mocktails so unrelated to each other. good start to the week.

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  18. Anonymous8:52 AM

    I don't particularly care for Girl Scout cookies. One of the bakeries that made those cookies was not too far from where I grew up, and they sold broken cookies by the bag. Familiarity breeds contempt, as they say...

    The cookies have regional recipe variations, and in some cases, different names, based upon which bakery the Scouts council in your region uses. Tagalongs is one of those with different names. Its counterpart is the Peanut Butter Patty.

    Both bakeries use the THINMINTS name , but the two versions are different.

    The metro area where I live is split in two: Dallas uses one bakery, while Fort Worth uses the other. The two major cities of the area have a history of non-cooperation. DFW Airport is a big exception.

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  19. Hey All !
    Nice MonPuz. Apt Revealer. My post today is really ON A TEAR today.. Har.

    Not too much else to add. Hope y'all set your clocks Saturday night, or you'll get to work an hour early and wonder where everyone is.

    No MUSS, no fuss.

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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

    1. Id checkers? (4)
    2. Brand for a butterfly expert, perhaps (6)
    3. Org. that sells large batteries, ironically (3)
    4. Protagonist's pride, often (6)(4)
    5. They're easy to read, typically (3)(5)


    EGOS
    SPEEDO
    AAA
    TRAGIC FLAW
    BAD LIARS

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  21. All the "mock" words are used in a different sense from their mocking sense -- which makes them nicely chosen. And MOCKTAIL is the perfect revealer. But seeing none of this coming, I solved this puzzle as a themeless. When I saw the theme, my response was not an "Aha!" but more of a somewhat tepid "Oh, that's nice."

    It's smooth, it's professionally done, and yet I find this a hard puzzle to get excited about one way or the other.

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  22. I wonder if the old pro Jeff Chen set out to create the "perfect" kealoa? Because I've never seen a better one. The crossing of (also a kealoa) UTE/OTO made it impossible to know if the "Mauna___" clue would have an E (kea) or an O (loa) as its middle letter. Pretty clever.

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  23. @pabloinnh - I was limiting my list to Girl Scout cookies. In the broader world, of course your mom's jumbles are tops.

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  24. Bob Mills10:10 AM

    I thought 33-Down pertained to piano keys, so I had BLACK---S for a long while before realizing "keyboard" referred to computers. Otherwise it was easy, but a nice puzzle without an overemphasis on street talk.

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  26. Loren. Loved your take on MOCKTAIL. What you have after a fanny implant.

    The Saturday Cox/Rathvon cryptic in the WSJ had a gimmick I've never seen before.

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  27. Maybe we should add STOMP/TROMP/CLOMP to the kealoa list...

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  28. Beezer10:25 AM

    Today @Nancy pretty much sums up my feelings about the puzzle today…smooth and professional but nothing to get excited about.

    As for Girl Scout cookies…@LMS summed up my feelings about GS cookies AND the modern day “assault” at the grocery store! I do the SAME thing, and I was a Brownie and Girl Scout in the ‘60s! Hey. Back then we had to “buck up” and go door to door to the neighbors and my mother would NOT go with me! I think my winning sales pitch was something like “Mrs. Morrison, would you like to buy some Girl Scout cookies? You don’t HAVE to if you don’t want to.” I was always low on the cookie sales and found out later that some of the girl’s PARENTS strong-armed their co-workers! Now they do THAT plus accost you at the grocery store! Anyway, you REALLY have to like a little dose of sugar to really like them IMHO.

    Then there is the use of MOCK in this puzzle. I mean, there is RIBbing, NEEDLing, RIDing, and KIDding but, to me, MOCKing has a special injection of “meanness” to each one. This didn’t ruin the puzzle for me because I solved then looked at the theme. Guess I as surprised this wasn’t brought up.

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  29. (There are Uniclues above but I haven't peeked yet.)

    Uniclues:

    1) Male chauvinist pig challenges women to a tug-of-war

    2) "I cannot tell a lie: I caused the rip in your antique quilt."

    3) They made God angry when they partook not of the Apple but of the other Laptops of Knowledge





    1) "SKIRTS, IT'S ON!!!"

    2) ON A TEAR: DID IT

    3) EDEN'S NINE IBMS

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  30. HARRY POTTER IS #1! Today we get the actual dude who brought him to life. He's still doing new shows, but of course it's Hollywood and I can't remember the names of any of them.

    Took me a while to get the theme after finishing, but when I did it made me laugh. Nice job. And of course all those MOCKTAILS end up being the butt end of jokes ... advanced assery. 6-9, har.

    Haven't read the blog yet, but I can imagine a PEE [CUE] discussion getting out of hand. I suppose I should spell the next section YooKneeKloos.

    Uniclues:

    1 Young brainiac's drawing of a yellow representation of the Pythagorean Theorem in the snow.
    2 How God and an octet of angels maintained operations for their heaven on Earth.
    3 British starlet known for always having cookies.
    4 Young man's joyous response to the first sign spring has arrived ... hyacinths, whatevs.
    5 Those cantinas in every sci-fi film filled with villainous vermin and unhygienic food service procedures.

    1 WHIZ KID PEE ART (~)
    2 EDEN'S NINE IBMS
    3 THIN MINTS KEIRA
    4 SKIRTS! IT'S ON!
    5 MIRED SPACE BARS

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  31. @Southside Johnny - It's not really a north vs south distribution of Girl Scout Cookies. There's two bakeries: ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers. If you google "Girl Scout Cookie map" you can see how it maps , but it's more like a strip from north to south in the middle of the country and patches of the coasts are one bakery, and everyone else is the other bakery. I'm in Chicago, and I get Samoas. However we don't get Lemonades, but the inferior Lemon-Ups. I have to go to Wisconsin, which uses the other bakery, to get those. (Or know Girl Scouts who smuggle the other cookies across the border.)

    I do think that Thin Mints are the definitive girl scout cookie, though. Not my favorite, but first thing that comes to mind when you say "Girl Scout Cookie." The GSA website lists the Thin Mints as their number one seller, with samoas second.

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  32. @kitshef-I just don't know my Girl Scout cookies, so thanks for the clarification.

    You're right about my Mom's cookies. I probably have eaten thousands .

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  33. I just read the blog. Some of you are saying you don't like Girl Scout cookies. WHAAA? What has life done to you to create such monsters? Who are you? Pleasant commentators suddenly unmasked as if you're headlining as the mild mannered lighthouse keeper in a Scooby-Doo film? I believe every state should have a rule where you're allowed to push a fourth grade girl to the ground if necessary to get her out of the way for a clear path to the cardboard foldout table containing said cookies. Don't like Girl Scout cookies {inaudible} ... I wonder if the Wordplay crowd is less psychotic.

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  34. Croce solvers: Croce’s Freestyle #792 was pretty tough. I took me coming back to it off and on for most of the day to finish. Good luck!

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  35. I can’t think of another Monday in recent months (years?) that I enjoyed more. . . though the bar is very low.
    I’m with LMS on cookies—GSA ones, that is—they suck big time, absolutely the worst, dry, bland, wannabe-chocolate etc.
    Thank you JC and SK for the Monday morning Oscar after-party, liked the mocktails!

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  36. Well I tried to do @okanaganer's down only Monday, only to fail with some down hugging CLOMPS. I wasn't ON A TEAR.
    When I saw SPACE and NEEDLE I thought perhaps we were talking about the Loupe Lounge in Seattle.... Maybe sipping something with MOCK and a TAIL.. That evidently didn't PAN OUT.
    So what do we have here? Tails being a cute little synonym for mock. So you RIB, NEEDLE, KID and RIDE...you add them up and you get a MOCK and some TAIL.
    I liked HOOF IT smirking at TAKEN FOR A RIDE.
    I liked seeing PELICAN... Remember "A heck of a bird is a Pelican..its beak can hold more than its Bellycan? A true get up and leave the room moment.
    I feel sorry for the GSOA. Imagine if you don't have a mom that works in an office where she could peddle about a thousand boxes of THIN MINtS on everyone and instead you have to go to Walmart and watch people wearing jeans that are hitched up under the derriere walk past you as you beg them to eat your cookies.... I guess that would prepare you for future success.
    A fine Monday..Nothing really inspired me to make up a little whimsy Monday story other than imagining PAPA at the STEAK house eating a RIB with a side of SLAW and asking PETAL, the BARS tender, for a YAK DANIEL to SLAKE his thirst.

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  37. Nice MonPuz theme idea. Lotsa themer possibilities, includin:

    * STRIPTEASE. Don't hide the mockin-tail part very well, tho.
    * STANDATEASE. There yah go. But perhaps it would be accused of hidin the mockin-tail too well?
    * GREATAUNT. har. Like it, even tho y'all probably don't.
    * GRASSCORN. OK. Now we're just gettin desperate, I'd grant.

    staff weeject pick: COS. Goes so well with COOS. Makes yah long for some COCOA.
    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Scrooge's "Phooey!"} = BAH. Nice gift, to the Downs-only solverquestidors.

    The two cheater squares above BAH and below RIM didn't register, on M&A's desperation meter. I refer all naysayers to the Jaws of Themelessness, in most Fri&SatPuzs. Example: Last SatPuz, which had 4 of em, and henceforth at least 12 cheater squares, right there.

    other fave stuff: PELICAN. THINMINTS. SPACEBARS [dietary candy alternative to eatin THINMINTS]. PEE/PEEN [primo "to pee" mini-conjugation].

    Thanx for gangin up on us, Koperwas & Chenmeister dudes. Extra-cool WHIZKID+PEE themer extension, btw.

    Masked & AnonymoUUs


    **gruntz**

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  38. Loved seeing THINMINTS in the puzzle, love seeing the Girl Scouts selling them even more! I have exactly the opposite reaction from @LMS - I buy cookies from our neighborhood Girl Scout when she comes to the door, and I look for those cookie stands and buy a couple more boxes whenever I see them. Just disappointed that the troops in our area did not have the new Raspberry Rally this year.

    The GSA is a great program for young women, and we've encountered some real entrepreneurs-in-the-making over the years. I loved seeing the news stories about the two young women a few years ago who won the UN Forest Heroes Award for leading the campaign to get the GSA to remove palm oil from their cookies - some real moxie there. And of course I love those Samoas and Tagalongs and Dosidos! So I fork over a few bucks whenever I get the chance, and bring out the cookies whenever friends or family are at the house.

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  39. @jae - I had Croce 792 as very, very slightly easier than medium. Let's just call it medium, with the SE corner putting up the most resistance.

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  40. What an eye the constructors had, to see the theme possibility in MOCKTAIL! And nice job on finding theme phrases where the final noun becomes a verb post-reveal. So clever!
    No problem here with "tagalongs," as I've never heard of them: thanks to the comments above I now understand it's because Badgerland is in peanut butter patty territory. Maybe it's because they became imprinted on my palate in my Brownie days, but I find the THIN MINTS and both of the peanut butter ones irresistible.

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  41. Joseph Michael12:28 PM

    Enough with the Downs Only already. I could care less since I solve Across and Down on paper and in ink, the way God intended.

    Seems to be a subtheme going on with SEW, SEAM, and MOVE THE NEEDLE.

    Alternative clues:
    * Where techs play video games
    * Where money is made during the Great Depression
    * Where Ewoks and Klingons have alcoholic mixed drinks

    * E DENS
    * THIN MINTS
    * SPACE BARS

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  42. @Gary Jugert - #1!
    @Nancy - I love how we all tackled EDEN'S IBMs, and yours was the best.

    @pabloinnh - I'm assuming your Mom is gone now and I wonder if jumbles are still provided by you (or your wife).

    I feel so sadly out of this Girl Scout cookie discussion. Thin Mints?
    Samoas? Caramel Delites? Tagalongs? Lemonades? In the True North Strong and Free we have Girl Guides and they sell cookies, too. But I don't think they're the same kinds. Hmm...[doing research]. Both Canadian kinds are made by Dare. One is called Chocolate and Vanilla and they're sandwich cookies a la Oreo but with non-contrasting icing and biscuit flavors (i.e. each cookie is either all chocolate or all vanilla). The other kind is Chocolatey Mint: white minty stuff inside a (you guessed it) chocolatey coating. Maybe they're like thin mints? In olden times I used to love Girl Guide cookies, but I can't eat them now because of dietary restrictions (no biggie -- I'm happy with my current diet). However, I have an utterly crucial role to play in Girl Guide cookie distribution, because I'm the gatekeeper for my husband. You see, if they were freely available in a known location, he'd gobble up too many and then regret it. So when we buy a box or two, he hands them to me to hide and I dole them out at a decorous pace. This way they stay a treat he loves!

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  43. Anonymous12:36 PM

    Tomorrow extended session with my physician. My time has come when the consequences of dementia is only months away. No lives are without some pain and disappointment but also, if lucky, some pleasure. These puzzles give my wife and I a special time when all our misunderstandings have gone away and we sit side by side happy to solve them. Life has been a pleasure and these puzzles have been a part of it.

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  44. Anonymous12:48 PM

    Worked the puzzle after watching the Oscars. What a contrast between the puzzle and “Everything Everywhere All The Time” which won a near record breaking number of wins. The best Monday puzzle I’ve seen in a long time with a great “plot, “ a great “cast” of clues and answers v. the absolute worst movie I have ever seen. Watched the whole mess because of all the great reviews. A very painful experience. A good xword is some antidote.

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  45. Anonymous12:56 PM

    Dear Anonymous @12:36 — thank you for your thoughtful comments. All my warmest wishes, ~Rex

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  46. @Pabloinnh: How about a recipe?

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  47. @Barbara S

    Maybe your restricted diet allows these cookies.

    Full disclosure, my daughter In law, whose BD is today, is founder/CEO of Joydays. Happy Birthday, Amy!

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  48. That's so incredibly generous for you to say, @Barbara S! And I loved the Ogden Nash reference as a casual aside in your #2.

    @Anon 12:48 -- What happened to you re the awful "Everything Everywhere" movie can never happen to me. Oh, sure, it might have happened to me before the days of YouTube, but it can never happen to me now. Heed my words and it will never happen to you ever again either:

    Before you read a single review and before you ask a single friend what they thought of a movie, go to YouTube and watch the trailer. While this may not guarantee you'll love a movie, it's a pretty fool-proof way to know that you're going to positively hate it if you do see it. I had unavoidably seen some of the "Everything Everywhere" hype in print and I was curious, so I clicked on the trailer. Not only did I immediately know this was not a "Nancy movie" -- I knew this was a movie that looked so incredibly garish, crazed and unpleasant that I would pay a small fortune NOT to see it!

    When I read that it had a "lock" on the Oscar for Best Picture, I decided to duck the ceremony entirely this year. Usually my way of "watching" the Awards is to turn on my TV for the opening monologue/scene and hang around until the first (and last for a long, long while) major award -- usually Supporting Actor. And to then do something else for the next two or three hours and come back for the last half hour. This year, thanks in part to Everything Everywhere, I never turned the program on at all.

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  49. @Anon 12:36p - good luck and here’s hoping for plenty of peace and comfort and more puzzles.

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  50. @Anonymous (12:36PM)
    Your message went straight to my heart. Someone dear to me is grappling with Alzheimer's and I know something of the challenges. I wish you joy of the everyday and the peace that comes to us all.

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  51. JC66 (1:19 PM)
    Happy Birthday to cookie maven Amy! Thanks for the recommendation and they look delicious, but tell her to get right on to gluten-free/nut-free for the nut-allergic celiacs in the crowd. I have to say, though, that I'm lucky that there are now so many options for the food-challenged. When my uncle was first diagnosed with celiac disease in the 1990s there was hardly anything among prepared foods that he could eat. Now, the GF shelves are groaning under the weight of choice -- and I like it!

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  52. Nanorobots make their own Splash Mountain
    EENIE TECHS TAKEN FOR A RIDE ON A TEAR
    (There are a lots of tears about Splash Mountain closing at Disney World)



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  53. My first reaction to the reveal was "Huh? These don't sound synonymous to me". One could lovingly RIB or KID a child selling Girl Scout Cookies but you would have to be a Scrooge-like meanie to NEEDLE, RIDE or MOCK her. Even co-constructor Jeff Chen seems to show some misgivings when says in his notes at xwordinfo.com that "I wish I could say that when Sam [co-constructor Sam Koperwas] sent me this concept, I knew from the start that it would get accepted."

    So I go to Plan B and do some POC (plural of convenience) hunting. With two just in the top row, I figured it would be a banner day. They run the full gamut from the simple (ET, e.g.) to several two for ones (SKIRT/SPIRIT, e.g.). Here are entries that got a convenient S letter count, grid fill boost: ET, CLOMP, CD, SKIRT, LAPSE, SPIRIT, OZ, OT, COO, SPACE BAR, ERECT, TECH, EDEN, IBM, CO and SPADE. That's a bunch and earns the grid fill a POC Marked rating.

    Another kind of letter count inflation (LCI) is needed when one of the themers, TAKE FOR A RIDE, isn't up to the task of filling its slot.

    Also of note are the four cheater/helper squares that don't affect the word count but make it easier to fill the grid by changing six words (ETS, YAK, BAH, RIM, UTE and TSA) into three-letter rather than four-letter entries.

    So at least this one provided plenty for the grid construction CRITIC to chew on.

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  54. [SB: yd missed this 6er. @Barbara S, good for you knowing it; I have no memory of ever seeing that word. Ironically I got the 9er within the first 5 seconds or so!]

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  55. Canon Chasuble3:32 PM

    2nd Monday running doing by across only until I reached the stumbling block of # 51.
    So many ways to start... and all of them wrong. Ouch!

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  56. @kitshef - the SE corner was the one I kept coming back to.

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  57. @Barbara S- My Mom is indeed gone, just coming up on twenty years. But one Valentine's Day, I woke up to find that my wife had baked me a batch of the fabled chocolate jumbles. I didn't realize that she had the recipe, and I could say I didn't cry, but that would be lying.

    @Old Actor-So yes, there is a recipe. I'll have to check to see if it's a family secret before I go revealing it.

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  58. @okanaganer (3:22 PM)
    Funnily enough, a clue that got me to that 6er is this. Scroll down a bit to the carton on the left.

    @pabloinnh (5:39 PM)
    Oh, Pablo, that's one of the nicest stories ever. What a sweetie your wife must be.

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  59. Beezer6:46 PM

    Lol @Gary J on GS cookies! Did anyone actually say they HATE them? As for me…I just don’t particularly like them and I’d be happy to throw $10-$20/to Girl Scouts without eating the cookies. Are they horrible? No. Can you get WAY better cheap cookies at Trader Joe’s? Yes. If you read my post, I have mixed feelings these days. Brownies and Girl Scouts were fun for me. The cookie PUSH was starting when I was a kid but today it seems like the be all/end all of Girl Scouts, and I do not like THAT! (Humbly speaking, GJ)

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  60. On the day after the DANIELs won a couple of major Oscars, it seems a shame to not clue that entry on their names, but it probably wouldn't have been fair on a Monday. Still.

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  61. @Barbara S, believe it or not I think I tried that word, since it's on the container in my kitchen! (And you never know when some random foreign word will be accepted.) Different vowel order though.

    [SB Mon. 0; my last word was an anagram of Tuesday's 62 across.]

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  62. Anybody else do STOMP before CLOMP? Another Kealoa!

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  63. I haven't even read your blog yet today, but I need to get this out, and this is the only place I know to do it: It's been like eighty years since anyone called a joke a "gasser." TOP BANANAS and IN A PIG'S EYE and GASSER... are we in a 1940s classic Hollywood film?? If so, why are we simultaneously picking the NFL draft?? I think this puzzle is having a stroke.

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  64. Anonymous10:53 AM

    We're still cluing for EENY in 2023?

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  65. I didn't particularly notice cheater squares, but I did see a pair of "Utahs." Almost like a Jaws-of-themelessness wannabe.

    This puzzle is all about the theme/revealer. Even after (very easily) completing the grid, I was scratching my head about the connection. After a couple of minutes it came: not "MOCK"--or fake--TAILS but synonyms for "MOCK" at the TAIL end. A self-Gibbs-slap followed.

    Pedestrian fill, but a well-hidden theme. Makes for a fun solve. Birdie.

    Wordle par--but yikes, with that word surely a par-5 hole. (Me:4)

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  66. Burma Shave12:06 PM

    HERETO PET

    ON SKIRTS I am A CRITIC,
    when THE SPIRITS MOVE inside,
    and KEIRA always DIDIT,
    AD hoc when TAKENFORARIDE.

    --- DANIEL DEREK

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  67. Anonymous12:24 PM

    Way too many three-letter non-words.

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  68. Rather well-disguised theme.
    Did not care for DIDIT ITSON ONSITE ONATEAR.
    Wordle bogey, toughy.

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