Relative difficulty: Very, very easy (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- AMAZON BASIN (17A: Vast South American watershed)
- METACARPAL (26A: Hand bone)
- APPLE PEELER( 37A: Kitchen gadget)
- UBERMENSCH (52A: Nietzsche's superior man of the future)
The Übermensch (German pronunciation: [ˈʔyːbɐmɛnʃ]; transl. "Overman") is a concept in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche. In his 1883 book, Thus Spoke Zarathustra (German: Also sprach Zarathustra), Nietzsche has his character Zarathustra posit the Übermensch as a goal for humanity to set for itself. The Übermensch represents a shift from otherworldly Christian values and manifests the grounded human ideal. // In 1896, Alexander Tille made the first English translation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, rendering Übermensch as "Beyond-Man". In 1909, Thomas Common translated it as "Superman", following the terminology of George Bernard Shaw's 1903 stage play Man and Superman. Walter Kaufmannlambasted this translation in the 1950s for two reasons: first, the failure of the English prefix "super" to capture the nuance of the German über (though in Latin, its meaning of "above" or "beyond" is closer to the German); and second, for promoting misidentification of Nietzsche's concept with the comic-book character Superman. Kaufmann and others preferred to translate Übermensch as "overman". A translation like "superior humans" might better fit the concept of Nietzsche as he unfolds his narrative. Scholars continue to employ both terms, some simply opting to reproduce the German word. // The German prefix über can have connotations of superiority, transcendence, excessiveness, or intensity, depending on the words to which it is attached. Mensch refers to a human being, not a male specifically as it is still sometimes erroneously believed. The adjective übermenschlich means super-human: beyond human strength or out of proportion to humanity. (wikipedia)
• • •
The only other wrong answer I considered was AYE (instead of YEA) at 35D: Vote of approval. But again, this is the kind of petty error it takes virtually no time to correct. Took me a few seconds to figure out what word was supposed to follow APPLE, but again, we're talking about seconds.
The "hardest" (not actually hard) part of the puzzle was that last themer. I tried to predict what the final "TECH" company was going to be and ... we come to the one real weakness with the theme, which is: I do not think UBER is a tech company, at least not in the way that the others are. The others are tech conglomerates whose business is tech, across many businesses and platforms. Wikipedia has Meta as a "multinational technology conglomerate." Amazon and Apple are similar—they're into *everything*; you can hardly make a digital move without interacting with one of the first three companies. Whereas UBER ... is a ride-hailing app? I mean, huge, yes, and they use "technology" for their delivery and transportation businesses, but ... I've lived my whole life without ever having to interact with UBER. Their official name *is* Uber Technologies, Inc., and they *argue* (controversially) that they're a "tech company" to get around local regulations affecting taxi companies. But ... whatever they are, they aren't "tech" the way the other three are "tech." Not in size, not in reach, not in breadth of "tech"-ness. Real odd-man-out today. And UBERMENSCH is also an anomalous answer—not obscure, by any means, but by far the least universally known thing in the grid. Everything else in the grid is ultracommon knowledge. This isn't a knock on UBERMENSCH as an answer at all—only an explanation of why it was the "hardest" (again, not actually hard) part of the puzzle to get. But as you can see here, I just needed the "-RM-" + the "-SCH" for the term to pop into my mind. Helped that I knew the theme at that point, and that the Nietzschean term was familiar to me.
And that's that. No resistance, no grit, no problems whatsoever. Solid, straightforward theme idea, solid, straightforward grid. Nothing sparkly going on here, and it was really too easy, even for a Monday, but it's well conceived and well made, overall. If you make a new friend while sharing a ride to work, have you MET A CAR PAL? I think you have. Or maybe you went down to the lake and met a carp named Al, who knows? See you tomorrow.
Medium. Solid with a wee bit of sparkle (I disagree with @Rex)...MEZCAL, BLOOPS, NUDISM, UBER MENSCH...liked it a bunch! Excellent Monday!
ReplyDeleteGRAMPs before GRAMPA and ILIAL before ILIAC. This happens when you don’t check the crossing clues.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #849 was again pretty easy for a Croce. The east was slightly tougher than the west and I made an educated (lucky) guess in the SE corner. Good luck!
Bay Area resident here. Uber is absolutely seen as a tech company locally the same as any it the others—they were venture funded and compete for the same talent as other big tech firms.
ReplyDeleteIf anything I’d take issue with four of the biggest companies in the world being described as startups.
ReplyDeleteI thought this at first, too. But they aren’t described as startups. Startups refers to the company names being at the beginning of the phrase.
DeleteEasyish downs-only for me, but not quite as easy as it was for Rex. I breezed through it but got a bit hung up in the middle. I have a hard time remembering bones and there were a Halloween skeleton full of them today. So I wasn’t sure about ULNA, I had the YEA/aye conundrum, and I wasn’t seeing TAMPERS at all. I went with PEELER for the APPLE follower, and got ULNA and YEA, and then I just had to run the alphabet in a couple of places to see TAMPERS.
DeleteSpeaking of alphabet, “alphabet soup” would have made a good fourth themer because Alphabet owns Google, which is as big a tech conglomerate as the first three. But “alphabet soup” is too long for the space, and a lot of people probably don’t know that Alphabet owns Google.
I object to the clue for LYNX. It’s not just a bobcat by another name. A bobcat is a member of the lynx family but my sources confirm they are different. They can interbreed but so can lions and tigers.
About startup. What I thought immediately was that all four began as startups in Silicon Valley. And Wanderlust is probably right that startup is a HINT referring to the beginning of the 4 answers.
DeleteSeems okay to me also. Agree with Rex that it was very easy.
Interesting link about Ubermensch. Wasn’t aware of the translation controversy.
GRAMPA had this VILLA on the ISLE of ANNUM EWE. He'd be in his POOL wondering how much a KILO of MEZCAL would RAKE in, when out of the blue, his close KIN, ILIAC...a MENSCH to be sure... would fly in on UBER.
ReplyDeleteThey liked to HANG OUT and drink BEETLE PALM on TAP. It was their RITUAL and YEA, EVEN SO, they'd eat a TACO...
Their TECH PEELER, YUM, was a TACO HATER. She had a DIPLOMA in NUDISM and lived in a CAVE. It was ERIE because she once used TNT to SET ANNUM EWE on fire. It ended up as a MISHAP...IKEA you not. EVEN SO, GRAMPA wasn't about to CEDE to her TAMPERS.
He liked YUM. He once took her to a MOTEL that WED you ALA an IDO. GRAMPA has ESP so he knew not to SET SCORES too high. She wanted him to buy her a PEARL from the AMAZON BASIN! Like YEA, he'd WED some TACO HATER who had a DIPLOMA in NUDISM and wanted a PEARL from the AMAZON BASIN.
Back at the VILLA, he needed to grease a PALM and take his ANACIN. He ELECTS BOOPS, AKA LIU, to be his PAL. She could use her ESP to TAP into the KILO MEZCAL START UP business and tell him how much they'd RAKE in.
The ANNUM EWE DEPOTS were empty so they could probably RUSTLE in a POD of two of the MEZCAL. "What a META idea" yelled ILIAC. "BLOOPS is the APPLE of my eye" he crooned. "She ABIDED by the RULES...I'm in AWE...we can RAKE in a KILO of dough."
GRAMPA wouldn't CEDE to this META plan, because EVEN SO, a HATER or two would PILE ON. After ASKEW of time, he'd go sit on the RIM of his POOL in his VILLA on the ISLE of ANNUM EWE and leave his MEZCAL business to ILIAC and BLOOPS.
You'd see GRAMPA in his POOL. He'd be eating an APPLE. YUM would offer a PEELER but he didn't want one. He'd be drinking an UBER MEZCAL and eating a TACO while watching NUDISM on his TV SET. He was RESTED and all SET to HANG OUT with YUM....Maybe WED her someday?
How ERIE is that?
PS...HappY Birthday @JC66...Care to share an Agave-based liquor?
ReplyDeleteI thought with all of the bones that maybe SKELETON was going to be the revealer today.
ReplyDeleteDoesn’t APPLE have like the largest market-capitalization of any company in the world? Maybe if this puzzle had run in like 1979 when was Steve Jobs was chilling in his garage they would have been characterized as a “startup”. Crazy.
Only rough spot was choosing GRAnPA or GRAMPA as MEZCAL was out of my wheelhouse.
Not much depth here - I guess these UBER corps were once start-ups. TAMPERS, BEETLE, BLOOPS are all solid. The shorts are rough - BRR, MDS etc.
ReplyDeleteClem Snide
Side eye to the AWE - EWE combo. Thought there was an O in EMERY. ABIDED trends religious. ELLA’s Cole Porter Songbook Is one of the greats.
Harmless Monday morning solve. ERIE indeed @Gill.
My baby’s the PEARL of the quarter
About Emery Over the years, it took me a while to get it straight. Emery for the board and Emory for the university.
Delete
ReplyDeleteMy only overwrite was at 8D: MeSsuP before MISHAP for the minor snafu.
This was a Medium+ Monday. You can't rate a Monday as "Very, very easy" when it includes MEZCAL, METACARPAL, ILIAC, BLOOPS, UBERMENSCH, ANACIN, EMERY, LYNX...
ReplyDeleteAll very gettable, and I getted it in under 4 minutes, but those are Tuesday or later kind of answers.
@Ted 7:22 AM
Delete+1 These ratings of easy, medium and challenging are non-sensical in so many ways and definitely shouldn't be assessed by puzzlers with decades of experience. It's gotten even more comically absurd with the Monday downs-only mania. We sound like a toddlers coming into the kitchen with a picture of a tree next to a house saying, "Look what I did ... and it was easy."
I did solve downs-only today, as it happens, and I found it harder than most Mondays, mostly due to the NE corner.
ReplyDeleteRITUAL would never have occurred to me from that clue. I think it's a stretch, especially for a Monday, and was only clued that way as a little inside joke, which I always resent.
Also, ‘hiccup’ shares a couple of key letters with MISHAP. Don’t ask me how I know.
Monday's have become a "skim the analysis" exercise for me as the downs-only approach does not apply. Sort of interesting but a good chance to use TLDR, which I learned from crosswords.
ReplyDeleteThought this was a little uneven for a Monday--looking at you METACARPAL and UBERMENSCH for midweek level, but then we have "Swedish furniture giant" and "Oyster's gem" for a pre-Monday gimmes. Does not fall into the "foolish consistency" trap, at least.
Tried to suss out the reveal but no luck. Forgot that META had become META and like OFL don't think of UBER as a tech company, but there are more tech companies out there than are dreamt of in my philosophy, so that's on me.
Had a fine time with this one, ZDL. Aero Demerits Levied, and thanks for all the fun.
A Croce Monday, A NYer Monday, so good to me......
Croce’s Freestyle #849 was again pretty easy for a Croce. Probably only a couple of wrong guesses on some short fill (17A, 25A, 34A 42A) kept me from a record time for a Croce.
ReplyDeleteAs always, I like Rex's blog as a way to see just how different one solver's experience can be from another. He recently rated a downs-only as challenging and I thought it was the easiest I'd ever done. Today he says this was stupidly easy and I gave up about 3/4 through.
ReplyDeleteI got stuck at ABIDED for a while, and I was never ever going to get BLOOPS. ANACIN I've never heard of, but I'm sure I would've come up with something pretty close based on crosses, if I had still been solving downs at that point.
So a slight disagreement about this being a downs-only for beginners.
WED and IDO and its "wedding"-based clue we're clunky to see.
I like to point this out when it happens: immediately after this solve I went to an archived puzzle (somewhere in Oct 2007) and it had EWE, ELAN, and ULNA. Common crossword fare, of course, but still enough for an ERIE case of déjà vu.
Three of the four theme answers, IMO, are most lovely: AMAZON BASIN, METACARPAL, and UBERMENSCH. These required a couple of crosses for me to get, and when they filled in I was momentarily blissed in a wave of beauty. These, for me, were the best moments of the solve.
ReplyDeleteThis is Zachary’s fifth NYT puzzle; he is an early-week specialist so far, with three Mondays and two Tuesdays. This confidence-building puzzle is perfectly pitched for new and near-new solvers. There is no guile in the cluing, and the three toughest answers, IMO – METACARPAL, UBERMENSCH, and MEZCAL – are very easily crossed.
My Monday RITUAL – filling in the theme answers, leaving the reveal blank, and trying to guess what it is, something I struggle with, was a near success. I saw the AMAZON, META, APPLE, UBER connection, and that they were the first words of the answers, but still needed that first T to come up with TECH STARTUP. Small steps.
Serendipities: Three games (CLUE, POOL, SET), four palindromes (EWE, ALA, AKA, TNT), and the PuzzPair© of NUDISM and PEELER. Best as I can tell, there are two NYT answer debuts – APPLE PEELER and AMAZON BASIN.
Zachary, this is a sterling Monday. Thank you for a sweet and spirited solve.
Thx, Zachary, for this TECHie puz! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed.
Loving these down only Mons. :)
One cell dnf at NUDISt / tDS. Got a twinge of spidey-sense at the former, but sadly, didn't follow it up. Had to look at the across clue to get the 'M'.
Another excellent adventure! :)
Happy 84th @JC66! 🎉
Thx @jae; on it! :)
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David Balton & Jane Stewart's NYT acrostic on xwordinfo.com was not easy, but not too hard; a worthy challenge! :)
___
On to Croce's #849🤞, with Anna Shechtman's Mon. New Yorker on deck for tm.
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Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
As a Jew, I’m very familiar with the word Übermensch, and I object to its use in a NYT crossword. The term was co-opted by the Nazis to describe the "Master Race", as opposed to "Untermenschen", "subhumans" like Jews. This is all discussed in the same Wikipedia article that Rex cites. Gee, wonder how he missed it?
ReplyDeleteAn important concept of his was co-opted by an evil movement, but Nietzsche was hardly a Nazi.
DeleteJust as the Rolling Stones are not Trumpers, although their music was played at his rallies until they sued him.
And Amazon started in Jeff Bezos’s garage in Bellevue, WA.
ReplyDeletesilicon valley resident. i have to vehemently disagree with "bay area resident" uber is NOT a tech company. it's a glorified ride hailing service akin to a taxi service.
ReplyDelete14 seconds away from a personal best, due to keyboard fumbles.
Taken together, these four companies control virtually every aspect of...
ReplyDeleteHow you buy stuff
Who you socialize with
What gadgets you own and use
How you get around town
Not all that STARTUP-ish, it seems to me. Pretty darned well-established. While I wrote in TECH STARTUP without a second thought, what I really wanted to write in was TECH TYRANNY. It would fit, btw.
Other than META/Facebook, all of these companies have established some degree of dominance over my life. Imagine that! Tech-challenged me, of all people! Definitely an ominous sign. You might even say: as @Nancy goes, so goes the nation. Sigh.
Polar opposite experience from Rex. I found this very difficult as a downs-only and started looking at some across clues much sooner than I’d have liked. Then it was easy. Maybe I was tired, or that extra glass of wine was to blame.
ReplyDeleteFor those of you questioning the theme (which I thought was very clever) ... the puzzle isn't saying any of the named companies are start-ups. An apple peeler is a tech start-up because a tech company (Apple) starts up the answer. And "any a new venture in Silicon Valley" = tech start-up.
ReplyDeleteMaybe the Start Up part is that the theme answers all started with a tech company. Giant, monopolistic, over-reaching, intrusive, or job-killing companies led by self-deluding founder billionaires who like to pretend they've done something for the good of humanity.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteNice MonPuz. Light on dreck. All Themers START UP with a tech companies, who, at one point, were all literal START UPs. But, now, they have bajillions of dollars, that I think they should distribute the wealth to the people. Just sayin'.
Quick puz, me of the trying to go slower to make puz last longer ilk, but still went fast. Didn't do Downs Only, I still like looking at all the clues. Hey, the constructor went to the trouble to make clues, I want to read them!
Nother Monday. SPLUT!
No F's (The Roo Does Not ABIDE) 😁
RooMonster
DarrinV
A pleasant Monday which certainly offered nothing much in the way of resistance, but that’s not a complaint. Just a fact. A clever way to get a TECH heavy theme without really getting into technology. I always think of AMAZON as the granddaddy of Internet sales and one which has become a familiar name in most of our lives.
ReplyDelete@JC66: Best wishes for a very happy birthday! I still think of you every time I use the nifty little cheat sheet you so generously shared with me. Hope you have a wonderful day.
Farthest I ever got using Debbie Downer approach - MIScue and RatTLE (leaving me with LIa Thomas and Mel OTt) were the only MISHAPs.
ReplyDeleteJust to add to the points made by @Wanderlust, @Twangster, and anon -- the fact that neither AMAZON, META, APPLE, nor UBER is a startup is a feature, not a bug. It makes the wordplay in the theme answers more interesting that none of the tech companies mentioned is actually a startup.
ReplyDeleteMy grandchildren call me Grandpa, but of course they started calling me that long before they could read, write, or spell. So it wasn't until my granddaughter was about 5 and sent me a postcard from Yellowstone Park that I knew for sure I wasn't actually GRAMPA.
By coincidence, I made an apple pie Saturday, and really wished I had had an APPLE PEELER.
IMHO one can't blame Nietzsche for Nazism. But I do wonder about the absence of a hint that the German title was wanted. If the clue were "long work by Tolstoy" the answer would be WAR AND PEACE, not a transliteration of the Russian title.
Done. Great puzzle in every possible way. Gotta run. Busy morning of übermensching ahead.
ReplyDeleteTee-Hee: Übermensch NUDISM. Eek.
Übermensch Uniclues:
1 Boomer wandering away from the home in his underwear in October.
2 Board game clubs.
3 My belly's educational goal.
4 The worm.
1 GRAMPA AMID BRR
2 CLUE HANGOUTS
3 TACO DIPLOMA
4 MEZCAL PEARL
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: The glorious sound an exasperated wife makes upon learning her husband's latest inane plan. HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
New PR. 3:04. Not sure I'm capable of doing a 15x15 any faster than that.
ReplyDeleteI actually probably would have had an easier time had I done downs only, cause I flew through the grid, but had METAtARsAL instead of METACARPAL. ILIAC and BLOOPS are completely foreign words to me, so having ILIAt and BLOOsS didn’t seem totally weird. The double S on BLOOsS was strange to my eye, but I know zero about sports so I thought “eh this could just be some weird sports acronym or something.” So that cost me probably 30 seconds at the end. Otherwise yes, fun, breezy, nice way to start the week.
ReplyDeleteHappy birthday, @JC66! Though the mystery here is how did all those fellow Rexites know it was your birthday? I combed the comments for a reference from you and couldn't find one. Then I combed yesterday's comments too. It wasn't there either.
ReplyDeleteBut all good birthday wishes anyway, @JC66.
A really good Monday, I thought - easy yet with a witty twist. Before looking at the reveal clue, I noticed the connection among AMAZON et.al. and thought "TECH-related," which was far too boring to actually be the reveal. So, I thought START-UPS with its double meaning - companies that are or were START-UPS in the real world and are the starting words of the theme entries in crossworld - was genius.
ReplyDelete@smalltowndoc 7:57 and @jberg 9:16 - on ÜBERMENSCH I find myself agreeing with you both. As I wrote it in, I had qualms, yet it's just one example of so many concepts from German history and vocabulary that the Nazis perverted in adapting them to their ideology.
@smalltowndoc, Yes, Ubermensch. Ugly.
ReplyDeleteAgree with Rex - very very easy. But enjoyable all the same.
ReplyDeleteM&A's gonna give that there UBER themer a pass of approval. They are called Uber Technologies, Inc., after all.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject picks: MDS & OTS. Plural abbrevers. Nice weeject stacks in all four puzgrid corners, btw.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Oyster's gem} = PEARL. Didn't have to dive too deep, to get that one.
other faves: HANGOUT. DIPLOMA. GRAMPA on MEZCAL. NUDISM/NADA + UBER. APPS/APPLE.
Thanx for the tech update, Mr. Levy dude. A solid MonPuz.
Masked & Anonymo6Us
**gruntz**
LYNX is not another name for a bobcat, they are two separate and distinct species. A better clue would have been bobcat’s cousin.
ReplyDelete+1 for: "I solved downs only, and was surprised at just how easy Rex thought it was."
ReplyDeleteLike others, I had a few downs-only problems that, in aggregate, really slowed me down, even though some of them are minor.
Minor Snafu: "Dust Up"
Aleve Alternative: "Motrin"
Interferes (with): "Meddles"
Vote of approval: "Yea"
Give in under pressure: "Fold"
What I learned: Don't go through the whole puzzle, downs only, in numerical clue order, and fill in your best guess. You end up inevitably with some wrong guesses, and then you get bogged down.
Happy Monday everyone!!
I really enjoyed this puzzle for its crunchiness (for a Monday) and would just say that @Rex’s new habit of rating it due to the “downs only” difficulty might be a disservice to new solvers who probably (as most do) start with across and fill in as needed with downs. I am also adopting @pabloinnh’s TL;DR attitude toward the @Rex rundown of why or why not the puzzle was easy or hard based on “downs only.”
ReplyDelete@Nancy…excellent and funny posting today! And @Gill…one of your best Crossworld stories!
As for all the nitpicking on Uber’s designation as a “tech” company…really? Ok. I’m sure they used EXISTING technology BUT they transformed personal transportation in a huge way! Yes…mega-cities like NYC had huge taxi systems which just required you to walk outside, go the curb, and lift and wave your arm. Getting a taxi in smaller cities across the US (and elsewhere) required a phone call and dispatch system that could have you waiting FOREVER (unless you are at the airport). Anyway, Brittanica says the simple explanation of “technology” is:
The application of scientific knowledge to the practical aims of human life or, as it is sometimes phrased, to the change and manipulation of the human environment.
Pretty sure Uber changed and manipulated our environment.
@Gary (9:31) If they give out diplomas for tacos, I think I got my PhD long time ago.
ReplyDelete@Nancy (9:48) It was Saturday when JC mentioned today would be his birthday, and by some miracle I remembered.
@Whatsername 12:21 PM
Delete🎓 ❤️
Easy solve-in-my-head Monday.
ReplyDeleteGreat puzzle today and super write-up, so thanks to the constructors and to OFL. It was Monday Easy, but by no means a pushover. My Monday RITUAL is to time myself, and to do Downs only until some of the Acrosses become obvious.
ReplyDeleteMuch amused by all the hate and envy directed to APPLE and META and the like. Folks, they were all once startups, and almost every last one of you could have bought their stocks soon after they went public. My motto was the same as my mother's: Buy what you know. So I bought APPLE because I loved their computers starting with the APPLE II. I bought Facebook (now part of META) because I figured if I was becoming addicted to it, so would everyone else. And because of all those IRAs that were promoted back in the day as a tax free gimmick, tons of folks who otherwise would not be in the stock market found it easy to buy 100 shares or so, understanding that just a couple of winning investments would likely make them more money than a bank or savings and loan was willing to pay.
I didn't buy any UBER shares because while the concept made sense, I didn't see them making their investors rich -- and I find that indeed they haven't. Plus, I've always preferred Lyft, as a rider.
Count me among those who bought Thus Spoke Zarathustra way back in the day and was fascinated. As much by the language as by the thoughts.
Hey, how about a little love for PALM? It’s been a TECHSTARTUP, a tech death, a tech re-startup and is still around. Constructor could have made 33A into PALMreader or something. I’m not looking for a handout here, but don’t give PALM the finger!
ReplyDeleteI’ve just returned from 4 days off-line in the environs of Mt. Rainier. Absolutely stunning fall foliage and perfect weather gave several hundred thousand other people the same idea. Nevertheless, a splendid time.
Nice to get back to the blog and a sweet littleMonday puzzle. Thanks, Zachary David Levy.
Good to have you back! You were missed!
DeleteI also am not happy about the LYNX clueage.
ReplyDelete@old timer (12:58)
ReplyDeleteYou must be a rich man!
Thanks Lewis for your list of favorite clues. Enjoyed the reminder, and agreed they were all good. I think my favorite was " Knot without a struggle" because of the play on the expression "not without a struggle" as well as the clever way of cluing the clip-on.
ReplyDeleteI realized when I got to the reveal that I did today's puzzle as a non-themer. That is, it went fast and I didn't notice the theme answers, didn't wonder what the theme was.
Reading Rex's description of doing the puzzle it seemed to me he was not really doing downs only. He seems to do across at times as he goes.
Personally, I don't see why one would want to do a CROSSWORD puzzle in one direction only.
Yes, very easy. I had "gramps" instead of "GRAMPA" and "metatarsal" instead of "METACARPAL," but the crosses made it work. Didn't get the theme until after I had finished.
ReplyDeleteNote to rex; Mondays were meant to be easy.
ReplyDeleteThis one did not disaapoint, and the theme made it shine.
Is Uber a "tech" company?
Was WeWork?
@GILL
ReplyDeleteThanks, I usually save martinis for Saturdays, but I'll have a BIG one tonight.
@Whatsername
I really appreciate your remembering. Thanks.
@bocamp & @Nancy
Thanks for the good wishes.
@smalltowndoc (7:57) - rarely do I defend Rex but your spurious slur/suggestion that he is amti-Semitic is a bit Uber the top!
ReplyDeleteI AM OFFENDED!
When I was doing the puzzle, I first thought of SUPERMAN but that doesn’t work of course. I was surprised that a Monday puzzle would have Ubermensch, especially since the English version - outside of academia- is generally much more common in English. (BTW when George Bernard Shaw came up with the translation, it was way before the comic book changed the English word’s meaning-)
ReplyDeleteI think the critics of Ubermensch here have a point because of it appears in English much more frequently when people are talking or writing about the Nazis. In retrospect, it probably should have been avoided. Common usage is important. It is certainly unfair to Nietzsche to associate him retroactively with the Nazis !
The puzzle constructor was trying to avoid the connection but as this blog today shows, you can’t.
p.s.
ReplyDeleteHappy B-day to @JC66.
@kitshef, re: yer recent question: FArenHeit, or Funny As Heck. Just sayin.
M&Also
@M&A
ReplyDeleteThanks, I don't know how to say "thanks" riunt style, 😂
Thx?
ReplyDeleteNADA ON
ReplyDeleteHer NUDISM I ABIDED,
EVENSO, IDO have doubt,
EVEN KIN ARE undecided,
but ELLA let it all HANGOUT.
--- GRAMPA
Easy, smooth Monday. You unidirectional nuts can knock yourselves out; I'll go two ways. I have enough challenges right now.
ReplyDeleteTECH not being my favorite, I still found this no sweat. I'll take it. DOD DONNA Summer worked hard for it, honey. Birdie.
Wordle birdie.
I grew up with my mother and her parents. And my GRANDPA was the super man of the future!
ReplyDeleteIt's Monday, right? Must be. (see puzzle)
Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords