Relative difficulty: Easy (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- "MOONSHADOW" (17A: 1971 Cat Stevens hit that would be apt to play during a 46-Across)
- "INTO THE NIGHT" (23A: 2007 Santana hit that would be apt to play during a 46-Across)
- "STARING AT THE SUN" (36A: 1997 U2 hit that would be apt to play during a 46-Across)
- "TOTAL ECLIPSE / OF THE HEART" (46A: Event across the U.S. on 4/8/24 ... and, with 57-Across, 1983 Bonnie Tyler hit that would be apt to play during a 46-Across)
Polonium is a chemical element; it has symbol Po and atomic number 84. A rare and highly radioactivemetal (although sometimes classified as a metalloid) with no stable isotopes, polonium is a chalcogen and chemically similar to selenium and tellurium, though its metallic character resembles that of its horizontal neighbors in the periodic table: thallium, lead, and bismuth. Due to the short half-life of all its isotopes, its natural occurrence is limited to tiny traces of the fleeting polonium-210 (with a half-life of 138 days) in uranium ores, as it is the penultimate daughter of natural uranium-238. Though longer-lived isotopes exist, such as the 124 years half-life of polonium-209, they are much more difficult to produce. Today, polonium is usually produced in milligram quantities by the neutron irradiation of bismuth. Due to its intense radioactivity, which results in the radiolysis of chemical bonds and radioactive self-heating, its chemistry has mostly been investigated on the trace scale only.
Polonium was discovered on July 18, 1898 by Marie Skłodowska-Curie and Pierre Curie, when it was extracted from the uranium ore pitchblende and identified solely by its strong radioactivity: it was the first element to be so discovered. Polonium was named after Marie Curie's homeland of Poland. Polonium has few applications, and those are related to its radioactivity: heaters in space probes, antistatic devices, sources of neutrons and alpha particles, and poison e.g. poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko. It is extremely dangerous to humans. (wikipedia)
• • •
["She's just sixteen years old / 'Leave her alone,' / They sayyyyy" [note: "They" are right]]
The only other comment I have about the puzzle as a whole is that it was astonishingly easy to solve Downs-only. I went from top to bottom of the puzzle and balked at only three (!!?!?!?) answers: THANOS, SIPHON, ESCHEW. That first one, I really should've known. I just blanked and had to wait for the answers around it to fill in. As for SIPHON, somehow the clue didn't trigger any associations (43D: Tube that uses gravity to transfer liquids). And ESCHEW, while a great word, was simply not top-of-the-brain for me at 45D: Deliberately avoid. I think Downs-only was the way to go today. In the Acrosses, as I said above, two of those songs were unknowns to me, and I doubt I could've come up with POLONIUM very quickly either. But since most of the Downs were short, and short answers tend to be very very easy on Mondays, I absolutely sliced through this thing. Not necessarily the most scintillating experience (short fill rarely gets up to "scintillating"), but it was great fun to watch the themers come into view, and especially to get to the revealer, which felt kind of magical.
["Turn around..."]
Be safe out there today, especially if you are driving to an eclipse-viewing destination. It's gonna be nuts. We've had "ARRIVE EARLY / STAY LATE" on the illuminated highway traffic signs for weeks now. All my best to every public official who has to deal with the madness. Oh, and congratulations to Paolo Pasco, the newest American Crossword Puzzle Tournament champion! He's my daughter's age! Why am I shouting!? Congrats, Paolo!
[photo by Josh Sevin] |
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
"ALOE" yelled URSINE to her OLDER brother, HAIKU...."I'm HOME!" HAIKU wasn't all that KEANE on the visit, since URSINE can EMIT this FAT POLONIUM ODOR INTO the NIGHT and it makes you want to HIDE behind a MIRO....!
ReplyDeleteHAIKU lived in her SHADOW, and the NERD in him didn't't have the HEART to TUTU her. Although she was an OGRE that could BAM the NIGHT away in her HASP TENOR ALTO voice that would FROST his HEART, he didn't want an ADO hanging in the MIDST of a RIAL TIFF.
URSINE had the HOTS for a NEW IDOL named KNISH. KNISH would like to HARNESS the SUN RAYS, then MOON anyone STARING at his BRISKETS. It would FROST HAIKU into a SNIT of ESCHEW. HAIKU had a big HEART and he didn't want a TIFF to ECLIPSE their NEW HOME, so he just kept STARING at his NATO.
On the EVE of ETON WELSH NIGHT, URSINE and HAIKU would SIPHON some ASTI MOON shine and INTO THE NIGHT they'd HIDE under THE TUTU. TREE. They'd not TARRY long since a TIFF with the T MAN AIDES would be a TOTAL FAT BAM never SEEN OUT of the HEART of UTAH.
THANOS was the OLDER T MAN in the town. He had a LOTTO FAT between his TAIL and he'd always be STARING into some GUAC that he wanted to ESCHEW. He was also KEANE on the KENTS he'd smoke when OUT IDING some NERD that would EMIT a NEW ODOR. Since no one was SEEN OUT drinking ASTI MOON shine , he went HOME and called it a NIGHT.
The SUN set and the MOON was OUT. The only SHADOW SEEN was an ECLIPSE of URSINE and KNISH smoking KENTS, eating GUAC, and sipping some ASTI MOON shine. The EVE was A LIT with OMEGA RAYS and all came out of the SHADOWS to dance the UTAH TUTU. It was a TOTAL HOTS NIGHT....THANOS would agree.
Wow!
Delete@GILL I. 12:26 AM
Delete...and that's the truth...
So clever, @Gil I. Thanks!
DeleteEasy-medium. Delightful, liked it a bunch!
ReplyDeleteI did not know the “hits” @Rex did not know.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #900 was on the easy side for a Croce or about half again as tough as last Saturday’s NYT. Good luck!
A lot of Natick potential for a Monday! toMei/Miro, Thanos/Tman, Asti/keAne, maybe even hasP/Polonium could kind of be anything…
ReplyDeleteAnonymous 1:05 AM
DeleteFWIW Rex came up with the term
natick from the cross of the Mass, town of Natick and early 20 th century illustrator NC Wyeth. Two relatively obscure names with an uninferable letter at the cross ( nothing more uninferable than an initial!).
Just because someone ( say me) doing a puzzle doesn’t know either answer at a cross doesn’t = a natick.
In all honesty, there are no naticks in this puzzle.
Virtually everyone Rex’s age and older would know T Man immediately and probably many others. Asti has been in the Times On innumerable occasions. Italian wine region = Asti. Automatic.
Hasp isn’t an obscure word.
Marie Curie was famously from Poland so the p is certainly inferable
Maybe a generational thing on these but that means a lot of people.
, I think natick should be reserved for obscure (to most people) crosses
Rex I'm envious; I've never been near the path of totality, and this time in western Canada we only get something like a 20% partial eclipse. Hope you get some clear skies!
ReplyDeleteBefore I even started this, I wondered: will this be an eclipse theme? And Yes It Was. I also solved down clues only, and I was watching 17 across as it filled in from the downs, and it could only be MOON SHADOW. How perfect!
But the other themers... 23 across was mostly filled by the downs except for the Jewish turnover. So it looked like INTO THE LIGHT!, which made sense, eclipse wise, except coming out of it instead of going into it. So I thought the turnover was BLINI crossing BENTS at square 22.
Oh well, lesser known theme songs aside, it was pretty good for a Monday. TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE HEART is an unforgettable song. Happy eclipse, all you lucky south/easterners!
Very nice.
ReplyDeleteI might have found it more fun if I'd heard of any of the songs (Still thought it clever the way song titles were used to fit the eclipse theme. Did smile when I got to "total eclipse of the heart".
It sort of sang itself. Either because I have head it at sometime, or because it just has a natural rhythm.
I think we are supposed to get a partial eclipse here (if no clouds) but not enough to get excited about
got stuck on Jewish deli potato (no idea) as KLISH… “into the light” sounded very reasonable as both a) theme (the moon is going into the light, right?) and b) a reference to a song I’d never heard of. On looking up “‘night” made more sense but that crossing was a natick for me
ReplyDeleteMy five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. String together? (3)
2. What Scott Joplin might yell after a spill? (7)
3. London dunderhead (5)
4. Pictures where people are headscarfed? (6)(6)
5. Cinderella's calling card (3)(5)
SEW
RAGTIME
HOSER
ZOMBIE MOVIES
BIG UPSET
ReplyDeleteMy eclipse glasses are ready. Here in northern New Jersey we get 93% coverage, but the eclipse time forecast is for clouds. I hope those who are traveling to a totality viewing site have better luck.
Congratulations to Paolo Pasco and all ACPT attendees. I'm sorry I couldn't join you. Maybe next year!
Solved "downs only lite" (not reading the clues for the long answers) and found it fairly easy. My only overwrites were spat before TIFF at 10A and doI before AMI at 29A. Fun puzzle for eclipse day!
I agree that there are some potential trouble spots (like THANOS x TMAN). Including the name of an emoji is not a good precedent and doesn’t bode well for the future - but unfortunately emoji’s and memes are probably going to be with us for a while, so I’d better get used to it.
ReplyDeleteI’m another of those that only knew two of the four songs, but fortunately it’s a Monday and the crosses are reasonable.
Good puzzle idea, but only heard of two of the songs. The only INTO THE NIGHT I know is the one by SWEET. I know neither the Santana song nor the U2 song.
ReplyDeleteVery easy downs only, with ultrOn before THANOS and 'is it KEeNE or KEANE' the only real holdups.
Easy as a downs-only.
ReplyDeleteHere's a better song choice for Staring at the Sun
I'm just disappointed that they didn't manage to fit in BLACK HOLE SUN.
ReplyDelete….or “Here Comes the Sun”…..
DeleteMagnificent theme idea. I shouldn’t be surprised. Peter has such a talent for coming up with worthy themes. This is his 128th NYT puzzle, and 123 of them are themed.
ReplyDeletePlus, a talent for crafting a puzzle. This one has a high 59 squares devoted to the theme, but look how smooth the puzzle reads. Look how perfect for Monday, filled with everyday language, except for a POLONIUM here and a THANOS there for interest and bite, easily crossed.
I took a poll amongst myself and it was unanimous: Peter is remarkable.
I like the serendipitous echoes to today’s Big Event that showed up in the puzzle. The word that goes with “moon” (NEW), and the word that goes with “sun” (RAYS).
Better yet, the letter O, which echoes the black circle we see in pictures of the total eclipse. That letter’s name (the long O) begins five words (OLDER, ODOR, OPEC, OGRE, OMEGA), ends five words (MIRO, NATO, LOTTO, INTRO, ALTO, ESSO), and is in the middle of six (MOONSHADOW, POLONIUM, HOME, ALOE, THANOS, TOMEI).
Peter, you are a Crosslandia giant, not only from the volume of your output, but even more, from its quality. Thank you for another splendid outing!
Easy downs only! But I did have to look at a few across clues toward the end. It’s always a good day when Rex is happy with a puzzle.
ReplyDeleteYess!! Got "total eclipse"...and immediately thought "of the heart". And boom it was there....turn around bright eyes...thanks Peter! ☀️🌕🌑❤️
ReplyDeleteNice theme. I guess there's some kind of eclipse thing going on today.
ReplyDeleteHaha, just kidding. We're a little south of the "path of totality" (great term) and the roads are going to be nuts but we'll probably drive an hour or so north, find a place to park, watch, turn around and go back home.
Smooth as a smelt here except for the KEENE problem and starting with ESCAPE for ESCHEW, otherwise no nits. I'm going to look up the chords for TOTALECLIPSEOFTHEHEART and sing it at tonight's hootenanny if it turns out that I can borrow a guitar, as mine is still at the luthier's. I do love to belt a ballad.
A just-right Monday, PG. Perfectly Germane and a very pleasant solve. Thanks for all the fun.
My Tante Chaika (Aunt Clara) was the only one of my father's four siblings to make it out of Russia with him and move to the U.S., with her hubby my Uncle Calman (Carl). Chaika was a bulldozer of a woman. In her later years she survived so many strokes and other physical setbacks that my mother, who was not very fond of her, once famously said "They're going to have to shoot her." She finally passed away, in her late 80s.
ReplyDeleteShe made knishes. The potato knishes and the kasha knishes were among my favorite foods when I was a little boy. One time we were over at Chaika's for dinner and she served me a liver knish. I must have been around eight. I looked at it, pushed it around a little with my fork, and said "I don't like it." She said, "First take a taste -- then tell me you don't like it." And I thought, what's the point? I won that battle and the dreaded item was removed.
Decades later, my family and I were dining at a deli in NY and I noticed liver knishes on the menu. I ordered one for us to share. It was delicious. I'm sorry, Tante Chaika -- I wish I had tried yours.
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteA TOTAL ECLIPSE puz on the day of a TOTAL ECLIPSE. Nice. Only gonna get a partial out here in Las Vegas. It'll still probably dim the day. No STARING AT THE SUN for me. I'm sure there are watch parties at various properties out here. I'll be at work. 🙁
Nice MonPuz. Appropriate theme, good fill, easy to do.
Watch your eyeballs today, not just the SUN!
TOTAL ECLIPSE of a Monday. Har.
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Gorgeous sunny day yesterday here in the path of totality…today not so much, sadness.
ReplyDeleteVery easy downs-only for me too. The New Yorker has a puzzle with the Eclipse theme too, but a much more clever way of handling it. But for the NYer, the hardest day of the week is Monday, so they had more leeway to try something more challenging.
ReplyDeleteI saw the last eclipse in totality in South Carolina, and it was truly awesome. That is an overused word that fits here. I kinda wish I was going somewhere to see this one but the timing’s not right. For those of you chasing it, I hope you have clear skies!
I'm the perfect audience for this puzzle since I don't know any of the songs -- giving me the enjoyable task of trying to guess the titles from just a few crosses. (This is one of those rare times where I'm not complaining about a pop culture-based theme since my lack of familiarity made the puzzle much more interesting to solve.)
ReplyDeleteOne wrong guess. I guessed MOONSHADes and it was instead MOONSHADOW. But the rest were easy.
Biggest question upfront: Would it be TOTAL ELIPSE or SOLAR ECLIPSE?
I'm guessing that none of these songs have anything whatsoever to do with an ECLIPSE. Am I right?
So my last question about this quite enjoyable and very timely puzzle is this: Is it a big "Planning-in-Advance" piece of construction: i.e. Peter Gordon knew w-a-a-a-y in advance (which is how the NYTXW works) that the ECLIPSE was coming and planned accordingly? Or is it "Famous Constructor Has The NYTXW Insider Contacts to Jump the Line For a Really Good Reason", as in "Peter Gordon here. This is a TOTAL ECLIPSE puzzle, so you'd better get it into your queue in time for April 8th of this year"?
Whichever -- it's a puzzle by a seasoned pro and perfect for today.
Eclipse day. Lots of fun.
ReplyDeleteUniclues:
1 Stinky emanations from grampa.
2 Practice bondage with French friend.
3 Mom served murder.
4 You (to me).
5 Go for the hotdog.
1 OLDER HIDE ODOR
2 HARNESS AMI
3 BRISKETS ALIT (~)
4 NERD OF THE HEART
5 ESCHEW KNISH
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Reason why helm officer is always prepared to make Spock toast. SULU BREAD BOXES.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
It doesn't seem right to have a TOTALECLIPSE-themed puzzle with no Marjorie Taylor Greene reference. In case you've just awoken from a week-long coma, she said, "God is sending America strong signs to tell us to repent. Earthquakes and eclipses and many more things to come. I pray that our country listens." On second thought, an entire MTG tribute puzzle could be real popular: earthquake, eclipse, Jewish space laser, Sandy Hook hoax. The themers just about write themselves. And, of course, today's puzzle does have Trump's favorite eclipse activity: STARINGATTHESUN.
ReplyDeleteHow many voices sing with @pabloinnh in the choir? TENOR so ALTOgether, which is a LOTTO keep in sync.
Egs: Bae, how do I work this tube that uses gravity to transfer liquids?
Mrs. Egs: SIP, HON.
This was by far the easiest DOS I've experienced. Have fun in the shadows today if you're in one of the totalitarian communities. And post some E-Clips!
"Into the Night" is a creepy song that I'm glad I don't remember. Another grown man singing about a 16-year-old. Great puzzle though.
ReplyDeleteThat video was gross, but I was shocked by the similar theme in the video of "Total Eclipse of the Heart" (which somehow I'd never seen). I used to like that song...uber creepy video, though.
Delete@egs (9:46)-- Oh, I'm repenting! I'm repenting! I'm repenting that this is a country with even one very dangerous and completely loony-tunes MTG in it.
ReplyDeleteNo one's ever heard that Santana song and Staring at the Sun by TV on the Radio is a much more well known song than the U2 one. Post Malone even has a song with the same name that I would argue is more known than the U2 song.
ReplyDeleteNice eclipse puzz. Now on to the real thing!
ReplyDelete@Liveprof (8:37) -- I enjoyed your liver knish story. It reminds me of what my father once said to me when I was very, very young and a picky eater. "Nancy, you are fully entitled to dislike any food you dislike. But you are not allowed to dislike it without tasting it first."
ReplyDeleteDad was a real gourmet and eager to turn me into one too. At four or five, I looked like an exceedingly poor candidate. By age seven, I was well on my way. And my parents loved to tell the story of how, when I was 11, we were on a trip to Washington D.C with their closest friends and their friend's 11-year-old daughter Kathy and how in a restaurant, when Kathy ordered just about the only thing she would eat back then, which was spaghetti and meatballs, I ordered shad roe.
As Ogden Nash might have said:
Liver knishes
Are delicious.
@Nancy -- Sounds like you had a good dad!
ReplyDeleteThat poem you cited was by Ogden Knash.
Obligatory...
ReplyDeleteTotal Eclipse Of The Heart - Literal Video
On 1A, HAIKU
ReplyDeleteThere is a funny book by David Bader called "Haikus for Jews." (According to my good friend Miriam Webster, the plural of haiku can be either haiku or haikus. I bet Bader chose the latter because it rhymes with Jews.)
Here are two samples from it:
Beyond Valium,
the peace of knowing one's child
is an internist.
Is one Nobel Prize
so much to ask from a child
after all I've done?
Don’t usually drop by, but couldn’t resist a peek on 4/8/2024. Haven’t read above yet either…..my bad?
ReplyDeleteDidn’t do more than the songs and reveal before checking to be sure of the day’s outcome. Did the New Yorker with its related theme before checking out the option here. It was a good deal better and TOTALly ECLIPSEd Peter’s peck of puzzle pieces though I have equal delight in seeing either AE-S or PG in the construction credit line.
link that may work for non-subscribers
Stay safe & don’t sneak a peek no matter how tempted!
I miss Carly Simon, although "You're So Vain" doesn't really fit as a title. But a little bonus could be "Where you should be all the time" for NOVA SCOTIA. I guess that would be hard to fit in, though. We dud get some bonus RAYS, at least.
ReplyDeleteI got HAIKU right away, but then went to 1-D and COFFEE SHOP didn't fit, so I didn't know what to do. As for our old crossword friend the T-MAN, cluing it as "dated lingo" suggests that people used to say it, which I doubt.
As for the emoji clue, it may have worked online, but in the paper it came out as a tiny shaded circle. I could sort of make out the spectacles, but I just waited for the crosses.
I saw a total eclipse when I was about 12, but not since. We get about 90% here, but we waited too long to look for the glasses, so we are planning to use the pinhole method. It's pretty sunny, at least.
This was a great Monday puzzle! Topical, with a theme that was on point (at first I thought it was just songs about astronomical objects, but the revealer was great, and is also a banger). And the fill was pretty clean, with some nice, not too obscure trivia and proper names (POLONIUM, WELSH, TOMEI) (Crazy, Stupid, Love is a great movie, btw. Highly recommend) and some pleasing words to delight my little word nerd heart (ESCHEW, TARRY, URSINE, KNISH)
ReplyDeleteCongratz to Mr. Pasco dude. Was great to see Will Shortz present in the tournament champ photo, over at the tourney website.
ReplyDeletePeter Gordon dude. Mr. MonPuz, at the NYT. Eclipse set to music puztheme. Like.
staff weeject pick: AMI. cool clue.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {17-syllable Japanese poem] = HAIKU, chain-reactin into {Bearlike} = URSINE. Got M&A off to a mighty fast start.
other faves: BRISKETS & KNISH. ESCHEW. POLONIUM. TUTU. THANOS [even tho it was a no-know, at our house; schlocky].
Thanx for the eclipse celebration puz, Mr. Gordon due. Great job.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
:-( [runtpuz server currently down. M&A blames the eclipse.]
46A is a stand-alone song title, as well. Quirky "hit" from Klaus Nomi 1981/1982.
ReplyDeleteI got a 'BLOOP' message so maybe my post didn't happen.
ReplyDeleteGreat & totally appropriate puzzle today, Peter, thank you!
I always loved "Total Eclipse of the Heart", Santana (although I knew it wasn't right but wanted "Black Magic Woman) & wonder whatever happened to Cat Stevens??? Was Carly Simon too much for him (lol)?
Enjoy Eclipse Day everyone!
Even easy for me!! Solved across and down only..lol! Jim
ReplyDeletep.p.s.s.
ReplyDeleteRats! Startin to cloud up here, right before eclipse time. M&A blames THANOS.
M&Also
… but, runtpuz eclipse is over! ...
**gruntz**
@jb129 12:41
ReplyDeleteI've been Yusuf Islam since 1977.
I have disliked living in Oklahoma (just the climate and some societal and governmental dislikes, not the many, many wonderful friends and capable people I met and worked with) since 1976, and moved out here to NorCal to be near my kids and granddaughter and now Oklahoma is in then path of totality! My husband would be thrilled. I will enjoy keeping up with it on line.
ReplyDeleteWhat a delightful way to kick off the eclipse - a theme puzzle with a double eclipse connection. And the clever Bonnie Tyler song is such a good one. I have no complaints today and was hoping for an eclipse theme to honor this momentous day. It won’t come ‘round again for 40-some years and it’s unlikely I’ll be here to see it. Have a wonderful day today everyone. Don’t forget your glasses!
@Liveprof -- I've just made a note to myself to call the library tomorrow and reserve a copy of "Haiku for Jews". It looks hilarious! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteTo reciprocate, I offer you this. I don't think you were on the blog when I last posted it.
Excellent themer! But my favourite solar ECLIPSE song has to be Set Your Controls to the HEART of THESUN by Pink Floyd. Look it up on YouTube. It’s amazing.
ReplyDeleteIs Peter Gordon's middle name "And?" He should ONE day make a puzzle about "Trees, swaying in the summer breeze..."
ReplyDeleteAnyhoo, good one today. A cool DOD in Marisa TOMEI, a timely theme that, despite covering a good deal of real estate (59 of 187 squares, or fully 30%), doesn't bend the fill out of shape. Two thumbs up. Only nit: super-easy even for a Monday. Eagle nonetheless.
Wordle birdie.
On my first pass I was shaking my head, "this is not a Monday!" A Spanish painter? The Japanese name of sushi fish? An element well down the table and out of everyday parlance? Songs I've never heard of? I was wondering if the new editor had decided to do away with the ramp over the week. Then TAU was clued as easily as possible, and then I got to the downs and laughed, "Okay, Rex is going to declare this the easiest puzzle ever."
ReplyDeleteExcept I didn't finish because I didn't know either the Spanish painter or the Crazy Stupid Love actor/role.
I was a little itchy about calling racehorse kit "HARNESS," but I guess whether they are calling the saddle and bridle on a thoroughbred HARNESS, or calling a Standardbred a racehorse, it calls under the same "shut up, mathematicians, it's close enough for crosswords" rule. And harness can be many things, "Blow, wind! Come, wrack! At least we’ll die with harness on our back."
My only questionable answer was THANES, which turned out ok. Just not a follower of that show. Ah well.
ReplyDeleteAll else fell into place. I love those long answers that I can easily suss out.
Lady Di
EVE, ESCHEW THE NEW IDOL IN THE MIDST OFTHE NIGHT
ReplyDeleteRAY’S a TOTAL NERD who can HARNESS EVE TO be THE ONE;
TAIL for an OLDER FAT TMAN SEENOUT STARINGATTHESUN.
--- KENT KENT-KEANE