Relative difficulty: Easyish (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- BREAK IT DOWN (21A: Explain something in steps)
- KEEPS IT REAL (31A: Acts like one's true self, colloquially)
- PUT IT MILDLY (40A: Was understated in one's description)
Marie Kondo (近藤 麻理恵, Kondō Marie, pronounced [kondoː maɾie], born 9 October 1984), also known as Konmari (こんまり), is a Japanese organizing consultant, author, and TV presenter.
Kondo has written four books on organizing, which have collectively sold millions of copies around the world. Her books have been translated from Japanese into several languages, and her book The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (2011) has been published in more than 30 countries. It was a best-seller in Japan and in Europe, and was published in the United States in 2014. [...] Kondo's method of organizing is known as the KonMari method, and consists of gathering together all of one's belongings, one category at a time, and then keeping only those things that "spark joy" (Japanese language ときめく tokimeku, translated as equivalent to English "flutter, throb, palpitate"), and choosing a place for everything from then on. Kondo advises to start the process of tidying up by "quickly and completely" discarding whatever it is in the house that doesn't spark joy. Following this philosophy will acknowledge the usefulness of each belonging and help owners learn more about themselves, which will help them be able to more easily decide what to keep or discard. She advises to do this by category of items and not their location in the house. For example, all the clothes in the house should be piled up first, assessed for tokimeku, and discarded if not needed, followed by other categories such as books, papers, miscellany, and mementos. Another crucial aspect of the KonMari method is to find a designated place for each item in the house and making sure it stays there.Kondo says that her method is partly inspired by the Shinto religion. Cleaning and organizing things properly can be a spiritual practice in Shintoism, which is concerned with the energy or divine spirit of things (kami) and the right way to live (kannagara):
• • •
My one big mistake (solving Downs-only) was getting the tense of LOST SLEEP wrong. I wrote in LOSE SLEEP. I have no idea why. Just stupid. It gave me GEE (instead of GET) in that cross, so I couldn't clearly see the error. Dumb brain glitch. Otherwise, no serious trouble. My worst mistake was probably imagining that ALGERIA was the [Northernmost country in Africa]. I was close! And it fit! And ended -IA! Ugh. That's the answer that slowed me down the most. I definitely did NAAN before ROTI, but those crosses looked bad pretty quick, and luckily I knew enough to keep my eye on the NAAN in case it turned into ROTI—and it did (22D: Indian flatbread). I learned that NOVA was the name for [Smoked salmon] from doing crosswords, so as I was writing it in, I was pretty tentative. "NAVI? No, that's the Avatar people. NOVI? NEVA? Oh, it's NOVA! That's right, I remember, it's a word that could definitely have a different clue ... but doesn't." Had IN A ___ at 43D: Stuck, with no easy way out, which left me stuck, with no easy way out, or way in to the SE, especially since I had the very appropriate "OOH!" instead of the not-really-a-"reaction" AWE at 59D: Reaction to seeing the Northern Lights, perhaps. A "reaction" is something something you do or say. AWE is a feeling. Blah blah blah I'm sure you word lawyer / AWE defenders are right in some technical sense, but boo. [Feeling upon seeing the Northern Lights, perhaps]—that, I like. "Reaction," I don't. Also in the "Don't Like" column: LESS as an answer for 63A: What the KonMari Method leaves you with. Way, way, way too vague. Not KonMari-specific enough, at all. True, you do get rid of shit, but the point of the "Method" is tidiness—it's right there in the title of the damn book (The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up).
So ... cool revealer, cool MAD SKILLS, the rest ... SPLAT. Net grade: middling. Some scheduling news: I'm here for the rest of July, then in early August I head west to see my dad and extended family, so I'll be out for a week again, during which my trusty substitutes will substitute once more. Thanks to them for their able work this month, and prethanks to them for that same work next month. I'll be spending early August in Santa Barbara, making several trips into the L.A. area, so if you live down there and I owe you a visit or you want to buy me a drink, just remind me or let me know, whichever applies. See you tomorrow.
"TO PUT IT MILDLY, I'm THE BOSS here and my ROTI PONE TUFT does not BROIL well!" yelled APRIL in her SMUG voice. "My PLAN is to PUT IT on hot LIDS so it doesn't SPLAT all over the POTS!".....
ReplyDeleteAPRIL acted MILDLY UGLI and would go GAGA when her TUFT would SPLAT. The town MOOCH, PALEO, on the other hand, was a RUDE IMP who SEEMED REAL HIPS and LOVED REAL SOP. You'd want to UNSEE him BREAKING that SOP as he PUT IT in his ROUGE MUG and DOWN IT with some SPANK NEYO.
The ACLU from UCLA was in town. They would TESTS the ROTI PONE TUFT SKILLS of APRIL. APRIL LOST SLEEP and her LIDS seemed to REPEL the FLAK she might GET.....She'd be UP A TREE if her MUG shot was on POST NOTES from that RUDE IMP, PALEO. The NOTES all over BRIAR town would say that APRIL's TUFT was from TUNISIA and she'd BROIL iT DOWN and EVEN the LIDS would SPLAT with ROTI PONE!
"NO SPLAT on the LIDS!" the ACE from the ACLU would yell..."It's REAL - although MILDLY UGLI - but she does KEEPS IT REAL!" APRIL would BREAK DOWN in tears. She SEEMED to go GAGA with the ACLU UCLA RATERS and sang AIDA ODES to them.....
PALEO hated RATERS. He SHOOS them away as if he were THE REAL BOSS. He was RUDE and smelled of SOP. But...he was IN A SPOT now. BRIAR town SEEMED to have a PLAN to GET him to ENLIST in the NOVA ARMADA and head EAST. He took a STAND that was UGLI. It was BREAK or REPEL!...He would MOPE, but he was UP A TREE and didn't want any FLAK.
PALEO finally did ENLIST in the NOVA ARMADA and headed EAST. He SEEMED MILDLY GAGA at first, but the SOP was REAL good.
APRIL felt SMUG and EVEN LESS UGLI over the STAND she took as LEADER of the ROTI PONE TUFT that didn't SPLAT all over the POTS. AIDA ODES sung over the TEAL GLEN SPOT was the PLAN. The OWLET EVEN sang along and all EYES were LOST in SLEEP... The PLAN worked and that's the truth!
ReplyDeleteMedium. Did not know NEYO as clued, tried cacti before BRIAR, misspelled ARMADA…
The theme was no help in solving. In fact I needed more than a couple of nanoseconds post solve to see what was going on. Fun theme answers, terrific reveal, a couple of fine long downs, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #927 was pretty tough for a Croce for me. Several WOEs and the typical tricky clueing. Good luck!
Easy enough Downs-only solve. The theme helped and it's a really neat Monday-level idea with a great reimagining of the revealer (pun with both POST and NOTES!). I had to end on NEYO, I didn't quite remember that name but I guess it was somewhere in the depths of my brain because it was the first answer I tried. If you don't know NEYO, all vowels make sense with S_P, and even T could go there. I don't know if NEYO is Monday-level fill, it could've been replaced with NEWT or NEXT instead.
ReplyDeleteI have a concept of cursed crossings which is what happens when two similar pieces of crosswordese intersect. The most cursed one I've seen is easily OLEO x OLIO. Today we have ACLU x UCLA, two answers that I used to mix up allllll the time (as a non-American), and I still get confused about them at times.
A bit too many abstruse trivia for a Monday for a non-American. Also l first put DOLE for MOPE but POST HOC (remember yesterday) l found out that l created a neologism as verbally it's only "to hand out," although noun-wise it's OK as an (archaic) synonym for "sadness." Sadly.
ReplyDeleteThanks @Rex for explaining the “do re mi” post-it note thing. I totally could not figure that out….
ReplyDeleteI find myself oddly taken with the logical “fallacies” from yesterday’s puzzle. I’m looking at the sofa here in my AirBnB in Madrid… How in the name of all that’s holy can they make a sofa with no arms?
Person A) No sofa is armless
Person B) My AirBnB in Madrid has an armless sofa
Person A) No TRUE sofa is armless.
On the other hand, the Douglass Adams sofa has low, vestigial arms…. It is “Mostly Armless”….
I memorized the “post hoc ergo propter hoc” phrase. I am sure that it will come in handy one day…
Settee. Also, you will use the Latin phrase in the next 72 hours trying to sound cool.
DeleteI forgot to addd, that here in Spain we do not pronounce the letter “h”. So, “mostly harmless”, becomes “mostly armless”, which apparently applies to sofas.
ReplyDeleteMy five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Major undertaking? (7)
2. They often take bows (9)
3. Things that are head and shoulders above the rest? (7)(4)
4. Appealing subject? (3)
5. Horses around? (8)
COLLEGE
SHOELACES
PROFILE PICS
LAW
CAROUSEL
Not as easy as some Mondays. Didn't get the theme until after I was finished. DO-RE-MI doesn't seemed to connect with the ITs or with POSTITNOTES, though they are notes, musically.
ReplyDeleteExactly - and each “note” is post (ie, after) an “it”
DeleteSanta Barbara. Heaven on earth. Enjoy.
ReplyDeleteI thought the theme barely qualified as a theme and Rex loved it - I also thought MAD SKILLS sounded weird and maybe a little made up. Do people say that with any frequency in the wild?
ReplyDeleteI faintly remember the quasi-fad status that the cleaning up the place book(s) achieved, but definitely didn’t remember that the name was the Konmari Method - but no surprise there. The rest of it was a nice, breezy Monday.
Southside Johnny
DeleteThe whole point of new slang for each generation is that the previous generations haven’t heard it and/or don’t understand it
So of course you haven’t heard it
But it is a thing.
I enjoyed the theme as well. No real problems, but I wasn't sure if it was going to be MAD SKILLS or MAD SKILLz--for some reason I thought the Z was going to show up there.
ReplyDeleteMostly fine, I thought. No ridiculous short answers, which is always a positive, but the theme didn’t do anything for me.
ReplyDeleteI didn’t get it as I was going through and even when it clicked following completion of the puzzle, it barely elicited a reaction.
I don’t hate the idea at all, but I just didn’t really like it as the execution felt a little forced.
Really did not like the theme today - that's two Mondays in a row. The trend at NYTXW seems to be towards increasingly tortured letter-play.
ReplyDeleteCroce freestyle 927 was solidly in the medium zone thanks to tough NE and NW sections.
Usually the answer-set stars – sparky entries – are long. The shorter answers are so often a supporting cast, forgettable glue. But man, today this puzzle starts off dense with short beauty – SPLAT, MOOCH, UNSEE, TUFT, FLAK, SMUG. Brava on that!
ReplyDeleteAnd the theme – mwah! Left me wondering why hadn’t any constructor thought of this before. The perfect revealer, eliciting from me an inner standing-O.
That’s enough to make me a fan of this puzzle, to PUT IT MILDLY. But then there are lovely serendipities as icing:
• PuzzPair© of EYES and LIDS.
• The GET across and STAND down.
• Lovely contradictory abutting pair of GAGA and PUT IT MILDLY.
• Parallel prepositional phrases with parallel clues UP A TREE and IN A SPOT.
Laura, your first puzzle (collabed with Katherine Baiker) also had a primo revealer, with theme answers that ended with same-sounding words, like PIG TAIL TALE and MR. RIGHT RITE, all given wacky clues, with the revealer being AD HOMINEM. Wow!
So just what will you come up with next? Anxious to see. Thank you for a puzzle that left me buoyant!
@ Southside, people say Mad Skills all the time. I liked this puzzle. Not sure what was so bad about it. Solid Monday. I mean, they are supposed to be relatively easy and quick
ReplyDeleteNEYO was meaningless to me and then OFL describes it as crosswordese. Hmmmm.
ReplyDeleteAlso I was about to write something about MADSKILLZ and read @Adam's comment, so I will just say I was thinking that too.
After DO and RE MI had to be next, and the revealer was a winner. Don't think I have ever seen the "if it doesn't spark joy, toss it" approach described as the KonMari Method, but of course it makes sense,
Nice breezy Mondecito, LD. Lightly Demanding, and Largely Delightful. Thanks for all the fun.
Long, long before I was anywhere near the revealer clue or had looked at the length of the answer, I fairly yelled out "POST-IT NOTES!!" At that point I had only BREAK IT DOWN and KEEP IT REAL filled in. So I am feeling quite pleased with myself and perhaps a little SMUG.
ReplyDeleteA very nice play on words and very nicely chosen themers. All theme answers are very much in the language and all are well-clued.
I kept wanting PUT IT gentLY at 40A, but GE is not a note. I needed crosses to get MILDLY. Just couldn't think of it.
Nice clues for OWLET and SPANK. ROUGE is so yesterday; these days it's BLUSH. (I'm old enough to have used ROUGE back in the day, but then I'm old enough to have used a rotary phone too.)
A cute theme and no junk. Liked it!
Boy, did I overthink this one!
ReplyDeleteI figured that the theme was based on the fact that DO RE MI are notes that follow TI—yet the revealer says POST IT? Then I saw that because their sequence in the grid was downward—the reverse of their natural order—the TI had been reversed to IT! Brilliant, no?
Like OFL, I was really irritated by the grammatical inconsistency of the themers. We are who we are…
Hey All !
ReplyDeleteNice puz. POST (after) IT "NOTES". Pretty slick. Some fun slangy terms, MAD SKILLS and SPANK. Liked UP A TREE and clue on THEBOSS. Didn't particularly like the ACLU/UCLA cross, though. Both valid answers, but they irked me for some weird reason.
Staying quite hot out here this week. Broke another High Temp record yesterday. Even broke the Low Temp record, which was 90, yesterday's low was 91. Hottest year on record, this year. We hit an all time record High of 120 a few weeks ago. I figured I'd BREAK IT DOWN to KEEPS IT REAL letting you know it's hot, to PUT IT MILDLY. 😁
Monday again, how RUDE. Har. Have a great day!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
Never heard of NEYO. That's on me. I've learned that just because I haven't heard of someone that doesn't mean they're not one of the most famous people on the planet.
ReplyDeleteWelcome back Rex! I like to think of the Kon-Mari method as “Less is more”. You end up with less stuff, it’s true, but you gain more joy in what you have. I was all set to dislike this method until I caught a few episodes of Marie Kondo’s streaming show. She seems like such a nice, caring person that wants to bring happiness to her clients. Do I practice the method? Sadly no! I’m still not neat but I appreciate the ideas behind it.
ReplyDeleteVery fun Monday puzzle with a creative theme! I wonder if anybody else tried at first to make the end of a lion’s tail more scientific sounding than TUFT? No?
ReplyDeleteUnlike @Nancy I didn’t feel too SMUG writing in POSTITNOTES…I got THAT from the clue and then looked back at my circled DOREMI.
@GILL I. you were on fire today!
I've heard that the Barefoot Contessa is coming out with a book on cooking with marijuana: INASPOT.
ReplyDeleteWhat will REPEL a leper? A mirror.
AK, PS and UT. Pre IT notes.
DIDWE sounds like an Elmer Fudd-ism. "I don't care DIDWE about that wabbit.
If you missed 15A, you haven't ACLU.
Great revealer. Fun Monday. Thanks, Laura Dershewitz.
My Word of the Day is the tried and true crossword-ese EOS, because that "Goddess of the dawn" not only is smack dab in the middle of this grid at 37A, but she reappears as a Hidden Diagonal Word (HDW) off the E in 6D, TAPES. And that's not all. The 37A dawning of the goddess spawns two 4-letter HDWs--ERRS (off the E in EOS) and OTTO (off the O). That OTTO fellow moves to the NW and, believe it or not, intersects with the Hidden Diagonal EOS! That OTTO also goes both ways, of course, being a dandy little palindrome.
ReplyDeleteSo here's to EOS! Long may she rule the dawn!
There's another fun Hidden Diagonal Word intersection in the SE corner, by the way, where SALT shares its L with soccer great PELE. Check it out. (We all know that PELE was worth his SALT.)
Signed,
THE BOSS of the HDWs
ITFA ITSOL ITLA ITTI ITDO. There, now it's full-scale.
ReplyDeleteClue: "Mad talent, slangily" Answer: CRAZY SKILLS. Slang for slang for slang for slang.
And now a word about low-rise pants:
ReplyDeleteI don't know what on earth possessed me about five years ago. And I wasn't 22 anymore, either. Having never even tried on a pair of low-rise pants much less ever owned any, I was in a ritzy Madison Avenue UES shop and chanced upon a pair of the most gloriously soft chocolate brown cashmere pants. They were beautifully cut: shaped in a way that made me look taller -- no mean feat. And they were on sale.
Chocolate brown cashmere pants are quite rare. Ones on sale are rarer still.
I didn't feel completely secure walking in them, but there wasn't all that much walking to be done in the shop. And the elastic seemed firm...
I never sat down in them. There was no place to sit in the shop and no reason to sit.
Dear Reader, I took them home.
I had them on at home (thank heavens!) when I made the mistake of sitting down in them for the first time. And when I got up...!!!!
Dear Reader, I have never worn them. No eyes have ever seen me in them. The most ridiculous excuse for "clothing" it has ever been my misfortune to own.
At least you didn't marry them.
Deleteyep. Great ahar moment revealer. Real good Monday IT-puz.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject pick [of only 7 choices]: EOS darlin. honrable mention to IT.
best SUSword: NEYO. A total no-know. And just after I sorta had that there NEY name [Napoleon general dude] straight in my head.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Springsteen, to fans} = THEBOSS. Also really liked the lasagna SPLAT.
other fave stuff: LOSTSLEEP. THEBOSS. UPATREE. INASPOT. ARMADA. maybe MADSKILLS, but that sounds like an ability to recite all Alfred E. Neuman quotes.
Thanx for the fun, Ms. Dershewitz darlin. Primo puztheme. And congratz on yer solo debut.
Masked & Anonymo6Us
**gruntz**
I've started to learn to pay attention to what's going in the circles, so I was able to put in MI from the first two. But I was looking for something about scales in the revealer, and it took me a moment to understand the POST-IT reference. I was still just a little disappointed that we didn't have MAKE IT FANCY, KEEP IT SOLEMN, LET IT LAST, HOLD IT TIGHT, but that would probably have to be on a Sunday to have space for it.
ReplyDeleteMy wife and her cousin went shopping and came back with Marie Kondo's book as a present for me; or, more precisely, as a pointed comment. I couldn't do the part where you pile everything on the floor and then go through the pile, deciding whether each item is either really useful or sparks joy (a method more or less plagiarized from Oscar Wilde, btw). But I worked through my closet and got rid of a lot of shoes. Now for the books....
No one seems to have mentioned the paired clues for UP A TREE and IN A SPOT, which I thought was pretty neat--although I would have preferred my first answer, IN A hole.
This Woody Guthrie song about the dust bowl is now my earworm for the day.
Mondays are usually not comment-worthy but the EOS/TETE cross struck me as firmly Tuesday or even Wednesday (not a complaint; the puzzle overall was still very easy). I've learned (and promptly forgot) just about every variety of Indian bread there is thanks to recent Times crosswords.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree about EOS/TETE -- especially as it's in the sole narrow connection between north and south.
DeleteI figured it out, but without confidence.
"Just Deportees" -- is that it, @jberg?
ReplyDeleteI'll have a listen now, but that's my guess.
@jberg -- I'm wrong. Believe it or not, I don't know that one. But then Pete Seeger was always my pipeline to Woody -- and I don't think he ever sang that one.
ReplyDeleteCroce took about 2 NYT Saturdays, so pretty thorny. Would have helped if I could have remembered the Syracuse hooper long before I did, major face palm after that one went in.
ReplyDeletePretty easy. I knew there had to be a theme since there were circles but had to come here to see what it was.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the fun, Laura :)
From etmonlyine.com
ReplyDeletereaction (n.) "action in resistance or response to another action or power," 1640s....Originally a word in physics and dynamics. In chemistry….by 1836. ****The general sense of "action or feeling in response" (to a statement, event, etc.) is recorded from 1914.**** “
ERGO, “ooh” and AWE are both reactions. No word lawyering required, just letting English do its thing over time. Besides, as our old friend @Z would point out (about both AWE and LESS), crossword clues aren’t definitions, they’re clues.
The Return of SPLAT from yesterday reminded me of noticeable repetitions recently. PATH both Saturday and Sunday. UGLI rearing its ugly head again today after its appearance Wednesday. Both NOVA and ROTI were seen Thursday. I can understand some useful entries like SEE or EEL popping up frequently but it seems like lazy editing to have so many so close together. I make an exception for what I would call “seeding” - using a less common entry with an easy clue or easier crossings first, then later in the week without the training wheels. But that’s not what we’ve been seeing recently and I object. Thank you for listening to my rant.
Colorful, easy Monday with little to complain about. Not much work, though I have barely a passing acquaintance with NEYO and MADSKILLS. Looking forward to Ms. Dershewitz’s next one.
It’s garbage day so maybe I’ll get rid of some stuff that doesn’t spark joy.
#A 12:22. It was Joachin with his dictum that taught us that they’re clues not definitions, not Z.
DeleteSpiffy theme and revealer with some POST segue from yesterday.
ReplyDeleteI did NOTE that of the theme entries, one needed some convenient help to do its job. BREAK IT DOWN and PUT IT MILDLY can STAND on their own but KEEP IT REAL had to ENLIST some POC (plural of convenience) assistance to get it done. See also the lower rightmost square for a two for one POC. It's not the only one in the grid. I can't UNSEE this stuff.
Never heard of MAD SKILLS. Is that anything like BAD ASS SKILLS?
Maybe more Saturdayish but another option for the TUNISIA clue: B. Kliban's "Biggest Tongue in ____".
Love this theme and its perfect revealer, but I am worried about what happened to FA, SO, LA and TI. They're probably hanging out with DI, RA, RI, ME, FI, SE, SI, LI, LE, and TE filming a pub scene for the Lord of the Rings musical.
ReplyDeleteFunny, well edited, Mondays are almost always better than the rest of the week and this puzzle is great.
Have you noticed an increase in the amount of SPLAT showing up in our puzzle since the the president dropped out of the race? This is SPLAT day two. Feels like a lotta SPLAT. I guess they're warning us what's going to happen to democracy when the orange king claims the throne?
I think Tunisia has the best name of all the African countries. I might go there someday.
I use the phrase MAD SKILLS, usually humorously, all the time describing the opposite, or the mundane.
ARMADA is on my favorite word list between ATELIER and MOXIE. And amazingly, SMUG is also on my list way down there between YOYO and RUBBISH.
Propers: 5
Places: 1
Products: 3
Partials: 3
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 13 (17%)
Recipes: 2 (beta)
Funnyisms: 5 😄
Tee-Hee: SPANK.
Uniclues:
1 Make a cat burglar say, "Ow ow ow."
2 A ceramic one saying, "World's fairly typical dad."
3 Throw the baby from a speeding train. (Don't do this by the way, it's very bad for the outfit.)
4 Emulate the British Navy in the Battle of Gravelines on August 8, 1588.
5 Those with opinions on Shakira.
6 Why Bruce has pretty feet.
7 Bread in the banyans.
1 ENLIST BRIAR
2 KEEPS-IT-REAL MUG
3 REPEL ONESIE
4 SPANK ARMADA (~)
5 ACE HIPS RATERS
6 THE BOSS PEDI
7 ROTI UP A TREE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Note from delusional companion unlikely to return anytime soon. I MET SOMEONE. BRB..
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@GILL, Wow, great stuff, and at 1:12am no less! You made such colorful use of SPLAT, NOVA and UGLI that I retract my rant!
ReplyDelete@Nancy, well-deserved SMUGness! I had the whole puzzle filled except the revealer and couldn’t get it. Sorry about your low-rise pants experience. I don’t remember when I learned that lesson, but if there’s no place to sit I’ll do a half-squat to see what tricks the pants will perform. “I have never worn them” suggests you still have them. If so, you might try suspenders. Or have have additional fabric added to the waist. Shame for chocolate brown cashmere to be forever forsaken.
Nice suggestions from @jberg for finishing the scale, and thanks also for the Guthrie DO RE MI link. It prompted me to find this cover by Ani DiFranco, whose name just came up in a puzzle my husband was solving. Love the musical education I get from this blog.
@Mskare, of course, Joachin's Dictum. Thank you. @Z would quote it and then expound.
ReplyDelete@Rex - If you haven't had your fill of Julie Andrews, and how could anyone, get "The Americanization of Emily". Peak Julie Andrews, peak James Garner, peak Paddy Chayefsky and yet way, way better than the sum of its parts.
ReplyDelete"They're clues, not definitions" was first stated here way way long ago, someone said it to ACME back when she was a regular. Joachim may well have independently come up with it, but he wasn't the first.r
Challenging, for a Monday. More like a Tuesday or even a Wednesday for me.
ReplyDeleteCute little mini-scale. To finish:
ReplyDelete1. What an ump does for a grounder just inside 3rd*
2. Picard directive
3. Question of endurance
4. "Just wait"
That clue for LESS was off the wall for a Monday, but it didn't matter, the crosses were so easy. Another EKES sighting will cost a stroke, so: par.
*1. CALLSIT[FA]IR
2. MAKEITIT[SO]
3. WILLIT[LA]ST
4. GIVEIT[TI]ME
Wordle bogey; I couldn't believe they'd do SKATE and STAKE on successive days.
EDIT THE NOTES
ReplyDelete“BREAKITDOWN for THEBOSS,
DIDWE GET all THE TESTS?”
“EVEN though SLEEP was LOST,
PUTITMILDLY to REST.”
--- MS. APRIL GAYE, UCLA