Relative difficulty: Easy (3:18)
THEME: Abbreviations? — Theme entries end with three-letter abbreviations. I'm not sure if there's something more here. It doesn't seem like the letters spell anything out, or have any relation to each other. Please let me know if I'm missing a connection in the comments.
Theme answers:
Word of the Day: NTSB (Accident-investigating org.) —
- [How some movies were released, pre-streaming] for DIRECT TO DVD
- [Bruce Springsteen album with a red, white and blue cover] for BORN IN THE USA
- [Question to someone who's on the way] for WHATS YOUR ETA
- [A piece of cake, so to speak] for AS EASY AS ABC
Word of the Day: NTSB (Accident-investigating org.) —
I put OSHA here, and had never heard of this agency, so thought I'd educate us all: The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independent U.S. government investigative agency responsible for civil transportation accident investigation. In this role, the NTSB investigates and reports on aviation accidents and incidents, certain types of highway crashes, ship and marine accidents, pipeline incidents, bridge failures, and railroad accidents.
• • •
I absolutely flew through today's puzzle! I'm trying to identify some of the vocabulary that, while easy for me, may have stumped a brand new solver-- KIR and ANODE stand out, and I wonder if new teenaged solvers are aware of ETTA JAMES and EDITH Piaf. (Fun to see them like this-- I usually see just "Etta" and "Piaf.") Anyway, do yourself a favor and listen to Beyonce's cover of "I'd Rather Go Blind" and Cristin Milioti's cover of "La Vie en Rose." Stunning songs. (Or listen to the originals!!! Also incredible, obviously!)
I wish there had been a little more to the theme here. It's totally serviceable, but this feels like a puzzle many people will solve without even realizing there was a theme at all, and I don't know if the long answers were fun enough to justify that. DIRECT TO DVD, in particular felt dated, rather than nostalgic, although maybe you disagree. I wanted the "ABC" in the last answer to indicate something, but it doesn't seem to be a revealer.
What else? I was surprised they didn't clue LUCKY ONE in reference to the Taylor Swift song given that it's not a particularly in-the-language phrase, and given that the NYT crossword loves a Taylor Swift clue. But I guess the song is called The Lucky One, so they would have had to do a weird fill-in-the-blank. There was also only one question mark clue ([One serving you a whopper?] for LIAR) which felt a tad low to me.
Bullets:
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
- [Mark Zuckerberg's company] for META — It's hilarious to me how he went through the whole rigamarole of changing the name in order to launch a Metaverse that was enormously panned and mercilessly mocked. Oh well. I guess he's still a billionaire so no huge loss.
- [Lingerie top] for BRA — Something felt off about this phrasing, maybe because I have many bras I would not consider lingerie, and some lingerie tops that I would not consider bras. Could the clue have benefited from a ", perhaps" ?
- [Bling worn on the head] for TIARA — I paused while solving because I thought this phrasing was so awkward. It felt like how an alien observing Earth and studying our language would describe a tiara.
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Hi Malaika! I can't see anything further to the theme than, as you said, they end in 3 letter abbrev's. I just noticed that 59 across, without the first and last letters, is: _SEASYASAB_. Say what?
ReplyDeleteI solved down clues only and it went okay but I got very annoyed at... yet again... all the names. Fortunately I knew most of them except Sunisa LEE.
Once again: Joel, fewer names, please.
As for LUCKY ONE, the song to listen to is by Alison Krauss & Union Station.
You don’t know Suni Lee? I’m no lover of names in my crosswords but Suni Lee is pretty well known (2020 All-Around gold in women’s gymnastics, and 2024 Bronze in the same). I guess using her full name instead of her nickname might be a bit tricky, but still, I think it’s quite fair considering the recency of the Olympics.
DeleteEasy, no WOEs and no erasures. Cute theme with no discernible junk and some fine long downs. Liked it a bunch.
ReplyDeleteCroce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #945 was one of the tougher Croce’s I’ve done plus. I had a multi square DNF. I did not know 15d and guessed wrong on some of the crosses that were also WOEs for me. Hope you have better luck!
Tough one for sure. Did know 15D, filled in 21A in Spanish, which messed up the whole NE for too long, and finally cheated on the Steely Dan drink brand which opened up the SE. Still have one blank square. Shesh.
DeleteDidn't get the initial trick until I was finished. Nice easy Monday with a few nice long entries.
ReplyDeleteThat was the easiest Monday in quite a while. Nothing remotely tricky.
ReplyDeleteI long for the day the NYT finds something to replace Brian Eno as a clue/answer. Feels like he’s been in every grid for about two weeks!
My five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. People are often spotted pressing them (7)
2. Windy flight? (5)(9)
3. Box office? (7)
4. Poor resolution, say (10)
5. Take inventory? (3)
BARBELLS
SPIRAL STAIRCASE
CUBICLE
ANTICLIMAX
ROB
Welcome back Malaika. I solved it as a themeless and even after the fact didn’t pick up on the abbreviation convention until I read your review. Even as a themeless, the entire grid felt right at home for a Monday. Even though it was Monday-easy, it was still a fun solve.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThanks for filling in, Malaika!
One overwrite, at 59A: AS EASY AS pie before ABC, corrected by TIARA at 49D.
I came here hoping to learn that there was more to the theme than "phrases ending in three letters" but apparently not.
Hi Malaika. I had the same reaction to the clue for TIARA. How do you do, fellow earthlings?
ReplyDeleteAt my age, an 11:00 enchilada is a sure recipe for 3 a.m. Tums.
I agree that ENO is getting tired. I enjoyed this theme--phrases ending in a 3-letter initialism. Had a rhythm to it. But it would make it really crisp if the puzzle had no other initialisms.... what do you think? I feel like NTSB kinda doesn't belong. But I certainly enjoyed a nice smooth Monday solve! : )Thanks Freddie for a great puzzle.
ReplyDeleteToday is Springsteen’s Birthday!
ReplyDeleteHow many put down As Easy as pie for 59A ?
ReplyDeleteMe! And I thought it was quite clever. I hadn't noticed the theme.
DeleteTotally should have reworked that SE corner. When you clue it as "a piece of cake so to speak" it has to be easy as pie.
DeleteSame issue here pie before ABC
DeletePie is actually not very easy -- have you ever made one?
DeleteHi Malaika! I think the theme we’re missing is just a general emphasis on song/music clues? I suppose in honor of Bruce Springsteen’s birthday. Three of the four long acrosses are lyrics (almost) – Born in the USA obviously, What’s Your ETA (newjeans) and “easy as abc” is just close enough to “abc, easy as 123” (Michael Jackson) to call up the reference for me. From there we’ve got LUCKY ONE, 40A HELLO (Adele), 56A “what’s the USE in trying” (smash mouth from shrek), 42A “TIS the season to be jolly”, and the Twisted Sister clue. Plus, Edith Piaf, Etta James, Brian Eno, Selena Gomez, and Sweeney Todd. All this to say, I think it’s cute enough, but unless there’s a reference I’m totally missing it makes DIRECTTODVD frustratingly unrelated and out of sync with the rest of the puzzle
ReplyDeleteYou are seeing a music theme where there isn’t one, which is why DIRECTTODVD feels out of sync to you. The constructor’s notes make it clear that the theme is phrases that end with 3-letter initialisms, nothing more or less.
DeleteI was solving downs only, got the BORNINTHEUSA, _ _EASYASABC, and also thought lyrics with three letter abbreviations. That D_D was driving me N_TS!!
DeleteSammy goes to see the Rabbi. Rabbi, he says, I have two girls in love with me -- Annie and Rachel. With all of your wisdom and foresight, can you tell me which of them will be the lucky one?
ReplyDeleteThe rabbi closes his eyes and strokes his beard and goes into deep thought. When he opens them he says: You will marry Annie. Rachel will be the lucky one.
I wish there was a like button for this!!
DeleteFreddy has range. While well more than half of his 17 NYT puzzles are Mondays and Tuesdays, he also has a pair of themeless puzzles filled with cluing deftness. For example: here's one where he made a drab answer shine -- [Illustration, for example: Abbr.].*
ReplyDeleteThe NE and SW corners of this grid are islands, that is, have only one answer coming in from outside. Islands can be nerve-wracking on the tougher puzzle days of the week, but not today, because it’s Monday-time, and the cluin’ is easy.
Some lovely serendipities today. A pair of PuzzPairs©: YELP/YEOW and HIALL/HELLO. Answers that become names when read backwards: TAP, AROD, AVE, and IRA. And, I guess because my brain was really on the prowl, answers that are homonyms of other words: DEW, TEES, TIERS, NIT, TOE, and WERE.
And, by the way, regarding this theme, try coming up with other in-the-language phrases ending in initialisms. Then try to come up with pairs of them that contain equal numbers of letters. There’s high skill behind this theme.
Because you have such range, Freddy, I never know when I’m going to see one of your puzzles next, but I’ve learned that it will be of superb quality. Thank you for a splendid outing today!
*SYN
lingerie = women's underwear or nightwear. from wikipedia: "lingerie is a category of primarily women's clothing including undergarments (mainly brassieres), sleepwear, and lightweight robes."
ReplyDeleteHit a downs-only roadblock pretty early — I filled in maybe half the puzzle downs-only but the across answers just wouldn’t come, so I looked at some across clues. Overall a nice Monday but not downs-only-friendly, at least for me.
ReplyDeleteDowns-only defeated me. I didn't get IDIOM, which meant that HI ALL etc. had too many choices to figure out; similarly with WISE UP. YEO[W] didn't even occur to me.
DeleteI breezed through, no stops, and it took me 5 minutes. How do you do it in 3 minutes??
ReplyDeleteWell I feel especially dated, because at first I dropped in DIRECT TO VHS
ReplyDeleteHI ALL !
ReplyDeleteLittle NIT, in a puz theme that is initialisms, you really shouldn't have others. Tough to do, I realize.
Surprised Malaika hasn't heard of the NTSB. They are referenced every time there is a plane or train crash.
Good puz for a Monday. Decent fill, openish grid (well, NE/SW corners closed off). Regular solve time here. Which is good, after a three day one-letter DNF streak. Yeesh!
Neat seeing HIALL on top of ADIEU.
Monday again. YELP.
No F's (That gets a BERATE)
RooMonster
DarrinV
You could also nit at Roth/IRA.
DeleteHi Malaika, and Happy Monday! No recommendations for late-night spots, as mine involves blankets and pillows, but I sort of remember those days.
ReplyDeleteSaw the "theme" after DVD and USA and was waiting for some kind of revealer, but no, just another themer. Happens sometimes. Wrote in EASYASPIE without thinking and had to change it, of course. I think I was influenced by "cake" in the clue. When I gave my students easy quizzes I described them as "having various cake-like qualities" and noticed which kids found that funny or interesting so I could grade accordingly.
Nice enough Mondecito, FC. A Fast Completion did not detract from its appeal, and thanks for all the fun.
Great write-up! As a newer solver, the only place that gave me trouble was two consecutive proper nouns of people I didn’t know (EDITH and SELENA) crossing two consecutive abbreviations, one of which I didn’t know (NTSB) and the other that I misconstrued to assume it was an anti-discrimination law, and when my initial guess of ADA didn’t work I wrongly assumed I didn’t know it either (DEI, which I certainly do in fact know). But after I realized my mistake on DEI, EDITH became inferable, and the other name was going to be either SELENA or hELENA if it was inferable, which it turned out to be. A good Monday for a new solver to practice inferring.
ReplyDeleteNot just abbreviations, but TLAs - - Three Letter Abbreviations. The beauty of TLA is that it is, itself, a TLA. Meta.
ReplyDeleteSomeday TODD Rundgren will get his due here.
You and me both. One of the great autodidact musicians and producers of the last 75 years. R & R Hall of famer, even though he eschews the honor. Certainly crossworthy.
DeleteAnswers ending in three letters? Is that all there is? I'll come back later to see if I missed something (music lesson in 25 minutes, got to set up for the Zoom call). Meanwhile:
ReplyDeleteTYPE SET is not layout -- first you set the type, then you lay out your page, including any art. Nowadays you can do them both in Pagemaker or whatever, but they are still different steps.
And OMS is the worst POC ever. It is one sound that you make and hold. You certainly don't count them.
Later
Initialisms!!!! How thrilling!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThe puzzle is well and professionally made, but that's hardly enough to make it exciting. I was looking for a cute revealer -- some sort of pun that would tie together the fact that there are initials ending the first three answers. I couldn't think of one because, of course, there ISN'T one. Oh well -- on to Tuesday...
Encontramos un restaurante totalmente vegetal cerca de nuestra casa.
ReplyDeleteI've been working on eating less murdery for years, but being BORN IN THE USA, and living in the land of carne adovada, death is on every menu. To our delight we found an all-plant based restaurant within walking distance of the house and it's good. Even the "milk" shake.
They didn't give us a menu for today's meal. Maybe "Here's your initialism" in Bill Engvall's voice? His last special was filled with brutal clichés, and he's out on his farewell tour now.
The only thing I love in this puzzle is hearing, "We're not gonna take it..." roaring in Dee Snider's voice in my head. I just read his Wiki and he's the hardest working grampa in showbiz. Married 43 years to boot. I guess the hair and makeup didn't confuse him like so many others.
I don't like Bruce Springsteen's music. He's 75 today.
Propers: 7
Places: 3
Products: 4
Partials: 6
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 23 of 78 (29%)
Funnyisms: 1 🤨
Tee-Hee: BRA. Learned more about @Malaika's underwear than I feel comfortable knowing today.
Uniclues:
1 A Lincoln Towncar according to any hillbilly.
2 Every one of her lines of dialog in "Only Murders in the Building."
3 Diadem for under eaters.
4 Place in the forest to get your heroin.
1 LUCKY ONE SEDAN
2 SELENA SAP
3 SLIM BUILD TIARA
4 KILO SALE ARBOR
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: It's cute, but it should have a digital clock by now. RE-RATES BIG BEND.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Plants can be meat eaters too!
DeleteOr haven't you seen Little Shop of Horrors?
Not much to comment on…I think this was a puzzle that was great for new solvers as per @Emily Ransom, and well and professionally made as per @Nancy. I didn’t find too much “gunk” as it’s called now, which is always a plus! Hey…it’s a Monday! Oh. I will say that I really like SLIMBUILD as an answer. As someone who fits that description I have always wanted to remove from the English language the word “skinny.” Ugh.
ReplyDeleteFor a moment I thought I was trippingonLSD as I solved this one. So I switchedonCNN.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy @Malaika's write ups, but I hope @Rex is ok. Fun Monday. Thanks, Freddie Cheng.
Clues for Hidden Diagonal Words found in today's grid:
ReplyDelete1. Reports and supports (5 letters)
2. Travel "connections"?
3. Pierce me!
HI, ALL ... ADIEU ... HELLO (clued with "ciao" and "bonjour") ... AVE
Our old buddy aloha is feeling left out and lonely today!
Had seats in the nosebleed section last night. Left in TIERS.
Answers:
1. POSTS (off the P in 47A, JEEP)
2. INNS (the I in 15D, EDITH)
3. LOBE (the L in 12D, YELP)
Au revoir, ALL!
Pretty weak.
ReplyDeleteThis mathgent. Couldn't get through on my iPad. This is my iPhone.
ReplyDeleteAppalled that NYT published this and didn't accept Nancy's fine puzzles.
DVD. USA. ETA. ABC. yep. All four are abbreves for 3-word phrases.
ReplyDeleteThat is, if the 59-A one is a post-debate slogan from the ,LA campaign: AS EASY AS AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANY. har
staff weeject picks: The other abbreves that stand for 3-word phrases: DEI & IRA.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Farewell that's a popular starting guess in Wordle} = ADIEU. yep. Count M&A in on that.
Helps establish yer vowel patterns.
other fave stuff: JEEP. HIALL & HELLO. BET & BETSY.
a pair of no-knows on a Monday: LEE. EDITH. No prob, as they were Downs Only.
Thanx and welcome back, Mr. Cheng dude. As easy as SKY.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
**gruntz**
Well, technically, USA and ETA do have ofs in em. soooo … 3-letter phrases plus the of runt words.
DeletePrimo weeject stacks in the NE & SW, btw.
And thanx, Malaika. U are always a welcome sub-human. har
M&Also
It's quite a stretch, but you could argue that AS EASY AS ABC (I, too, started with pie) is actually the revealer. Arguments:
ReplyDelete--it's the last theme entry
--the other three are abbreviations, and clued as such; ABC, as clued, is not
--ABC stands for the whole alphabet, as in "now I know my ABCs," so it can be regarded as a hint that the other theme answers end in 3 letters of the alphabet
As I said, it's a stretch.
But yeah, we've got DEI, IRA, NTSB-- and what about those TEES?
Third note of the scale? NOT RE.
And notice the ONE/dog kealoa at the end of 5-D.
Thanks for stepping in, Malaika! Always good to see you.
For those who might not know Etta James… They should listen to Etta saying I’d rather go blind before they listen to Beyoncé
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/QDc3Ww-2X70?si=Q8Q_h9OnKLkEXGwN
ReplyDeleteHi Malaika
ReplyDeleteA pretty easy solve. Before I knew it, it was over. A fan of female blues/jazz singers, I liked seeing ETTA James. And always like seeing 'The Boss'.
An enjoyable Monday, thanks, Freddie :)
Malaika, are you the guest blogger who is a fan of Our Flag Means Death? What about Izzy Hands singing La Vie en Rose? That's all I think of when I see that song!
ReplyDeleteMalaika -! Apparently you don’t pay much attention to airplane accidents, investigated by NTSB.
ReplyDeleteWhat I noticed about the theme answers was anABBA rhyme pattern. Somehow missed that they were all three letter endings. Seems stronger now that was pointed out.
ReplyDeleteI think Bruce Springsteen would be deeply hurt to find out that Gary Jugert doesn't like his music. In fact, that just might be the thing that pushes him into retirement.
ReplyDeleteFortunately I happen to know that Bruce doesn't like crossword puzzles, so he probably will be spared the bad news. Whew!
@bigsteve46 2:18 PM
DeleteI know, right?! I feel so bad about this.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete@dash: "So you all subscribe just for the games?"
DeleteYes.
Otis Davis died on Sept 14, at the age of 92.. Won gold in Rome in 1960. Ran the 440 in 44.9 seconds. Couldn't go to college in Alabama, his home state, because he was Black. Did well at U of Oregon. Rest in peace, Otis.
DeleteI subscribe to the games only but have never groused about the names. I do like the NYT and have subscribed in past (delivery mode) for Sunday and these days on/off digitally, but there ARE other ways to learn “names.”
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteLate to the table today because we woke up to an unexpected rainstorm and had to jump out of bed and rescue a bunch of stuff left out on yesterday's projects. Returned to the cottage for breakfast and my regular downs-only Monday solve when my computer decided to keep bugging me about a payment problem with my credit card on file at Apple+. So I tried. An hour and a half later, after much obscene screaming (their interface was s**t) I was finally able to open the puzzle. Decided, because it was getting late and I have stuff to do, that I would ditch the D-O approach an solve "as god intended it to be" solved.
ReplyDeleteWow! Was that easy! Don't think I had a single type-over and a whole bunch of correct answers appeared without seeing the clues. Kinda fun, but I still don't know what DEI is. Nice break, but I think I'll return to D-O mode tomorrow.
Is that a theme? That's not a theme, is it? That's pathetic.
ReplyDeleteOn the plus side, managed to work a pair of WoEs in on a Monday (DIE, KIR).
This has got to be the weakest theme ever to appear in a NYT crossword.
ReplyDeleteHIALL! HELLO! (Mini-theme).
ReplyDeleteI never heard of DEI either. (Looked up post-solve: it's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion). KIR is another one that made a surprise Monday appearance. This puzzle wasn't all that easy, for the day.
Best I can come up with, theme-wise, is phrases where you have to spell out the last 3 letters when speaking. Not much of one, and no revealer, which adds to the unease. Medium, with maybe a side of challenging. We'll take it. Par.
Wordle bogey.
TAP WISE LEE
ReplyDeleteYES, SELENA HAD A SLIMBUILD,
she’s BORN AS THE TYPE, but gee,
‘TIS A LUCKYONE TO be thrilled,
HOT and EASYAS-A-B-C.
--- IRA & BETSY ROTH
I thought I was going to have the rare long answer doppelganger today. But in the puzzle I did earlier today, the answer was indeed, as easy as pie.
ReplyDelete