Monday, December 23, 2024

Hodgepodge bowlful of munchies / MON 12-23-24 / Two equal parts, to kids / Madonna coffee table book released a day after her 1992 album "Erotica" / CBS late show hosted by Taylor Tomlinson / Hoppy holiday? / Heavenly protector of sailors / Ontario-based network that aired "Schitt's Creek"

Constructor: Glenn Cook

Relative difficulty: Easy (easiest Downs-only I've ever done, or close to it)


THEME: AFTER MIDNIGHT (34A: CBS late show hosted by Taylor Tomlinson ... or where to find the first words of the answers to the starred clues) — first words of each themer can follow "MIDNIGHT" in a familiar phrase or name:

Theme answers:
  • SNACK MIX (17A: *Hodgepodge bowlful of munchies) (midnight snack)
  • MASS TRANSIT (25A: *Buses, trains, subways, etc.) (midnight mass)
  • COWBOY BOOTS (48A: *Rodeo footwear) (Midnight Cowboy)
  • OIL PAINT (58A: *Portrait artist's medium) (Midnight Oil)
Word of the Day: Midnight Oil (see 58A) —

Midnight Oil (known informally as "The Oils") are an Australian rock band composed of Peter Garrett (vocals, harmonica), Rob Hirst (drums), Jim Moginie (guitar, keyboard) and Martin Rotsey (guitar). The group was formed in Sydney in 1972 by Hirst, Moginie and original bassist Andrew James as Farm: they enlisted Garrett the following year, changed their name in 1976, and hired Rotsey a year later. Peter Gifford served as bass player from 1980 to 1987, with Bones Hillman then assuming the role until his death in 2020. Midnight Oil have sold over 20 million albums worldwide as of 2021.

Midnight Oil issued their self-titled debut album in 1978 and gained a cult following in their homeland despite a lack of mainstream media acceptance. The band achieved greater popularity throughout Australasia with the release of 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 (1982) – which spawned the singles "Power and the Passion" and "US Forces" – and also began to attract an audience in the United States. They achieved their first Australian number one album in 1984 with Red Sails in the Sunset, and topped their native country's singles chart for six weeks with the EP Species Deceases (1985).

The group garnered worldwide attention with 1987 album Diesel and Dust. Its singles "The Dead Heart" and "Beds Are Burning" illuminated the plight of Indigenous Australians, with the latter charting at number one in multiple countries.

• • •

A rare Downs-only solve where I knew everything. Every Down. No mysteries. Every answer, first try, all the way to the end. I doubt I could've gotten every answer *cold*, but the thing about Downs-only is that along the way, you begin to infer longer Acrosses, and then those letters help you with the Downs you haven't got yet. So I eventually inferred the end of MASS TRANSIT and all of AFTER MIDNIGHT and the beginnings of OIL PAINT and finally COWBOY BOOTS from the Downs I had in place, and then used the inferred letters to get into the Downs in areas I hadn't explored yet. But I never had more than one letter in place with any Down I looked at, and still got every single one. Even HALFSIES I got off just the "H" (38D: Two equal parts, to kids). The only bit of hesitation I experienced was when I tried to infer the front end of COWBOY BOOTS—I had -OY BOOTS and for some reason did not immediately clock it. Some kind of TOY BOOTS? Just couldn't see it. If I'd taken a few more seconds, I think I would have, but I took one look at 45D: W.W. II naval menaces, wrote in U-BOATS, and with that "B," finally saw that the boots belonged to a COWBOY. From there, five seconds or so to the end. I don't speed-solve anymore, but if I did, this could easily have been my fastest time ever. Sub-2:30 for sure. Closer to 2:00. I only had to look at half the clues, and all of them went right in, so ...  yeah, it would've been very fast. It was fast even at my normal JOG TROT pace (trying that term out after learning it yesterday ... can't say I love it). This is all to say—this was easy. Way easier than a typical Monday. With Acrosses, who knows? Might've been a lot slower. I certainly wouldn't have known some of those Acrosses, including *the revealer*, LOL I do not watch network TV anymore and have no idea who Taylor Tomlinson even is. She seems to be very big on Tik-Tok. According to wikipedia, one of her biggest comedic influences is Maria Bamford. This endears her to me, Maria Bamford being one of only two comedians I've ever paid to see. Anyway, Taylor Tomlinson has a late show on CBS, apparently! Good to know!


This theme is kind of old hat. A typical "words that can follow/precede" theme. None of the themers themselves are that exciting, except AFTER MIDNIGHT, which is a nice standalone phrase (while I was solving, I just assumed it was going to be clued via the Eric Clapton song). I liked BLAST OFF, AFTER MIDNIGHT, and HALFSIES. Not much else registered. Oh, I realized I have a weird blockage when it comes to spelling CYMBAL (5D: Drum kit component). Honestly, I know how it's spelled—I look at it, I know what it means, it's a word I've known forever—but today, after I thought, "oh, I know this answer!," I tried *write* this answer and my brain was like "whoa whoa whoa ... are you sure about literally any of these letters?" I was spelling it so slowly and deliberately, like a third-grader on a spelling test: C-Y (really, "Y"?)-M (this already looks wrong)-B-... A-L? (not "L-E," right?). Right. Doesn't help that SYMBOL is a homophone. Also doesn't help that Shakespeare wrote a play called CYMBELine. I think of myself as a better-than-average speller, but ... man, CYMBAL still looks kinda wrong to me.


Notes:
  • 5A: Ontario-based network that aired "Schitt's Creek" (CBC) — Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. I only ever saw Schitt's Creek featured on Netflix. If I'd been looking at Across clues, I would've guessed CBC, just because of the "Ontario" bit (assuming, correctly, that the "Ontario" in question is the Canadian province and not the (as an acquaintance of mine put it) "airport with a town attached" in Southern California. 
  • 46D: Heavenly protector of sailors (ST. ELMO) — did you know that "ST." (as an abbr. for "saint") never gets an abbr. indicator in clues? I did not know this. I looked at all the STELMO clues—no abbr. indicators. I looked at the STMARK clues—same. STJUDE—same. But when "ST." is an abbr. for "street," out come the abbr. indicators (for the most part). MAIN ST clues either indicate the abbr. directly, e.g. [Business center: Abbr.], or suggest it by analogy, e.g. [Central route thru town]) or else use a "sign" clue that dodges the issue, e.g. [Common town sign], [Sign in the middle of town]. Not sure why there's this discrepancy between "saint" and "street" abbreviation cluing. I'm guessing that saints' names are so commonly written out as "ST." that the "Abbr." indicator maybe seems unnecessary. But the "street" abbr. is pretty common too, so ... shrug.
  • 30A: Hoppy holiday? (EASTER) — 'cause of the Bunny, I'm guessing. Really glad I didn't have to look at Across clues today. I'd've been wondering "wait ... there's a beer holiday now?"
  • 49D: University of Maine town (ORONO)—total crosswordese. If you didn’t know it, don’t feel too bad. But remember it.
  • 42D: Madonna coffee table book released a day after her 1992 album "Erotica" (SEX) — wow, there's a throwback. Not the easiest SEX clue for a Monday, I'd say, though I was able to remember it. In three letters, there wasn't much else it could be. Then again, I was a young man and still very immersed in contemporary pop culture when that thing dropped. Plus my best friend was one of the biggest Madonna fans on the planet (well ... one of the biggest Madonna record collectors, anyway, for sure). But I can see this clue missing a lot of people in 2024. 
  • 54D: Apt anagram of ANGER minus N (RAGE) — so ... not an "apt" anagram of anything, then. When you have to throw letters out, the "anagram" bit is nullified. I mean, FIRE is an "apt" anagram of BURN if you replace three of the letters and wish hard enough.
Time for more Holiday Pet Pics now.

Here we have Graycie and Little Man, wrapping paper enthusiasts (Little Man is also called "The Dude" because of his "soul patch")

[Thanks, Adrienne]

Here's Willie—named after William Blake of "Tyger Tyger, Burning Bright" fame. Since he is seen here chilling (behind a poinsettia), you could call him "Chilly Willie," but that would be corny. (RIP, Willie)
[Thanks, Monica]

Top here enjoys sleeping on soft things and being left alone. Typical cat stuff. Side note—I have that crossword ornament on my own tree. 
[Thanks, Laura]

These two scamps are Ripley and Trebek. Trebek has all the answers, of course, whereas Ripley ... he didn't murder anyone and then assume their identity, did he? He looks mischievous, but not *that* mischievous. 
[Thanks, Laura]

And lastly today, we get a big family pet extravaganza! That's Juko (human) belly-rubbing Max, who's being sniffed by Foxy while Romeo roams the periphery of what I assume is the world's biggest wreath. Get in there, Romeo! Christmas dog pile!
[Thanks, Jerry]

See you all next time (Christmas Eve!)

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]

57 comments:

  1. Bob Mills5:26 AM

    Didn't consider the theme until I was done. Nice comfortable Monday with a few highlights.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:03 AM

    Only 3 garbage words: YAO, KAMA, ONO.

    Liked MONROE.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Cute early week puzzle. Interesting themers and well filled. MIDNIGHT SNACK - MIDNIGHT OIL are solid. Apt revealer even if it’s not needed much.

    Where in the hell are my COWBOY BOOTS

    Some glue but I tended to like most of the short stuff. HALFSIES, OR ELSE etc are fun. I sense a little Canadian vibe. CATTY is temporal with Rex’s holiday postings although I am partial to Scruffy.

    EASTER

    Enjoyable Monday morning solve.

    My Morning Jacket

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous6:11 AM

    Once again the editing team at the NYT proves that they know how to Monday (but maybe CBC x COXES and NOM x ORONO aren't beginner-friendly). A breezy Downs-only experience (not "the fastest" for me, but still) where my only real trouble spot was 21D, since I kept wanting to fit crosswordese in there, off of ST-. STOIC and STAID didn't fit. STOLID? Even with the E I wanted STEELY (?) before STEADY.

    ReplyDelete
  5. My five favorite original clues from last week
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Morel support? (4)
    2. Sticky treats, in more ways than one? (9)
    3. Harsh sentences? (6)(8)
    4. Vineyard eponym (6)
    5. It's a little shady (6)(4)


    STEM
    POPSICLES
    TONGUE TWISTERS
    MARTHA
    BONSAI TREE


    Note: #4 and #5 come from a puzzle that I co-constructed, but these clues were not made by me.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I wrote STolid before STEADY and so had OASTER, and thought, "well, hops are dried in an oast, so maybe oASTER is a holiday somewhere . . . they really like beer?" It took me a couple more clues to realize that STolid would have to go, and then I saw EASTER. No other issues and a nice way to ease into what I hope is a quiet week.

    ReplyDelete
  7. A tale about KALE.

    For most of my life it was a nonentity; it’s not that I avoided it, but rather, I never considered it. No attraction for me at all. Then I started hearing about it as a nutritional powerhouse, and started eating it every now and then. It was okay tasting, so, for my own good, I soldiered through it. Then, suddenly, I grew to really like it, especially if cooked and dressed with olive oil and maybe a touch of salt. And now I’ve become one of those people that actually seeks it out, drools at the thought of it. Give. Me. Kale.

    End of a tale about KALE.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:50 AM

      for many years, pizza hut was the biggest buyer of kale in the U.S. — they used it to decorate their buffets!

      Delete
    2. Time for a reprise of my KALE ditty:
      To be sung to the tune of "I Hate Men" by Cole Porter

      Oh, I hate KALE!
      And anyone who cooks with it will fail!
      You put it in a salad and the salad you diminish.
      You put it in a casserole -- your family won't finish.
      And then you know what others know: You should have cooked with spinash!
      Oh, I hate KALE!

      Delete
  8. @rex -- "FIRE is an apt anagram of BURN if you replace three of the letters and wish hard enough." -- Triple "Hah!" Made my day.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Theme is an auto-fail for me as I've never heard of the host nor the show. I'm all for learning new stuff later in the week, but not on Mondays.

    In general, I was thinking as I solved that this was fairly tough for Monday, but as I look at it now, almost all the difficulty was in the across answers, so downs-only might have been easier.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thank you Rex - it’s good to know that I am not the only one who can’t spell CYMBAL. I don’t remember seeing ORONO before - but it is so crossword-friendly that it’s likely that I have parsed it together at least once.

    I also discerned the theme when I was finished - kind of cute.

    ReplyDelete
  11. So, this theme absolutely satisfied my brain’s workout ethic.

    I left the revealer blank, and filled in all the theme answers, then tried to guess what the revealer was without reading its clue. (This is a skill I’m weak at, so I work on it; it’s also often a riddle of the highest order for me, and my brain comes alive when faced with a riddle).

    I went through:
    • What do the first words of the theme answers go with?
    • What do their second words go with?
    • Is there some significance to the first initials of the answer’s two words?
    • What do the first words have in common?
    • And so on.

    Nada. So, I revealed the first two letters of the revealer, AF, and thought “After”. Then I revisited that first question above, focusing on what the first words go after, and, in a flash, “midnight” hit me, with a thunderous “Aha!”.

    There are people who don’t start solving the Times puzzle until Wednesday or Thursday, or even Friday. But I’m telling you, time and time again, these early week Times puzzles contain great moments and wit. I eagerly AWAIT them.

    Thank you for a stellar outing, Glenn, and congratulations on your NYT debut!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hey All !
    Had a streak of 109 MonPuzs solved correctly in a row. The math works out to 2 years, 5 days. Forgot about that streak for the .7 seconds that I decided to hit Check Puzzle because I couldn't find an error. What a dummy! If I took a bit more time, I probably would have gotten it. Dang. So much for a Christmas gift ...

    Where you ask? Had CBs/sOXES, even though I had somewhere in the ole brain screaming at me to erase that S. That's all I would've needed to do, I would've got to the C, and got it correct. But nooooooo. Change it to SOXES, clue it "Red and White?" or something, and everyone would be happy.

    Funny how Rex went for the Midnight Oil band. I'm sure multitudes of people will point out the burning expression. So I won't. Har.

    Going to work today. Normally work Dec 24 also, but this year, we're off! Back on 26th, but then two days, weekend! Why can't at weeks work like this?

    Nice MonPuz, upset still about my faux pas. CBC. Ugh ! * Shakes first in the air*

    Happy Monday. Happy Eve Eve.

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:45 AM

      Did the exact same thing. Could not figure out where my error was. I was so sure of CBS. My streak wasn't anywhere near as long as yours but I was proud of my Mondays! Time to start again!!!

      Delete
  13. Gah, I love the pet pics (as I keep saying). And now I want that Crossword ornament for my mom. Of course she lives with me so it would be a present for her that would go on our shared Christmas tree. And we’re Jewish but who cares? I still need it. I already got the Spelling bee ornament and the Wordle mug for her. Oh and cute puzzle! I am not great at Down’s only. I did try but I didn’t think it was as easy as Rex did.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Andy Freude8:42 AM

    So many ways to misspell CYMBAL, but none so wrong as my first try, tom-tom.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:49 PM

      My drummer daughter just calls that a Tom

      Delete
  15. Easy even for a Monday, but a good one for beginners, and I'm sure there must still be some beginners out there.

    Only WOE was SEX as clued. We have friends in ORONO and used to live close enough to Canada to make CBC a gimme (sorry @Roo). Some good candidates for M&A's moo-cow list today, EARS, which was, well, corny, and especially "Marilyn someone". Who could that be?

    Nice enough Mondecito, GC, but a Great Crossword does not have the revealer in the middle. Otherwise fine, and thanks for a good amount of Monday fun.

    ReplyDelete
  16. EasyEd9:10 AM

    Had experience similar to @RooMonster—brain could not formulate COXES until the very end so that whole section was a mess that I could not resolve until I finally saw MIX. The X triggered my memory, filled in COXES and then saw it was CYMBAL and not tYMBAL. Fun puzzle, fun blogs, a good morning.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anonymous9:19 AM

    ANGERED and ENRAGED are anagrams, but the clue for RAGE was pretty bad.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Rex, St. Nick would like a word with you before Wednesday.

    ReplyDelete
  19. My thoughts exactly on the anagram clue! My brain glazes over if I ever listen to the Sunday challenge on NPR because it is always something like that. Any puzzle that begins with “Can you think of a word that…” leads me to not being able to think of A SINGLE WORD OF ANY KIND.

    I was thinking of the Richard Linklater film, but it turned out to be “before MIDNIGHT”. After Midnight is a horror film from 1989, plus all the other things people have mentioned.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Any puzzle that begins with “Can you think of a word that…” leads me to not being able to think of A SINGLE WORD OF ANY KIND."

      I go completely blank, too, @burtonkd. I hate any puzzle where the answer could be anything in the entire Universe. Thanks for letting me know that I'm not the only one.

      Delete
  20. The problem with the theme is that I've never heard of Taylor Tomlinson, nor of the show. But It wasn't a big problem because the name is apt, and therefore guessable, and as a revealer it was very precise, so that's OK. I always sympathize with the neglected second words, but it's an acceptable type of theme.

    I'm less sympathetic with the idea of KALE in a Caesar salad. I mean, you can put kale in you salad, but then it's not a Caesar. Bad enough that we no longer get a raw egg, and seldom get an anchovy rubbed into the bowl.

    I'd object to Opus DEI, but that wouldn't be the Christmas spirit.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Could have had a nice cross-reference between (41A) EARS and (53A) how a pirate says 41D: ARREARS.

    The Canadian oil company is lucky to be getting all these free plugs from the NYTXW. If that ever stops, they'll be SOL.

    I feel like there's a sellable script lurking in the SE with GEL RAGE HALFSIES TRIO NAP SEX TRY. It almost writes itself.

    I always chant a sacred mantra while driving. I call it CAROMS.

    Pretty much what @Rex said, although it might have taken me longer than two minutes. But definitely the easiest D.O. solve of my life. Lotta fun. Thanks, Glenn Cook.

    ReplyDelete
  22. I go walkin' after midnight
    Out in the moonlight
    Just like we used to do, I'm always walkin'
    After midnight, searchin' for you.

    I liked this in retrospect but didn't particularly notice the theme while solving. I do watch network TV but never that late so, like Rex, I didn't know about Taylor Tomlinson or her show, but I didn't find the revealer hard to get after a very few letters were in place.

    To this Canadian, that was a mighty weird clue for the CBC. The salient point about the CBC is that it's Canada's national broadcaster, not where its headquarters are. The real Ontario-based network, I would argue is TVOntario or TVO which, for a nanosecond, I thought might be the answer, but I knew full well that CBC had aired "Schitt's Creek." Anyway, odd. And hey, there's another Canadian network in this puzzle, too: GLOBAL.

    Yay, CAROMS -- a word I learned from Spelling Bee. At first I thought horses' homes were STALLS, somehow overlooking the fact that it was one letter short. I really enjoyed the reference to EASTER two days before Christmas, which was also represented by its bauble-ORBS. Liked the appearance of both GEL and MOUSSE, hairstyling stalwarts, although MOUSSE is clued as food (yum. That SE corner was pretty delicious actually with your MOUSSE accompanied by your TORTES). TREADS near COWBOY BOOTS was also good. Had a brief problem with the stAt/ASAP kealoa, but it got sorted quickly. Knew HALvSIES immediately from the H and wanted to spell it like this with a V. But I guess HALFSIES is truer to its pronunciation (or is it?).

    Hey @Gary J.
    Personal cleaning problem for Santa on Boxing Day.
    SOOTY EARS


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Barbara S. 10:28 AM
      Always good to have you here! I miss you when you take time away.

      Delete
  23. Definitely Monday easy. An uncomplicated theme that produced fun answers. I liked it. I had no idea there was a TV show "AFTER MIDNIGHT". My thoughts went immediately to the Eric Clapton song but I guess that's pretty old.

    I was going to try to guess the theme answer for 58A after seeing the revealer, but _ILP___ wasn't leading me to midnight anything so I went with the crosses. Midnight OIL, hah.

    Thanks, Glenn Cook!

    ReplyDelete
  24. A tad easier than medium for me although it seemed tougher. No WOEs and no serious erasures.

    Cute theme with very little junk, liked it.

    We took a pass on Tomlinson’s late show because we weren’t interested in the format but we did enjoy her Stand Up specials on Netflix.





    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #970 was pretty easy for a Croce with one exception for me. I got hung up in the midwest and needed some help from my Gen-Z “Minecraft” player grandson to get 40a. Good luck!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree, pretty easy. NW was the toughest section for me, but even that was not particularly hard. Did not know 40a exactly, but familiar with the first word of that answer in a software context, so inferrable.

      Delete
  25. Once I'd filled in enough answers, I filled in most of the rest of the puzzle without even reading the clues. That's a step beyond solving Downs-only, right? What a boring creampuff.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I enjoyed the implied theme answers, and with [MIDNIGHT] MASS I saw a hinted Christmas theme—kids might burn [MIDNIGHT] OIL waiting for Santa, and might also leave him a [MIDNIGHT] SNACK. Then STABLE also connects to the subtle Christmas theme, and EASTER is a look forward? All very much a stretch, but two days before Christmas I can’t imagine I wasn’t supposed to notice.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous11:22 AM

    A what-the-1st-words-have-in-common puztheme. Acceptable for a MonPuz, but a tad repetitious, of course.
    Pretty good fillins, tho ... with faves: BLASTOFF. CYMBAL. GLOBAL. AMOEBA in the MOUSSE. ORONO/ONO echo.

    staff weeject pick: that there ONO echo. honrable mention to: FOX/SEX.

    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Words after "3, 2, 1..."} = BLASTOFF.

    Thanx, Mr. Cook dude. Nice debut puz.

    Masked & Anonymo2Us

    and for a little more of a challenge...

    "One-Liners" - 7x7 15 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    ... plus, for yer holiday fix, here's somethin they said could not be done [in a runtpuz]...

    "The 12 Days of Christmas" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. M and A4:28 PM

      Above comment is mine. Coulda sworn I gave it a name.
      Guess not.
      M&A

      Delete
  28. .
    I had STEELY for STEADY. SEX in relation to Madonna is a given. An easy Monday.
    Congrats on your debut, Glenn :)

    ReplyDelete
  29. Missed Ontario County New York.

    Why do crossword creators insist Yoko Ono was a musician? It's an insult to musicians and she wouldn't have gotten airplay without a famous husband. And her art? Meh.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Highly agree - so I'm not the only one!

      Delete
  30. Ponte tus botas de vaquero después de medianoche.

    A lovely, kinda crunchy, borderline scandalous Monday. I got STALLS in my head and it would not let go, so STABLES was the hardest part of the puzzle for me.

    Propers: 5
    Places: 2
    Products: 6
    Partials: 3
    Foreignisms: 4
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 74 (27%)

    Funnyisms: 3 😐

    Tee-Hee: We've been awash in a depressingly adult-ish run of puzzles, but finally, on a Monday, a nice little group of ehem-isms. [Dirty, like a chimney]. Where kits and Republicans come from: FOX SEX. COXES. [Counterpart of sin]. KAMA SUTRA. Let's add BLAST OFF and Marilyn and we're atitter in ARREARS.

    Uniclues:

    1 Interior decorator goal for cowgirl's apartment.
    2 Eliminate the church bus.
    3 Result of the Easter bunny emulating Santa.
    4 Springs single-cell scofflaw from the clink.
    5 Result of the latest bad hair day.
    6 Demand from eminently reasonable schoolyard bully.
    7 How a Mile High Club soirée ends.

    1 STABLES ELAN
    2 CUT MASS TRANSIT
    3 SOOTY EARS
    4 BAILS AMOEBA
    5 RECENT GEL RAGE
    6 HALFSIES OR ELSE (~)
    7 MIDAIR TRIO NAP

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Bottom line agreement. HINDS CONCUR.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  31. old timer11:45 AM

    Easy, doubly so because I go to bed between nine and ten, then wake up after 11 to watch Colbert at 11:35. Always a promo for TT, plus ads for we old folks, featuring drugs no one should ever venture to take.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Since it's a Monday puzzle, maybe expecting all the first words in the theme answers to have consistently the same or different meaning when they follow MIDNIGHT is unrealistic. SNACK, COWBOY and OIL are essentially the same in the theme answers and as they relate to the reveal while MASS isn't.

    Okay, where was the "Heavenly protector of sailors" ST ELMO (46D) when all those ships and lives were being lost to UBOATS in WWII?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anoa Bob
      I don’t follow your point.
      You can look at it another way
      Snack (food) Cowboy (a movie) oil ( either from an expression or a rock group) Mass a religious rite. They are all quite different. I don’t see why Mass is out of place.

      Delete
    2. dgd,
      I did a poor job of explaining. Let me try again. SNACK has the same meaning in SNACK MIX and MIDNIGHT SNACK. COWBOY has the same meaning in COWBOY BOOTS and MIDNIGHT COWBOY. OIL has the same meaning in OIL PAINT and MIDNIGHT OIL.

      MASS, however, has a different meaning in MASS TRANSIT and MIDNIGHT MASS. Therein lies the inconsistency it seems to me.

      Hope I did a better job this time.

      Delete
  33. I love the pet pix.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous11:59 AM

    This is pretty near to being a themeless. Take away the shaded squares and modify the "revealer" clue and it's entirely straightforward. The theme is in the 'after the fact-look what I did' category. I did thoroughly enjoy it, though.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Easy as TORTES. I encountered Taylor Tomlinson’s AFTER MIDNIGHT a few months ago and it’s great. Produced by Stephen Colbert. Tomlinson is hilarious and her guests are funny and creative.

    Decided after last week that downs only is less fun than reading all the clues (Hi, @Roo). That’s especially true with themed puzzles. Once I got the revealer I decided to try to guess the last two themers without crosses. It worked! Of course, what ELSE could “Rodeo footwear” be, so no genius required for that one. For “Portrait artist’s medium” it took a minute; it had to be OIL something but what? It’s just OIL or OILs. Wait, is it going to be PAINT? ONO it isn’t. YESSIRee it is - green OIL PAINT.

    Still laughing at @Rex’s anagram comment. Hey look, STELMO has a near-semordnilap, OMELETS.

    Congrats to Glenn on the NYT debut!

    Today is the birthday of Joseph Bodin de Boismortier (b. 1689), French Baroque composer, one of the 1st to work without patrons, born in Thionville, France (d. 1755). I chose this selection because of the lively art works in the video, “three depictions of village dances by artists from the Dutch and Flemish schools of painting.”

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  36. Jared M.1:02 PM

    That clue for RAGE is...something else. And glad Rex embedded Chappell Roan's *After Midnight*, since that's all I could think of after that answer 😂

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  37. M and A1:37 PM

    Looks like the monitors killed off my original comment, with runtpuzs attached, so I'll resend the runtz, separately. Here's the rest of my deleted comment...

    A what-the-1st-words-have-in-common puztheme. Acceptable for a MonPuz, but a tad repetitious, of course.
    Pretty good fillins, tho ... with faves: BLASTOFF. CYMBAL. GLOBAL. AMOEBA in the MOUSSE. ORONO/ONO echo.

    staff weeject pick: that there ONO echo. honrable mention to: FOX/SEX.

    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Words after "3, 2, 1..."} = BLASTOFF.

    Thanx, Mr. Cook dude. Nice debut puz.

    Masked & Anonymo2Us

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  38. M and A Runty Extra1:40 PM

    They said it couldn't be done [in a runtpuz]...

    "The 12 Days of Christmas" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

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  39. Solving downs only, not easy for me because of a dual error: HALVSIES with a V, then TRES for "Duo plus one" because I misread the clue as being... Spanish? Italian? Portuguese? And I was so busy trying to guess the letters of ORONO, which I did, but thought I hadn't! Yeesh.

    Hi @Barbara S! It's been a while since we've heard from you. Yes, the "Ontario" in the clue for CBC is pretty bizarre but I assume it's because the first C is "Canadian" so they wanted to avoid the country name. Fun trivia: in French it's "RC" which stands for Radio-Canada (yes, "Radio", they kept the name from when it was just radio, I guess).

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  40. A Moderator3:14 PM

    @M&A. Your comment appears at 11:22 AM (you posted as Anonymous). Please stop blaming others for your poor eyesight. 😂

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    Replies
    1. M and A4:32 PM

      To Moderator: Real Sorry about that. As I often say: Wrong again, M&A breath.
      Coulda sworn I’d given that comment a name, tho. But evidently not.
      Thanx,
      M&A

      Delete
  41. I really enjoyed this one, especially finding a reference to Midnight Oil in the puzzle, a favorite band of mine. Their songs have been living rent-free in my head ever since entering in the answer for 58-Across. Thanks Glenn Cook for the fun and smooth Monday gift!

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  42. Anonymous6:25 PM

    Carom shots do not bounce. I suppose a carom *could* bounce if hit with great vigor, but seems really unlikely. Jump shots bounce. TERRIBLE clue.

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  43. SharonAK11:09 PM

    @ Anoa bob I disagree that oil has the same meaning in the answer as after midnight. 1) Different kinds of oil,. And 2)
    the midnight oil is more a metaphor than real.

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