Monday, June 2, 2025

Pink Nintendo character from Planet Popstar / MON 6-2-25 / Rule-making grp. for a residential community / Actual shape of the Crab Nebula, disappointingly / Preferring platonic relationships, informally / Greek sorceress who took the phrase "men are pigs" literally / Actor Russell whose surname sounds like a bird / Grandma, in Glasgow

Constructor: Anthony V. Grubb

Relative difficulty: Challenging (when solved Downs-only)


THEME: CLOTHES LINE (64A: Where duds are draped to dry ... or a literal description of 18-, 28- and 49-Across) — colloquial expressions ("lines") that contain articles of clothing:

Theme answers:
  • "EAT MY SHORTS!" (18A: "Go fly a kite!")
  • "PUT A SOCK IN IT!" (28A: "Pipe down!")
  • "SUIT YOURSELF!" (49A: "No skin off my nose!")
Word of the Day: KIRBY (31D: Pink Nintendo character from Planet Popstar) —

Kirby (JapaneseカービィHepburnKābīJapanese pronunciation: [kaːbiː]) is the titular character and protagonist of the Kirby series of video games developed by HAL Laboratory and published by Nintendo. He first appeared in Kirby's Dream Land (1992), a platform game for the Game Boy. Since then, Kirby has appeared in over 50 games, ranging from action platformers to puzzleracing, and pinball, and has been featured as a playable character in every installment of the Super Smash Bros. series (1999–present). He has also starred in his own anime and manga series. Since 1999, he has been voiced by Makiko Ohmoto.

Kirby's signature skill is his ability to inhale objects or creatures and spit them out as projectiles, as well as the ability to suck in air to float over obstacles. His Copy Ability grants him the power to adopt the abilities of the creatures he inhales, while also wearing various costumes or transforming his shape. He uses these abilities to rescue various lands, such as his homeworld Planet Popstar, from evil forces and antagonists, such as Dark Matter or Nightmare. On these adventures, he often crosses paths with his rivals, King Dedede and Meta Knight. In virtually all of his appearances, Kirby is depicted as a cheerful, innocent, and food-loving character.

Kirby has been regarded as one of the most iconic video game characters of all time, as well as one of the cutest and most lovable. He has achieved high popularity with gamers in Japan. He has also been praised for being one of the most versatile characters, due to starring in a large catalogue of games that cuts across a variety of video game genres. (wikipedia)

• • •

I like this theme, but the cluing on this one bordered on nauseating at times, and there is one decision that I do not understand and will never understand; namely, why in the world do you go with ANNUM when ANNUL is available? When presented with a choice like this, You Should Take The Regular-Ass English Word Every Time. ANNUM? You *chose* ANNUM when ANNUL would've worked perfectly well in both directions!?!? Who does this? I'm sure none of you who solved this puzzle the regular way (i.e. looking at Across and Downs clues) noticed or cared, but let me tell you, solving Downs-only, you notice. If I've got ANNU-, an "L" is going in that final spot, and it's especially going in that final spot when it works in the Down (45D: Snacks (on) (MUNCHES)). Yes, OK, LUNCHES isn't quite the same as "Snacks" but it is sure as hell ballpark—horseshoes & hand grenades and all that. There was not one second where I questioned ANNUL / LUNCHES. It's not that big a deal to make a mistake (or more than one mistake) when solving Downs-only, but I really resent that the mistake came on a word that shouldn't have been in the grid in the first place. Objectively, ANNUL / LUNCHES is better than ANNUM (!?!?!) / MUNCHES. In any puzzle, in any situation, this is true. I can see liking MUNCHES better than LUNCHES, but ANNUM (Latin!) is not an answer you use unless you *have to*, and you sure as hell don't have to here. Blargh. An awful decision on everyone's part. 


Also awful was some of this cluing. So, so try-hard. "Per M.I.T."?? What the hell does that mean? What an incredibly stupid and meaningless and awkwardly worded way to clue OREOS (71A: It's nearly impossible to split their creme equally, per M.I.T.). "Nearly impossible"? Is it impossible or isn't it? I'm gonna say that if you get down to the atomic level, it's absolutely impossible, but What The Hell Are We Even Talking About Here? Who is trying to split the "creme" (ugly word)? You don't split the creme. You twist OREOS apart, OK, but inevitably the creme goes mostly one way, and that's how it is and who cares? M.I.T.? Also, why is it disappointing that the "Crab Nebula" is OVAL and how in the world am I supposed to get from "not Crab-shaped" to OVAL, specifically? (37D: Actual shape of the Crab Nebula, disappointingly). There's nothing At All that says "OVAL" in that clue. Also also, a crab's body is kind of OVAL, isn't it? I guess the cluing is trying to be whimsical, but it just read as awkward and flailing to me. The Greek sorceress CIRCE did not take the phrase "men are pigs" literally (11D: Greek sorceress who took the phrase "men are pigs" literally). She turned some men (Ulysses's / Odysseus's men) into pigs. That is different. That clue really should have a "?" on it to signify its wackiness and the liberty it's taking with phrasing. OK I think I'm through with the super-irritating parts of this puzzle.


It was fun to see the theme come into view—even to see individual theme answers come into view. Hard not to be amused by seeing "EAT MY SHORTS!" come into view, and "PUT A SOCK IN IT!" is equally vivid, vibrant, and unexpected. SUIT YOURSELF was the hardest to put together, largely because the whole bottom half of the puzzle was harder to put together than the top half, but eventually the "clothes" thing actually helped me get to SUIT etc. And still the revealer came as a surprise—a neat little pun on "line." As I said, the difficulty shot way up for me once I hit the equator of this puzzle, due almost entirely to not knowing what the **** a KIRBY is (see "Word of the Day," above). Apparently the roster of characters in the Greater Nintendo Universe is inexhaustible and it's my sad fate to continue finding this out, in puzzle after puzzle, ad infinitum, like Sideshow Bob, just stepping on rakes, for the rest of my solving life. 


KIRBY to F-BOMB (insane "word" to parse when you can't see the clue) to SMUG really did me in for a while. Even with F-O-B it took me way too long to think of F-BOMB ... so long that I thought one of those crosses must be wrong. I also really struggled to get SMUG ("That's pretty ironic, Rex, don't you think?!"—oh shut up) (42D: High-and-mighty). The clue is probably fine, but I think of SMUG as way lower-key than "high and mighty," which sounds more ... yeah, overt, ostentatious ... something. No good reason for not getting SMUG sooner. Other things slowed me down as well, though nothing so bad as that middle section. No idea what the Scots call their grandmas ... but it turns out it's exactly what the English call their grandmas, i.e. NAN. Nearly wrote in NAE because of its Scottish specificity, but then why would the word for "grandma" be the same word for "no" or "not"? Makes nae sense. Really loved the CROWE / HAWKE crossing in the SW. It was especially fun because I couldn't see the clue for HAWKE, but as soon as I pieced it together, I saw instantly what the puzzle was doing there, and knew the clue for HAWKE would be the same (but for one word) as that for CROWE (54D: Actor Russell whose surname sounds like a bird). First time I can recall intuiting an identiclue. Usually the puzzle forces those on me in unwanted ways, but today ... well, the identicluing was perfect. 


Last few things:
  • 3D: Emotionally charged, as an issue (HOT BUTTON) — great phrase, and one I can't believe I got right on the first guess, no crosses in place. I was not so lucky with the symmetrical long phrase, CAMERA SHY, which involved a struggle that's much more typical for long answers in a Downs-only solving situation (36D: Out of the picture, maybe?)
  • 5D: Rule-making grp. for a residential community (HOA) — LOL I was just thinking about Home Owners Associations yesterday (and not in a good way—never in a good way). Sometimes I think about / marvel at the fact that I live in a neighborhood with people who are both very like and Very Unlike me, and yet we all seem to get along just fine. This is likely because there is *no* Home Owners Association, so the ultra-conformists among us (perfect green lawns, no dandelions) can't annoy the rest of us with aesthetic overreach. Just as us ultra-liberal types can't make the others take down their tacky right-wing signage. It's win-win! (seriously, I genuinely like my neighbors, all of them)
  • 10D: Preferring platonic relationships, informally (ARO) — I'll bet ARO people never figured they'd be overrepresented, anywhere, but man ARO is Number 1 with a bullet where queer identities are concerned. Look at this ARO timeline!:

ARO was [Nigerian native] and [Orinoco tributary] back in the day, then Shortz came along and he was all "no more three-letter obscurities!" and POOF (39A: [Gone ... like magic!])ARO disappeared. It tried to come back once in 2015 as [Michael Sheen's character in "Twilight"], but that didn't take. But then, several years later, "Aromantic" (ARO) became an increasingly widely recognized identity and bam, here we are: CrossWorld is suddenly in an ARO boom time!

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook]

71 comments:

  1. Bob Mills5:39 AM

    A normal Monday except for the NE. I didn't know CIRCE or INSTA, and foolishly assumed the prickly plant(s) had to end in "s." I finally realized from the crosses that it was a vowel, and CACTI became obvious (duh).

    Thought EATMYSHORTS to be in poor taste for an NYT puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:15 AM

      “In poor taste” — very funny!! Shorts “taste poor” I guess; haven’t tried :)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:27 AM

      LOL

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:12 AM

      Has this guy never seen The Simpsons? EATMYSHORTS isn’t in poor taste at all, it’s just funny

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

    1. Caaaaaaar, you might say (4)
    2. Stage props? (4)
    3. Chip maker in a 1961 merger (3)
    4. Leaves the rest? (7)
    5. Desirable formation for ducks (3)


    LIMO
    HAND
    LAY
    AWAKENS
    ROW

    ReplyDelete
  3. https://news.mit.edu/2022/oreometer-cream-0419

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:24 PM

      Thank you for posting this!

      Delete
  4. Anonymous6:15 AM

    For Rex: The "grandma" clue referred to Guatemala, not Scotland.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:35 AM

      There was also one for Glasgow. I don’t solve “downs-only” so I didn’t even see that until Rex pointed it out.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous6:32 AM

    For Rex: Sorry for the error. I had NAN from the crosses, so I didn't read the clue. I falsely assumed you had substituted Glasgow for Guatemala.

    ReplyDelete
  6. A fun Monday - I enjoyed the theme and the reveal was a pleasant surprise. I think reading Rex go bonkers over a Monday grid was as enjoyable as the solve as well.

    The highlight for me was the CIRCE / ABUELA cross on a Monday. I literally LOL’ed on that one. I wish Billy Shakespeare could posthumously gift us a sonnet or perhaps a one act play about the NYT crossword editors - I imagine their tragic flaw would be their obsession with ensuring that the grid has at least some gibberish in it each and every day. I can imagine a jittery, ghost-like character having a dark aside lamenting the fact that he/she literally gets the DTs if they are somehow faced with a grid they can’t muck up.

    I also enjoyed the actors who sound like birds and the pink Nintendo character stepping on an FBOMB. I agree with OFL that the clues for OVAL and OREOS were definite head-scratchers. I’m guessing they just tried too hard to be original with a couple of answers that have probably appeared like a thousand times between the two of them.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Cute early week theme and well filled. Chuckled at EAT MY SHORTS and we get a fun revealer that explains it all.

    Southside Johnny

    HOT BUTTON, CAMERA SHY, MUNCHES are all top notch. Liked F BOMB dead center. The shorts in the NW/SE are the only MEH entries in the grid for the most part.

    The Flying Pickets

    Clean up on aisle yesterday - Happy Birthday to @Nancy and @egs!

    Enjoyable Monday morning solve.

    EBTG

    ReplyDelete
  8. Areawoman7:14 AM

    I must have woken up on the other side of the bed as Rex this morning because I thoroughly enjoyed this puzzle, perfect Monday. I have to wonder if his solving experience is marred by challenging himself by doing downs only because I loved how the clothesline laid itself out along the way and tittered out loud when i figured out the explosive expletive and how it seemed to fit with the sentiment of the themes. I personally think annum/munches is brighter fill and annul makes me sad because it means something didn’t work out in the end but again if you are solving downs only you can get into traps like that and are limiting your experience of the puzzle, kind of like going to a restaurant and only ordering off the kids menu and then complaining that the food sucks. Thanks Anthony V Grubb!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:39 AM

      Thank you. Perfect analogy too.

      Delete
    2. Exactly the opposite. The kids' menu is the regular solve, the safe and easy mac and cheese. The downs-only path is much more adventurous. And I don't think Rex is complaining "that the food sucks". He is simply recounting the journey from his perspective, often highlighting his admittedly self-inflicted wounds. Kind of interesting; like throwing a slice of Saint Agur into your tired old burger instead of that regular sheet of orange stuff.

      Delete
  9. My favorite part of the puzzle was the theme answers and their clues, which livened up the entire box.

    Co-stars were the lovely SPRIG, STONY, and HOT BUTTON.

    I liked that ASCEND doesn’t. I also like the opposite-meaning-in-opposite-corners MEH and YUM.

    Puzzle-inspired riddle: The U.S. has a trio of four-letter states, the lowest number of letters. But it also has a trio of 13-letter states, the highest number. What are they? (Answer in another post.)

    So, here’s the OREO story, thanks to MIT. Eight out of ten times, when you twist the cookie apart, the creme center will remain on one side. Why? Because when the cookie is made, the creme is dabbed onto one side, and soon after, the other side is affixed. Due to the creme being on the first side longer than the second, it adheres harder to the first side. You’re welcome.

    This puzzle had spark; it was way more YUM than MEH. It made me hopeful to see more from you, Anthony. Thank you for a bright start to the week!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Massachusetts, North Carolina, and South Carolina.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Verna Birnbaum7:24 AM

    Per Annum is a common phrase heard in American English and Monday easy. Other examples are De Facto, Et Cetera, Status Quo, Vice Versa, etc, et al…Perfectly legitimate.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:12 AM

      He didn’t say it wasnt “legitimate.” He said that you should not choose part of a Latin phrase when a regular English word is available. It’s a basic (good) construction principle

      Delete
  12. EasyEd7:26 AM

    Cute theme and revealer. Finished relatively quickly without pressing too hard, but never could have done this one downs only because I needed crosses everywhere. For some reason mixed up the clues and thought that both bird names belonged to an Ethan—this really made it hard to get CROWE.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Well, pretty cranky today, Rex. ANNUM is a oerfectly good word, and per ANNUM is a perfectly ordinary phrase that people say. I think that if people choose to solve downs-only in order to give themselves a greater challenge, then they shouldn’t grouse about finding certain answers more challenging. I thought this was a very easy and breezy Monday, enjoyed it a lot.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Juanita11:31 AM

      Thanks JJK. I was about to say much the same thing.

      Delete
  14. We also have no HOA - it was one of our "musts" when house-hunting. Thirty years on, no regrets.

    Soving acrosses only, this was a doddle. When I looked at the down clues later, I thought "this would be a tough day to do downs-only", et voila, Rex confirms.

    I really resent the clue for ASPS. They are gorgeous, and there is a reason they were chosen as a symbol for Egyptian royalty.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Vile seems a bit strong and you're right, they are pretty gorgeous, but I still don't think I'd like to meet up with one if I wasn't wearing knee-high leather boots.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous7:40 AM

    I allowed myself to look at a single Across clue, and the H from MEH reminded me of the phrase "HOT-BUTTON issue". I'm not from the US and didn't know what letter went in A_A, if you know it's D then you also know UDON is correct. Otherwise, a pretty normal Downs-only solve (though I'm very familiar with KIRBY).

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous7:44 AM

    For Lewis: MASSACHUSETTS, NOTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA

    ReplyDelete
  17. I liked this. In contrast to Rex, only went for the acrosses. Surprised that he didn't quibble with the difference between shorts-sock and suit, the former being actual articles of clothing, the latter a verb having nothing to do with attire.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Technical DNF because I had ANNU, didn't read the clue, stuck in an L to make a word, said LUNCHES?, guess so, and called it quits. Oh well. No streaks involved in a paper solve.

    Our HOA, actually a COA, as we live in a condo, has decided that owners cannot grow vegetables, as the plants tend to go "out of control". True story.

    SISTA as clued was an unknown, as was KIRBY. But KIRBY had the unintended consequence of making me think of Durwood KIRBY, who was an announcer and host on 50's tv. This led to remembering some episodes of "Rocky and Bullwinkle" that involved a quest for the mysterious "Kerwood Derby". Anything that makes me think of "Rocky and Bullwinkle" is aces with me.

    I liked your Monday a lot, AVG. A Very Good theme with an apt revealer, and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The last letter in for me today was the B in KIRBY, a thorough WOE. But your recall of Durwood Kirby changes my (mild) annoyance to a pleasurable recollection of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Thanks for that, Pablo! And darn good Mondicito, Anthony V. Grubb!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:01 AM

      "Durward"

      Delete
  19. Loved the Queen Latifah clue. Really good album.

    ReplyDelete
  20. How did NYTXW fans react when hearing the longtime editor had a stroke? EEK! MYSHORTZ!!

    i keep trying to do the downs-only thing but always peek (like Seinfeld when cleavage is in the vicinity). But I imagine FBOMB would cause those solvers to exclaim with the very expression they are missing.

    Ok, off to the hospital for a total knee replacement so I can (eventually) take my chihuahua for FULLDIVA walks once again…

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mskare7:51 AM

      @Andrew: One day late but best wishes on your knee replacement and recovery!

      Delete
  21. Diane Joan8:36 AM

    Anyone else want “PAPA” to cross “POOH” instead of “POOF”? I did. I’m always on the lookout for serendipitous crosses. Nice puzzle to start the week and Monday easy if you didn’t restrict your solving to downs-only.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Hey All !
    If the shoe fits ...

    Pretty nice little MonPuz. Liked the answer F is the BOMB. Har.

    Dang, Rex, blowing a FUSE over ANNUM? To me, ANNUL is only slightly better. ANNUM here is clued appropriately well. Only problem was you not looking at the Acrosses. Just sayin'. How about the NW corner? Could easily have been something else.
    HEH
    ADO
    WIT
    KEBAB
    Why the M there? 😁

    Anyway, even though I still have no job, I had made vacation plans to see my sister and her grandkids while I was still working, which I'll be leaving Wednesday. So, you won't hear my ramblings probably Thursday through Sunday. You're welcome. I'll try to the puzzles on my phone to keep my Streaks intact, we'll see how that works out.

    Welp, Happy Monday.

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  23. Anonymous9:17 AM

    "EATMYSHORTS" is in poor taste if the person saying it happens to be wearing them at the time. The fact that some pop culture figure invented the phrase doesn't make it any cleaner.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:32 PM

      Pearls clutched.

      Delete
  24. waryoptimist9:35 AM

    Easy, fun , another good Monday. Not a 5 star, but no real problems either. The theme phrases woke me up , got me going this AM

    Rex, you've got to realize: you're in the 1% , we're the 99%. Although some on this blog join you in Downs-only solving, the vast majority of us don't. We don't ask that you "dumb it down" for us , just have some respect for the constructor and your audience please.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Mr. Cheese9:37 AM

    I guess I’m old and out of the mainstream. I can’t understand “ARO”.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous9:45 AM

    CAME RASHY took me a couple seconds to parse

    ReplyDelete
  27. First of all, warm thanks to everyone for their good wishes yesterday. And now the puzzle.

    The good news is that it's one of the liveliest Mondays I've ever done and that I was never bored. The bad news is that it seems to celebrate contemporary rudeness to a certain extent -- and in fact, some of the vernacular was so unknown to me that I had a Monday 1-letter DNF: EAT MY SHiRTS/ARi instead of EAT MY SHORTS/ARO. Shirts, Shorts -- it's all a euphemism for you-know-what, and it's rude. Also, there must be a more gentle way to say "Pipe down" than PUT A SOCK IN IT. (Although there are ruder ways too, such as "Shut the [F BOMB] up!")

    But I forgive the puzzle because it's clued with such verve. The CROWE/HAWKE thing is inspired. The clue for CAMERA SHY is inspired. And has there ever, ever, ever in the history of puzzles been a more interesting OREO clue (71A)?

    So the bottom LINE is that I enjoyed this cheerfully rude puzzle a lot.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agree about the puzzle, including the participation in the “what unique way can you clue OREO” contest. That clue set RP off, for some reason. Reading Rex, you’d notice that ARO has appeared 5 times last year and another 5 this year already. Put it on your shelf with ORR and OTT. Happy Birthday again - I may have been anon yesterday…

      Delete
  28. WHY CAN'T THEY JUST KEEP MONDAYS THEMELESS??!!

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anthony: EATMYSHORTS.
    Cleopatra: Kiss my ASPS.

    A dependence on carbon monoxide is a COHABIT.

    The bottom row neatly summarizes the story of my high school years: OREOS STONY YUM.

    I had a follow up with my dermatologist after a visit a few weeks ago about a strange outbreak of itchy dots on my legs. After using his prescribed cream for two weeks, everything cleared up. Or, as he put it, you CAMERASHY and now you're fine. That'll be $250 please.

    Good D.O. solve for me. No ANNUMis from this solver. Thanks, Anthony V. Grubb.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:44 PM

      Thank you! @egs 😂

      Delete
  30. Cool puztheme and punchLINE. Not especially E-Z for a MonPuz, but didn't lose my shirt, solvequest nanosecond-wise. Liked it. Hats off, to the constructioneer.

    staff weeject picks: ADA [NAN of ADO], ARO, HOA. The most mysterious, of the runtwords.
    Primo weeject stacks, NW & SE, btw.

    fave moo-cow easy-E MonPuz clue: {Bruce Springsteen, to fans} = THEBOSS.
    honrable mention to the CACTI & ORION clues.
    some other faves included: CAMERASHY. HOTBUTTON. THEBOSS. FBOMB. The OREOS MIT-documented clue.

    Thanx for all them duds, Mr. Grubb dude. [In a good way.]

    Masked & Anonym007Us

    ... duck! ...

    "Quack Doc" - 7x7 themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  31. Easy Monday. Agree with @BobMills 5:39 - not the worst I've seen, but not what I'd expect from the NYT.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Anonymous10:36 AM

    Kirby's been a Nintendo character for over 30 years and has appeared in over 50 games. He's one of the most famous video game characters of the 2000s.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous7:06 PM

      He inhaled all the udon, munched on some tacos, and ate all the Oreos before fighting the boss.

      Delete
  33. I have to agree with @JJK 7:26 regarding Rex's anti-ANNUM rant - it's a self-inflicted injury due to downs-only solving. Meanwhile, this puzzle was so easy that many of the down answers mentioned in Rex's write-up were clues and answers I never saw. I solved online as I do Sunday through Wednesday to save paper and toner, and I just typed my way through the acrosses and didn't look twice.

    I did like the theme answers and reveal. The only answer I had to go back to was FBOMB crossing KIRBY (who?). I do not think SMUG = High and mighty though I would say it is equal to supercilious and that definition can be "high and mighty" so I guess, in a way...

    We put SOLAR panels on our roof in 2024. It's great for lowering our electric bill but I wish we could have put them as an array in the yard - cleaning the snow off of them is a pain where they are now. Although the literature about solar panels will tell you that snow will melt off quickly, we haven't found it so. So my husband stands on a ladder on the deck sweeping them off with a special broom/scraper thingy. But on a day like today, it's very nice!

    Thanks, Anthony V. Grubb, nice Monday puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Easy-medium. No costly erasures but I did not know SISTA. I did know KIRBY because I recently did a puzzle with a very similar clue/answer which I got wrong (I went with KuRBY as the cross was a Renaissance British composer I’d never heard of). Remembering past errors helped me with ALOHA OE yesterday.

    Smooth, fun, amusing, delightful…liked it a bunch!!


    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1016 was pretty easy for a Croce. The middle stack was the toughest section for me. Good luck!

    ReplyDelete
  35. Mike in Santa Monica11:01 AM

    Good to see I wasn't the only downs-only solver to fall into the lUNCHES for MUNCHES trap. Wasn't nearly as offended as Rex. Was more offended earlier when I thought that the puzzle thought lunching was snacking. "That's a bad clue," I SMUGly thought as I typed in the bad answer.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Three items of clothing, and I guess the idiomatic phrases they are in each constitutes a LINE, so that's something. And I do like the way the clothing item moves across the entry, from end to middle to front. And there are some other nice elements, like the crossing actor-birds. And TACOS have been very much in the news lately, or at least TACO has been, so that's a little currency. The puzzle is getting a little smutty with 18-A and 46-A, but that's today's world, I suppose.

    The only hard part for me was choosing between STaid and STOic for "poker-faced." But it had to be an N, for NAN. I don't think it quite works-- one would say "stony-faced" so technically the clue should be "poker," but that would be nonsense. Maybe "Good kind of face for a poker player."

    ReplyDelete
  37. sharonak11:33 AM

    Thanks Lewis for the best clues . Seeing hem made me smile again.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Let me add my appreciation for @Lewis's best clues list. Often he is just too upbeat and happy for me but that list is a highlight of my week. Reminds us all of what good clueing should be like.

      Delete
  38. Weirdly, responding to @Lewis's challenge, I immediately got North Carolina and South Carolina, but struggled to come up with the name of the state I live in!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous4:48 PM

      Me too!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous4:49 PM

      Exactly the same thing happened to me. Went through 49 states and forgot my own

      Delete
  39. Anonymous12:07 PM

    According to an interview in the NYT this morning with Easy Mode editor Christina Iverson, there have been 253 clues for OREO. One of her favorites was Neville Fogarty’s [Treat with the identical color scheme as this puzzle.] I kinda liked today’s. Not sure if it was a first but it sure wasn’t boring.

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  40. Well, this is weird. I never knew the puzzle was available to me this early. It is now about 20 past 10 on Sunday night and I just happened to be in my studio and thought I might do a puzzle from the archives when I realized this one was up. Normally I don’t even look at the day’s offering until at least 9 am Pacific time. So, like I said, weird. But I bet I can’t post until the morning and I’ll still come in behind all you early bird types. I like my slow mornings so I’ll publish this in the morning, post coffee.

    But it is now Monday somewhere and so I solved downs-only and it wasn’t too difficult. Only slowed down by that KIRBY character at 31D, the good, no, wonderful clue for CAMERASHY at 36D, and lUNCHES (which I didn’t really like) for MUNCHES at 45D because I had ANNU_ at 44A and guessed ANNUl. Didn’t get the congrats so went right back there and changed it to MUNCHES.

    After completing the grid, I went back, as I usually do on Mondays and Tuesdays, to see what I had missed by solving D-O and thought it looked like a pretty standard entry-level Monday. Only quibble might be that “Go fly a kite” doesn’t come near the snarkiness of EATMYSHORTS at 18A.

    So the big question now is what am I going to do with this extra time? I may have to get off my ass and get out and work. (Checks weather forecast on phone. Supposed to be a decent day.) No excuses.

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  41. A fun Monday for me, though I join the throng who needed every cross for KIRBY and for whom that B was the very last letter. I didn’t know EAT MY SHORTS, but enjoyed learning it. Tried to guess the revealer before it came—knew it was going to have something to do with CLOTHES—and the simplicity of it surprised me. All told, a good Monday!

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  42. Also solved down clues only and also had LUNCHES crossing ANNUL, but I wasn't as outraged as Rex. Downs-only means that'll happen now and then! Actually it also happened at ANO crossing ONION cuz I just can't remember that silly 3 letter thingy. Anyway, cute Monday theme.

    In these parts, a "Rule-making grp. for a residential community" is a STRATA COUNCIL. Didn't fit.

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  43. Anonymous2:03 PM

    I agree with ALL of your complaints about this puzzle, Rex.

    1. I DID like seeing CIRCE in the grid, (I’ve been enjoying re-reading Odysseus and re-watching the 1954 film with Kirk Douglas playing Ulysses, lately) but definitely should’ve had a “?” at the end.

    2. I suppose your solving via downs only makes this puzzle harder, for me it was relatively easy, except for the MUNCHES, a dumb choice, as you perfectly articulated.

    3. I’ll bet you meant to say “I’ll bet” instead of “I’ll be”, re: ARO. Can’t an argument be made to posit that “aromatic” and “asexual” are the same thing?

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  44. Hard disagree on Lunch vs Munch/annuL vs annum. ANNUL is sad because of something being cancelled, most likely a marriage; Per ANNUM makes me think about entirety of money for a year (which, come to think of it could be depressing) and MUNCH is more colorful than LUNCH, although I can’t fault you if MUNCH makes you SCREAM;)
    If you solve downs only, you can’t expect the puzzle to be edited just for you…

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  45. Anonymous2:37 PM

    Kudos for the Springsteen shout out!!!

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  46. Loved the theme/puzzle. Shocked to see EATMYSHORTS was a debut, after 36 years of The Simpsons. Is it really that offensive to some people? Well... that *sucks*. (Mayhaps that's why the editing team decided against ANNUL LUNCHES.)

    Obligatory Simpsons clip: Simpsons catchphrases

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  47. Anonymous3:43 PM

    The OREO clue was fun!
    Liked this Monday puzzle very much, solved normally. ANNUM MUNCHES is better than Annul Lunches.
    Thank you AVG !

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  48. "ARO" by definition does not mean exclusively platonic. "Aromantics" by definition are not into or shun romantic relationships, but many of them DO have sexual relationships (without emotional involvement). The name for a person who does not have sexual relationships is an "asexual," or "ace" for short. Analogously, many aces DO have romantic relationships that do not involve sex, i.e., are platonic. While there is overlap among aces and aros, they are two distinct groups with different definitions.

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  49. Btw, the female vocalist on that track was the late great Ronnie Spector. What an amazing set of pipes she had on her. She ad-libbed a couple of the lines on the live recording. What a great artist.

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  50. Es uno de esos días.

    Pretty funny theme. Maybe a bit snark heavy, but the astronomy entries lighten it up. Like all y'all I love the HAWKE/CROWE cross.

    People: 6
    Places: 1
    Products: 6
    Partials: 5
    Foreignisms: 1
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 19 of 78 (24%)

    Funnyisms: 4 🙂

    Tee-Hee: F-BOMB.

    Uniclues:

    1 MEH THOSE CACTI: My feelings on one too many walks around the high desert.

    2 UDON ABUELA: Woman who won't follow crossword culinary rules.

    3 YUM STONY OREOS: Twisters for the twisted.

    4 THE BOSS MUNCHES: What happens during an ass chewing at work.

    5 COHABIT BREWERY: One overstaying their welcome at the pub.

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Crystal ball gazer predicts the future of music performance major. AH I SEE TWO DOLLAR BILLS.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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