Pepé Le Pew is an animated character from the Warner Bros.Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons, introduced in 1945. Depicted as a French anthropomorphic striped skunk, Pepé is constantly on the quest for love and pursuit of romance but typically his skunk odor causes other characters to run away from him.
Although initially a feature character with his own series of shorts, Pepé has drawn in increasing accusations of harassing clearly unwilling women as a subject of humor. The female characters in his films often flee from him, and his behavior is often seen as a form of stalking and implied sexual assault. (wikipedia)
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Was kind of hoping ... assuming, in fact ... that day was some important day in the life of Mel Blanc (you know, birthday, death day, something). But no. He was born May 30, 1908 and died July 10, 1989. So ... yeah, I don't get it. Is it a tight theme? Not particularly. It's just a list of some of his more famous roles. One of which is a sex pest skunk. In addition to the characters featured in the puzzle, Blanc voiced Tweety and Sylvester and Foghorn Leghorn and Yosemite Sam and Porky Pig and I don't know how many others. This is a decent set of names, but it's also very partial and at least somewhat arbitrary. Four of them are Looney Tunes, but WOODY WOODPECKER isn't, which makes the theme even looser than it could've been, although I guess it would be hard to lay off a perfect grid-spanning 15 like WOODY WOODPECKER. Still, if you're doing Woody—that is, if you're going beyond Looney Tunes characters—why not do Barney Rubble while you're at it? This theme is really looking for some reason to exist besides "here are some Mel Blanc voice roles." If you tried to do this with a live-action film actor ("here are some Tom Hanks roles"), you ... probably wouldn't have your puzzle accepted. Not tight enough. Not interesting enough. Perhaps there's some angle I'm missing here. These are really good constructors. I'm just missing the point of it all. The only thing I liked about the theme (besides the general good feeling I get from remembering some of these characters—rapey skunk excepted) is the winky, bonus Blanc at 28A: Mont Blanc, e.g. (ALP).
The Downs-only solve was easy once I got DAFFY DUCK. From there, I could see that the letter pattern in the next themer (ending in two "D"s) almost certainly meant ELMER FUDD, and from there I needed only the tail end of WOODY WOODPECKER to get it. As a visual aid, here's the tail end of WOODY WOODPECKER:
When you know you're hunting famous cartoon characters, then the themers pretty much reveal themselves with a few crosses. This means that all my struggle came up top, before the theme clicked into place. I couldn't think of what the [Clear component of blood] was and so wrote in PLASM (?) (instead of SERUM). I couldn't see THERAPY because ... well, that's a very generic answer. What kind of THERAPY? You mean *physical* THERAPY? Because that's what it's (generally) called (in a rehab context). The thing that threw me the most, though, was the phrase "Stow away" in 6D: Stow away, big-time (HOARD). "Stow away" is what you do on a boat when you don't want to (or can't) pay your fare. Having recently finished watching the entire run of The Love Boat, I feel like an expert on this subject. It's the "away" part that's messing things up. If you "stow" lots of things in your house, then you're a HOARDer. But if you "stow away, big time," I assume you are just really good at hiding on boats, or else you stowed away on, like, the best boat. Like the QEII (now a floating hotel in Dubai!?)
My [Pained cry] was an "OUCH!" and a "YEOW!" before it was a "YIPE!," which seems more a surprised cry, to me (19D: Pained cry). I got my OTOS and my UTES confused again, but sorting it out wasn't too hard (30D: Colorado Plateau natives). I had to hunt down a typo/error at the end because somehow, in the early confusion of trying to gain a Downs-only foothold, I thought -CP looked better than -LP as a possible Across answer (PCP?) and so wrote in NFC instead of NFL at 21D: Falcons' and Eagles' org. I was right, too. Those teams are both in the NFC. But I was wrong, of course, as ALP > ACP for 28A: Mont Blanc, e.g.
Bullets:
5A: Breakfast chain that punnily used a kangaroo in its early commercials (IHOP) — I love when crosswordese clues contain lore. If you're gonna give me the answer I've seen a million times before, tell me something I don't know! I vaguely remember the kangaroo days of IHOP. I've talked before about collecting all the NFL helmet magnets from IHOP in the late '70s. I remember the restaurant had an iconic vaulted roof. Let's see if I can find the iconic kangaroo... omg did they really do a parody of R. Crumb's "Keep on Truckin'" Looks like they did. This looks sooooo familiar that I have to believe I saw it before I ever knew the comics icon being referenced
[Promotional stickers, I remember these!]
44A: Newspaper opinion piece (OP-ED) — your regular reminder (for those who need it) that the "OP" in OP-ED does not stand for "opinion" (it stands for "opposite," as in "OPposite the EDitorial page")
10D: Baked item whose name suggests how much of each ingredient to use (POUND CAKE) — one pound each of butter, sugar, eggs, and flour. So ... a four-POUND CAKE.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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A cheap and cheerful Monday (and I mean that I the best way) from the master of such things, Andrea Carla Michaels and her collaborator of the day, Christina Iverson. Working downs-only I could see all my favourite childhood cartoon characters emerging as I progressed. Did not know they were all voiced by Mel Blanc, so that was nice to discover.
A few stumbles and a few nits along the way … at 19D I had Yeow, a real pained cry. Nobody says YIPE when they’re in pain, do they? And speaking of things nobody says, I’ve been involved in many mortgage renegotiations in my time and I have never heard anyone, not my wife (the real financial brains of this operation), not the mortgage expert from the bank, not nobody! ever use the term REFI (22A). Not said in my world, except when my world and Crossworld collide.
Also, in my world, 37D HOEs are pretty ineffectual “ground breaking garden tool”s. Yes, they are fine if you have soft, loamy soil but if you have dense, clay based soil like I have, you’d better have a mattock. Think of it as a hoe on steroids. Or a pick-axe with a flat blade. Whereas a hoe will only penetrate about an inch into the soil, no matter how hard I swing it (and I break them fairly often), a mattock will dig 6 - 8 inches deep and allow me to rake up the roots of the weeds and get rid of them. I can’t really fault the constructors and editors of the NYTXW for this (they apparently don’t get out much) but I just want you to know that the hoe, while useful in some situations, is not the super tool the puzzle continually makes it out to be.
Was that a rant? Sorry. I’ll spare you the rants I had planned about the puzzle’s limited knowledge of Dada practitioners and the dark underbelly of rehab THERAPY. You’re welcome.
ACME and Christina, it was fun, I just had to let off a bit of steam.
Love Mondays, but this might be a little too Mondayish. All those are iconic characters from my childhood, and it's pretty groovy they're all voiced by the same guy, but otherwise there's very little to love here. We're unlikely to ever see Pepe ever again as he didn't survive the MeToo movement (and he shouldn't have).
Tofu is punishment protein to wrangle you back to murder meat. It's ghastly goop. And completely unnecessary in a healthy normal plant based diet.
Third appearance of TATA in three days. That's alotta toodling. I think if you POKE a bear you'll be saying goodbye sooner.
1 Make a confused baby anatidae. 2 Signature line for an expert in surviving numerous self-inflicted gunshot wounds. 3 Great name for a carrot company. 4 A paddle. 5 Dessert forks.
My five favorite original clues from last week (in order of appearance):
1. Rock alternative (5) 2. Source of schadenfreude? (6) 3. Smack in the middle of a crowd, in brief? (3) 4. Bond classification (6)(4) 5. Like Manhattan in the 80s and 90s? (6)
Easy, breezy and fun, as I would expect on a Monday from @Acme and Christina Iverson. Liked it a lot more than @Rex and @Gary Jugert did. Th-th-that's all, folks!
A long time ago, I was solving this puzzle and got stuck at an unguessable (to me) crossing: N. C. WYETH crossing NATICK at the "N"—I knew WYETH but forgot his initials, and NATICK ... is a suburb of Boston that I had no hope of knowing. It was clued as someplace the Boston Marathon runs through (???). Anyway, NATICK— the more obscure name in that crossing—became shorthand for an unguessable cross, esp. where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known. NATICK took hold as crossword slang, and the term can now be both noun ("I had a NATICK in the SW corner...") or verb ("I got NATICKED by 50A / 34D!")
8 comments:
A cheap and cheerful Monday (and I mean that I the best way) from the master of such things, Andrea Carla Michaels and her collaborator of the day, Christina Iverson. Working downs-only I could see all my favourite childhood cartoon characters emerging as I progressed. Did not know they were all voiced by Mel Blanc, so that was nice to discover.
A few stumbles and a few nits along the way … at 19D I had Yeow, a real pained cry. Nobody says YIPE when they’re in pain, do they? And speaking of things nobody says, I’ve been involved in many mortgage renegotiations in my time and I have never heard anyone, not my wife (the real financial brains of this operation), not the mortgage expert from the bank, not nobody! ever use the term REFI (22A). Not said in my world, except when my world and Crossworld collide.
Also, in my world, 37D HOEs are pretty ineffectual “ground breaking garden tool”s. Yes, they are fine if you have soft, loamy soil but if you have dense, clay based soil like I have, you’d better have a mattock. Think of it as a hoe on steroids. Or a pick-axe with a flat blade. Whereas a hoe will only penetrate about an inch into the soil, no matter how hard I swing it (and I break them fairly often), a mattock will dig 6 - 8 inches deep and allow me to rake up the roots of the weeds and get rid of them. I can’t really fault the constructors and editors of the NYTXW for this (they apparently don’t get out much) but I just want you to know that the hoe, while useful in some situations, is not the super tool the puzzle continually makes it out to be.
Was that a rant? Sorry. I’ll spare you the rants I had planned about the puzzle’s limited knowledge of Dada practitioners and the dark underbelly of rehab THERAPY. You’re welcome.
ACME and Christina, it was fun, I just had to let off a bit of steam.
Bueno, ¿no eres especial?
Love Mondays, but this might be a little too Mondayish. All those are iconic characters from my childhood, and it's pretty groovy they're all voiced by the same guy, but otherwise there's very little to love here. We're unlikely to ever see Pepe ever again as he didn't survive the MeToo movement (and he shouldn't have).
Tofu is punishment protein to wrangle you back to murder meat. It's ghastly goop. And completely unnecessary in a healthy normal plant based diet.
Third appearance of TATA in three days. That's alotta toodling. I think if you POKE a bear you'll be saying goodbye sooner.
People: 6 {not counting theme entries}
Places: 2
Products: 4
Partials: 8
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 23 of 78 (29%)
Funny Factor: 2 😕
Uniclues:
1 Make a confused baby anatidae.
2 Signature line for an expert in surviving numerous self-inflicted gunshot wounds.
3 Great name for a carrot company.
4 A paddle.
5 Dessert forks.
1 BIRTH DAFFY DUCK
2 ELMER FUDD, PHD
3 BUGS BUNNY GROWN
4 THERAPY CLUB
5 POUND CAKE PLOWS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: One meeeeeelion dollars. EVIL BOTTOM LINE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Medium. My only problem with this one was not knowing the symbol for EUROS which caused some hang ups in the SE which lead to medium.
@Rex - Thanks for the IHOP kangaroo sticker.
Fun, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1037 was another pretty easy Croce for me. The SW gave me the most resistance. Good luck!
Easy, especially for seniors who remember Mel Blanc and his vocal repertoire. I liked the puzzle more than Rex did.
My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):
1. Rock alternative (5)
2. Source of schadenfreude? (6)
3. Smack in the middle of a crowd, in brief? (3)
4. Bond classification (6)(4)
5. Like Manhattan in the 80s and 90s? (6)
PAPER
GERMAN
PDA
ACTION HERO
UPTOWN
My favorite used-before clues from last week:
[Collector's item, informally?] (3)
[New Jersey?] (4)
IOU
CALF
Easy, breezy and fun, as I would expect on a Monday from @Acme and Christina Iverson. Liked it a lot more than @Rex and @Gary Jugert did. Th-th-that's all, folks!
Definitely harder than easier puzzles, and easier than harder puzzles, and about the same degree of difficulty as the rest.
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